Filed 4/5/21 Belcher v. Bakkers CA4/3
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION THREE
JOHN A. BELCHER,
Petitioner and Appellant, G058893
v. (Super. Ct. No. 30-2018-01018203)
MICHAEL Y.C. BAKKERS, OPINION
Objector and Respondent.
Appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, Jacki C.
Brown, Judge. Affirmed.
Law Offices of John A. Belcher and John A. Belcher for Petitioner and
Appellant.
No appearance by Objector and Respondent.
This appeal concerns John A. Belcher’s petition for payment of attorney
fees and reimbursement of costs from Paul Bakkers’ estate (Estate). For three years,
1
Belcher rendered legal services to Paul, and others in the Bakkers family, in litigation
involving assets held in a family trust (Trust). Belcher asserts the probate court
erroneously determined he must file a creditor’s claim against the Estate and improperly
denied his petition for attorney fees. We affirm the court’s order.
FACTS
Paul and his wife, Joan Bakkers, hired Belcher to litigate a lawsuit they
filed against their son, Michael Bakkers. The retainer agreement, dated January 26, 2016,
stated the parties agreed Belcher would represent Paul, Joan, and their daughter Gaby
Bakkers “as Trustees of the Bakkers Living Trust,” in an action against Michael, his
company Southwest Credit Company, and his girlfriend Linh Nguyen.
In the lawsuit, Paul and Joan alleged Michael was liable for financial elder
abuse and other claims based on their belief he gained access to their finances and stole
from them. (Bakkers v. Bakkers (Jan. 24, 2019, G054865) [nonpub. opn.] (Bakkers I).)
In addition, they alleged Michael wrongfully designated himself as a joint tenant on the
grant deed of their primary residence, located on Juanita Way in Placentia (Juanita
Property). Michael used the property as security for a $700,000 loan, placing a lien on
the Juanita Property. (Bakkers I, supra, G054865.). Paul and Joan owned an investment
property located on Whitman Drive in Placentia (Whitman Property), and they alleged
Michael wrongfully forced Joan to withdraw $375,000 cash to purchase the property
from another son, Andrew Bakkers, when the home was going into foreclosure. (Bakkers
I, supra, G054865.) Michael and Nguyen recorded a $375,000 deed of trust against the
Whitman Property. The Juanita Property and the Whitman Property were included on the
Trust’s schedule of assets.
1
For the sake of clarity and to avoid confusion, we refer to members of the
Bakkers family by their first names.
2
Relevant to this appeal, the retainer agreement contained the following fee
provision: “The representation will be handled on a contingent fee basis with our fee
being dependent upon recovery through settlement or trial . . . . Our fee will be equal to
40 [percent] of any ‘net recovery’ as hereafter defined. In addition to the percentages of
cash as our fee, in the event of a success in removing liens or recovering title we will
receive an additional fee. As an additional fee, we will receive $100,000 if [the Juanita
Property] is deeded back to plaintiffs. In addition, we will receive $80,000 if the lien on
[the Whitman Property] is released and title is restored to plaintiffs.” The agreement also
specified the client would be responsible for all costs and expenses associated with
litigation. Additionally, the parties agreed Belcher “shall have a lien for fees and costs”
and the lien would attach to “any and all real property of the client, including any
recovery the client may obtain . . . in this matter.”
Neither Paul nor Joan survived the final resolution of their case. Joan died
prior to prevailing at trial, and Paul died while the appeal was pending. After some
delay, the probate court appointed a special administrator to represent the Estate on
appeal. This court affirmed the judgment cancelling Michael’s joint tenancy claim to the
Juanita Property, restoring title to the Trust, and cancelling the $700,000 lien. We also
affirmed the court’s ruling to restore the entire Whitman Property to the Trust, without
any liens. (Bakkers I, supra, G054865.)
Because it is relevant to this appeal, we will briefly digress to discuss facts
relating to the special administrator. After Paul passed away, we gave Belcher time to
file a party substitution motion. We denied Belcher’s first motion to substitute Gaby as
respondent in place of Paul because counsel failed to comply with Code of Civil
Procedure section 337.32. (Bakkers v. Bakkers (July 17, 2018, G054865) [nonpub.
order].) Despite being given 60 days, Belcher failed to file a party substitution motion
and this court held oral argument. (Bakkers v. Bakkers (Sept. 19, 2018, G054865)
[nonpub. order].)
