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             DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS

                                   No. 14-PR-635

                     IN RE ESTATE OF REUBEN E. WAUGH, JR.;
                         GREGORY WAUGH, APPELLANT.

                          Appeal from the Superior Court
                           of the District of Columbia
                                Probate Division
                                 (ADM-969-08)

                     (Hon. John M. Campbell, Probate Judge)

(Submitted March 31, 2015                                 Decided August 27, 2015)

      James R. Holloway was on the brief for appellant.

      Paul M. Toulouse was on the brief for appellees.

      Before FISHER and BLACKBURNE-RIGSBY, Associate Judges, and KING,
Senior Judge.

      BLACKBURNE-RIGSBY, Associate Judge:           Over the course of supervised

probate, and in two prior appeals before this court, appellant Gregory Waugh has

raised multiple challenges to the administration and distribution of the estate of his

father, decedent Reuben E. Waugh, who died intestate. Appellant’s primary claim

in the present appeal relates to compensation paid to appellee-attorney Paul M.

Toulouse, who has served in three capacities — as attorney for the estate, as co-
                                          2

personal representative with appellee Shanese L. Barber, the decedent’s common

law wife, and as the lawyer for Ms. Barber in her efforts to establish that she is an

heir of the estate. Appellant contends that the trial court erroneously denied his

challenges to Mr. Toulouse’s compensation because appellant raised them by way

of an objection to the co-personal representatives’ account of estate administration,

rather than by a separate petition under D.C. Code § 20-753 (2001). On appeal, we

address a question of statutory construction: whether our probate statute permits

an interested party to petition the court for a review of the reasonableness of

compensation paid from estate funds by way of an objection to the personal

representative’s account of estate administration, rather than by a separate petition.

We answer in the affirmative and remand for proceedings consistent with this

holding.1



                            I.     Factual Background



      Reuben E. Waugh, Jr., died intestate on July 17, 2008, leaving Ms. Barber

and appellant as potential heirs. Both potential heirs filed petitions for probate, but

the trial court granted Ms. Barber’s petition after an evidentiary hearing in which it

      1
         Appellant also challenges the trial court’s determination that his objection
to a proposed distribution of estate assets was untimely under D.C. Code § 20-1102
(d) (2001). We address this issue briefly, and affirm.
                                            3

determined that Ms. Barber was the decedent’s common law wife. The trial court

also appointed Ms. Barber as co-personal representative of the estate with her

attorney, Mr. Toulouse, who also served as the attorney for the estate.



   A. Appellant’s first and second appeals



         In appellant’s first appeal before this court, he challenged the trial court’s

determination that Ms. Barber was the decedent’s common law wife, and we

affirmed. See In re Estate of Reuben E. Waugh, Jr.; Gregory Waugh, Appellant,

No. 09-PR-1038, Mem. Op. & J. (D.C. October 19, 2010).                  Mr. Toulouse

represented Ms. Barber in that appeal and received compensation from estate

funds.



         During and after the first appeal, Ms. Barber and Mr. Toulouse continued to

administer the estate in accordance with their duties as co-personal representatives.

Pursuant to D.C. Code § 20-721 (2001), 2 they submitted two accounts of the


         2
             D.C. Code § 20-721 provides:

                 Except as provided in section 20-731, a supervised
                 personal representative shall prepare verified written
                 accounts of the management and distribution of the
                 decedent’s property at the times and in the manner
                                                                (continued . . .)
                                            4

management and distribution of the estate to appellant and to the probate division

for approval, the first on July 19, 2010 (“First Account”), and the second and final

on April 29, 2011 (“Final Account”). Mr. Toulouse also provided appellant with a

proposal to distribute the estate’s assets in kind, pursuant to D.C. Code

§ 20-1102 (d),3 on March 25, 2011. In this proposal, Mr. Toulouse requested that

appellant raise any objections to the distribution in kind within thirty days, though

appellant did not meet this deadline.



