Court Opinion

ID: 9353528
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-01-12 01:44:16.494409+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:06:51.946626
License: Public Domain

Rel: January 6, 2023

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern
Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts,
300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other
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         SUPREME COURT OF ALABAMA
                             OCTOBER TERM, 2022-2023

                                _________________________

                                        1200401
                                _________________________

                Tamera Erskine, as personal representative
                of the Estate of Joann Bashinsky, deceased

                                                  v.

               J. Kenneth Guin, Jr., and Gregory H. Hawley

                                _________________________

                                        1210153
                                _________________________

                John P. McKleroy, Jr., and Patty Townsend

                                                  v.
1200401 and 1210153

        Landon E. Ash and Tamera Erskine, as personal
   representative of the Estate of Joann Bashinsky, deceased

               Appeals from Jefferson Probate Court
                          (19BHM02213)

PER CURIAM.

     Tamera Erskine, as the personal representative of the estate of

Joann Bashinsky ("Ms. Bashinsky"), deceased, appeals from: (1) an order

of the Jefferson Probate Court awarding fees to the temporary guardian

and conservator for Ms. Bashinsky previously appointed by the probate

court and (2) an order awarding fees to a guardian ad litem appointed to

represent Ms. Bashinsky in a proceeding seeking the appointment of a

permanent guardian and conservator commenced by John P. McKleroy,

Jr., and Patty Townsend. McKleroy and Townsend separately appeal

from the probate court's order of dismissal with prejudice of all remaining

pending matters following Ms. Bashinsky's death.1

     1This  Court granted the uncontested motion to incorporate the
record filed in appeal no. 1210153 with the record filed in appeal no.
1200401. In a January 14, 2022, order, this Court consolidated the two
appeals.

                                    2
1200401 and 1210153

                                 I. Facts

     This is the second time this case has come before us. In Ex parte

Bashinsky, 319 So. 3d 1240 (Ala. 2020), we dealt with Erskine's

challenges to the probate court's handling of McKleroy and Townsend's

"Emergency Petition for a Temporary Guardian and Conservator" ("the

emergency petition") concerning Ms. Bashinsky. In the present appeals,

we deal with the aftermath of our decision in Ex parte Bashinsky.

Because our analysis in Ex parte Bashinsky is integral to our disposition

of appeal number 1200401, we must reiterate some of the facts recounted

in that opinion. We then describe in detail the procedural history in this

case that unfolded after we issued our decision in Ex parte Bashinsky.

     This case was commenced on October 1, 2019, when McKleroy and

Townsend simultaneously filed the emergency petition and a petition

seeking the appointment of a permanent guardian and conservator for

Ms. Bashinsky. Ms. Bashinsky was the widow of Sloan Y. Bashinsky,

who owned the majority stock in Golden Enterprises, Inc., and who was

the founder, chairman, and chief executive officer of Golden Flake Foods

("Golden Flake"). McKleroy and Townsend, two former Golden Flake

employees who had professional relationships with Ms. Bashinsky,

                                    3
1200401 and 1210153

alleged that Ms. Bashinsky was incapable of caring for herself and for

her assets, which were then valued at approximately $218 million.

McKleroy and Townsend's allegations of Ms. Bashinsky's incompetence

centered on her request that Level Four Advisory Services LLC, which

held approximately $35 million of Ms. Bashinsky's personal assets,

transfer $17.5 million to David Heath at the investment firm Morgan

Stanley. McKleroy and Townsend further alleged that the transferred

assets would end up being controlled by Ms. Bashinsky's grandson,

Landon E. Ash, whom they alleged had already accumulated $23.5

million in total indebtedness to Ms. Bashinsky and whom they alleged

exerted undue influence upon Ms. Bashinsky.

     On October 17, 2019, Probate Judge Alan King held a hearing on

the emergency petition, at which he granted a motion of McKleroy and

Townsend to disqualify Ms. Bashinsky's chosen attorneys without giving

Ms. Bashinsky an opportunity to waive any alleged conflict. He further

refused to grant a requested continuance so that Ms. Bashinsky could

retain substitute counsel. The hearing then proceeded on the matter of

the appointment of a temporary guardian and conservator. Judge King

refused to allow Ms. Bashinsky to cross-examine witnesses during the

                                  4
1200401 and 1210153

hearing or to allow her to testify on her own behalf.2 After concluding the

hearing, Judge King, on the same day, entered a written order in which

he purported to appoint Gregory H. Hawley, the general conservator for

Jefferson County, as the temporary guardian and conservator for

Ms. Bashinsky.3

     Ms. Bashinsky petitioned this Court for a writ of mandamus

directing the probate court to vacate its orders disqualifying her

attorneys from representing her in the underlying proceedings and

appointing a temporary guardian and conservator over her person and

property. She also sought dismissal of the emergency petition and the

petition for a permanent guardian and conservator. On July 2, 2020, this

Court issued an opinion addressing Ms. Bashinsky's mandamus petition.

     2Robert    S. Gwin, whom Judge King had appointed as
Ms. Bashinsky's guardian ad litem for the proceedings on the emergency
petition, had informed Judge King following the disqualification of her
attorneys that he was not able to, and he would not, act as
Ms. Bashinsky's counsel during the proceedings. See Ex parte
Bashinsky, 319 So. 3d at 1250.

     3McKleroy    and Townsend's emergency petition had recommended
that Hawley be appointed temporary guardian and conservator. Hawley
testified during a subsequent hearing in this case that he was originally
appointed as general conservator for Jefferson County by Judge King in
2013.

                                    5
1200401 and 1210153

In Ex parte Bashinsky, we explained that the authority to establish a

temporary guardianship/conservatorship is premised on the existence of

an actual emergency that does not permit time to make an immediate

competency determination; if no such emergency exists, we explained,

then    the    statutory   process   for   establishing   a   permanent

guardianship/conservatorship applies. We concluded that, in this case, no

such emergency existed -- or was even alleged by McKleroy and

Townsend -- because there was no immediate threat to Ms. Bashinsky’s

health, safety, and welfare or of the dissipation of her assets. Because

there was no emergency, we held that the requirements for establishing

a permanent guardianship/conservatorship applied. We noted that the

probate court had violated the basic requirements of a hearing regarding

whether to establish a permanent guardianship/conservatorship by:

(1) failing to provide Ms. Bashinsky notice of the competency hearing;

(2) not allowing Ms. Bashinsky to be represented by counsel; and

(3) preventing Ms. Bashinsky from presenting testimony and evidence on

her behalf and to cross-examine witnesses. Specifically, we stated:

       "Because we have determined that no 'emergency' was
       presented in that hearing, the representation and case-
       presentation rights afforded to a respondent in §§ 26-2A-102
       and 26-2A-135[, Ala. Code 1975,] were applicable. Those
                                     6
1200401 and 1210153

     provisions, and Ms. Bashinsky's basic due-process rights,
     were egregiously violated, as the probate court treated the
     proceeding like an ex parte hearing even though
     Ms. Bashinsky was present.

            "….

           "… 'A judgment is void ... if the court rendering it ...
     acted in a manner inconsistent with due process.' Insurance
     Mgmt. & Admin., Inc. v. Palomar Ins. Corp., 590 So. 2d 209,
     212 (Ala. 1991). Accordingly, we conclude that the probate
     court's October 17, 2019, order appointing a temporary
     guardian and conservator must be set aside. Given that the
     hearing appointing a temporary guardian and conservator
     was a nullity, it follows that the determination to disqualify
     Ms. Bashinsky's attorneys that occurred during that hearing,
     and which precipitated the aforementioned due-process
     violations, must also be set aside."

Ex parte Bashinsky, 319 So. 3d at 1262-63 (second emphasis added). At

the conclusion of our opinion, we explained:

     "[T]he October 17, 2019, order appointing a temporary
     guardian and conservator for Ms. Bashinsky is void, as is the
     order disqualifying Ms. Bashinsky's counsel. We therefore
     grant the petition for the writ of mandamus as to those orders
     and direct the probate court to vacate its October 17, 2019,
     orders, to require the temporary guardian and conservator to
     account for all of Ms. Bashinsky's funds and property, and to
     dismiss the emergency petition." 4

     4The  Court also determined that McKleroy and Townsend's petition
seeking the appointment of a permanent guardian and conservator over
Ms. Bashinsky's person and property was not properly before the Court
because the probate court had not issued any orders at that time
pertaining to that petition, and we therefore denied Erskine's petition for
a writ of mandamus insofar as it sought relief relating to that petition.
                                     7
1200401 and 1210153

Id. at 1263 (emphasis added).

     On July 16, 2020, Chief Justice Parker appointed Walker County

Probate Judge A. Lee Tucker as a special Jefferson Probate Judge to

preside over the matters.5 On August 28, 2020, pursuant to Ex parte

Bashinsky, Judge Tucker entered an order vacating Judge King's

October 17, 2019, order that had appointed Hawley temporary guardian

and conservator and dismissing the emergency petition. The August 28,

2020, order also required Hawley to "file with the probate court an

accounting for Mrs. Joann Bashinsky's funds and property within Forty-

Five (45) days from the date of this order." Finally, the order provided

that the petition for a permanent guardian and conservator would be set

for a hearing after the petition was served upon Ms. Bashinsky and Ash.

     On August 6, 2020, Hawley filed what he styled a "Petition for Final

Settlement of Conservatorship." On September 3, 2020, Ms. Bashinsky

filed a "Response and Objection to Petition for Final Settlement of

Conservatorship" in which she complained that Hawley had not

"include[d] all supporting documents necessary for determination

     5Judge   King retired from the bench on May 31, 2020.

                                   8
1200401 and 1210153

whether the payments were properly made on behalf of Ms. Bashinsky."