3
Before we filed the opinion in Bakkers I, counsel filed a request for judicial
notice “of the probate court’s order appointing Robert M. Newell, Jr., as special
administrator ‘limited to the pending appeal litigation for purposes of standing.’”
(Bakkers I, supra, G054865.) As noted in our prior opinion, the probate court cautioned,
“‘These Special Letters do not extend beyond the powers needed to represent the estate in
the pending appeal[]’” and the letters expired at the conclusion of the appeal. (Ibid.) As
part of our written opinion, we granted Belcher’s motion to substitute Newall as a party
for Paul. (Bakkers I, G054865.)
In February 2019, approximately one month after we issued the Bakkers I
opinion, Belcher filed a “petition for approval and order for payment of attorney[] fees
and reimbursement of costs[]” (Fee Petition). (Capitalization omitted.) Noticeably
absent from the Fee Petition was any legal authority authorizing the probate court to pay
Belcher’s attorney fees and costs. He requested $180,000 in attorney fees “as provided
for in the retainer agreement, for successfully removing the fraudulent liens on the
[Juanita and Whitman] Properties,” as well as $7,756.93 in costs and expenses incurred
during the lawsuit. Belcher noted the request was reasonable because he spent over 700
hours on the case and he typically charged $500 per hour.
Michael, as a self-represented litigant, filed an objection. He argued his
90- year-old parents lacked the mental capacity to enter into the contingency fee
agreement.
A few months later, Belcher filed a creditor’s claim for $190,715. The
Judicial Council’s form requested facts supporting the claim. Belcher wrote that from
January 2016 to January 2019, he was owed $180,000 in attorney fees pursuant to a
contingency agreement. He calculated that from July 2014 through June 2018, he was
owed $10,715 for “[c]osts accrued including court fees, depositions, [and] shipping
costs[.]” He served a copy of the creditor’s claim to Newell by mail.
4
At the hearing on the Fee Petition, Belcher submitted evidence showing he
and his associate spent over 700 hours working on the case and the appeal. On the
second day of the hearing, the probate court stopped the proceedings and, on its own
motion, set an order to show cause (OSC) “against the petitioner for failing to comply
with the mandatory statutory procedures for a creditor’s claim in a probate proceeding.”
In its written order, the court noted Michael, a self-represented litigant, did not know how
to file a demurrer to the improper Fee Petition. The court explained Belcher failed to
address “the obvious anomaly that this request for attorney[] fees stemmed from a civil
lawsuit fully litigated before Paul[’s] . . . death, but not affirmed on appeal until after
[his] passing,” and therefore, it was a creditor’s claim against Paul’s estate. It asked the
parties to file briefing on this issue.
In his briefing, Belcher asserted he did not have to file a creditor’s claim for
two reasons. He maintained there were currently competing petitions for appointment of
a personal representative and a creditor cannot file a claim until after receiving the
personal representative’s notice of administration of the estate. (Prob. Code, § 9100,
2
subd. (a) [deadlines for creditor’s claims].) He reasoned that because the court had not
yet resolved the issue of who would serve as the Estate’s personal representative, no
official notice had been sent to creditors, and the section 9100 timelines were not
triggered. Second, Belcher concluded the time was “[r]ipe” for the court to adjudicate his
Fee Petition because the court had already “heard and granted” petitions filed by two
other attorneys. He submitted copies of the probate court’s prior orders approving and
paying attorney fees and costs incurred by Paul’s temporary conservative, Cheryl Walsh,
and the guardian ad litem, Ernest Hayward. Belcher asserted his fees, incurred to
preserve the Estate’s “only assets,” were a proper expense of administration and must be
given a higher priority of distribution than any other creditor claims.
2
All further statutory references are to the Probate Code, unless otherwise
indicated.
