Filed 8/1/14 Conservatorship of Sanchez CA4/2
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION TWO
Conservatorship of the Person and Estate
of VICTORIA C. SANCHEZ.
HELEN GUTIERREZ as Co-conservator
etc. et al., E056173
Petitioners and Respondents, (Super.Ct.No. RCRS00499)
v. OPINION
MARGARET SANCHEZ,
Objector and Appellant.
APPEAL from the Superior Court of San Bernardino County. J. Michael Welch,
Judge. Affirmed.
Young & Young and George W. Young for Objector and Appellant.
Ward & Ward, Alexandra S. Ward; and Laura E. Gonzalez for Petitioners and
Respondents.
1
Victoria C. Sanchez (Mother) was a conservatee in the years prior to her death.
Mother had six children. Three of Mother’s children were Co-conservators: (1) Joe C.
Sanchez (Sanchez), (2) Stella Yazell (Yazell), and (3) Helen Gutierrez (Gutierrez)
(collectively, Co-conservators). Another of Mother’s children is Margaret M. Lara
(Lara).1
As part of the conservatorship case, the probate court created a substitute
judgment trust for Mother.2 In the order creating the trust, the court also ordered it
would continue to supervise the trust. As a result, the trust proceedings took place
within the conservatorship case. Mother died in February 2011. A conservatorship case
would typically involve only a final accounting after the conservatee’s death, and then
the case would terminate. (§§ 1860, 2630;3 Conservatorship of Starr (1989) 215
Cal.App.3d 1390, 1394 (Starr).) However, due to the trust proceedings, the case
continued with various rulings being made.
1In this court’s record, Lara is also referred to as Margaret M. Sanchez. We use
the name Lara for clarity, since there are other people involved in the case with the last
name Sanchez.
2 A substitute judgment trust permits “a probate court to substitute its judgment
for that of a conservatee.” (In re Conservatorship of Estate of Kane (2006) 137
Cal.App.4th 400, 403.) Under this power, the probate court has the “power and
authority to determine whether to authorize transfers of the property of the incompetent
for the purpose of avoiding unnecessary estate or inheritance taxes or expenses of
administration, and to authorize such action where it appears from all the circumstances
that the ward, if sane, as a reasonably prudent man, would so plan his estate, there being
no substantial evidence of a contrary intent” [Citation.]’” (Id. at p. 404.)
3 All further statutory references are to the Probate Code unless otherwise
indicated.
2
In June 2011, the probate court ordered Lara to pay $5,000 “in sanctions” for
attorney’s fees that were incurred by Mother’s attorney (Ortiz) as a result of Lara’s
failure to make certain agreed-upon payments, e.g., property taxes and insurance. In
February 2012, the probate court ordered Lara to pay $12,696.50 for attorney’s fees
incurred by Ortiz as a result of Lara’s failures (1) to communicate, and (2) to make
certain agreed-upon payments, e.g. property taxes and insurance. In April 2012, the
probate court ordered Lara to vacate the real property that had been owned by Mother
and ordered the real property be sold to a conventional third party buyer.
Lara contends the probate court exceeded its jurisdictional authority by ordering
the sale of the real property. Next, Lara asserts the probate court erred by ordering her
to pay $12,696.50 in attorney’s fees after previously ordering her to pay only $5,000 in
fees. Lara asserts the court erred in regard to the attorney’s fees: (1) under the doctrine
of law of the case, (2) under the principle of judicial estoppel, and (3) by acting in
excess of its jurisdiction. We affirm the judgment.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Mother was born on November 8, 1921. Mother married Joe S. Sanchez (Father)
in March 1940. Mother and Father had six children, including Sanchez, Yazell,
Gutierrez, and Lara. In December 1980, Mother and Father purchased real property in
Chino (the property). The property had two addresses, 5035 F Street and 5031 F Street
(“the property” refers to the whole property with both addresses). Mother and Father
acquired the property as joint tenants. Originally, there was a single family residence at
the 5031 address (5031-house). In 1981, a second single family residence was
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constructed at the 5035 address (5035-house). Upon completion of the construction,
Mother and Father resided in the 5035-house.
Mother and Father permitted Lara to reside in the 5031-house for approximately
20 years, without paying rent. Father died in January 2004. Father resided at the 5035-
house until his death. Mother continued to reside at the 5035-house after Father’s death.
At the time of Father’s death, the 5031-house had a rental value of approximately
$1,000 per month. Also at the time of Father’s death, Mother’s income consisted of
social security and assistance from her children. Mother’s only significant asset was the
property, as she became the sole owner after Father’s death.
