Gerald D. McLemore v. Dennis Marshall McLemore ( 2007 )


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  •              IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2007-CA-02043-SCT
    IN RE: ESTATE OF WILLIAM F. MCLEMORE,
    DECEASED: GERALD D. MCLEMORE
    v.
    DENNIS M. MCLEMORE, FLOYD SHANNON
    MCLEMORE, JACKIE MCLEMORE AND
    ESTATE OF COLLEEN H. MCLEMORE
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:             10/11/2007
    TRIAL JUDGE:                  HON. MITCHELL M. LUNDY, JR.
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:    DESOTO COUNTY CHANCERY COURT
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT:      AUBREY LEE BROWN, JR.
    ROSS EMERSON WEBSTER
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES:      STEVEN W. PITTMAN
    SUSAN ELIZABETH MACKENZIE
    EDWARD THOMAS AUTRY
    NATURE OF THE CASE:           CIVIL - WILLS, TRUSTS, AND ESTATES
    DISPOSITION:                  ON DIRECT APPEAL: AFFIRMED; ON
    CROSS-APPEAL: AFFIRMED IN PART,
    REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART -
    03/31/2011
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    CONSOLIDATED WITH
    NO. 2009-CA-00784-SCT
    IN RE: JACKIE MCLEMORE, DENNIS
    MARSHALL MCLEMORE, INDIVIDUALLY AND
    AS CO-EXECUTORS OF THE ESTATE OF
    COLLEEN H. MCLEMORE AND FLOYD
    SHANNON MCLEMORE
    v.
    GERALD D. MCLEMORE, EXECUTOR OF THE
    ESTATE OF WILLIAM F. MCLEMORE,
    DECEASED, GERALD D. MCLEMORE,
    TRUSTEE OF THE WILLIAM F. MCLEMORE
    LIVING TRUST, WILLIAM F. MCLEMORE
    MARITAL TRUST AND WILLIAM F.
    MCLEMORE FAMILY TRUST, AND FIRST
    SECURITY BANK, TRUSTEE OF THE WILLIAM
    F. MCLEMORE MARITAL TRUST
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                           04/09/2009
    TRIAL JUDGE:                                HON. MITCHELL M. LUNDY, JR.
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                  DESOTO COUNTY CHANCERY COURT
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS:                   STEVEN W. PITTMAN
    SUSAN ELIZABETH MACKENZIE
    EDWARD THOMAS AUTRY
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES:                    AUBREY LEE BROWN
    ROSS EMERSON WEBSTER
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                         WILLS, TRUSTS, AND ESTATES
    DISPOSITION:                                ON DIRECT APPEAL: AFFIRMED IN PART
    AND REMANDED IN PART; ON CROSS-
    APPEAL: AFFIRMED IN PART AND
    REMANDED IN PART - 03/31/2011
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    EN BANC.
    RANDOLPH, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.    This case1 involves the administration of William F. McLemore’s estate and trusts.
    William appointed his widow, Colleen McLemore, and son, Gerald McLemore, as
    1
    The two consolidated cases effectively represent one case with a series of trial-court
    orders, several of which came after the parties filed their first notices of appeal and cross-
    appeal. In the second case, First Security Bank, as a successor trustee after Gerald
    McLemore’s removal, is listed as a party. But the record does not reveal that the bank
    appeared at trial or filed anything with the trial court. The bank did not submit a brief, but
    did file a motion in this Court, seeking to file a statement clarifying the assets in one of the
    trusts.
    2
    coexecutors of his will and cotrustees of his trusts. Following William’s death, very little
    was accomplished without strife and litigation, dividing the family. According to the
    chancellor, in the nearly nine years since William’s death, this case has been “hotly litigated”
    with some “highly anxious moments.” Thirty-six volumes of record detail the conflicts,
    which included motions for removal of executors and trustees, motions to compel, motions
    for contempt, motions for sanctions, a cease-and-desist letter, last-minute filings, contentious
    practices by attorneys, a retaliatory motion, and claims of fraud.
    ¶2.    Although the fitness of Gerald and Colleen to have continued as fiduciaries is hotly
    debated in the briefs, no party raised as an issue the chancellor’s denial of all attempts to
    remove Gerald as executor.2 Thus, the issue of retaining the same coexecutors and
    cotrustees is not before the Court and will not be discussed further.
    ¶3.    William amassed a great deal of wealth, primarily represented by real-estate holdings
    in DeSoto County, Mississippi, and Shelby County, Tennessee. By the time he died on May
    11, 2002, he had been married to Colleen for more than sixty-seven years. They had four
    sons, Gerald, Billy, Dennis, and Shannon. William and his sons worked together in various
    real-estate and farming operations. They were involved in many property transactions,
    including trading properties with each other. William gave and loaned money to his sons
    on numerous occasions over the years. A longstanding hostility existed among the sons.
    2
    After Colleen (and two of her sons, Billy and Dennis) petitioned to remove Gerald,
    she sent two letters to her attorney, stating that she no longer sought his removal. But the
    petition was never withdrawn. Subsequently, Billy and Dennis petitioned for the removal
    of Gerald and Colleen. Colleen’s removal was mooted upon her death. Gerald was removed
    as trustee by a majority vote of the other trust beneficiaries.
    3
    None of the others liked Gerald. The relationship between Gerald and Billy was especially
    poor. Both testified that they had not spoken to each other in fifteen years. In William’s will
    and trusts, Gerald and Colleen were appointed coexecutors of the estate and cotrustees of the
    trusts. After William died, Colleen continued William’s practice of providing money to their
    sons, particularly to Dennis and Shannon.
    ¶4.    After cooperating initially, Gerald and Colleen disagreed over: (1) ownership of
    various properties; (2) loans/gifts to Dennis and Shannon; and (3) remuneration for rent-
    collection, building maintenance, and contracting with new tenants. At the suggestion of
    Billy and Dennis, Colleen retained an attorney to seek Gerald’s removal as coexecutor and
    cotrustee. After initially attempting to act as a liaison and peacemaker, Shannon joined Billy
    and Dennis against Gerald. Their efforts to remove Gerald as executor did not succeed.
    When family tensions worsened, Colleen excluded Gerald as an heir to her estate and as a
    beneficiary of a trust she controlled. She named Billy and Dennis as her coexecutors. On
    January 21, 2007, after trial had begun, Colleen died. Her estate was substituted in her stead.
    Upon Colleen’s death, Gerald became the sole executor and trustee of William’s estate and
    trusts. Then his three brothers, a majority of the trust beneficiaries, voted to remove him as
    trustee. Following trial, Billy died, and Jackie McLemore, as personal representative of his
    estate, was substituted in his stead.
    ¶5.    The conflict over the disposition of one parcel, known as the Elvis Ranch and Bank
    Building (“Elvis property”), was especially contentious. Part of this property was once
    owned by entertainer Elvis A. Presley. It represented a large share of the family’s wealth.
    Colleen and William had contracted to sell the property in 2002 for $7,000,000, but the sale
    4
    was never completed. Other sales opportunities occurred later; Gerald had a buyer, and his
    brothers had another buyer. The chancellor considered and approved various petitions for
    orders to confirm sales contracts and for authority to sell the property, but no sale had been
    consummated by the time of the chancellor’s post-trial orders in October 2007.
    ¶6.    The record of the second case is primarily comprised of billing records of the
    attorneys for Gerald and Colleen’s estate. After trial, the chancellor awarded fees of
    approximately $420,000 to Edward T. Autry, the attorney for Colleen’s estate, based in part
    on his affidavit that he and Colleen had operated under an oral agreement for attorney fees
    ranging from $175 to $350 per hour. Later, a written fee agreement (setting the hourly fee
    at $175), signed by Colleen and Autry, turned up in discovery in another case involving
    these parties. At that time, Gerald charged that Autry, as well as Billy and Dennis, had
    committed fraud upon the court by claiming not only that no written agreement had existed,
    but that Autry and his firm had never used written fee agreements. Autry retaliated by
    claiming that Gerald’s attorney, Aubrey L. Brown, Jr., had committed fraud by continuing
    to operate under an old fee agreement and failing to complete a new agreement after Brown
    had changed firms.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    ¶7.    William completed his will and trust documents in 1994. The will called for Colleen
    and Gerald to be appointed as William’s personal representatives and for distribution of all
    of William’s property to the William F. McLemore Living Trust. William was to be the sole
    trustee of the living trust until his death. Colleen and Gerald were to become trustees upon
    William’s death. The living trust provided for the trustees to receive “fair and reasonable
    5
    compensation for the services [they render as fiduciaries].” The trustees also were to be
    “reimbursed for the reasonable costs and expenses incurred in connection with [their]
    fiduciary duties.” The trustees were authorized “to employ attorneys . . . and other such
    agents as [they] shall deem necessary or desirable. . . . [They] shall reasonably compensate
    those persons or entities . . . .” There was no provision in the living trust for payments of
    compensation, reimbursement, or professional fees of the other beneficiaries who were not
    named trustees.
    ¶8.    The living trust allowed for removal of trustees. After William’s death, Colleen was
    authorized to remove any trustee for cause. After the death of both William and Colleen, a
    majority of the beneficiaries could remove a trustee without cause.
    ¶9.    The living trust called for the distribution of all living-trust property into two separate
    trusts (marital and family) upon William’s death. The marital trust was to receive all
    property, less $1,000,000 (“the smallest amount which, if allowed as a marital deduction,
    would result in the least possible federal estate tax being payable . . . ”). The family trust
    was to be funded by property valued at $1,000,000.
    ¶10.   The trustees of the marital trust were to “pay to or apply for the benefit of [Colleen],
    at least annually during [her] lifetime, all of the net income from the Marital Trust.”
    Regarding Colleen’s final expenses, the trustees of the marital trust “may, in [their] sole and
    absolute discretion, pay for the following expenses: . . . Any inheritance, estate, or other
    death taxes payable by reason of [Colleen]’s death . . . .” The same section of the living trust
    cautioned, “Without in any way limiting my Trustee’s discretion, it is my desire that my
    Trustee not make any payments under this Section if those payments can be satisfied from
    6
    [Colleen’s assets] outside of the marital trust.” Upon Colleen’s death, any remaining balance
    of the marital trust was to be divided into equal shares, one for each of the four sons.