      Appellant’s     only    responses     to    the   co-personal     representatives’

communications came in the form of objections to the First and Final Accounts,


(. . . continued)
               prescribed in this subchapter.              The personal
               representative shall file the account with a certificate that
               there has been mailed or delivered to all interested
               persons, within the previous 15 days, a copy of the
               account with a notice that the account will be filed on or
               before a stated date.
      3
          D.C. Code § 20-1102 (d) provides:

              After the probable claims against the estate are known,
              the personal representative may mail or deliver a
              proposal for distribution to all persons who have a right
              to object to the proposed distribution. The right of any
              such person to object to the proposed distribution
              terminates if such person fails to object in writing
              received by the personal representative within 30 days
              after mailing or delivery of the proposal.
                                          5

filed pursuant to D.C. Code § 20-726 (2001).4 Appellant filed objections to the

First Account on April 24, 2010, asserting, among other things, that Mr. Toulouse

had abdicated his responsibility as co-personal representative by failing to require

supporting documentation for the attorney’s fees paid to him for his services, and

abdicated his responsibility as attorney for the estate by failing to provide such

documentation. Appellant filed objections to the Final Account on June 1, 2011,

renewing his objections to the First Account and, for the first time, objecting to Mr.

Toulouse’s proposal for distribution of the estate in kind as “unfair and uneven.”

At the time of this filing, more than two months had elapsed since appellant

received this proposal, and thus appellant had missed the thirty-day window in

which to object to the proposed distribution, pursuant to D.C. Code § 20-1102 (d).5

The trial court denied appellant’s objections to both accounts without making

specific findings, and appellant once again appealed to this court.6


      4
         D.C. Code § 20-726 provides that “[a]ny interested person may file an
exception to an account with the Register within 30 days of the filing of the
account. Such person shall mail a copy of the exception to the personal
representative.” Appellant and the trial court refer to these “exceptions” as
“objections.”
      5
          See supra note 3.
      6
        Specifically, in its order approving the First Account, the trial court stated
that appellant’s objections were denied “[f]or the reasons stated in the opposition
to the objection[.]” Similarly, in its order approving the Final Account, the trial
court handwrote “the objections filed by Gregory Waugh are denied.”
                                          6

      In appellant’s second appeal, he challenged the trial court’s denial of his

objections to the First Account and the Final Account, arguing error on the merits.

Mr. Toulouse and Ms. Barber countered on procedural grounds, arguing that

appellant had failed to file a petition challenging the reasonableness of

compensation paid from the estate under D.C. Code § 20-753 (a)7 and that his

objection to the distribution of estate assets was untimely under D.C. Code § 20-

1102 (d).8 See In re Estate of Reuben E. Waugh, Jr.; Gregory Waugh, Appellant,

No. 11-PR-1427, Mem. Op. & J. (D.C. January 14, 2013). We concluded that the

      7
          D.C. Code § 20-753 (a) provides:

              (a) On petition of any interested person (other than one
              who has consented after fair disclosure, and any person
              or entity claiming by or through such interested person)
              or on appropriate motion if administration is supervised,
              and after notice to all interested persons and hearing, the
              reasonableness of the need for or scope of employment of
              any person or entity employed by a personal
              representative including any attorney, auditor, investment
              advisor or other specialized agent or assistant, the
              reasonableness of the compensation of any person or
              entity so employed, or the reasonableness of the
              compensation claimed or taken by the personal
              representative for the personal representative’s own
              services, may be reviewed by the Court. Any person or
              entity who has received from an estate compensation for
              services rendered in excess of what the Court finds to be
              reasonable may be ordered to make appropriate refunds if
              such person or entity was given due notice of the petition
              and hearing, and the right to participate in such hearing.
      8
          See supra note 3.
                                          7

record was insufficient to assess the merits of either party’s assertions and

remanded for the trial court to “further explain its rulings” and make the following

inquiries:

             First, were the objections appellant Waugh filed to the
             first and second accounts sufficient to challenge the
             attorney’s fees paid to appellee Toulouse for his legal
             work to establish and defend appellee Barber’s status as
             an heir of the estate, or was appellant required to follow a
             different procedure?

             Second, assuming appellant’s objections were
             sufficiently preserved, should the estate be required to
             pay Toulouse’s attorney’s fees for: services provided to
             Ms. Barber to establish her status as the decedent’s
             common law wife; services provided to Ms. Barber
             defending the ruling on appeal; and/or any other services
             provided to Ms. Barber in her capacity as heir, or
             putative heir, as distinguished from her capacity as co-
             personal representative?

             Third, to the extent appellant seeks a different
             distribution of assets, is his claim barred by D.C. Code
             § 20-1102 (d), or was his objection to the first or second
             account — or the combination of the two objections —
             sufficient to raise and preserve this claim?



