PEPPERS CEMETERY FOUNDATION, and OPAL MASSEY, Plaintiff-Respondent v. DANNY W. MCKINNEY, TRUSTEE of the Revocable Living Trust Agreement of Norma C. Bennett and Pearl L. Bennett DANNY W. MCKINNEY, individually NADINE M. MCKINNEY, and TRINITY EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH OF LEBANON, MISSOURI, Defendants-Respondents.
PEPPERS CEMETERY FOUNDATION, )
)
Plaintiff-Appellant, )
and )
)
OPAL MASSEY, )
)
Plaintiff-Respondent, )
v. ) No. SD33320
)
DANNY W. MCKINNEY, TRUSTEE ) Filed: Feb. 4, 2015
of the Revocable Living Trust Agreement )
of Norman C. Bennett and Pearl L. Bennett; )
DANNY W. MCKINNEY, individually; )
NADINE M. MCKINNEY, and TRINITY )
EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH )
OF LEBANON, MISSOURI, )
)
Defendants-Respondents. )
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF LACLEDE COUNTY
Honorable Steven B. Jackson, Associate Circuit Judge
AFFIRMED
Plaintiff Peppers Cemetery Foundation ("Foundation") appeals the portion of a
judgment of the probate division of the circuit court ("the trial court") that ordered
Foundation to pay $2,000 to Plaintiff Opal Massey ("Respondent") for attorney fees she
incurred ("the additional attorney fees") in connection with her motion to enforce a
settlement agreement the parties had reached in their lawsuit over the proper
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administration and distribution of the assets of a trust.1 The payment of other specified
attorney fees to separate lawyers for Foundation ($1,500) and Respondent ($13,500)
("original attorney fees") from the trust had been agreed upon in a Memorandum of
Agreement ("the Memorandum") signed on behalf of all parties (as well as counsel for
the represented parties) at the conclusion of a May 2012 mediation session.2
Foundation contends the trial court erred in awarding the additional attorney fees
"as a result of [Foundation's] attempt to inquire into the reasonableness of" Respondent's
original attorney fees "because the reasonableness of the attorney's fee claim is an
implied term of the mediated settlement." Because the trial court had broad discretion
under section 456.10-10043 to award reasonable attorney fees, and Foundation has failed
to prove that the trial court abused that discretion, we affirm.
Facts and Procedural Background
In February 2012, Respondent and Foundation, as beneficiaries of the trust, filed
their joint petition, which asserted nine counts for relief. In March 2012, the parties
stipulated that they would complete mediation within 90 days. Foundation agrees in its
brief (citing the enforcement motion) that mediation was held, and "the parties set out the
essential terms of an agreement for settlement of the case" in the Memorandum.
The Memorandum, dated May 14, 2012, provided for the payment of specific
sums from the trust to Foundation, Respondent, the Church, and Mr. McKinney. It then
provided:
From the balance left in the trust is to be deducted $1,500.00
attorney fees to Angela C. Rieschel [("Foundation counsel")] and
1
We will refer to Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church of Lebanon, Missouri as "the Church". Foundation
and Respondent are the only parties that have filed a brief in this appeal.
2
Counsel for the Church subsequently entered the case in December 2013.
3
RSMo Cum. Supp. 2012.
2
$13,500.00 attorney fees to Heather McBride [("Respondent counsel")].
After those amounts are deducted, the balances of proceeds are to be
divided one fourth each to the [Church], [Respondent], [Foundation,] and
[Mr.] McKinney. [Mr.] McKinney is responsible for paying David
Wilhite's attorney fees [Mr. Wilhite had represented the McKinneys
individually and Mr. McKinney as successor trustee].
This agreement resolves all issues in the above styled case.
In its statement of facts, Foundation asserts4 that on October 17, 2012, "the parties
reached agreement that a circulated settlement agreement contained correct terms."