5
The probate court held the OSC hearing in early January 2020. It issued a
lengthy statement of decision denying Belcher’s Fee Petition. After summarizing the
underlying facts, the court stated it appreciated Belcher believed his fees and costs
represented expenses incurred by the Estate because his legal efforts returned assets to
the Trust. However, it was not pleased with Belcher’s efforts at the OSC hearing to
change his request from $180,000 to over $400,000. In the statement of decision, the
court commented Belcher submitted 15 pages of time sheets and “[a]lthough not
requested in his petition, [Belcher] . . . argued that a reasonable fee should be the total of
his hourly services multiplied by 33 [percent] for a total amount of $434,600, instead of
the $180,000 plus costs requested in his petition’s prayer.” The court also pointed out
Belcher covered his bases by filing both the Fee Petition and creditor’s claim (served on
Newell, the person appointed as a special administrator during the appeal). The court
noted the Estate did not currently have a special administrator but there were currently
“competing petitions for appointment as special administrator . . . filed by [Gaby] and
[Michael] . . . [and] set for [a] joint trial on January 13, 2020 . . . .”
Considering the facts and arguments presented, the probate court made the
following ruling: “The [c]ourt does not make any findings or rulings as to whether
[Belcher] has a valid creditor’s claim or if it is time-barred; that is not before the [c]ourt.
The [c]ourt, however, finds that any remedial action by [Belcher] is limited to the
contractual terms laid out in the retainer agreement (Exh[ibit No.] 201), and that
agreement was not for legal services to the probate [E]state. It is a contractual obligation
between Belcher and [Paul] as an individual—or [Joan and Gaby] as trustees of the
[Trust]. [Belcher] cannot now change the terms of his fee agreement, nor can he argue to
this [c]ourt that he is entitled to greater fees than the 40 [percent] recovery augmented by
the $180,000[] as detailed in the retainer agreement. However, the petition itself ‘prays’
6
for an order for payment of attorney[] fees in the amount of $180,000[] plus
reimbursement of costs in the amount of $7,756.93 and nothing more. At trial, he argued
for substantially more, using a multiplier of 33 [percent]. [¶] The [c]ourt now orders
entry of judgment against the petitioner as the attorney fee request is for legal services
rendered to the decedent(s) before [they died], although the final opinion in the appeal
still had to be received. Thus, the fees are owed to Belcher from [the Estate] in the form
of a creditor’s claim.”
The last section of the statement of decision discussed the reasons why
Belcher’s legal authority was inapplicable. The court also rejected Belcher’s assertion
the court should invoke its equitable powers on his behalf because to deny him fees
would be unjust and unfair. The court responded, “But this [c]ourt is not entertaining
anything about a creditor’s claim for this amount; that appears to still be pending, having
been filed in June 2019[,] but awaiting appointment under competing petitions of the
special administrator. [¶] The [c]ourt grants its own motion entering judgment against
[Belcher].”
DISCUSSION
Simply stated, the sole legal issue we must decide in this case is what
procedures apply for an attorney seeking payment of fees and costs from a deceased
client. As will be explained in more detail below, Belcher’s contingency fee agreement
with Paul created an attorney charging lien, which has not yet been adjudicated to
establish its existence or the amount secured. While we are sympathetic to Belcher’s
predicament of having to wait further to be paid for his legal services in this lengthy
dispute, his only option is to file a creditor’s claim because establishing a viable lien
requires resolution of the decedent’s personal liability. As noted by the probate court, its
denial of the Fee Petition had no effect on Belcher’s ability to pursue his creditor’s claim.
We affirm the ruling.
7
I. Applicable Legal Principles
A. Section 2631 Petitions
We begin with legal authority relating to Belcher’s assertion his petition
was the proper mechanism for seeking attorney fees because the court authorized
payment to two other attorneys. The record shows that in 2018 (soon after Paul died), the
court considered petitions seeking “approval and order” for payments of attorney fees
incurred by Paul’s conservator and guardian ad litem. Belcher fails to appreciate court-
approved attorney fees and expenses incurred by conservators and guardians are
3
specifically authorized by statute. (§ 2631, subd. (a).) Belcher fails to cite to any
statutory authority, and we found none, permitting the court to authorize or order the
payment of fees incurred by legal counsel hired by the decedent before his death. Section
2631 does not assist Belcher in this appeal.
B. Claims of Creditors
“‘“A probate or trust estate is not a legal entity; it is simply a collection of
assets and liabilities. As such, it has no capacity to sue or be sued, or to defend an action.
Any litigation must be maintained by, or against, the executor [or personal representative]
of the estate.”’ [Citation.]” (Smith v. Cimmet (2011) 199 Cal.App.4th 1381, 1390-1391,
fn. omitted.)
