Court Opinion

ID: 4319235
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-10-09 19:09:10.496444+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:45:48.248637
License: Public Domain

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                                                              Electronically Filed
                                                              Supreme Court
                                                              SCWC-XX-XXXXXXX
                                                              09-OCT-2018
                                                              08:03 AM

           IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF HAWAI#I

                                ---o0o---

             BRIAN E. BENNETT and DEBRA S. BENNETT,
       Respondents/Plaintiffs-Appellees-Cross-Appellants,

                                    vs.

        SAMUEL JONG HOON CHUNG and LINDA HYUNKONG CHUNG,
       Petitioners/Defendants-Appellants-Cross-Appellees.

                            SCWC-XX-XXXXXXX

         CERTIORARI TO THE INTERMEDIATE COURT OF APPEALS
              (CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX; CIVIL NO. 11-1-0882)

                            OCTOBER 9, 2018

 RECKTENWALD, C.J., NAKAYAMA, McKENNA, POLLACK, AND WILSON, JJ.

                OPINION OF THE COURT BY NAKAYAMA, J.

          After an arbitrator issues an arbitration award,

parties to the arbitration proceeding may file motions to confirm

or to vacate the award in court.       Generally, a party must file a

motion to vacate an arbitration award within ninety days after it
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receives notice of the award.       Hawai#i Revised Statutes (HRS) §

658A-23 (Supp. 2001).     On the other hand, a party may file a

motion to confirm the award at any time after receiving notice of

the award.    HRS § 658A-22 (Supp. 2001).       This case presents two

related questions involving these provisions: first, whether the

time to file a motion to vacate an arbitration award is limited

by the opposing party’s filing of a motion to confirm; and

second, how an order denying a motion to vacate an arbitration

award can be properly appealed.

          In this case, Respondents/Plaintiffs-Appellees-Cross-

Appellants Brian E. Bennett and Debra S. Bennett (collectively,

“the Bennetts”), after receiving notice of an arbitrator’s award

in their favor, filed a motion to confirm the award in the

Circuit Court of the First Circuit (circuit court).           Before the

ninety-day period in which Petitioners/Defendants-Appellants-

Cross-Appellees Samuel Jong Hoon Chung and Linda Hyunkong Chung

(collectively, “the Chungs”) could file a motion to vacate the

award had expired, the circuit court granted the Bennetts’ motion

to confirm.    The Chungs then filed a motion to vacate the award

within the ninety-day period.       The circuit court denied their

motion to vacate, and the Chungs appealed the judgment of

confirmation and the order denying the motion to vacate.            The

Intermediate Court of Appeals (ICA) dismissed the Chungs’ appeal

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after they failed to file a jurisdictional statement and opening

brief.

          Back in the circuit court, the Chungs filed a motion to

amend the previous order denying their motion to vacate because

they believed that the arbitration statute barred such orders

from being appealed.     The circuit court agreed, and amended its

order to “again confirm” the award to allow the Chungs to appeal.

However, the ICA dismissed the Chungs’ subsequent appeal for lack

of appellate jurisdiction.      On certiorari, the Chungs argue that

the ICA erred in dismissing their appeal.

          We agree.     As a preliminary matter, the Chungs could

not have appealed from the circuit court’s first order denying

their motion to vacate the award because HRS Chapter 658A does

not permit appeals from such orders.        Therefore, the circuit

court properly amended its order and judgment and reconfirmed the

award to allow the Chungs to appeal.        Second, because HRS § 658A-

23 clearly provides that the Chungs had ninety days, not less, to

file a motion to vacate, and they filed a motion to vacate within

that period, the Chungs had a right to timely appeal from the

circuit court’s amended order and amended judgment.

          We conclude that the ICA has appellate jurisdiction to

adjudicate the Chungs’ appeal.       Accordingly, we vacate the ICA’s

August 8, 2017 Order Dismissing Appeal for Lack of Appellate

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Jurisdiction and remand the case to the ICA to resolve the

Chungs’ appeal on the merits.

                               I.   BACKGROUND

            The Chungs and the Bennetts were involved in a dispute

arising out of the sale of real property, and decided to resolve

the dispute through arbitration.           On February 11, 2015, an

arbitrator issued a final award that awarded the Bennetts money

damages and attorneys’ fees and costs.            On February 12, 2015, the

Chungs were notified of the arbitrator’s award by email.

A.    Circuit Court Proceedings - Motion to Confirm

            On February 17, 2015, five days after the Chungs were

notified of the arbitrator’s award, the Bennetts filed a motion

in the circuit court1 to confirm the arbitrator’s award (Motion

to Confirm) pursuant to HRS § 658A-22.2

            On March 2, 2015, the Chungs filed a memorandum in

opposition to the Motion to Confirm.           In their memorandum, the

Chungs informed the circuit court that they “intend[ed] to file a

motion to vacate under Section 658A-23 of the Hawaii Revised

1
      The Honorable Karen T. Nakasone presided.

2
      HRS § 658A-22 (Supp. 2001) provides:

                  Confirmation of award. After a party to an
            arbitration proceeding receives notice of an award, the
            party may make a motion to the court for an order confirming
            the award at which time the court shall issue a confirming
            order unless the award is modified or corrected pursuant to
            section 658A-20 or 658A-24 or is vacated pursuant to section
            658A-23.

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Statutes,[3] thus making the [Bennetts’ Motion to Confirm]

premature.”    They further explained that under HRS § 658A-23(b),

they “[had] a statutory right to file a motion to vacate by May

13, 2015.”    The Chungs therefore requested “that the Court defer

any decision on the [Bennetts’ Motion to Confirm] until it can

decide a motion to vacate on the merits.”          The Chungs did not

argue any issue on the merits or provide any substantive reason

to deny the Bennetts’ Motion to Confirm at that time.

