Cooper v. Sawyer

405 P.2d 394, 48 Haw. 394, 1965 Haw. LEXIS 39
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1965
Docket4386
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 405 P.2d 394 (Cooper v. Sawyer) 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
Cooper v. Sawyer, 405 P.2d 394, 48 Haw. 394, 1965 Haw. LEXIS 39 (haw 1965).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

WIRTZ, J.

This appeal by respondents, the Sawyers, is from a judgment favorable to petitioner, entered on April 10,1963, based upon tbe chancellor’s decision on Request for Declaratory Judgment filed November 2, 1962.

*395 The action was begun by a complaint filed September 27, 1960, seeking injunctive relief against the obstruction of an easement held by petitioner-appellee in a piece of property, Lot 156-P (hereinafter referred to as Lot P), owned in fee by respondent Porter and subject to an equitable interest acquired by respondents, the Sawyers, appellants herein, under agreement of sale dated September 9, 1960.

Respondents-appellants filed an answer of denial and a counterclaim. The counterclaim sought injunctive relief alleging misuse and overburdening of the easement, which was appurtenant to petitioner’s Lot 156-0 (hereinafter referred to as Lot C) by “using it for the benefit of four other lots,” 1 containing apartment units, also owned by petitioner, and “to which it was not appurtenant.” Eespondents-appellants also asserted that there had been a change in the use of the easement “which resulted in increasing the already unlawful burden.”

The pleadings raised the single issue of misuse of the ■easement resulting in an unlawful burden on the servient tenement, Lot P, owned by respondents-appellants.

After a short hearing, on March 16,1962, the remaining parties 2 agreed that the chancellor should settle the matter at issue and determine the rights of the parties as in a declaratory judgment proceeding on the record thus far made, upon agreed facts set forth in the stipulation, and upon such further testimony as the chancellor might deem necessary to determine disputed facts if found to be relevant. 3

*396 The chancellor viewed the premises and thereafter entered his decision and judgment. The decision so graphically and concisely states the pertinent facts and geographic relationship of the property involved that the findings of fact are set forth in full:

“5. Petitioner owns lots with apartment units on them near Lot 156-C, rents out her twenty-four apartment units, and owns Lot 156-C. Its 90-foot Diamond Head [east] side adjoins the Ewa 90-foot side of Lot 156-P. On Lot 156-C Petitioner has part of an apartment unit, a diesel hotwater tank structure, a one-automobile open parking space at the mauka end, and makai of this space a garage structure with four spaces for two automobiles each. The hotwater tank structure is for hot water for apartments all of which except one of which are not on Lot 156-C. In 1960 Petitioner built just Ewa [west] of the garage a fence which prevents automobiles from going in or out of the garage except on the Diamond Head [east] side of Lot 156-C. This has increased use of Lot 156-P. Petitioner uses one garage space herself, rents others to tenants in her apartments and to other persons.
“6. The Sawyers, as purchasers under an agreement of sale with Mrs. Porter, own the fee simple equitable title to Lots 156-P and 156-D-l. The 90-foot Ewa [west] boundary of Lot 156-D-l adjoins the 90-foot Diamond Head [east] boundary of Lot 156-P. The Sawyers hold their Lot 156-P title subject to an easement in Lot 156-P for Lot 156-C. Formerly, before unity of title to Lots 156-P and 156-D-l, an easement existed in Lot 156-P for Lot 156-D-l. This easement gave the owner of Lot 156-D-l easement rights in Lot 156-P equal to those of the owner of Lot 156-C in Lot 156-P. Unity of title to Lots 156-P and 156-D-l caused the easement in Lot 156-P for Lot 156-D-l to merge *397 in the Lot 156-P fee simple title. Under their fee simple equitable title, the Sawyers have complete rights to use Lot 156-P, subject to the easement rights for Lot 156-C, and have as much right to use Lot 156-P for Lot 156-D-l as Petitioner has to use Lot 156-P for Lot 156-C. On Lot 156-D-l the Sawyers have five apartments. They rent the five apartments to tenants and claim a right to let their tenants park three automobiles on Lot 156-P along its Diamond Head [east] boundary and as close as possible to the mauka [north] boundary of Lot 156-P.
********
“8. Lot 156-P is a rectangle, 90 feet long and 10 feet wide. It is black-topped, like a road. A masonry wall, with openings to Lot 156-D-l, where the Sawyers have apartments, runs along its Diamond Head [east] 90-foot boundary.
“9. An ordinary-sized automobile parked on Lot 156-P parallel and as close as possible to the Lot 156-P Diamond Head [east] boundary would force a similar automobile attempting to pass it on Lot 156-P to go partly onto Lot 156-C. If the moving automobile were turning from Lot 156-P into Lot 156-C or backing from Lot 156-C onto Lot 156-P, such a parked automobile nearby would be an even greater interference with its passage.
“10. No access to or from Lot 156-P exists across its mauka [north] boundary. All access between the public streets and Lot 156-P is across its makai [south] boundary. For passage to and from Lot 156-C, traffic is likely to be heavier on the makai [south] than on the mauka [north] portion of Lot 156-P. The closer they are to the mauka [north] and Diamond Head [east] boundaries of Lot 156-P the less will parked *398 automobiles on Lot 156-P obstruct moving automobiles on Lot 156-P.”

The transcript of testimony of the brief hearing held shows that the use of Lot P for ingress to and egress from the garages maintained on Lot C between July 1957 and August 1960 was infrequent and unnecessary until after petitioner built a fence running between Lots C and Lots A and B and along the 20-foot access right of way abutting Lot C thereby leaving only Lot P available for use as a means of ingress and egress to the garages on Lot C. This testimony likewise shows that the garages on Lot C had already been erected and utilized at the time the grant of the easement over Lot P was made to petitioner in 1940.

The above findings of fact by the chancellor are unchallenged under this appeal. As stated by respondents-appellants in their reply brief: “Rarely has there been so much agreement about facts, and so little as to the application of the law to the facts. It is in applying the well established principles of law in the cases to the facts of this case that error of law, not fact, is asserted.” Nor could they be successfully challenged as “clearly erroneous” under H.R.C.P., § 52(a).

The following controverted conclusions of law made by the chancellor are the bases of controversy under this appeal:

“11. The easement on Lot 156-P gives the owner of Lot 156-C access to and from Lot 156-C across all of the Diamond Head [east] boundary of Lot 156-C, over all of Lot 156-P, and across all of the makai [south] boundary of Lot 156-P. The easement is for Lot 156-C only; it may be used for Lot 156-C only.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
405 P.2d 394, 48 Haw. 394, 1965 Haw. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-sawyer-haw-1965.