In March 2004, Lara presented a document to Mother. The document transferred
the property to Lara for no consideration. Lara filed the document with the San
Bernardino County Recorder. Mother did not understand the nature of the document, or
the difference between a deed and a testamentary document. It appeared Lara obtained
Mother’s signature on the deed by falsely asserting the document functioned in the
nature of a will and would only transfer the 5031-house to Lara upon Mother’s death.
Additionally, Lara threatened Mother’s caregivers, who had been hired by Co-
conservators.
In August 2004, Co-conservators sought a conservatorship to protect Mother.
Co-conservators asserted the conservatorship was needed due to Lara isolating Mother
and causing Mother to transfer ownership of the property. The probate court ordered
attorney Donnasue Smith-Ortiz (Ortiz) to represent Mother. In January 2005, the
probate court appointed Co-conservators to their positions as Co-conservators. The
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order granted Co-conservators (1) access to the 5035-house, and (2) authorization to
recover the property, which had been transferred to Lara. The order also prohibited
Mother from signing any document that would transfer her assets without prior court
approval.
In June 2005, Co-conservators sought an order (1) declaring the deed, which
transferred the property to Lara, to be void; and (2) requiring Lara to pay attorney’s fees
and court costs associated with the transfer of the property. Lara raised an issue
concerning the accounting submitted by the Co-conservators. The parties agreed to
attend mediation at IVAMS.
After the mediation, in March 2006, the Co-conservators and Lara agreed: (1) a
substituted judgment trust would be drafted for Mother; (2) the trust would hold title to
the property; (3) Lara would transfer the property into the trust; (4) Ortiz would act as
trustee for the trust; (5) the probate court would continue to supervise the trust; (6)
Mother would continue residing in her home unless physicians found it was necessary
for her to move; (7) if the property were sold, then Lara would receive 40 percent of the
net proceeds and 60 percent would be used for Mother’s benefit, or if Mother died, then
the 60 percent would go to the Co-conservators; (8) Lara would have the right of first
refusal to purchase the property upon the trustee’s decision to sell the property; (9) Lara
would be required to reasonably maintain the 5031-house; (10) if Lara did not maintain
the 5031-house, then the trustee could “give notice” to Lara; (11) Lara would pay the
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property taxes and insurance “on the real property” 4 to Ortiz; (12) Lara and the Co-
conservators would equally divide the water bill each month; and (13) the Co-
conservators would continue to manage Mother’s funds, separate from the trust.5
On May 3, 2007, Ortiz filed a trial brief reflecting Lara failed to transfer the
property into the trust. Ortiz argued that Lara should be responsible for the fees and
costs associated with the accounting and transfer of the property because Lara was
“creating issues to misdirect the court [in] hope[s] that her own breach and failure to
comply with the Stipulation and Order is not focused on in this trial.” On May 7, 2007,
the probate court entered an order declaring void the 2004 deed transferring the property
to Lara. The court ordered the Co-conservators to execute a quitclaim deed transferring
the property into Mother’s trust.
In February 2009, Ortiz filed an accounting reflecting Lara owed (1) $765.80 for
the 2007-2008 property tax; (2) $389.20 for the 2008 property insurance; (3) $861.42
for the 2008-2009 property tax; (4) $534 for the 2009 property insurance; and
(5) $783.09 for the second installment of the 2008-2009 property tax. Ortiz requested
the probate court order Lara to pay Ortiz $2,550.42 for the property tax and insurance,
or order Lara to vacate the property. The probate court approved the accounting.
In October 2009, Yazell and Gutierrez submitted an accounting. The document
reflected one of the Co-conservators, Sanchez, died in July 2009, thus leaving Yazell
4 We infer “the real property” refers to the whole property, i.e., both addresses.
5 It appears Lara signed the agreement as Margie Sanchez.
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and Gutierrez as the remaining Co-conservators.6 The document further reflected the
Co-conservators had paid the property taxes and insurance to Ortiz, which Lara was
supposed to pay. The Co-conservators requested the probate court order Lara to pay the
Co-conservators $8,021.20 for the property taxes and insurance, or order Lara to vacate
the 5031-house due to her breach of the 2006 agreement. The Co-conservators also
requested the court order Lara to repair the roof and paint the interior and exterior of the
5031-house.
An amended accounting was filed, to which Lara objected. Trial dates were
continued, vacated, and rescheduled. In February 2011, Ortiz submitted a trial brief.
The brief reflected two issues to be addressed during trial were: (1) Lara’s breach of the
2006 agreement, and (2) whether Lara “should be held liable for all compensation and
costs of the co-conservators, and all other litigation costs and expenses incurred for
filing her objections, most of which are outside the scope of this trial, without
reasonable cause and in bad faith.” Ortiz asserted Lara should be required to pay
$7,927.75 in attorney’s fees, for the period of March 2007 through July 2010.