    ¶11.   The family trust was to be funded by property equaling $1,000,000 in value. The
    living trust granted Colleen “the limited testamentary power to appoint to or for the benefit
    of my descendants . . . by a valid last will and testament . . . , all or any portion of the
    principal and any . . . income of the Family Trust . . . . [Colleen] may make distributions
    among my descendants in equal or unequal amounts . . . .” (Emphasis added.)
    ¶12.   The attorney who drafted the documents testified that William’s intent was to transfer
    all his real property into the living trust, but this was never done. Thus, the living trust was
    not funded when William died. However, William’s will stated, “If my revocable living
    trust is not in effect at my death for any reason whatsoever, then all of my property shall be
    disposed of under the terms of my revocable living trust as if it were in full force and effect
    on the date of my death.”
    ¶13.   In his latter years, William continued to transact business and was involved in the
    lives of his sons. William collected the rent on his properties and made deposits to an
    account at BancorpSouth. Records were kept at an office located at the family’s Greenriver
    Farms property. A secretary, Gloria McCarson, who worked for William and Dennis,
    maintained the records. At one time, William and Dennis owned the farm, an approximately
    2,400-acre property, in equal shares. According to Dennis’s testimony, he bought his
    father’s share in 1998 in exchange for assuming all the farm debt.3 Dennis testified that
    3
    The Elvis property was used as collateral for the farm debt. These attachments were
    discovered after William’s death when his heirs attempted to sell the Elvis property.
    7
    another parcel, five acres in Horn Lake, initially was involved in the transaction, but that he
    and his father had decided that Dennis could keep it. William and Colleen also loaned
    money to Dennis, totaling $640,673 at the time of William’s death.
    ¶14.   William and Colleen helped Shannon by purchasing a house for him in their names.
    Shannon was to make the payments, but his parents assisted when necessary. These
    payments totaled $69,098 by the time of William’s death. William and Billy traded
    property, including a parcel on Winchester Avenue in Memphis. Billy testified later that he
    had thought he owned the parcel, but conceded that it was an asset of William’s estate.
    ¶15.   After William died on May 11, 2002, one of the first disputes arose over what asset(s)
    should be used to fund the family trust, as well as the timing of the transfer (whether it
    should occur before or after William’s estate-tax return was accepted by the Internal
    Revenue Service). Difficulty arose over using the Elvis property, as the assessed value
    ($1,000,000) was less than the selling price on the sales contract ($7,000,000) that William
    and Colleen already had negotiated. Gerald testified that the purpose of this transaction was
    to “beat the system.” Dennis testified that the Elvis-property dispute was the reason they had
    encouraged Colleen to find her own attorney. Although a closing date had been set, the sale
    never occurred, and the property remained in William’s estate.
    ¶16.   After the family cooperated initially regarding day-to-day business management,
    disputes arose. Gerald was in charge of rent collection and was assisted by Billy and Dennis.
    Gerald and Colleen decided to continue using the same bank account William had used
    (“rental account”) to deposit rent checks. Records were maintained by McCarson at the farm
    office. After a few weeks, Gerald, in the summer of 2002, told his brothers that, with all
    8
    three of them collecting rent, he was unable to maintain control of the operation, and that he
    would be the sole rent collector. During this time, Colleen drafted checks totaling $30,000
    from the rental account to satisfy arrearage in child-support payments owed by Shannon.
    Gerald insisted that the families of the other three sons be given the same amount, which he
    effected from estate funds in his control. Also during this time, Colleen began to loan
    money to Dennis from the rental account. In December 2002, Gerald confronted his mother
    about these loans, but otherwise did nothing to stop the loans from continuing. The loans
    totaled $383,500 at the time of Colleen’s death.
    ¶17.   Meanwhile, Gerald began questioning the ownership status of various properties
    (including Greenriver Farms, the Horn Lake property, and the Winchester property), and
    whether they should be included in William’s estate. He also investigated whether Dennis
    and Shannon owed the estate for the funds they received prior to William’s death. Colleen
    wanted to leave these matters to the past and asked Gerald not to pursue them.
    ¶18.    These disputes came to a head in December 2002 and January 2003. Gerald
    informed Colleen that he could not continue as the sole rent collector unless he began to
    receive an annual fiduciary compensation of $20,000. Colleen never agreed to this, and
    Gerald stopped collecting rent in January 2003. Colleen, who had become concerned that
    no one was maintaining the properties or working to find tenants for vacant buildings,
    enlisted the help of Dennis and Billy. After Dennis was added as a signatory to the old rental
    account in December 2002, Colleen and Dennis closed that account. They transferred its
    funds into a new rental account on February 19, 2003. Colleen and Dennis were the sole
    signatories of the new rental account. Dennis and Billy testified that, after Gerald quit, they
    9
    collected rent, maintained buildings, and negotiated contracts with new tenants. Gerald
    admitted that, once Dennis and Billy took over, he never inquired as to who was collecting
    rent. He did, however, have a lawyer send a letter to Dennis and Billy, ordering them to
    cease and desist from collecting rent or handling any of the affairs of the estate. Gerald
    admitted that this was the only letter he sent to his brothers during his tenure as executor and
    trustee. Billy and Dennis testified that, upon Colleen’s advice, they ignored this letter
    because Gerald was not performing the duties. Meanwhile, Dennis continued to receive
    funds from the new account (an account upon which he had signature authority) as he had
    from the old account.
    ¶19.   At approximately the same time as the changeover of the account, Colleen retained
    Autry as her attorney, and Taylor Buntin, who had served Colleen and Gerald as
    cofiduciaries, withdrew. Billy and Dennis were the first to contact Autry. They met with
    him on January 9, 2003. Autry wrote an opinion letter for Billy and Dennis, who then shared
    it with their mother. Autry then prepared, signed, and sent Colleen a written fee agreement
    for her approval. This first proposed agreement was never returned, and Autry sent another.
    Colleen signed the second document, but never returned it. On February 12, 2003, nineteen
    days after Autry sent the second proposed fee agreement, Colleen went to Autry’s office and
    retained him as her attorney. Autry later testified that, prior to the meeting on February 12,
    he had expended sixty hours under the assumption that his services would be compensated
    under an hourly-fee basis, payable monthly by the client. He testified that, following this
    meeting, upon Colleen’s decision, they operated under an oral agreement that, at the
    conclusion of the case, he would petition the court for reasonable attorney fees as allowed
    10
    in William’s living trust. Immediately after Autry was hired, first Colleen and then Gerald
    petitioned the chancellor to have the other removed as coexecutor and cotrustee. Colleen,
    Billy, and Dennis charged that Gerald had been derelict in his duties. They also were
    concerned that properties owned by the estate had not been transferred to fund the trusts.
    Gerald charged that Colleen was under the undue influence of Billy and Dennis, and, thus,
    was depleting the estate. He sought judgments in favor of William’s estate for Shannon’s
    and Dennis’s indebtedness to William at the time of his death, and for the loans to Dennis
    from the rental accounts.
    ¶20.   Following the initiation of litigation, Colleen continued to direct the efforts of Billy
    and Dennis to conduct day-to-day business, while Gerald showed little interest. Dennis
    continued to receive funds from the new account. Colleen reported the income from the
    properties owned by William’s estate on her individual tax return. Her accountant, Jimmy
    Luke, testified that she commingled income from properties owned by William’s estate with
    income from properties she owned outright. Luke stated that none of this was relevant to her
    income tax, as all the income was hers to do with as she pleased, whether it came from
    property owned outright, or from William’s estate’s property that should have been
    transferred to one of the trusts.
    ¶21.   The preparation and filing of William’s estate-tax return likewise was not without
    issues. The federal return was filed April 14, 2004, without Gerald’s signature. Gerald
    signed the Mississippi return only after the State Tax Commission put a lien on the
    properties, despite Gerald’s belief that the return was incorrect. Gerald claimed, at that time
    and later at trial, that both returns were incorrect, but he never did anything to correct or
    11
    amend the filed returns. The federal return included, inter alia, as estate property, the Elvis
    property and the Winchester property, but did not include Greenriver Farms or the Horn
    Lake property. Included among the debts payable to the estate were: notes receivable from
    Dennis totaling $640,673 and a note receivable from Shannon for $69,098.
    ¶22.   The disposition of the Elvis property was a point of contention throughout. The
    appraised value prior to William’s death was $1,000,000. William and Colleen had signed
    a contract with a buyer who had agreed to pay $7,000,000. The closing date was to be June
    16, 2002, but the sale never occurred. In 2005, Gerald, in anticipation of selling the
    property, transferred it from the estate to the marital trust. Later that year, Gerald had a
    buyer and sales contracts, and Billy and Dennis had a different buyer and sales contracts.
    Each side petitioned the chancellor for an order to confirm the contracts and for authority to
    sell the property. The chancellor confirmed the contracts submitted by Billy and Dennis and
    granted them authority to sell the property. But this sale never occurred. In 2006, the
    conflict recurred. This time, the court approved the contract submitted by Gerald and
    authorized the sale, but it never occurred.
    ¶23.   Trial began in November 2006 and continued on six nonconsecutive days through
    July 2007. On January 21, 2007, Colleen died, precipitating another round of motions and
    petitions. Gerald, claiming that Dennis had gained de facto control over the rental income,
    moved to enjoin Dennis from using the funds and to order him to surrender control over that
    account. On February 20, 2007, the chancellor granted a preliminary and permanent
    injunction against Dennis. Only after Gerald petitioned for a citation of contempt against
    Dennis on August 6, 2007, did Dennis comply with the injunction. After Gerald regained
    12
    control over the rental income, he resumed rent collection, but still had not transferred all the
    property to the trusts. He testified at trial in April 2007 that he already had made all the
    transfers to the living trust, but had refused to transfer the deeds to the marital trust, as he
    believed it had ceased to exist when Colleen died.
    ¶24.   On February 16, 2007, Billy, Dennis, and Shannon, a majority of the beneficiaries of
    William’s living trust, voted to remove Gerald as a trustee. Gerald received notice of this
    action on March 31, 2007. Following this, a corporate trustee, First Security Bank, was
    named as Gerald’s successor, but had not accepted appointment by the time of the
    chancellor’s post-trial orders.