She also more generally objected "to the credit or payment of any fees or

expenses to Hawley as the Alabama Supreme Court held the October 17,

2019, order appointing [Hawley]" void and to "the payment of attorney

fees and expenses to [various law firms] for their service as counsel to

Hawley during the pendency of his appointment as Temporary Guardian

and Conservator pursuant to the Probate Court's October 17, 2019, order

which the Alabama Supreme Court ruled void and a nullity." On

September 30, 2020, Hawley filed a "Reply to Response and Objections to

Petition for Final Settlement of Conservatorship" in which he stated that

he was "ready to produce any documentation corroborating receipts and

disbursements set forth in the Final Settlement Petition." Hawley

further contended that he

     "and his attorneys are fully entitled to be paid for the legal
     and fiduciary work performed in this case resulting from the
     orders of the Probate Court …. Mr. Hawley was clearly duty
     bound to fulfill his fiduciary duties as temporary Guardian
     and Conservator as ordered by [the probate] court until such
     time his appointment was terminated or vacated, which again
     did not occur until [the probate] court's ruling on August 28,
     2020. Mr. Hawley is now further duty bound to fulfill his
     court-ordered work to prepare, file and arrange for the
     property adjudication of a Petition for Final Settlement as
     directed by [the probate] court."

                                   9
1200401 and 1210153

On October 6, 2020, Judge Tucker entered an order stating that "[t]he

Petition for Final Settlement of Conservatorship of the Estate of Joann

F. Bashinsky, filed by Gregory H. Hawley, Conservator is hereby set for

hearing December 8, 2020, at 9:00 A.M. in the Probate Court of Jefferson

County."

     On September 28, 2020, Ms. Bashinsky filed a motion to strike

portions of McKleroy and Townsend's petition for a permanent guardian

and conservator. On October 16, 2020, Judge Tucker appointed

J. Kenneth Guin, Jr., as guardian ad litem for Ms. Bashinsky "to protect

her interests and report to the court, regarding the application of John

McKleroy, as Petitioner, for the appointment of a Guardian and

Conservator."6 Given this Court's July 2, 2020, ruling in Ex parte

Bashinsky, Guin's appointment clearly was made for the purpose of

representing Ms. Bashinsky's interests in the proceedings on the pending

petition for a permanent guardian and conservator.

     6Guin  was the third guardian ad litem to be appointed in this case.
The previous two guardians ad litem had moved to withdraw from their
roles, and the probate court had granted those motions on December 3,
2019, and October 6, 2020, respectively.

                                   10
1200401 and 1210153

     On October 5, 2020, Judge Tucker held a hearing regarding

discovery, scheduling, and pending motions. Judge Tucker discussed

certain social-media postings regarding the case. In light of that

discussion, on October 22, 2020, Judge Tucker entered an order with

respect to "trial publicity" that, in pertinent part, provided:

     "A. Each attorney in this matter shall strictly adhere to the
     requirements and limitations on extra-judicial statements set
     forth in Rule 3.6, Ala. R. Prof. C.

     "B. So long as this matter is pending before this Court, no
     party and no counsel of record for a party shall make any false
     statement or publish any post containing any false statement,
     about any other party or this matter on social media or in
     statements to traditional or electronic media; and

     "C. The attorneys for each party to this matter shall certify in
     writing to this Court within five (5) days of this Order that
     they have provided a copy of this Order to their respective
     clients."

     On December 8, 2020, Judge Tucker held a hearing on what he

described as "the petition in regard to the final settlement of the

conservator." In that hearing, Ms. Bashinsky's counsel argued:

     "This judgment was vacated. It was voided by the Alabama
     Supreme Court. And it's as if it didn't take place. So there --
     there's a nullity. No appointments, no legal fees, no court costs
     should have been paid. I'm not against lawyers getting paid;
     not against Mr. Hawley getting paid if he's justified. But it
     ought to come out of the petitioners, who started this and who
     created the void situation; not the estate. The Court went on
                                     11
1200401 and 1210153

     to say that a void judgment has absolutely no legal force or
     effect."

     On December 11, 2020, the probate court entered what it styled a

"Decree on Final Settlement" concerning Hawley's service as temporary

guardian and conservator. That order provided:

           "This cause coming before the Court to be heard on
     December 8, 2020, for examination and auditing of the
     account heretofore filed by Gregory H. Hawley, Esq., as
     Conservator of the Estate of Joann F. Bashinsky, a Protected
     Person, as final settlement of his conservatorship, being
     present in Court Attorneys for Petitioner, Attorneys for
     Respondent, Attorneys for Landon Ash, Court-appointed
     Guardian ad Litem, Ken Guin, conservator Gregory H.
     Hawley, Esq., and his attorneys. Gregory H. Hawley as
     conservator moving the court to proceed with said final
     settlement.

           "It appearing to the Court from pleadings and proof that
     due notice of the time and nature of said settlement has been
     given in strict accordance with the law, and Melissa McCay,
     as Attorney in Fact for Ohio Casualty Insurance Company, as
     surety, having accepted service and waived notice of said
     settlement hearing. The Honorable Gregory H. Hawley Esq.,
     who was heretofore appointed to act as Guardian and
     Conservator of JoAnn F. Bashinsky an alleged incapacitated
     person, upon application of Mr. Hawley, for Conservators
     Final Settlement and the Respondent objecting to the Final
     Settlement and denying the correctness of said account and
     insisting that strict proof be made as to the correctness of said
     account. Upon pleadings and proof, review of the Final
     Settlement by the Jefferson County accountant, Daniel Nash
     and testimony of Gregory H. Hawley Esq., with no other
     witness being presented by the Petitioners or Respondent and
     the court having examined and audited said account for final
                                    12
1200401 and 1210153

     settlement and considered the testimony and pleadings filed
     regarding said final settlement.

          "It is Hereby Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed as follows:

          "The Court finds that the said Gregory H. Hawley as
     conservator, is chargeable with receipts in the sum of
     $2,027,347.94 as shown by his account of the assets received
     by him and that he is entitled to credits for monies paid out
     in and about the conservatorship and for the support and
     maintenance of JoAnn F. Bashinsky in the amount of
     $1,464,083.08, further access to accounts in the amount of
     $563,264.86 was returned to Ms. Bashinsky upon the ruling
     by the Alabama Supreme Court ordering the temporary
     guardian and conservator to account for all Ms. Bashinsky's
     funds and property and to dismiss the emergency petition.

            "The court with no witness disputing said accounting,
     finds that said accounting and vouchers are accepted and
     allowed and ordered recorded. It is further ordered that the
     cost of the proceeding be and is hereby taxed against the
     estate. The conservator is awarded a fee of Eighty-Six
     Thousand ($86,000.00) Dollars for his service in said case,
     along with reimbursement of $1,037.02 paid by him to Source
     One Legal copy. That an attorney fee due to Sirote & Permutt
     PC., in representation of Mr. Hawley as the Conservator of
     the estate in the amount of $80,083.15, is to be paid as costs
     of the estate. Further that the Guardian and Conservator,
     Gregory H. Hawley and the Surety Ohio Casualty Insurance
     Company are hereby discharged and relieved from all further
     liability."

(Emphasis added.)

     On January 3, 2021, Ms. Bashinsky died. Shortly thereafter,

Tamera Erskine was named personal representative of the estate of

                                  13
1200401 and 1210153

Ms. Bashinsky. On January 4, 2021, Guin filed a "Court Representative

Fee Petition" that provided a list of his expenses and his hours spent in

his capacity as guardian ad litem. On January 5, 2021, counsel for

Ms. Bashinsky filed a suggestion of death and requested that "this action

… be dismissed." On January 8, 2021, McKleroy and Townsend filed a

memorandum in opposition to the motion to dismiss and, along with that

memorandum: (1) a motion to substitute Erskine, the personal

representative of Ms. Bashinsky's estate, for Ms. Bashinsky; (2) a motion

for sanctions against Ash for allegedly violating the October 22, 2020,

order concerning trial publicity; and (3) a motion seeking payment of

attorney fees stemming from the litigation of the emergency petition.

     On January 11, 2021, Judge Tucker entered an order requiring

"[t]he Estate of Joann Bashinsky" to pay Guin $56,035.75. On

January 22, 2021, Guin filed a motion to withdraw as guardian ad litem

because of Ms. Bashinsky's death. Judge Tucker granted that motion on

the same day. Also on January 22, 2021, Judge Tucker entered an

amended order concerning Guin's fee, and he again awarded Guin

$56,035.75 to be paid by "[t]he Estate of Joann Bashinsky." The amended

order further stated:

                                   14
1200401 and 1210153

           "C. Pursuant to [Ala. R. Civ. P.] 54(b) this judgment is
     final as to the action and fees of J. Kenneth Guin, Jr. serving
     as Guardian ad Litem and Court Representative, there is no
     just reason for delay of entry of this final judgment as to
     J. Kenneth Guin, Jr. serving as Guardian ad Litem and Court
     Representative."

In all other respects, the amended order was essentially identical to

Judge Tucker's January 11, 2021, order.

     On March 5, 2021, Ms. Bashinsky's attorneys filed a "Notice of

Substitution of Party for Purposes of Appeal Only," advising the probate

court that,

     "pursuant to Rule 25, Ala. R. Civ. P., … Tamera K. Erskine,
     as Personal Representative for the Estate of Joann F.
     Bashinsky …. wishes to take an appeal in this case to the
     Alabama Supreme Court and, as such, gives this notice of the
     substitution of her for Joann Bashinsky in this matter for
     purposes of appeal only."

That same day, Erskine filed a notice of appeal seeking to challenge: (1)

Judge Tucker's December 11, 2020, order awarding fees to Hawley and

his attorneys, a sum totaling $167,120.17, and (2) Judge Tucker's

January 22, 2021, order awarding a fee of $56,035.75 to guardian

ad litem Guin.

