In re Estate of Newman ( 2018 )


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    IN RE ESTATE OF NEWMAN
    Cite as 
    25 Neb. Ct. App. 771
    In re Estate of H arley Newman, deceased.
    Linda M artens, Personal R epresentative of the
    Estate of H arley Newman, deceased, appellee,
    v. Stewart Newman, appellant.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed April 17, 2018.     No. A-16-1049.
    1.	 Decedents’ Estates: Appeal and Error. An appellate court reviews pro-
    bate cases for error appearing on the record made in the county court.
    2.	 Decedents’ Estates: Judgments: Appeal and Error. When reviewing
    questions of law in a probate matter, an appellate court reaches a conclu-
    sion independent of the determination reached by the court below.
    3.	 Decedents’ Estates: Appeal and Error. The probate court’s factual
    findings have the effect of a verdict, and an appellate court will not set
    those findings aside unless they are clearly erroneous.
    4.	 Trial: Judges: Words and Phrases. An ex parte communication occurs
    when a judge communicates with any person concerning a pending or
    impending proceeding without notice to an adverse party.
    5.	 Trial: Witnesses: Parties. Neb. Rev. Stat. § 24-734(4) (Reissue 2016)
    only pertains to allowing a witness to be examined telephonically with
    the consent of the parties. It does not address permitting a party to
    appear and participate at trial telephonically.
    6.	 Due Process: Trial: Witnesses: Evidence. When a person has a right
    to be heard, procedural due process includes a reasonable opportunity to
    refute or defend against a charge or accusation and a reasonable oppor-
    tunity to confront and cross-examine adverse witnesses and present
    evidence on the charge or accusation.
    7.	 Constitutional Law: Prisoners. A prisoner has no absolute constitu-
    tional right to be released from prison so that the prisoner can be present
    at a hearing in a civil action.
    8.	 Due Process: Prisoners: Right to Counsel. Although due process
    does not require the appointment of counsel to represent a prisoner in
    a private civil matter, due process does require that the prisoner receive
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    IN RE ESTATE OF NEWMAN
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    meaningful access to the courts to defend against suits brought against
    him or her.
    9.	 Prisoners: Courts: Claims: Damages: Proof. To establish a violation
    of the right of meaningful access to the courts, a prisoner must establish
    the State has not provided an opportunity to litigate a claim challenging
    the prisoner’s sentence or conditions of confinement in a court of law,
    which resulted in actual injury.
    10.	 Constitutional Law: Prisoners: Courts. The constitutional right to
    access the courts does not guarantee inmates the wherewithal to trans-
    form themselves into litigating engines capable of filing everything
    from shareholder derivative actions to slip-and-fall claims. The tools it
    requires to be provided are those that the inmates need in order to attack
    their sentences directly or collaterally and in order to challenge the con-
    ditions of their confinement. Impairment of any other litigating capacity
    is simply one of the incidental and perfectly constitutional consequences
    of conviction and incarceration.
    11.	 Pretrial Procedure: Appeal and Error. Decisions regarding discovery
    are directed to the discretion of the trial court, and will be upheld in the
    absence of an abuse of discretion.
    12.	 Pretrial Procedure: Proof: Appeal and Error. The party asserting
    error in a discovery ruling bears the burden of showing that the ruling
    was an abuse of discretion.
    13.	 Appeal and Error. An appellate court is not obligated to engage in an
    analysis that is not necessary to adjudicate the case and controversy
    before it.
    Appeal from the County Court for Douglas County: Craig
    Q. McDermott, Judge. Reversed and remanded for a new trial.
    Stewart Newman, pro se.
    Nick Halbur, of Elder Law of Omaha, P.C., L.L.O., for
    appellee.
    Pirtle, Bishop, and A rterburn, Judges.
    Pirtle, Judge.