    ¶25.   Again in 2007, as the hearing date on the Elvis property approached, each side had
    its own buyer. Shannon moved to compel Gerald to transfer the property from the family
    trust to its three beneficiaries (Billy, Dennis, and Shannon) so that they could sell the
    property for $7,500,000. Shannon argued that Gerald was no longer a beneficiary of the
    family trust, as Colleen had excluded him in her will using the authority granted her in
    William’s living trust. Recognizing that Gerald had filed a challenge to Colleen’s will,
    Shannon agreed that provisions should be made to protect Gerald’s interest, pending the
    outcome of the probate action.
    ¶26.   Among the other motions presented before and during the trial were: (1) Gerald’s
    motion for order requiring Dennis, individually and as coexecutor of Colleen’s estate, to
    account for estate funds and property; and (2) Shannon’s motion to clarify judgment and
    verified complaint for temporary restraining order against Gerald. In Shannon’s motion, he
    argued that Gerald had been voted out as a trustee, remaining only as an interim trustee
    13
    pending acceptance by a successor, and was no longer a beneficiary of the family trust.
    Shannon alleged that Gerald recently had attempted to negotiate the sale of the Elvis
    property, and that, by his other actions and inactions as trustee, he was acting against the
    interests of the family-trust beneficiaries. Shannon sought an order limiting Gerald’s
    authority as interim trustee to rent collection and deposit, as well as other day-to-day
    functions. Specifically, Shannon requested that Gerald be prohibited from coming onto or
    about the Elvis property or engaging in any solicitation or negotiations to sell the property.
    ¶27.   At trial, neither Dennis nor Shannon contested the requirement to repay the loans they
    had received from William. Neither challenged the net loan amounts as reported in
    William’s estate-tax return. Gerald argued that Dennis and Shannon had received sufficient
    funds since William’s death to have begun repaying their debts, but admitted that he had
    never asked them to begin repayment. Dennis did not challenge the requirement to repay
    the amounts Colleen had given him from the rental receipts. Although Dennis failed to
    provide the records of the new rental account in response to a discovery request, records of
    the account were available to the chancellor at trial.4 Dennis testified and was cross-
    examined about his use of the funds.
    ¶28.   The chancellor issued a series of post-trial orders on August 17, 2007. The chancellor
    found that, as a majority of the trust beneficiaries had removed Gerald as trustee, the issue
    of his removal was moot.        However, since the successor trustee had not accepted
    appointment, Gerald was to continue as trustee. Further, the chancellor granted Shannon’s
    4
    These included monthly account statements for February 2003 through July 2003 and
    charts listing all deposits, transfers, withdrawals from January 2003 through May 2006.
    14
    motion to limit Gerald’s duties as trustee and to restrain him from coming onto or around the
    Elvis property, or attempting to solicit or negotiate its sale. The chancellor found that
    Colleen and Dennis had made unauthorized loans of estate funds to Dennis and/or
    Greenriver Farms in the amount of $383,500. Thus, he ordered a judgment in favor
    William’s estate of $192,800 (the unpaid balance) against Colleen’s estate and Dennis,
    jointly and severally. The chancellor found that, at the time of William’s death, Dennis
    owed William $640,673, and Shannon owed $69,098.                Thus, the chancellor ordered
    judgments in favor of William’s estate against Dennis and Shannon for those amounts. The
    chancellor denied Gerald’s request for prejudgment interest on these awards. Regarding his
    decision not to order prejudgment interest on Colleen’s loans to Dennis, the chancellor found
    Colleen’s actions to have been in error, although he did not impute any bad intent to her, as
    she had “thought she was doing right . . .” and had tried unsuccessfully “to satisfy and/or
    make peace between the family.”
    ¶29.   The parties then filed, inter alia, the following: (1) all parties’ petitions for attorney
    fees with attached time records and attorney affidavits; (2) Colleen’s estate’s and Gerald’s
    petitions for fiduciary commissions for service as coexecutors and cotrustees; (3) Gerald’s
    petition to construe and enforce the living trust such that Colleen’s estate tax be paid from
    her assets, other than marital-trust assets; (4) Colleen’s estate’s petition for order directing
    payment of Colleen’s estate tax from the marital trust; (5) Gerald’s motion to alter or amend
    the judgments to add awards of prejudgment interest; (6) Shannon’s petition to compel
    Gerald, as trustee of the family trust, to transfer the Elvis property to Billy, Dennis, and
    Shannon; (7) Billy, Dennis, and Shannon’s petition for order transferring judgments from
    15
    William’s estate to the marital trust.
    ¶30.   Autry, as attorney for Colleen’s estate, stated in his attorney-fee affidavit that he met
    with Billy and Dennis on January 9, 2003, to discuss the case and render legal advice. The
    affidavit continues:
    On February 12, 2003, pursuant to an oral agreement, I undertook to represent
    Colleen . . . in her capacity as Co-Executor of [William’s estate] and Co-
    Trustee of the [living trust, marital trust, and family trust], for services
    rendered at hourly rates ranging from $175 - $350 per hour for attorneys . . .
    and at said time[,] Colleen . . . ratified all of my actions and time incurred prior
    to my engagement[,] researching issues to or for her benefit as same relates to
    her fiduciary responsibilities . . . .
    Neither a written fee agreement nor any written fee proposal was mentioned. Autry
    requested a total of $404,281.50 for services rendered through August 30, 2007, the date of
    the affidavit. He also requested an award of $50,000 as an estimate of future services to be
    rendered up to the closing of William’s estate. On September 20, 2007, when these requests
    were argued, Autry requested an additional amount representing fees incurred to that date
    and renewed his request for future fees. Autry also argued in favor of a fee award to Steven
    W. Pittman, the attorney for Billy and Dennis. When Gerald’s attorney, Aubrey L. Brown,
    Jr., questioned why Autry was doing this, Autry replied:
    I will make it clear . . . I represent Colleen McLemore, and since she’s died,
    I represent her Estate. My agreement with Colleen was that she hired me. . .
    . She asked me to . . . move this estate along, and that’s what I did. The facts
    are, Your Honor, we don’t get retainers and we don’t really engage in written,
    I guess, employment agreements because we just never have, Your Honor. .
    . . The practice in our office is not to ask for fees until the Estate is finished.
    Brown did not question the number of hours Autry claimed, but stated that he was troubled
    by the lack of a written agreement and charged that Autry actually was representing the other
    16
    sons. He asked, “Is it your representation there is no other written agreement with any other
    beneficiary, Dennis or Billy or Shannon?” Autry replied:
    Again, it’s my practice that we just – wrong or right, we don’t generally have
    written retainer agreements because clients come to us and they ask us.
    They’re not there because we ask them to be there and because we solicit
    them; they’re there because they want to be and they need help. That’s
    generally how we practice, and I’ve practiced that way since I first became
    licensed, Your Honor.
    ¶31.   On October 11, 2007, the chancellor issued another set of post-trial orders. All the
    attorney-fee requests were approved. Brown was awarded approximately $177,000 as an
    interim payment for services rendered through June 30, 2007. Shannon’s attorney, Susan
    MacKenzie, was awarded approximately $41,000 as interim payment for her services and
    expenses. Pittman was awarded approximately $44,000 as interim payment for his services
    and expenses. Autry was awarded fees of $420,891.50 for his services provided through
    September 20, 2007, and expenses in the amount of $7,000.96 for the same period.
    ¶32.   The chancellor found that Colleen had provided valuable and necessary services to
    William’s estate during her tenure as coexecutor and cotrustee, and found that Autry had
    represented Colleen’s interests, as well as those of her estate, as they related to William’s
    estate. The chancellor based the award on the time records and affidavit presented by Autry.
    However, the chancellor declined to award fees based on Autry’s estimate of future services
    to be rendered after September 20, 2007, as Colleen’s service to William’s estate had ended
    upon her death.
    ¶33.   The chancellor approved fiduciary commissions for Colleen’s estate and Gerald for
    their services as coexecutors and cotrustees. Gerald requested a commission based on a
    17
    formula for a corporate trustee ($400,000, split equally between Colleen’s estate and
    Gerald). Colleen’s estate asked for approximately $120,000, based on a percentage of the
    gross estate. Each was awarded $160,000. The chancellor found that each had administered
    William’s estate and had provided valuable and necessary services to the estate and trusts.
    ¶34.   After hearing argument, the chancellor denied Colleen’s estate’s motion to direct
    payment of Colleen’s estate taxes from the marital trust. Gerald argued that William’s
    intent, expressed in the living trust, was that the marital trust not be used to pay Colleen’s
    estate taxes if other funds sufficed. He argued further that federal tax law to the contrary is
    inapplicable where state law and the settlor’s intent call for an apportionment different from
    the method prescribed under federal law. Colleen’s estate argued that the Internal Revenue
    Code, as federal law, trumps state law. He argued that William’s intent was irrelevant, as
    the relevant intent was that of Colleen. She had not waived her right under federal law, thus
    her estate retained the option to seek contribution from the marital trust.
    ¶35.   The chancellor denied Gerald’s motion for prejudgment interest on the loan-
    repayment judgments and granted the motion to transfer the judgments from William’s estate
    to the marital trust. The chancellor denied Gerald’s motion to require Dennis to account for
    estate funds and property. He did this in the interest of finality, after hearing argument
    regarding the amount of documentary evidence and testimony on this issue. The chancellor
    granted the motion to compel Gerald to transfer the Elvis property from the family trust to
    its beneficiaries, Billy, Dennis, and Shannon. In the judgment, the chancellor included six
    provisions to protect Gerald’s claim of interest in the property, pending judgment in the
    probate of Colleen’s will. Each provision called for a notation to be placed on the deed of
    18
    conveyance detailing its effect upon the transfer. The chancellor ordered, inter alia, that, if
    a sale of the property occurred, one-fourth of the proceeds of the sale, plus $250,000, be
    placed in escrow to provide for Gerald’s share if he were to succeed in challenging Colleen’s
    will.
    ¶36.     Gerald filed his notice of appeal in November 2007, followed by a cross-appeal by
    Billy and Dennis. In December 2007, Billy, Dennis, and Shannon filed contempt motions
    against Gerald because he had not complied with the chancellor’s orders, including those to
    transfer the Elvis property out of the family trust and to transfer the judgments from the
    estate to the marital trust. Gerald responded to these motions and requested Rule 11
    sanctions against Billy, Dennis, Shannon, and their attorneys. See Miss. R. Civ. P. 11. In
    February 2008, the chancellor granted the contempt motions, but found that Gerald’s actions
    had not been willful and that he had purged himself of contempt. Gerald’s requests for
    sanctions were denied.
