Ah Leong v. Ah Leong

29 Haw. 770, 1927 Haw. LEXIS 59
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedMay 6, 1927
DocketNo. 1729.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 29 Haw. 770 (Ah Leong v. Ah Leong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ah Leong v. Ah Leong, 29 Haw. 770, 1927 Haw. LEXIS 59 (haw 1927).

Opinions

OPINION OP THE COURT BY

BANKS, J.

The complainant brought a suit in equity against the respondent by which she seeks to establish her claim to a portion of the respondent’s property. The circuit judge decided the case in favor of the respondent and entered *771 a decree dismissing the bill. From this decree the complainant appeals.

As we understand the bill and the contention of the complainant she bases her claim on two theories — one the alternative of the other. The first theory is that in 1887, at a time when the respondent was without means and was just entering upon a commercial career in Honolulu, she gave him $200 of her own money with the understanding and agreement that it was to be put into a mercantile business and that both of them would devote their time and energies to the upbuilding of the business and would share the profits and accumulations derived from it; that, through their united efforts expended during many years under this agreement, large and valuable assets have been accumulated which stand in the name of the respondent alone and that he refuses to grant her any interest in this property; that, to the end that she may have her just rights, the respondent should be declared to be a trustee for her benefit and should be required to account to her for her equitable proportion of the property in question. The second theory upon which she relies is that in 1884, when she was a young girl of seventeen and shortly after her arrival in the Hawaiian Islands from China, a marriage ceremony was performed between herself and the respondent at Kohala, on the Island of Hawaii, which she in good faith believed united them in lawful wedlock; that not long after this ceremony she and the respondent came to Honolulu where they continued to live together as husband and wife for upwards of thirty years and that during this period she gave birth to several children of which he Avas the father; that shortly after taking up their residence in Honolulu a small stock of merchandise was purchased towards which she contributed the sum of $200 and thereupon the re *772 spondent began his mercantile career; that believing herself to be his lawful wife and having his prosperity and success at heart she for many years collaborated with him in building up his fortune, devoting her time and her energies to keeping the store in order, waiting on customers, delivering goods and performing the household duties; that in 1920 the supreme court of Hawaii in Parke v. Parke, 25 Haw. 397, decided that a statutory license was essential to a valid marriage in Hawaii and therefore the marriage between herself and the respondent for which no license had been issued was entirely void; that under these circumstances she has no legal standing as the wife of the respondent but, inasmuch as she assisted him in the accumulation of his wealth under the honest belief that she was his lawful wife,she, in equity and justice, should not be left remediless but should be awarded a share of the property she helped to accumulate.

When this case was formerly here on reserved questions it was the conclusion of the court that the first theory was sound in law. Ah Leong v. Ah Leong, 28 Haw. 581. Since then the case has been tried in the circuit court on its merits and the facts have been judicially ascertained. The circuit judge held that the evidence was insufficient to prove that the complainant contributed any money to the business in which the respondent was engaged and that it was also insufficient to prove that her contributions of labor and services were made under an agreement, express or implied, that she and the respondent were to be joint owners of the assets of the business and its profits and accumulations. While we are not bound by this finding it is nevertheless entitled to great weight and should not be overturned unless we are convinced that it was erroneous. The evidence does not so convince us. The only evidence *773 of an express agreement is that furnished by the testimony of the complainant herself. It is brief and is as follows: “Q State Avhether or not you had any understanding, arrangement or agreement Avith Ah Leong, or did Ah Leong say anything to you as to the business or ownership of the business? A Yes, he said it belonged to us, and the name of the business was ‘Wing Hung Kee.’ Q What does the word, ‘Wing’ mean? A That means ‘eternal,’ ‘permanent.’ Q What does ‘Hung’ mean? A That is my surname. Q Family name? A Surname. Q What does ‘Kee’ mean? A ‘Memorandum.’ Q It was the store name? A Yes.” The substance of this testimony is that the respondent said to the complainant “the business belongs to us” and that her surname appeared in the name under which the business was conducted. Conceding the testimony to be true, in determining its effect the relation of the parties to each other at the time the statement by the respondent was made must be kept in mind. The complainant then believed, and she also supposed the respondent believed, that she was. his lawful wife. Under these circumstances it would be a strained construction to evolve out of this testimony an express agreement to share the assets and accumulations of a business enterprise. Many a husband has said to his wife: “This is our home” or “this is our automobile” or “these shares of stock are ours.” It would hardly be contended that such expressions constituted an express agreement between the husband and wife that they were joint owners of the property referred to and its increment, although it had been acquired by their joint efforts.

Taking the view of the evidence most favorable to the complainant, her claim that there was an implied agreement that she and the respondent were joint owners of the property cannot be sustained. According to her *774 testimony she honestly believed that she was the respondent’s lawful wife. She believed this from the time the ceremony was performed at Kohala in 1884 until she was disillusioned by the Parke decision in 1920. Assuming that she gave the respondent $200 in 1887, she believed it then and she continued to believe it during the years she worked in the store and delivered merchandise and took care of the household. There certainly can be no legal implication from these facts of an agreement between herself and the respondent that they were to share in the assets and accumulations of the business that was conducted. Such implication is no stronger than if she had been the lawful wife of the respondent. Whether the marriage was lawful or unlawful, if she acted under the belief that it was lawful the natural inference is that her contributions of labor and money were made in an effort and with the desire to build up and accélerate the success of the man whom she supposed to be her lawful husband. It has been held that under such circumstances an informal wife, upon discovering the illegality of her marriage, cannot even maintain an action against her putative husband for the value of her labor and services. For instance, in Cooper v. Cooper, 147 Mass. 370, 372, 17 N. E.

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Bluebook (online)
29 Haw. 770, 1927 Haw. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ah-leong-v-ah-leong-haw-1927.