   B. The trial court’s order on remand



      On remand, the trial court answered the first and second inquiries by

explaining that appellant was required to file a separate petition for a compensation

review pursuant to D.C. Code § 20-753 (a), and that appellant’s objections to the
                                          8

First and Final Accounts were not a sufficient substitute. 9 The process for

reviewing an account, the trial court explained, does not include a review of the

reasonableness of compensation paid from the estate. Rather, it is an auditing

process in which the Probate Division’s auditing staff ensures that the account

balances and is supported by documentation and, if so, submits the account to the

court for review and approval.      The Probate Division’s auditing staff has no

authority to decide an issue or make recommendations to the court in response to

an interested party’s objection to the account.



      On the other hand, the trial court explained that a petition for a

compensation review filed pursuant to § 20-753 (a) is meant to put all parties on

notice that compensation paid from the estate is disputed and provides “a forum

where both parties can submit evidence and a record can be established for the

court’s consideration of the review petition.” Because appellant never filed this

petition, and because his objections to the First and Final Accounts were not a

sufficient alternative, the trial court stated that the parties and the court were

“entitled to proceed with the estate administration with the understanding that the

      9
         Specifically, the trial court stated that appellant must file a “§ 20-753 (b)
petition,” referring to the process for requesting a review of the employment and
compensation of personal representatives and employees of the estate described in
§ 20-753 (a). Section 20-753 (b) provides factors for the court to consider in its
review.
                                         9

reasonableness of Mr. Toulouse’s attorney fees w[as] not at issue.” The trial court

found that appellant had ample opportunity to file a petition in compliance with

this statute, and concluded that appellant’s failure to do so constituted waiver of

this right.



       As to the third inquiry on remand, regarding appellant’s objections to the

proposed distribution of the estate, the trial court determined that appellant was

required to follow the procedure set forth in D.C. Code § 20-1102 (d) and object to

the proposed distribution “within 30 days after mailing or delivery of the

proposal.” Id. The trial court explained that this procedure promotes efficient

estate administration by allowing the parties to address objections to a proposed

distribution before the proposed distribution plan is implemented, a concern that is

particularly relevant where a hostile heir is involved. Because Mr. Waugh did not

object to the proposed distribution within thirty days and instead challenged it in

his objection to Final Account –– filed more than two months later –– the trial

court concluded that Mr. Waugh had forfeited his right to do so and that his claim

was time barred.10 This appeal followed.



       10
         The trial court also concluded that, in any event, the proposed distribution
was fair, as it allocated the estate’s assets in-kind between appellant and Ms.
Barber, who took assets valued at $214,620 and $212,700, respectively.
                                          10

                                  II.    Discussion



      On appeal, appellant argues that the trial court erred by concluding on

remand that his objections to the First Account and the Final Account were

inadequate to preserve his challenges to the reasonableness of compensation paid

from the estate and to the proposed distribution of the assets of the estate. The trial

court’s conclusions, appellant argues, were entirely based on its own interpretation

of the statutes implicated, and this interpretation allowed the trial court to avoid

hearing appellant’s claims on their merits.



      In the absence of prior interpretation by this court, the trial court answered

our inquiries on remand by engaging in a literal interpretation of § 20-753 (a) and

-1102 (d), and we review its interpretation de novo as applied to appellant’s claims.

See In re Estate of Wilson, 935 A.2d 323, 326 (D.C. 2007).          In so doing, “[w]e

must first look at the language of the statute by itself to see if the language is plain

and admits of no more than one meaning. . . . The primary and general rule of

statutory construction is that the intent of the lawmaker is to be found in the

language that he [or she] has used.” Peoples Drug Stores, Inc. v. District of

Columbia, 470 A.2d 751, 753 (D.C. 1983) (en banc) (citations omitted). Yet we

may also look beyond the plain language of a statute in order to “effectuate the
                                          11

legislative purpose . . . as determined by a reading of the legislative history or by

an examination of the statute as a whole.” Id. at 754 (citations and internal

quotation marks omitted). We turn first to appellant’s argument regarding the

proposed distribution of the estate, which we address summarily.