    INTRODUCTION
    Stewart Newman appeals from an “Order for Probate of
    Will” entered in the county court for Douglas County wherein
    the court found that the last will and testament of Harley
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    IN RE ESTATE OF NEWMAN
    Cite as 
    25 Neb. Ct. App. 771
    Newman, executed February 15, 2016, was a valid will and
    should be probated by the personal representative, Linda
    Martens. Stewart challenges multiple pretrial matters, as well
    as the court’s determination that the will was valid, and the
    court’s failure to allow his claim for the return of personal
    property. Based on the reasons that follow, we reverse, and
    remand for a new trial.
    BACKGROUND
    This case involves the formal probate of Harley’s last will
    and testament. Harley, the father of Stewart and Martens,
    passed away on February 22, 2016. On March 28, Martens
    filed an “Application for Informal Probate of Will and Informal
    Appointment of Personal Representative,” along with Harley’s
    last will and testament executed on February 15. On March
    29, the “Registrar” issued a “Certificate to Probate Will” and
    appointed Martens the personal representative. Stewart filed a
    “Petition of Claim and Request of Formal Testacy” on April
    15, requesting a formal probate of Harley’s will and request-
    ing an order to return Stewart’s personal property that was left
    in Harley’s custodial care. The court set a pretrial conference
    hearing for May 31. Stewart filed additional motions before
    the May 31 hearing.
    Stewart was not present at the pretrial conference hearing
    on May 31, 2016, because he was incarcerated. Several matters
    were addressed. However, the hearing was ultimately set aside
    for a new pretrial conference on August 12 to afford Stewart
    the opportunity to be heard. At the August 12 hearing, Stewart
    participated in the hearing by telephone and the court informed
    the parties that all issues addressed at the May 31 hearing
    would be reconsidered.
    At the August 12, 2016, hearing, Stewart was granted in
    forma pauperis status. The court denied his motion for appoint-
    ment of counsel. The court also considered Stewart’s “Motion
    for Subpoena,” in which he asked the court for “an Order
    to Subpoena the phone records of the Nebraska Department
    of Corrections Services,” specifically those records of calls
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    between him and Harley. Martens objected to the form of the
    filing, which the court sustained. Stewart also filed a motion
    which included a request that Martens produce an address for
    Diana Kappel, his ex-wife. At the hearing, Martens’ counsel
    stated that Martens did not have Kappel’s address and the court
    ruled that Martens could not be compelled to produce evidence
    it did not have or to investigate for Stewart.
    Stewart had also filed a motion to appear telephonically.
    Martens objected to allowing Stewart to appear or to testify
    telephonically for trial, citing Neb. Rev. Stat. § 24-734(4)
    (Reissue 2016). The court granted Stewart’s motion to the
    extent of nonevidentiary hearings. It ruled that trial would
    not be held telephonically because there was no stipulation or
    consent by all the parties to conduct an evidentiary hearing by
    such means.
    Another nonevidentiary hearing was held on September 22,
    2016, to address additional motions and filings by Stewart.
    Stewart participated by telephone. Stewart’s request for
    Kappel’s address was again discussed, and Martens’ attorney
    again stated neither he nor Martens had the address. Stewart’s
    “Motion to Issue a Transport Order,” allowing him to be physi-
    cally present for trial, was denied. Before the conclusion of the
    hearing, the court told Stewart that he could submit his argu-
    ments for trial in a brief and indicated that it would not make
    a decision until it had received his brief.
    Trial was held on September 27, 2016. The court took
    judicial notice of Harley’s last will and testament already in
    the court record and heard testimony from three witnesses.
    The evidence showed that Harley executed his last will and
    testament on February 15 in his wife’s room at a health care
    facility where she resided. Harley’s wife and two daughters
    were present, and he was able to identify those individ­
    uals correctly.
    Melinda Streetman, a paralegal and notary public, testified
    that she reviewed the key provisions of the will with Harley
    and that he verified their accuracy. Streetman specifically
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    went over a provision in the will that excluded Stewart from
    receiving any portion of Harley’s estate, and Harley affirmed
    his intent to exclude Stewart. Only Streetman, Harley, and his
    wife were present during the discussion of the provisions in
    the will.
    Streetman identified Harley’s last will and testament and her
    own signature on the will accompanied by her notary seal. She
    also testified that she witnessed Harley sign the document and
    that she observed the two witnesses, who both worked at the
    facility, sign the will.