“Generally, anyone who demands payment from an estate, based on a debt
or the liability of the decedent, must file a claim against the estate in accordance with the
requirements of the Probate Code. Even though the statute of limitations may have a
3
Section 2631 provides the following: “(a) Upon the death of the ward or
conservatee, the guardian or conservator may contract for and pay a reasonable sum for
the expenses of the last illness and the disposition of the remains of the deceased ward or
conservatee, and for unpaid court-approved attorney’s fees, and may pay the unpaid
expenses of the guardianship or conservatorship accruing before or after the death of the
ward or conservatee, in full or in part, to the extent reasonable, from any personal
property of the deceased ward or conservatee which is under the control of the guardian
or conservator.”
8
long time to run on an action, probate statutes generally require the filing of claims within
a shorter time period. The purpose of the requirement is to give the representative an
opportunity to ascertain speedily the obligations against the estate and the method of
payment. [Citation.] All claims must be filed in the manner and within the time provided
under . . . sections 9000 et seq., and any claim that is not so filed is barred. [Citation.]
However, the creditor’s duty to file a claim is not triggered unless the personal
representative gives proper notice of administration. [Citation.]” (Gold, et al., Cal. Civil
Practice: Probate & Trust Proceedings (2020) ¶ 13:1.)
Section 9000 provides as follows: “As used in this division: (a) ‘Claim’
means a demand for payment for any of the following, whether due, not due, accrued or
not accrued, or contingent, and whether liquidated or unliquidated: [¶] (1) Liability of the
decedent, whether arising in contract, tort, or otherwise.” And a “‘Creditor’ means a
person who may have a claim against estate property.” (§ 9000, subd. (c).) The
representative need not pay if the claim is not properly filed, and failure in this regard is
an absolute bar to enforcement. (§ 9002.) Thus, a plaintiff who wishes to recover money
for a breach of contract claim against a deceased defendant must file a section 9000
claim, after the personal representative of the estate gives notice of administration.
(§ 9050.) Only if the representative denies the claim may the plaintiff file a lawsuit
against the decedent’s personal representative. (§ 9351.)
There are limited exceptions to the claim requirement. Relevant to this
case, a “lien creditor may, without filing a claim in probate, bring an equitable action to
foreclose the judgment lien, but he has no right to a deficiency. [Citation.]” (County
Line Holdings, LLC v. McClanahan (2018) 22 Cal.App.5th 1067, 1072-1073 (County
Line Holdings); § 9391.) “The creditor may bring the action at any time during the
statutory duration of the judgment lien. [Citation.]” (Ibid., fn. omitted.)
With regards to this lien exception, section 9391 provides the following:
“[T]he holder of a mortgage or other lien on property in the decedent’s estate, including,
9
but not limited to, a judgment lien, may commence an action to enforce the lien against
the property that is subject to the lien, without first filing a claim as provided in this part,
if in the complaint the holder of the lien expressly waives all recourse against other
property in the estate. Section 366.2 of the Code of Civil Procedure [one year statute of
limitations] does not apply to an action under this section. The personal representative
shall have the authority to seek to enjoin any action of the lienholder to enforce a lien
against property that is subject to the lien.” (§ 9391.)
In County Line Holdings, the court considered whether a judgment
lienholder was barred by the one year statute limiting creditor’s claims against the
decedent. (County Line Holdings, supra, 22 Cal.App.5th at p. 1069.) That court
determined Code of Civil Procedure section 366.2 limited the time to bring a cause of
action, not the time to enforce a judgment following a judgment debtor’s death. (Ibid.)
Following our Supreme Court’s decision in Corporation of America v. Marks (1937)
10 Cal.2d 218, the court explained the rule as follows: “[W]hile the debtor is still alive,
the usual and ordinary method of enforcement of a judgment lien is by execution sale.
[Citation]. On death of the debtor, however, . . . former section 732, now section 9300,
terminates the right of the creditor to enforce the judgment lien by execution and sale.
[Citation.] ‘But the death of the debtor does not terminate the judgment lien.’ [Citation.]
