County of Maui v. Puamana Management Corp.

631 P.2d 1215, 2 Haw. App. 352, 1981 Haw. App. LEXIS 234
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 10, 1981
DocketNO. 7193; CIVIL NO. 3474
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 631 P.2d 1215 (County of Maui v. Puamana Management Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County of Maui v. Puamana Management Corp., 631 P.2d 1215, 2 Haw. App. 352, 1981 Haw. App. LEXIS 234 (hawapp 1981).

Opinion

*353 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

PADGETT, J.

This is an appeal by the County of Maui from an order in the nature of a declaratory judgment and injunction entered below. The order was entered pursuant to the granting of appellant’s motion for summary judgment and denying the motion for summary judgment of Appellee Puamana Management Corporation. Appellant contends that the injunctive relief was not wide enough in scope. We affirm.

As we understand the questions presented and the statement of points relied upon, appellant is contending that pursuant to the provisions of §§ 8-1.4 and 8-2.3 of the Permanent Ordinances of the County of Maui 1971, the court should have enjoined Appellee Management Corporation from “activities including, but not limited to” the collective and continuous rental at Puamana, a planned unit development in a residential district, of single-family dwelling units to transients for a minimum period of one week, coupled with the provision of maid, housekeeping and other services to such transient guests.

Appellant also contends that the court should have enjoined Appellee Puamana Community Association from authorizing Appellee Management Corporation to conduct the activities complained of “at the planned development”. With respect to this latter point, since the order below required the Management Corporation to move its offices and registration activities off of the premises of the planned unit development, we assume what appellant is saying is that the Association should not have permitted the Management Corporation to continue to rent units at the Puamana Planned Unit Development in the manner complained of — that is, collective and continuous rental to transients, etc.

The Puamana project is located in Lahaina, Maui in a residential district and is composed of single-family residential units with common facilities. It was developed as a planned unit development under § 8-1.17 of the Maui Zoning Code. Appellee Puamana Community Association was the record holder of the fee simple interest in the units and owned, controlled or maintained the development. Appellee Puamana Management Corporation, acting as agent for a *354 substantial number of the owners of units within the development, rented out units for periods of one week or in excess thereof. It maintained a reservation and frontdesk office in the clubhouse, provided maid and bellhop services to the units, operated a commercial laundry on the premises, advertised the premises for rent in travel magazines and billed and collected the monies for the rentals.

Appellant brought an action for declaratory and injunctive relief against the Association and Management and John Does, who presumably were unit owners. The unit owners, however, were never identified or made parties to the proceeding. The contention was that under the provisions of §§ 8-1.4,8-2.1 and 8-2.2 of the Maui Zoning Code, appellees were illegally operating a hotel in a residential district. Appellant moved for summary judgment and Appellee Management filed a counter motion. The counter motion was denied and appellant’s motion was granted. In the course of the argument over the form of decree, the appellees raised certain questions as to what could and could not be done upon the premises and the court below, attempting to comply with Rule 65(d), Hawaii Rules of Civil Procedure (HRCP), entered its order specifically stating what could and could not be done on the premises. The court specifically enjoined Puamana Management Corporation from operating a reservations desk, a maid or laundry services on the premises at Puamana but specifically allowed the operation of a reservation desk, of washer and dryer services and domestic help services for property owners renting their units if those operations were based outside of the Puamana Planned Development.

An order complying with appellant’s contention that Management’s “activities, including but not limited to” certain specified actions should be enjoined would clearly have violated Rule 65(d), HRCP.

Apparently, appellant had tendered a form of order which was to its liking after the court had orally indicated it would grant it summary judgment. Objections to that form of order from the appellees appear in the record but the appellant’s proposed form of order, itself, does not. In appellant’s reply brief, it suggests that the order should have read:

The Appellee is hereby permanently restrained and enjoined from renting any unit in the Puamana Planned Development to a person or persons unless said person or persons manifests the *355 intent to make said unit their permanent residence, dwelling, abode and home.

From this, it would appear that appellant’s position is that unless the renter of a unit in a residential area manifests an intent to make that unit his permanent home, the act of renting to him violates the ordinance. That position is, on its face, absurd. Nevertheless, while appellant has grotesquely overstated its position, it is representing the public and the matter is one of considerable public interest. We therefore examine the record to see whether within the context of the statement of points relied upon, the court below should have granted broader relief to appellant.

The pertinent provisions of the ordinance are as follows: Section 8-1.4 states

Residential Districts.
(a) Description and purpose. Areas for single-family dwellings are established to provide for harmonious residential neighborhood without the detraction of commercial and industrial activities.
(b) Permitted uses:
(1) Single family dwellings.

In § 8-1.2 of the ordinance, a dwelling is defined as:

A building or portion thereof designed exclusively for residential occupancy but not including hotels, tenements, boarding or lodging houses as defined herein.

A dwelling unit is defined as:

Any building or any portion thereof which is designed or intended for occupancy by one family or persons living together or by a person living alone and providing complete living facilities within the unit for sleeping, recreation, eating, sanitary and laundering facilities, including installed equipment for only one kitchen.

A dwelling, single family is defined as:

A building consisting of only one dwelling unit designed for or occupied exclusively by one family.

A hotel is defined as:

A building designed for occupancy as the more or less temporary abiding place of transient individuals who are lodged with or *356 without meals, in which there are more than twenty (20) guest rooms, which rooms may be equipped with cooking facilities.

And a motel is defined as:

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Bluebook (online)
631 P.2d 1215, 2 Haw. App. 352, 1981 Haw. App. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-maui-v-puamana-management-corp-hawapp-1981.