    The first witness, a social worker, testified that she signed
    the will on February 15, 2016. She identified her signature
    and Harley’s signature on the will. She testified that she knew
    Harley because his wife was her patient at the facility where
    she worked, Harley had been her patient at one time, and
    Harley visited his wife every day. The social worker testified
    that on the day the will was executed, Harley was not acting
    out of the ordinary, there was nothing unusual about his behav-
    ior, and she had no concerns about his cognition.
    The other witness to the will, a nurse, testified that she knew
    Harley and his wife because she provided care to Harley’s
    wife. She testified that she was present when Harley signed the
    will, she had no concerns about his cognition, and there was
    nothing unusual about his behavior. She identified her signa-
    ture and Harley’s signature on the will.
    Following trial, the court entered an order on September
    29, 2016, finding that Harley’s last will and testament was a
    valid will. It granted the application for probate of the will and
    ordered that the will be probated by Martens.
    ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Stewart assigns that the trial court erred in (1) having ex
    parte communication with Martens’ attorney, as well as fail-
    ing to allow Stewart to be heard and present at trial; (2) mak-
    ing a decision on the will before the court received his brief;
    (3) not allowing him his right to the discovery of evidence to
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    support his claims; (4) finding that the document at issue was
    a self-proven will and that Harley was competent to sign it;
    (5) failing to find that Stewart is a “rightful heir in accordance
    to Article Four of the instrument”; and (6) failing to allow his
    claim of unlawful taking of his personal property.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1-3] An appellate court reviews probate cases for error
    appearing on the record made in the county court. In re Estate
    of Balvin, 
    295 Neb. 346
    , 
    888 N.W.2d 499
    (2016). When
    reviewing questions of law in a probate matter, an appellate
    court reaches a conclusion independent of the determination
    reached by the court below. 
    Id. The probate
    court’s factual
    findings have the effect of a verdict, and an appellate court
    will not set those findings aside unless they are clearly errone-
    ous. 
    Id. ANALYSIS Stewart
    makes two separate arguments under his first assign-
    ment of error. He argues that the court erred in having ex parte
    communication with Martens’ attorney at the May 31, 2016,
    hearing and that the court erred in failing to allow him to be
    heard and present at the September 27 trial.
    We first address Stewart’s ex parte communication argu-
    ment. Stewart argues that the trial judge used the hearing
    on May 31, 2016, to engage in an ex parte communication
    with Martens’ attorney where the two of them discussed how
    they were going to proceed to ensure Stewart could not bring
    any evidence or appear, while keeping him from having any
    grounds for an appeal.
    [4] The May 31, 2016, hearing was held without Stewart’s
    participation. However, no ex parte communication took place.
    An ex parte communication occurs when a judge commu-
    nicates with any person concerning a pending or impending
    proceeding without notice to an adverse party. State v. Thomas,
    
    268 Neb. 570
    , 
    685 N.W.2d 69
    (2004). Stewart had notice
    of the hearing. The court entered an order on April 18 for a
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    pretrial conference, notifying the parties that a pretrial confer-
    ence would be held on May 31. Stewart even responded to the
    notice by filing a motion for continuance asking that the May
    31 hearing be rescheduled. Stewart was unable to attend the
    hearing because he was incarcerated and was not represented
    by counsel, so the hearing proceeded without him.
    Further, there was no prejudice to Stewart from the May 31,
    2016, hearing, because at the hearing, the court concluded that
    Stewart should be allowed to participate in the proceedings
    by telephone. A subsequent pretrial conference hearing was
    held on August 12, where Stewart participated by telephone.
    At that hearing, the court informed the parties that all issues
    addressed at the May 31 hearing would be reconsidered. The
    court then gave Stewart the opportunity to address his filings
    and motions.
    Stewart also suggests that an ex parte communication
    occurred at a June 10, 2016, hearing and that the court reporter
    had not filed a complete bill of exceptions because the June 10
    hearing was not in the record. However, the record before us
    reflects that a hearing was never held on June 10.