    ¶37.    On April 8, 2008, Gerald moved under Rule 60 to vacate the final judgment awarding
    fees to Autry and for disgorgement of all amounts paid, as well as for contempt and Rule 11
    sanctions. See Miss. R. Civ. P. 11, 60. Gerald alleged that newly discovered evidence
    supported his motion. In response to a discovery request in the litigation over Colleen’s will,
    Billy had provided a copy of an attorney-fee agreement signed by Autry and Colleen. The
    document set hourly fees at: Attorney, $175; Associate Attorney, $125; Paralegal, $100.
    Two days later, Autry filed a similar motion against Brown. Autry’s motion called for
    disgorgement of all fees paid to Brown and for sanctions and a citation of contempt because
    Brown had committed fraud upon the court by continuing, after he moved to a new firm, to
    19
    use a fee agreement drawn up while he was at a prior firm. On the same day, Autry also
    moved to vacate the order approving executor fees to Gerald, and for sanctions and for a
    finding of contempt against Gerald, because he had known that the only fee agreement
    between him and his attorney was one from a prior law firm. Brown then moved for
    additional sanctions against Autry, Billy, and Dennis, because they had retaliated by filing
    a nearly identical motion that had no basis in fact or law, that was patently frivolous, and was
    brought solely for the purpose of harassment.
    ¶38.   In Autry’s responses to Brown’s motions, he asserted that: (1) the chancellor did not
    base the fee award on his representations concerning a written agreement; (2) he did not
    recall who requested the purported written agreement; (3) he signed and forwarded the
    proposed fee agreement to Colleen; (4) Colleen never returned the document; (5) he and two
    of his employees had searched the client file and had not found a copy of the agreement; (6)
    the document is not a binding contract, as it was not returned; (7) he never sent a bill to
    Colleen based on the document; (8) Billy, Dennis, and Shannon had searched Colleen’s
    papers and had not found a copy of the document; (9) the document was not newly
    discovered evidence, as due diligence and proper inquiry by Brown would have produced
    it. Autry’s response included a copy of a letter he had sent to Brown. In it, he asserted that
    his motion had not been in retaliation. The letter continued, “I simply grew tired of your
    repeated misrepresentations to the Court and counsel that there is a written fee agreement by
    and between [Gerald] and yourself and your firm.” The letter closed with an offer to
    withdraw the motion if Brown would reciprocate.
    ¶39.   Billy testified that he recalled when Colleen received the proposed fee agreement, and
    20
    that he, as was his custom with all documents Colleen received, had made a copy of it and
    had returned the original to Colleen. Billy continued his testimony by proffer, stating that
    Colleen had found it difficult to sign the document, as it meant firing her old attorney and
    beginning litigation against her son. Billy testified that Colleen signed the document, but
    he could not recall whether she returned it to Autry. Autry argued that he had logged sixty
    hours of work under the fee agreement before Colleen decided that she would rather petition
    the court for reasonable fees at the conclusion, rather than pay a monthly, per-hour fee. At
    oral argument, Autry repeated the claim made prior to the fee award, “Quite frankly, your
    Honor, I don’t know who asked me to prepare a written fee agreement because, again, and
    I’ll say it again for the Court, and make sure it’s clear on record, my firm doesn’t enter into
    written retainer agreements.” In a supplementary response to the court, Autry listed 146
    estate cases over the previous eighteen years in which he had been the attorney of record.
    In three of these cases, Autry and his client operated under a retainer agreement.
    ¶40.   Autry’s attorney argued that the clear-and-convincing standard for fraud had not been
    met. He argued that it was not necessary for Autry to have disclosed the purported fee
    agreement; as Autry did not know that a signed agreement existed, it was not something that
    the court should have taken into account. In his bench ruling, the chancellor found that
    Autry’s actions did not constitute fraud, but that the court should have been advised of the
    proposed fee agreement, as it was something the court would have considered. The
    chancellor ordered Autry’s fee award to be based on the proposed agreement ($276,033.75)
    and that the difference in that amount and the previous award ($420,891.50) was to be
    disgorged.
    21
    ¶41.   The chancellor dismissed Autry’s motion, as he found no misrepresentation by
    Brown. He found that Autry’s motion mirrored Brown’s and that it had been filed for
    retaliatory reasons. The chancellor denied fees to either side for bringing these motions.5
    However, the chancellor exercised his discretion and denied the motions for sanctions
    against Autry even though he found it a “close question.”6
    ¶42.   After the successor trustee, First Security Bank, accepted the court’s appointment
    replacing Gerald in December 2007, the process of closing William’s estate, as well as
    funding and winding up the trusts, accelerated. This occurred despite the ongoing battle over
    attorney fees and the successful contempt motions against Gerald as detailed above, as well
    as another unsuccessful effort to remove Gerald as executor. As the closure of William’s
    estate approached, all the attorneys except Autry submitted supplemental fee requests, all of
    which were approved.7
    5
    This order is irrelevant to Autry, as the chancellor already had cut off fees following
    Colleen’s death. However, as will be seen below, this order is inconsistent with the fee
    awards subsequently made to Brown.
    6
    Brown requested $10,643 as the sanction amount, representing that one-half of the
    fees logged in April 2008 was an approximation of the amount expended in defending
    against Autry’s retaliatory motion. In answer to the chancellor’s question, Brown replied
    that, if these fees were not paid by Autry as a sanction, they would be part of his attorney-fee
    request for payment from William’s estate.
    7
    Autry did not make a request, as the chancellor had ruled that fees were no longer
    payable for services after Colleen died and ceased being a fiduciary. Brown requested and
    received $156,462.95 for his total fees and expenses for the period from July 1, 2007,
    through February 20, 2009. Without breaking down the amounts, Brown claimed that these
    fees included those for prosecuting the successful disgorgement motion against Autry.
    MacKenzie submitted multiple interim requests and received $34,308.95 as the net amount
    due. Pittman was the only attorney to break the request down between trial-court fees and
    appeal fees. He requested $11,355, specifying that $174 of that total was in preparation for
    appeal. He received the full amount requested, $11,355.
    22
    ¶43.   On April 13, 2009, the chancellor ordered the estate closed and Gerald discharged of
    his duties as executor. Billy, Dennis, and Shannon appealed, and Gerald cross-appealed.
    ISSUES
    ¶44.   The parties raised these issues, which have been edited, combined, and reordered for
    clarity and brevity.8
    I.     Whether the chancellor erred in awarding attorney fees and expenses
    to Autry, Pittman, and MacKenzie.
    II.    Whether the chancellor erred in granting Brown’s Rule 60 motion,
    reducing the fee award to Autry and ordering disgorgement of fees.
    III.   Whether the chancellor erred in denying Brown’s motion for Rule 11
    sanctions against Autry.
    IV.    Whether the chancellor erred in awarding fiduciary compensation to
    Colleen’s estate for her services as coexecutor of William’s estate.
    V.     Whether the chancellor erred in ordering Gerald, as trustee of the
    family trust, to transfer the Elvis property out of the trust.
    VI.    Whether the chancellor erred in denying prejudgment interest upon the
    judgments awarded to William’s estate.
    VII.   Whether the chancellor erred in denying Gerald’s motion for order
    requiring Dennis, individually and as coexecutor of Colleen’s estate,
    to account for estate funds and property.
    8
    The following issues arose from Gerald’s 2007 appeal: grant of attorney fees to
    Autry, Pittman, and MacKenzie; award of executor fees to Colleen’s estate; denial of petition
    to require Dennis to account; order to transfer the Elvis property; denial of award of
    prejudgment interest.      These issues arose from Colleen’s estate’s cross-appeal:
    discontinuance of attorney fees to Autry; order to pay estate taxes from assets other than the
    marital trust; lack of award of postjudgment interest.
    These issues arose from the 2009 appeal filed by Colleen’s estate, Billy, Dennis, and
    Shannon: reduction in fee award and order to disgorge; award of fees to Brown since 2007;
    attorney fees for this appeal. These issues arose from Gerald’s cross-appeal: award of
    additional attorney fees; denial of Rule 11 motion; attorney fees for this appeal.
    23
    VIII. Whether the chancellor erred in denying Colleen’s estate’s motion to
    allow payment of estate taxes from marital trust funds rather than from
    her estate’s funds.
    IX.    Whether the chancellor erred in granting fees to Brown for services
    provided after July 3, 2007, and in denying an award of fees to Autry
    for services provided after September 20, 2007.
    X.     Whether the chancellor erred in failing to order postjudgment interest
    on the awards of attorney fees and executor commissions.
    XI.    Whether this Court should award the parties their attorney fees and
    expenses incurred in bringing and defending this appeal.
    ANALYSIS
    ¶45.   In Lowrey v. Lowrey, 
    25 So. 3d 274
     (Miss. 2009), this Court stated the following:
    “‘A chancellor's findings of fact will not be disturbed unless manifestly wrong
    or clearly erroneous.’” “However, the Court will not hesitate to reverse if it
    finds the chancellor's decision is manifestly wrong, or that the court applied
    an erroneous legal standard.” A chancellor's conclusions of law are reviewed
    de novo.
    
    Id. at 285
     (citations omitted).
    I.     Whether the chancellor erred in awarding attorney fees and
    expenses to Autry, Pittman, and MacKenzie.
    Autry
    ¶46.   “Regarding attorney's fees, ‘[i]t is well-settled that the amount allowable as attorney's
    fees for services rendered in the administration of an estate rests within the sound discretion
    of the chancery court.’” Barnes, Broom, Dallas & McLeod, PLLC v. Estate of Cappaert,
    
    991 So. 2d 1209
    , 1211 (Miss. 2008) (quoting Harper v. Harper, 
    491 So. 2d 189
    , 200
    (Miss.1986)). “[A] trial court's decision regarding attorneys' fees will not be disturbed by
    an appellate court unless it is manifestly wrong.” Tupelo Redevelopment Agency v. Gray
    24
    Corp., Inc., 
    972 So. 2d 495
    , 521 (Miss. 2007). Statutes allow for the payment of attorney
    fees of executors from estate funds. See 
    Miss. Code Ann. § 91-7-281
     (Rev. 2004).
    Mississippi Code Section 91-7-299 (Rev. 2004) provides that “the court may allow [an
    executor’s] necessary expenses, including a reasonable attorney's fee, to be assessed out of
    the estate, in an amount to be determined by the court.” 