            A hearing was held on the Bennetts’ Motion to Confirm

on March 10, 2015, approximately one month after the Chungs

received notice of the arbitration award.          At that time, the

Chungs had not yet filed a motion to vacate the award.             At the

hearing, the issue of whether the circuit court was required to

3
      HRS § 658A-23 (Supp. 2001) provides in relevant part:

                  Vacating award. (a) Upon motion to the court by a
            party to an arbitration proceeding, the court shall vacate
            an award made in the arbitration proceeding if: [reasons].
                  (b) A motion under this section shall be filed within
            ninety days after the movant receives notice of an award
            pursuant to section 658A-19 or within ninety days after the
            movant receives notice of a modified or corrected award
            pursuant to section 658A-20, unless the movant alleges that
            the award was procured by corruption, fraud, or other undue
            means, in which case the motion shall be made within ninety
            days after the ground is known or by the exercise of
            reasonable care would have been known by the movant.

                    . . . .

                  (d) If the court denies a motion to vacate an award,
            it shall confirm the award unless a motion to modify or
            correct the award is pending.

(Emphasis added.)

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wait to confirm the arbitration award until the Chungs filed a

motion to vacate the award was discussed.         First, the Chungs

contended that confirming the award without waiting the requisite

ninety days prejudiced them:
                [THE CHUNGS’ COUNSEL:] I mean, we have 90 days. And
          what has happened here and I guess what you could do,
          according to the [Bennetts], if the award comes out, you
          just move to confirm the next day. And it forces a party on
          the other side like myself and the Chungs to, like, move
          fast on this. . . . I mean, I have the pieces, but I would
          like to put together a good motion to vacate and, I mean, I
          can’t do that to beat this motion, and I don’t think the way
          the statute is written it’s intended to do that. And I
          think what the Court should do is just delay this decision
          on this motion until the motion to vacate is filed. . . .
                THE COURT: Okay. But they did move fast . . . to
          confirm, but the award is issued February 11th, right?
          Motions [sic] filed six days late, February 17th. The
          hearing is today, so you had about 30 days to file.
                [THE CHUNGS’ COUNSEL:] Yes. Yes. And I have sixty
          more days to file. It is not my intent, Your Honor, to
          delay until the 90 day. . . . I mean, conversely, if the
          Court says, “I confirm now,” then the statutory right to
          move to vacate is meaningless. And all I’m asking for, Your
          Honor, is time within that statutory period to get the
          motion filed there and heard, and then the Court can decide.

          The Bennetts argued that any court order confirming the

award at that time would not hamper the rights of the Chungs to

file a motion to vacate in the future:
          [A]s I read the law, the rights of the defendant or
          respondent in this matter are not abridged by the Court
          granting the motion to affirm. If [the Chungs bring] a
          motion which identifies a valid basis, legal and factual,
          upon which the Court concludes that vacating the award is
          appropriate under the circumstances, the Court will vacate
          and that will terminate and seize whatever benefits we have.
          . . . But I’m entitled to by –- we’re –- for 658-22 says,
          “shall” not “may.” This is one of those kinds of rules are
          black and white [sic]. And so I’m entitled to the
          affirmation of the award today without prejudice to whatever
          [the Chungs’ counsel] thinks he has or doesn’t have.

In response, the Chungs’ counsel argued that in the interest of

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judicial economy, it would be better for the circuit court to

wait to rule on the Bennetts’ Motion to Confirm until the Chungs

filed their motion to vacate, even if no motion to vacate was

currently pending.    Specifically, the Chungs’ counsel voiced his

concern that an order granting the Bennett’s Motion to Confirm

would trigger appellate deadlines that would differ from the

deadlines triggered by a subsequent order on the Chungs’ motion

to vacate.

          While acknowledging the Chungs’ argument regarding

judicial economy, the circuit court nevertheless concluded:
          [T]he court is guided by 658-22. And, to me, it’s very
          clear that it requires me [sic]. It says, “shall issue a
          confirming order unless the award is modified or corrected
          pursuant to those sections or is vacated pursuant to Section
          658A-23.[”]
                The award was issued February 11th. The motion was
          filed February 17th. The hearing is set today. [The
          Chungs] had about 30 days to file. If a motion to vacate
          had been filed and was currently pending before the Court,
          then I –- it would be very clear to me that I would look,
          also, to 658A-23. And at that point the concerns of
          judicial economy would, to me, seem to dictate that there
          just be one hearing on both motions. But at this point the
          motion to vacate is being discussed just purely in
          hypothetical terms and it has not been filed yet, although
          [the Chungs] have represented that they are going to file
          one.
                Given my reading of 658-22, the Court’s –- my decision
          is going to be to grant the confirmation of the award. I
          think I’m constrained by this particular section which I
          agree with the movants is very clear that I shall issue the
          confirming order. So for those reasons and other reasons
          indicated in the moving papers, the Court is going to grant
          the motion.

          On April 6, 2015, the circuit court entered a written

order granting the Bennetts’ Motion to Confirm (Order Granting

Motion to Confirm), and a final judgment (Judgment of

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Confirmation) in favor of the Bennetts.           The Chungs did not

appeal the Order Granting Motion to Confirm or the Judgment of

Confirmation.

B.    Circuit Court Proceedings and First Appeal - Motion to
      Vacate

            On May 13, 2015, the Chungs filed, within the statutory

ninety-day window provided by HRS § 658A-23(b), a motion to

vacate the arbitration award (Motion to Vacate).4            Therein, the

Chungs’ alleged evident partiality by the arbitrator.              The

Bennetts filed a memorandum in opposition to the Chungs’ Motion

to Vacate and challenged the Chungs’ claims regarding the

arbitrator’s evident partiality.

            The circuit court held a hearing on the Chungs’ Motion

to Vacate on June 26, 2015.        At the hearing, the parties disputed

whether the arbitrator demonstrated evident partiality.              At the

conclusion of the hearing, the circuit court orally denied the

Chungs’ Motion to Vacate.        Specifically, the circuit court stated

that it was not persuaded that the arbitrator demonstrated

evident partiality and case law was “very clear that the Court’s

role is not to second-guess the arbitrator’s award.”

            On July 22, 2015, the circuit court entered a written

order denying the Motion to Vacate (Order Denying Motion to

4
      The ninety-day window closed on May 13, 2015, ninety days after the
Chungs received notice of the arbitrator’s final award.

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Vacate).