The lien continues for its statutory duration unless sooner terminated by satisfaction or
discharge. [Citation] ‘The judgment lien creditor . . . may file a claim, and in such event
the priority of his lien will be protected in the administration proceeding . . . , and he will
have a claim for any deficiency against the general estate of the decedent.’ [Citation.]”
(County Line Holdings, supra, 22 Cal.App.5th at p. 1072.)
“Our Supreme Court expressly rejected the . . . contention that enforcement
of the judgment lien in the course of estate administration is the exclusive remedy of the
judgment lien creditor on the death of the debtor prior to levy of execution. [Citation.]
The court stated heirs and distributees take subject to the lien. [Citation.] ‘“A judgment
10
lien has always been regarded as the highest form of security.”’ [Citation.] A judgment
lien creditor may, without filing a claim in probate, bring an equitable action to foreclose
the judgment lien, but he has no right to a deficiency. [Citation.] The creditor may bring
the action at any time during the statutory duration of the judgment lien. [Citation.] [¶]
Thus, under Corporation of America, the judgment creditor has an option: file a timely
claim in the estate probate proceeding and seek a deficiency; or, without filing a claim,
bring an action to foreclose the lien during its statutory duration, waiving any right to a
deficiency. In neither case does the lien lose its priority.” (County Line Holdings, supra,
22 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1072-1073, fn. omitted.)
It is telling that Belcher did not include this well settled legal authority in
his appellate briefing. The two procedural avenues available to holders of secured liens
do not include the path Belcher took in this case, i.e., filing a Fee Petition against the
Estate to enforce the lien.
C. Attorney Charging Lien
Belcher asserts for the first time on appeal that his contingency fee
agreement with Paul created an attorney charging lien, which did not fully ripen until
after the matter was appealed. Noticeably missing from his discussion was legal
authority describing how attorneys must establish the value and validity of the lien before
seeking enforcement. For this reason, we recite a brief primer on both the creation and
collection of attorney charging liens.
“‘A lien is a charge imposed in some mode other than by a transfer in trust
upon specific property by which it is made security for the performance of an act.’
[Citation.] An attorney’s lien ‘upon the fund or judgment which he has recovered for his
compensation as attorney in recovering the fund or judgment . . . is denominated a
“charging lien.”’ [Citation.] A charging lien may be used to secure either an hourly fee
or a contingency fee. [Citation.]” (Fletcher v. Davis (2004) 33 Cal.4th 61, 66
(Fletcher).)
11
Unlike most jurisdictions, in California a charging lien “‘is created only by
contract . . . . Unlike a service lien or a mechanic’s lien, for example [citations], an
attorney’s lien is not created by the mere fact that an attorney has performed services in a
case.’ [Citations.]” (Fletcher, supra, 33 Cal.4th at p. 66.) A charging lien gives the
attorney ‘“an equitable assignment pro tanto of the client’s claim”’ (the proceeds of the
client’s recovery, if any) as security and entitles the attorney to ‘“any available equitable
remedy necessary to effect payment”’ of the fees and costs owed. (Epstein v. Abrams
(1997) 57 Cal.App.4th 1159, 1169.) For liens created in a contingency fee contract, a
cause of action to enforce the lien “‘does not accrue until the occurrence of the stated
contingency.’ [Citation.]” (Southern California Gas Co. v. Flannery (2016)
5 Cal.App.5th 476, 494 (Flannery).)
“An attorney’s contractual lien is created and takes effect when the fee
agreement is executed. [Citations.] . . . [¶] Where there are competing liens, the general
rule is that, all things being equal, liens have priority according to the time of their
creation. [Citation.] An attorney’s lien on a judgment for services prevails over later
encumbrances. [Citations.] [¶] Public policy favors the priority of the attorney lien. ‘If
an attorney’s claim for a lien on the judgment based on a contract for fees earned prior to
and in the action cannot prevail over the lien of a subsequent judgment creditor, persons
with meritorious claims might well be deprived of legal representation because of their
inability to pay legal fees or to assure that such fees will be paid out of the sum recovered
in the latest lawsuit. Such a result would be detrimental not only to prospective litigants,
but to their creditors as well.’ [Citation.]” (Waltrip v. Kimberlin (2008) 164 Cal.App.4th
517, 525 (Waltrip).)