Foundation subsequently notified Respondent that "it would not sign the settlement
agreement" and "[s]tarting on October 24, 2012, [Foundation] sought an itemized
statement of [Respondent's] attorney fee invoices for [Respondent's counsel] verifying
the $13,500 incurred by [Respondent]."
In February 2014, Respondent filed the enforcement motion, which incorporated
an unexecuted "Settlement and Release Agreement" ("the Settlement Agreement"), other
documents related to the Settlement Agreement, and Respondent counsel's affidavit
affirming the truth of the matters stated in the enforcement motion. The enforcement
motion also sought additional attorney fees against Foundation in favor of Respondent for
services performed in "the researching, drafting, filing, and argument of" the enforcement
motion, and it stated that the attorney fees had "exceed[ed] the amount set forth in the
Memorandum[.]" Respondent argued that the enforcement motion "would not have been
necessary but for [Foundation's] refusal to sign documents evidencing the agreement it
and the other parties to this case made following mediation in May 2012." The
McKinneys also joined in the enforcement motion.
4
Foundation cites assertions in Respondent's enforcement motion as the record supporting the statements
of fact addressed in this paragraph.
3
A February 13, 2014 hearing was held on the matter, but it was not recorded. The
next day, the trial court entered an order stating that all parties had agreed that the
Memorandum was "enforceable, and that all parties [were] in agreement that the
settlement documents" also included with the enforcement motion were "correct." The
order noted that "Foundation argued it should be permitted to review [Respondent's]
attorney fees invoices for reasonableness of the fees." The order also stated that
Respondent objected on the grounds of privilege and argued that the Memorandum did
not require any review for reasonableness, but "[t]o dispose of this matter," Respondent
asked the trial court to review the invoices "in camera and under seal[.]" The order also
stated that "Foundation agreed to the same." Respondent counsel was ordered to submit
"her firm invoices for work performed and costs incurred by [Respondent] in the above-
captioned matter." Finally, the order stated that the trial court would review the "invoices
for reasonableness, and the Court's determination of the same shall be final and binding
on all parties."
On March 4th, the trial court entered an order sustaining the enforcement motion
and directing the parties "to execute the [Settlement Agreement], and all exhibits
thereto," in a form revised to show counsel for the Church and current dates for the
execution of the documents. The order reflected the receipt of "itemized copies of all
attorney fees and costs incurred by [Respondent] from the inception of this matter to
date." It found that original attorney fees of $13,500 referenced in the Memorandum for
Respondent counsel were "appropriate and reasonable for the services performed by
[Respondent's] counsel on her behalf in this matter." It sustained Respondent's request
for additional attorney fees and directed that the payment to Foundation under the
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Settlement Agreement be offset by $2,000 in order to pay this amount for such fees to
Respondent.
The trial court entered its "FINAL JUDGMENT" on March 12th. The judgment
stated, inter alia, that "without presentation of any evidence, all parties agreed
[Respondent] would file itemized billing records under seal for the Court's in camera
review. [Respondent] also requested attorney fees for bringing the [enforcement motion]
and [Foundation] objected." The judgment made orders consistent with the March 4th
order, including reference to the finding that the preparation, filing, and argument of the
enforcement motion along with the preparation of a "proposed order would not have been
necessary but for [Foundation's] refusal to sign the settlement documents and
[Respondent] should receive additional attorney fees in the amount of Two Thousand
Dollars ($2,000.00) as a reasonable fee."
Foundation timely filed a "MOTION FOR NEW TRIAL AND MOTION FOR
RECONSIDERATION, OR, IN THE ALTERNATIVE, MOTION TO AMEND THE
JUDGMENT AND SUGGESTIONS IN SUPPORT" ("new trial motion"). Foundation
asserted that: Respondent "presented no evidence" concerning additional attorney fees;
had such evidence been presented, Foundation "would have presented evidence in
opposition and . . . preserved objections"; it was appropriate for Foundation to inquire
into the reasonableness of Respondent's original attorney fees; and the trial court abused
its discretion in awarding the additional attorney fees. During argument on the new trial
motion, Foundation's counsel suggested that Respondent had not requested additional
attorney fees at the February 13th hearing and that "[i]f she had requested attorney fees,
we would have asked for a hearing and presented evidence that the documents, number
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one, were not presented -- were not properly prepared." Foundation counsel concluded
her argument by stating:
We don't have any problem with the judgment except for the part where it
says that there was evidence presented on the additional attorney fees of
$2,000 and that we objected. We didn't object because there was no
request made to the Court. And we would respectfully ask the Court to
omit that in the judgment or, at least, set a hearing so we can say our
piece.
