Freitas v. Gomes

472 P.2d 494, 52 Haw. 145, 1970 Haw. LEXIS 107
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 7, 1970
Docket4893
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 472 P.2d 494 (Freitas v. Gomes) 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
Freitas v. Gomes, 472 P.2d 494, 52 Haw. 145, 1970 Haw. LEXIS 107 (haw 1970).

Opinion

*146 OPINION OF THE COURT BX

LEVINSON, J.

The question raised in tbis case is whether the admission of the decedent’s will to probate and the distribution of his estate in the probate proceedings bars the plaintiff’s present action to construe the will and obtain a declaratory judgment as to the rights of the respective beneficiaries.

The testator, Manuel Gomes, Sr., died on November 30, 1959, leaving real property appraised at $2,747,120.00 and personal property appraised at $347,772.00. In his will, among other dispositions not relevant to this case, the testator made provisions for two trusts. Into one trust; contained in paragraph seven of his will, the testator put stock and real property with the income to be paid to his wife, Cosie, for life, and on her death the remainder was to be distributed “as may be directed by the Will of my Wife, Cosie Luiz Gomes.” This trust will be hereinafter referred to as the paragraph seven trust.

Out of the will’s other trust, as contained in paragraph eight, the income was to go to the testator’s wife for life and the remainder to certain named children and grandchild including the plaintiff, Carrie G. Freitas, who was the testator’s daughter. This trust will be hereinafter referred to as the paragraph eight trust.

The will contained two other provisions relevant to this appeal. It had an in terrorem or “no contest” clause which provided that if any legatee began any proceeding to contest or attempt to set aside the will, the legacy or interest of such person would be forfeited and, in lieu of the provision in the will for such person, $2,000 was bequeathed to him. The will also made reference to a will which the testator’s wife made and published on the same day the testator executed his will. Her will purportedly devised and bequeathed certain property, which was to be given by the testator to his wife by his will, to those children and grandchild and their heirs who would not take *147 under the testator’s will. In the event that his wife did not leave anything to the children according to the will she executed that day, the testator left a bequest of $5,000 to each of them.

Nine of the children named in the paragraph eight trust decided to contest the probate of the will as it appeared that most of the property would go into the paragraph seven trust with the paragraph eight trust receiving few, if any, assets. The contestants later entered into a compromise agreement with the defendants who are trustees of the paragraph seven trust and principal beneficiaries of the will. Under the agreement the nine children were to receive some Honolulu real property. The agreement was approved by the court and the will was duly admitted to probate.

The plaintiff was not a party to the compromise agreement and nothing was distributed to her under the will. All of the real and personal property remaining was distributed by the court to the defendants as trustees under the paragraph seven trust and nothing went into the paragraph eight trust. The plaintiff conceded in oral argument that it was proper for no assets to have been distributed to the paragraph eight trust and she seeks nothing from that trust.

The plaintiff asks for a construction of the will, a declaratory judgment as to the rights of the named beneficiaries under the will, and an accounting by the trustees. Her theory is that the testator intended to give the wife a power of appointment in the paragraph seven trust merely to avoid taxes and that the wife was obligated by the will itself to exercise her power in favor of the children and grandchild including the plaintiff. This she argues is evident from a reading of the will itself. The plaintiff alternatively argues that there was a contract between the testator and his wife that the wife would make a *148 specific will and that the plaintiff is a beneficiary of that contract and claims under it. Further, the plaintiff argues that the “no contest” clause of the testator’s will was violated by nine of the children so that their interests are void except for the $2,000 conditional bequest to each of them in the event of a contest.

The defendants moved to dismiss the plaintiff’s complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. H.R.C.P., Rule 12(b)(6). The trial court granted summary judgment, considering the “contents of the documents on file” in the probate proceeding. 1 The basis for the court’s grant of summary judgment was that the probate court’s final decree of distribution on September 12, 1963 placing all of the remaining property into the paragraph seven trust was “res judicata of all issues raised by plaintiff’s complaint.” In this respect we must ask first if the plaintiff’s interests as alleged in the complaint were indeed determined by the probate court in its decree and, second, if they were, was this res judicata of the plaintiff’s claim?

I. JURISDICTION OF THE PROBATE COURT.

The probate court’s jurisdiction is found in HRS §§ 531-1 to 531-34. Our circuit courts sitting in chambers have jurisdiction over the probate of wills and the administration of decedents’ estates. HRS § 531-1. In a proceeding to probate a will the question to be determined is whether the document presented is the valid last will of a *149 decedent. In this respect “the only proper and necessary matters for consideration and determination are the testamentary capacity of the testator, the due execution of the will in accordance with the statutory requirements, and the presence or absence of fraud, mistake or undue influence-” In re Estate of Wolters, 27 Haw. 136, 140 (1923). Yet while the probate court is without jurisdiction to entertain a direct proceeding solely instituted for the interpretation and construction of a will or the determination of the validity of a particular testamentary bequest or devise, such matters are within the power of the probate court to decide, to the extent necessary to make any authorized decree, especially when they are involved in the settlement and distribution of the testator’s estate. 2 The final decree of distribution of a decedent’s assets is a conclusive determination of the validity of the will and the legal rights of all parties to whom the estate is to be presently distributed to receive it for themselves or as trustees.

In the present case the relevant part of the decree distributed the property to the defendants as trustees of the paragraph seven trust. Insofar as any necessary determination of persons entitled to the property was made, such determination extended only to the trustees of the paragraph seven trust who received the assets in their fiduciary capacity. In no way was any determination of the trust’s beneficiaries brought into issue. Counsel for the defendants has argued that such a determination was the necessary implication of the decree of distribution. We disagree.

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Bluebook (online)
472 P.2d 494, 52 Haw. 145, 1970 Haw. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freitas-v-gomes-haw-1970.