    Id.
     As was done here, “a testator
    could expressly provide in his will that his executor should have the power to employ
    counsel to assist him in the administration of the trust estate; and that a reasonable fee for
    such services should be a charge against the trust estate.” Gwin v. Fountain, 
    159 Miss. 619
    ,
    
    126 So. 18
    , 22 (1930). William’s will and trusts made Colleen a coexecutor and cotrustee.
    The living trust authorized her to hire and compensate an attorney. A chancellor is required
    to review the reasonableness of requests to charge fees to an estate, considering the McKee
    factors. See McKee v. McKee, 
    418 So. 2d 764
    , 767 (Miss. 1982). See Miss. R. Prof’l
    Conduct 3.3(a). This Court has adopted the lodestar method, in which “the most useful
    starting point for determining the amount of a reasonable fee is the number of hours
    reasonably expended on the litigation, multiplied by a reasonable hourly rate.” Tupelo
    Redevelopment Agency, 972 So. 2d at 522 (quoting BellSouth Personal Commc’ns, LLC
    v. Bd. of Supervisors of Hinds County, 
    912 So. 2d 436
    , 446-47 (Miss. 2005)).
    ¶47.   Gerald does not challenge the chancellor’s authority to grant fees, but argues that fees
    are not warranted here, as Autry’s services did not inure to the benefit of William’s estate.
    The chancellor found that Colleen had provided valuable and necessary services to
    William’s estate and that Autry had represented her interests, as well as those of her estate,
    as they related to William’s estate. Among the services provided by Colleen, as assisted by
    25
    Autry, were the following: (1) directing her sons’ rent collection, lease negotiation, and
    property sales; (2) securing the release of claims on the Elvis property; (3) completing estate-
    tax and income-tax returns; and (5) recovering $70,000 that Gerald had claimed as his
    personal property.
    ¶48.   Gerald asserts that Colleen’s payments to Dennis and Shannon reveal that her neglect
    and maladministration had led to financial losses for the estate. He cites cases in which this
    Court has found manifest error in a chancellor’s fee award. See Will of McCaffrey v.
    Fortenberry, 
    592 So. 2d 52
    , 63 (Miss. 1991) (attorney withdrew $93,000 in fees in a
    haphazard manner for more than seven years; financial loss to estate was incalculable as an
    inventory had not been done in ten years); Matter of Chambers, 
    458 So. 2d 691
    , 693 (Miss.
    1984) (annual accounting not done, failure to file tax returns resulted in penalties and
    interest). Here, Colleen loaned money to Dennis, gave money to her grandchildren, and
    failed to require Dennis and Shannon to repay their loans. The chancellor found that Colleen
    was in error, but did not impute any fault to her, as he found that she had thought she was
    doing the right thing, while maintaining day-to-day operations and trying unsuccessfully to
    keep the family together. These payments did not result in a loss to the estate, as judgments
    were entered requiring their repayment.
    ¶49.   Finally, Gerald argues that fees should be denied to Autry because of his lack of
    candor to the court in failing to acknowledge the proposed fee agreement. Gerald claims that
    Autry misled the court, violating his duty of fidelity to the court. See Barrett v. Miss. Bar,
    
    648 So. 2d 1154
    , 1158-59 (Miss. 1995); 
    Miss. Code Ann. § 73-3-35
     (Rev. 2008) (attorney
    oath); Miss. R. Prof’l Conduct 3.3(a). Gerald now argues that Autry’s conduct constituted
    26
    constructive fraud, obviating the requirement to prove his intentional deception. See Tyson
    v. Moore, 
    613 So. 2d 817
    , 823 (Miss. 1992); Victory Lane Prods., LLC v. Paul, Hastings,
    Janofsky & Walker, LLC, 
    409 F. Supp. 2d 773
    , 781 (S.D. Miss. 2006). However, Gerald
    did not challenge in the trial court the requirement to prove fraudulent intent by a clear and
    convincing standard. Gerald cites no cases in which an attorney’s lack of candor has led to
    a denial of all fees. By failing to cite authority, Gerald’s claim must fail.
    ¶50.   We find that the chancellor did not abuse his discretion in awarding the reduced fees
    to Autry. The award amount is a separate issue addressed below.
    Pittman and MacKenzie
    ¶51.   Gerald argues that the chancellor abused his discretion in awarding fees to the
    attorneys for the beneficiaries of the estate, as no statutory authority exists to award fees
    unless the will or trusts otherwise authorize payment. Here, the will and trusts authorize
    such payments only to Colleen and Gerald. Gerald cites In re Estate of Gillies, 
    830 So. 2d 640
     (Miss. 2002), for the proposition that only a personal representative of an estate or trust
    is entitled or has standing to seek attorney fees, absent authority to the contrary in the will
    or trust. However, Gillies is not as broadly applied as Gerald asserts. Gillies involved a
    dispute between a former administrator of an estate and an attorney she had hired to file a
    malpractice action against the estate’s former attorney. Id. at 642. The attorney who filed
    the malpractice motion was awarded fees for his services, but also sought administration
    expenses, claiming that he had paid an unspecified estate expense. The chancellor found that
    the attorney was not entitled to administration expenses. Id. at 647. This Court agreed “that
    the chancellor did not abuse his discretion in determining [that the attorney] was not entitled
    27
    to administrative expenses.” Id.
    ¶52.   Billy, Dennis, and Shannon concede that no statutory or testamentary authority exists
    to support their fee requests, but contend that caselaw and the facts of this case provide the
    authority to support a finding that the chancellor did not abuse his discretion. Mississippi
    generally follows the American rule. “‘[I]f attorney's fees are not authorized by the contract
    or by statute, they are not to be awarded when an award of punitive damages is not proper.’”
    In re Guardianship of Duckett, 
    991 So. 2d 1165
    , 1179 (Miss. 2008) (quoting Hamilton v.
    Hopkins, 
    834 So. 2d 695
    , 700 (Miss. 2003).
    ¶53.   This Court has not addressed the precise question before us, although our Court of
    Appeals recently awarded fees to beneficiaries who were not authorized in the will to receive
    fees. In re Estate of Thomas, 
    28 So. 3d 627
     (Miss. Ct. App. 2009), cert. denied 
    27 So. 3d 404
     (Miss. 2010). The court stated, “As for the [beneficiaries]' attorney's fees, the chancellor
    found that their attorney essentially had to act as attorney for the Estate and that equity
    required that [they] be reimbursed . . . .” Id. at 637. The executor and his attorney had
    discouraged the beneficiaries “from asking questions concerning the Estate, and it was their
    lack of cooperation that forced [them] to hire an attorney to ensure a proper handling of their
    mother's estate.” Id. The beneficiaries “had no option but to hire an attorney in order to get
    [the executor] to disclose the details of their mother's estate.” Id. The court concluded the
    following:
    we find no error with the chancellor's decision to award them attorney's fees.
    The supreme court has held that “even where there is no specific statutory
    authority for imposing sanctions, courts have an inherent power to protect the
    integrity of their processes, and may impose sanctions in order to do so.”
    Selleck v. S.F. Cockrell Trucking, Inc., 
    517 So. 2d 558
    , 560 (Miss. 1987)
    28
    (citing Ladner v. Ladner, 
    436 So. 2d 1366
    , 1370 (Miss. 1983)). The supreme
    court went on to state that “where a party's intentional misconduct causes the
    opposing party to expend time and money needlessly, then attorney's fees and
    expenses should be awarded to the wronged party.” 
    Id.
    Thomas, 
    28 So. 3d at 637
    .
    ¶54.   Other states have allowed attorney-fee awards to nonfiduciary beneficiaries where
    their efforts benefitted the estate and became necessary because of “laches, negligence, or
    fraud of the legal representative of the estate.” Becht v. Miller, 
    273 N.W. 294
    , 298 (Mich.
    1937). Citing similar cases from Connecticut, New York, and New Hampshire, the Becht
    Court stated:
    the case at bar presents the question of the allowance from an estate as
    administrative expenses of fees and expenses incurred not by the executor or
    administrator but by a residuary legatee. The question in its precise form has
    never been heretofore presented for consideration in this jurisdiction.
    Examination of the decisions of other states reveals the existence of
    conflicting opinion, but as a general proposition it may be stated that, before
    such an item may be charged against the estate, it must be shown that the
    services rendered were beneficial to the estate as a whole rather than to an
    individual or group of individuals interested therein.
    ....
    A doctrine which permits a decedent's estate to be so charged, should,
    however, in our opinion, be applied with caution and its operation limited to
    those cases in which the services performed have not only been distinctly
    beneficial to the estate, but became necessary either by reason of laches,
    negligence, or fraud of the legal representative of the estate.
    
    Id. at 297-98
    .
    ¶55.   Other states have followed Becht, allowing fee payments. See In re Keller, 
    584 N.E.2d 1312
    , 1318 (Ohio Ct. App.1989); Wagner v. Brownlee, 
    713 N.W.2d 592
    , 596-97
    (S.D. 2006); In re Sheldon's Estate, 
    24 N.W.2d 875
    , 876 (Wis. 1946). South Dakota
    29
    followed Becht until it passed its version of the Uniform Probate Code, authorizing such
    payments. See Wagner, 713 N.W.2d at 597; SDCL § 29-A-3-720 (“The court may also
    award necessary expenses and disbursements, including reasonable attorney's fees, to any
    person who prosecuted or defended an action that resulted in a substantial benefit to the
    estate.”).
    ¶56.   Other states have applied the principles enunciated in Becht, but found that fees were
    not authorized, as the services had not benefitted the estate. See In re Phelps' Estate, 
    283 P.2d 293
    , 295 (Cal. Ct. App. 1955); Distributors Supply Co. v. Shablow's Estate, 
    92 N.W.2d 83
    , 88-89 (Minn. 1958). Missouri likewise has embraced this concept. “Missouri
    seems to follow the rule that expenses incurred by a beneficiary of an estate, rather than the
    personal representative, must be shown to be beneficial to the estate as a whole rather than
    to just individuals interested therein.” In re Estate of Murray, 
    682 S.W.2d 857
    , 858 (Mo.
    Ct. App. 1984). But see Foster's Estate v. Theis, 
    290 S.W.2d 185
    , 188-89 (Mo. Ct. App.
    1956) (citing Becht but rejecting its reasoning).
