In re the Estate of Lazarus

11 Haw. 379, 1898 Haw. LEXIS 48
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 11 Haw. 379 (In re the Estate of Lazarus) 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 Lazarus, 11 Haw. 379, 1898 Haw. LEXIS 48 (haw 1898).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

FREAR, J.

On the 6th of last August Judge Perry of the First Circuit Court sitting in chambers made an order admitting to probate an alleged will of the decedent, Joseph Lazarus, and appointing an executor thereof. Three days later certain contestants noted an appeal from that order to the Circuit Comt, but did not pay the costs accrued or file a bond for further costs within ten days after the order appealed from. Afterwards, upon motion of the executor in the Circuit Court, Judge Hitchcock, of the' Third and Fourth Circuits, presiding in this case in the First Circuit, both Circuit Judges of this Circuit being disqualified, dismissed the contestants’ appeal on the ground that the said costs had not been paid nor the said bond filed within the said time. The case comes here on contestants’ exception to this ruling.

[380]*380The question is whether the statute (Ch. 109, Laws of 1892) requiring such costs to be paid and bond to be filed within ten days, on appeal from an order of a Circuit Judge at chambers, applies to such an appeal when taken to the Circuit Court as well as when taken to the Supreme Court.

Before 1861, no appeal was allowed from an order of a Judge in chambers to a court sitting with a jury. In that year an Act was passed providing for such an appeal in certain probate cases upon certain issues of fact, but without specifying the time within which the appeal should be noted or containing any provision as to costs or bond. By Buie 4 of the Supreme Court, however, the appellant in such cases was required to note his appeal, pay the costs accrued and file a bond in the sum of $50 for costs to accrue, within ten days after the decision appealed from. This Buie was superseded by the Act to Beorganize the Judiciary Department, Ch. 57, Laws of 1892, which provided, among other things, as follows:

“Section 69. Appeals shall be allowed from all decisions, judgments, orders or decrees of Circuit Judges in Chambers, to the Circuit Court, and, if solely on points of law, to the Supreme Court, and of Justices of the Supreme Court at Chambers, to the Supreme Court, whenever the party appealing shall file notice of his appeal within five days, and shall pay the costs accrued, and deposit a sufficient bond in the sum of fifty dollars, conditioned for the payment of the costs further to accrue in case he is defeated in the Appellate Court, or money to the same amount, within ten days after the filing of the decision, judgment, order or decree appealed from.”

This section was amended at the same session of the Legislature by Act 109, so to read as follows:

“Section 69. Appeals shall be allowed from all decisions, judgments, orders or decrees of Circuit Judges in Chambers, to the Supreme Court, except in cases in which the appellant is entitled to appeal to a jury, whenever the party appealing shall file notice of his appeal within five days, and shall pay the costs accrued, and deposit a sufficient bond in the sum of fifty [381]*381dollars, conditioned for the payment of the costs further to accrue in case he is defeated in the Appellate Court, or money to the same amount, within ten days after the filing of the decision, judgment, order or decree appealed from; provided, however, that in any case in which the law allows an appeal from the decision, judgment, order or decree of a Judge in Chambers to be tried before a jury, the Judge whose decision, judgment, order or decree is appealed from shall not preside at the trial of such appeal before a jury, but such appeal shall be in order for hearing at the next regular term of the Circuit Court of the Circuit in which the cause was tried in Chambers, and the Circuit Judge of some other Circuit, who shall be thereto authorized by the written request of the Chief Justice, or other Justice of the Supreme Court, shall preside at the trial of such appeal; but further provided, that in case such appeal shall be taken from the decision, judgment, order or decree of one of the Judges of the Eirst Circuit in Chambers, it shall be in order for hearing at the next regular term of such Circuit, but the Judge whose decision, judgment, order or decree is appealed from shall not preside at the trial of such appeal.”

Section 69 as originally passed clearly made the provisions as to costs and bonds applicable to appeals to the Circuit Courts as well as to appeals to the Supreme Court. "Was this changed in the Section as amended?

Eirst, what was the intention of the Legislature? (1) On general principles, and considering the whole history of legislation respecting appeals in this country, it is not likely that the Legislature would intend to allow an appeal without any provision as to costs or the time within which the appeal should be taken or perfected. (2) In the original Section passed at the same session, the Legislature showed beyond doubt an intention that the provisions as to costs and bond should apply to appeals to the Circuit Courts. (3) There is nothing in the amended Section showing an intention to change the law in this respect. On the contrary, the amendment may be fully accounted for upon other intentions, and more particularly upon the intention [382]*382to allow general appeals, not merely appeals on points of law, in most chamber cases to the Supreme Court. The original Section, as shown by the following Section (70) and other provisions, evidently had not expressed the intention of the Legislature as to appeals to the Supreme Court. (4) In the amended Section the words “Appellate Court” are used as in the original Section and as in the Supreme Court Rule which preceded it,— which words were evidently used to include both the Circuit and Supreme Courts. (5) The proviso of the amended Section providing for the procedure in case the appeal is taken to the Circuit Court indicates that the Legislature thought the first part of the Section applied to such appeals. (6) It is argued that a fifty dollar bond would be sufficient on an appeal to the Supreme Court but that a hundred dollar bond ought to be required on an appeal to a jury as is required on such appeals from District Magistrates under the provisions of. the preceding Section (68) and hence that the Legislature could not have intended the amended Section (69) to apply to appeals to a jury. But there is no provision for a hundred dollar bond on appeals of this kind nor any indication of a belief that a bond of that amount should be required. On the contrary, under both the Supreme Court Rule referred to and the original Section (69) the amount of the bond on these appeals was fixed at fifty dollars.

It appearing clearly to have been the intention of the Legislature that the provisions in the amended Section as to costs and bond should apply to appeals to the Circuit Courts, the next question is, are the words of the Section capable of being so construed? For, if possible, the intention of the Legislature should be given effect.

If we strike out the words “to the Supreme Court, except in eases in which the appellant is entitled to appeal to a jury” in the first part of the amended Section, we have remaining a complete section providing for the procedure on taking appeals from orders and decrees of Judges at chambers. There would then be merely a question to which court or courts the appeals should be taken. Other Acts (the Act of 1864 in probate cases) [383]*383already provided in what cases the appeals might be taken to a jury.

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Related

In re the Estate of Soares
438 P.2d 401 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1968)
In Re the Estate of Cheong Chinn
359 P.2d 932 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1961)
In re the Estate of Walker
43 Haw. 304 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1959)
In re the Estate of Kamakala
12 Haw. 262 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 Haw. 379, 1898 Haw. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-lazarus-haw-1898.