The trial court summarized its recollection of the "last hearing that led to this."
That summary included the following:
I can tell you without question that I heard [Respondent counsel] bring up
the issue that she had had to bring this action and would request fees for
that. I don't remember an actual amount being suggested. I do remember
[Respondent counsel] specifically saying that there had been additional
costs incurred and that they would seek that. And I believe it's also set
forth -- I'd have to pull the motion, but I believe it's requested in the
motion. So I believe it's been pled, I believe it was requested.
The trial court also recalled:
[I]t was agreed to and this matter was taken up with no record, no other
evidence presented by agreement of the parties. The issue of additional
attorney's fees was submitted as being requested by [Respondent counsel].
I don't know why anyone or no one else heard it. I can tell you
unequivocally I heard it.
None of these recollections are refuted by the record on appeal. The trial court also
observed that Respondent counsel's "documents ha[d] proposed $6,000" for additional
attorney fees. The trial court noted its position as an expert on attorney fees, an
awareness of what it believed local attorneys would have charged, and that it had
reviewed "the actual documents prepared and submitted . . . as well as holding the
hearings" so as to "assess a value of" the services rendered concerning the enforcement
motion at $2,000.
The trial court denied the new trial motion, and this appeal timely followed.
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Applicable Principles of Review and Governing Law
"The general rule is that in reviewing a court-tried case, we will affirm the
judgment unless it is against the weight of the evidence, there is no substantial evidence
to support it, or the trial court has erroneously applied or declared the law." Muilenburg,
Inc. v. Cherokee Rose Design & Build, L.L.C., 250 S.W.3d 848, 851 (Mo. App. S.D.
2008). "In a judicial proceeding involving the administration of a trust, the court, as
justice and equity may require, may award costs and expenses, including reasonable
attorney's fees, to any party, to be paid by another party or from the trust that is the
subject of the controversy." Section 456.10-1004.
Where the legislature statutorily authorizes an award of attorney's
fees in the discretion of the trial court as in this case, the decision to grant
or deny attorney's fees is reviewable for an abuse of discretion. In re Gene
Wild Revocable Trust, 299 S.W.3d [767,] 782 [(Mo. App. S.D. 2009)].
The trial court abuses its discretion in awarding attorney's fees if the
award is either arbitrarily arrived at or so unreasonable as to indicate
indifference and lack of proper judicial consideration. Id. (internal quotes
and citation omitted). "An award of attorney's fees is presumed to be
correct, with the burden on the complaining party to prove otherwise." Id.
(internal quotes and citation omitted). When reviewing a challenge to an
attorney's fees award, the appellate court gives deference to the discretion
of the trial judge who, by virtue of his or her office and experience, is
considered an expert in determining the proper amount of compensation
for legal services.
O'Riley v. U.S. Bank, N.A., 412 S.W.3d 400, 418-19 (Mo. App. W.D. 2013).
Analysis
Foundation's point contends the trial court erred in awarding Respondent the
additional attorney fees, but it does not identify the nature of the error requiring reversal.
The point alleges that the award of the additional attorney fees resulted from Foundation's
"attempt to inquire into the reasonableness of" Respondent's original attorney fees and
such reasonableness "is an implied term of the mediated settlement." The point does not
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contend that the amount of the additional attorney fees is unreasonable, and in its
argument supporting the point, Foundation "abandons its inquiry into the reasonableness
of the $13,500 attorney's fee claim[.]"