    We conclude that Stewart’s argument under his first assign-
    ment of error—the court’s ex parte communication with
    Martens’ attorney—is without merit.
    As previously stated, Stewart also argues under his first
    assignment of error that the court erred in denying him the
    right to appear either in person or telephonically at the trial
    on September 27, 2016. At the August 12 pretrial conference
    hearing, Martens objected to allowing Stewart to appear or to
    testify at trial by telephone, citing § 24-734(4). Although the
    court had granted Stewart’s motion to participate by telephone
    for nonevidentiary hearings, it ruled that trial would not be
    held telephonically because there was no stipulation or consent
    by all the parties to conduct the evidentiary hearing by such
    means. Stewart had also filed a motion to issue a transport
    order, allowing him to be physically present at trial, which the
    trial court denied.
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    [5] We first address Marten’s reliance upon § 24-734(4)
    in support of her objection to allowing Stewart to appear or
    testify by telephone. Subsection (4) of § 24-734 provides: “A
    judge, in any case with the consent of the parties, may permit
    any witness who is to be examined by oral examination to
    appear by telephonic, videoconferencing, or similar methods,
    with any costs thereof to be taxed as costs.” (Emphasis sup-
    plied.) This subsection only pertains to allowing a witness to
    be examined telephonically with the consent of the parties. It
    does not address permitting a party to appear and participate at
    trial telephonically. We conclude that the statute is irrelevant
    to the issue of whether the court erred in denying Stewart the
    right to appear either in person or telephonically at the trial.
    [6-8] Stewart argues that the court’s refusal to allow him
    to appear in person or by telephone at trial deprived him of
    procedural due process. He relies on Conn v. Conn, 13 Neb.
    App. 472, 
    695 N.W.2d 674
    (2005), where this court deter-
    mined that an inmate’s due process rights were violated when
    the trial court denied his request to participate by telephone
    in a dissolution proceeding brought against him by his wife.
    We held that “‘[w]hen a person has a right to be heard, pro-
    cedural due process includes . . . a reasonable opportunity to
    refute or defend against a charge or accusation [and] a rea-
    sonable opportunity to confront and cross-examine adverse
    witnesses and present evidence on the charge or accusation . .
    . .’” 
    Id. at 475,
    695 N.W.2d at 677, quoting In re Interest of
    L.V., 
    240 Neb. 404
    , 
    482 N.W.2d 250
    (1992). We further stated
    in Conn:
    “Although it is clear that a prisoner has no absolute
    constitutional right to be released from prison so that the
    prisoner can be present at a hearing in a civil action . . .
    and that due process does not require the appointment of
    counsel to represent the prisoner in a private civil mat-
    ter . . . due process does require that the prisoner receive
    meaningful access to the courts to defend [against] suits
    brought against him or her.”
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    13 Neb. App. at 
    475, 695 N.W.2d at 677
    , quoting Board of
    Regents v. Thompson, 
    6 Neb. Ct. App. 734
    , 
    577 N.W.2d 749
    (1998) (citations omitted).
    The Conn case can be distinguished from the present case
    in that Conn involved a civil matter brought against an inmate,
    whereas Stewart could be designated as an “objector” or a
    “contestant” in the instant probate matter which he did not ini-
    tiate. See Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 30-2429.01 and 30-2431 (Reissue
    2016). Stewart is not defending against a charge or accusation
    brought against him. However, he is not in the position of a
    plaintiff either. Stewart did not file this action. Rather, he is in
    the position of trying to protect what he views as his property
    interest in the estate of Harley.
    [9,10] In Jacob v. Nebraska Dept. of Corr. Servs., 
    294 Neb. 735
    , 
    884 N.W.2d 687
    (2016), the Nebraska Supreme Court
    held that to establish a violation of the right of meaningful
    access to the courts, a prisoner must establish the State has
    not provided an opportunity to litigate a claim challenging the
    prisoner’s sentence or conditions of confinement in a court of
    law, which resulted in actual injury, that is, the hindrance of a
    nonfrivolous and arguably meritorious underlying legal claim.