     On March 8, 2021, Judge Tucker entered an order that purported

to address several outstanding matters in this case that remained

                                   15
1200401 and 1210153

pending following Ms. Bashinsky's death. First, the probate court

dismissed as moot McKleroy and Townsend's petition for appointment of

a permanent guardian and conservator for Ms. Bashinsky. On a related

note, the probate court dismissed for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction,

but without prejudice, McKleroy and Townsend's requests for the probate

court to determine the validity of: (1) Ms. Bashinsky's termination of

Townsend's employment with her; (2) Ms. Bashinsky's termination of

McKleroy's appointment as her attorney-in-fact; and (3) Ms. Bashinsky's

power of attorney granted to Erskine.      However, Judge Tucker also

concluded that he still had jurisdiction to entertain the motions that

McKleroy and Townsend had filed on January 8, 2021. Specifically, he

expressly declined to dismiss the motion for substitution of a party, the

motion for sanctions against Ash, and the motion for payment of

McKleroy and Townsend's attorney fees.

     On March 23, 2021, McKleroy and Townsend filed a "Motion for

Setting Hearing Date to Conclude Conservatorship Matter," seeking a

date for arguing the outstanding motions that remained in the case.

Judge Tucker set a hearing for April 29, 2021. On April 16, 2021, Ash

filed a petition for a writ of mandamus with this Court arguing that the

                                   16
1200401 and 1210153

probate court had no discretion to decide motions that were filed after it

had lost subject-matter jurisdiction and that the only action the probate

court could take after Bashinsky's death was to dismiss the entire action.

On April 20, 2021, Erskine filed a petition for a writ of mandamus

arguing that Ms. Bashinsky's death rendered the probate-court

proceedings "non-justiciable," which, she said, deprived the probate court

of jurisdiction in all matters related to those proceedings. On April 27,

2021, Judge Tucker stayed the proceedings. On October 18, 2021, Judge

Tucker sua sponte reconsidered his order staying the proceedings, and he

lifted the stay. That same day, Judge Tucker entered what he styled a

"Final Order" in which he purported to amend the March 8, 2021, order

and to dismiss "all issues that remained following the March 8, 2021,

order … WITH PREJUDICE." 7 (Capitalization in original.) On

November 29, 2021, McKleroy and Townsend filed a notice of appeal

challenging Judge Tucker's order dismissing the remaining issues.

     7On  October 18, 2021, Judge Tucker also entered an order recusing
himself from this case. We assume that that order was entered after
Judge Tucker's order purporting to lift the stay of proceedings and his
order purporting to dismiss all pending issues in the case.
                                   17
1200401 and 1210153

     On December 15, 2021, this Court dismissed both Ash's and

Erskine's petitions for a writ of mandamus. Ex parte Erskine (No.

1200505, Dec. 15, 2021), and Ex parte Ash (No. 1200497, Dec. 15, 2021).

On February 28, 2021, McKleroy and Townsend filed a motion to dismiss

their appeal -- appeal no. 1210153 -- with each party to bear their own

costs. We now grant that motion and dismiss McKleroy and Townsend's

appeal. Accordingly, the only issues now before this Court are those

raised in Erskine's appeal regarding Judge Tucker's December 11, 2020,

order awarding fees to Hawley and his attorneys and Judge Tucker's

January 22, 2021, order awarding a fee to Guin.

                              II. Analysis

     In the December 8, 2020, hearing concerning Hawley's "Petition for

Final Settlement of Conservatorship," Hawley testified:

     "Your honor, I tell people all the time, you know, I think we
     currently have 120 to 130 active conservatorship cases in the
     office. We probably handled a couple of hundred over the past
     few years. There's never been a case like this one. I hope there
     never is again a case like this one."

The rendition of facts supports Hawley's sentiment: this is an unusual,

perhaps even sui generis, case born from an unfortunate set of

circumstances that is highly unlikely to reoccur. Nonetheless, for better

                                   18
1200401 and 1210153

or worse, Erskine's appeal presents issues that must be resolved. We will

first address Erskine's appeal insofar as it challenges Judge Tucker's

December 11, 2020, order awarding fees to Hawley and his attorneys. We

will then turn to Erskine's appeal insofar as it challenges Judge Tucker's

January 22, 2021, order awarding a fee to Guin.

A. The December 11, 2020, Order Pertaining to Hawley

     Erskine contends that Judge Tucker's December 11, 2020, order

awarding fees to Hawley and his attorneys exceeded this Court's

mandate in Ex parte Bashinsky, which stated that the probate court was

"to require the temporary guardian and conservator to account for all of

Ms. Bashinsky's funds and property." 319 So. 3d at 1263. According to

Erskine, "[t]his Court's mandate did not direct the Probate Court to hold

a hearing on the accounting filed by the temporary conservator; it did not

direct the Probate Court to award fees and/or costs to the temporary

conservator; and it did not direct the payment of attorney fees incurred

by the temporary conservator." Erskine's brief, p. 13. Erskine notes that

this Court has stated that, "when an appellate court remands a case, the

trial court's authority is limited to compliance with the directions

provided by the appellate court; it does not have the authority to reopen

                                   19
1200401 and 1210153

for additional testimony except where expressly directed to do so."

Ex parte Shinaberry, 326 So. 3d 1037, 1043 n.3 (Ala. 2020). Erskine

further contends that, even if this Court's mandate did authorize Judge

Tucker to award fees to Hawley and his attorneys, the probate court lost

jurisdiction to do so after it dismissed the emergency petition on

August 28, 2020. See Erskine's brief, p. 13. Erskine also argues that

Judge Tucker could not order Ms. Bashinsky's "estate" to pay fees to

Hawley and his attorneys because, based on this Court's holding in

Ex parte Bashinsky that Judge King's October 17, 2019, order granting

an emergency petition was void due to violations of Ms. Bashinsky's

statutory and due-process rights, no guardianship or conservatorship

estate was ever created.

     Hawley does not address most of Erskine's arguments. Instead, he

contends that Erskine's appeal is due to be dismissed because she filed

the appeal on March 5, 2021, challenging an order entered December 11,

2020, which was well outside the 42-day window for a timely appeal from

a final judgment. Hawley contends that Judge Tucker's December 11,

2020, order was an appealable order under § 12-22-21(5), Ala. Code 1975,

which provides:

                                  20
1200401 and 1210153

           "Appeal from the order, judgment or decree of the
     probate court may be taken by the party aggrieved to the
     circuit court or Supreme Court in the cases hereinafter
     specified. Appeals to the Supreme Court shall be governed by
     the Alabama Rules of Appellate Procedure, including the time
     for taking an appeal. Appeal to the circuit court in such cases
     shall be within the time hereinafter specified:

           "....

           "(5) After a final settlement, upon any order, judgment
     or decree, made on such settlement, or respecting any item or
     matter thereof, or any previous settlement or item, or matter
     thereof, within 42 days thereafter."

In other words, Hawley contends that the December 11, 2020, order was

a "final settlement" of a temporary guardianship/conservatorship, which

made it immediately appealable.

     The fundamental problem with Hawley's argument is that in

Ex parte Bashinsky we made it abundantly clear that no guardianship

or conservatorship was ever created, and thus no "final settlement" could

have been entertained or approved by Judge Tucker. In Ex parte

Bashinsky, we unequivocally stated that "the representation and case-

presentation rights afforded to a respondent in §§ 26-2A-102 and 26-2A-

135[, Ala. Code 1975,] were applicable," that "[t]hose provisions, and

Ms. Bashinsky's basic due-process rights, were egregiously violated,"

                                   21
1200401 and 1210153

that "the hearing appointing a temporary guardian and conservator was

a nullity," and that Judge King's "October 17, 2019, order appointing a

temporary guardian and conservator for Ms. Bashinsky is void." 319

So. 3d at 1262, 1263. In other words, because basic due-process

requirements were not followed, the probate court lacked the legal

authority to order Hawley to assume control of Ms. Bashinsky's life

decisions and personal assets. As Erskine observes in her appellate brief,

a guardianship or conservatorship begins when a probate court grants a

petition seeking one, not when the petition is filed or even when a

guardian ad litem is initially appointed. This Court explained as much in

the context of removing to a circuit court a guardianship or

conservatorship for a minor:

           "Based upon the substantial similarity of the language
     of § 12-11-41[, Ala. Code 1975,] and the language of § 26-2-2[,
     Ala. Code 1975,] the reasoning that led us to the foregoing
     conclusions in [Ex parte ]Smith[, 619 So. 2d 1374 (Ala. 1993)],
     [Allen v. Estate of ]Juddine[, 60 So. 3d 852 (Ala. 2010)], and
     DuBose[ v. Weaver, 68 So. 3d 814 (Ala. 2011),] regarding § 12-
     11-41 now compels us to a comparable conclusion regarding
     § 26-2-2. The filing of a petition for letters of guardianship or
     conservatorship does not begin '[t]he administration or
     conduct of [the] guardianship or conservatorship'; rather, the
     probate court must act upon the petition before the
     guardianship or conservatorship may by subject to removal to
     the circuit court.7 It likewise follows that, absent the existence

                                    22
1200401 and 1210153

    of a guardianship or conservatorship, the circuit court cannot
    remove '[t]he administration or conduct of [the] guardianship
    or conservatorship' from the probate court. Accordingly, as the
    Court of Civil Appeals concluded in Ex parte Coffee County
    Department of Human Resources, 771 So. 2d 485, 487 (Ala.
    Civ. App. 2000), after also noting the similarity between § 12-
    11-41 and § 26-2-2, 'the circuit court did not have jurisdiction
    to enter a removal order before the probate court had acted
    upon' the petition for letters of conservatorship.