           The Chungs filed a notice of appeal from the April 6,

2015 Judgment of Confirmation and the July 22, 2015 Order Denying

Motion to Vacate.     The Chungs subsequently did not file a

jurisdictional statement or opening brief.          However, on

November 2, 2015, in response to the Bennetts’ motion to dismiss,

the Chungs filed a memorandum noting that “there may be a

jurisdictional issue.”      Specifically, the Chungs stated that “an

appeal does not lie from an order denying a motion to vacate an

arbitration award,” and cited HRS § 658A-28 (Supp. 2001).5

Therefore, the Chungs concluded that the way to properly appeal

the circuit court’s Order Denying Motion to Vacate was “to have

the trial court enter an amended judgment, such that an appeal

can be taken which would be sanctioned by the statute[.]”

           On December 23, 2015, the ICA dismissed the Chungs’

appeal pursuant to Hawai#i Rules of Appellate Procedure (HRAP)

5
     HRS § 658A-28 (Supp. 2001) provides:

           Appeals. (a) An appeal may be taken from:
                 (1)   An order denying a motion to compel arbitration;
                 (2)   An order granting a motion to stay arbitration;
                 (3)   An order confirming or denying confirmation of
                       an award;
                 (4)   An order modifying or correcting an award;
                 (5)   An order vacating an award without directing a
                       rehearing; or
                 (6)   A final judgment entered pursuant to this
                       chapter.
                 (b)   An appeal under this section shall be taken as
           from an order or a judgment in a civil action.

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Rule 306 because the Chungs did not timely file a jurisdictional

statement or opening brief, and did not otherwise respond to the

subsequent notice of default.

C.    Circuit Court Proceedings of the Instant Appeal

            On August 15, 2016, eight months after the ICA

dismissed the Chungs’ first appeal, the Chungs filed a motion to

enter an amended judgment in the circuit court “in order to

appeal the denial of their motion to vacate arbitration award”

(Motion to Amend).      In their Motion to Amend, the Chungs stated

that they believed they could not have appealed the circuit

court’s Order Denying Motion to Vacate, because denials of

motions to vacate are not appealable orders under HRS § 658A-28.

Therefore, they requested that an amended judgment be entered so

that a proper appeal could be taken.

            On September 22, 2016, the circuit court held a hearing

on the Chungs’ Motion to Amend.         At the hearing, the Bennetts

conceded that the Chungs’ Motion to Vacate was timely.              However,

the Bennetts appeared to argue that because the circuit court

granted their Motion to Confirm, it also ruled on any motion to

6
      HRAP Rule 30 (2015) provides in relevant part:

                  When the brief for appellant is not filed within the
            time required, the appellate clerk shall forthwith give
            notice to the parties that the matter will be called to the
            attention of the appellate court on a day certain for such
            action as the appellate court deems proper and that the
            appeal may be dismissed.

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vacate at that time:7
                  [THE BENNETTS’ COUNSEL:] But the idea that there’s a
            second different, dispositive, segregable set of facts and
            law that would entitle [the Chungs] to separate and
            different legal rights is simply incorrect. The fact that
            [the Chungs’ counsel] has –- that he has to file –- if we
            had filed nothing and he filed his motion in 90 days and
            then there was a motion to confirm afterwards, it would have
            been fine. But the courts would have considered the motion
            to confirm and reserved the motion to vacate, considered
            exactly the same set of facts and law, and if it didn’t,
            it’s because [the Chungs’ counsel] didn’t bring that
            information to the court’s attention when the motion to
            confirm was argued and briefed. . . .
                  THE COURT: He had 90 days to file his motion to
            vacate.
                  [THE BENNETTS’ COUNSEL:] Which he did.
                  THE COURT: Yeah.
                  [THE BENNETTS’ COUNSEL:] But I’ve never said his
            motion to vacate was untimely. I’m saying that the motion
            to vacate is the other side of the motion to confirm, the
            two are identical sets of facts and law.

            The Chungs’ counsel disputed that the facts and law on

which a party might rely in a motion to confirm were the same as

the facts and law in a motion to vacate:
            So when [the Bennetts’ counsel] said this is the different
            side of the same coin, it is not the different side of the
            same coin. They’re two different things. Because I can put
            together a petition to confirm an arbitration award in half
            an hour. I cannot put together a motion to vacate that
            fast. And that’s why I asked for the abeyance, to hold it
            in abeyance, to give me what the legislature gave me, which
            was the 90 days, in order to prepare and present the motion
            to vacate, which is different, qualitatively different. And
            if the legislature said, oh, you know what, if a petition to
            confirm comes a couple days after the award is issued, well,
            you’re out of luck then. We don’t –- this 90-day thing is
            just out the window. Legislature’s not saying that.
            They’re saying, here is the time you got to test the award.
            And no one’s saying I didn’t do that right. I did.

7
      This position appears to be contrary to the one the Bennetts held in the
previous hearing on the Motion to Confirm, where the Bennetts’ counsel stated
that “the rights of [the Chungs] . . . are not abridged by the Court granting
the motion to affirm.”

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The Chungs further argued that this court’s decision in Salud v.

Financial Security Insurance Co., 69 Haw. 427, 430, 745 P.2d 290,

293 (1987), provided the means in which a party could appeal an

order denying a motion to vacate an arbitration award.

          On October 25, 2016, the circuit court filed an Amended

Order Denying Defendants’ Motion to Vacate Arbitration Award

(Amended Order).    In amending its previous Order Denying Motion

to Vacate, the circuit court explained:
                5. The nonappealability of an order denying a motion
          to vacate is consistent with case law. In [Salud],the
          Hawaii Supreme Court interpreted the predecessor Chapter
          658, which also did not provide for a direct appeal of an
          order denying a motion to vacate an arbitration award.

                6. The Salud Court, however, noted that the lack of a
          statutory right to appeal a denial of a motion to vacate,
          did not mean that such orders could never be reviewed. . . .

                7. Salud’s holding that “a confirmation should
          follow” a court’s denial of a motion to vacate award, is
          consistent with the current pertinent provision contained in
          HRS § 658A-23(d).

                8. HRS § 658-23, entitled “Vacating award,” governs a
          motion to vacate an award. Subsection (d) states “[i]f the
          court denies a motion to vacate an award, it shall confirm
          the award unless a motion to modify or correct the award is
          pending.” This means that a court must confirm an award
          following a denial of a motion to vacate an award.

                9. In this case, this court did not confirm the award
          after denying the motion to vacate, as required by HRS §
          658A-23(d).