    The court further noted that the constitutional right to access
    the courts does not guarantee inmates the wherewithal to
    transform themselves into litigating engines capable of filing
    everything from shareholder derivative actions to slip-and-fall
    claims. 
    Id. The tools
    it requires to be provided are those that the
    inmates need in order to attack their sentences directly
    or collaterally and in order to challenge the conditions
    of their confinement. Impairment of any other litigating
    capacity is simply one of the incidental and perfectly con-
    stitutional consequences of conviction and incarceration.
    
    Id. at 745,
    884 N.W.2d at 695, citing Lewis v. Casey, 
    518 U.S. 343
    , 
    116 S. Ct. 2174
    , 
    135 L. Ed. 2d 606
    (1996).
    Stewart is not challenging his sentence or the conditions of
    his confinement. However, he is challenging the validity of
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    the will of Harley, his father. The will, on the one hand, is in
    no way related to his imprisonment, but, on the other hand,
    is an attempt to simply protect a property right that he has in
    Harley’s estate. In that sense, Stewart stands similarly situ-
    ated to the husband in Conn v. Conn, 
    13 Neb. Ct. App. 472
    , 
    695 N.W.2d 674
    (2005), who was the defendant in a divorce action.
    The trial court’s refusal to allow Stewart to even participate by
    telephone at trial is more than “one of the incidental and per-
    fectly constitutional consequences of conviction and incarcera-
    tion.” See Jacob v. Nebraska Dept. of Corr. Servs., 294 Neb. at
    
    745, 884 N.W.2d at 695
    , citing Lewis v. 
    Casey, supra
    .
    We conclude the court’s failure to allow Stewart to partici-
    pate in the trial by telephone was a deprivation of his funda-
    mental due process rights pursuant to U.S. Const. amends. V
    and XIV and Neb. Const. art. I, § 3.
    Stewart next assigns that the court erred in making a deci-
    sion on the validity of the will before it received his trial brief.
    At the September 22, 2016, hearing, the court told Stewart
    he could submit a brief to the court within 14 days after trial,
    where he could argue his position because he would not be
    present in person or telephonically. The court indicated that it
    would refrain from making a decision on the matter until after
    it received his brief. Stewart’s brief was filed on October 3.
    The court announced its decision at trial on September 27 and
    entered an order on September 29.
    Although the court was not technically required to wait
    to make its decision until after it received Stewart’s brief, it
    should have done so. Given our finding above that Stewart’s
    due process rights were violated when he was not allowed to
    participate by telephone at trial, we find this error by the court
    compounded the situation. Given the violation of Stewart’s
    due process rights discussed previously, we must reverse, and
    remand for a new trial.
    Stewart’s third assignment of error is that the trial court
    erred in not allowing him his right to the discovery of evi-
    dence to support his claims. Stewart argues that he was denied
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    two specific discovery requests: the address of Kappel and
    recordings of telephone conversations between him and Harley
    from the Department of Correctional Services. He argues that
    Kappel would have provided evidence in regard to Stewart’s
    personal property left in Harley’s care, a 2009 will by Harley,
    and the relationship between Stewart’s children and his par-
    ents prior to Harley’s death. He alleges the recorded telephone
    conversations would show the continued relationship between
    him and Harley, discussions of Stewart’s personal property,
    Harley’s desire to leave Stewart his home, and Harley’s lack
    of coherence due to heavy medication on or about February
    15, 2016.
    [11,12] Decisions regarding discovery are directed to the
    discretion of the trial court, and will be upheld in the absence
    of an abuse of discretion. Moreno v. City of Gering, 
    293 Neb. 320
    , 
    878 N.W.2d 529
    (2016). The party asserting error in a dis-
    covery ruling bears the burden of showing that the ruling was
    an abuse of discretion. 
