LOS ANGELES (CNS) — Britney Spears' mother will have to wait until this summer for a hearing on her petition for more than $660,000 in attorneys' fees from her daughter's estate, money the Spears matriarch says she is entitled to for purportedly starting the effort that resulted in Jamie Spears being ousted as their offspring's conservator, a judge said Wednesday.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Brenda Penny said she had not read all the court papers related to Lynne Spears' fees request and so she rescheduled Wednesday's hearing on the issue until July 20.


What You Need To Know

  • Lynne Spears brought her petition for more than $660,000 in attorneys' fees from her daughter's estate in November, the same month the judge ended the singer's 13-year conservatorship

  • But the singer's lawyer, Mathew Rosengart, filed papers this week objecting to her request

  • Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Brenda Penny said she needs "to really look at everything that's been filed and the probate attorney needs to look at everything too"

  • In court Wednesday, Lynne Spears' lawyer, Yasha Bronshteyn, told the judge that the singer's conservatorship was "well beyond unique" given that it lasted more than 13 years, and he touted Lynne Spears' role in ending it

"I need to really look at everything that's been filed and the probate attorney needs to look at everything too," the judge said.

Lynne Spears brought her petition in November, the same month the judge ended the singer's 13-year conservatorship. But the singer's lawyer, Mathew Rosengart, filed papers this week objecting to her request.

Lynne Spears, acting as a third party in the conservatorship battle, hired a team of lawyers in 2019 to see what they could do to "help Britney free herself from what she saw was a very controlling existence," and help the entertainer "achieve independence from her conservator father, Jamie Spears," according to Lynne Spears' attorneys' court papers.

The 40-year-old entertainer "enthusiastically agreed" to her mother's help, hoping together they could "free her from the nightmare she was enduring," according to Lynne Spears' attorneys' court papers.

In court Wednesday, Lynne Spears' lawyer, Yasha Bronshteyn, told the judge that the singer's conservatorship was "well beyond unique" given that it lasted more than 13 years, and he touted Lynne Spears' role in ending it.

But Rosengart disputed Bronshteyn's claims and told the judge that there is no legal basis for Lynne Spears' request.

"We believe the petition was filed in bad faith," Rosengart said, adding that it was "unfortunate" that his client had to spend the time and money for him to appear on her behalf in court Wednesday.

Lynne Spears, 66, and the 69-year-old Jamie Spears divorced in 2002.