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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
No. 19-PR-846
IN RE PEARL ROBINSON; BRUCE E. GARDNER, APPELLANT.
Appeal from the Superior Court
of the District of Columbia
(INT-358-14)
(Hon. Gerald I. Fisher and Hon. Jonathan H. Pittman, Trial Judges)
(Submitted June 23, 2021 Decided August 18, 2022)
Bruce Gardner, pro se.
Before GLICKMAN and MCLEESE, Associate Judges, and THOMPSON, Senior
Judge. ∗
PER CURIAM: Appellant Bruce E. Gardner is a court-appointed guardian and
conservator. Mr. Gardner asked the trial court to approve compensation for work
performed on behalf of his ward, Ms. Pearl Robinson. The trial court granted that
request in part and denied it in part. We affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand
for further proceedings.
∗
Judge Thompson was an Associate Judge at the time of submission. She
began her service as a Senior Judge in February 2022.
2
I. Background
Mr. Gardner sought approximately $45,000 in compensation, claiming an
hourly rate of $300. The trial court awarded Mr. Gardner approximately $33,000.
The trial court generally accepted Mr. Gardner’s hourly rate of $300, but reduced
the rate to $90 for certain non-legal tasks and $25 for less complex non-legal tasks.
The trial court also disallowed some claimed hours and expenses.
II. Hourly Rate
Mr. Gardner challenges the trial court’s reduction of his hourly rate. We agree
that a remand is necessary on this issue.
A. Contract
Mr. Gardner argues that the trial court was required to compensate him at an
hourly rate of $300 for all of the claimed hours, because Mr. Gardner had a valid
3
and enforceable contract with Ms. Robinson to be compensated at that rate. We
disagree.
According to Mr. Gardner, the contract was made in November 2014, just
days before Ms. Robinson was found to be incapacitated. At that time, Mr. Gardner
had not yet been appointed guardian/conservator and instead was a court-appointed
attorney representing Ms. Robinson in connection with the petition to appoint a
guardian/conservator. Ms. Robinson initially opposed the petition, but she withdrew
her opposition and requested the appointment of Mr. Gardner.
We have previously expressed doubts about the validity of the claimed
contract between Mr. Gardner and Ms. Robinson. In re Robinson, 216 A.3d 887,
890 (D.C. 2019) (per curiam) (“[I]t is far from clear that . . . Ms. Robinson -- who
was deemed incapacitated by the court -- . . . was capable of entering into a legally
binding contract with Mr. Gardner . . . .”). The trial court in this case also expressed
grave concerns about Mr. Gardner’s conduct in connection with the alleged contract.
Specifically, the trial court noted that Mr. Gardner had not advised the trial court at
the time of the appointment that he had negotiated a contract for compensation with
Ms. Robinson, whom the court had just found to be incapacitated. Such a disclosure
4
“would have raised red flags about a possible conflict of interest.” In the trial court’s
view, such a disclosure would also have made it highly unlikely that Mr. Gardner
would have been appointed. The trial court was “profoundly disturbed” by the
ethical questions created by the alleged agreement.
Mr. Gardner does not directly address the ethical concerns raised by the trial
court. He does contend, however, that the agreement was valid as a matter of
contract law. We need not address that issue, because we agree with the trial court
that Mr. Gardner’s compensation from the funds of Ms. Robinson’s estate is
governed by statute rather than by Mr. Gardner’s alleged contract with Ms.
Robinson. See D.C. Code § 21-2060(a) (providing for compensation for court-
appointed guardians and conservators “[a]s approved by order of the court”); In re
Robinson, 216 A.3d at 889 (“The compensation of court-appointed guardians is
governed by D.C. Code § 21-2060(a) . . . .”); Super. Ct. Prob. R. 308(a)
(compensation for court-appointed guardians and conservators from estate of ward
“must be approved by Order of the Court before being paid”), superseded by Super.
Ct. Prob. R. 322(a) (providing that court-appointed guardians and conservators are
entitled to reasonable compensation from assets of the ward “[a]s approved by prior
court order”) (effective Aug. 22, 2022).
5
We are not persuaded by Mr. Gardner’s reliance on In re Estate of Grealis,
902 A.2d 821 (D.C. 2006). That case held “that when attorney’s fees are not paid
from the estate of a protected individual (or from the court’s Guardianship Fund) but
rather from private funds, no statutory basis exists for requiring court approval.” Id.
at 822. Mr. Gardner is seeking compensation from Ms. Robinson’s estate, so this
case is governed by § 21-2060(a), not by In re Estate of Grealis.
B. Claim and Issue Preclusion
Mr. Gardner argues in passing that the trial court was required by principles
of claim preclusion and issue preclusion to deem his $300 hourly rate reasonable,
because that rate had previously been deemed reasonable in connection with earlier
compensation applications in this case. We disagree.