   A. Whether Appellant’s objection to the proposed distribution in kind was
      timely filed, pursuant to Section 20-1102 (d)



      Section 20-1102 (d) requires the personal representative to “mail or deliver”

a proposal for the distribution of the estate to those with a right to object. See § 20-

1102 (d).11 The interested parties must object to this proposed distribution “within

30 days after mailing or delivery of the proposal” or their right to object

“terminates.” Id. We agree with the trial court that this timing requirement is a

necessary aspect of efficient estate administration and distribution because the

personal representatives must address any objections prior to moving forward with

the associated transfer of property and assets. Appellant filed his objection to the

Final Account, in which he challenged this proposed distribution, more than two

months after receiving the proposal. We need not assess whether appellant’s

decision to challenge the distribution of the estate within his objections to the Final


      11
           See supra note 3.
                                          12

Account was appropriate under § 20-1102 (d) because appellant’s challenge, even

if proper in form, was untimely.



   B. Whether appellant’s objections to the First Account and Final Account
      were sufficient to initiate a compensation review, pursuant to Section 20-
      753 (a)



      In many cases, the first time that an interested party will discover the amount

of compensation paid from estate funds to an attorney or a personal representative

is in the personal representative’s written account of the management and

distribution of the decedent’s property, which it must deliver to all interested

persons and file with the court for review and approval.                D.C. Code

§ 20-721; D.C. Code § 20-731 (2001) (permitting parties to waive the requirement

of filing accounts); see also D.C. Code § 20-722 (2001) (explaining the required

contents of an account, including “each . . . disbursement and distribution of assets

of the estate”). Interested parties may file objections to the account explaining

why they take issue with the account, as presented, and the trial court considers

these objections in deciding whether to approve the account. See D.C. Code § 20-

726 (“Any interested person may file an exception to an account with the Register

within 30 days of the filing of the account.”).
                                          13

      If an interested party would like to contest the reasonableness of

compensation paid from estate funds, however, that party must request a

compensation review. Essentially, this review is a statutorily-defined evidentiary

process in which the court holds a hearing and considers the reasonableness of the

employment or compensation of the personal representative and persons employed

by the personal representative. See D.C. Code § 20-753 (a); see also D.C. Code

§§ 20-751 and -752 (2001) (providing for compensation from estate funds for the

personal representative and for any personal representative who “defends or

prosecutes . . . any proceeding relating to the decedent’s estate”). In pertinent part,

§ 20-753 (a) provides that “any interested person” may file a “petition” or an

“appropriate motion if the estate is supervised” seeking review by the court of “the

reasonableness of the need for or scope of employment of any person or entity

employed by a personal representative including any attorney” and “the

reasonableness of the compensation of any person or entity so employed.” D.C.

Code § 20-753 (a).12 If, after notice and a hearing, the court determines that a

compensation review is necessary, the court will consider a list of five statutory

reasonableness factors before issuing its findings and conclusions. See D.C. Code




      12
           D.C. Code § 20-753 (a) is provided in full supra note 7.
                                           14

§ 20-753 (b). 13 As the trial court explained, this process allows the court to

conduct its compensation review on the basis of a record containing evidence from

all interested parties.



       Appellant argues that an interested party may satisfy the “petition” or

“appropriate motion” requirement of § 20-753 (a) — and thereby initiate a

compensation review — by filing an objection to the personal representative’s



       13
            D.C. Code § 20-753 (b) provides:

               In determining the reasonableness of any employment or
               compensation as provided in subsection (a) of this
               section, the Court shall consider the following factors (as
               shown in the verified statements of the personal
               representative or of any other recipient of such
               compensation), as well as any other factors deemed
               relevant by the Court:

               (1) the reasonable relationship of the compensation to the
               nature of the work performed;
               (2) any estimate of such compensation provided to the
               personal representative (or to the interested persons, in
               the case of compensation to the personal representative
               who is also counsel for the estate);
               (3) the reasonableness of the time spent, including the
               number of hours spent and the usual hourly
               compensation for the work performed;
               (4) the nature and complexity of the matters involved and
               difficulties encountered, and the results achieved; and
               (5) whether or not all relevant time limitations have been
               met (or the reasons for any delay).
                                         15

account of the estate. Our de novo review of Title 20, its legislative history, and

the Superior Court Rules of the Probate Division leads us to agree.