“Equitable considerations also favor the attorney lien. It is a principle of
equity that ‘those whose labor, skills and materials resulted in the creation of a fund
should be entitled to priority in the payment of their claims from such source.’ [Citation.]
. . . It is the attorney’s labor, skill and materials, and his willingness to take the risk of no
12
recovery, that results in the judgment or settlement paid to the debtor. [Citation.] ‘“The
special or charging lien of an attorney has been held to be an equitable right to have the
fees and costs due to him for services in a suit secured to him out of the judgment or
recovery in the particular action, the attorney to the extent of such services being
regarded as an equitable assignee of the judgment. It is based, as in the case of a lien
proper, on the natural equity that a party should not be allowed to appropriate the whole
of a judgment in his favor without paying for the services of his attorney in obtaining
such judgment.”’ [Citation.]” (Waltrip, supra, 164 Cal.App.4th at pp. 525-526.)
As mentioned, the attorney charging lien is created when the fee agreement
is signed. “Unlike a judgment creditor’s lien, which is created when the notice of lien is
filed [citation], an attorney’s lien is a “secret” lien; it is created and the attorney’s security
interest is protected even without a notice of lien. [Citations.]’ [Citation.] Still, it is
‘permissible, and even advisable,’ for an attorney to file a notice of lien in the underlying
action, meaning the action where the attorney is the client’s attorney of record or—in the
case of an attorney who has been discharged—where the attorney previously represented
the client. [Citation.]’” (Flannery, supra, 5 Cal.App.5th at p. 494.)
“It is well recognized that, regardless of whether an attorney files a notice
of lien, the court deciding the underlying action lacks jurisdiction to decide the existence
or validity of the attorney’s lien claim on the underlying judgment. [Citations.] . . .
Because the attorney cannot intervene in the underlying action, ‘[a]fter the client obtains
a judgment, the attorney must bring a separate, independent action against the client to
establish the existence of the lien, to determine the amount of the lien, and to enforce it.’
[Citation.]” (Flannery, supra, 5 Cal.App.5th at p. 495.) The court in Brown v. Superior
Court (2004) 116 Cal.App.4th 320, 333, clarified an attorney need not sue his former
client for breach of contract, but rather the attorney need only bring a separate action
against his client, such as one for declaratory relief.
13
II. Analysis
Belcher asserts his Fee Petition was the proper mechanism to require the
probate court to immediately pay legal costs arising from contractually-established legal
services benefitting the Estate. He asserts the court erred by concluding he must file a
creditor’s claim with the Estate’s personal representative because this option fails to
consider his status as a lienholder. Belcher misunderstands the nature of charging liens
and the limited exceptions to the creditor claim requirements for probated estates.
As explained in Mojtahedi v. Vargas (2014) 228 Cal.App.4th 974, 976
(Mojtahedi), an attorney charging lien is only effective if the attorney has filed an
independent action to establish the lien’s amount and enforceability. In that case, an
attorney who had previously represented two clients filed a complaint against the clients’
successor attorney, seeking to recover a portion of a settlement payment the successor
attorney had obtained for the clients. (Ibid.) The trial court sustained without leave to
amend the defendant’s demurrer to the complaint because the attorney had failed to
establish the amount or enforceability of his lien in an independent action against the
clients. (Id. at pp. 976-977.) The appellate court agreed and reiterated the “well
established” rule that “‘“[a]fter the client obtains a judgment, the attorney must bring a
separate, independent action against the client to establish the existence of [an attorney’s]
lien, to determine the amount of the lien, and to enforce it.”’ [Citations.]” (Id. at pp.
977-978, quoting Brown, supra, 116 Cal.App.4th at p. 328.) Although the plaintiff
(attorney) in Mojtahedi alleged he had a contract with his former clients and provided
records showing his time and costs, the court determined the attorney had “failed to
allege facts establishing that he adjudicated the existence, value, or enforceability of his
lien. . . . A log of plaintiff’s time, although useful to adjudicate the reasonable value of
plaintiff’s services in a separate action against the clients, is insufficient to establish that
plaintiff is entitled to a particular amount of settlement money in his suit against
defendant. Plaintiff admits that he never brought a separate action against his clients to
14
litigate those issues. Therefore, he has yet to establish the value or validity of his
purported lien.” (Mojtahedi, supra, 228 Cal.App.4th at p. 978.)