                10. Because the award had already been confirmed
          prior to the filing of the motion to vacate award, it did
          not occur to the court, nor to any of the parties, that the
          award should be confirmed again, to strictly follow the
          dictates of HRS § 658A-23(d).

                11. This court’s failure to confirm the award after
          the denial of the motion to vacate as HRS § 658A-23(d)
          requires, however, has rendered the order denying the motion
          to vacate herein, unappealable under HRS § 658A-28.

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                  12. This court agrees with [the Chungs], that under
            the unique procedural circumstances of this case, [the
            Chungs] should be afforded relief in the form of an amended
            judgment upon which [the Chungs] can exercise their right to
            appeal. The court concludes such relief is warranted under
            [Hawai#i Rules of Civil Procedure] HRCP Rule 60(a), (b)(1),
            and (b)(6),[8 ] HRS § 658A-23(d), and Salud, supra.

                  13. An Awarded [sic] Order and Judgment confirming
            the award, and denying the motion to vacate should have been
            entered following the court’s denial of the motion to
            vacate, under HRS § 658A-23(d).

(Emphases in original.)

            Accordingly, the Amended Order stated:
                  For the reasons set forth supra and the reasons set
            forth in [the Chungs’] submissions, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED,
            ADJUDGED, AND DECREED that:
                  The Order [Denying Motion to Vacate] is amended to
            also order that the arbitration award is again confirmed
            after the denial of the motion to vacate the arbitration
            award. Thus, the last sentence of the Order [Denying Motion
            to Vacate] is amended as follows:

                   IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED
                   that the motion is hereby DENIED, and the
                   arbitration award, dated February 11, 2015, is
                   again CONFIRMED.

An amended judgment was also entered on October 25, 2016 (Amended

Judgment).

            The Chungs, believing that they finally had an

appealable order, timely filed a notice of appeal on November 4,

2016 from the circuit court’s Amended Order and Amended Judgment.

The Bennetts filed a notice of cross-appeal.

8
      HRCP Rule 60(b) (2006) allows courts to “relieve a party or a party’s
legal representative from a final judgment, order, or proceeding” for reasons
such as: “(1) mistake, inadvertence, surprise or excusable neglect;” or “(6)
any other reason justifying relief from the operation of the judgment.”
      “The motion shall be made within a reasonable time, and for reasons (1),
(2), and (3) not more than one year after the judgment, order, or proceeding
was entered or taken.” HRCP Rule 60(b).

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D.    ICA Proceedings

            The Chungs raised one point of error on appeal: whether

the trial court erred in denying their Motion to Vacate because

of the evident partiality of the arbitrator.            On April 10, 2017,

the Bennetts filed an answering brief responding to the merits of

the Chungs’ opening brief.9

            On August 8, 2017, the ICA dismissed the Chungs’ appeal

for lack of appellate jurisdiction for two reasons.             First, the

ICA held that the Chungs failed to “timely” file a motion to

vacate the award (and/or failed to timely appeal the circuit

court’s original Order Granting Motion to Confirm).             Second, the

ICA determined that the Chungs defaulted on their first appeal

when they did not file a jurisdictional statement or opening

brief, and the circuit court’s Amended Judgment did not cure the

default.

            With respect to the timeliness of the Motion to Vacate,

the ICA held that while HRS § 658A-23(b) provides that a motion

to vacate an arbitration award shall be filed within ninety days,

“[t]he Chungs were not entitled to assume that they had the full

ninety day period to file their Motion to Vacate.”             For support,

the ICA cited a Texas Court of Appeals case, Hamm v. Millennium

9
      On March 1, 2017, the Bennetts also filed an opening brief in their
cross-appeal, alleging that the trial court erred in entering its Amended
Order and Amended Judgment.

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Income Fund, L.L.C., 178 S.W.3d 256, 264-65 (Tex. App. 2005),

which construed a similarly worded statutory provision and held

that the ninety-day period was the maximum, and not the absolute,

period upon which a losing party may rely to vacate an

arbitration award.    Therefore, the ICA concluded that “[w]hen the

Bennetts filed their Motion to Confirm within a week of the

arbitrator’s issuance of the Final Award, it was incumbent on the

Chungs to oppose the Motion to Confirm and/or to file their

Motion to Vacate.”    Additionally, the ICA stated that the Chungs

could have appealed the circuit court’s April 6, 2015 Order

Granting Motion to Confirm or the April 6, 2015 Judgment of

Confirmation, but did not do so.

          With respect to the Chungs’ ability to appeal the

Amended Judgment, the ICA held that even if it were to consider

the Chungs’ Motion to Vacate as a post-judgment motion under HRCP

Rule 60(b), the Chungs defaulted on their first appeal from the

Order Denying Motion to Vacate because they failed to file a

jurisdictional statement and an opening brief.

          Under these circumstances, the ICA concluded that the

Chungs “were not entitled to the entry of an Amended Judgment.”

It noted that the Amended Judgment itself “did not change the

substance of the Circuit Court’s April 6, [2015], Judgment [of

Confirmation] or its Order Denying Motion to Vacate but was

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entered for the sole purpose of giving the Chungs another chance

to appeal the Circuit Court’s prior decisions.”             The ICA stated

that a trial court could not restart the time period to appeal by

filing an amended judgment that did not “amend a prior judgment

in a material and substantial respect.”           (Citing Korsak v. Hawaii

Permanente Med. Grp., 94 Hawai#i 297, 304, 12 P.3d 1238, 1245

(2000).)    Therefore, the ICA concluded that “the Amended Judgment

did not restart the time period for appeal,” making the Chungs’

appeal and the Bennetts’ cross-appeal untimely.             Accordingly, the

ICA dismissed the appeal and cross-appeal for lack of appellate

jurisdiction.

            On October 9, 2017, the Chungs filed an application for

writ of certiorari.10

                          II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW

A.    Jurisdiction

            We are empowered “[t]o hear and determine all questions

of law, or of mixed law and fact, which are properly before [us]

on any appeal allowed by law from any other court or agency.”

Bacon v. Karlin, 68 Haw. 648, 650, 727 P.2d 1127, 1129 (1986)

(alterations in original) (emphasis omitted) (citing HRS § 602-

10
      The Bennetts did not file an application for writ of certiorari
challenging the ICA’s decision to dismiss their cross-appeal for lack of
appellate jurisdiction. Therefore, the arguments raised in their cross-appeal
are not at issue here.