          "In the present case, James Sr. and Julie filed the
    guardianship proceeding requesting that the probate court
    determine whether Jo Ann is in need of a guardian or
    conservator. Although there have been numerous proceedings
    in the probate court concerning the question whether Jo Ann
    is incapacitated in such a manner that requires the
    appointment of a guardian or conservator, the probate court
    has not yet answered that question. Likewise, it has not
    entered an order concluding that Jo Ann is in need of a
    guardian or conservator or appointing a guardian or
    conservator. See Ala. Code 1975, § 26-2A-105(b) ('The court
    may appoint a guardian as requested if it is satisfied that the
    person for whom a guardian is sought is incapacitated and
    that the appointment is necessary or desirable as a means of
    providing continuing care and supervision of the person of the
    incapacitated person.'); Ala. Code 1975, § 26-2A-135(f) ('After
    hearing, upon finding that a basis for the appointment of a
    conservator or other protective order has been established,
    the court shall make an appointment or other appropriate
    protective order.'). In other words, the probate court has not
    entered an order creating a guardianship or conservatorship
    for Jo Ann. Logically, because no guardianship or
    conservatorship has been created for Jo Ann, there is no
    'administration or conduct' of such guardianship or

                                  23
1200401 and 1210153

     conservatorship to be removed from the probate court to the
     circuit court.
     _______________

          "7The probate court has subject-matter jurisdiction to
     determine whether a minor is in need of a guardian or
     conservator and whether a person is incapacitated and is in
     need of a guardian or conservator. See Ala. Code 1975, § 26-
     2A-31. The filing of a petition that raises the possibility of the
     necessity for the appointment of a guardian or conservator,
     however, is not the equivalent of creating a guardianship or
     conservatorship that must be 'administ[ered] or conduct[ed].'

           "…."

Ex parte Casey, 88 So. 3d 822, 829-30 (Ala. 2012) (footnote 8 omitted and

emphasis added).

     Applying the understanding provided in Ex parte Casey to the

situation in this case, it is clear that no guardianship or conservatorship

that must be administered or conducted was created because, as we held

in Ex parte Bashinsky, the hearing addressing the emergency petition

was a nullity and the order appointing Hawley was void. The basis of our

decision was that no circumstances constituting an "emergency" upon

which to predicate the appointment of a temporary guardian and

conservator for Ms. Bashinsky were ever alleged or proven to exist, and

so the provisions in the Alabama Uniform Guardianship and Protective

                                    24
1200401 and 1210153

Proceedings Act ("the AUGPPA"), § 26-2A-1 et seq., Ala. Code 1975, for

holding an ex parte hearing to appoint a temporary guardian and

conservator did not apply. See Ex parte Bashinsky, 319 So. 3d at 1262-63.

Absent such an emergency, the probate court's authority to affect

Ms. Bashinsky's person and property depended upon the existence of

certain facts that were never established in this case, namely, her

incompetence and her need for protection. The lack of a properly

supported underlying finding of incompetence prevented the probate

court from possessing legitimate power to order Hawley to assume

control of Ms. Bashinsky's assets without her consent. In short, Hawley

never   possessed    valid   legal   authority   to   assume   control   of

Ms. Bashinsky's life decisions and personal assets because the probate

court did not adhere to the legal requirements necessary to bestow such

authority.

     Logically, there can be no "final settlement" of a nonexistent

conservatorship. Indeed, § 26-5-7, Ala. Code 1975, provides, in part, that,

"[o]n the ... expiration of [the conservator's] authority ..., a final

settlement of the conservatorship must be made ...." (Emphasis added.)

Similarly, § 26-5-33, Ala. Code 1975, provides, in part, that, "[o]n the

                                     25
1200401 and 1210153

termination of a conservatorship ... on the expiration of [the

conservator's] authority or otherwise, the court of probate may issue

process requiring the conservator to appear ... and file his or her accounts

and vouchers for a final settlement." (Emphasis added.) Hawley never

had valid legal authority as a conservator, and so no "final settlement" of

a conservatorship could be ordered.

     As authority for Judge Tucker's approval of his "Petition for Final

Settlement of Conservatorship," Hawley points to this Court's mandate

in the conclusion of Ex parte Bashinsky that the probate court "require

the temporary guardian and conservator to account for all of

Ms. Bashinsky's funds and property." 319 So. 3d at 1263. Perhaps, to be

clearer, we could have said "purported temporary guardian and

conservator," but we did state that Judge King's October 17, 2019, order

appointing Hawley temporary guardian and conservator was "void,"

which clearly meant that Hawley never possessed valid legal authority

over Ms. Bashinsky's person or assets. The "accounting" we required was

for the purpose of having Hawley establish his own liability to

Ms. Bashinsky because he held control over Ms. Bashinsky's property

under color of law -- but absent her consent -- from October 17, 2019, to

                                    26
1200401 and 1210153

August 28, 2020, not for the purpose of having Hawley account to the

probate court for a conservatorship. In other words, the accounting was

a matter of equity, 8 not a matter of a statutory "final settlement" of a

conservatorship. 9 We never said anything about a "final settlement," nor

could we have done so, because we ruled that the purported temporary

guardianship and conservatorship was void, and the petition for a

permanent guardian and conservator had not been adjudicated in any

way. Consequently, the fact that § 12-22-21(5) provides that an order on

"final settlement" is appealable is irrelevant to the circumstances in this

case. 10

      8Section26-2A-3, Ala. Code 1975, provides that "the principles of
law and equity supplement" the provisions of the AUGPPA.

      9In his December 11, 2020, order, Judge Tucker did not purport to
act based on the probate court's equitable powers, but, even if he had,
forcing the decedent estate of the one unquestionably innocent party in
this matter to pay Hawley and his attorneys fees in the absence of a
supported finding that Ms. Bashinsky was incompetent does not strike
us as particularly equitable.

      10Because no guardianship or conservatorship was at issue, the
provision in Ala. Code 1975, § 26-5-1, that "[t]he court of probate from
which the appointment of a conservator is derived has jurisdiction of the
settlement, partial or final, of the accounts of the conservator" is also
irrelevant.

                                    27
1200401 and 1210153

     For Judge Tucker's December 11, 2020, order to be appealable,

therefore, it would have to have been otherwise final. In his motion to

dismiss Erskine's appeal, Hawley did argue that Judge Tucker's

December 11, 2020, order was appealable under § 12-22-20, Ala. Code

1975, which provides:

          "An appeal lies to the circuit court or Supreme Court
     from any final decree of the probate court, or from any final
     judgment, order or decree of the probate judge; and, in all
     cases where it may of right be done, the appellate court shall
     render such decree, order or judgment as the probate court
     ought to have rendered."

However, the difficulty with applying § 12-22-20 is that the December 11,

2020, order plainly was not a "final judgment" because there were several

other outstanding issues in this case at the time Judge Tucker entered

that order, including the pending petition for a permanent guardianship

and conservatorship. The litany of orders Judge Tucker subsequently

entered underscores the lack of finality of his December 11, 2020, order.11

     11As  our rendition of facts relates, Judge Tucker subsequently
entered: (1) the January 11, 2021, order awarding a fee to guardian
ad litem Guin; (2) the January 22, 2021, amended order reiterating the
award to guardian ad litem Guin; (3) the March 8, 2021, order that
purported to decide several outstanding issues; and (4) the October 18,
2021, order that Judge Tucker labeled a "Final Order" in which he
purported to amend the March 8, 2021, order and to dismiss "all issues
                                  28
1200401 and 1210153

Moreover, Judge Tucker did not certify his December 11, 2020, order as

final and appealable pursuant to Rule 54(b), Ala. R. Civ. P. Thus, the

record on appeal plainly refutes the notion that the December 11, 2020,

order was a "final judgment" under § 12-22-20. 12

     Based on the foregoing, the December 11, 2020, order was, at most,

an interlocutory order, not a final judgment that was appealable under

§ 12-22-21(5). A nonfinal judgment cannot support an appeal. See, e.g.,

Dzwonkowski v. Sonitrol of Mobile, Inc., 892 So. 2d 354, 362 (Ala. 2004)

(" ' "When it is determined that an order appealed from is not a final

judgment, it is the duty of the Court to dismiss the appeal ex mero

motu." ' " (quoting Tatum v. Freeman, 858 So. 2d 979, 980 (Ala. Civ. App.

2003), quoting in turn Powell v. Republic Nat'l Life Ins. Co., 293 Ala. 101,

102, 300 So. 2d 359, 360 (1974))). Because the order appealed from was

not final, it is irrelevant whether Erskine's appeal was untimely. See,

e.g., Dyas v. Stringfellow, 333 So. 3d 128, 132 & n.3 (Ala. 2021)

that remained following the March 8, 2021, order … WITH
PREJUDICE."

     12Indeed,  in his appellate brief, Hawley did not cite § 12-22-20 as
authority that Judge Tucker's December 11, 2020, order was final and
appealable, probably because this Court, on October 1, 2021, had denied
his motion to dismiss without comment.
                                    29
1200401 and 1210153

(dismissing appeal because "no valid, final judgment" had been entered

by the trial court and noting that, therefore, this Court would "pretermit

discussion of [the appellee's] argument that the appeal should be

dismissed as to him because the plaintiffs did not file a timely notice of

appeal"); Ex parte Harrington, 289 So. 3d 1232, 1234 (Ala. 2019)

(concluding that a trial court's judgment was nonfinal and could not

support an appeal in lieu of assessing whether the appeal was untimely).

Accordingly, Erskine's appeal, insofar as it challenges Judge Tucker's

December 11, 2020, order, is due to be dismissed as having been taken

from a nonfinal judgment.

B. The January 22, 2021, Order Pertaining to Guin

     Erskine briefly argues that Ms. Bashinsky's death deprived the

probate court of subject-matter jurisdiction to award a fee to guardian

ad litem Guin. See Erskine's brief, p. 19. As our rendition of the facts

noted, on October 16, 2020, Judge Tucker appointed Guin as guardian ad

litem for Ms. Bashinsky with respect to the petition for a permanent

guardianship and conservatorship, which was still pending in the

probate court at that time. Because § 26-2A-52, Ala. Code 1975, which is

part of the AUGPPA, provides that, "[a]t any point in a proceeding, a

                                   30
1200401 and 1210153

court may appoint a guardian ad litem to represent the interest of a

minor or other person if the court determines that representation of the

interest otherwise would be inadequate," Judge Tucker clearly had

jurisdiction to make Guin's appointment. Then Ms. Bashinsky

unexpectedly died on January 3, 2021, thus obviously ending any need

for a proceeding concerning her capacity. Erskine argues:

     "The Probate Court lost subject-matter jurisdiction upon the
     death of Joann Bashinsky and/or the filing of a Suggestion of
     Death and could do nothing more except to dismiss this action.
     … Therefore, [Judge Tucker's] award of fees to the guardian
     ad litem is void for lack of jurisdiction and must be reversed."

