Christian Ex Rel. Holt v. Waialua Agricultural Co.

30 Haw. 533
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 7, 1928
Docket1840
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 30 Haw. 533 (Christian Ex Rel. Holt v. Waialua Agricultural Co.) 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
Christian Ex Rel. Holt v. Waialua Agricultural Co., 30 Haw. 533 (haw 1928).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

PERRY, C. J.

This is a suit iu equity to cancel a deed executed by Eliza R. P. Christian, et al., under date of May 2, 1910, to James Lawrence Holt, the ground of cancellation being that at the time of its execution Mrs. Christian was mentally incompetent. The petitioner is the guardian of the estate of Mrs. Christian. The respondents are the grantee just referred to, James Lawrence Holt, and the Waialua Agricultural Company, Limited, a corporation to which *534 by mesné conveyances the title acquired' by James Lawrence Holt from Mrs. Christian passed. The allegations of the bill which are material on this. appeal are as follows: that George H. Holt, the petitioner, is the duly appointed, qualified and acting guardian of. the estate of Eliza R. P. Christian, an incompetent person; that the respondent, James L. Holt, is a son of James R. Holt and a grandson of Robert William Holt; that Eliza R. P. Christian, formerly Eliza R. P. Holt, is the daughter and sole heir ¡of John Dominis Holt, a son of Robert William Holt; that Robert William Holt was the owner of large “properties” in this Territory and died in the year 1862; that Robert William Holt left a will which provided that the bulk of his estate should be divided into four equal parts, on'e part of which was to go to and become the property ,of his daughter, Elizabeth M. Aldrich, and that the remaining three-fourths would be “held in trust to pay the income from equal and undivided thirds thereof to each of his sons, Owen J. Holt, James R. Holt and John Dominis Holt, for their respective lives with remainder over in .fee as to each undivided one-third to the heirs at law of the said three sons as they respectively should die”; that after the distribution of one-fourth to the daughter,; Elizabeth, and after the payment of all debts "and specific legacies, there remained in the said estate and undistributed six enumerated tracts or parcels of land aggregating in area over fourteen thousand acres; that under the provisions of the will the son, John Dominis Holt, waé entitled to the income for life from an undivided onerthird of all of the six parcels of land and that Eliza R. P. Christian, “the only child and sole heir at law of her father, the said John Dominis Holt, * * * became and was entitled to accede to and become the owner in fee simple of an undivided one-third interest in all of said lands upon the death of her said father and subject *535 only to tlie survival of him”; that Eliza R. P. Christian “is, was and at all times” in the petition mentioned “has been insane and mentally incompetent”; that for many years prior to 1910 the respondent Waialua Agricultural Company had used and occupied as a sugar cane plantation large portions of the .six lands above referred to as a tenant under leaseholds from persons holding the legal estate in trust pending the death of the life tenant; and that in the year 1910, “becoming desirous of acquiring said lands in fee simple and more particularly of acquiring the undivided one-third in said land as to which the said John Dominis Holt was entitled to the income for life and as to which the said Eliza R. P. Christian would be entitled to the fee upon his death”, the respondent corporation undertook and carried through the negotiations and transactions about to be referred to; that in the year 1910 Eliza R. P. Christian “was wholly incompetent mentally * * and was unable to care for herself or her affairs and Avas then residing in Oxford, England, with her cousin, Anne Holt KentAve.ll, im Avhose care she had been for many years”; that Anne Holt KentAvell “had complete control over said incompetent person, but that she Avas Avithout knoAvledge as to the legal status of said incompetent and concerning her inability to execute a Aralid conveyance of her properties; that at said time respondent James L. Holt Avas resident in Honolulu, Hawaii, and Avas on friendly terms with and related to Anne Holt Kentwell”; that the alleged incompetent Avas at that time twenty-four years of age and “aside from her said mental affliction Avas in generally good physical health and condition, whereas the said John Dominis Holt, upon Avhose déath the vesting of the interest in fee in the said Eliza R. P. Christian alone depended, Avas a man of 71 years of age”; that at that time “the interest in expectancy in fee in an undivided one-third of said lands to Avhich said in *536 competent, would be entitled upon the death of her said father was of the value of upwards of $300,000.00, and that all of the foregoing facts and circumstances were well known to respondent corporation”, although the value of the property “was unknown ^to and not disclosed to said-Anne Holt Kentwell and was of course entirely impossible of being understood by said incompetent”; that the respondent corporation employed the firm of Castle & Withington of Honolulu to act for it “in the matter of procuring the conveyance to it of the so-called Christian interest in said property” and persuaded James L. Holt to endeavor to induce Mrs. Kentwell to procure the signature of the; alleged incompetent to a deed of her interest at a cost to the respondent corporation not to exceed the sum of $40,000, — the title so obtained by James L. Holt to be immediately transferred to the respondent corporation or its appointees in trust; that the arrangement between the corporation and James L. Holt was that the negotiations were to be had with Mrs. Kentwell and the incompetent as though Holt were in fact purchasing the property and that the conveyance was to be taken in Holt’s name; that in the deed from James L. Holt to the corporation or its appointees, ’ transferring the title which he was to secure from Mrs. Christian, there was also to be included a conveyance of the interest of James L. Holt himself in the same lands (being his interest in expectancy as the sole heir at Iuav of James R. Holt) and that James L. Holt was to receive from the corporation as consideration for his services and for his interest in the property the sum of $60,000; that a further sum of $20,000'was to be paid to one John F. Colburn Avho was thé holder of the life interests of; John Dominis Holt.and James R. Holt and was also trustee for James L. Holt for certain purposes,— “making a total contemplated expenditure to said cor *537 poration of $120,000.00 for petitioner’s interest, as well as for tlie other interest above indicated in said lands”; that James L. Holt, having ascertained from England that “said plan might be reasonably expected to he successful”, David Withington, a member of the law firm of Castle & Withington, proceeded to England, ostensibly as attorney for James L. Holt, hut in fact in the interests of the respondent corporation, “in an endeavor to procure through said Anne Holt Kentwell” or otherwise “a conveyance of the said Christian interest at an expenditure to said corporation of not to exceed $40,000.00”; that in England David Withington called upon Mrs. Kentwell “in whose home was the said incompetent, Eliza R. P. Christian” and “was then and there given and did have ample opportunity for ascertaining for himself and those whom he represented the fact of said incompetency” and “was fully aware of said mental incompetency * * '* at the time of the happening of all of the events which there transpired” as in the petition described; that Withington misrepresented to Mrs. Kentwell and the incompetent the value of the property under consideration and induced Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Haw. 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christian-ex-rel-holt-v-waialua-agricultural-co-haw-1928.