    Id. In regard
    to the first discovery issue, Stewart filed vari-
    ous motions requesting Kappel’s address from Martens. The
    court denied his motions related to Kappel’s address at the
    hearings on August 12 and September 22, 2016. At both
    hearings, Martens’ counsel stated that neither he nor Martens
    had Kappel’s current address. The court ruled that Martens
    could not be compelled to produce evidence it did not have
    or to investigate for Stewart. Martens did not have Kappel’s
    address, and it was Stewart’s burden to locate a witness he
    believed could support his case. Martens was not respon-
    sible for finding information for Stewart that she did not
    have. The court did not err in denying his motions related to
    Kappel’s address.
    The second discovery ruling Stewart challenges is the
    denial of his efforts to obtain recorded telephone conversa-
    tions from the Department of Correctional Services. Stewart
    filed a “Motion for Subpoena” related to telephone records and
    recorded conversations kept by the Department of Correctional
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    Services. Martens objected to the motion based on the improper
    form of the filing, which the trial court granted. Stewart sub-
    sequently filed a “Motion for Order to Release Discovery
    Information,” seeking telephone records and recorded con-
    versations. Martens again objected as to form, stating that
    a motion for the release of telephone records is not proper
    discovery. Martens’ counsel further stated that the Department
    of Correctional Services could be compelled under the proper
    form for a subpoena, but Stewart’s filing was not a subpoena,
    it was a motion. The trial court denied Stewart’s “Motion for
    Order to Release Discovery Information.”
    On appeal, Stewart does not argue that either of his requests
    for the telephone records and recorded conversations were in
    the proper form. Rather, he asserts that the court’s failure to
    grant his requests for telephone records and recorded conver-
    sations prevented him from obtaining evidence to support his
    claims. Stewart has failed to meet his burden to show that the
    discovery ruling was an abuse of discretion. See Moreno v. City
    of 
    Gering, supra
    . We conclude the trial court did not err in the
    discovery rulings challenged by Stewart.
    Stewart’s next assignment of error is that the court erred
    in not allowing his claim for unlawful taking of his property.
    In his “Petition of Claim and Request of Formal Testacy,” his
    initial filing, Stewart requested an order to return personal
    property belonging to him or the value thereof that was left
    in Harley’s custodial care. Stewart states that he left personal
    property in Harley’s care when he was incarcerated in 2011,
    that Martens had knowledge of the personal property, and that
    she sold or disposed of his property without his permission.
    Stewart attempted to combine the contest of the will with a
    creditor’s claim against the estate. The claim against the estate
    was discussed at the September 22, 2016, hearing. Martens’
    counsel stated that she had disallowed Stewart’s property claim
    in the “Objections” she filed in response to Stewart’s “Petition
    of Claim and Request of Formal Testacy.” The “Objections”
    stated that she was disallowing all claims beyond his demand
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    for formal probate of the will. Martens further stated that
    Stewart had not filed a petition for allowance and that the time
    allowed to do so had elapsed.
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 30-2488(a) (Reissue 2016) provides in
    relevant part:
    Every claim which is disallowed in whole or in part by
    the personal representative is barred so far as not allowed
    unless the claimant files a petition for allowance in the
    court or commences a proceeding against the personal
    representative not later than sixty days after the mailing
    of the notice of disallowance or partial allowance if the
    notice warns the claimant of the impending bar.
    In the present case, Martens disallowed Stewart’s claim for
    the return of personal property in the “Objections” filed May
    24, 2016. Pursuant to § 30-2488, the disallowance shifted the
    burden to Stewart to file a petition for allowance no later than
    60 days after the notice of disallowance. He did not file a
    petition for allowance within the time allowed. Accordingly,
    Stewart’s claim for the return of his personal property was not
    before the court. This assignment of error is without merit.
    [13] Finally, because we have determined that Stewart’s
    due process rights were violated requiring us to reverse, and
    remand for a new trial, we need not address his remaining
    assignments of error. An appellate court is not obligated to
    engage in an analysis that is not necessary to adjudicate the
    case and controversy before it. Walters v. Sporer, 
    298 Neb. 536
    , 
    905 N.W.2d 70
    (2017).
    CONCLUSION
    We conclude that the trial court violated Stewart’s due
    process rights when it did not allow him to participate in the
    trial by telephone. Accordingly, we reverse, and remand for a
    new trial.
    R eversed and remanded for a new trial.