On February 9 and 10, 2011, the court held a short cause trial. The probate court
found all of Lara’s objections to the accounting had been resolved or withdrawn. The
court approved the Co-conservators’ accounting. The court approved Ortiz’s
resignation as trustee and appointed the Co-conservators as successor trustees. The
6 From this point, “Co-conservators” will refer only to Yazell and Gutierrez.
7
court ordered Lara to reimburse Mother’s estate for the property tax and insurance
payments made by the Co-conservators.
In regard to the sanctions/attorney’s fees request, the court ordered Lara to “pay
$5,000 in sanctions for her failure to adhere to the Stipulation dated March 14, 2006
requiring her to pay property tax and insurance for real property commonly referred to
as 5031 and 5035 ‘F’ Street Chino, San Bernardino County, California 91710 which
thereby caused [Mother] to incur attorney’s fees for Donnasue Smith Ortiz’[s] efforts to
enforce the Stipulation terms.”
The court ordered Lara to pay $500 per month ($325 for property tax and $175
for sanctions) directly into a certain bank account. If Lara failed to pay the $500 after
30 days, Lara would be in breach and the Co-conservators/co-trustees could bring an ex
parte action to terminate Lara’s tenancy. The order reflected the terms of the order were
agreed upon in the judge’s chambers with the judge and all attorneys being present.
Mother died on February 13, 2011.
In May 2011, the Co-conservators moved for sanctions against Lara and
requested Lara be required to pay attorney’s fees for Ortiz in the amount of $12,696.50.
Co-conservators asserted Lara should pay Ortiz’s fees because the fees were incurred by
Mother due to Lara’s “continual breach” of the 2006 agreement and frivolous objections
to the accountings. The motion reflected Lara had breached the agreement by (1)
failing to pay the property tax and insurance, and (2) receiving code violations from the
City of Chino “on numerous occasions for failing to maintain the residence.” The Co-
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conservators alleged they had paid the property taxes and insurance “from 2005 to
present.”
In August 2011, the Co-conservators/co-trustees, filed an accounting and request
for reimbursement. Co-conservators requested the court (1) order Lara to pay
“sanctions” in the amount of $12,696.50 for the attorney’s fees incurred by Ortiz;
(2) find that Lara breached the agreement requiring her to pay $500 per month; (3) find
Lara to be in contempt of court for not making the required payments; and (4) order
Lara is no longer permitted to reside at the 5031-house. Lara objected to the
accounting. Lara also requested she (1) be permitted to “exercise her right of first
refusal as per [the] signed stipulation in March 2006,” and (2) not be required to pay
Ortiz’s attorney’s fees.
Also in August, the Co-conservators filed an ex parte application for Lara to
cooperate with the sale of the property. Co-conservators asked the probate court to
determine whether (1) they could proceed with the sale of the property, and (2) Lara still
had a right of first refusal despite her “continual breach.”
In September, the Co-conservators filed a brief to clarify the $5,000 sanctions
order in relation to their request for Lara to pay $12,696.50 for Ortiz’s attorney’s fees.
Co-conservators explained that, in August 2010, Ortiz’s bill totaled $7,927.75 in
charges incurred due to Lara. The Co-conservators requested Lara pay $8,000 for the
fees, but had ultimately agreed to the lesser amount of $5,000. The Co-conservators
paid Ortiz $8,381 in December 2010. Lara did not make the required $500 monthly
payments, which included payment on the agreed upon $5,000 sanctions award. The
9
Co-conservators explained that the $5,000 award covered work performed by Ortiz in
2010, and did not cover fees incurred for trial preparation in 2011. Thus, the $5,000
was partial payment on earlier work performed by Ortiz, while the $12,696.50 was a
different bill for trial preparation. Ortiz submitted a statement reflecting the $12,696.50
bill covered the period from August 5, 2010 to April 4, 2011.
On October 17, 2011, Lara submitted a declaration reflecting (1) she never
signed any order from the court, and (2) she was never “notified of any pending or past
due homeowner[’]s property insurance.” On October 19, the probate court held a
hearing in the matter. The court asked if the property would be sold and whether Lara
was interested in purchasing the property, since she had a right of first refusal. The Co-
conservators’/co-trustees’ attorney informed the court that Lara had not yet made an
offer on the property and requested a deadline be set for Lara to make an offer. The
parties raised issues about appraisals for the property and mortgages on the property.
The court found the property matter involved “too many issues,” since the parties likely
“can’t agree on the appraisals and then liens and so on, so forth.” The court ordered the
parties to submit appraisals and declarations in support of their arguments on the
property issue by November 21. The court scheduled a hearing for December 1 to
decide the issues related to the property and attorney’s fees.