      Looking first to the plain meaning of the statute, the trial court’s assumption

that a “petition” must be filed separately from an objection to an account is not

untenable. Yet this assumption is based on the absence of any mention either way

as to whether a party may file a § 20-753 petition within an objection to an

account, not on any express or implied prohibition. No provision of Title 20,

including § 20-753, and no rule of the Superior Court’s Probate Division, prevents

an interested party from including a request for a compensation review within an

objection to an account, so long as that petition complies with the requirements of

Title 20 and the Superior Court Rules of the Probate Division.             For probate

purposes, the requirements for a “petition” are defined quite loosely:

             Any request filed by an interested person, including any
             pleading described in this title as a petition, need not be
             in any particular format. It will be sufficient for the
             purpose intended as long as it is in writing and
             specifically identifies the particular issue or concern
             which the interested person wishes the Court to review or
             resolve.

D.C. Code § 20-107 (c) (2001) (emphasis added). Super. Ct. Prob. R. 424 requires

that a “petition for review of . . . compensation by the personal representative” for

a “supervised or unsupervised” estate must be “filed pursuant to [Super. Ct. Prob.
                                           16

R.] 412 and . . . address the factors set forth in D.C. Code § 20-753 (b) and any

other factors deemed relevant.”14 Id. Super. Ct. Prob. R. 412 (a) adds that the

petition “shall specifically identify the relief requested, the legal basis therefore (if

any), and the reasons why such relief is believed to be appropriate” and “shall be

accompanied by a Certificate of Service.” In other words, under these provisions,

an interested party may satisfy the requirements for a § 20-753 petition within a

timely objection to an account if, within the objection, that party 1) specifically

identifies that the relief requested is a determination of the reasonableness of

compensation paid from estate assets and why such relief is appropriate, 2)

addresses the factors set forth in § 20-753 (b), and 3) provides a Certificate of

Service. 15    Where such a petition is present, the court and the personal



      14
           See factors listed supra note 13.
      15
          While § 20-753 requires that such requests be filed by “petition . . . or on
appropriate motion if administration is supervised,” the distinction between a
“petition” and a “motion” seems to be a distinction in name, not substance, due
solely to the supervised status of the estate. The substantive requirements for a
“petition” described in the Superior Court Rules of the Probate Division would
therefore apply equally to a “motion” filed in a supervised estate. This
interpretation is bolstered by D.C. Code § 20-107, which permits an interested
person to “petition the court for an order . . . to resolve a question or controversy
arising in the course of a supervised or unsupervised administration of a decedent’s
estate,” and by Super. Ct. Prob. R. 424, which does not distinguish between a
“petition” or “appropriate motion” in stating requirements for initiating a
compensation review in a “supervised or unsupervised” estate. See Super. Ct.
Prob. R. 424.
                                           17

representative(s), in reviewing an interested party’s objections to the account,

would thereby be on notice of a request for a compensation review.



      Acknowledging the tenability of the trial court’s interpretation, however, we

also look to the legislative history of § 20-753 (a). The present compensation

review procedure originated as part of the Probate Reform Act of 1994, in which

the Council of the District of Columbia (“Council”) sought to increase the

efficiency of the probate process by “revers[ing] the existing presumption in the

District of Columbia of court supervision of decedents’ estates.” D.C. Council,

Report on Bill 10-649 at 2 (October 26, 1994). Instead, the Act created a “flexible

system of estate administration that removes the estate from court review and

thereby reduces the time and costs associated with court supervision[,]” except

where interested persons seek to “have any controversy or uncertainty involving an

administration resolved by court adjudication or declaration.” Id. In keeping with

this purpose, the Council added § 20-753 to “allow the court, after an objection by

an interested party, to review the reasonableness and scope of compensation for all

services rendered the estate.” Id. at 8.



      Our interpretation finds support in the Council’s objective of increasing

efficiency by freeing the court from overseeing aspects of estate administration that
                                         18

it need not supervise, absent a request from an interested party. Id. at 8. In

pursuing this objective, the Council noted that it did not intend to “circumvent,

diminish or eliminate existing court procedures established to protect estate

property for the benefit of interested persons.” Id. at 2. In our view, the Council’s

objective would not be served by denying interested parties the protective

procedure of a review under § 20-753 where a party submits a request for review

that complies with the requirements of § 20-753 within an objection to an account,

rather than by a separate petition. Indeed, because the account is likely the first

time that the interested party will encounter the disputed attorney fees, permitting

parties to petition for a compensation review within an objection to this account

would seem to promote, not impede, the Council’s objective.



      Accordingly, we hold that an interested party may petition for a

compensation review under § 20-753 (a) by way of a timely objection to an

account, so long as that party adheres to the requirements of Title 20 and the

Superior Court Rules of the Probate Division, as outlined herein.



