This opinion will be unpublished and
may not be cited except as provided by
Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).
STATE OF MINNESOTA
IN COURT OF APPEALS
A15-1546
In re the Conservatorship of:
Merritt Elmer Johnson, Protected Person
Filed June 6, 2016
Affirmed
Klaphake, Judge *
Hennepin County District Court
File No. 27-GC-PR-13-452
Matthew J. Schaap, Robert B. Bauer, Dougherty, Molenda, Solfest, Hills & Bauer P.A.,
Apple Valley, Minnesota (for appellant Nesvig)
Dennis J. Dietzler, Dietzler Law Office, Edina, Minnesota (for respondent Leonidas)
Considered and decided by Jesson, Presiding Judge; Kirk, Judge; and Klaphake,
Judge.
UNPUBLISHED OPINION
KLAPHAKE, Judge
In this dispute regarding the fees to be awarded to a conservator, appellant, the
emergency conservator’s attorney, argues that the district court (1) erred in denying
attorney fees for services that duplicated services performed by the emergency conservator;
*
Retired judge of the Minnesota Court of Appeals, serving by appointment pursuant to
Minn. Const. art. VI, § 10.
(2) failed to apply the correct test when addressing whether to award the fees in question;
and (3) failed to make adequate findings of fact explaining why certain fees were denied.
Because the district court correctly applied the law and the findings are sufficient to permit
appellate review, we affirm.
DECISION
An attorney who provides “necessary services with regard to the appointment of a
guardian or conservator” or “the administration of the protected person’s estate or personal
affairs . . . shall be entitled to compensation from the protected person’s estate.” Minn.
Stat. § 524.5-502(b) (2014). We review a district court’s award of attorney fees for an
abuse of discretion, and the reasonableness of fees is a fact question the district court’s
resolution of which we will not set aside unless clearly erroneous. In re Conservatorship
of Mansur, 367 N.W.2d 550, 552 (Minn. App. 1985), review denied (Minn. July 11, 1985).
In September 2013, the district court appointed Mary Johnson emergency
conservator of her brother-in-law, 93-year-old Merritt Johnson, who had been swindled out
of about $40,000. Mary Johnson hired appellant-attorney R. Gordon Nesvig to represent
her in the conservatorship proceeding and assist her in protecting Merritt Johnson’s assets.
In January 2014, the district court added respondent Lisa Leonidas as emergency co-
conservator.
On April 10, 2014, the emergency conservatorship ended, and Leonidas became the
sole general conservator. Nesvig filed a final account for the emergency conservatorship
in the district court, which included $35,356.71 in attorney fees billed at the rate of $240
per hour. Leonidas submitted a letter to the district court objecting to the amount of
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attorney fees. And an account technician for the Minnesota Judicial Branch’s Conservator
Account Auditing Program (CAAP) filed an audit report. The report questioned the
reasonableness of 43.25 hours of services billed at $240 per hour, which totaled $10,380,
for noncourt related services performed with Mary Johnson. The questioned services
included going to the bank to open and close accounts, going to Merritt Johnson’s residence
with Mary Johnson to explain court procedure, and meeting with Mary Johnson to sort mail
and pay bills.
Following an evidentiary hearing, a district court referee recommended reducing
Nesvig’s attorney fees by $9,192, and the district court confirmed the referee’s decision.
Nesvig filed a notice of review of the account order, and the district court affirmed the
account order, stating:
[The referee] based his reduction in fees on the duplication of
services between the attorney and the conservator, and the fact
that these administrative tasks “should have been charged at a
conservator rate rather than an attorney rate.” In his Order and
during the trial on the matter, only the most egregious
examples of duplication were addressed (i.e. “playing the court
conservatorship video for the conservator, opening a checking
account, writing out checks.”) However, nothing in the
statutory or common law suggests the referee must make
specific reference to each line item and amount in determining
the overall reasonableness of professional fees. It was within
[the referee’s] discretion to deny all the professional fees
charged to the protected person’s estate. His reasonable
reduction of $9,192 for clearly duplicative fees out of a total of
$35,356.71 charged by Mr. Nesvig to the estate was warranted.
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Absent a prior agreement, courts consider the following factors when determining
whether the attorney fees are fair and reasonable:
(1) the time and labor required;
(2) the experience and knowledge of the attorney;
(3) the complexity and novelty of problems involved;
(4) the extent of the responsibilities assumed and the results
obtained; and
(5) the sufficiency of assets properly available to pay for
the services.
Minn. Stat. § 525.515(b) (2014); see Mansur, 367 N.W.2d at 553 (stating that these factors
apply to conservatorship cases.).
Time and Labor Required
Nesvig argues that “[s]ignificant time and labor were required to prevent Merritt
Johnson from transferring his assets to con artists” and that Mary Johnson needed “Nesvig
to provide professional judgment and legal guidance.” He testified that Mary Johnson was
unsophisticated and a cautious conservator who relied significantly on Nesvig to provide
advice regarding most conservatorship matters.