Foundation's supporting argument maintains that "[t]he award of $2,000 for
[additional] attorney's fees had no basis in law as [Foundation] properly policed the
bargain when it inquired into the reasonableness of [Respondent's attorney] fees" and that
Foundation "merely seeks not to be penalized for having inquired into [the]
reasonableness" of Respondent's original attorney fees.5 But section 456.10-1004
explicitly provides a legal basis for a trial court to award attorney fees in any case
involving the administration of a trust. O'Riley, 412 S.W.3d at 418. We therefore
interpret Foundation's claim on appeal to be that the trial court abused its discretion in
ordering Foundation to pay the additional attorney fees because Foundation was entitled
to question the reasonableness of Respondent's original attorney fees under the parties'
mediated agreement.
Foundation argues that "reasonableness is an implied term in every contract for
attorney's fees[,]" quoting State ex rel. Chase Resorts, Inc. v. Campbell, 913 S.W.2d
832, 835 (Mo. App. E.D. 1995). The contract in that case was an insurance policy that
provided for the reimbursement of expenses, including legal fees, incurred in defending a
claim. Id. at 834. It does not appear that the precise amount of legal fees was specified
in that contract. Id. The court found that while the policy did not "expressly limit [the
insured's] reimbursement to fees reasonably incurred"; it also found that "an attorney, as a
5
Foundation also argues that Respondent counsel's invoices were submitted to the trial court under seal so
that it did not see them and that these documents were not actually admitted into evidence, but such issues
are not preserved for review as they were not raised in the point relied on. Hollida v. Hollida, 131 S.W.3d
911, 916 n.6 (Mo. App. S.D. 2004). And, as noted above, Foundation expressly abandons its inquiry into
the reasonableness of Respondent counsel's original attorney fees.
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fiduciary, cannot bind his client to pay a greater compensation for his services than the
attorney would have the right to demand if no contract had been made." Id. at 835. As a
result, the insurance company could inquire into the reasonableness of attorney fees
billed to the insured. Id. However, the opinion also noted that "[t]he trial court, as an
expert on attorney's fees, may award reasonable amounts as a matter of law." Id.
This case is similar to Chase Resorts in that it involves the agreement of a third
party (Foundation) that allows the attorney fees of another party (Respondent) to be paid
in a manner that affects Foundation's own interests as a trust beneficiary. But unlike
Chase Resorts, see id. at 834, the Memorandum expressed an agreement by Foundation
that Respondent counsel would be paid a precise figure for attorney fees, and it did not
express any limitation or qualification on the agreement to pay that exact figure.
In any event, we need not decide whether these distinctions mean that Foundation
was prohibited by the terms of the Memorandum from challenging the reasonableness of
the original attorney fees such that it would have been proper to "penalize" Foundation by
awarding the additional attorney fees. The trial court's discretion in awarding attorney
fees "[i]n a judicial proceeding involving the administration of a trust" under section
456.10-1004 is not limited to instances where a "penalty" is warranted. "Instead, it leaves
the award to the trial court's determination of what 'equity and justice' require." Rouner
v. Wise, 446 S.W.3d 242, 260 (Mo. banc 2014). "Section 456.10-1004 is a discretionary
statute." Lehmann v. Bank of America, N.A., 427 S.W.3d 315, 324 (Mo. App. E.D.
2014); see also Gene Wild Revocable Trust, 299 S.W.3d at 784 (the trial court's finding
that the payment of the attorney fees should be taken out of the trust before its division
was "the province of the probate court within its sound discretion").
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As a result, we cannot find that the trial court's award of the additional attorney
fees was "either arbitrarily arrived at or so unreasonable as to indicate indifference and
lack of proper judicial consideration." Id. at 782 (quotations and internal citations
omitted). Foundation's point is denied, and the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
DON E. BURRELL, J. - OPINION AUTHOR
NANCY STEFFEN RAHMEYER, J. - CONCURS
GARY W. LYNCH, J. - CONCURS
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