Campbell v. Kawananakoa

34 Haw. 333, 1937 Haw. LEXIS 17
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1937
DocketNo. 2333.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 34 Haw. 333 (Campbell v. Kawananakoa) 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
Campbell v. Kawananakoa, 34 Haw. 333, 1937 Haw. LEXIS 17 (haw 1937).

Opinion

*334 OPINION OP THE COURT BY

BANKS, J.

On the 31st day of December, 1931, the then trustees of the trust estate created by the last will and testament of James Campbell, now deceased, demised by two separate leases for a term of fifty years as and from January 1,1929, certain sugar lands belonging to the trust estate to the Ewa Plantation Company and the Oahu Sugar Company respectively. It being doubtful whether the trust would, under the will of the testator providing for its termination, survive the leases, the trustees brought the instant bill in equity for the purpose of obtaining a judicial decree validating the leases for their full term' even though the trust should terminate prior to the expiration of this term. The equity judge entered a decree in accordance with the prayer of the bill. Prom this decree an appeal was taken to this court by the minor respondents through their guardian ad litem. The other respondents being satisfied with the decree appeared in support of it.

It is conceded by the trustees that the will of the testator did not empower them of their own volition to execute leases that would be binding beyond the termination of the trust. In other words, that the only means by which this end could be accomplished would be by competent judicial action.

This concession was obviously the result of the decision of this court in Campbell v. Kawananakoa, 31 Haw. 500. That case was brought to this court on appeal and involved *335 the consideration of the very will of James Campbell that is now before ns. One of the questions presented by the appeal (and the only one that need be considered) was as follows: “Can the trustees under the will and of the estate of James Campbell, deceased, now make a legal and valid lease for the term of fifty (50) years from January 1st, 1929, subject to existing leases and the rights of the lessees or sublessees thereunder, expiring respectively December 31st, 1939, November 30th, 1939, and December 31st, 1939, of the property mentioned in said proposal for a lease, and not subject to termination by reason of the termination of the trust within said fifty (50) year term?” The question was answered in the negative and the reason given for this conclusion was expressed in the following language: “The testator has expressly declared in his will that he wishes all the authority of his trustees,’ and all their dominion over the property, to cease at the time that he has chosen for the termination of the trust.”

It may be observed that at the time the judgment of the court was sought in the earlier Kawananakoa case the leases had not been executed but were in contemplation and that the inquiry related solely to the authority of the trustees to execute these contemplated leases. Subsequent to the decision in that case the leases now before us were executed and the instant question is not whether the trustees had the authority to execute them but whether the court of equity is vested with the power to validate them for their full term of fifty years, notwithstanding the prior termination of the trust.

In support of the affirmative of this question our attention is called to section 4712, R. L. 1935, which is as follows : “Any circuit judge sitting at chambers in equity and having jurisdiction over a trust, on petition of one or more of the.trustees, and after such notice to those interested as shall be ordered by the judge, may, if it appears to be for the *336 benefit of the trust estate, authorize- or direct the trustee or trustees to lease or extend the terms of leases of the real property for such periods as may be deemed advantageous to the estate; or to invest moneys of the trust estate in the purchase of real or personal property, or the constructing, improving or repairing of buildings or other improvements on the land belonging to the trust estate, or in such other manner as the judge shall deem to be most for the benefit of the trust estate and as best effecting the objects of the trust. Any lease or extension of lease made under such authority or direction shall continue in force for the full period so authorized notwithstanding the trust shall have terminated.”

The power conferred by the statute upon the court, in so far as it relates to the leases before us, is to authorize the trustees, if it appears to the court to be advantageous to or for the benefit of the trust estate, to validate them for their full term, notwithstanding the prior termination of the trust.

The accruing advantage or benefit, in order to justify the extension, must of necessity be an advantage or benefit to all classes of beneficiaries who under the will of the testator are to be the recipients of his bounty. If only the members of one class are to be benefited and the members of another class deprived of valuable rights devised to them by the trust instrument the authorization given by the court below to the trustees to extend the leases should not be upheld.

We think, in considering whether the validation of the leases before us for a period beyond the termination of the trust would be advantageous to all the beneficiaries, the views of the trustor as they are reflected in his will are of great consequence and should not be lightly disregarded. The material welfare of all of 'his children and grandchildren was a matter of deep concern to him and no doubt *337 after much thought he conceived a plan under which he must have been convinced their interests would be protected and best subserved. He evidently believed that it would be for the benefit of all the beneficiaries of the trust to divide his estate into two classes, income and corpus, the former to go absolutely to the life tenants during the duration of the trust and the latter to go absolutely to the remaindermen upon the termination of the trust.

The intention of the testator regarding the disposal of both the income and the corpus is fully commented on in the Kawananakoa case, supra, at page 510. After discussing the rule limiting the terms of leases granted by trustees to the duration of the trust the court said: “There is in the case at bar the further strong consideration that the testator has expressly said that 'the authority of my said trustees hereunder shall continue during the natural life and lives of my said wife, and of my children by my said wife, who shall be in esse at the date of my decease, and the survivor of them; and, if there shall be in esse, at the death of such survivor, any lawful issue of any such child as last aforesaid, then these trusts, and the authority of said trustees hereunder, shall further continue for the definite term of twenty years after the decease of such survivor, provided any such lawful issue as aforesaid shall live so long, and if not, then for such lesser term and period as he, she or they shall live.’ This is an unambiguous statement of the testator’s intention and desire that the authority of his trustees shall cease at the time specified by him. Their authority will cease at the death of the survivor of the testator’s four children who are now still living if there shall then be in esse

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Matter of Estate of Christian
652 P.2d 1137 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1982)
In re the Estate of Campbell
42 Haw. 586 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1958)
Estate of James Campbell, Decsd.
40 Haw. 543 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1954)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Haw. 333, 1937 Haw. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-kawananakoa-haw-1937.