Correa v. Waiakea Mill Co.

32 Haw. 310, 1932 Haw. LEXIS 30
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1932
DocketNo. 2024.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 32 Haw. 310 (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., 32 Haw. 310, 1932 Haw. LEXIS 30 (haw 1932).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT BY

PERRY, C. J.

Acting pursuant to the powers conferred upon him by section 73 of the Organic Act, by chapter 30 of the Revised Laws of Hawaii, 1915, and by the proclamation of the President of the United States, issued June 24, 1918, for the wartime purpose of encouraging the pro *311 duction of sugar, the commissioner of public lands, with the approval of the governor, on August 12, 1918, entered into a contract with the Waiakea Mill Company, an Hawaiian corporation, relating to the cultivation of sugar cane on the ahupuaa of Waiakea in the district of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, a part of the public domain, and to the harvesting of the same and the manufacture of sugar therefrom. At that time it was the purpose of the territorial government to open the whole or large parts of that ahupuaa for homesteading and provisions were contained in the contract which were intended to facilitate that homesteading policy, while at the same time continuing to the greatest extent possible the growth of cane and the manufacture of sugar. There were provisions for the withdrawal of the corporation in favor of each and every homesteader as he might come upon the land and present himself in readiness to take up the cultivation of the cane and for the just apportionment between the corporation and the incoming homesteader of the cost of the cultivation, harvesting and other necessary operations. There were further provisions giving to the corporation under certain circumstances a lien upon the cane for the moneys expended in its cultivation.

On March 14, 1919, Lot No. 1409, which was a part of the ahupuaa, was made the subject of a homesteading agreement between the Territory and one Kikuyo Fujii, and the Waiakea Mill Company was notified in due course that this homesteader was ready to take possession and to cultivate the cane. The corporation thereupon ceased cultivation. Kikuyo Fujii, however, failed to enter and to cultivate and her agreement with the Territory was subsequently cancelled. Thereupon a “Special Homestead Agreement” (No. 1859), bearing date of March 5, 1920, was entered into by the commissioner of public lands, with the approval of the governor, and Mary K. Lo, the *312 present plaintiff, relating to tlie same Lot No. 1409.

Commencing about March 8 and ending before eight o’clock on the morning of March 24, 1920, the Waiakea Mill Company harvested all of the cane then growing upon Lot 1409, transported it to its mill and in due course manufactured it into sugar and sold the sugar. On March 1, 1926, the present action by the plaintiff against the defendant was commenced. In the declaration it is alleged that the plaintiff “was the owner and entitled to the immediate possession of all and singular that'certain crop of matured sugar cane standing on and being upon” Lot 1409 and that “on divers occasions and times between the 6th and 27th days of March, A. D. 1920, * * * the said defendant, without the permission and against the will of plaintiff, wilfully and unlawfully entered in and upon the above described premises * * * and then and there * * * wrongfully cut down, took and carried away a matured crop of sugar cane of great value, consisting of 254.12 tons, then being and standing upon said premises, said sugar cane being then and there the property of and in the possession of plaintiff, and converted the same into raw sugar and molasses of a value of $14,971.66, which said sugar and molasses the said defendant sold and disposed of to its own use and benefit, and converted the proceeds thereof” to its own use. The prayer was for judgment in the sum of $21,958.06. The-defendant’s answer was a general denial. At the first trial the jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $12,658.20. Upon a writ of error this court set aside the verdict and granted a new trial. (31 Haw. 317.) At the second trial the jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $1883.50, principal, and $1657.74, interest. Both parties were dissatisfied and each of them brings a bill of exceptions to this court.

“Special Homestead Agreement” No. 1859 is a con *313 tract whereby the commissioner of public lands authorizes and empowers the homesteader (the present plaintiff) to take immediate possession of Lot No. 1409 and to occupy and use the same subject to certain covenants and conditions. By that instrument the homesteader covenants to perform certain prescribed conditions of residence, cultivation and maintenance and to pay the agreed purchase price of $2320 in certain specified installments; and the commissioner undertakes to issue a patent to the homesteader, within a stated time, upon performance by her of all of the terms on her part to be kept and performed. As above stated, the agreement on its face bears date of March 5, 1920. At the first trial both parties proceeded upon the assumption that the instrument was executed and became effective on the date which it bears. At the second trial, for the first time, the defense was presented that the agreement was not executed, and did not become effective, until business hours of March 24, 1920, that the crop of cane which was on the land on March 5, 1920, was all cut and removed by the defendant during a period beginning about March 8 and ending not later than eight o’clock on the morning of March 24, and that therefore when the agreement became effective (in business hours of March 24) it did not convey or transfer to the homesteader (the plaintiff) any right in the cane and there can be no recovery by the plaintiff in this action.

The agreement is on a printed form as to its first, third and fourth pages. The undisputed evidence is that the blanks on the first, third and fourth pages were filled in and the signature of the plaintiff appended, in Hilo, on March 5, 1920; that at the time of its execution by the plaintiff there was in the instrument no detailed description of the lot such as is now found on page two thereof and there was not attached to it the blueprint *314 of the map of the lot now attached thereto; that on March 5,1920, the document as signed by Mrs. Lo was forwarded to the office of the commissioner of public lands in Honolulu; that subsequently the description was typewritten on the second page and the blueprint was attached; that on March 24, 1920, the commissioner of public lands, by letter of that date, forwarded to the acting governor of HaAvaii “for your approval” the instrument in question; that subsequent to the sending of this letter, and on the same day, Acting Governor Iaultea signed the clause of consent printed at the end of the instrument and reading “I consent to the sale of the said land upon the terms and conditions above set forth;” that by letter dated March 30, 1920, the chief clerk in the office of the commissioner of public lands in Honolulu foiwarded to the agent in Hilo Agreement No. 1859 “in duplicate, one copy being for your files and the other for delivery to the proper parties.” The evidence is silent as to when the commissioner of public lands signed the agreement.

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Related

Lalakea v. Laupahoehoe Sugar Co.
33 Haw. 745 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
32 Haw. 310, 1932 Haw. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/correa-v-waiakea-mill-co-haw-1932.