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5(1) (Supp. 1984)).
                  Moreover, it is axiomatic that we are under an
            obligation to ensure that we have jurisdiction to hear and
            determine each case and to dismiss an appeal on our own
            motion where we conclude we lack jurisdiction. When we
            perceive a jurisdictional defect in an appeal, we must, sua
            sponte, dismiss that appeal.

Id. (citations and quotations omitted).

B.    Statutory Interpretation

            “The interpretation of a statute is a question of law

reviewable de novo.”       Gray v. Admin. Dir. of the Court, 84

Hawai#i 138, 144, 931 P.2d 580, 586 (1997) (citing State v.

Arceo, 84 Hawai#i 1, 10, 928 P.2d 843, 852 (1996)).             Furthermore,

this court’s statutory construction is guided by established

rules:
            When construing a statute, our foremost obligation is to
            ascertain and give effect to the intention of the
            legislature, which is obtained primarily from the language
            contained in the statute itself. And we must read statutory
            language in the context of the entire statute and construe
            it in a manner consistent with its purpose.

Id. at 148, 931 P.2d at 590 (citations and quotations omitted)

(quoting State v. Toyomura, 80 Hawai#i 8, 18-19, 904 P.2d 893,

903-04 (1995)).

                              III. DISCUSSION

            The Chungs present one question on certiorari:

“[w]hether the ICA erred by ruling that the ninety day period in

which to move to vacate an arbitration award, as provided by [HRS

§ 658A-23(b)], does not provide for ninety days to move to vacate

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the award.”     The Chungs argue that the plain language of HRS §

658A-23(b) gives them a full ninety days, not less, to file a

motion to vacate an arbitration award.           The Bennetts counter that

because the Chungs failed to file a jurisdictional statement and

opening brief in their appeal of the circuit court’s Order

Denying Motion to Vacate, they “destroyed their appellate

jurisdiction.”

            Neither party appears to directly address the argument

raised by the other.       But their arguments, and the ICA’s

reasoning in dismissing the Chungs’ appeal, suggest that there

are two issues that must be resolved in determining whether the

ICA has appellate jurisdiction to decide this case.             The first

issue is whether an order denying a party’s motion to vacate an

arbitration award is, by itself, an appealable order.              The second

is whether HRS § 658A-23(b) provides a moving party an entire

ninety days to file a motion to vacate an arbitration award.

A.    An order denying a motion to vacate an arbitration award is
      not a final appealable order.

            In their response to the Chungs’ application for writ

of certiorari, the Bennetts argue that court rules governing the

time to properly bring appeals bar the Chungs from appealing from

the circuit court’s Amended Judgment.          The Bennetts note that the

Chungs filed an appeal from the Order Denying Motion to Vacate,

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but failed to file a jurisdictional statement and opening brief,

which led the ICA to dismiss their first appeal.           The Bennetts

argue that the Chungs’ purpose for pursuing an amended judgment

was “to escape from their own mistakes, and not to correct any

mistakes that may have been made by the Circuit Court.”

          Regarding amended judgments, this court has stated:
          The general rule is that where a judgment is amended in a
          material and substantial respect, the time within which an
          appeal from such determination may be taken begins to run
          from the date of the amendment, although where the amendment
          relates only to the correction of a clerical . . . error, it
          does not affect the time allowed for appeal.

Korsak, 94 Hawai#i at 304, 12 P.3d at 1245 (ellipsis in original)

(quoting Interstate Printing Co. v. Dep’t of Revenue, 459 N.W.2d
519, 523 (Neb. 1990)).     Moreover, “[i]f the amendment for the

purpose of correcting a ‘clerical error’ either materially alters

rights or obligations determined by the prior judgment [or

decree] or creates a right of appeal where one did not exist

before, the time for appeal shall be measured from the entry of

the amended judgment.”     Id. (alterations in original) (emphasis

added).

          Here, the Bennetts argue that the circuit court’s

Amended Judgment did not change the previous judgment in any

material or substantial respect.         Rather, they argue that the

Amended Judgment “incorporated the Judgment [of Confirmation] ‘in

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its entirety . . . by reference.’”11         Therefore, the Bennetts

contend that under Korsak, the Amended Judgment did not

“substantially and materially alte[r] the original Judgment” and

does not trigger a new time period for appeal.            (Citing 94

Hawai#i at 304, 12 P.3d at 1245.)

            We disagree.     The Amended Order amended the circuit

court’s previous Order Denying Motion to Vacate in a “material

and substantial respect.”        See Korsak, 94 Hawai#i at 304, 12 P.3d

at 1245.    This is so because the Chungs could not have appealed

an order denying their Motion to Vacate, and the circuit court’s

subsequent order that “again confirmed” the award created a right

of appeal where one did not exist before.           Id.

            We have previously concluded that an order denying a

motion to vacate an arbitration award is not appealable.              See

Salud, 69 Haw. at 430, 745 P.2d at 292-93.           In Salud, this court

examined the appeal provision in the predecessor arbitration

statute to HRS Chapter 658A, which read, “an appeal may be taken

from an order vacating an award, or from a judgment entered upon

an award, as from an order or judgment in an action, otherwise no

appeal may be had.”       HRS § 658-15 (1972) (emphasis added).          We

concluded that HRS § 658-15 “proclaim[ed] . . . in unmistakable

11
      This is incorrect. The Amended Judgment incorporated the October 25,
2016 Amended Order by reference, not the April 6, 2015 Judgment of
Confirmation.

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terms” that an order denying a motion to vacate was not

appealable.     Salud, 69 Haw. at 430, 745 P.2d at 292-93.

          But this court then described how a denial of a motion

to vacate could properly be appealed:
                Still, this does not mean that the denial of a motion
          to vacate an award by the circuit court necessarily
          forecloses an appeal sanctioned by HRS § 658-15. The
          unsuccessful movant’s recourse would then be a motion to
          confirm the award. Since the circuit court has already
          reviewed the award and decided no grounds exist for vacating
          it, a confirmation should follow.