Erskine's brief, pp. 19-20. Thus, Erskine appears to be questioning

whether Judge Tucker had ancillary jurisdiction after Ms. Bashinsky's

death to award Guin any fee.

     However, the merits of the foregoing argument are not properly

before us because Judge Tucker's January 22, 2021, order was not

appealable. As we noted in the rendition of the facts, that order contained

the formulaic language of a Rule 54(b), Ala. R. Civ. P., order, but a proper

Rule 54(b) order is one "where the court has completely disposed of one

of a number of claims, or one of multiple parties, and has made an express

determination that there is no just reason for delay." Committee

                                    31
1200401 and 1210153

Comments on 1973 Adoption of Rule 54. The January 22, 2021, order did

not dispose of a claim or any actual party in this case. Moreover, a

Rule 54(b) certification is not proper if " ' "the issues in the claim being

certified and a claim that will remain pending in the trial court ' "are so

closely   intertwined   that   separate      adjudication   would   pose   an

unreasonable risk of inconsistent results." ' " ' " Fuller v. Birmingham-

Jefferson Cnty. Transit Auth., 147 So. 3d 907, 911 (Ala. 2013) (quoting

Lighting Fair, Inc. v. Rosenberg, 63 So. 3d 1256, 1263 (Ala. 2010) (other

citations omitted)). In Erskine's "Statement of the Issues" attached to her

notice of appeal, she listed one issue as:

           "Whether the death of Joann Bashinsky on January 3,
     2021, and the January 5, 2021, filing of a Suggestion of Death
     and Motion to Dismiss deprived the probate court of subject-
     matter jurisdiction and renders its January 22, 2021, final
     judg[ment] awarding attorney fees and costs to the guardian
     ad litem, Ken Guin, void?"13

Unsurprisingly, Erskine made this exact same argument with respect to

all the remaining motions before the probate court in her motion to

dismiss that Judge Tucker ruled on in his March 8, 2021, order. Thus,

     13Erskine  essentially repeats this statement in her "Statement of
the Issues" in her appellate brief. See Erskine's brief, p. 4.

                                     32
1200401 and 1210153

there clearly was an intertwining issue with respect to the issue raised

on appeal and the matters still purportedly before Judge Tucker at the

time he purported to certify the January 22, 2021, order as final pursuant

to Rule 54(b). Consequently, the probate court's January 22, 2021, order

was not a proper Rule 54(b) order, and therefore, it was not an appealable

order. 14 See, e.g., Dzwonkowski, 892 So. 2d at 361 ("[T]he trial court

recited the formula for certification of a judgment pursuant to Rule 54(b),

Ala. R. Civ. P. However, '[n]ot every order has the requisite element of

finality that can trigger the operation of Rule 54(b).' Goldome Credit

Corp. v. Player, 869 So. 2d 1146, 1147 (Ala. Civ. App. 2003).").

     Moreover, Judge Tucker's March 8, 2021, order did not resolve that

intertwining of issues even though the probate court purported to dismiss

the request for a permanent guardian and conservator as well as

     "other claims which hinge on a determination of Mrs.
     Bashinsky’s incapacity or susceptibility to undue influence,

     14The  fact that neither Erskine nor Guin raised this issue does not
impede us from reaching this conclusion. See, e.g., Fuller v. Birmingham-
Jefferson Cnty. Transit Auth., 147 So. 3d 907, 911 (Ala. 2013) ("[N]one of
the parties argues on appeal that the trial court's certification of its …
order as final under Rule 54(b) was inappropriate. However,
jurisdictional matters, such as whether an order is final so as to support
an appeal, are of such importance that an appellate court may take notice
of them ex mero motu.").

                                    33
1200401 and 1210153

     namely, the validity of Mrs. Bashinsky's purported October
     2019 termination of Petitioner Patty Townsend, the validity
     of Mrs. Bashinsky's purported October 2019 termination of
     her appointment of Petitioner John P. McKleroy, Jr. as her
     attorney-in-fact, or the request for a declaration as to the
     validity of an October 2019 Power of Attorney executed by
     Mrs. Bashinsky."

This is because on March 5, 2021, Erskine appealed Judge Tucker's

December 11, 2020, order and his January 22, 2021, order. When an

appeal is taken, unless it is from a proper Rule 54(b) order, the appeal

divests the lower court of jurisdiction over the case until the appellate

court provides a disposition of the appeal -- even if the appeal is

premature, i.e., from a nonfinal judgment. See, e.g., Dyas, 333 So. 3d at

132 ("[T]he plaintiffs' premature notice of appeal divested the trial court

of jurisdiction to rule upon the remaining claims in the case. ... Therefore,

the trial court's January 17, 2020, order was a nullity. ... Accordingly, the

trial court has not effectively adjudicated all the claims against all the

parties in this case, and there is no valid, final judgment for this Court

to review."); Williams v. Mari Props., LLC, 329 So. 3d 1237, 1240 (Ala.

2020) ("[W]hen a final judgment is appealed from the probate court ...,

the probate court is without jurisdiction to proceed further. This is also

true even if the order that is appealed, in actuality, is a nonfinal order.");

                                     34
1200401 and 1210153

Busby v. Lewis, 993 So. 2d 31, 34 (Ala. Civ. App. 2008) (holding that a

trial court lacked jurisdiction to enter a judgment resolving pending

claims while the action was before this court on appeal, despite the fact

that the appeal had been prematurely taken from an interlocutory order,

citing Etheredge v. Genie Indus., Inc., 632 So. 2d 1324, 1325 (Ala. 1994)).

Thus, because this case was appealed on March 5, 2021, Judge Tucker

had no jurisdiction to enter the March 8, 2021, order, and that order is a

nullity. See, e.g., Harden v. Laney, 118 So. 3d 186, 187 (Ala. 2013)

("Because jurisdiction over Harden's appeal rested in this Court when the

trial court entered its order purporting to strike Harden's notice of

appeal, the trial court's order is a nullity ....").

      In fact, the same is true of Judge Tucker's October 18, 2021, order

that was labeled a "Final Order" in which he purported to amend the

March 8, 2021, order and to dismiss "all issues that remained following

the March 8, 2021, order … WITH PREJUDICE." The probate court had

no jurisdiction to enter the October 18, 2021, order because jurisdiction

of the case rests with this Court until it has been determined otherwise.

See, e.g., Foster v. Greer & Sons, Inc., 446 So. 2d 605, 608-09 (Ala. 1984)

(explaining that, until an appellate court makes a determination

                                       35
1200401 and 1210153

regarding its own jurisdiction, the appellate court and trial court are

"bound by the presumption that [the appellate court has] jurisdiction,"

citing Thames v. Gunter-Dunn, Inc., 365 So. 2d 1216 (Ala. 1979)),

overruled on other grounds by Ex parte Andrews, 520 So. 2d 507 (Ala.

1987).

     Based on the foregoing, the January 22, 2021, order was not a final,

appealable judgment because Judge Tucker's certification of finality

under Rule 54(b) was ineffective, and he lacked jurisdiction to enter any

orders after Erskine's appeal was filed. Because the January 22, 2021,

order was not a final judgment, Erskine's appeal, insofar as it challenges

that order, is due to be dismissed as having been taken from a nonfinal

judgment.

                             III. Conclusion

     McKleroy and Townsend's motion to dismiss appeal no. 1210153 is

granted. As to Erskine's appeal, appeal no. 1200401, Judge Tucker's

December 11, 2020, order awarding fees to Hawley and his attorneys was

not a "final settlement" of a guardianship or conservatorship, and it was

not otherwise a final judgment, and therefore it was not an appealable

order. Judge Tucker's January 22, 2021, order awarding a fee to Guin

                                   36
1200401 and 1210153

was not appropriate for Rule 54(b) certification because it did not

completely dispose of a claim or a party and it involved an issue that was

intertwined with issues that remained before the probate court. Neither

of those orders became final by virtue of Judge Tucker's March 8, 2021,

order or his October 18, 2021, order because those latter orders were

entered after Erskine's March 5, 2021, appeal divested the probate court

of jurisdiction in this case. Therefore, Erskine's appeal is dismissed, and

the cause is remanded for the probate court to enter a proper final

judgment in this case.

     1200401 -- APPEAL DISMISSED.

     Bryan, Sellers, Mendheim, and Stewart, JJ., concur.

     Parker, C.J., concurs in part and concurs in the result, with opinion.

     Bolin, J., dissents, with opinion.

     Shaw, Wise, and Mitchell, JJ., recuse themselves.

     1210153 -- APPEAL DISMISSED.

     Parker, C.J., and Bolin, Bryan, Sellers, Mendheim, and Stewart,

JJ., concur.

     Shaw, Wise, and Mitchell, JJ., recuse themselves.

                                    37
1200401 and 1210153

PARKER, Chief Justice (concurring in part and concurring in the result

in appeal no. 1200401).

     I concur in all of the main opinion except footnote 9's comment on

the potential equity of Gregory H. Hawley's request for compensation

from the estate, an issue that is not before us because we are dismissing

that appeal. I also note that, when this case returns to the probate court,

Hawley is free to argue that he is entitled to compensation as a trustee

in invitum. See § 26-2A-3, Ala. Code 1975; Moody v. Bibb, 50 Ala. 245,

245-49 (1874); cf. Mitchell v. Parker, 227 Ala. 676, 678, 151 So. 842, 843

(1933); 90A C.J.S. Trusts § 637 (2020).