The Mojtahedi court rejected the attorney’s argument that he did not have
to file a separate action because he and his client did not dispute the amount of the lien.
(Mojtahedi, supra, 228 Cal.App.4th at p. 978.) It held the lack of a dispute was
“insignificant” because this fact failed to “alter the applicability of the central principle
. . . the attorney’s lien is only enforceable after the attorney adjudicates the value and
validity of the lien in a separate action against his client.” (Ibid., italics added.) It added
the following: “Plaintiff provided the services to the clients, not to defendant. If
successful in a declaratory relief action regarding the reasonable value of his services,
plaintiff’s fees will be paid out of the clients’ settlement proceeds. [Citation.] Plaintiff
must thus litigate with the clients to determine the reasonable cost of the services he
provided to them. Plaintiff has omitted this essential step of establishing his entitlement
to a particular portion of the settlement proceeds.” (Ibid.)
Following the legal analysis set forth in the Brown case, the court in
Mojtahedi stated that requiring an attorney to institute an action did not mean he or she
must sue the client for breach of contract. (Mojtahedi, supra, 228 Cal.App.4th at p. 979.)
“[B]y seeking a declaration regarding the reasonable value of his services rendered,
plaintiff will address the issue without subjecting his former clients to damages.
Importantly, this procedure also gives the court an opportunity to evaluate the value and
quantity of plaintiff’s services with the relevant parties: plaintiff and his former clients.”
(Ibid.) The court concluded, “Despite case law requiring plaintiff to bring a separate
declaratory relief action against the clients, plaintiff has not sought such relief[,] and
therefore, “failed to establish the existence, amount, and enforceability of his lien on the
settlement money.” (Ibid.)
15
In the case before us, Belcher was unable to file a separate, independent
action to establish the amount and enforceability of the lien before Paul died. Belcher
would like us to assume that if Paul had not died, Paul had no choice but to pay the
contractually agreed upon $180,000 lien plus costs. Not so. In a declaratory relief
action, Paul could have raised grounds to challenge the validity of the lien or the
reasonableness of the costs (which Belcher vacillates as ranging from $7,700 to over
$10,000). Attorney liens are not automatically enforceable. (See, Plummer v.
Day/Eisenberg (2010) 184 Cal.App.4th 38 [triable issue of fact whether attorney had
valid enforceable lien on settlement proceeds].)
After Paul died, the issue of the lien’s amount and enforceability still
needed to be adjudicated. Because a declaratory relief claim would involve the personal
liability of the decedent, Belcher must comply with creditor claim statutes if he wishes to
4
enforce the contractually created lien. We cannot imagine any circumstances in which
the probate court could order payment on a $190,715 charging lien, created before the
decedent’s death, without first giving Paul’s personal representative an opportunity to
review or challenge the amount requested or the lien’s enforceability.
In summary, just as if Paul were still alive, Belcher must adjudicate the
lien’s validity before seeking enforcement. (Mojtahedi, supra, 228 Cal.App.4th
at p. 978.) We conclude none of the cases cited by Belcher say otherwise. For example,
in Novak v. Fay (2015) 236 Cal.App.4th 329, 331-332, the court held an attorney lien on
a deceased beneficiary’s share of trust may not be subject to the creditor’s claim
4
In its ruling, the court repeatedly stated it made no factual findings or
rulings regarding the validity or timing of Belcher’s creditor’s claim. For this reason, we
need not discuss Belcher’s arguments concerning what should be the deadline for filing a
creditor’s claim in this case. (Citing Clark v. Kerby (1992) 4 Cal.App.4th 1505, 1514
[application of statute of limitations on creditor’s claims]. There is no need for an
advisory opinion.
16
requirement in that deceased beneficiary’s estate. In our case, the attorney’s unverified
lien purportedly attaches to property held in the deceased’s estate, not a beneficiary’s
estate.