Id. at 430, 745 P.2d at 293 (emphasis in original).              In other

words, we instructed that a denial of a motion to vacate an

arbitration award should be followed by an order confirming an

award, which was appealable.          See HRS § 658-15 (1972).

          While the Salud court interpreted a predecessor to the

current arbitration statute, that instruction nevertheless

applies here, because HRS Chapter 658A similarly bars an appeal

from an order denying a motion to vacate.            HRS § 658A-25(a)

(Supp. 2001) provides, “[u]pon granting an order confirming,

vacating without directing a hearing, modifying, or correcting an

award, the court shall enter a judgment in conformity therewith.”

Furthermore, HRS § 658A-28(a) lists the orders in which appeals

may be taken:
          (1)     An order   denying a motion to compel arbitration;
          (2)     An order   granting a motion to stay arbitration;
          (3)     An order   confirming or denying confirmation of an
                  award;
          (4)     An order   modifying or correcting an award;
          (5)     An order   vacating an award without directing a

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                    rehearing; or
            (6)     A final judgment entered pursuant to this chapter.

HRS § 658A-28(a).       An order denying a motion to vacate an award

is not identified in HRS §§ 658A-25(a) or 658A-28(a) as an

appealable order.

            This indicates that just as the now-repealed HRS § 658-

15 (1972) barred appeals from a denial of a motion to vacate, so

does our current HRS Chapter 658A.           Accord Salud, 69 Haw. at 430,

745 P.2d at 292-93.        Accordingly, the Chungs could not have

appealed from the circuit court’s Order Denying Motion to Vacate.

            But Salud presents the unsuccessful movant with a

solution.    We stated in Salud that after denying a motion to

vacate, the court should then confirm the award in order to allow

the losing party to appeal.         69 Haw. at 430, 745 P.2d at 293.

This instruction is codified today in HRS § 658A-23(d) (Supp.

2001), which states, “[i]f the court denies a motion to vacate an

award, it shall confirm the award unless a motion to modify or

correct the award is pending.”

            While the circuit court admitted that it did not follow

Salud in the first instance when it failed to confirm the award

after denying the Chungs’ Motion to Vacate, it subsequently

reconfirmed the award, which rendered the Amended Order

appealable.       See HRS § 658A-28(a) (“An appeal may be taken from:

. . . (3) An order confirming or denying confirmation of an

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award[.]”).     Because the circuit court’s Amended Order “create[d]

a right of appeal where one did not exist before,” the Order

Denying Motion to Vacate was “amended in a material and

substantial respect.”       See Korsak, 94 Hawai#i at 304, 12 P.3d at

1245.    Accordingly, “the time within which an appeal from such

determination may be taken begins to run from the date of the

amendment.”     Id.

            Here, the date of the amendment was October 25, 2016.

The Chungs’ notice of appeal, filed on November 4, 2016, was

therefore timely filed pursuant to HRAP Rule 4(a)(1).              Therefore,

the ICA erred in dismissing the Chungs’ appeal on the basis that

the Order Denying Motion to Vacate was not amended in a material

and substantial respect.

B.    HRS § 658A-23(b) gives the Chungs an entire ninety days to
      file a motion to vacate an arbitration award.

            HRS § 658A-23(b) provides that a motion to vacate an

arbitration award
            shall be filed within ninety days after the movant receives
            notice of the award pursuant to section 658A-19 or within
            ninety days after the movant receives notice of a modified
            or corrected award pursuant to section 658A-20, unless the
            movant alleges that the award was procured by corruption,
            fraud, or other undue means, in which case the motion shall
            be made within ninety days after the ground is known or by
            the exercise of reasonable care would have been known by the
            movant.

HRS § 658A-23(b) (Supp. 2001) (emphasis added).             The Chungs

contend that HRS § 658A-23(b) is clear and unambiguous, and that

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“[it] means what it says; that is, a losing party has ninety days

in which in [sic] move to vacate the arbitration award.”            The

Chungs further argue that the ICA erred when it stated that

“[t]he Chungs were not entitled to assume that they had the full

ninety day period to file their Motion to Vacate.”

          We agree.     The plain language of HRS § 658A-23

indicates that the Chungs had ninety days to file a motion to

vacate the arbitration award, not less.         Therefore, the ICA erred

in dismissing their appeal on this basis as well.

          The language of HRS § 658A-23(b) is clear –- a movant

has ninety days after receiving notice of a final arbitration

award to file a motion to vacate that award.          Here, the Chungs

received notice by email of the arbitration award in favor of the

Bennetts on February 12, 2015.       It is undisputed that the Chungs

filed their Motion to Vacate on May 13, 2015, within the ninety-

day period required by HRS § 658A-23.

          However, the ICA relied on a Texas Court of Appeals

decision, Hamm, 178 S.W.3d 256, to conclude that “[w]hen the

Bennetts filed their Motion to Confirm within a week of the

arbitrator’s issuance of the Final Award, it was incumbent on the

Chungs to oppose the Motion to Confirm and/or to file their

Motion to Vacate.”    We believe the ICA’s reliance on Hamm is

misplaced.

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           The issue in Hamm, like the issue here, involved

whether a losing party could file a motion to vacate an

arbitration award after the trial court ruled on the motion to

confirm. 178 S.W.3d at 258.      The Hamm court concluded that the

losing party could not.     Id. at 272.     The vacate provision of the

Texas Arbitration Act (TAA) read, “[a] party must make an

application under this section not later than the 90th day after

the date of delivery of a copy of the award to the applicant.”

Id. at 262 (emphases omitted) (citing Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code

Ann. § 171.088 (West 2005)).       In evaluating Section 171.088, the

Hamm court concluded that the ninety-day period to move to vacate

an award “represents the maximum, not an absolute period upon

which the challenging party may always rely.”          Id. at 264.

           Specifically, the Hamm court stated that “if a party

moves to confirm the arbitration award, then the party opposing

the award may not ‘idly stand by, allow the award to be confirmed

and judgment thereon entered, and then move to vacate the award

just as though no judgment existed.’”        Id. at 265 (citing The

Hartbridge, 57 F.2d 672, 673 (2d. Cir. 1932)).          Therefore, the

Hamm court held that a trial court need not wait the requisite

ninety days before confirming the award, and that “the trial

court had no discretion but to confirm the arbitration award if

the [losing party] did not file a motion to vacate or to modify .

