OPINION OF THE COURT BY
Julia H. Afong', a resident of Honolulu, died on February 14, 1919, leaving a large estate within this jurisdiction. On February 19, 1919, the Bishop Trust Company, Limited, named therein as executor, filed an alleged will of deceased for probate. Letters of temporary administration were first issued and on October 14, 1919, the Avill was duly admitted to probate and the Bishop Trust Company was appointed executor thereof. An appeal to a jury from the order admitting the will to probate was taken by Bessie B. Burns and A. Henry Afong, two of the children of the said Julia H. Afong, deceased, and after a lengthy trial the jury returned a verdict finding that the will ivas induced by undue influence and was not the will of Julia H. Afong. From this finding and the judgment entered thereon an appeal was taken to the supreme court where the verdict and judgment were affirmed. (See Estate of Afong, 26 Haw. 147, where a history of the controversy is set forth in detail.) The trust company .thereafter continued to act as temporary administrator and presented to the judge of the probate court an application for allowance of attorneys’ fees incurred in the defense of the validity of the will in the trial court before the jury in the sum of $3000, and the contestants presented a claim amounting to $6000 for their attorneys’ fees for services in the circuit and supreme courts. The judge of the probate court, while approving the amounts of the claims, was in doubt
“(1) Is the fee charged by attorneys employed by the executor and/or temporary administrator payable out of the estate of Julia H. Afong, deceased?
“(2) Are the fees charged by attorneys employed by the contestants payable out of the estate of Julia H. Afong, deceased?”
Neither the amount' of the fees nor the value of the services is in issue. The sole controversy turns upon the question of the judicial power reposed in the court to order payment of the claims by the estate. The attorneys for contestants do not oppose the payment of the fee asked by the attorneys for the temporary administrator. The Bishop Trust Company was nominated in the will as executor and the will on its face appeared to be valid and the last will and testament of deceased. It therefore was the duty of the trust company under section 2487 B. L. 1915 to present the will for probate to the court and after the will was admitted to probate and the trust company was appointed executor it clearly became the duty of the executor to defend the validity of the will against the attack of the contestants and it is incumbent upon the estate to reimburse the executor for its expense, including a reasonable attorneys’ fee incurred in the proceeding. See Notley v. Brown, 16 Haw. 575; McIntire v. McIntire, 192 U. S. 116; Bratney v. Curry, 33 Ind. 399; Parker v. Leighton, 102 Atl. 552; 18 Ann. Cas. 742.
The main controversy is in respect to the second question reserved by the circuit judge, that is, are the fees charged by attorneys employed by the contestants payable out of the estate of the deceased? Counsel for the temporary administrator contend that a circuit judge sitting in probate is not a chancery court with powers usually enjoyed in equity matters but is a law tribunal created by statute and is clothed only with such powers and author
Section 2272 R. L. 1915 confers in general terms jurisdiction upon circuit judges at chambers in probate matters. Much that is incidental to the proper exercise of these powers is not expressly set forth in the statute, a fact which is referred to in Carter v. Gear, 16 Haw. 242; at 248, in language as follows: “The jurisdiction and procedure of the courts and the judges at chambers is not all defined by statute. Much of it is covered by statute only in a very general way. For instance, judges at chambers are given jurisdiction in equity in general terms ■—-which means that they have such equitable jurisdiction as has been exercised in chancery in England and the equity courts in America. Even the act of 1878 which enumerates many subjects of equity jurisdiction is not exclusive, although it was taken from the Massachusetts statute which is there held exclusive. See Dole v. Gear,
Eegardless of Avhat the rule may be elsewhere, in Hawaii, as incidental to the general jurisdiction of a circuit judge at chambers sitting in probate, is reposed the authority to direct payment by an estate of a claim for services performed for its benefit and found to be reasonable in amount. The recent decision of this court in the matter of the Estate of Thomas K. Lalakea, 26 Haw. 243, is directly to this effect. In that case it was held that the attorneys’ fees incurred by some of the heirs in contesting an illegal claim of an administrator against the estate were properly chargeable to the estate because the services inured to its benefit. There is no express statutory authority for that holding but it is founded upon those general and incidental powers referred to in Hoare v. Allen and Carter v. Gear, supra.
The two questions reserved are answered in the affirmative.