Nesvig testified that Mary Johnson asked him to come to the bank with her to talk
to a banker about what could be done to stop Merritt Johnson’s spending. The banker
suggested a conservatorship, which he and Mary Johnson had already been contemplating.
The bank closed Merritt Johnson’s accounts because it was concerned about his spending
and issued two checks, each for over $30,000. The bank intended to give the checks to
Merritt Johnson, so Nesvig again accompanied Mary Johnson to the bank. The bank,
however, refused to give the checks to Mary Johnson because she had not yet been
appointed emergency conservator and mailed them to Merritt Johnson. Mary Johnson
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failed to intercept the checks and Merritt Johnson received them, so Nesvig and Mary
Johnson called the bank to try to get the bank to stop payment on the checks. A banker
suggested that they bring Merritt Johnson to the bank, so Nesvig accompanied Merritt
Johnson and Mary Johnson to the bank, and a banker persuaded Merritt Johnson to turn
over the checks to Mary Johnson.
Nesvig testified as follows about helping Mary Johnson with paying bills:
I have learned from years of experience it saves all kinds of
time in the long run if I keep it up on a monthly basis. And
now with the check system you don’t always get copies of the
checks back. They are processed electronically so we always
try to keep copies of the check and the bill as we did it, register
it in the check register so that when it came time to do the final
account it was far, far easier than if we had not done it that way.
Also, Mary did not have a copy machine.
Four letters from Nesvig to Leonidas and one from Nesvig to Leonidas’s attorney about
bills that Nesvig had assisted Mary Johnson with were admitted into evidence. The bills
included a payment due for phone service; an offer of renewal of Merritt Johnson’s auto
insurance policy, which Nesvig recommended not be renewed for liability reasons; and an
offer to renew Merritt Johnson’s AAA membership, which Nesvig noted was optional.
Regarding visiting Merritt Johnson with Mary Johnson, Nesvig testified that the
visit occurred before Mary Johnson was appointed emergency conservator and before
Merritt Johnson was represented by a court-appointed attorney and that the visit was
suggested by the district court referee. But on cross-examination, Nesvig admitted that he
did not know if the referee wanted him to accompany Mary Johnson to talk to Merritt
Johnson about the conservatorship.
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Although significant time and labor and an attorney’s expertise may have been
required to protect Merritt Johnson’s estate, Nesvig does not explain why an attorney’s
expertise was needed to perform the services for which fees were denied. Nesvig’s own
testimony shows that an attorney’s expertise was not required to help Mary Johnson by
accompanying her to the bank, overseeing routine bill paying, and helping explain the
conservatorship to Merritt Johnson. To the extent needed, a conservator could have
assisted Mary Johnson with such tasks, and the record contains evidence that the standard
rates charged by conservators range from $20 to $30 per hour.
Attorney’s Knowledge and Experience
Nesvig argues that he has over 40 years of experience in conservatorship, tax, and
criminal cases and that his rate of $240 per hour is “exceedingly reasonable.” But Nesvig’s
billing rate for necessary legal services was not contested. The district court found that
services provided to assist Mary Johnson with administrative tasks should have been billed
at the rate charged by conservators.
Complexity and Novelty of Problems Involved
Although there was evidence that administration of Merritt Johnson’s estate was
complex due to his vulnerability to con artists, the record does not show that the denied
fees were related to the complex issues. Nesvig cites intercepting and reviewing Merritt
Johnson’s mail as a complexity. But routine bills and correspondence could have been
screened out by a conservator and did not require Nesvig’s expertise.
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Extent of Responsibilities Assumed and Results Obtained
Nesvig argues that the outcome of his efforts was completely successful because
Merritt Johnson did not lose any additional assets to con artists after Nesvig became
involved in the case. Although Nesvig successfully protected Merritt Johnson’s estate, it
was not necessary for Nesvig to perform clerical or administrative tasks. Again, such
services could have been provided by a conservator at a lower billing rate.
Sufficiency of Assets to pay for Services
It is not contested that Merritt’s Johnson’s assets were sufficient to pay the amount
billed by Nesvig.
Reasonableness of Fees
Nesvig argues that the district court acknowledged the five-factor test but ignored
it. A district court abuses its discretion when it fails to consider required factors when
awarding attorney fees. Miller, 642 N.W.2d at 77. And when the reasonableness of fees
is challenged, the district court must explain the reasons for the fee award. Anderson v.
Hunter, Keith, Marshall & Co., 417 N.W.2d 619, 629 (Minn. 1988). In protection cases,
a district court has a responsibility to review carefully the detail of fees charged to the
estate. In re Guardianship of Doyle, 778 N.W.2d 342, 347-48 (Minn. App. 2010).
Nesvig argues that the findings were inadequate to explain the lump-sum denial of
fees. The district court’s denial of $9,192 represents 38.3 hours of Nesvig’s time. The
district court explained its reasons for denying fees for performing administrative tasks.
Although the district court’s findings did not address line-item amounts, the CAAP report
questioned 43 hours of Nesvig’s time, and the record evidence shows that an attorney’s
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expertise was not required to perform the questioned services. We, therefore, conclude
that the district court did not abuse its discretion in its denial of fees.
Affirmed.
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