Godfrey v. Kidwell

15 Haw. 526, 1904 Haw. LEXIS 77
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 15 Haw. 526 (Godfrey v. Kidwell) 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
Godfrey v. Kidwell, 15 Haw. 526, 1904 Haw. LEXIS 77 (haw 1904).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

PERRY, J.

(Galbraith, J., dissenting.)

For a statement of tbe case on appeal-see ante, p. 351. Tbe complainant now moves for a rebearing on tbe following grounds: (1) that said decision of tbe Supreme Court is in conflict witb former controlling decisions to wbicb tbe attention [527]*527•of said Court was not drawn; (2) that questions decisive of the case, and duly submitted by counsel, bave been overlooked by the court in said decision; (3) that said decision is based upon mistake or misapprehension of the facts of the case apparent •upon the record; (4) that many fraudulent acts, omissions and .silence of defendant-appellant as appear of record render said decision against equity; (5) that said decision does not give •due weight to the evidence in said cause and is not supported by the facts in the record; (6) that the special circumstances of the case; the fact, as appears of record, that the plaintiff was an ignorant young man without business training or experience, who had just arrived at majority, who was without disinterested •or independent legal or other advice in the transaction at issue; that the consideration involved was hardly a fair one; that no error appears in the admission or rejection of testimony, that the cause appears to have been heard fairly and fully in the lower court, and that the judge thereof is the best judge of the evidence and the weight of the evidence and of the credibility of the witnesses; that the appeal in this Supreme Court was de-ni ded by a divided bench; and that the cause is one in equity, the policy of which is liberal, — render a petition for rehearing especially reasonable and worthy of favorable consideration.

1. Our attention has not, upon the hearing of this motion, either in the oral or in the written argument, been called to any controlling decision bearing upon any of the questions involved in the case. A number of cases from other jurisdictions not cited on the appeal, are now cited, but, while all are of value, none of them can in any correct sense be regarded 'as controlling, because, even if for no other reason, the principles declared by them are inapplicable to the facts of this case as we have found them.

2. It is contended that under this head may properly be discussed the court’s failure to comment in its written opinion upon the case of Irick v. Fulton, 3 Gratt. (Va.) 193. The contention is clearly untenable. An authority cited is not a question submitted, within the meaning of the rule as to rehearings. [528]*528Referring, however, to the Virginia case cited and freely quoted from in complainant’s brief and considered by us on the appeal,, we find nothing in it that can lead to a rehearing. What the court there held was that by a deed which conveyed the interest of the grantor but which was “made under the belief of the parties that” the grantor “was entitled only to an undivided interest or share in said property, as one of the children and heirs of said Betty Ilaveley, the parties only sold and purchased and only intended to sell and purchase, such undivided interest,” and that no more passed under the deed. That statement of the-law it is unnecessary to question in this case. It does not apply to the facts as we have found them. Our finding was that the deed was not executed under a mistake as to the facts on the part of either party, — that while both doubtless supposed that in all probability the grantor’s interest would prove to be not more than one half, still they speculated, knowing the deed to-be operative to convey all the grantor’s interest, whatever it might be, and took their chances as to all over as well as to all under one half.

It is difficult to ascertain from the oral argument or from the brief for complainant what other questions, if any, are claimed to have been submitted to and overlooked by the court. The following, perhaps, were intended to be made the subject of such claim: that there was a mutual mistake of fact and, hereunder, that Ehdwell’s alleged admissions in certain pleadings and other documents in two former cases in Avhich he was a party show, any testimony of his to the contrary notwithstanding, that he believed at the time he received the deed that the grantor’s interest was not more than one half and understood that that was all that the deed conveyed to him; that even where the mistake is that of one party only, without knowledge of such mistake and without fraud on the part of the other, equity may, under the peculiar circumstances of the case, grant relief; that while no one circumstance, as, for example, youth, inexperience, want of independent advice, ignorance of material facts, or inadequacy of consideration, may of itself be sufficient, per-[529]*529baps, to justify relief, still, when, taken together, they are sufficient to require the intervention of equity. The first is a pure question of fact and was very carefully considered by the court on the appeal, — the court was divided on its conclusion upon the point. The second and third involve familiar rules of law, sought to be applied, howrcver, by the complainant to a state of facts which the court found not to exist. All of the circumstances referred to, as well as the two rules of law, were considered by the court, -whether they are expressly referred to in the prevailing opinions or not. Both points are by necessary implication, if not otherwise, disposed of by the decision. Moreover, the mere omission to touch upon a material point in the written opinion is not a good ground for a rehearing, provided the point was in fact considered by the court.

For the complainant the following contentions, also, are made and argued at length: (1) that even if there was not a mutual mistake of fact, there was at least such a mistake on one side and fraud (willful concealment of a material fact) on the other, or mistake on one side “accompanied by circumstances such as appeal peculiarly to a court of eqiiity”; (2) that the evidence shows inadequacy of consideration so gross as to constitute per se ground, for granting relief; (4) that the transaction was with an “expectant heir” and that, therefore, “mere inadequacy of price or compensation is sufficient to set aside the contract.” It is claimed that the court’s attention has not been hitherto drawn to any of these points. If this is so, the court’s failure, if any, to consider them, is not ground for a rehearing. In such case, they would simply be mere arguments based upon the same facts shown or claimed to be shown by the evidence. Counsel’s failure, if any, to advance them at the original hearing could not be taken advantage of to secure a further hearing. To hold otherwise would be to encourage the presentation of cases piecemeal. It may be added that with the exception of the fourth all of the points were presented in substance on the appeal, although not as elaborately as by present counsel, and were considered and disposed of by the findings and reasoning of the [530]*530court. The fourth point is new and is, apparently, that upon which the greatest reliance is placed. The rule contended for is that equity will set aside transactions in which expectant heirs have dealt with their expectations, when the court is satisfied that they have not been adequately protected against the pressure put upon them by their poverty; that mere inadequacy of price will entitle an expectant heir to set aside (on terms) the sale of a reversion; and that the purchaser is bound to establish the fact that the transaction was fair and the consideration given sufficient. O’Rorke v. Bolingbroke,

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Bluebook (online)
15 Haw. 526, 1904 Haw. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/godfrey-v-kidwell-haw-1904.