    ¶57.   Nebraska has allowed such expenses. See Matter of Williams' Estate, 
    242 N.W.2d 612
     (Neb. 1976). The court stated:
    Assuredly there are instances, usually where additional property is brought
    into the estate, where attorneys' fees of a party other than the executor or
    administrator may properly be taxed as an expense of administration. Beyond
    that instance, if a party supplies services which ought to have been supplied
    by the executor or administrator, then, to that extent, costs or expenses
    incurred by the party may properly be taxed to the estate.
    Id. at 615-16.
    ¶58.   Here, Colleen testified that Gerald would not talk to her and was running roughshod
    30
    over the rest of the family. She testified that he hung up on her when she tried to call him
    and had told her that he hated her. All three brothers testified that Gerald would not
    communicate with them. Colleen and all three brothers believed that they required attorney
    services in order to ensure the proper administration of the estate. Autry, as well as Pittman
    and MacKenzie, were essentially serving William’s estate.
    ¶59.   Gerald argues that the services of Pittman and MacKenzie did not inure to the benefit
    of William’s estate. Gerald’s brothers claim that they and their attorneys did the following
    to benefit the estate, carry out William’s intent, or lead to the eventual closure of the estate:
    (1) made efforts that led to the sale of the Elvis property for $7,500,000; (2) prevented
    Gerald from using family-trust funds to pay administrative expenses of the marital trust; (3)
    forced the return of family-trust funds withheld by Gerald; (4) enjoined Gerald’s actions as
    interim trustee; (5) released approximately $230,000 to the family trust that had been
    withheld by Gerald; (6) filed successful contempt motions forcing Gerald to transfer
    judgments and transfer properties to the appropriate trusts; (7) successfully petitioned the
    court to require the estate to be wound up and closed.
    ¶60.   These beneficiaries took actions that were required under the circumstances to benefit
    the estate and move the estate and trusts toward closure. The beneficiaries’ attorneys
    essentially were acting as attorneys for the estate, and Gerald was held in contempt for
    failing to carry out his duties. We find the logic of Becht compelling and, therefore, adopt
    the principles set forth therein. See Becht, 273 N.W. at 297-98. Our chancellors should
    likewise consider the cautionary language and limitations set forth in that opinion. See id.
    at 298. We find that the chancellor did not abuse his discretion in allowing attorney fees to
    31
    Pittman and MacKenzie.
    II.    Whether the chancellor erred in granting Brown’s Rule 60 motion,
    reducing the fee award to Autry and ordering disgorgement of
    fees.
    ¶61.   Brown’s motion to vacate the chancellor’s award of attorney fees to Autry asserts two
    reasons under Rule 60. See Miss. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(1),(3). The rule provides the following:
    On motion and upon such terms as are just, the court may relieve a party or his
    legal representative from a final judgment, order, or proceeding for the
    following reasons:
    (1) fraud, misrepresentation, or other misconduct of an adverse
    party; . . . [or] (3) newly discovered evidence which by due
    diligence could not have been discovered in time to move for a
    new trial under Rule 59(b).
    Id. To prevail on this issue, it must be shown that the chancellor abused his discretion as to
    both of these elements.
    Fraud, misrepresentation, or other misconduct
    ¶62.   Colleen’s estate asserts that the chancellor’s order “was an abuse of discretion
    because the court found no evidence there was a written fee agreement . . . , nor any evidence
    of fraud or misrepresentation.” This misstates the chancellor’s findings. The chancellor did
    state that Autry’s failure to disclose the written agreement did not rise to the level of fraud,
    but the chancellor never stated that he had found no evidence of fraud or misrepresentation.
    The parties debate whether Autry’s misconduct met all nine elements of fraud, including the
    speaker’s knowledge of the falsity of his statement. See Stringfellow v. Stringfellow, 
    451 So. 2d 219
    , 221 (Miss. 1984); Johnson v. Brewer, 
    427 So. 2d 118
    , 120-21 (Miss. 1983).
    However, a finding of fraud is not essential to granting a motion under Rule 60(b)(1), if
    32
    misrepresentation or other misconduct is shown. The chancellor made no specific finding
    regarding misrepresentation, but stated that Autry had failed to disclose the agreement, and
    that such a contract was something he would have wanted to see. In the order, the chancellor
    found that (1) the agreement had not been disclosed; (2) Autry “should have advised the
    court” and; (3) if the agreement had been disclosed, he would have taken it into
    consideration. The chancellor did not find there was no evidence of an agreement. In fact,
    he used the agreement as the basis for reducing the fee award.
    Newly discovered evidence
    ¶63.   Gerald asserts that the written fee agreement constitutes newly discovered evidence,
    allowing for a reversal of the fee award. This Court has set the requirements for newly
    discovered evidence, holding that it
    must be evidence in existence of which a party was excusably ignorant,
    discovered after trial. In addition facts implying reasonable diligence must be
    provided by the movant. The evidence must be material, and not cumulative
    or impeaching, and it must be such as to require a different result.
    January v. Barnes, 
    621 So. 2d 915
    , 920 (Miss. 1992). Here, Gerald showed that the
    evidence had surfaced after the trial. Colleen’s estate argues that this evidence could have
    been discovered by Gerald if he had been diligent in his discovery motions, deposition
    questions, and cross-examination. Colleen’s estate suggests that Gerald should have asked
    Colleen about the fee agreement, even though she died before Autry’s fees became an issue.
    Autry now argues that Gerald failed to ask him about the fee agreement when the request
    was heard. Gerald did ask about this subject, and Autry denied that there was a written
    agreement with Colleen or anyone else. In fact, he volunteered repeatedly that he and his
    33
    firm did not use these agreements and had never done so. However, in response to Gerald’s
    motion, he stated that he had used them infrequently. Colleen’s estate asserts correctly that
    the chancellor never made a finding that the fee agreement was newly discovered evidence,
    but the chancellor treated it as such. He stated that Autry should have disclosed the
    agreement and that he would have considered it if available. Finally, he used the agreement
    in reaching a different result.
    ¶64.   We find that the chancellor did not abuse his discretion in granting Gerald’s Rule 60
    motion, reducing the fee award, and requiring disgorgement of fees.
    III.   Whether the chancellor erred in denying Brown’s motion for Rule
    11 sanctions against Autry.
    ¶65.   “In the absence of a ‘definite and firm conviction that the court below committed a
    clear error of judgment in the conclusion it reached upon weighing of relevant factors,’ the
    judgment of the court's imposition of sanctions will be affirmed.” Wyssbrod v. Wittjen, 
    798 So. 2d 352
    , 357 (Miss. 2001) (quoting Kinard v. Morgan, 
    679 So. 2d 623
    , 625 (Miss.
    1996)). Gerald asserts that the proper standard of review is de novo. See In re Estate of
    Ladner, 
    909 So. 2d 1051
    , 1055 (Miss. 2004) (citing Amiker v. Drugs For Less, Inc., 
    796 So. 2d 942
    , 945-46 (Miss. 2001)). See also Stringer v. Lucas, 
    608 So. 2d 1351
    , 1359 (Miss.
    1992). In Amiker and Stringer, this Court recited the familiar abuse-of-discretion standard
    for sanctions review, but first asked whether the trial court had applied the right legal
    standard. See Amiker, 796 So. 2d at 945-46; Stringer, 608 So. 2d at 1359. No legal error
    occurred or was even alleged here. Thus, Gerald’s assertion is without merit.
    ¶66.   Rule 11 requires all attorneys representing parties to sign all pleadings and motions.
    34
    Miss. R. Civ. P. 11(a). The signature “constitutes a certificate that the attorney has read the
    pleading or motion; that to the best of the attorney's knowledge, information, and belief there
    is good ground to support it; and that it is not interposed for delay.” Id. If a motion, “in the
    opinion of the court, is frivolous or is filed for the purpose of harassment or delay, the court
    may order such a party, or his attorney, or both, to pay to the opposing party . . . the
    reasonable expenses incurred . . . , including reasonable attorneys' fees.” Miss. R. Civ. P.
    11(b).
    ¶67.     “[A] pleading or motion is frivolous within the meaning of Rule 11 only when,
    objectively speaking, the pleader or movant has no hope of success.” Tricon Metals &
    Servs., Inc. v. Topp, 
    537 So. 2d 1331
    , 1335 (Miss. 1989). In denying sanctions, the
    chancellor stated the following, “I think [there] was something that Mr. Autry could hang
    his hat on with reference to [this] motion . . . . [I]t dealt with some issues about written
    contracts and amount of attorney fees . . . .” “Though a case may be weak or ‘light-headed,’
    that is not sufficient to label it frivolous.” Leaf River Forest Products, Inc. v. Deakle, 
    661 So. 2d 188
    , 195 (Miss. 1995).
    ¶68.     This Court has held that pleadings found to be justiciable, viable, or colorable are not
    for the purpose of harassment or delay; thus, sanctions are inappropriate. See In re Spencer,
    
    985 So. 2d 330
    , 339 (Miss. 2008); Bean v. Broussard, 
    587 So. 2d 908
    , 913 (Miss. 1991);
    Dethlefs v. Beau Maison Dev. Corp., 
    511 So. 2d 112
    , 118 (Miss. 1987). Here, the motion’s
    justiciability is not at issue. The chancellor’s “hang-his-hat-on” statement is tantamount to
    a finding of colorability.
    ¶69.     Gerald posits the following as proof that the chancellor erred in denying sanctions:
    35
    (1) Billy knew that Autry’s fee request was a misrepresentation, as he knew his mother had
    signed a written fee agreement; and (2) Autry’s motion was found to be without basis for
    relief and to have been filed in retaliation to Gerald’s motion, which was granted.
    ¶70.   We agree with the trial court that this represents a “very close” question. However,
    considering the abuse-of-discretion standard, this Court affirms the denial of sanctions.
    Further, this Court has held that a chancellor’s “discretion generally ought be exercised in
    the context of the facts of the particular case, the language of Rule 11 and its dominant
    purpose of general deterrence.” Tricon Metals & Servs., Inc. v. Topp, 
    537 So. 2d 1331
    ,
    1336-37 (Miss. 1989). The chancellor stated, “[T]his matter has been hotly litigated, and
    highly anxious moments. Matters filed on both sides.” All parties filed multiple motions
    for sanctions, all of which were denied. It is unlikely that the threat of sanctions would have
    deterred parties with such a penchant for litigation. Under these circumstances, the
    chancellor did not abuse his discretion, and his judgment should be affirmed.
