A probate commissioner acted unethically and she violated the rules, but she did nothing wrong in the case of the old lady who went into probate court worth $1.3 million and five years later was penniless, according to a ruling released Monday morning.
Based on a quick read of the 11-page ruling, Marie Long lost the overall question of whether she was treated fairly during her five-year foray through Maricopa County Superior Court's probate division. But she won a new trial on the most outrageous of issues: the $233,000 charged by attorney Brenda Church and her firm, Frazer, Ryan, Goldberg & Arnold, for 11 months of work last year.
In all, Superior Court Judge Robert Budoff found that Commissioner Lindsay Ellis violated the Code of Judicial Conduct of the Arizona Supreme Court when she e-mailed a draft copy of her ruling in the Long case only to certain attorneys – the ones who wound up with (or their clients wound up with) much of her cash. But that “ex-parte communication”, while inappropriate, isn’t enough to show that Ellis was biased, he wrote.
“The ex parte communication occurred after the trial and after the ruling had actually been prepared, and the only change that had occurred as a result of the improper ex parte communication was immaterial to the substance of the ruling itself,” he wrote. “The fact that the lawyers who were in receipt of the ex parte communication did not disclose it for two months, and the fact that the judge never disclosed it, apparently, until after it was brought to the attention of other judicial officers, after the fact, is inconsequential to the substance of the ruling itself regardless of whether or not counsel and the Judge may have violated any of their ethical obligations.”
Budoff found that the other ex parte communications “were only related to scheduling issues and are inconsequential.”
Overall, Budoff found there was no evidence that Ellis was biased and that she properly approved hundreds of thousands of dollars in fees charged by the Sun Valley Group. He dismissed complaints that Sun Valley was self dealing by both acting as guardian and providing care because the guardian ad litem, Brian Theut, and Long’s court-appointed attorney, Jon Kitchel, “arguably acceded” to Sun Valley providing care while Marie was still living at home. Apparently, the Supreme Court rules prohibiting such conduct don’t matter. The judge never even mentioned them.
Full Article and Source:
Judge: Probate Judge Acted Unethically but She Wasn't Biased Against Old Lady
Lawyers and judges lie for each other!
ReplyDeleteBias, shmias! I think what they're doing in the guardian game is more like what the law books call criminal conversion of assets.
ReplyDeleteIt's an out of control system happening across the country.
ReplyDeleteAs long as self monitoring is in place, Americans have no where to go for justice.
Looks like Superior Court Judge Robert Budoff just gave the elderly the finger!
ReplyDeleteSuch a miscarriage of justice and it makes me sick to my stomach.
ReplyDeleteI have a feeling the new judge isn't going to approve the $233K so maybe Marie Long can recover that?
ReplyDeleteHa! You've got that right, Steve. It would be funny if it weren't so very sad.
ReplyDeleteBudoff will get by with this. The brethern always protect themselves.
ReplyDeleteBut make no mistake, Budoff and the rest of your kind - we, the people know. We see right through you.
I am sorry, Marie. What they did to you is wrong and I hope they will pay for it in the end.
ReplyDeleteI pray for your peace of mind and I applaud your coming public.
Thank you, Laurie Roberts, for another good report.