Correa v. Waiakea Mill Co.

30 Haw. 276, 1928 Haw. LEXIS 45
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 27, 1928
Docket1772
StatusPublished

This text of 30 Haw. 276 (Correa v. Waiakea Mill 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
Correa v. Waiakea Mill Co., 30 Haw. 276, 1928 Haw. LEXIS 45 (haw 1928).

Opinion

OPINION OE THE COURT BY

BANKS, J.

This action is predicated on the alleged wrongful taking and conversion of a matured but unsevered crop of sugar cane that was standing on land that was owned by the plaintiff. The defendant does not deny the plaintiff’s ownership of the land nor does it deny that it severed and removed the crop of sugar cane therefrom. It does, however, by its special plea in bar, attempt to justify its *277 act. The justification relied on is (1) that it had a right to enter upon the land for the purpose of enforcing a lien it held on the sugar cane, which lien it is alleged, arose out of a certain contract dated August 12, 1918, and that its entry was solely for that purpose; (2) that on December 14, 1925, the plaintiff brought an action in assumpsit for damages for breach of said contract of August 12, 1918, and that upon issues joined in said action a judgment was rendered against her, which said judgment is in full force and effect and that by reason of said judgment and the pleadings in the case she is now estopped to charge that the defendant committed a trespass either by entering the said premises or by cutting the cane thereon and marketing the sugar therefrom. The court below after hearing evidence sustained the plea on both grounds and dismissed the plaintiff’s action. To this ruling the plaintiff excepted and has brought the case here on writ of error.

Formerly the land now owned by the plaintiff was a part of the public domain and was embraced within the ahupuaa of Waiakea in the district of Hilo on the Island of Hawaii. It had been leased by the Territory to the defendant, Waiakea Mill Company, and had been used by the company for the cultivation of sugar cane. It was contemplated by the government that the land would upon the expiration of the lease be devoted to homestead purposes. On June 14, 1918, the President of the United States issued a proclamation reciting that “by reason of the existence of a state of war it is essential to the national security and defense, for the successful prosecution of the war, and for the support and maintenance of the Army and Navy, to secure an adequate supply of sugar and other food products in the United States, including the Territory of Hawaii,” and finding that “it is essential in order to secure such adequate food supply to continue to the fullest extent' possible the cultivation of all public *278 lands in the Territory of Hawaii now under cultivation in sugar or;other food products” and for these purposes authorizing the commissioner of public lands of this Territory, with the approval of the governor, “to enter into all necessary contracts with the lesseés of any of said government lands, the leases of which have expired or which, while this proclamation is in force, will expire, or with any other person, firm, or corporation, for the continued cultivation of said lands, until such time as the same shall be occupied and cultivated by homesteaders.”

By the authority thus conferred the commissioner of public lands of the Territory, by and with the consent of the governor, on the 12th day of August, 1918, entered into a contract with the Waiakea Mill Company, the defendant herein, under which contract the mill company now claims it acquired the right to enter upon the premises in question and to remove therefrom the crop of sugar cane standing thereon. This contract recites the ownership by the Territory of the ahupuaa of Waiakea in the district of Hilo and that the land therein embraced was then partly under cultivation in sugar cane and was about to be opened for homesteading. The Waiakea Mill Company, therein called the planter, agreed, “in so far as may be practicable, to cultivate and/or to replant in sugar cane the land in said tract now or which has heretofore been finder cultivation in sugar cane; to continue to cultivate the sugar cane now growing on all of such land * * * and to fertilize, strip and otherwise cultivate to maturity and harvest the present and any successive crops of sugar cane during the term of this contract, all in the most approved manner and to the satisfaction of the commissioner.” The contract further provides, in section 6, that “the planter shall continue the work under this contract until notified in writing by the commissioner that the homesteader is ready to take over the actual cultivation of his lot under his special home *279 stead agreement;” and that “as soon as may be, after any portion of the land covered by this agreement shall be subdivided into homesteads, and the commissioner shall have notified the planter, as provided in section 6 hereof, that any homesteader or homesteaders is or are ready to take over the actual cultivation of his or their homestead or homesteads, the total actual cost, as defined in section 2 hereof, shall be apportioned by the commissioner, subject to final determination, in case of dispute, as provided in section 11 hereof, between the said homesteads and/or between the said homesteads and any portion of said tract not homesteaded, in proportion to their planted area.” Other clauses provide for the manner of determining costs and interest charges. Section 7 provides for a lien in favor of the planter on the homesteader’s crops as security for the reimbursement to the planter of moneys expended by it in cultivation of growing crops taken over by the homesteader from the planter.

On the 5th day of March, 1920, the plaintiff entered into a contract with the commissioner of public lands, which contract was approved by the governor, under the terms of which she acquired the right to purchase as a homestead the land upon which the defendant subsequently entered and from which it removed the crop of sugar cane which is the subject-matter of the instant suit. Among the provisions of this contract is the following: “The purchaser” (the plaintiff herein) “takes said lot and the crop or crops growing thereon subject to the lien on said crops which is provided for in a contract entered into under the authority of the presidential proclamation dated June 24, 1918, between the commissioner and the Waiakea Mill Company dated August 12, 1918, the terms of said contract insofar as they, are applicable to the purchaser herein being made a part of this special homestead agreement by reference as fully and completely *280 as though said contract were actually incorporated herein.” ,

Assuming hut not deciding that the mill company had a lien on 'the sugar cane in question the inquiry still remains whether under the plea itself or under the evidence introduced in support of it the defendant had the legal right to enter the premises where the cane stood and remove it in order, to protect and enforce its lien. If it had not such fight the plea in bar should not have been sustained on that ground.

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

Related

Correa v. Waiakea Mill Co.
29 Haw. 579 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1927)
Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar Co. v. Wailuku Sugar Co.
14 Haw. 50 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1902)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 Haw. 276, 1928 Haw. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/correa-v-waiakea-mill-co-haw-1928.