Burbank v. Wood

2 Haw. 591, 1862 Haw. LEXIS 1
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 18, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2 Haw. 591 (Burbank v. Wood) 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
Burbank v. Wood, 2 Haw. 591, 1862 Haw. LEXIS 1 (haw 1862).

Opinion

Allen, C. J.

This is a bill in equity, in which the complainant, the widow of Samuel Burbank, and as guardian ad litem of his children, minors, alleges that Samuel Burbank entered into an agreement with the respondent, dated May 15, 1851, for the purchase of one-half of the Koloa Plantation, with all the personal property on the estate required in the cultivation of cane or the manufacture of sugar, for the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, [592]*592with interest after one year, and in which he stipulated to take the sole management of the property for the term of five years, for the mutual benefit of the parties, but without charge, and that one-half of the net annual proceeds should be applied, until the amount dire for principal and interest of the said purchase is paid. It appears further, by the contract, that the respondent agreed to furnish the money and goods which might be necessary to carry on the estate, charging the usual interest, and to make sale of all products of the plantation, and to do all other business requisite for the same, so far as he was able, at Honolulu, without commissions.

It was further mutually agreed that neither party should sell his interest unless with the consent of the other, for the term of five years.

It is further alleged, that in pursuance of this agreement, the said Burbank entered into the possession of the plantation and labored faithfully for the term of five years, but that during this time it was thought advisable by the parties to devote a large amount of time, capital and labor to the drainage of marsh land, and to certain permanent improvements and additions, which could not be remunerative within the term of the contract, but were thought advisable, as the - plantation without them and carried on as before, would prove unproductive. It is further charged, that on the settlement of their accounts, it was agreed that the price of the plantation should be $40,000 instead of the sum originally stipulated, and that in consequence of the failure of the crops and the considerations before set forth, it was agreed that interest neither on the principal nor advances should be paid. It is further charged, that said Burbank paid during his life $3,228 50 ; that the original contract expired May 15th, 1856, but that he continued to superintend the estate till the day of his death, which was on the 10th of May, 1857. It is further charged that a tract of land called Raa was purchased for $2,000 during the term of the contract. And it is further charged, that by mutual agreement, made and entered into by the parties, during the period of Burbank's occupancy of the premises, he was to have a deed of one-half of the plantation, after the coming in of the crop growing at the time of his decease.

[593]*593And the complainant further alleges, that after the death of her husband the respondent often consulted her in relation to the sale of the estate, advising against it, saying that it would be a good property for her children, and treating her in all respects as a co-partner, saying that she and her children had as much right in the estate as any one ; that she and her children should have a portion of it; that she had no reason to be disturbed about the future, as she had ample means of support.

The complainant further says that she resided on the estate with her children till October, 1860, as she had good right to do, and that during’ this period she received from the plantation $1,826 62, or thereabouts; and the complainant further avers that she is informed, and believes, that the respondent has more than once admitted, since the death of her husband, that his heirs were justly entitled to a portion of the plantation, at one time one-third, and at another time one-fourth. The complainant further avers that she has made efforts for a settlement, without success, and that the respondent refuses to do aught in the premises.

The prayer of the complainant is, that the respondent may be decreed to deed to the heirs of said Burbank such proportion of the estate as they were entitled to on the 10th of May, 1857, and to account for the proceeds of the plantation from that date, and also to render an account from May 15th, 1851, to May 10, 1857 ; and that the complainant may have a just equivalent for the labor performed by said Burbank, and for the money advanced by him.

The respondent admits the contract, and that in pursuance thereof Burbank took up his residence and labored on the plantation for five years, but denies that the expenditure of draining the marsh land was at his instance, but that of the said Burbank, although it had been a subject of conversation between them. He further answers and says, that although the said Burbank usually consulted the respondent upon all matters of improvement of the plantation and outlays of money beyond the current expenses,“still he was allowed paramount control, agreeably to the agreement or contract aforesaid.

The respondent denies that at the time the said Burbank assumed control as resident manager, that the draining was under[594]*594taken because the plantation was likely to prove unproductive, but avers that the crop under cultivation at the time was the largest and most profitable of any during his management. The said Burbank, however, was always confident of profitable results from the swamp land, and believed this would enable him to pay the amount due by him on his contract for the purchase— that he planted on said marsh about eighty acres of cane before it was fully drained, and that although the respondent expressed his doubts about the result, the said Burbank continued sanguine of large returns till within about three months of his decease, when a considerable portion of the cane growing thereon was blighted. The respondent further says that it was not understood or agreed that the plantation should be valued on settlement at §40,000 instead of §50,000, but that he did say to him, that perhaps at the time of making the contract, the plantation was valued too high, and suggested a willingness to reduce it to §40,000; but that said Burbank replied he would have no more gratuities, he preferred to work it out and see the result; ” and that the subject was never reverted to again. Said respondent denies that he ever intimated to said Burbank, or any other person, during his lifetime, that it was his purpose not to charge interest on the advances or on the contract, and avers that he has no recollection of ever having had any conversation on the subject, but avers that if there is in existence any written memorandum from which it can be inferred that it was ever the purpose of this defendant to give to the heirs of the said Burbank the advantage of the proportion made by this defendant to the said Burbank, to reduce the estimated value of the plantation to $40,000, which the said Burbank refused to accept during his lifetime, and to forego and relinquish the claim to interest on the advances made by him, and on the stipulated price agreed upon by the parties to the said agreement, it is only a copy surreptitiously obtained, of a private memorandum made by this defendant soon after the decease of the said Burbank, to guide his solicitor in preparing the will of this defendant, and which was not intended to be a memorandum of an acknowledgment of any legal or equitable obligation on the •part of this defendant to change in any manner the terms or cancel the said outstanding contract.

[595]

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Bluebook (online)
2 Haw. 591, 1862 Haw. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burbank-v-wood-haw-1862.