In re Guardian Ad Litem Fees
In re Guardian Ad Litem Fees
Opinion of the Court
This is a wrongful death action grounded on allegations of medical malpractice. The original parties are not involved in this appeal. Appellant is plaintiffs attorney. Appellee is the guardian ad litem appointed by the court to report relative to the best interests of the minor next of kin at the hearing regarding distribution of the settlement proceeds. Appellant raises objections to the trial court’s order directing him to pay the fees of the guardian ad litem. We affirm.
After the hearing, appellee sent appellant a bill for her services as guardian ad litem in the sum of $1,171.30. There is a dispute over whether the guardian ad litem offered to accept $500 in settlement. There is no dispute that the bill was not paid. Appellant objected to the amount of the bill and the attorney’s hourly rate of $225. On February 3, 1995, appellee filed a motion for payment of the guardian ad litem fee, attaching to it a bill itemized by date and service, which totaled $1,171.30, including $6.30 in costs. On May 12, 1995, a hearing was held with appellee present and appellant represented by an associate in his firm. Appellee suggested that she would be willing to accept $1,000 to settle the bill. She stated that with that hearing her bill exceeded $1,400. She agreed that the bill was very high but attributed this to appellant’s lack of cooperation and mishandling of the settlement of the case. She stated that her fees as guardian ad litem usually were only a few hundred dollars. She suggested that payment of the fee be divided between appellant and the next of kin. Appellant’s associate asked for another hearing at which appellant could be present to contest the amount of the fees. The trial court ordered the appellant to pay the entire $1,000 fee and stated that fees in this amount would not have been incurred if appellant had handled the matter properly. The order directing appellant to pay the $1,000 guardian ad litem fee forthwith was entered on May 12, 1995. This appeal followed.
Appellant first contends that the court lacks jurisdiction over him and cannot order him to pay the fees
A question arises regarding whether the fees of the guardian ad litem are attorney fees or are costs. The trial court treated them as costs of enforcing or prosecuting the claim. The parties during argument stated that trial courts sometimes treat the fees of a guardian ad litem as attorney fees and sometimes as costs. We note that a guardian ad litem need not be an attorney. Nothing in MCR 2.201 relating to representation of minors in circuit court litigation requires it. Neither does probate court rule MCR 5.201 mandate that a guardian ad litem be an attorney. Rule 5.201(E)(1) specifically states in part:
(1) When'úxe guardian ad litem appointed to represent the interest of a person is an attorney, that appointment does not create an attorney-client relationship. [Emphasis added.]
We conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in considering the fee of the guardian ad litem to be a cost payable upon distribution of the proceeds of a wrongful death action.
Appellee filed a motion for sanctions for vexatious appeal pursuant to MCR 7.216(C)(1)(b), which this Court denied. Appellant’s brief indulged in personal attacks on both appellee and the trial court frequently based upon facts not in the record on appeal. While such conduct is to be deprecated, appellant did raise a justiciable issue relative to the nature of the guardian ad litem fee and the appropriateness of its being granted as a cost under the Michigan wrongful death act. For that reason, the motion was denied. We would urge appellant in the future to base his appellate arguments on facts contained in the record.
Affirmed.
Concurring Opinion
(concurring). I concur in the result, but am a little less certain about the precipitating cause for the heat generated between these attorneys because I think the trial court should have made provision for payment of appellee’s services in the order distributing the settlement proceeds. I am also confused about the guardian ad litem’s objections to the annuity for the younger child bearing also the name of the mother. I do not think this titling of the account in both the parties’ names resulted in making this “qualified” tax-deferred money for IRS considerations regarding IRA-type annuities. It seems to me this was tax-free money awarded to the minor and would have retained that identity regardless of having had the mother’s name on the account for other purposes. At least it is certainly arguably so. Whether later earnings on the account would be tax-deferred or exempt is another question, and perhaps that is what offended the guardian ad litem.
In any event, as I see it, this controversy was fueled from three sides, appellant being only one leg of the triangle.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- In re GUARDIAN AD LITEM FEES
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published