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. . the award before the ruling on [the] motion to confirm.”                Id.

at 272.

            But in coming to this conclusion, the Hamm court also

noted that “[t]he scant case law on the issue conflicts,” and

made clear that “the only Texas authority on this issue

necessitates today’s holding.”       Id. at 264 (citing City of

Baytown v. C.L. Winter, Inc., 886 S.W.2d 515, 521 (Tex. App.

1994).    Moreover, the TAA was not modeled on the Uniform

Arbitration Act (UAA).     Compare Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann.

§ 171.088 (West 2005) with Unif. Arbitration Act § 23(b) (Unif.

Law Comm’n 2000).

            This makes the Texas Court of Appeals’ reasoning in

Hamm inapposite to the reasoning we must employ in this case,

because the Legislature made clear when it amended our

arbitration act in 2001 that it wished to “standardize Hawaii’s

arbitration laws . . . by replacing the current statutory chapter

on arbitration and awards with the Uniform Arbitration Act.”                See

Conf. Comm. Rep. No. 115, in 2001 Senate Journal, at 905.

Indeed, we previously recognized that “[t]he legislative history

reflects that the legislature globally adopted the UAA ‘to

standardize Hawaii’s arbitration laws with those used in other

states . . . .’”    Daiichi Hawai#i Real Estate Corp. v. Lichter,

103 Hawai#i 325, 327 n.1, 82 P.3d 411, 413 n.1 (2003) (citing

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Conf. Comm. Rep. No. 115, in 2001 Senate Journal, at 905),

superseded on other grounds by statute, HRS § 658A-12, as

recognized in Nordic PCL Const., Inc. v. LPIHGC, LLC, 136 Hawai#i

29, 44-45, 358 P.3d 1, 16-17 (2015).          Accordingly, HRS § 658A-

23(b) (vacating award provision) mirrors UAA Section 23(b), and

HRS § 658A-22 (confirming award provision) mirrors UAA Section

22.12

            Because the Legislature intended to adopt the UAA

wholesale, the comments to UAA Section 22 are particularly

instructive, because they discuss the situation at issue here,

i.e., what happens when a motion to confirm an arbitration award

12
      Uniform Arbitration Act § 23(b) (Unif. Law Comm’n 2000) provides in
relevant part:

            A [motion] under this section must be filed within 90 days
            after the [movant] receives notice of the award pursuant to
            Section 19 or within 90 days after the [movant] receives
            notice of a modified or corrected award pursuant to Section
            20, unless the [movant] alleges that the award was procured
            by corruption, fraud, or other undue means, in which case
            the [motion] must be made within 90 days after the ground is
            known or by the exercise of reasonable care would have been
            known by the [movant].

(Alterations in original.)

      Uniform Arbitration Act § 22 (Unif. Law Comm’n 2000) provides in
relevant part:

            After a party to an arbitration proceeding receives notice
            of an award, the party may make a [motion] to the court for
            an order confirming the award at which time the court shall
            issue a confirming order unless the award is modified or
            corrected pursuant to Section 20 or 24 or is vacated
            pursuant to Section 23.

(Alteration in original.)

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is filed before a motion to vacate the award.          Comment 1 to UAA

Section 22 states:
           Although a losing party to an arbitration has 90 days after
           the arbitrator gives notice of the award to file a motion to
           vacate under Section 23(b) or to file a motion to modify or
           correct under Section 24(a), a court need not wait 90 days
           before taking jurisdiction if the winning party files a
           motion to confirm under Section 22. Otherwise the losing
           party would have this period of 90 days in which possibly to
           dissipate or otherwise dispose of assets necessary to
           satisfy an arbitration award. If the winning party files a
           motion to confirm prior to 90 days after the arbitrator
           gives notice of the award, the losing party can either (1)
           file a motion to vacate or modify at that time or (2) file a
           motion to vacate or modify within the 90-day statutory
           period.

Unif. Arbitration Act § 22 cmt. 1 (Unif. Law Comm’n 2000)

(emphases added).    The comment addresses two issues.          First, the

comment permits courts to “take jurisdiction” of the award when a

party files a motion to confirm, even if the requisite ninety

days in which a motion to vacate can be filed has not yet

elapsed.   Id.   However, the comment also ensures that losing

parties have a full ninety days to file a motion to vacate.               Id.

This indicates that a losing party may file a motion to vacate

after a motion to confirm is filed, as long as the ninety-day

period has not elapsed.

           A case from the Nevada Supreme Court illustrates this

principle.   Casey v. Wells Fargo Bank, 290 P.3d 265 (Nev. 2012).

In Casey, the Nevada Supreme Court examined a similar factual

situation to the one presented here and held that the district

court erred in not allowing the losing party a full ninety days

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to file a motion to vacate an arbitration award. 290 P.3d at

268.    There, Casey, the losing party, received notice of an

arbitrator’s award to Wells Fargo on November 4, 2010.               Id. at

267.    Wells Fargo then filed a motion to confirm the award on

December 22, 2010, well within the ninety-day period in which

Casey could file a motion to vacate.           Id.   “Within hours, the

district court granted Wells Fargo’s motion.”             Id. at 266.

             In evaluating whether Casey could file a motion to

vacate the award, the Nevada Supreme Court noted that Nevada’s

Arbitration Act was “almost identical” to the UAA, and therefore

determined that “comment 1 to section 22 is useful in

interpreting our statute.”         Id. at 268.     After examining the

comment, the court then explained:
                   The error in this case thus was not in the district
             court accepting jurisdiction over the motion to confirm. It
             was in summarily adjudicating the motion to confirm, without
             giving Casey the opportunity to file an opposition to the
             motion or to file a motion to vacate, modify, or correct,
             while she was still within the 90-day period to so move.

Id.    In other words, the Casey court distinguished between the

court’s “taking jurisdiction” over the motion to confirm, and

adjudicating the motion to confirm.           See id.    It allowed the

former but disapproved the latter because the ninety-day period

to move to vacate had not yet elapsed.            Id.   Relatedly, the Casey

court also concluded that a losing party must have an opportunity

within the ninety-day period to challenge the winning party’s

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motion to confirm.      Id.

