Stafford v. Groff

221 P.2d 246, 99 Cal. App. 2d 67, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1656
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 18, 1950
DocketCiv. 17242
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 221 P.2d 246 (Stafford v. Groff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stafford v. Groff, 221 P.2d 246, 99 Cal. App. 2d 67, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1656 (Cal. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

WOOD (Parker), J.

Lucille Stafford, by a guardian ad litem, commenced an action on October 11, 1943, for an . accounting and an injunction against appellants, Mr. and Mrs. *69 J. M. Groff, Elizabeth Groff Dunseth and Boy C. Poor. Mrs. Groff is Mrs. Stafford’s sister, and Mrs. Dunseth is Mrs. Groff’s daughter. Mrs. Stafford sought to cancel an assignment of oil royalties from herself to Mrs. Groff, to recover alleged “gifts” from her to the Groffs and Mrs. Dunseth, and to recover $210,000 which she had loaned to an investment company in which Mr. Groff was a partner (which company later became defunct). It was alleged in the complaint that Mrs. Stafford was an incompetent person. Later in 1943 she was adjudged an incompetent person, and a bank was appointed guardian of her estate, and Comly Shoemaker was appointed guardian of her person. On December 27, 1944, the superior court approved an agreement between plaintiff, by her guardian ad litem, and Bay Howard and W. W. Comstock, attorneys at law, whereby plaintiff employed said attorneys to represent her in said action and agreed to pay them 50 per cent of the recovery plus attorney’s fees and expenses in any proceeding to enforce his (their) rights. On April 23, 1946, Bay Howard as “First Party” and Arthur E. White, an attorney at law representing the defendants Groff, Dunseth and Poor as “Second Party,” entered into a “Memorandum Agreement” for settlement of said action subject to approval of the court. The guardian ad litem and the attorneys Howard and Comstock approved the agreement in writing; and attorneys Newton E. Anderson, Arthur E. White and Montgomery G. Bice, as attorneys for the defendants, approved the agreement. That agreement provided that Mr. Howard should receive a total of $18,000 in full payment for all fees and expenses of himself and associates (including $1,600 for Mr. Shoemaker). On September 27,1946, an “Interlocutory Order Instructing Guardian ad litem as to Settlement,” based upon said memorandum agreement, was filed. Among other things, it was provided in said order that the guardian of Mrs. Stafford’s estate should pay $13,400 to Mr. Howard and $1,600 to Comly Shoemaker, the guardian ad litem and guardian of Mrs. Stafford’s person. Said amounts were for work done and cash spent for the benefit of Mrs. Stafford. On April 26, 1946, under the provisions of the memorandum agreement of settlement, Mr. Howard was paid $3,000. Prior to the. proceeding herein, Mr. Howard had received the said $18,000.

On October 27, 1947, a judgment (dated October 24, 1947), based upon a stipulation of the parties, was entered. On January 19, 1948, allegedly pursuant to provisions in that judgment, Bay Howard filed a “Petition for Allowance and *70 Payment of Fees and Expenses to Ray Howard, Attorney.” In said petition Mr. Howard sought attorney’s fees and expenses for the period from April 23, 1946 (the date of the memorandum agreement) to October 24, 1947 (the date of the final judgment). On February 10, 1948, the matter of the petition came on for hearing. None of the defendants Groff, Dunseth or Poor, or their counsel, was present at the hearing. Evidence was introduced, and the court made an order allowing $10,000 as additional attorney’s fees for Mr. Howard and $300 as attorney’s fees for Mr. Comstock, the attorney who represented Mr. Howard at the hearing of the petition herein. It was also ordered therein that whenever it shall appear upon motion made in this action that the funds in the hands of the estate guardian amount to $10,000 or less the defendants Groff shall be required to make said payments of $300 per month commencing from a date to be specified by the court, and. also to pay to said estate guardian any unpaid balance of said $10,300 and any other reasonably necessary expense of the guardianship. The defendants Groff, Dunseth and Poor appeal from said order.

Said appellants assert, among other things, that the court did not have jurisdiction to entertain the proceeding that resulted in said order. They argue that the judgment of October 24, 1947, was a final adjudication of the rights of the parties; that jurisdiction was not reserved for further proceedings in the action in which said judgment was rendered; that Ray Howard’s petition for further fees presented a new and distinct civil action for attorney’s fees; that since his petition was a disputed claim against the guardian, a separate civil action should have been commenced.

The judgment of October 24, 1947, provided, among other things, that the bank, as guardian of said estate, should pay $13,400 to Ray Howard and $1,600 to Comly Shoemaker, guardian ad litem• that defendants Groff should pay to the guardian of the estate for the support of Mrs. Stafford $300 per month plus any additional amounts necessarily and reasonably expended by said guardian “but said payments shall not be required to commence until, and shall continue only so long as, the funds belonging to Lucille Stafford, in the hands of said bank amount to $10,000.00 or less”; that the payment of said sums to Mr. Howard and Mr. Shoemaker “ordered to be made under paragraph (1) hereof, are in full of all of their, and each of their claims under an order made on December 27, 1944, authorizing an agreement between Lucille *71 Stafford and Ray Howard,” and all other claims by them or either of them against defendants Groff, Dunseth and Poor and all defendants in an action in the United States District Court in Illinois, and “shall also be in full for all fees, expenses,” and other claims of any kind in connection with the prosecution of said actions by Ray Howard, Comly Shoemaker and any of their associates against Lucile Stafford or against her estate either under guardianship or in probate in case of her death. The judgment provided, in paragraph (11) thereof, that: “This court hereby reserves jurisdiction to make such other and further orders herein as may be necessary in' order to obtain performance of the acts herein ordered and to make its order decreeing that said estate guardian has complied with this judgment upon said estate guardian showing, after notice to the other parties to the within action, that it has complied with the provisions of this judgment but in all other respects the within action is hereby dismissed with prejudice as to all defendants.” In paragraph (25) of the judgment it was provided in part as follows: “A substantial part of the consideration for the signing of the stipulation for this judgment by Ray Howard is the permission hereby granted, for him to apply for an allowance and to be paid the amount so allowed, on account of his fees for services and expenses performed or expended after the making of the Memorandum Agreement of April 23, 1946, in the prosecution of the cases herein referred to, in addition to the $18,000 then agreed upon as his total fee as of that date, of which said $13,400 is a part. Such additional allowance is to be based on the reasonable value of services and the amount of his expenses after said April 23, 1946, and/or for services and expenses subsequent to said date under and pursuant to the agreement made under date of December 28, 1944, on behalf of Lucille Stafford by her guardian ad litem, pursuant to the order herein of December 27, 1944, authorizing the same. Mr. Howard’s claims include those based on the provision thereof for attorney’s fees in enforcing his rights thereunder.

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Bluebook (online)
221 P.2d 246, 99 Cal. App. 2d 67, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stafford-v-groff-calctapp-1950.