Lara did not file documents about the property by November 21; she filed them
on November 28. At the hearing on December 1, Co-conservators’ attorney explained
that Lara had not made an offer to purchase the property; rather, she submitted an
appraisal for only the 5031-house —not the whole property, which included both
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addresses/residences. Lara’s son explained that an offer had not been made because the
property was still in Mother’s name—not the trust’s name, i.e., Co-conservators
allegedly did not execute the quitclaim deed placing the property in the trust’s name.
The court took the matter under submission.
In February 2012, the probate court issued a ruling. The court ordered Lara to
pay (1) Ortiz’s attorney’s fee bill of $12,696.50; (2) the unpaid property tax and
insurance bills; and (3) maintenance bills for the property. The court explained that
Lara failed to make proper payments during the five year period. For example, Lara’s
checks were made out to the trust, rather than Ortiz. Additionally, Lara made a tax
payment directly to the Assessor’s Office, and then failed to communicate with Ortiz.
Lara did not respond to Ortiz’s requests for payment, so Ortiz also paid the tax bill,
causing a double payment that had to be researched. The court found the majority of
Ortiz’s fees were incurred as a result Lara’s actions or inactions.
In regard to the sale of the property, the court found the 2006 agreement gave
Lara the right of first refusal. In its ruling, the court wrote, “There have been many
attempts to inspect the property, list the property, and in general, cooperate in an effort
to either sell it or have [Lara] buy it. [¶] There has never been a solution. Each side
blames the other and there can never be a solution unless the Court takes charge of it.
[¶] The court has jurisdiction to settle this matter. [¶] The Court will select a broker
from three names of brokers who will accept this job. Each side is to give me three
brokers who will actively try to sell the property. [¶] The person/firm selected shall
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have complete access to the property. [Lara] is enjoined from interfering with the
broker’s access to the property. She must cooperate.
“The broker shall explore all the possible ways that [Lara] could purchase the
property. The broker needs to cooperate with any lender that [Lara] wishes to use in her
endeavor to buy the house. When both a plan to sell and a plan to buy has been arrived
at, the Court will be notified. The Court will then decide if [the property] is to be sold
and to whom.”
On April 6, 2012, the Co-conservators filed an ex parte application for
instructions and an order requiring Lara to cooperate with the sale of the property. The
Co-conservators explained that Lara “made an offer to purchase the property through an
untraditional reverse mortgage.” The Co-conservators rejected Lara’s offer. The Co-
conservators asserted they received “multiple” other offers, but could not provide the
prospective buyers a walk-through of the property because Lara’s dog roamed freely on
the property and Lara called the police when visitors arrived. The Co-conservators
asserted they lost three offers for $299,000. The Co-conservators asked the court to
order Lara (1) to restrain her dog in the yard; (2) to provide a key to the 5031-house; (3)
to permit the realtor to show the property when given 24 hours notice; and (4) to vacate
the 5031-house in 30 days.
The court held a hearing in the matter on April 12, 2012. Co-conservators’
attorney explained that Lara wanted a reverse mortgage on the property, which is a loan
on the property—not an offer to purchase the property. The court explained to Lara’s
attorney that Lara had been given approximately three years to purchase the property,
12
but she had failed to make an offer despite being encouraged to do so. The court
instructed counsel to work together to effectuate a sale of the property. The court
scheduled another hearing for the following week because the Co-conservators had
received an all cash offer on the property from a third party.
On April 16, 2012, in a reply to the ex parte petition, Lara explained that she
submitted an offer to purchase the property, but the offer was rejected without a
counteroffer. Lara also explained she was unwilling to pay a commission for the
realtor. Lara asserted that if the court interpreted the right of first refusal as requiring
Lara to match the other offers submitted, then Lara wanted an opportunity to match
those offers.
In a response, the Co-conservators explained that Lara’s “offer” was not really an
offer, but was rather an expressed intent to make an offer. The Co-conservators asserted
the document submitted by Lara as an “offer” was not truly an offer because it failed to
include the basic elements of an offer, such as the exact type of reverse mortgage Lara
will obtain and the exact amount of reverse mortgage funding Lara will obtain. The Co-
conservators requested they be permitted to sell the property to a buyer with pre-
approved financing.
On April 18, 2012, the court held another hearing in the matter. Lara’s counsel
(Brock) argued that Lara’s offer was not deficient. Brock explained Lara would give
the Co-conservators the full value for the property, but wanted to put the title in Lara’s
name first, so that Lara would be refinancing the property, which is “easier.” Brock
13
asserted the Co-conservators should not be permitted to reject Lara’s offer solely
because Lara did not want traditional financing.
