Harbrecht v. Harrison

38 Haw. 206, 1948 Haw. LEXIS 13
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 31, 1948
Docket2696
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 38 Haw. 206 (Harbrecht v. Harrison) 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
Harbrecht v. Harrison, 38 Haw. 206, 1948 Haw. LEXIS 13 (haw 1948).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

LE BARON, J.

(Peters, J., dissenting.)

This is a bill in equity for accounting and for discovery and other incidental relief between nonresident copartners *207 of a foreign limited partnership which was organized and existing under the laws of the State of Illinois. The partnership’s principal place of business was in that state, but the firm also did business elsewhere in the United States and throughout the orient. The bill is brought, after the partnership had been dissolved pursuant to the laws of Illinois, by the petitioners, one a general partner and the other a limited partner, against the respondent, a general partner, who was also the managing partner exclusively entrusted with the assets of the partnership, the conduct of its business and the keeping of its books, accounts and records, either at its principal place of business in Illinois or at her office, the location of which is undisclosed. The substance of the action against the respondent involves her breach of the peculiar trusts and duties arising from the termination of the partnership relation and placed upon her by the articles of limited partnership which are attached to the bill and made a part thereof by reference. So amplified, the bill alleges in effect that the respondent refused on demand to perform her exclusive duty to liquidate the dissolved partnership’s assets and from the proceeds to pay its debts, repay to the petitioners the sum of fifty thousand dollars as their contribution of initial capital and distribute to the petitioners one half of the balance as their proportionate share. The bill further contains inter alia averments that the respondent concealed from the petitioners the books, accounts and records of the dissolved partnership and the petitioners have no access to them; that discovery is necessary to enable the petitioners to make a full and complete statement of the moneys to which they are entitled and that they have no adequate remedy at law.

Upon service of process, the respondent’s attorney appeared specially for the purpose of pleading, and did plead, to the jurisdiction of the equity court. He prayed *208 that it refuse to entertain the cause of action of the petitioners and that it dismiss their bill upon the grounds that the parties are all nonresidents, the respondent being at the time of service but temporarily in Honolulu en route to the orient; that the partnership involved and its affairs are not and never have been situate in the Territory of Hawaii; that none of its business has ever been conducted, nor are any of its books, accounts and records to be found, in the Territory; that all of its affairs were conducted, and all of its books, accounts and records are, in Illinois or the Philippine Islands; that undue and unnecessary expense will be incurred if the cause is tried in the Territory.

To this plea the petitioners make replication that the respondent has no known permanent residence; that she travels extensively both in the United States and to foreign countries; that the petitioners commenced similar proceedings against her in the State of Illinois which were discontinued without prejudice because of inability to secure personal service; that they are willing to stipulate with the respondent that a discontinuance of the instant proceedings be likewise entered on condition she submit to the jurisdiction of an appropriate Illinois court upon institution of proceedings to try the cause therein.

At the hearing of the plea and replication, the attorney for the respondent stated that he had no authority from her to enter into the stipulation suggested in the replication. The presiding judge at chambers by order of court denied the respondent’s plea and required her to answer. From this order the presiding judge allowed the respondent to take an interlocutory appeal.

The appeal challenges the lower court’s exercise of jurisdiction only, not the jtmsdiction itself. No contention is made under it that the bill does not state a cause of action cognizable in a court of equity nor that the lower *209 court did not have the discretionary power to take cognizance of the cause stated. In correlation thereto the denied plea is not in the nature of a demurrer but goes to the exercise of jurisdiction over a concededly personal and transitory action which admittedly may be instituted wherever the respondent can be found and • served with process, irrespective of where the cause arose or the parties resided. That the lower court did in fact retain its possessed jurisdiction is the gravamen of the respondent’s complaint before this court.

To assume possessed jurisdiction over a transitory action between nonresidents was a matter within the lower court’s judicial discretion in which broad considerations of the relationship between territory and state or foreign nation govern. (Territory v. Gay, 32 Haw. 404; Universal Adjustment Corporation v. Midland Bank, 281 Mass. 303, 184 N. E. 152.) The exercise of that discretion will not be disturbed on review unless the lower court has acted arbitrarily without the employment of its conscientious judgment, exceeded the bound of reason in view of all the circumstances, or ignored rules or principles of law or practice as to result in substantial injustice. (See Bishop v. Pacific Navigation Co., 7 Haw. 276; Wilson v. Liliuokalani, 13 Haw. 466; McMillan v. Peters, 30 Haw. 148.) The attorney for the respondent contends that there was a plain abuse of discretion in that the lower court ignored and failed to apply the well-recognized doctrine of forum non conveniens. Without seriously arguing that substantial injustice resulted therefrom he cites the authority of Universal Adjustment Corp. v. Midland Bank, supra; Sielckens v. Sorenson, 161 Atl. 47; Carnegie v. Laughlin, 28 A. (2d) 506, and that of Gulf Oil Corp. v. Gilbert, 330 U. S. 501, 91 L. ed. 1055. (See also Koster v. Lumbermens Mutual Co., 330 U. S. 518.) But these cases all hold either directly or by strong implication that juris *210 diction of law or equity must be assumed, if the defendant or respondent, as the case may be, is not subject to process in the state that he claims is the more appropriate and convenient forum, or if therein the statute of limitations has run or the action has become stale. Indeed, nothing less would serve the interests of justice, consistent with the nature of the doctrine as an instrument of justice (see Williams v. Green Bay & W. R. Co., 326 U. S. 549), which concept underlies, and is epitomized by, the statement of the Supreme Court in the recent Gilbert case on page 506, supra,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 Haw. 206, 1948 Haw. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harbrecht-v-harrison-haw-1948.