            Additionally, the Washington Court of Appeals

interpreted a similarly-worded vacate provision in their

arbitration statute to permit the filing of a motion to vacate

even after the trial court had confirmed the arbitration award.13

Martin v. Hydraulic Fishing Supply, Inc., 832 P.2d 118 (Wash. Ct.

App. 1992).     In Martin, an arbitration award was issued on

December 21, 1990, and a motion to confirm the award was filed on

December 28, 1990.      Id. at 119.     The trial court entered judgment

confirming the award on January 9, 1991.            Id.   The award was thus

confirmed before the statutory three-month period to file a

motion to vacate expired.        Hydraulic Fishing Supply (HFS), the

losing party, filed a motion to vacate the award on February 28,

1991, within the three-month period.          Id.    The motion to vacate

was denied on March 21, 1991, and HFS appealed.             Id.

            While the Washington Court of Appeals ultimately

affirmed the trial court’s denial of HFS’s motion to vacate, it

also held that HFS was entitled to file a motion to vacate after

the trial court confirmed the award.          Id. at 120.     In explaining

its rationale, the Martin court stated that a plain reading of

13
      Revised Code of Washington (RCW) 7.04.180 (1943) provided, “Notice of a
motion to vacate, modify or correct an award shall be served upon the adverse
party, or his attorney, within three months after a copy of the award is
delivered to the party or his attorney.”
      At that time, Washington had not yet adopted the UAA.

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its arbitration scheme indicated that confirming an arbitration

award was “not intended to cut off a party’s rights under RCW

7.04.180 before the 3-month period it provides for has expired.”

Id.    It further determined that “[i]n the absence of any

provision explicitly providing that a party’s rights under RCW

7.04.180 are limited by entry of an order confirming the judgment

under RCW 7.04.150,[14] we must conclude that the motion to

vacate the judgment here was permissible under RCW 7.04.180.”

Id.

             Applying the rationale employed in Martin and Casey

here, we first observe that similar to Washington’s statute, a

party’s rights under the vacate provision in our arbitration

statute (HRS § 658A-23) are not limited by the confirmation

provision (HRS § 658A-22).15         In fact, HRS § 658A-22 specifically

states that a party may file a motion to confirm the arbitration

award, and the court shall issue a confirming order, “unless the

award is . . . vacated pursuant to section 658A-23.” (Emphasis

added.)     This suggests that the vacate provision actually places

14
       RCW 7.04.150 (1982) provided in relevant part:

             At any time within one year after the award is made, unless
             the parties shall extend the time in writing, any party to
             the arbitration may apply to the court for an order
             confirming the award, and the court shall grant such an
             order unless the award is . . . vacated, modified, or
             corrected as provided in RCW 7.04.160 and 7.04.170.

15
       See supra notes 2 and 3.

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a limitation on a court’s ability to confirm an award.              Because

nothing in HRS Chapter 658A explicitly provides that a party’s

rights under HRS § 658A-23 are limited by an order confirming an

award, a timely motion to vacate an award, even if filed after a

court confirms that award, is permissible under our statutory

scheme.    See Martin, 832 P.2d at 120.         Finally, our statutory

scheme mirrors the UAA, and thus requires that a party be allowed

an entire ninety days after receiving notice of an award to file

a motion to vacate that award.         See Casey, 290 P.3d at 268.

            This leads us to conclude that the ICA erred when it

relied on Hamm to hold that the Chungs did not have a full ninety

days to file a motion to vacate.           Instead, the language of HRS

Chapter 658A and clear legislative intent indicate that the

Chungs had an entire ninety-day period to file a motion to vacate

after receiving notice of the award.           Because they filed their

Motion to Vacate within the ninety-day period, the Chungs did not

lose their right to timely appeal the circuit court’s decision to

deny their motion.

C.    Absent the filing of a motion to vacate, a court should wait
      to file an order confirming an arbitration award until the
      ninety-day period in which to file a motion to vacate has
      expired.

            Because the circuit court subsequently decided the

Chungs’ Motion to Vacate on the merits, there is an adequate

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record on which the ICA may evaluate the Chungs’ appeal.            The

circuit court held a hearing on the Motion to Vacate, considered

oral and written submissions by the parties regarding the Chungs’

allegation of evident partiality by the arbitrator, and

subsequently filed an order denying the Motion to Vacate.

Moreover, when the circuit court amended its order to “again

confirm” the arbitration award, the circuit court issued an

appealable order that the ICA should have considered on the

merits.   While the circuit court admitted that it had erred in

not immediately confirming the award after denying the Chungs’

Motion to Vacate, the circuit court’s subsequent decision to

reconfirm the award was proper under the circumstances.

           But in the future, in the interest of judicial economy,

a circuit court presented with a motion to confirm an arbitration

award should wait until after the statutory ninety-day period to

file a motion to vacate expires before issuing an order

confirming the award.     Here, the circuit court recognized the

Chungs’ concerns regarding judicial economy, but ultimately

concluded that without a motion to vacate before it, and because

HRS § 658A-22 provided that the court “shall issue” a confirming

order, it was required to grant the Bennetts’ Motion to Confirm.

This conclusion, as discussed above, is not mandated by our

arbitration statute.

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          Therefore, in the interest of judicial economy, absent

the filing of a motion to vacate, a circuit court should wait to

file an order confirming an arbitration award until the ninety-

day period in which to file a motion to vacate has elapsed.

                             IV. CONCLUSION

          Because the Chungs timely appealed an order that

amended the circuit court’s previous order denying their Motion

to Vacate in a “material and substantial respect,” and because

the Chungs originally filed their Motion to Vacate within the

statutory ninety-day period, the ICA erred in dismissing the

Chungs’ appeal for lack of appellate jurisdiction.

          Accordingly, we vacate the ICA’s August 8, 2017 Order

Dismissing Appeal for Lack of Appellate Jurisdiction, and remand

the case to the ICA to resolve the Chungs’ appeal on the merits.

Carl H. Osaki for                        /s/ Mark E. Recktenwald
petitioners/defendants-
appellants-cross-appellees               /s/ Paula A. Nakayama

Robert E. Badger for                     /s/ Sabrina S. McKenna
respondents/plaintiffs-
appellees-cross-appellants               /s/ Richard W. Pollack

                                         /s/ Michael D. Wilson

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