Goo Leong Shee v. Young Hung

36 Haw. 132, 1942 Haw. LEXIS 13
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1942
DocketNo. 2478.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 36 Haw. 132 (Goo Leong Shee v. Young Hung) 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
Goo Leong Shee v. Young Hung, 36 Haw. 132, 1942 Haw. LEXIS 13 (haw 1942).

Opinion

*133 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

KEMP, C. J.

This is an action in ejectment and for damages for wrongful detention brought by Goo Leong Shee and City Mill Company, Limited, against Young Hung. The land involved comprises 799 square feet, a portion of a parcel which comprised 4473 square feet. The larger tract is variously referred to in the conveyances hereinafter mentioned as a 20-foot right of way, a 20-foot roadway, and a lane. The 799 square feet comprise a strip 10 feet wide and approximately 80 feet long, being a portion of the westerly half of said 4473 square feet.

The plaintiffs, by amended complaint filed September 2, 1939, asserted title to said land by virtue of a deed to City Mill Company, Limited, from George W. Gora dated December 5, 1929, and an agreement of sale from City Mill Company, Limited, to Goo Leong Shee dated September 12, 1936. They alleged that the defendant Young Hung, contrary to law and their rights, has taken said land into his possession and converted it to his own use and occupation. They prayed restitution of said property and damages. The defendant answered by general denial. However, at the opening of the trial defendant gave notice that he would rely not only upon paper title to an ease *134 ment over tbe land in question but also upon use of tbe property as a roadway.

After a trial, jury waived, tbe circuit judge, after bearing tbe evidence and viewing tbe premises, found for tbe plaintiffs and entered judgment accordingly. Tbe defendant brings tbe case here on writ of error. The assignments of error set forth:

“That tbe judgment is contrary to tbe law, tbe evidence and tbe weight of tbe evidence in that:
“(1) Tbe Court failed to take into consideration tbe fact that this was a subdivision with a street in which the Plaintiff in Error was granted a vested right of way which has never been divested;
“(2) Tbe Court, although recognizing tbe law to be that tbe Plaintiff in Error at least acquired a vested interest in tbe lane opposite bis property, extended tbe rights of the Defendants in Error into the lane beyond tbe bounds of tbe property of Plaintiff in Error;
“ (3) That tbe evidence showed that Plaintiff in Error acquired an easement in addition by user over tbe premises for a period of more than ten years prior to the filing of tbe suit and tbe blocking of the lane;
“(4) Tbe deeds conveyed property along tbe 20-foot right of way in question Tor the use of tbe abutting property ' owners,’ thereby encumbering tbe entire lane and creating an easement therein for all abutting property owners;
“ (5) Tbe Court failed to consider tbe fact that Plaintiff in Error used said easement as an outlet from his premises to Kanaina Street;
“(6) Plaintiff in Error bad an implied easement by reason of the fact that bis property was bounded on an existing lane.”

In bis opening brief tbe defendant says that be relies on all tbe specifications of error assigned, which be con *136 denses into the following statement: “When Percy Pond, in 1912, conveyed the land of which Young Hung’s forms a portion, to Eliza Ellsworth, and bounded it along a 20 foot roadway, the fee of which roadway was owned by him, he thereby conveyed to the said Eliza Ellsworth and her successors in title an easement of a right of way along the entire extent of said 20 foot roadway, and both he and his grantees, including the Defendants in Error, are es-topped to deny such easement.”

*135

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Bluebook (online)
36 Haw. 132, 1942 Haw. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goo-leong-shee-v-young-hung-haw-1942.