26 Haw. 186 | Haw. | 1921
OPINION OF THE COURT BY
The appellant Bella K. Rodrigues filed her petition addressed to the judge of the circuit court of the fifth circuit for the probate of a writing purporting to be the last ivill and testament of William Bade, otherwise known as William Keaumaikai Bade, deceased. In the petition it is alleged that the deceased left an estate consisting of real estate of the value of two thousand dollars and personal estate of the value of one thousand dollars. It is also alleged that the deceased left no wife but it is not stated who the next of kin are. Benjamin K. Kahale-puna is named in said will as executor and the petitioner prays that said will be admitted to probate and letters
At the bearing tbe proponent of tbe Avill offered formal proof of its execution and tbe testamentary capacity of tbe testator by tbe testimony of the tAvo subscribing witnesses. It Avas brought out in tbe examination of the subscribing Avitness Solomon K. Kaulili that be is the
The motion Avas presented and argued hut we reserved our opinion thereon until a presentation of the appeal on the merits and it is now before us for disposition.
Two sections of our statute are pertinent. They are section 2508 R. L. 1915: “Appeals shall be alloAved from all decisions, judgments, orders or decrees of circuit judge’s in chambers, to the supreme court, except in cases in which the appellant is entitled to appeal to a jury, * * ⅜ ” and section 2484: “But whenever the A"alue of the estate of any deceased person shall exceed five hundred dollars, any person claiming, before any judge, sitting as a court
This reduces the question to the simple one of whether or not there is any matter of fact in issue. In Barth v.
From these authorities and others of like import the appellee argues that the issues are determined by the •pleadings without regard to the evidence adduced and that where the pleadings put in issue any matter of fact (as they undoubtedly do in this case) the appeal must be to the circuit court for a trial by a jury. The appellants on the other hand argue in effect that since the decision and order of the probate judge are based entirely upon a question of law and involve no disputed question of fact they Avere not entitled to appeal to a jury and therefore under section 2508 aboAre quoted they are given a right to appeal to this court.
If the only question involved in the appeal is the one upon which the probate judge based his decision we think the appeal was properly taken to this court notwithstanding the statement in In re Estate of Walters, 10 Haw. 25, that: “But if the appeal from a circuit judge at chambers be on the validity of a will or on facts touching the descent of property and the estate exceed the value of $500, the appellant is entitled to' appeal to a jury (p. 394 Compiled Laws), and by Chap. 109 Laws of 1892, he cannot appeal to the supreme court.” The above
The statutory provisions affecting the question under consideration have by reason of repeated amendments gotten into a very unsatisfactory condition. In fact so far as we can see it is only by judicial construction of long standing that a right to appeal to the circuit court for a jury trial in a case of this character has been preserved since the statute expressly creating that right was amended in 1892 (Ch. 109 S. L. 1892) to read substan
This brings us to a consideration of the case on its merits. We have already stated sufficiently how the case arose and the question involved. A consideration of the following statutory provisions is necessary: Section 3260 R. L. 1915: “No will shall be valid unless it be in writing * * * and attested by two or more competent witnesses subscribing their names to the will in the presence of the testator.” Section 3262: “All beneficial devises, legacies and gifts whatever, made or given in any will to a subscribing witness thereto, shall be void, unless there are two other competent witnesses to the same.” Section 2609: “No person offered as a witness shall hereafter be excluded by reason of ⅞ ⅜ * interest from giving evidence either in person or by deposition, according to the practice of the court, on the trial of any issue joined or of any matter or question, or on any inquiry arising in any suit, action or proceeding in any court, or before any person having by law or by consent of parties authority to hear, receive or examine evidence.” Section 3260 above quoted does not define “competent witness” and reference must be made to the general law to construe these words. “The act of 1883 * * * entirely removes all dis
On tbe authority of these cases we bold that section 2609 • read in connection with section 3260 prevents tbe • interest of tbe subscribing witness from disqualifying him as a subscribing witness to tbe will. If it were not entirely clear from these statutory provisions that interest did not disqualify tbe witness section 3262 would remove all doubt for it would be an idle thing for tbe legislature to provide, as it has provided in section 3262, for voiding legacies and gifts made under tbe will to a subscribing witness thereto if tbe will itself were void by reason of that fact.
Tbe order of tbe probate judge is reversed and tbe cause remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.