    IV.    Whether the chancellor erred in awarding fiduciary compensation
    to Colleen’s estate for her services as coexecutor of William’s
    estate.
    ¶71.   Gerald requested fees for executor services in the amount of $400,000, to be split
    equally between Colleen’s estate and himself. The chancellor found that Colleen’s and
    Gerald’s services had benefitted William’s estate, and awarded fees to each coexecutor in
    the amount of $160,000. Gerald now argues to this Court that Colleen’s estate should get
    no executor fees, claiming that her maladministration caused waste to the estate. In the
    alternative, he argues that this Court should reduce the award, as it exceeds the amount
    requested by Colleen’s estate. We find that Gerald is judicially estopped from alleging error
    36
    on this issue, as he is taking a position at odds with the one he took at trial. See Pursue
    Energy Corp. v. Miss. State Tax Comm'n, 
    968 So. 2d 368
    , 377 (Miss. 2007). Further,
    Gerald did not challenge the award of executor fees to Colleen’s estate in the trial court.
    This Court will not hold “a trial court . . . in error on appeal for a matter not presented to it
    for decision.” Mills v. Nichols, 
    467 So. 2d 924
    , 931 (Miss. 1985).
    V.     Whether the chancellor erred in ordering Gerald, as trustee of the
    family trust, to transfer the Elvis property out of the trust.
    ¶72.   Gerald argues that the terms of the trusts and the statutes of Mississippi and
    Tennessee granted him plenary power to act as trustee of the family trust. However, by the
    time the chancellor ordered him to transfer the Elvis property from the marital trust to its
    beneficiaries (October 11, 2007), he had been removed as trustee and remained only as
    acting trustee. He was limited by order of the trial court to rent-collection and other day-to-
    day functions, and was specifically enjoined from negotiation for the sale of the Elvis
    property or going onto or about the property.
    ¶73.   Gerald argues further that (1) transferring the property would deplete the family trust
    of its assets, leaving him unable to pay the fees and expenses to be assessed against the trust;
    and (2) pending litigation would affect the ultimate disposition of the family trust. Colleen’s
    estate argues that Colleen exercised her right under the family trust to exclude Gerald and
    leave it to her other three sons. In the order directing the transfer of the property, the
    chancellor adequately protected Gerald’s claim, pending the outcome of the litigation over
    Colleen’s estate. We find no abuse of discretion in the chancellor’s order.
    VI.    Whether the chancellor erred in denying prejudgment interest
    upon the judgments awarded to William’s estate.
    37
    ¶74.   Gerald cites breach-of-contract cases in attempting to show that the trial court abused
    its discretion in denying prejudgment interest on the judgments for the loans to Dennis and
    Shannon. See Sunburst Bank v. Keith, 
    648 So. 2d 1147
    , 1152 (Miss. 1995); Cain v. Cain,
    
    967 So. 2d 654
    , 663 (Miss. Ct. App. 2007); Estate of Baxter v. Shaw Associates., Inc., 
    797 So. 2d 396
    , 403, 407 (Miss. Ct. App. 2001). Gerald argues that these cases show that the
    amounts owed had become liquidated, and thus payable, requiring an order for prejudgment
    interest.
    ¶75.   The discretion to award or deny prejudgment interest rested with the chancellor. A
    trial court may award prejudgment interest provided certain conditions are met, but is not
    required to do so. See Stockstill v. Gammill, 
    943 So. 2d 35
    , 50 (Miss. 2006); Tupelo
    Redevelopment Agency v. Abernathy, 
    913 So. 2d 278
    , 286 (Miss. 2005); USF&G Co. v.
    Conservatorship of Melson, 
    809 So. 2d 647
    , 661-62 (Miss. 2002). This Court has stated:
    An award of prejudgment interest rests in the discretion of the awarding judge.
    Under Mississippi law, prejudgment interest may be allowed in cases where
    the amount due is liquidated when the claim is originally made or where the
    denial of a claim is frivolous or in bad faith. No award of prejudgment interest
    may rationally be made where the principal amount has not been fixed prior
    to judgment.
    Upchurch Plumbing, Inc. v. Greenwood Utilities. Comm'n, 
    964 So. 2d 1100
    , 1117 (Miss.
    2007) (quoting Coho Res., Inc. v. McCarthy, 
    829 So. 2d 1
    , 19-20 (Miss. 2002).
    ¶76.   Dennis and Shannon claimed, and Gerald admitted, that he had never requested that
    they begin repayment of the loans, i.e., no “claim [was] originally made.” Upchurch
    Plumbing, 964 So. 2d at 1117. As the chancellor had the discretion to deny prejudgment
    interest, we find no abuse of discretion.
    38
    VII.    Whether the chancellor erred in denying Gerald’s motion for
    order requiring Dennis, individually and as coexecutor of Colleen’s
    estate, to account for estate funds and property.
    ¶77.   Gerald argues that Dennis (as a coexecutor of the estate of Colleen, who herself was
    a coexecutor of William’s estate) was required to settle Colleen’s accounts in the
    administration of William’s estate. See 
    Miss. Code Ann. § 91-7-69
     (Rev. 2004). “The
    executor of an executor . . . shall settle the accounts of his testator . . . in the administration
    of the first estate, and for that purpose shall be amenable to the jurisdiction of the court.” 
    Id.
    Further, according to Gerald, the chancellor was without discretion to excuse Dennis from
    this duty. See Hayes v. Nat’l Sur. Co., 
    169 Miss. 676
    , 
    153 So. 515
     (1934). The Hayes
    Court held the following:
    [W]hatever might be said by way of extenuation in a particular case of the
    failure of an administrator of an administrator to settle the accounts of his
    intestate in the administration of the first estate, there is no authority in any
    court either to excuse the performance of that duty or to waive the
    consequences thereof.
    Id. at 520. Gerald argues now that Dennis embezzled funds from William’s estate, thus
    making him liable to the actions of persons aggrieved. See 
    Miss. Code Ann. § 91-7-249
    (Rev. 2004). However, prior to this appeal, Gerald has never denied that the funds Dennis
    received were loans to be repaid. Thus, this portion of Gerald’s argument will not be
    considered.
    ¶78.    Even assuming that Hayes controls here, Gerald’s argument is without merit. See
    Hayes, 
    153 So. at 515
    . In Hayes, a man left a large estate. His administrator died less than
    a year later, after spending nearly all of the estate assets. Id. at 518-19. The administrator
    of the second man’s estate was himself gravely ill, never made a report, and died before he
    39
    was able to “to find out ‘what it was all about.’” Id. at 519-20. Here, Dennis was called to
    account. The chancellor had available to him the bank records of the new rental account and
    a summary of all receipts and expenditures. Further, Dennis testified and was cross-
    examined regarding his actions.
    ¶79.   In denying Gerald’s motion, the chancellor stated, “There’s got to be an end to this
    somewhere certainly. I would think that that was litigated, discussed, testified to under
    oath.” We find no abuse of discretion in the denial of Gerald’s motion.
    VIII. Whether the chancellor erred in denying Colleen’s estate’s motion
    to allow payment of estate taxes from marital trust funds rather
    than from her estate’s funds.
    ¶80.   Colleen’s estate argues that the chancellor erred legally by granting Gerald’s motion
    to enforce the provision in William’s living trust expressing his desire for the payment of
    “[a]ny inheritance, estate, or other death taxes payable by reason of [Colleen]’s death” from
    Colleen’s assets outside the marital trust. Colleen’s estate filed a motion to direct payment
    from the marital trust and a motion to alter or amend the chancellor’s order. Both were
    denied without explanation.
    ¶81.   Under the provisions of William’s living trust, his property was to be split into a
    family trust and a marital trust. The family, or “bypass,” trust was set up to hold the amount
    that could pass free of estate tax ($1,000,000 in 2002). The marital, or “Q-TIP,” trust was
    set up to hold the remainder of the estate. It qualified for an unlimited marital deduction on
    federal estate taxes. Thus, no tax was due at the time of William’s death. See 
    26 U.S.C.A. § 2056
    (b)(7) (2006). However, the Internal Revenue Code (“IRC”) provides that, if, at the
    time of the second spouse’s death, the inclusion of the marital trust in her estate makes it
    40
    exceed the amount that can pass free of estate tax, her estate is required to pay the tax. See
    
    26 U.S.C.A. § 2044
     (2006).
    ¶82.   Another statute allows the second decedent’s estate to recover from the marital trust
    the amount of estate tax that is payable as a result of the inclusion of the marital trust in her
    estate. See 26 U.S.C.A. § 2207A (2006). It provides the following:
    (1) In general. – If any part of the gross estate consists of property the value
    of which is includible in the gross estate by reason of section 2044 (relating to
    certain property for which marital deduction was previously allowed), the
    decedent's estate shall be entitled to recover from the person receiving the
    property the amount by which –
    (A) the total tax under this chapter which has been paid, exceeds
    (B) the total tax under this chapter which would have been
    payable if the value of such property had not been included in
    the gross estate.
    26 U.S.C.A. § 2207A(a) (2006). Colleen’s separate assets at the time of her death totaled
    approximately $1,500,000.9 The amount that could pass without estate-tax liability was
    $2,000,000 at that time. By including the approximate $1,900,000 from the marital trust, her
    estate increased to $3,400,000. She then had an estate-tax liability of approximately
    $630,000, owing entirely to the inclusion of the marital trust. Under section 2207A of the
    IRC, her estate would be able to use marital-trust assets to pay the entire amount. 26
    U.S.C.A. § 2207A (2006). The same code section allows for waiver of this right to recover.
    See 26 U.S.C.A. § 2207A(a)(2) (2006). It provides:
    Decedent may otherwise direct. – Paragraph (1) shall not apply with respect
    to any property to the extent that the decedent in his will (or a revocable trust)
    specifically indicates an intent to waive any right of recovery under this
    9
    The figures used in this scenario were provided in Colleen’s estate’s brief.
    41
    subchapter with respect to such property.
    26 U.S.C.A. § 2207A(a)(2) (2006). Colleen did not waive her Section 2207A right.
    ¶83.   Gerald argues that the settlor’s intent (William’s) is paramount here and that his desire
    should trump federal law to the contrary. Colleen’s estate counters that Colleen, as the
    second to die, is the decedent contemplated in Section 2207A(a)(2). Colleen’s estate does
    not dispute William’s intent, but argues that it is irrelevant. Gerald also argues that a state
    statute should control. See 
    Miss. Code Ann. § 27-10-7
     (Rev. 2010). It calls for estate taxes
    to be “apportioned among all persons interested in the estate,” but allows for the method
    described in the decedent’s will to take precedence over the statutory method. 