In an earlier appeal, Mr. Gardner made a similar argument: that the “law of
the case” doctrine precluded the trial court from finding an hourly rate unreasonable
if the hourly rate had been approved in connection with earlier requests for
compensation. In re Robinson, 216 A.3d at 890. We disagreed, explaining that trial
courts are not required to find an hourly rate “reasonable simply because that rate
6
had been approved, without analysis, in an earlier compensation request decided by
a different judge and relating to a different time period.” Id. For similar reasons,
we disagree with Mr. Gardner’s invocation of principles of claim preclusion and
issue preclusion. Mr. Gardner provides no authority supporting the idea that such
principles should prevent a trial court from making an independent determination as
to the reasonableness of the hourly rate claimed in a given compensation application.
Moreover, we see no reason to preclude such an independent determination. On the
other hand, prior rulings approving an hourly rate are certainly relevant to the
determination whether that hourly rate is reasonable.
C. Reasonableness of Reduction in Hourly Rate
Mr. Gardner challenges the trial court’s decision to reduce Mr. Gardner’s
hourly rate to $90 for most non-legal tasks (such as writing checks) and $25 for less
complex non-legal tasks (such as shopping for Ms. Robinson). The trial court gave
two reasons for its ruling. First, the trial court noted that $90 is the maximum hourly
rate awarded to court-appointed guardians who are paid from public funds when a
ward’s estate lacks adequate funds to pay compensation. In re Goodwin, 275 A.3d
283, 287-88 (D.C. 2022). We have recently held, however, that “the fact that $90 is
7
the hourly rate paid to guardians when an estate’s assets are depleted does not mean
that should be viewed as the reasonable rate for all non-legal guardianship services.”
In re Robinson, 216 A.3d at 892.
Second, the trial court considered information from the Bureau of Labor
Statistics about the hourly wage paid to employees for various non-legal tasks that
Mr. Gardner had performed. We do not doubt that such information is potentially
relevant. As we have explained, the trial court may have the authority to reduce Mr.
Gardner’s hourly rate for non-legal tasks, either “because that rate is generally
unreasonable for non-legal guardianship [or conservator] services or because some
of the services Mr. Gardner provided should reasonably have been provided by
others at a reduced cost.” In re Robinson, 216 A.3d at 891-92; cf. In re Gardner,
268 A.3d 850, 859 n.15 (D.C. 2022) (“An attorney may choose not to hire support
staff to do [clerical] work . . . but that decision will not justify billing such work at
the attorney’s hourly rate.”). Nevertheless, we think that further explanation would
be necessary before such a determination would be warranted.
8
First, Mr. Gardner is not an employee, and he performed a variety of tasks as
a guardian and conservator. It may be overly simplistic to reduce his hourly rate
based on the salaries typically paid to employees who perform specific tasks.
Second, we have previously explained that the statutory duties of a court-
appointed guardian are not “inherently legal.” In re Robinson, 216 A.3d at 891.
Moreover, Mr. Gardner argued in the trial court that fiduciaries performing services
like those provided by Mr. Gardner were typically compensated at hourly rates
ranging from $200 to $390. The trial court did not specifically address that
argument.
Third, we note that the Superior Court has established a Probate Fiduciary
Panel, for purposes of appointing guardians and conservators in Probate Division
proceedings. See Administrative Order 19-06 (D.C. Super. Ct. May 22, 2019).
Although there is no general statutory requirement that guardians and conservators
be attorneys, see D.C. Code §§ 21-2043 and -2057, the Superior Court permits only
qualified attorneys to be placed on the Fiduciary Panel, Administrative Order 19-06
at 1. That circumstance seems at least potentially relevant to the appropriate hourly
rate at which guardians and conservators should be compensated.
9
We therefore remand this case to the trial court for further consideration of
the reasonable rate at which Mr. Gardner should be compensated for the tasks the
trial court deemed to be non-legal. See, e.g., In re Wilson, No. 19-PR-1203, 2022
WL 2517352, at *4 (D.C. July 7, 2022) (remanding for trial court “to determine the
reasonableness of the requested compensation” for administrative tasks).
III. Delay in Awarding Compensation
Mr. Gardner argues that the trial court unduly delayed a decision on his
request for compensation, and the trial court therefore was required both to grant the
requested compensation in full and to award prejudgment interest. We have recently
held otherwise. In re Gardner, 268 A.3d at 857-58 (delay in ruling on guardian’s
request for compensation did not require trial court to grant petition in full or pay
prejudgment interest).
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the Superior Court is affirmed in part
and vacated in part, and the case is remanded for further consideration of the hourly
rate at which Mr. Gardner should be compensated for tasks the trial court determined
to be non-legal.
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So ordered.