                                    38
1200401 and 1210153

BOLIN, Justice (dissenting in appeal no. 1200401).

     I respectfully disagree with the main opinion's conclusions

regarding the import of the Jefferson Probate Court's orders of

December 11, 2020, and January 22, 2021. Therefore, in appeal no.

1200401, I dissent.     Although I believe that the appeal should be

dismissed in part, insofar as it challenges the December 11, 2020, order,

I do so because the appeal from that order was untimely, not, as the main

opinion concludes, because that order was not sufficiently final and

appealable. Insofar as the appeal arises from the January 22, 2021,

order, I believe that that order was properly certified as final pursuant

to Rule 54(b), Ala. R. Civ. P., and I would affirm that order on the merits.

     In appeal no. 1200401, Tamera Erskine, as the personal

representative of the estate of Joann Bashinsky ("Ms. Bashinsky"),

deceased, appeals from two orders of the probate court entered after this

Court's decision in Ex parte Bashinsky, 319 So. 3d 1240 (Ala. 2020). In

the first order -- a "Decree on Final Settlement" entered on December 11,

2020 -- the probate court awarded Gregory H. Hawley a temporary

conservator's fee and awarded attorneys' fees to the law firm

representing Hawley. In the second order, entered on January 22, 2021,

                                    39
1200401 and 1210153

the probate court awarded J. Kenneth Guin, Jr., who had been appointed

the successor guardian ad litem for Bashinsky in relation to a pending

petition seeking the appointment of a permanent guardian and

conservator for Ms. Bashinsky, a fee for his services.

     Ms. Bashinsky died on January 3, 2021, while the petition for a

permanent guardian and conservator was still pending. On January 5,

2021, Ms. Bashinsky's attorneys filed a suggestion of death and moved to

dismiss the case. On March 5, 2021, Erskine, who had been appointed

the personal representative of Ms. Bashinsky's estate, filed a notice of

appeal, challenging the December 11, 2020, and January 22, 2021,

orders.

                     The December 11, 2020, Order

     Erskine argues that the probate court lacked jurisdiction to enter

its December 11, 2020, order because, she asserts: (1) the probate court

exceeded this Court's mandate in Ex parte Bashinsky by entering the

order; (2) the probate court lost subject-matter jurisdiction on August 28,

2020, when it dismissed an emergency petition seeking the appointment

of a temporary guardian and conservator for Ms. Bashinsky; and (3) the

probate court's order of October 17, 2019, appointing Hawley as Ms.

                                    40
1200401 and 1210153

Bashinsky's temporary guardian and conservator was declared void in

Ex parte Bashinsky and, thus, no estate was ever established that could

be ordered to pay a conservator's fee. Hawley responds that Erskine's

appeal is untimely to the extent that it challenges the December 11, 2020,

order and that the probate court did not exceed this Court's mandate in

Ex parte Bashinsky.

     At the outset, I note that John P. McKleroy, Jr., and Patty

Townsend filed the emergency petition for a temporary guardian and

conservator and the petition for a permanent guardian and conservator,

pursuant to Ala. Code 1975, § 26-2A-102 and § 26-2A-135, which are part

of the Alabama Uniform Guardianship and Protective Proceedings Act

("AUGPPA"), Ala. Code 1975, § 26-2A-1 et seq. Section 26-2A-31, Ala.

Code 1975, gives a probate court jurisdiction over guardianship and

protective proceedings, § 26-2A-31(a), with the "power to make order[s],

judgments, and decrees and take all other action necessary and proper to

administer justice in the matters that come before it," § 26-2A-31(b), and

further provides that "[n]o provision of [the AUGPPA] shall be construed

to void, abate, or diminish the powers of equity jurisdiction, when

invoked, heretofore or hereafter granted by statute to certain probate

                                   41
1200401 and 1210153

courts," § 26-2A-31(e), which would include the Jefferson Probate Court

in this matter. Section 26-5-1, Ala. Code 1975, gives a probate court

appointing a conservator jurisdiction over "settlement, partial or final, of

the accounts of the conservator."

     Section 26-2A-107, Ala. Code 1975, provides for the appointment of

a temporary guardian for a protected person when there is an

"emergency" situation.      Although the AUGPPA does not expressly

provide for temporary orders to protect the property and business

interests of a protected person, §§ 26-2A-30, 26-2A-130, 26-2A-136, and

26-2A-137, Ala. Code 1975, allow for the appointment of a special or

temporary conservator to protect such interests. See Ex parte Jamison,

336 So. 3d 175 (Ala. 2021). Section 26-2A-33, Ala. Code 1975, adopts the

Alabama Rules of Civil Procedure and the Alabama Rules of Appellate

Procedure to govern AUGPPA proceedings involving incapacitated

persons, except when the AUGPPA specifically provides otherwise or

when doing so would be inconsistent with the AUGPPA. Accordingly, a

proper party may seek emergency protection for the benefit of an

incapacitated person, as well as for an incapacitated person's property

and business interests.

                                    42
1200401 and 1210153

     I agree with Hawley that Erskine's appeal is untimely. The probate

court is a court of general and original jurisdiction regarding the

administration of guardianships and conservatorships. See Art. VI, § 144,

Ala. Const. 1901 (Off. Recomp.)15; § 12-13-1(b)(6) and (b)(7), Ala. Code

1975; and § 26-2A-31(a), Ala. Code 1975.

     Section 12-22-21(5), Ala. Code 1975, provides:

          "Appeal from the order, judgment or decree of the
     probate court may be taken by the party aggrieved to the …
     Supreme Court in the cases hereinafter specified. Appeals to
     the Supreme Court shall be governed by the Alabama Rules
     of Appellate Procedure, including the time for taking an
     appeal. ...

                 "....

                 "(5) After a final settlement, upon any order,
            judgment or decree, made on such settlement, or
            respecting any item or matter thereof, or any
            previous settlement or item, or matter thereof ...."

     Rule 4(a)(1), Ala. R. App. P., provides that,

     15In Ex parte Casey, 88 So. 3d 822, 827 n.4 (Ala. 2012), this Court
explained that the use of the term guardianship in § 144 might have
referred to either the guardianship of the person of a minor or an
incapacitated person, which is still referred to as the guardianship under
the AUGPPA, or the guardianship of the property (i.e., the estate) of a
minor or an incapacitated person, which is referred to as a
conservatorship under the AUGPPA.

                                    43
1200401 and 1210153

     "[e]xcept as otherwise provided herein, in all cases in which
     an appeal is permitted by law as of right to the supreme court
     …, the notice of appeal required by Rule 3[, Ala. R. App. P.,]
     shall be filed with the clerk of the trial court within 42 days
     (6 weeks) of the date of the entry of the judgment or order
     appealed from ...."

     Section 12-22-21 sets out certain probate-court orders that are

immediately appealable.        To promote immediate appellate review of

certain orders entered in the course of probate-court proceedings, the

legislature has provided for appeals of certain orders that are not final in

the traditional sense, and such orders do not need to be certified as final

pursuant to Rule 54(b), Ala. R. Civ. P. See Moseley v. Cook, 150 So. 3d

169, 171 n.3 (Ala. 2014)(Moore, C.J., dissenting)("This express statutory

authority [§ 12-22-21] renders a Rule 54(b) certification of finality

unnecessary."); cf. Brown v. Brown, 21 So. 3d 1 (Ala. Civ. App.

2009)(holding that testator's son had the right to appeal the circuit

court's summary judgment determining the validity of the will proferred

by testator's widow even though § 12-22-21(1) provides for appeal from a

probate court's nonfinal order on a contest challenging the validity of a

will but does not specifically provide a right to appeal a similar order

entered by a circuit court).

                                     44
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     Additionally, in Ex parte Bashinsky, this Court's decision was final

as to the matters before it, and further proceedings had to be executed

according to our mandate. Ex parte Edwards, 727 So. 2d 792, 794 (Ala.

1988)(noting that an appellate court's decision is final as to all matters

before it, becomes the law of the case, and must be executed according to

the appellate mandate).     A trial court has a duty to comply with the

mandate given by an appellate court, Dzwonkowski v. Sonitrol of Mobile,

Inc., 87 So. 3d 1172 (Ala. 2011), and may not exceed the scope of an

appellate court's mandate, Honea v. Raymond James Fin. Servs., Inc.,

279 So. 3d 568 (Ala. 2018). A trial court can neither address issues

already decided by an appellate court's decision in the case nor act beyond

the appellate court's express mandate. Id.

     In this case, the probate court appointed Hawley as temporary

guardian and conservator, and in Ex parte Bashinsky, this Court ordered

the probate court to require Hawley to account for Ms. Bashinsky's funds

and property. Our mandate cannot be couched in terms of requiring

something less than Hawley's statutory duty to complete a final

accounting of Ms. Bashinsky's property and financial interests, which

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Hawley had been conserving, to protect Ms. Bashinsky, pursuant to an

order of the probate court.

     Moreover, looking at the substance of the December 11, 2020, order,

that order was a final settlement contemplated by 12-22-21(5). Title 26,

Chapter 5, of the Alabama Code addresses the settlements of

conservator's accounts. Section 26-5-7, Ala. Code 1975, sets out when a

final settlement is required. Specifically, § 26-5-7 provides, in pertinent

part: "On the ... expiration of [the conservator's] authority ..., a final

settlement of the conservatorship must be made ...." (Emphasis added.)

Section 26-5-8, Ala. Code 1975, provides that the conservator must file a

full account of the conservatorship accompanied by vouchers and verified

by affidavit. Section 26-5-9, Ala. Code 1975, requires the probate court

to appoint a day for determining whether to approve the final settlement

and to give notice to the conservator and the protected person. Here, the

probate court properly held a hearing on the final settlement of the

temporary conservatorship, as required by statute. Ms. Bashinsky was

given notice of the hearing and was represented by counsel. Section 26-

5-10, Ala. Code 1975, requires the probate court to

      "examine the vouchers and to audit and state the account,
     requiring evidence in support of all such vouchers or items of
                                    46
1200401 and 1210153

     the account as may be contested or as may not on examination
     appear to the court to be just and proper, such evidence to be
     taken by affidavit or in any other legal mode."

