Aiona v. Wing Sing Wo Company

368 P.2d 879, 45 Haw. 427, 1962 Haw. LEXIS 65
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 1962
Docket4168
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 368 P.2d 879 (Aiona v. Wing Sing Wo Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aiona v. Wing Sing Wo Company, 368 P.2d 879, 45 Haw. 427, 1962 Haw. LEXIS 65 (haw 1962).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

On April 26, 1954 this action, Equity No. 5388, was dismissed by the circuit court “without *428 prejudice,” after petitioners, hereinafter referred to as plaintiffs, had had a period of nearly three years in which to adduce further evidence that Chang Chong, the. father of the plaintiffs and through whom they claim, was the same Chang Chong who formerly owned 250 shares of the stock of the respondent corporation.

It was on July 25, 1951 that respondents, hereinafter referred to as defendants, made an oral motion for dismissal for failure of proof. The court took the motion under advisement after indicating that it would like further evidence on the point above stated. The order of April 26, 1954 dismissing the action stated that the evidence adduced failed to establish this point.

An appeal from the dismissal of the action was dismissed by this court, sica sponte, without prejudice, on the ground that the order of April 26, 1954 was not an appealable order. Following the filing of the opinion, reported at 41 Haw. 871, the case was remanded on March 5, Í956. A petition for rehearing, filed twelve days after the filing of the opinion and accordingly untimely under our rule 5(a), was struck for that reason. In the petition for rehearing plaintiffs stated, and upon the argument of the present appeal they again stated, that no new evidence could possibly be submitted.

Notwithstanding the dismissal of this appeal in 1956 plaintiffs were not without remedy. They could and did, on January'3, 1957, bring a new action, Civil No. 2504. However, on April 29, 1959 they moved to discontinue it without prejudice. On the same day they filed in the equity cáse (No. 5388) a motion to set thát case “for trial' pursuant to the mandate of the Supreme Court which remanded it .to the trial court for further. proceedings.” This was after defendants in Civil No. 2504, the same parties who were defendants in Equity No-. 5388, had moved for summary judgment in:. Civil No. 2504.

*429 On May 4, 1959 all three motions were heard. Without ruling on the motion for summary judgment the court permitted the discontinuance of Civil No. 2504 without prejudice, on plaintiffs’ motion. An order to that effect subsequently was entered. In Equity No. 5388, the court interpreted the motion as one to reopen and denied the motion on the grounds that, first, plaintiffs had no new evidence to present, and, second, the motion was not timely and stated no ground under Rule 60(b) of the Hawaii Rules of Civil Procedure. Upon entry of this order on October 1, 1959, the present appeal was taken.

It was held at 41 Haw. 371 that the order of April 26, 1954 permitted another action to be brought, that in that event the prior proceedings would not support a plea of res judicata, and that the dismissal without prejudice left the parties as free to litigate the issue as though the original action had not been commenced. Defendants, however, contend that upon bringing of another action additional evidence would be required, and that under the order of April 26, 1954 it became res judicata that the facts so far shown were insufficient, citing Craver v. Spaugh, 227 N.C. 129, 41 S.E.2d 82. The same point was made by defendants by their motion for summary judgment in Civil No. 2504. It is unnecessary for us to rule upon the point as a fresh question. The question is not free from doubt, because the circuit court’s order of dismissal, though “without prejudice,” expressly found that the evidence failed to establish a key fact. See 17 Am. Jur., Dismissal, § 103 at 173 (1957 ed.); Annot., 149 A.L.R. 553, 598. But the decisive point now is that this court adjudicated in 1956 that nothing had been determined by the above finding. See Bertelmann v. Lucas, 35 Haw. 335, 343. Thus it has been conclusively decided that nothing has been adjudicated as to the sufficiency of the evidence adduced in the first action. The dismissal of *430 the appeal “without prejudice” could have had no other purpose than to reserve as an open question the correctness of the finding above mentioned. See Annot., 149 A.L.R., supra at 563.

However, we think it proper to state that in our opinion the plaintiffs were entitled to appeal in 1954 from the compulsory nonsuit ordered against them. See Central Transp. Co. v. Pullman’s Car Co., 139 U.S. 24; 2 Am. Jur., Appeal and Error, § 82. This court had reviewed compulsory nonsuits previously, as illustrated by Garcia v. Mendonca, 7 Haw. 194; Territory v. McCandless, 16 Haw. 728; Lyu v. Shinn, 40 Haw. 198; Schimmelfennig v. Grove Farm Co., 41 Haw. 124. The words “without prejudice” did not make the present case unique; in Territory v. McCandless, supra, this court expressly declared that the dismissal was without prejudice but this did not affect the status of the appeal. Accordingly, we are of the opinion that review of the order of April 26, 1954 should have been accorded in the former appeal even though the dismissal of the suit effected by that order was without prejudice.

Irrespective of the view just expressed, this appeal presents solely the question whether plaintiffs’ motion of April 29, 1959 in Equity No. 5388 should have been granted. The appeal does not bring up for review the order made April 26, 1954. 7 Moore, Federal Practice, § 60.30(3) (2d ed.). Our view, above stated, that the appeal from that order should have been entertained does not enlarge our jurisdiction in the present case. Our jurisdiction is solely over the order of October 1, 1959 on the motion of April 29, 1959.

Plaintiffs’ motion was not made under H.R.O.P., Rule 60(b), though the trial court treated it as such a motion. The motion actually was that the case be set for trial. The theory of the motion was that the remand of March *431 5, 1956 was for further proceedings. This was incorrect-; the words “for further proceedings” did not appear in the remand and no further proceedings were called for under the opinion and judgment of this court. The dismissal of the appeal left the action dismissed without prejudice. Plaintiffs’ choice at that point was between seeking reinstatement of the dismissed action, on the one hand, or bringing a new action, on the other. The latter course was followed until April 29, 1959, when a new course of action was decided upon;, the second action was discontinued, and the motion now involved was filed in the original action.

Assuming but not deciding that at some point the original action might have been reinstated we come to the consideration of H.R.C.P., Rule 60(b). We agree with the court below that the motion was not timely under that rule 1

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Bluebook (online)
368 P.2d 879, 45 Haw. 427, 1962 Haw. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aiona-v-wing-sing-wo-company-haw-1962.