    Id.
     The
    parties dispute whether federal laws regarding federal taxes do or do not trump state laws to
    the contrary.
    ¶84.   In the face of federal law to the contrary, William’s desire regarding the
    apportionment of his wife’s estate’s tax obligations is irrelevant.         As shown by the
    explanatory scenario in the Code of Federal Regulations, Colleen is the decedent
    contemplated in section 2207A(a)(2). See 
    26 C.F.R. § 20
    .2207A (2010). She did not waive
    her right to recovery under section 2207A. Thus, her estate retains this right.
    ¶85.   We find that the dispute over the precedence of federal and state tax laws is moot, as
    the statutes are not in conflict. Both call for apportionment of estate tax to those interested
    in the estate and both allow for the decedent to direct a different apportionment in her will.
    See 26 U.S.C.A. § 2207A; 
    Miss. Code Ann. § 27-10-7
     (Rev. 2010).
    ¶86.   If the dispute over the applicability of the Supremacy Clause is relevant, Gerald’s
    argument is still without merit. See U.S. Const. art. VI, cl. 2. Colleen’s estate cites an
    42
    Alabama case      for the proposition that federal law controls regarding federal taxes.
    Cleveland v. Compass Bank, 
    652 So. 2d 1134
    , 1137-38 (Ala. 1994) (Section 2207A, having
    no specific provision on state taxes, does not preempt Alabama statute regarding state taxes,
    but does preempt regarding federal taxes). Gerald cites a case from the State of Washington.
    See Eisenbach v. Schneider, 
    166 P.3d 858
    , 863-65 (Wash. Ct. App. 2007) (citing Riggs v.
    Del Drago, 
    317 U.S. 95
    , 
    63 S. Ct. 109
    , 
    87 L. Ed. 106
     (1942)). In Eisenbach, both spouses
    expressed their intent in a jointly prepared trust indenture that their trusts should be
    apportioned pro rata. Eisenbach, 
    166 P.3d at 865
    . The court noted that the widow, as the
    second decedent, had expressed her intent to waive her rights under Section 2207A. 
    Id.
    Riggs is equally unhelpful to Gerald, as the Court ruled that the federal and state statutes at
    issue were not in conflict, thus the state law could control. Riggs, 
    317 U.S. at 97-98
    .
    ¶87.   Thus, we reverse that portion of the chancellor’s judgment.
    IX.    Whether the chancellor erred in granting fees to Brown for services
    provided after July 3, 2007, and in denying an award of fees to
    Autry for services provided after September 20, 2007.
    ¶88.   As noted above, attorney-fee decisions are to be affirmed unless found to be
    manifestly wrong. Tupelo Redevelopment, 972 So. 2d at 521.
    Brown’s fees
    ¶89.   Colleen’s estate argues that this Court should reverse the chancellor’s award of fees,
    because the services rendered by Brown after the first fee award were not for the benefit of
    the estate. Colleen’s estate charges that these fees were expended for Gerald’s personal
    benefit, and that Gerald’s continued litigation went against the interests and stated wishes of
    the majority of the estate’s beneficiaries.
    43
    ¶90.   In December 2007, Colleen’s estate moved to cut off Brown’s fees. The trial court
    denied the motion, ordering it “denied to the extent that it seeks to discontinue [Brown’s]
    entitlement to additional fees and expenses associated with the administration of the Estate
    and the Trusts in and before the Trial Court.” 10
    ¶91.   Colleen’s estate cites only one case in support of its argument. See Clarksdale
    Hospital v. Wallis, 
    187 Miss. 834
    , 
    193 So. 627
     (1940). In Wallis, the Court held, “Where
    the services were rendered for the sole benefit of an individual . . . interested in the estate,
    as against the others interested, such an allowance is unauthorized.” Id. at 628. However,
    the party seeking attorney fees, whose payment was contested by the executor, was the
    hospital. Id. Here, the executor of the estate is seeking his fees.
    ¶92.   Gerald counters that, despite his removal as trustee, he remained an executor until the
    estate was closed. He claims correctly that, in every litigation he commenced, he prevailed
    and benefitted the estate. This included the disgorgement action against Autry that occurred
    in 2008 and benefitted the estate by more than $144,000.
    ¶93.   We find no abuse of discretion in awarding fees to Gerald’s attorney after July 2007.
    Autry’s fees
    ¶94.   Colleen’s estate concedes that “no Mississippi law exists to guide as to whether
    attorney’s fees should be awarded under these circumstances.” Without citation of any
    authority other than “good sense and policy,” the argument continues “that attorney fees are
    10
    As will be discussed further below, Colleen’s estate requested, and the Court
    ordered, that Brown was not entitled to reimbursement or payment of fees regarding his
    notice of appeal filed in November 2007.
    44
    appropriately awarded even after the death of the executor where the fees are the direct and
    unavoidable result of continuing litigation begun during the lifetime of the executor.” We
    decline to consider this argument, as it is procedurally barred. See Miss. R. App. P. 28(a)(6);
    City of Jackson v. Harris, 
    44 So. 3d 927
    , 935 (Miss. 2010).
    X.     Whether the chancellor erred in failing to order postjudgment
    interest on the awards of attorney fees and executor commissions.
    ¶95.   The chancellor did not order postjudgment interest on any of the awards of attorney
    fees or executor fees. The orders granting executor fees and interim attorney fees to Gerald
    include blank lines for the interest rate to be entered later. Both have “0%” printed on the
    blank. The orders granting interim attorney fees to Billy, Dennis, and Shannon contain no
    mention of postjudgment interest. The order granting Colleen’s executor fees and attorney
    fees has a typed sentence authorizing postjudgment interest at the rate of eight percent, but
    the entire two-line sentence is lined out and initialed. The initials are those of the four
    attorneys. The orders granting the final attorney-fee awards do not mention postjudgment
    interest.
    ¶96.   Colleen’s estate now cites Mississippi Code Section 75-7-7 (Rev. 2002) and argues
    that the chancellor erred in denying postjudgment interest, a statutory right. See Miss. Dep’t
    of Human Servs. v. McNeel, 
    10 So. 3d 444
    , 460 (Miss. 2009). Shannon makes a similar
    argument in his brief, but Billy and Dennis do not mention postjudgment interest. Gerald
    responds to these arguments in his reply brief, stating that he does not challenge the right to
    postjudgment interest, but continues that, if the others are to get it, he wants it.
    ¶97.   The McNeel Court stated the following:
    45
    This Court has stated that “post-judgment interest is a statutory right . . . .”
    Miss. Dep't of Mental Health v. Hall, 
    936 So. 2d 917
    , 929 (Miss. 2006)
    (quoting U.S. Fidelity & Guar. Co. v. Estate of Francis ex rel. Francis, 
    825 So. 2d 38
    , 50 (Miss. 2002)). Therefore, “[d]ue to the mandatory nature of §
    75-17-7 and because public policy heavily favors post-judgment interest,”
    Hall, 936 So. 2d at 930, this Court concludes that McNeel is entitled to post-
    judgment interest.
    Id. These parties had a right to postjudgment interest, but they sat on those rights. Gerald,
    Dennis, and Billy did not raise the issue on appeal. No party raised this issue with the trial
    court. As above, this Court will not hold “a trial court . . . in error on appeal for a matter not
    presented to it for decision.” Mills, 467 So. 2d at 931. No party requested that this Court
    consider plain error, and we decline to conduct such an analysis.
    XI.     Whether this Court should award the parties their attorney fees
    and expenses incurred in bringing and defending this appeal.
    ¶98.   All parties request that this Court award attorney fees for this appeal. With the
    following contradictory exceptions, the trial court has not had an opportunity to rule on this
    issue: (1) fee payments to Colleen’s estate were terminated in 2007 following her death; (2)
    Colleen’s estate’s motion to deny Gerald fees for this appeal was granted; (3) Gerald’s
    supplemental fee request, which did not separate trial-court fees and appeal fees, was granted
    in full; (4) Shannon’s supplemental fee request, which did not separate trial-court fees and
    appeal fees, was granted with a deduction for a different reason; (5) Billy’s and Dennis’s fee
    request, which did separate appeal fees, was granted in full, including appeal fees.
    ¶99.   This Court may grant a motion for attorney fees where a contract provides for
    reasonable attorney fees and the trial court granted fees for services in the trial court. See
    Dixie Contractors, Inc. v. Ballard, 
    249 So. 2d 653
    , 657 (Miss. 1971). In divorce cases in
    46
    which a party is found unable to pay, this Court has granted motions for attorney fees in the
    amount of one-half that awarded by the chancellor. See Monroe v. Monroe, 
    745 So. 2d 249
    ,
    253 (Miss. 1999). Such an award is not appropriate in this case.
    ¶100. With the exceptions noted above, the trial court has not had an opportunity to issue
    a final judgment on this issue. This Court has nothing to review regarding appeal fees for
    Billy, Dennis, and Shannon. Regarding Gerald’s fees, the chancellor’s judgment is unclear.
    Colleen’s estate is the only party for which there exists a clear judgment subject to review
    by this Court. Fees to Colleen’s estate were terminated following her death, and this Court
    has affirmed that judgment. The chancellor may consider this issue upon remand. Consistent
    with the instructions of this opinion, the chancellor may first determine which parties, if any,
    are entitled to fees for this appeal, and then determine the reasonable fee award(s), if any.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶101. We remand the appeal-fees issue, reverse and remand the estate-tax issue, and affirm
    on all other issues.
    ¶102. AS TO 2007-CA-02043-SCT: ON DIRECT APPEAL: AFFIRMED. ON
    CROSS-APPEAL: AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART.
    AS TO 2009-CA-00784-SCT: ON DIRECT APPEAL: AFFIRMED IN PART AND
    REMANDED IN PART. ON CROSS-APPEAL: AFFIRMED IN PART AND
    REMANDED IN PART.
    WALLER, C.J., DICKINSON, P.J., LAMAR, KITCHENS, CHANDLER, PIERCE,
    AND KING, JJ., CONCUR. CARLSON, P.J., NOT PARTICIPATING.
    47