The probate court said, “What I see here is really more of the same stuff. I really
do. And that is dictating terms and conditions with respect to sale or the purchase of the
house that are maybe pie-in-the-sky ideas. I don’t know if she can qualify for any kind
of loan. There is nothing in there to indicate to me that she can. [¶] The idea of a
reverse mortgage, I never thought of that at all. I don’t know. . . . The cleaner way to
do it is to sell the property and divide it up. That is the only way to do it.”
Brock asserted Lara and her children would make a traditional offer of $300,000
and would return to court “in a short period with a loan guarantee or loan approval.”
The court explained that it had been telling Lara to make that type of offer for
approximately two years. The Co-conservators argued that Lara had “been given the
opportunity” many times to make a traditional purchase offer for the property. The
court said, “I am going to say, ‘Sell for that’”—referring to the offer of $299,900 that
had been submitted by a third party. Brock asked if the court would give Lara the
opportunity to offer more than $300,000. The court responded, “You know, Mr. Brock,
I have done that I can’t tell you how many times. I am just actually tired of it. Okay.”
The court ordered that Lara must vacate the 5031-house within 30 days.
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DISCUSSION
A. JURISDICTION TO ORDER THE SALE
1. FACTS
Lara’s attorney (Brock) was somewhat new to the case at the time of the April
12, 2012 hearing. At the beginning of the hearing, the following exchange took place:
“The Court: Are you familiar with a number of the issues involved and this
house?
“Mr. Brock: I’m most familiar with following [sic] an understanding from the
Court’s ruling of February 23.
“The Court: Oh, okay.
“Mr. Brock: And in seeing this petition, I have trouble connecting the two
because this petition doesn’t appear to be following what the Court’s ruling was about
how we were going to sell the house. Having said that, I need to inform the Court that I
have filed, April 6, a petition in a—under a trust matter, same case—or same matter
because of title issues. As I read the file, I was not certain whether the title was in the
name of the decedent, in the name of the conservatee, but it definitely was not in the
name of the trustees. And to clear title from the title company, in review of their
preliminary title report, they wanted it in the name of the trustees. So I filed a petition
for determination of title plus quiet title because there are some very old liens against
the property and with—it includes an offer to purchase the property by my client.
“The Court: Do you know that, if I recall, that this Court took jurisdiction of the
trust many years ago?
15
“Mr. Brock: I saw that the Court created the trust.
“The Court: Yes, that’s correct, if I recall. And the trustee eventually was the—
originally was, I think, Ms. Ortiz and then subsequently the petitioners.
“Mr. Brock: Yes. And, see, your Honor, I filed it that way as a—
“The Court: Why wouldn’t you file it right in this action, because that’s where
the trust action is?
“Mr. Brock: In an overabundance of caution.
“The Court: All right.
“Mr. Brock: Because I’m reading your order and I felt like I was going to have
to file and pay a filing fee in the conservatorship action, but I might have a problem
with the title company. And the title company’s saying, [w]e appreciate what the
judge’s order says, but it should have been the trust and we want it—the order to come
from the trust. Now, I probably could have convinced the title company to take it, but
just out of an overabundance of caution—and when I filed that, on the cover sheet, I
referenced that it is related to this case.
“The Court: Well, you should have filed it –
“Mr. Brock: I apologize.”
2. ANALYSIS
Lara contends the probate court lacked jurisdiction to order the sale of the
property since the case was designated as a conservatorship proceeding. Lara uses the
terms “fundamental jurisdiction” and “excess of jurisdiction” in describing the alleged
16
error. It appears the issue would be better characterized as an act asserted to be in
excess of jurisdiction—not a lack of fundamental jurisdiction.
“The principle of ‘subject matter jurisdiction’ relates to the inherent authority of
the court involved to deal with the case or matter before it. [Citation.] In contrast, a
court acts in excess of jurisdiction ‘“where, though the court has jurisdiction over the
subject matter and the parties in the fundamental sense, it has no ‘jurisdiction’ (or
power) to act except in a particular manner, or to give certain kinds of relief, or to act
without the occurrence of certain procedural prerequisites.”’ [Citation.]”
(Conservatorship of O’Connor (1996) 48 Cal.App.4th 1076, 1087-1088 (O’Connor).)
So, in this case, it is an excess of jurisdiction question, because the issue is
whether, in this conservatorship proceeding, the court could continue issuing rulings
related to the trust after Mother died in February 2011. It is not an issue of the court
lacking fundamental jurisdiction over the subject matter or the parties, but whether the
court went beyond the bounds of its authority to act. It appears there was subject matter
jurisdiction because the probate court has jurisdiction over conservatorships (§ 2200)
and the property and conservatee were located in San Bernardino County.
