Fourth Circuit Court

Identity area

Type of entity

Corporate body

Authorized form of name

Fourth Circuit Court

Parallel form(s) of name

Standardized form(s) of name according to other rules

Other form(s) of name

Identifiers for corporate bodies

Description area

Dates of existence

1892-1943

History

On October 8, 1840, Kamehameha III granted the first constitution of the Hawaiian Kingdom, which vested the judicial power of government in a Supreme Court, consisting of the King as chief judge, Premier (kuhina nui), and four individuals appointed by the representative body. Island courts held by their respective governors functioned as circuit courts on their respective island. The island governors were given powers to appoint judges who functioned as district magistrates for the island. Chapter XLVII of the Laws of 1842 mandated that the Supreme judges assemble in Honolulu each June and in Lahaina each December to try cases appealed to them. Selection criteria for foreign and native juries were provided for in the Laws of 1842. The Third Act of Kamehameha III in 1847 titled "An Act to Organize the Judiciary Department of the Hawaiian Islands" created four levels of courts - the Supreme Court, the Superior Court of Law and Equity, four circuit court jurisdictions, and district courts.

Places

1847: Fourth Circuit originally consisted of Niihau and Kauai.
1892: The islands of Kauai and Niihau were designated the Fifth Circuit and the jurisdiction of the Fourth Circuit encompassed the districts of Hamakua, Hilo and Puna on the island of Hawaii which had been part of the Third Circuit.
1943: Fourth Circuit is abolished, the entire island of Hawaii is again designated the Third Circuit.

Legal status

Functions, occupations and activities

The circuit courts had jurisdiction over adoptions, district and police court appeals, arbitrations, bankruptcies, admiralty, civil, criminal, divorce, fishing rights, guardianship, naturalization, probate, special proceedings, and water rights cases. Civil cases include equity and law cases. Article 18 of the Constitution of the Republic of Hawaii (1894) vested the authority to naturalize aliens in the Supreme Court. The circuit courts' jurisdiction remained the same when Hawaii became a territory of the United States in 1900 with the exception of admiralty cases and naturalizations of aliens. Admiralty cases were not heard by the circuit courts after 1900; jurisdiction over maritime cases resides in federal district court. In 1900 jurisdiction over naturalizations of aliens was transferred from the Supreme Court to the individual circuit courts.

The clerks of the Supreme Court, circuit courts, and district courts were appointed by their respective courts and had the power to issue process in all suits and matters brought before the court, administer oaths, take depositions of witnesses, to assess damages, and draw juries. The clerk recorded the proceedings of the court and held custody of court records. The clerk had charge of the seals of the court, maintained financial records, made quarterly account reports, and maintained an alphabetical list of plaintiffs and defendants to any suit or judgment recorded.

Mandates/sources of authority

An Act to Reorganize the Judiciary Department, 1892

Internal structures/genealogy

General context

Relationships area

Related entity

District Court of the Fourth Circuit (1892-1943)

Identifier of the related entity

Category of the relationship

hierarchical

Dates of the relationship

1892 - 1943

Description of relationship

District and police court determinations were subject to appeal in the circuit courts on their respective island.

Related entity

Judiciary (1840)

Identifier of the related entity

Category of the relationship

hierarchical

Dates of the relationship

1892-1943

Description of relationship

Part of the Judiciary

Related entity

Supreme Court (1853)

Identifier of the related entity

Category of the relationship

hierarchical

Type of relationship

Supreme Court

is the superior of

Fourth Circuit Court

Dates of the relationship

1892-1943

Description of relationship

Decisions of the Circuit Court could be appealed to the Supreme Court

Related entity

Third Circuit Court (1847)

Identifier of the related entity

Category of the relationship

temporal

Type of relationship

Third Circuit Court

is the predecessor of

Fourth Circuit Court

Dates of the relationship

1892

Description of relationship

The districts of Hamakua, Hilo and Puna on the island of Hawaii were part of the Third Circuit before the formation of the new Fourth Circuit in 1892 and after its dissolution in 1943.

Related entity

Third Circuit Court (1847)

Identifier of the related entity

Category of the relationship

temporal

Type of relationship

Third Circuit Court

is the successor of

Fourth Circuit Court

Dates of the relationship

1943

Description of relationship

The districts of Hamakua, Hilo and Puna on the island of Hawaii were part of the Third Circuit before the formation of the new Fourth Circuit in 1892 and after its dissolution in 1943.

Access points area

Subject access points

Place access points

Occupations

Control area

Authority record identifier

Maintained by

Institution identifier

Rules and/or conventions used

Status

Level of detail

Dates of creation, revision and deletion

Created on 1994-06, P. Lai
Revised on 1996-10, 1996-11, 1997-04, 2001-06, and 2002-06
Additions on 2002-11, A. Hoof
Additions on 2004-04, P. Lai

Language(s)

  • English

Script(s)

Sources

Maintenance notes

1994-06, P. Lai: Created
1996-10, 1996-11, 1997-04, 2001-06, and 2002-06: Revised
2002-11, A. Hoof: Additions
2004-04, P. Lai: Additions
2020-09-09, Joel Horowitz: Entered into AtoM

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