Sing Ying Kao v. Ben Hsia

524 A.2d 70, 309 Md. 366, 1987 Md. LEXIS 223
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 21, 1987
Docket126, September Term, 1986
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 524 A.2d 70 (Sing Ying Kao v. Ben Hsia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sing Ying Kao v. Ben Hsia, 524 A.2d 70, 309 Md. 366, 1987 Md. LEXIS 223 (Md. 1987).

Opinion

ADKINS, Judge.

This appeal from the Orphans’ Court for Montgomery County involves the circumstances under which issues may be transmitted by an orphans’ court to a circuit court, for resolution by the latter, and the appropriate subject matter of issues. For reasons we shall in due course explain, we hold that the Orphans’ Court for Montgomery County erred in transmitting to the circuit court for that county the issues now before us. 1 We first sketch the factual and procedural background of the case.

*369 I. Background

Sing-Pao Chiang, a native of mainland China, came to the United States many years ago and eventually became a naturalized citizen. Somewhat late in life she married (apparently in Taiwan) a widower, Charles C.H. Hsia. Mr. Hsia had four sons by his previous marriage, Arthur, Ben, Carl, and Donald Hsia.

In 1973, when Sing-Pao Chiang Hsia and Charles C.H. Hsia were married to each other and residing in Montgomery County, they executed wills. Hers left one-third of her estate to her husband, if he survived her, and if not, to her four stepsons. The remaining two-thirds were left to her sister, Sing-Ying C. Kao (also known as Xin Ying Jiang), with contingent gifts to two schools if Mrs. Kao did not survive Mrs. Hsia. 2 His left everything to his wife if she survived, and otherwise to his four sons and Mrs. Kao in equal shares. At that time Mrs. Kao was a resident of Shanghai, China, but in 1981 she came to live with Mr. and Mrs. Hsia.

Mr. Hsia died in Montgomery County on 28 April 1983. All his property passed to Mrs. Hsia, not by virtue of his will, but by survivorship—it was all held by the entireties, according to Mrs. Kao. On 2 June 1983 Mrs. Hsia executed a new will, revoking the 1973 will and leaving the bulk of her estate to her sister, Sing-Ying C. Kao. The 1983 will made no mention of her four stepsons.

When Mrs. Hsia’s will was filed for probate in the Orphans’ Court for Montgomery County, three of the stepsons, Ben, Carl, and Donald Hsia, petitioned to caveat the *370 1983 will. 3 The petition charged that Mrs. Hsia lacked testamentary capacity, that Mrs. Kao had procured the will by undue influence and fraud, and that the will breached a contract Mr. and Mrs. Hsia had made with respect to the disposition of their estates. Issues for the most part reflecting these contentions were framed by the Orphans’ Court for Montgomery County and transmitted to the Circuit Court for Montgomery County. The propriety of those issues is not before us. It is clear, however, that the Caveators hoped to invalidate the 1983 will, thereby reviving the 1973 document with its more favorable (to them) provisions.

There were extensive proceedings in the circuit court, including lengthy discovery. Eventually, the Caveators moved to remand the case to the orphans’ court for the framing of supplementary issues. The motion is barren of specific factual allegations, averring only that “[t]hrough discovery substantial additional facts were uncovered which are vital to this case and which have prompted the need for supplementary issues to be raised.” It seems, however, that the Caveators had unearthed some provisions of Taiwanese law that they thought would be beneficial to them, even if Mrs. Hsia had possessed testamentary capacity in 1983, had not been unduly influenced or defrauded by Mrs. Kao, and had not breached any contract with the late Mr. Hsia. In any event, the remand was ordered, and the propriety of that order is not before us.

On remand, and without the benefit of further pleadings to elucidate the Caveators’ new theory, the orphans’ court framed and transmitted to the circuit court “the following supplementary issues ... to be consolidated with the issues” previously transmitted:

1. Does this Court recognize and take notice of the laws of the Republic of China [Taiwan] as applied to its nationals?
*371 2. Does this Court recognize and accept as binding the marriage contracts of nationals of the Republic of China when those marriage contracts are entered into in the Republic of China and pursuant to those laws?
3. Does this Court recognize and accept as binding the resulting contract, either quasi-contract or implied contract, with the children of such nationals when such children are born in the Republic of China and under the laws of the Republic of China, and in particular the right under the laws of the Republic of China that their parent may not under those laws disinherit those children by Will or in any other manner?
4. Did the Will of Charles C.H. Hsia, the father of the Caveators, the four sons, purport to disinherit the four sons?
5. Did the advice given to one of the sons by his father that ‘We have taken care of you in our Wills’ induce the sons not to contest their father’s Will?
6. Did the Will of Sing-Pao C. Hsia, the decedent, attempt to controvert the sons’ right of inheritance and was such attempt in violation of their legal rights?
7. Does this Court recognize the right to ‘dual nationality’ as does the United States Government and as evidenced by the information provided by the United States Government on passports issued by [it]?
8. Does this Court recognize the rights of the Caveators as dual nationals, under the laws of the Republic of China?
9. Does this Court recognize and take judicial notice of the provisions of Article 1, Section 10 of the Constitution of the United States which forbids any state to pass a law impairing the Obligation of Contracts, and how does that Constitutional provision affect the Caveators?

It is from the order transmitting these issues that Sing-Ying C. Kao (Caveatee), appeals. As we have said, the *372 appellees are her late sister’s three caveator-stepsons, Ben, Carl, and Donald Hsia. 4

II. Questions on Appeal

Caveatee contends (as we see her contentions) that:

1. An orphans’ court , may not frame and transmit issues to a circuit court unless the basis for them has been established by pleadings in the orphans’ court;
2. An orphans’ court may not transmit issues of law to a circuit court; and
3. Once an orphans’ court has transmitted issues to a circuit court, the orphans’ court may not thereafter add supplemental issues. 5

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Bluebook (online)
524 A.2d 70, 309 Md. 366, 1987 Md. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sing-ying-kao-v-ben-hsia-md-1987.