“Death of the conservatee does not terminate the probate court’s jurisdiction over
the conservatorship estate. The court retains jurisdiction over the estate ‘for the purpose
of settling the accounts of the guardian or conservator or for any other purpose incident
to the enforcement of the judgments and orders of the court upon such accounts . . . .’
(§ 2630, italics added.) Relevant case law illustrates that the scope of the court’s
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jurisdiction should be construed broadly to accomplish these goals. [Citations.]”
(O’Connor, supra, 48 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1088-1089.)
“In contrast to cases involving other types of jurisdictional defects, a party may
be precluded from challenging [an] action in excess of a court’s jurisdiction when the
circumstances warrant applying principles of estoppel, disfavor of collateral attack or
res judicata. [Citation.]” (O’Connor, supra, 48 Cal.App.4th at p. 1088, fn. omitted.)
“When ‘“the court has jurisdiction of the subject matter, a party who seeks or consents
to action beyond the court’s power as defined by statute or decisional rule may be
estopped to complain of the ensuing action in excess of jurisdiction. [Citations.]
Whether he shall be estopped depends on the importance of the irregularity not only to
the parties but to the functioning of the courts and in some instances on other
considerations of public policy. A litigant who has stipulated to a procedure in excess
of jurisdiction may be estopped to question it when ‘[t]o hold otherwise would permit
the parties to trifle with the courts.’” [Citations.]’ [Citation.]” (O’Connor, supra, 48
Cal.App.4th at p. 1092.)
The record reflects Lara consented to the sale of the property being handled as
part of the conservatorship proceedings. In 2006, the probate court entered an order, as
a result of the parties’ stipulations, reflecting, in part, (1) a substituted judgment trust
would be created for Mother; (2) Lara would have a right of first refusal to purchase the
property upon the trustees’ decision to sell the property; and (3) “[t]he trust shall
continue to be subject to the court’s supervision.”
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Lara stipulated that the conservatorship court would continue to supervise the
trust, thus reflecting an agreement that the court could made trust decisions in the
conservatorship proceedings. Lara tried to enforce the portion of the order that related
to her right of first refusal, which reflects Lara does not contest the order that created
the trust. Additionally, when Brock was asked why he filed documents related to the
trust in a separate trust action, he did not explain that he believed the court lacked
jurisdiction because it was a conservatorship case; rather, he said he acted out of an
abundance of caution, thus failing to raise the issue in the probate court. Given the
foregoing points, especially Lara’s stipulation to the court’s continuing supervision of
the trust, Lara is estopped from arguing the excess of jurisdiction issue because she
stipulated to the trust being addressed in the conservatorship proceedings.
Nevertheless, if Lara is not estopped, the court also acted within its jurisdiction.
As set forth ante, a conservatorship terminates upon the death of the conservatee.
(§ 1860.) After the death of the conservatee, the probate court’s jurisdiction is
delineated by section 2630, which provides: the probate court retains jurisdiction “for
any other purpose incident to the enforcement of the judgments and orders of the court
upon [the guardian’s or conservator’s] accounts.” (§ 2630; O’Connor, supra, 48
Cal.App.4th at p. 1089; Starr, supra, 215 Cal.App.3d at p. 1394.)
As explained ante, in March 2006, following stipulations by the parties, the
probate court entered an order (1) creating the trust; (2) making the trust subject to the
court’s continuing supervision; and (3) granting Lara the right of first refusal to
purchase the property. By overseeing the sale of the property, the probate court was
19
enforcing the orders made in the conservatorship case. The court was deciding whether
Lara had been given a reasonable right of first refusal, and following through with
disposal of the trust’s or Mother’s most significant asset.7 Accordingly, the court acted
within its jurisdiction.
Lara asserts the probate court acted in excess of its jurisdiction because, in a
conservatorship proceeding, a probate court does not have authority to liquidate assets,
unless the estate is very small. Lara asserts the property was worth over $200,000, so
the estate was not small. Lara’s argument is not persuasive because it does not take into
account the particular orders and stipulations made in this case, which granted the
probate court supervisory power over the trust within the conservatorship proceedings.
Lara contends that if the property were a trust asset, not a conservatorship asset,
then the probate court only had the power to settle the Co-conservators’ accounting—
the conservatorship proceeding was necessarily terminated after that point. We do not
find this argument persuasive due to the stipulations and orders in the record, along with
the estoppel reasoning set forth ante. Lara stipulated to the trust being supervised
within the conservatorship proceedings; ignoring the stipulation or trying to bypass it
would be trifling with the courts.
7 It is unclear from the record whether, at the time of the order, the property was
being held in Mother’s name or the trust’s name.
