In Re the Estate of Cheong Chinn

359 P.2d 932, 44 Haw. 613, 1961 Haw. LEXIS 46
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 10, 1961
Docket4120
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 359 P.2d 932 (In Re the Estate of Cheong Chinn) 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
In Re the Estate of Cheong Chinn, 359 P.2d 932, 44 Haw. 613, 1961 Haw. LEXIS 46 (haw 1961).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT BY

LEWIS, J.

This is an interlocutory appeal from an order denying a motion to dismiss an appeal to the circuit court by *614 contestants, whose objections to the admission to probate of the September 17, 1956 will of deceased were disallowed, and the probate contest ordered dismissed, by a circuit judge sitting at chambers, the Honorable W. Z. Fairbanks.

The contestants, appellees here, are Yau Lee Chinn, an adult son of decedent, and Amy Farias, next friend of Yau Hook Chinn and Geraldine Louise Chinn, minor children of decedent. The decision against them was rendered and judgment entered November 6, 1958. On November 14, 1958 they filed a paper designated “Notice of Appeal and Motion for Jury Trial,” captioned “In the Circuit Court of the First Judicial Circuit.” All previous papers in the proceeding had carried in the caption the additional words “At Chambers” “In Probate.”

Fanny Loo Chinn, widow of decedent, was the petitioner for probate of the will, in which she is one of the devisees, the others being the three children who, however, are not her children but the children of Amy Farias, divorced wife of decedent and next friend of the minor contestants. The widow hereinafter is referred to as the proponent and the contestants are referred to as such.

When the circuit judge dismissed the contest he appointed Cooke Trust Company, Limited, as administrator with the will annexed, instead of appointing proponent, who was designated by the will of September 17, 1956 as executrix. Proponent and the administrator with the will annexed moved on January 6, 1959 for dismissal of contestants’ appeal. This motion was based on the alleged failure to pay “the costs accrued,” and two other grounds (failure to file bond and state the issues of fact relied upon on appeal) which have not been urged here. No point Avas made as to the caption used by contestants.

This motion, unlike contestants’ paper, carried in the *615 caption the words “At Chambers” “In Probate.” It was noticed for hearing before and was heard by the Honorable Frank A. McKinley. By order of February 17, 1959, Judge McKinley denied the motion to dismiss contestants’ appeal and at the same time allowed an interlocutory appeal to this court, which has been taken by proponent. The administrator with the will annexed appeared before us but filed no brief and presented no argument, advising this court that it considered itself a stakeholder. We express no opinion on the status of an administrator with the will annexed during the pendency of an appeal from an order disallowing objections to the probate of the will.

We first consider two questions raised by this court, sua sponte, having to do with the use and nonuse by the parties of the words “At Chambers” and “In Probate” in the caption of the various papers filed below.

Due to the nonapplicability of the Hawaii Rules of Civil Procedure to certain proceedings (H.R.C.P., Rule 81(a)) there still obtains in this State, in probate proceedings, the statutory distinction between the jurisdiction of the circuit court and a circuit judge at chambers. R.L.H. 1955, § 215-18, provides that the conducting of probate proceedings is a part of the “power at chambers” of the “judges of the several circuit courts” but “subject to appeal to the circuit and supreme courts, according to law.” The expression “probate court” is used herein to signify the circuit judge sitting at chambers in probate.

This court has deemed it unnecessary to decide “[w]hether the circuit court and the court of the circuit judge at chambers should be regarded as one, that is, whether they should be considered merely as the law and equity sides of the same court, or whether they should be considered as distinct courts, though presided over by *616 tlie same judges.” Carter v. Gear, 16 Haw. 242, 251, aff’d 197 U.S. 348. Upon another phase of Carter the court ruled that the question whether the petition was before the circuit court or before the judge at chambers should be decided upon “the record as a whole.” Carter v. Gear, 16 Haw. 412. The criteria are illustrated by Kala v. Mills, 15 Haw. 422, and Kendall v. Holloway, 16 Haw. 45, in which it was held that resort to a circuit judge at chambers was intended, while in In re Candido, 31 Haw. 630, there was nothing to show that the jurisdiction of the circuit judge at chambers was invoked or exercised. In each case the record as a whole was considered.

Both parties have cited Estate of Walker, 43 Haw. 304, 306, in which the court sustained the denial of a jury trial in a probate matter, saying:

“* * * The probate court and the circuit court are not one and the same. A motion for a jury trial must be made not in the probate court but in the circuit court after an appeal has been taken there. (Estate of Brenig, 7 Haw. 640).”

The record in Walker shows that an order for distribution of the estate was made by the Honorable Harry R. Hewitt, and within ten days thereafter the claimant filed a motion captioned “At Chambers” “In Probate” wherein he moved “this Honorable Court” that a certain issue of fact “on appeal be tried by a jury in accordance with Section 12002 of Revised Laws of Hawaii 1945 [R.L.H. 1955, § 317-2].” Together with the motion the claimant filed a notice that the motion would be presented before the same judge, the Honorable Harry R. Hewitt, who thereafter heard and denied the motion. Had the claimant intended to address the circuit court, the appellate tribunal, this motion would have been presented to another judge; pursuant to R.L.H. 1955, § 208-3, Judge Hewitt *617 would have been prohibited from sitting upon an appeal from his own decision. Upon the record as a whole the motion in Walker was made in the probate court, the trial court. Though one may take a precautionary appeal in some circumstances, the claimant in Walker did not so proceed but, on the contrary, was endeavoring to pursue his appeal in the trial court. The essence of an appeal is the divesting of the trial court’s jurisdiction. See Madden v. Madden, 43 Haw. 148, 150.

In the present case Judge Fairbanks was the assigned probate judge when the contest first was heard and accordingly retained the matter when the 1958 term commenced January 13, 1958, under the Order of Assignment, rendering the decision of the probate court upon the will contest. However, Judge McKinley was assigned to the probate calendar and civil proceedings sounding in probate during that term, and the 1959 term did not begin until January 12, 1959. The motion to dismiss the appeal was noticed for hearing before him on January 9, 1959.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
359 P.2d 932, 44 Haw. 613, 1961 Haw. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-cheong-chinn-haw-1961.