      Looking to the content of appellant’s objections to the accounts in the

present case, we note that in his objection to the First Account, he unambiguously

requested “an evidentiary hearing requiring . . . [the] Personal Representatives to
                                           19

document and justify the transactions in this Account.” Appellant specifically

objected to the attorney’s fees, noting the absence of supporting documentation

and arguing that the fees seemed to improperly compensate Mr. Toulouse in his

capacity as attorney for the estate rather than as co-personal representative, which

would not be “reasonable compensation for his services” under D.C. Code §§ 20-

751 and -752. Appellant objected to Mr. Toulouse’s continuing role “as both

counsel for Ms. Barber in her capacity as a putative heir, and as co-personal

representative of the estate.” According to appellant, “Mr. Toulouse’s action of

advocating on behalf of one interested party, and against the interests of a second

interested party, plainly violates his fiduciary duty to act in the best interests of all

interested parties as co-personal representative.” With respect to attorney’s fees,

appellant objected to “Mr. Toulouse’s billing the instant estate $52,616.98, at the

rate of $375.00 per hour, for legal work presumably done as the retained attorney

for Ms. Barber, one putative heir, for appellate work on her behalf,” work that was

“plainly in conflict with the right of Mr. Gregory Waugh, an undisputed heir, to the

faithful service by Mr. Toulouse to all interested persons of the estate.”



      In his objection to the Final Account, appellant incorporated his objections

to the First Account and added additional claims. First, appellant reiterated his

objections to “the glaring conflict of interest in the ongoing multiple roles of
                                          20

Mr. Toulouse as counsel for Ms. Barber, co-personal representative and counsel

for the interested parties in the estate, namely Ms. Barber and Mr. Gregory

Waugh.” According to appellant, there was “an obvious conflict of interest in Mr.

Toulouse acting as both counsel for Ms. Barber in the cause before the Probate

Court and on appeal, and then appointing himself as counsel for the estate and

charging the estate for his attorney’s fees before the District of Columbia Court of

Appeals.” In this regard, appellant noted that a check for $46,156.28 seems to

have been issued by Mr. Toulouse, as personal representative, to Mr. Toulouse, as

counsel for the estate. Second, appellant repeated his claim that the attorney’s fees

were unsupported by accounting or documentation. Third, appellant alleged that a

$15,000 balance of attorney’s fees had been used as a method of balancing out the

proposed distribution of estate assets.



      Appellant’s arguments specifically invoke §§ 20-751 and -752 and directly

address the reasonableness factors outlined in § 20-753 (b) that the trial court must

consider in its compensation review.16 Specifically, appellant has addressed “the

reasonable relationship of the compensation to the nature of the work performed,”

the correctness of “any estimate of such compensation provided to . . . the personal

representative who is also counsel for the estate,” and the lack of documentation to

      16
           See supra note 13.
                                        21

determine “the reasonableness of the time spent.” D.C. Code § 20-753 (b) (1)-(3).

Appellant’s challenge to the lack of supporting documentation also encompasses

the remaining two factors. See D.C. Code § 20-753 (b) (4)-(5) (“the nature and

complexity of the matters involved and the difficulties encountered, and the results

achieved” and “whether or not all relevant time limitations have been met (or the

reasons for any delay)”). In addition, appellant presumably complied with the

requirement of D.C. Code § 20-726 that he “mail a copy of the exception to the

personal representative[,]” as the personal representatives filed responses to both

objections.



      Accordingly, we conclude that appellant’s objections to the First Account

and Final Account sufficiently preserved his challenge to compensation paid from

the estate and we remand for the trial court to hold a hearing and review the

propriety and reasonableness of this compensation under § 20-753. See In re

Estate of Murrell, 878 A.2d 462, 463–64 (D.C. 2005) (remanding for a hearing

after the trial court, upon a properly filed objection to an attorney’s request for

compensation, conducted no such hearing and “made no attempt to relate the

compensation awarded to the factors enumerated in D.C. Code § 20-753 (b)”).
                                        22

                                III.   Conclusion



      Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s conclusion that appellant’s right to

challenge the proposed distribution of the estate was time barred, but we remand

for the trial court to hold a hearing and consider the reasonableness of

compensation paid from the estate pursuant to § 22-753.



                                             So ordered.