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B. ATTORNEY’S FEES
1. CONTENTION
Lara asserts the court erred by ordering Lara to pay attorney’s fees: (1) under the
doctrine of law of the case, (2) under the principle of judicial estoppel, and (3) by acting
in excess of its jurisdiction.
2. NOTICE OF APPEAL
Co-conservators assert Lara’s notices of appeal do not include the order requiring
Lara to pay $5,000 in sanctions/attorney’s fees, and therefore, Lara cannot argue error
as to that order. We agree that the notices of appeal do not include the order for the
$5,000 sanctions/attorney’s fees. Nevertheless, it appears Lara’s arguments are focused
on the award of $12,696.50, as opposed to the $5,000 award. Accordingly, we address
the issues she raises on appeal.
3. EXCESS OF JURISDICTION
Lara contends the Probate Code does not authorize the probate court to order a
party to pay attorney’s fees for a conservatee’s court-appointed attorney.
In the court’s ruling related to the $12,696.50 attorney fee award, the court
wrote, “[Lara’s] failure to communicate with Attorney Ortiz has resulted in unnecessary
legal expenses imposed upon Conservatee. Since, 2006, Ms. Ortiz’s law office has been
burdened with sending correspondence and phone calls to [Lara] on a monthly basis to
get her to comply with the Stipulation to pay the property tax and insurance. [Lara]
claims she does not receive correspondence. [¶] Even five years after the Stipulation,
[Lara] does not send the proper payment.”
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The Co-conservators assert the award of attorney’s fees was within the court’s
jurisdiction because the fees were awarded in the trust portion of the case, not the
conservatorship portion of the case, and courts have jurisdiction to award attorney’s fees
in trust cases. Thus, Lara characterizes the case as a conservatorship matter, wherein
she alleges fees cannot be awarded, while Co-conservators/co-trustees characterize the
case as a trust matter, wherein attorney’s fees can be awarded.
In regard to conservatorship proceedings, section 2622.5, subdivision (a)
provides, “If the court determines that the objections were without reasonable cause and
in bad faith, the court may order the objector to pay the compensation and costs of the
conservator or guardian and other expenses and costs of litigation, including attorney’s
fees, incurred to defend the account. The objector shall be personally liable to the
guardianship or conservatorship estate for the amount ordered.” (Italics added.)
In regard to trust proceedings, section 17211, subdivision (a), provides: “If a
beneficiary contests the trustee’s account and the court determines that the contest was
without reasonable cause and in bad faith, the court may award against the contestant
the compensation and costs of the trustee and other expenses and costs of litigation,
including attorney’s fees, incurred to defend the account. The amount awarded shall be
a charge against any interest of the beneficiary in the trust. The contestant shall be
personally liable for any amount that remains unsatisfied.” (Italics added.)
In conservatorship proceedings and trust proceedings, a probate court can order a
party to pay attorney’s fees, if the party’s litigation is unreasonable and in bad faith. In
this case, the motions for attorney’s fees were based upon Lara’s allegedly bringing
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“frivolous issues raised in bad faith.” In its findings related to the attorney’s fees award,
the probate court described Lara’s failures to communicate and payment errors that
continued over a five-year period. The probate court’s findings reflect unreasonable
and bad faith actions taken by Lara. Accordingly, the probate court, in this hybrid
conservatorship-trust case, had jurisdiction to order Lara to pay attorney’s fees. (§§
2622.5, subd. (a), 17211, subd. (a).)
4. ESTOPPEL
Lara contends principles of estoppel prevent the probate court from ordering
Lara to pay attorney’s fees in the amount of $12,696.50, after the court had already
made an order requiring Lara to pay $5,000 in attorney’s fees. Lara asserts there was a
single bill of $12,696.50, and the court ordered Lara to pay $17,696.50 for that single
bill.
The doctrine of judicial estoppel “‘applies when “(1) the same party has taken
two positions; (2) the positions were taken in judicial or quasi-judicial administrative
proceedings; (3) the party was successful in asserting the first position (i.e., the tribunal
adopted the position or accepted it as true); (4) the two positions are totally inconsistent;
and (5) the first position was not taken as a result of ignorance, fraud, or mistake.”
[Citations.]’ [Citation.]” (Blix Street Records, Inc. v. Cassidy (2010) 191 Cal.App.4th
39, 47.)
There are three bills that are relevant to the instant inquiry. The first bill is
included in Ortiz’s petition for an order requiring the Co-conservators to pay her
attorney’s fees. The petition was filed August 20, 2010. The petition requests the Co-
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conservators pay Ortiz $8,381 for work performed from February 3, 2009, through July
29, 2010.