Belcher’s reliance on Dacey v. Taraday (2011) 196 Cal.App.4th 962
(Dacey), is also misplaced. That court held Code of Civil Procedure section 366.2’s one-
year statute of limitations will bar any action on a debt of the decedent or for any
wrongdoing committed by the decedent, but it will not apply when the wrongdoing was
committed by the estate’s administrator. (Id. at p. 986.) In Dacey, several partners of a
law firm entered into a dissolution agreement, and in winding up their practice, they
assigned certain cases to one partner, Burton J. Goldstein. (Id. at p. 966.) The parties
agreed each former partner would receive specified percentages from the attorney fees
Goldstein recovered in those cases. (Ibid.) However, Goldstein died before completing
the cases. The administrator of Goldstein’s estate settled the cases and agreed to reduce
the estate’s share in the fee recovery. (Ibid.) When one of Goldstein’s former law
partners learned he would not be receiving his designated percentage of recovered
attorney fees, he did not file a creditor’s claim but rather sued the administrator for
breaching the dissolution agreement. (Ibid.) The appellate court affirmed the judgment
in his favor, ruling the statute of limitations did not bar his claims against the estate
because it was the administrator, not the decedent, who breached the dissolution
agreement. (Id. at pp. 986-987.)
The Dacey court held “section 366.2 does not apply in the present case
where the debt was not enforceable against Goldstein while he was alive and the breach
of the contract occurred after Goldstein’s death.” (Dacey, supra, 196 Cal.App.4th at p.
986, fn. omitted.) In addition, the court determined the “estate failed to preserve for
appeal the issue that [the plaintiff’s] failure to comply with the Probate Code and file a
timely creditor’s claim bars his breach of contract claim.” (Id. at p. 979.) It provided the
following explanation: “[A] claim based on failure to file within the claims filing period
17
of the Probate Code was mentioned in conjunction with the statute of limitations under
section 366.2, but was not presented as an independent defense. Accordingly, we
conclude that this issue was not sufficiently preserved for appeal as an independent basis
for rejecting [plaintiff’s] breach of contract claim.” (Id. at p. 978.) Nothing in this case
supports Belcher’s contention he was not required to file a creditor’s claim to recover on
an unestablished lien.
In the last section of his appellate brief, Belcher asserts his fee claim should
be treated as an expense of the Estate’s administration because the lawsuit protected the
Estate’s only assets. This argument is not premised on the theory he is a lienholder.
Rather, it is based entirely on inapplicable case law discussing appropriate expenses
incurred and paid during probate proceedings. (See, Estate of Stauffer (1959) 53 Cal.2d
124, 130 [permitting attorney fees from estate for extraordinary services given to
personal representative]; Estate of Kann (1967) 253 Cal.App.2d 212, 214-215 [upholding
common fund award to objectors’ attorney for successfully challenging executrix’
administration and benefitting others]; Eastwood v. Stewart (1923) 64 Cal.App. 614, 615
5
[executrix hired real estate agent who sued for earned commissions].)
5
Belcher also cited multiple cases concerning application of the “common
fund rule” in probate cases. The common fund doctrine provides “an exception to the
general American rule that parties bear the costs of their own attorneys” and permits
courts to exercise its equitable power to award attorney fees to a party who has recovered
or preserved a monetary fund for the benefit of himself and others. (Laffitte v. Robert
Half Internat. Inc. (2016) 1 Cal.5th 480, 488-489.) “Because it distributes the cost of
hiring an attorney among all the parties benefited, a common fund fee award has
sometimes been referred to as ‘fee spreading.’” (Ibid.) The doctrine does not apply
when the litigation does not result in the creation or preservation of a fund. (Northwest
Energetic Services, LLC v. California Franchise Tax Bd. (2008) 159 Cal.App.4th 841,
878.) Belcher is not a prevailing party in the case against Michael, and the underlying
litigation certainly did not create a fund to benefit himself. To be clear, he was the
attorney of parties who prevailed in litigation filed on behalf of themselves. There was
no need for equitable fee spreading among those plaintiffs. The doctrine is not
applicable.
18
The record in the case before us plainly supports the probate court’s
determination the Estate did not hire Belcher to assist with any probate administrative
matters. It was undisputed Paul (individually) hired Belcher to help him sue Michael,
Southwest Credit Company, and Nguyen for fraudulent conduct. We find no support for
Belcher’s theory Paul’s death transformed the completed civil litigation into a probate
administration task.
DISPOSITION
The order is affirmed. There being no appearance by Respondent, no costs
are awarded.
O’LEARY, P. J.
WE CONCUR:
THOMPSON, J.
GOETHALS, J.
19