Brown v. Bigelow

30 Haw. 132, 1927 Haw. LEXIS 16
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 14, 1927
Docket1740
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 30 Haw. 132 (Brown v. Bigelow) 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
Brown v. Bigelow, 30 Haw. 132, 1927 Haw. LEXIS 16 (haw 1927).

Opinion

*133 OPINION OP THE COURT BY

BANKS, X

This is an action for damages brought by the plaintiff on account of the death of his minor son. The defendants filed separate demurrers to the complaint, each of which was sustained. Thereupon the plaintiff asked leave to file an amended complaint which, on objection by each of the defendants, Avas denied. There being, then, no complaint before the court and no further offer of amendment the case was ordered dismissed. The plaintiff comes here on a bill of exceptions. The tAVO main questions are, whether the circuit court erred in sustaining the demurrers to the original complaint and in refusing to alloAV the amended complaint to be filed. We will consider these questions in their order.

The material averments of the original complaint are as follows: The defendant Lyman H. Bigelow Avas and is the superintendent of public AArorks of the Territory of Hawaii; while acting for the Territory he entered into a contract in Avriting with the HaAvaiian Dredging Company for the dredging of a canal in the city of Honolulu; a copy of the contract and specifications under which the canal was to be constructed is attached *134 to and made a part of the complaint; the dredging com- ■ pany, in: 1921, excavated a part of said canal westward from Ala Moana road through an ocean swimming and fishing resort known as Kalia, which resort had theretofore been shallow and safe but by such excavation was made a 'deep channel which was unsafe for children; this excavation has a length of twelve hundred feet, a width of one hundred and thirty feet and a depth of twenty-four feet; from time immemorial the Kalia fishery had been used by the public, including children, for swimming and fishing purposes; the danger to those accustomed to use this shallow fishery which would arise from the, digging of a deep channel through it was known to or ascertainable by the defendants; after the channel had been excavated it was left and allowed to remain hidden and invisible and was not provided with embankments or, other means of protecting the lives of the people and citizens who were accustomed to resort to it for the purpose of fishing and swimming; the danger to the lives of such people was increased by the digging of the channel because the water of the fishery was rendered muddy, causing the location of the canal in that' locality to he invisible; on May 30, 1924, the plaintiff’s son, aged seven years and five months, while wading in the Kalia fishery, fell into the channel that had been excavated by the dredging company and was drowned; the cause of the death of plaintiff’s son “was the negligence of the said defendants in digging, excavating and dredging a canal of the kind and dimensions aforesaid in the location aforesaid without means- for the protection of the lives of the public aforesaid and in letting the said canal remain in its unprotected and dangerous condition as aforesaid^ knowing that persons, especially children unable to swim, might fall into the said canal and be drowned therein;” the contract for the digging of the *135 canal is still in force and the Hawaiian Dredging Company is still carrying on operations thereunder.

■ A ground of demurrer, common to both the defendants, is that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

The plaintiff’s primary contention is that the excavation of the channel in the Kalia fishery was a public nuisance and that therefore the defendants are liable under the law pertaining to that subject. The Waikiki drainage canal is a public improvement authorized by legislative enactment. It is not contended that the legislature in enacting the statutes relating to the canal exceeded its authority or that the channel through the Kalia fishery was constructed in an improper manner. Under these circumstances we think the excavation of the channel in question was not a public nuisance.

In discussing this subject Joyce on the Law of Nuisances, section 69, says: “The rule may be stated to be that where one has the sanction of the State for what he does unless he commits a fault in the manner of doing it, he is completely justified, provided the legislature has the constitutional power to act. And the legislature may, except so far as it may be limited by constitutional restrictions, when deemed necessary for the public good, permit or require that to be done which would, on common law principles, and without the statute, be deemed a nuisance. And it is a general rule that where an act is made lawful by legislative sanction, annoyances in connection therewith must be borne by the individual subject to this qualification that the act must be done without negligence or unnecessary disturbance, by the one doing it, of the rights of others. So, it has been declared that 'when the legislature directs or allows that to be done which would otherwise be a nuisance, it will be valid, upon the ground that the legisla *136 ture is ordinarily the proper judge of what the public good requires, unless carried to such an extent that it can fairly be said to be an unwholesome and unreasonable law.’ And where legislative authority is granted for the construction of a work of public utility, upon making compensation, the one constructing it is liable only for such injury as results from the want of due skill and care in exercising the power conferred.” The author cites many cases in support of thé text which, upon examination, we find entirely satisfactory.

With this question disposed of we will next consider whether the complaint otherwise states a cause of action against the defendants or either of them. We will first consider whether it states a cause of action against the defendant ¡Bigelow.

The gravamen of the complaint is that the defendants negligently failed to provide and maintain embankments or other means of protecting people, who might use the Kalia fishery for swimming and fishing purposes, from falling into the channel that had been excavated in said fishery. Does the law place any such duty on the superintendent of public works, which office Bigelow held Avhen the contract was executed and which he has ever since held? Section 798, R. L. 1925, provides that “the Superintendent of public works shall be, and is, charged with the superintendence and management of the internal improvements of the Territory.” Bigelow’s connection Avith the Waikiki drainage canal (avMcIi, as Ave have just observed, is a public improvement authorized by legislative enactment) was not in an individual capacity but in his capacity as a public official. There, is nothing in the statute above quoted defining the duties óf the superintendent of public work's or in' the statutes relating to the construction of the Waikiki drainage canal that specifically imposes the duty on the *137 superintendent of public works, when a public improvement such as the Waikiki drainage canal is constructed, to erect embankments or barriers or to use other means to protect people from falling into an excavation that is a part of or incidental to such improvement. In the absence of such requirement, whether embankments or barriers should be so erected or other means for the protection of the public should be maintained is a matter of judgment or discretion.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Haw. 132, 1927 Haw. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-bigelow-haw-1927.