Camp v. Camp

128 P.3d 351, 109 Haw. 469
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 3, 2006
Docket26452
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 128 P.3d 351 (Camp v. Camp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Camp v. Camp, 128 P.3d 351, 109 Haw. 469 (hawapp 2006).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Defendant-Appellant Wailani Luella Camp (Wailani or Defendant) appeals from the February 24, 2004 Divorce Decree entered in the Family Court of the First Circuit. 1

We conclude that: (1) the February 24, 2004 Divorce Decree did not take effect prior to February 24, 2004; (2) Plaintiff-Appellee Gary Edward Camp (Gary or Plaintiff) died on October 17, 2003, prior to the February 24, 2004 Divorce Decree; (3) Gary’s death on October 17, 2003, extinguished 2 the divorce case and the family court’s jurisdiction to enter any subsequent orders/decrees/judgments, including the February 24, 2004 Divorce Decree. We remand with instructions.

BACKGROUND

Gary was born on October 6,1935. Waila-ni was born in January 1942.

*470 In July 1976, Wailani purchased 1312 Mok-apu Boulevard, Kailua, Hawai'i, 96734 (Moka-pu property) as a leasehold estate.

Gary and Wailani were married on May 22, 1981. When they married, Gary owned a residence in California. In 1986, (1) Gary (a) sold his California residence, netting $112,211.24 and (b) retired as an International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers electrician with 25.85 years of service; and (2) Wailani added Gary to her Mokapu title as a tenant in common, not by the entirety.

In 1994, Gary and Wailani purchased the fee of the Mokapu property.

On November 2, 2001, Gary filed a complaint for divorce. On May 29, 2002, Judge Bode A. Uale entered an order stating, in relevant part,

without prejudice to final accounting and allocation at time of trial[,] Plaintiff agrees (1) to pay Defendant $300 per month commencing June 1, 2002 as and for temporary alimony ...; (2) to pay monthly mortgage payments ...; and (3) to permit Defendant to continue to apply for reimbursement of her medical expenses from Plaintiffs medical insurance policy[.]

On October 25, 2002, Wailani filed a motion to set the case for a contested bench trial.

Plaintiffs Position Statement filed on January 6, 2003, states, in relevant part:

Plaintiff is seven years older than Defendant, and his health is very poor. He has had heart valve replacement in 1993 and therefore, he cannot perform strenuous work. He has hearing impairment from his service in the Korean War, and he is classified as disabled as a result. He was diagnosed with cancer in 1994 and completed treatment in 1995. Plaintiff recently had a biopsy and awaits those result [sic]. Plaintiff also has diabetes, which was diagnosed in 1997.

In Plaintiffs Amended Position Statement filed on March 25, 2003, Gary contended that he should be awarded all of the Mokapu property subject to its mortgage. He alleged that he was not aware until these divorce proceedings that Wailani was the owner of one-half of the property at 835 Mokulua Drive, Lanikai, Hawai'i (Lanikai property). He further alleged, in relevant part:

h) In 1992, the parties declared them intention to divorce. Plaintiff filed for a Complaint For Divorce, Defendant filed an Answer, and proposed divorce decrees were exchanged....
i) Throughout the first divorce proceedings, Defendant’s one half ownership interest in the Lanikai property was not disclosed to Plaintiff or his counsel. There was only one mention of Defendant having a “convenience interest” in her mother’s Lanikai property (the co-owner was Agnes K. Wright, Defendant’s mother).
j) In 1994, in the course of the parties’ refinancing of the Mokapu mortgage, in part to purchase the fee to that property, a multitude of documents were executed by the parties, for that transaction. Among those papers was a letter, purportedly executed by Plaintiff, under notary seal, (hereafter referred to as “marital agreement”), that stated that he renounced any claim he may have to the Lanikai property. The Lanikai property was put up as partial collateral for the Mokapu loan, with Agnes Wright signing onto the parties’ second mortgage for Mokapu as a security collateral for their loan.... That marital agreement was procured by fraud,....
k) Despite the dismissal of the divorce, in late 1992, the parties continued to have marital problems, and they continued to express their intention to divorce. In 2001, Plaintiff re-filed for the divorce. In the course of discovery, Plaintiff learned that Defendant had sold her interest in the Lanikai property to her children and daughter-in-law, for $225,000.00.

The divorce trial occurred on April 1, 2003, August 4, 2003, and August 5, 2003.

On April 24, 2003, Gary executed his Last Will (i) giving “all of my estate to the trustee under that Trust Agreement in which I am both the current trustee and trustor, which Trust is dated April 24, 2003”; and (ii) appointing his adult daughter from a prior marriage, namely Jean Ann Camp, as the personal representative of his estate.

*471 On April 24, 2003, Gary executed a Deed conveying his interest in the Mokapu property to “GARY E. CAMP, TRUSTEE OF THE GARY E. CAMP REVOCABLE LIVING TRUST DATED April 24, 2003[.]” 3

At. the conclusion of the trial on August 5, 2003, the court ordered the parties to file closing briefs by August 26, 2003, and to file responsive briefs by September 3, 2003, and stated that the court would render a written decision by September 16, 2003. In its written Decision and Order entered on October 10, 2003 (October 10, 2003 Decision and Order), the court decided, in relevant part:

II. Relevant Facts and Reasonable Inferences Therefrom.
The parties are senior citizens, both in their 60⅛, with Plaintiff suffering a variety of health ailments, including borderline diabetes, high blood pressure, an artificial heart valve requiring medications which allegedly affect his short-term memory, cancer (1995, in remission) and recent, April 21, 2003, hernia surgery.
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2. Real Property Ownership.
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b. Mokapu. Defendant purchased this property, as a leasehold estate titled solely in her name, in July 1976....
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After the sale of [Plaintiffs California residence], Defendant added Plaintiff to her Mokapu title as a tenant in common, not by the entirety. Mokapu served as the parties’ marital residence from 1986 until DOS [date of separation]. It is currently occupied by Plaintiff through a restraining order against Defendant.
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As of March 2003, Mokapu’s FMV [fair market value] is placed at $542,500 with a present mortgage balance of $200,000,....
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NOW THEREFORE, IT IS ADJUDGED AND DECREED as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 P.3d 351, 109 Haw. 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/camp-v-camp-hawapp-2006.