Kudlich v. Ciciarelli

401 P.2d 449, 48 Haw. 290, 1965 Haw. LEXIS 31
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1965
Docket4353
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 401 P.2d 449 (Kudlich v. Ciciarelli) 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
Kudlich v. Ciciarelli, 401 P.2d 449, 48 Haw. 290, 1965 Haw. LEXIS 31 (haw 1965).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

This is a civil case having its inception by the filing of the plaintiff’s complaint in the First Circuit Court on March 31, 1956. Defendants filed an answer *291 and counterclaim on April 12, 1956. An answer to defendants’ counterclaim was filed on May 2, 1956.

On July 20, 1962, pursuant to Rule 13(g) 1 of the revised Rules of the First Circuit Court, effective July 1, 1960, the clerk of the court notified the parties tkat tlie case would be dismissed unless objection was filed within ten days of the receipt of the notice. On July 31, 1962, plaintiff filed a timely objection, together with a Statement of Readiness as required by sáid Rule 13 in order to place the case on “the ready trial calendar of civil cases,” so designated by Rule 13(a) of the First Circuit Court rules, as revised. This was followed by a motion to set plaintiff’s objection for hearing, filed on September 19, 1962. At the conclusion of argument on the objection, held on September 28, 1962, the court declared that the case would not be dismissed under Rule 13(g) aforesaid but ordered further hearing to determine the applicability of the automatic dismissal provision of R.L.H. 1955, § 231-4. After this further hearing, the court ruled that the statute did apply, and entered an order dismissing the case with prejudice on November 1, 1962. The case is now before this court on plaintiff’s appeal. The sole question involved is whether R.L.H. 1955, § 231-4, operated to effect an automatic dismissal.

The archivist of the First Circuit Court was the only witness called. His testimony was confined to his under *292 standing of the procedural aspects of the First Circuit Court rules and the aforesaid statute pertaining to automatic dismissal. He stated that prior to the 1960 revision of the Circuit Court rules it was his practice to enter an order of dismissal under section 231-4 for the purpose of the record, though the statute did not require it. He entered such order six years after the case was at issue. Upon the filing of all answers the case was at issue and was on the ready calendar, he testified. After the 1960 revision of the Circuit Court rules he did not place any case on the ready calendar, whether or not at issue before 1960, unless a Statement of Readiness was filed. 2

In Arnold v. City and County, 45 Haw. 165, 363 P.2d 968, this court rendered its decision as it pertained to the facts involved in that case without considering the effect of the Hawaii Rules of Civil Procedure or the 1960 revision of the First Circuit Court rules. These matters were not involved in Arnold but must be considered in the instant case.

Upon the record before us we must conclude that this case was placed on the ready calendar on May 2, 1956 when the answer to the counterclaim was filed and the case was at issue. The testimony of the archivist has not been rebutted, either by contrary testimony as to the practice at that time, or by evidence as to what happened in this particular case. However, as will be seen, the practice which the record shows was followed at the time was not mandated by statute to the exclusion of other methods of making up the ready calendar.

*293 R.L.H. 1955, § 230-50 3 on which defendants rely, will first be considered. When considered in the light of its background, this section does not have the significance attributed to it by defendants. This section 230-50 originally was enacted as section 1111 of the Civil Code of 1859 and has remained unamended. In the Civil Code of 1859 it was followed by section 1112, which as amended became R.L.H. 1955, § 230-48, relating to demurrers. The latter section, as originally enacted, provided for decision on the demurrer by a “judge at chambers.” 4 Section 1111 (now section 230-50) in contrast thereto provided for a calendar of cases “triable in the court in which the action was commenced.” These were cases requiring action of a particular kind. Cf., State ex rel. Kennedy v. District Court, 121 Mont. 320, 194 P.2d 256, 260. The cases which this section had in view were those in which, as stated in section 1106 of the Civil Code of 1859 (later amended and becoming R.L.H. 1955, § 230-47), there was “an issue of fact to be determined by the jury.” However, a jury could be waived as provided by section 1137 of the Civil Code of 1859 (later amended and becoming R.L.H. 1955, §231-6). Thus section 1111 (now section 230-50) provided for the enrollment of cases requiring trial of factual issues, either by the jury or by the court if a jury was waived. It did not have the significance of prescribing that the date the case was at issue was determinative of its standing for tidal. On the contrary, section 1161 of the Civil Code of 1859 provided that the courts of record might make their own rules for “making up. calendars of the *294 causes, civil and criminal, coming on for trial in said courts,” and this section remains unchanged as R.L.H. 1955, § 231-1. This section 1161 was followed by section 1162, subsequently considerably amended and now R.L.H. 1955, § 231-4, the principal section here involved. 5 , As originally enacted it provided that: “Causes placed upon the calendar shall be taken up and disposed of in the order in which they stand, unless postponed by the court at the request of the plaintiff or the defendant.” There was no second sentence. This section is considered infra, at more length.

Under early rules, no longer in effect, cases were entered on the calendar, not according to the date of filing of the answer placing the case at issue, but instead “in the order in which the process was returnable” (3 Haw., Appendix, Rule XXII). Furthermore, under these early rules, except by leave of court a case did not go on the calendar as soon as it was at issue but only at the next term, unless process was returnable on or before the first day of the term. (Id., Rule XXI.) However, by a 1905 enactment (S.L. 1905, c. 8) it was provided, as still stated in R.L.H. 1955, § 231-3, that every action should be tried “at the term of court to which the summons therein is returnable unless such action is continued according to laAV.” Pursuant to another provision of the same 1905 act, now R.L.H. 1955, § 230-27, the summons was returnable “to the term pending immediately after the expiration of twenty days after the service of summons * * *.” Under *295 these provisions, in the absence of a valid court rule to the contrary, it became the duty of the clerk to place a case on the trial calendar in time for it to be tried at the term to which the summons was returnable, that is, the term pending immediately after the expiration of twenty days after the service of summons, if the case was at issue.

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Bluebook (online)
401 P.2d 449, 48 Haw. 290, 1965 Haw. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kudlich-v-ciciarelli-haw-1965.