(Emphasis added.) Here, the probate court heard testimony from an

accountant and from Hawley. Section 26-5-11, Ala. Code 1975, which is

titled, in part, "Final settlement generally," requires the probate court to

render its decree of the settlement, specifically stating that, "[a]fter the

examination of the vouchers and the audit and statement of the account,

the court must render a decree passing the same ...." (Emphasis added.)

     Section 26-5-13, Ala. Code 1975, allows for fees or other

compensation and attorney's fees for which a conservator "is entitled

from an estate up to the time of [any annual, partial, or final] settlement

...." Section 26-5-16, Ala. Code 1975, provides that a conservator "is

entitled for his or her services to reasonable compensation" as well as "an

allowance ... of actual expenses necessarily incurred." Section 26-5-33,

Ala. Code 1975, provides that, "[o]n the termination of a conservatorship

... on the expiration of [the conservator's] authority or otherwise, the

court of probate may issue process requiring the conservator to appear ...

and file his or her accounts and vouchers for a final settlement."

                                    47
1200401 and 1210153

(Emphasis added.)      Section 26-5-15, Ala. Code 1975, provides, in

pertinent part:

           "Whenever any conservator shall file any annual,
     partial, or final settlement in any court having jurisdiction
     thereof, the court shall, at the request of such conservator,
     require that notice thereof be given in the same manner as
     required by law in cases of final settlements. Any order or
     decree of the court on such settlement after such notice shall
     be final and conclusive as to all items of receipts and
     disbursements and other transactions and matters shown
     therein and as to all fees and compensation fixed or allowed
     to such conservator and attorney and appeals therefrom shall
     and must be taken in the manner provided for from any other
     final decrees of such court."

(Emphasis added.)

     In this case, Hawley's accounting of Ms. Bashinsky's assets was

examined and audited by the probate court, and the probate court

entered an order of final settlement, accepting and passing on the

accounting and audit and discharging both Hawley and his surety. The

probate court's order left nothing further for either Hawley or the probate

court to do or accomplish in the settlement of the temporary guardianship

and conservatorship. The term "final settlement" signifies that " 'nothing

remain[s] to be done by an administrator or by the court in the settlement

of [the] estate.' " Boyd v. Franklin, 919 So. 2d 1166, 1173 (Ala. 2005)

                                    48
1200401 and 1210153

(quoting Stevens v. Tucker, 87 Ind. 109, 115 (1882)). The probate court's

final order as to Hawley's tenure as temporary conservator was entered

on December 11, 2020.    Erskine filed her notice of appeal on March 5,

2021, outside of the 42-day time limit for an appeal. Without a timely

filed notice of appeal, an appellate court has no jurisdiction to consider

any issues, even an issue over which the trial court had no subject-matter

jurisdiction. Erskine's argument that subject-matter jurisdiction may be

challenged at any time is misguided here, because the filing in which it

is challenged must nevertheless be timely for the reviewing court to have

the jurisdiction to consider any argument the filing contains. Beatty v.

Carmichael, 293 So. 3d 874, 877 (Ala. 2019).

     Moreover, even if Erskine had timely appealed, a circumstance that

clearly is absent, the probate court did not err in awarding fees to

Hawley. Erskine argues that there was no estate created from which to

pay Hawley's fees because, as this Court held in Ex parte Bashinsky, the

probate court's order establishing the temporary guardianship and

conservatorship was a nullity. However, this Court held that the probate

court's order was a nullity because there had not been a proper

emergency hearing that bestowed and safeguarded the statutory and

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due-process protections to which Ms. Bashinsky was entitled and because

there had been no showing that Ms. Bashinsky was at immediate risk of

sustaining substantial harm to her health, safety, or welfare. It is clear

from this Court's discussion in Ex parte Bashinsky that the probate court

had not addressed a situation that constituted an emergency under the

AUGPPA.      319 So. 3d at 1257-60 (discussing what constitutes an

emergency under the AUGPPA). Nevertheless, after the probate court

appointed Hawley and ordered him to act on Ms. Bashinsky's behalf to

protect her and her assets, Hawley served both Ms. Bashinsky and her

estate in good faith in accordance with the court order appointing him as

temporary guardian and conservator. Hawley accepted the appointment

at a time when he was serving as the probate-court-appointed general

conservator for Jefferson County, see § 26-2-26, Ala. Code 1975, and as a

lawyer, i.e., an officer of the court. The probate court had before it a

substantial financial estate, reflected in the record to be approximately

$218 million, and the petition before it alleged that $23.5 million had

previously been "loaned" to a relative and that another $17.5 million was

about to be transferred from one financial entity to another for the benefit

of this same relative. Hawley acted as any conscientious, qualified

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1200401 and 1210153

attorney, particularly one serving as the general conservator of the

county, would likely do under the circumstances; that is, he accepted the

probate court's appointment as temporary guardian and conservator and

maintained the financial status quo until the probate court could

judicially ascertain whether Ms. Bashinsky possessed the mental

capacity to do whatever she wanted with her money and her estate. When

this Court subsequently ordered the probate court to have Hawley

account for Ms. Bashinsky's funds and property, Hawley once again acted

in good faith based on both the order appointing him as well as the order

requiring final settlement.

     Although the order appointing Hawley as temporary guardian and

conservator was entered in error and was subsequently declared void by

this Court, the purpose of a temporary guardianship and conservatorship

for any alleged incapacitated person (or a minor) is to preserve the health

and welfare of the person and/or to preserve his or her estate from loss,

waste, or misspending prior to a hearing on a petition for a permanent

guardianship and conservatorship can be conducted. Erskine's argument

is that because Hawley should have never been appointed as temporary

guardian and conservator after a defective hearing, he should not be

                                    51
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compensated for his work.     Although this Court disagreed with the

probate court that a proper hearing had been held to establish that an

emergency existed that warranted the judicial creation of a temporary

estate for an incapacitated person, Hawley was not in a position to

question the probate court; rather, he acted pursuant to a probate court

order that was valid on its face in a pending proceeding involving

discovery and preparation, a duty to protect Ms. Bashinsky and her

estate, and time necessarily spent in court. Later, this Court essentially

ordered Hawley to finalize his work as a fiduciary on behalf of Ms.

Bashinsky by appearing before the probate court and filing his accounts

and vouchers for a final settlement of his actions as temporary

conservator. This was mandated, despite the fact that this Court had

determined that there had been no proper hearing, affording Ms.

Bashinsky the statutory and due-process safeguards to which she was

entitled, to establish the existence of emergency circumstances

necessitating a temporary guardianship and conservatorship.         When

Hawley was appointed, the probate proceedings entailed requests for

both temporary and permanent guardianships and conservatorships, and

by accepting the appointment he submitted personally to the continuing

                                   52
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jurisdiction of the probate court in any proceeding relating to Ms.

Bashinsky's estate. § 26-2A-141, Ala. Code 1975.

     I submit that to disallow fees for a conservator who acted pursuant

to a court order that was valid on its face would ignore the reality that

there was an ongoing proceeding in the probate court. It was neither the

duty, nor the office, of Hawley to question the validity of the order at the

time of his appointment or during the duration of his services; rather, it

was Hawley's duty as both an officer of the court and as an appointee of

the court to act professionally to protect Ms. Bashinsky's best interests

regarding her property.

      It goes without saying that disallowing such earned fees could

make it difficult for probate judges to find willing counsel and other

persons to serve as court representatives, guardians ad litem, medical

personnel, fiduciaries, and in other roles for minors and incapacitated

persons in AUGPPA proceedings. If such earned fees are not properly

awarded in a proper judicial proceeding, then such fees should equitably

be assessed against the losing party -- not in essence against the

appointed lawyer. In this regard, I add that I agree completely with that

portion of Chief Justice Parker's special writing noting that "when this

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case returns to the probate court, Hawley is free to argue that he is

entitled to compensation as a trustee in invitum." ___ So. 3d at ___.

     Of course, this does not mean, however, that court-appointed

guardians and conservators will or should be compensated regardless of

the quality of their performance; however, that is clearly not an issue

before this Court in this case

                       The January 22, 2021, Order

     Erskine argues that Ms. Bashinsky's death deprived the probate

court of subject-matter jurisdiction to award fees to Guin, the guardian

ad litem appointed to represent Ms. Bashinsky in what was then a still

pending proceeding on the petition for a permanent guardianship and

conservatorship. 16 Erskine argues that Ms. Bashinsky's death ended the

necessity for a hearing on whether Ms. Bashinsky was incapacitated or

in need of protection -- a point not in dispute. However,

            "[s]ubject-matter jurisdiction is a simple concept:

            " 'Jurisdiction of the subject matter is the power to
            hear and determine cases of the general class to
            which the proceedings in question belong. The

     16In my opinion, the probate court properly certified the order
awarding fees to Guin as final pursuant to Rule 54(b), Ala. R. Civ. P., and
Erskine's appeal, insofar as it challenges that order, was timely.

                                     54
1200401 and 1210153

           principle of subject matter jurisdiction relates to a
           court's inherent authority to deal with the case or
           matter before it. The term means not simply
           jurisdiction of the particular case then occupying
           the attention of the court but jurisdiction of the
           class of cases to which the particular case belongs.'