The second bill is included in Ortiz’s trial brief, which was filed February 9,
2011. In the brief, Ortiz asserts an issue for trial is whether Lara should be required to
pay attorney’s fees for bringing unreasonable and bad faith litigation. Ortiz asserts Lara
should be required to pay $7,927.75. The bill covers work performed from March 13,
2007, through July 29, 2010, and is limited to the work created by Lara’s actions or
inactions.
On February 9 and 10, 2011, the trial court held a “short cause trial” in the case.
In the “Order After Hearing,” the court ordered Lara to “pay $5,000 in sanctions for her
failure to adhere to the Stipulation dated March 14, 2006 . . . which thereby caused
[Mother] to incur attorney’s fees for Donnasue Smith Ortiz’[s] efforts to enforce the
Stipulation terms.” The Order After Hearing was not filed by the court until June 20,
2011; however, it corresponds to the February hearing, as evinced by: (1) the
introduction discussing the February hearing, and (2) the order reflecting February
dates. For example, part of the order reflects: Lara shall pay Ortiz $1,312 “for home
owners [sic] insurance now due on or before February 18, 2011.”
The third bill is mentioned in the Co-conservators’ motion for
sanctions/attorney’s fees, which was filed on May 17, 2011. In the motion, Co-
conservators request Lara pay attorney’s fees in the amount of $12,696.50. On August
25, 2011, Co-conservators filed a first amended final accounting, in which they again
requested Lara be ordered to pay $12,696.50 in attorney’s fees. The bill reflects it
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covers work performed by Ortiz from July 31, 2010, through April 4, 2011. On
February 23, 2012, the probate court issued a ruling ordering Lara to pay attorney’s fees
in the amount of $12,696.50.
The $5,000 bill resulted from the attorney’s fee bills for $8,381 (the whole bill)
or $7,927.75 (the bill focused on Lara’s issues), which both covered work performed
through July 29, 2010. The $5,000 award deals with one of these two bills because the
award was made following the February 2011 short cause trial, which occurred prior to
the requests for an award of $12,696.50.
Further, the $12,696.50 bill is separate from the $8,381 bill because the
$12,696.50 bill reflects a credit, paid by the Co-conservators for $8,381. So there was a
second, independent, bill with a total amount due of $12,696.50, which covered the
period from July 31, 2010 to April 4, 2011. Accordingly, there were two separate bills,
covering two different time periods. The court did not order Lara to pay $17,696.50 for
a single $12,696.50 bill; rather, the court ordered Lara to pay a total of $17,696.50 for
two bills that totaled approximately $21,077.50.
In sum, looking at the record, the awards do not conflict with one another such
that judicial estoppel should apply. The $5,000 award relates to the $8,381 bill or the
$7,927.75 bill, while the $12,696.50 award relates to the $12,696.50 bill. Thus, there is
not a changed position; the two awards concern separate matters. Accordingly, judicial
estoppel is not applicable.
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5. LAW OF THE CASE
Lara contends the doctrine of law of the case provides the court could not order
Lara to pay $5,000 in attorney’s fees and then make a second order requiring Lara to
pay $12,696.50 for the same bill.
“The law of the case doctrine states that when, in deciding an appeal, an
appellate court ‘states in its opinion a principle or rule of law necessary to the decision,
that principle or rule becomes the law of the case and must be adhered to throughout its
subsequent progress, both in the lower court and upon subsequent appeal . . . , and this
although in its subsequent consideration [the appellate] court may be clearly of the
opinion that the former decision is erroneous in that particular.’ [Citations.]” (Kowis v.
Howard (1992) 3 Cal.4th 888, 892-893.)
The probate court’s order concerning attorney’s fees does not fall within the law
of the case doctrine, since the law of the case doctrine is triggered by an appellate court
opinion. Accordingly, we conclude Lara’s reliance on the law of the case doctrine is
unpersuasive.
C. APPELLATE ATTORNEY’S FEES
Co-conservators request this court award them attorney’s fees on appeal, or, in
the alternative, direct the probate court to consider whether attorney’s fees should be
awarded to Co-conservators. Co-conservators assert Lara’s appeal is meritless and
frivolous. Co-conservators (1) do not explain how the issues raised in this hybrid
conservatorship and trust case are meritless, and (2) do not cite any law to support their
request. Accordingly, we deny Co-conservators’ request for attorney’s fees on appeal
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because they have not provided legal analysis. The denial is without prejudice to Co-
conservators seeking such fees in the probate court. (Banning v. Newdow (2004) 119
Cal.App.4th 438, 459.)
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. Respondents are awarded their costs on appeal.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
MILLER
J.
We concur:
RICHLI
Acting P. J.
CODRINGTON
J.
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