     "21 C.J.S. Courts § 11 (2006). In determining a trial court's
     subject-matter jurisdiction, this Court asks ' "only whether
     the trial court had the constitutional and statutory authority"
     to hear the case.' Russell v. State, 51 So. 3d 1026, 1028 (Ala.
     2010) (quoting Ex parte Seymour, 946 So. 2d 536, 538 (Ala.
     2006)). Problems with subject-matter jurisdiction arise if, for
     example, a party files a probate action in a juvenile court, a
     divorce action in a probate court, or a bankruptcy petition in
     a circuit court, because the nature or class of those actions is
     limited to a particular forum with the authority to handle
     them. There are, however, no problems with subject-matter
     jurisdiction merely because a party files an action that
     ostensibly lacks a probability of merit."

Ex parte Safeway Ins. Co. of Alabama, Inc., 148 So. 3d 39, 42-43 (Ala.

2013).

     On October 16, 2020, the probate court appointed Guin to serve as

guardian ad litem for Ms. Bashinsky in the pending proceeding on the

petition for a permanent guardianship and conservatorship. Section 26-

2A-52, Ala. Code 1975, a part of the AUGPPA, provides, in pertinent part:

"At any point in a proceeding, a court may appoint a guardian ad litem

to represent the interest of a minor or other person if the court

                                    55
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determines that representation of the interest otherwise would be

inadequate." (Emphasis added.)

     Guin argues that, although Ms. Bashinsky's death mooted

McKleroy and Townsend's petition for a permanent guardianship and

conservatorship, the probate court still retained subject-matter

jurisdiction   over   collateral   matters    arising    out    of    the

guardianship/conservatorship proceedings.     Guin argues that such

collateral matters include the award of fees for his service as guardian

ad litem.

     Section 26-2A-142, Ala. Code 1975, provides:

           "(a) If not otherwise reasonably compensated for
     services rendered, any court representative, attorney,
     physician, conservator, or special conservator appointed in a
     protective proceeding and any attorney whose services
     resulted in a protective order or in an order that was
     beneficial to a protected person's estate is entitled to
     reasonable compensation from the estate. The conservator
     shall be allowed from the estate of the protect[ed] person all
     reasonable premiums paid on his or her bond and
     reimbursement of any court costs paid.

           "(b) If not otherwise reasonably compensated for
     services rendered, any court representative, attorney,
     physician appointed in a guardianship, and any attorney
     whose services resulted in a guardianship order or in an order
     that was beneficial to a ward is entitled to reasonable
     compensation from the estate. The guardian may be
                                   56
1200401 and 1210153

        reimbursed from the estate of the ward for any court costs
        paid.

              "(c) Except when the petitioner is related by blood or
        marriage to the individual who is the subject of the
        proceeding, if the assets of the estate in a protective
        proceeding or in a guardianship proceeding are not sufficient
        to provide reasonable compensation and pay court costs as
        permitted in subsections (a) and (b), the compensation of any
        guardian ad litem, court representative, or physician
        appointed by the court and court costs associated with the
        petition or motion may be taxed by the court with regard to
        any particular petition or motion presented to the court to the
        petitioner as additional costs to the petitioner."

        Erskine focuses on the word "estate" in § 26-2A-142(a) and (b),

arguing that because no estate was created, Guin is not entitled to any

fees.    Again, I disagree. 17 Section 26-2A-31, Ala. Code 1975, sets out the

subject-matter jurisdiction of the probate court under the AUGPPA and

provides:

              "(a) To the full extent permitted by the constitution and
        as permitted under Article 2 of Chapter 2B of [Title 26], the
        court has jurisdiction over all subject matter relating to
        estates of protected persons and protection of minors and
        incapacitated persons.

        17Section
               26-2A-20(6), Ala. Code 1975, defines "estate" to "include[]
the property of the person whose affairs are subject to [the AUGPPA]."

                                      57
1200401 and 1210153

          "(b) The court has full power to make order[s],
     judgments, and decrees and take all other action necessary
     and proper to administer justice in the matters that come
     before it.

          "(c) The court has jurisdiction over            protective
     proceedings and guardianship proceedings.

           "(d) If both guardianship and protective proceedings as
     to the same person are commenced or pending in the same
     court, the proceedings may be consolidated.

           "(e) No provision of [the AUGPPA] shall be construed to
     void, abate, or diminish the powers or equity jurisdiction,
     when invoked, heretofore or hereafter granted by statute to
     certain probate courts."

     The statutory grant of subject-matter jurisdiction to the probate

court found in § 26-2A-31 is broad. The probate court is granted the "full

power to make order[s], judgments, and decrees and take all other action

necessary and proper to administer justice in the matters that come

before it." § 26-2A-31(b). In Russell v. State, 51 So. 3d 1026 (Ala. 2010),

the State filed a condemnation action in a probate court, which entered a

final condemnation order. The property owner appealed the order to a

circuit court for a trial de novo. The circuit court granted the property

owner's motion to dismiss the condemnation proceedings on the ground

that the probate court had lacked jurisdiction because indispensable

                                    58
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parties had not been before the probate court. The property owner then

filed a motion for an award of litigation expenses and attorney fees. The

circuit court denied his request, asserting its lack of jurisdiction. On

appeal, we reversed the order denying the motion for expenses and

attorney fees, stating:

           "Although the circuit court concluded that it lacked
     subject-matter jurisdiction over the eminent-domain
     proceeding, we hold that it nevertheless had jurisdiction over
     Russell's motion for litigation expenses. Specifically, a court's
     subject-matter jurisdiction 'is derived from the Alabama
     Constitution and the Alabama Code.' Ex parte Seymour, 946
     So. 2d 536, 538 (Ala. 2006). In determining a court's subject-
     matter jurisdiction, 'we ask only whether the trial court had
     the constitutional and statutory authority' to hear the case.
     Seymour, 946 So. 2d at 538. Here, the plain language of § 18-
     1A-232(a)[, Ala. Code 1975,] provides that, in an eminent-
     domain action, '[t]he court shall award the defendant his
     litigation expenses, in addition to any other amounts
     authorized by law, if the action is wholly or partly dismissed
     for any reason.' (Emphasis added.) Section 18-1A-232(a) thus
     provides the circuit court the 'power' to award litigation
     expenses in this case, even if the action itself was 'dismissed
     for' lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. See also generally
     State Dep't of Human Res. v. Estate of Harris, 857 So. 2d 818,
     820 (Ala. Civ. App. 2002) ('Alabama follows the "American
     Rule" regarding the award of an attorney fee; that rule
     provides for the recovery of an attorney fee if a fee is allowed
     by statute, by the terms of a contract, or by a "special equity." '
     (emphasis added)). Russell's motion seeking litigation
     expenses was, therefore, unaffected by any lack of subject-
     matter jurisdiction over the eminent-domain action and was
                                     59
1200401 and 1210153

     properly filed after the dismissal of that action. See Williams
     v. Deerman, 724 So. 2d 18, 21 (Ala. Civ. App. 1998) (stating
     that a landowner's claim for costs and fees in a condemnation
     action that has been dismissed does 'not accrue, and the time
     for ... assertion [of the claim] d[oes] not begin to run,' until the
     action is dismissed)."

Russell, 51 So. 3d at 1028 (final emphasis added).

     Like the statutes in Russell that allowed for the award of fees as a

collateral matter, the AUGPPA provides in § 26-2A-142 that the probate

court has jurisdiction to award reasonable compensation to a guardian

ad litem related to a guardianship and conservatorship proceeding.

Additionally, § 26-2A-3, Ala. Code 1975, provides that the principles of

law and equity supplement the provisions of the AUGPPA. Therefore,

under the "special equity" rule as set out by this Court in City of

Birmingham v. Horn, 810 So. 2d 667 (Ala. 2001), attorney fees may be

awarded when the efforts of an attorney render a public service or result

in a benefit to the general public. Indeed, the original guardian ad litem

appointed to represent Ms. Bashinsky in the temporary guardianship

and conservatorship proceedings was in fact paid for his services.

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                               Conclusion

     In an ideal world, there would be no controversy, everyone would

maintain mental capacity for their lifetime, no one would attempt to take

advantage of another person, and there would be little need for a Uniform

Guardianship and Protective Proceedings Act, much less a probate court

to ensure fairness. Unfortunately, we live in a less than ideal world. At

issue in this case was whether Ms. Bashinsky was competent and had

the capacity to manage her considerable financial estate. When the case

was commenced, no one knew how long she would survive or whether she

was sufficiently competent to continue to care for her financial security.

That is the point where the Probate Court of Jefferson County and the

rule of law came in.

     For the reasons stated above, I submit that, insofar as it challenges

the December 11, 2020, order, Erskine's appeal is due to be dismissed as

untimely and that, insofar as Erskine's appeal challenges the January

22, 2021, order, that order should be affirmed on the merits.

     I am quite sure that, in retrospect, the learned probate judge would

handle the emergency proceedings differently if given a second chance.

However, because that is not possible, in closing I seek to condense,

                                   61
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emphasize, and reflect upon the following selected statutory provisions

from those set out at length above, recognizing that the probate court was

clothed with its equity jurisdiction in the allocation and award of fees and

expenses.

     First, § 26-2A-2, titled "Rule of construction; purposes," provides, in

pertinent part:

          "(a) [The AUGPPA] shall be liberally construed and
     applied to promote its underlying purposes and policies.

        "(b) The underlying purposes and policies of [the
     AUGPPA] are to:

                  "....

                 "(2) Promote a speedy and efficient system
            for managing and protecting the estates of
            protected persons so that assets may be preserved
            for application to the needs of the protected
            persons and their dependents."

     Second, § 26-2A-141 provides, in pertinent part:

           "By accepting appointment, a conservator submits
     personally to the jurisdiction of the court in any proceeding
     relating to the estate which may be instituted by any
     interested person. … "

     And last, § 26-2A-142(a) provides, in pertinent part:

                                    62
1200401 and 1210153

           "(a) If not otherwise reasonably compensated for
     services rendered, any … conservator[] or special conservator
     appointed in a protective proceeding … is entitled to
     reasonable compensation from the estate. ... "

For the reasons stated, I respectfully dissent in appeal no. 1200401.

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