HAIKU PLANTATIONS ASSOCIATION v. Lono

529 P.2d 1, 56 Haw. 96, 1974 Haw. LEXIS 92
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1974
DocketNO. 5489
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 529 P.2d 1 (HAIKU PLANTATIONS ASSOCIATION v. Lono) 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
HAIKU PLANTATIONS ASSOCIATION v. Lono, 529 P.2d 1, 56 Haw. 96, 1974 Haw. LEXIS 92 (haw 1974).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

OGATA, J.

This is an appeal by Samuel Lono, Jr., one of the defendants, from a judgment of the circuit court filed on February 8, 1973. The other defendants in this case, John Does 1-200, Doe Partnerships 1-10, and Doe Corporations 1-10, were unidentified defendants. None of these defendants were at any time during the proceedings in the court below specifically identified and substituted as a defendant or defendants under their true names. The unidentified defendants, not having been personally served, have not appealed.

*97 The plaintiffs, Haiku Plantations Association, Samuel Eason, Marijane Golding, Jay Rockstead, Glenn Mowry, David Mon crie f, Henry Walker, Marian Halberg and Herbert Halberg, filed in the circuit court on December 22, 1972, a complaint for injunctive rebef to mandate defendant, Samuel Lono, Jr., to remove structures and tents that he caused to be erected and to fill and restore the open cooking pit that he caused to be excavated, and to restrain all defendants from (1) parking any vehicles within the Haiku Plantations subdivision, except as a guest of a resident or owner of a home in such subdivision; (2) erecting any structures or tents or other shelters or otherwise trespassing upon the Haiku Plantations Subdivision; (3) trampling or otherwise damaging plantings or depositing trash or litter upon property of the Haiku Plantations Subdivision; and (4) assembling or conducting any public meetings or other gatherings or otherwise trespassing upon such property. As is customary the complaint further prayed that plaintiffs have such other and further relief as the court deems just and proper. Plaintiffs also filed, together with the complaint, a motion for an order to proceed against the unidentified defendants, an affidavit of counsel for plaintiffs, purporting to support the motion for an order to proceed against unidentified defendants, and the order of the court to proceed against unidentified defendants. They also filed, together with the complaint, a motion for temporary restraining order, a motion for preliminary injunction, seven affidavits to support and uphold the issuance of a temporary restraining order, and a certificate of efforts and reasons which was executed by counsel for the plaintiffs.

Upon the filing of the above pleadings and papers, the court on December 22, 1972, issued an order to show cause why a preliminary injunction should not issue in favor of the plaintiffs, which was made returnable on December 27,1972, as well as a temporary restraining order ex parte, without notice to the defendants. By its terms, the temporary restraining order restrained the defendants, their agents, servants, employees and attorneys and all persons in active concert and participation with them from parking any motor vehicle on property of the Haiku Plantations subdivision, or otherwise *98 causing or allowing any motor vehicle to enter and remain in the subdivision other than for ingress and egress from the property occupied by defendant, Samuel Lono, Jr., unless the defendant is on such property as a guest of a resident within such subdivision. Five days after the complaint had been filed, on December 27, 1972, which was also the return day for the order to show cause on the preliminary injunction, the court entered an order under which the trial on the merits of the permanent injunction was advanced and consolidated with the hearing on the preliminary injunction.

Although under the terms of the summons issued by the clerk of the court and served upon defendant, Samuel Lono, Jr., he was required to answer the complaint within 20 days after service of the summons, under the circumstances indicated above, he did not have that time to file his answer to the complaint and none was filed. All of the material allegations of the complaint in the absence of an answer thereto, must be deemed to have been denied by each defendant, and therefore, it was incumbent upon the plaintiffs to prove each of these allegations by the requisite proof to be entitled to any injunctive relief.

The trial court, after the conclusion of a hearing held on December 28, 1972, and on January 2 and 3, 1973, denied the motion for a preliminary injunction and dissolved the temporary restraining order. Based upon the order advancing and consolidating the trial on the merits with the hearing on the preliminary injunction previously entered by the court, it also denied the permanent injunction. We quote the entire judgment entered by the court on February 8, 1973, as follows:

“Upon the evidence adduced at trial on December 28, 1972, and January 2 and 3, 1973, and the Court having made an oral decision on January 3, 1973, and the evidence having shown and the Court having decided that Plaintiffs are entitled to the relief hereinafter set forth
“IT IS ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that Road Right of Way No. 23 over Lots 542, 585 and 800, comprising Haiku Plantations Drive, shown on Land Court Maps Nos. 41, 48 and 58, respectively, and noted on Transfer Certificates of Title Nos. 101,996, 105,167 and 111,098, re *99 spectively, is solely for purposes of ingress and egress and does not include any right or privilege to park vehicles, and it is further
“ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that Defendant Samuel Lono, Jr., has a right of way over Haiku Plantations Drive solely for purposes of ingress and egress, and the use thereof may include the full traveled portion of said roadway which is twenty (20) feet wide, but Defendant Samuel Lono, Jr., and all persons claiming such use by, through or under him, do not have any correlative right or privilege to park along Haiku Plantations Drive or any other roadway in Haiku Plantations subdivision, and it is further
“ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that the temporary restraining order is dissolved, the motion for a preliminary injunction is denied and the prayer for a permanent injunction is denied; provided, however, that the dissolution of the temporary restraining order and the denial of the motion and prayer for preliminary and permanent injunction is without prejudice to the granting of any such relief upon any new application showing the necessity and appropriateness therefor.”

The defendant, Samuel Lono, Jr., having resisted the relief sought by plaintiffs in their complaint, does not complain of the action of the trial judge in denying to them any injunctive relief. He argues and urges that the court below erred in entering a judgment which included the first two paragraphs quoted above, which declared and limited the right granted under Road Right of Way No. 23, over Lots 542, 585 and 800, comprising Haiku Plantations Drive, shown on Land Court Maps Nos. 41, 48 and 58, and noted on Transfer Certificates of Title Nos. 101,996, 105,167 and 111,098, to a right of way solely for the purposes of ingress and egress, without any right or a privilege to park vehicles, and which further declared that defendant Samuel Lono, Jr., and those claiming under him, have a right of way over Haiku Plantations Drive over the entire traveled portion of such roadway, 20 feet wide, only for ingress and egress, without any correlative right or privilege to park vehicles.

This contention of defendant Samuel Lono, Jr., is based

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Bluebook (online)
529 P.2d 1, 56 Haw. 96, 1974 Haw. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haiku-plantations-association-v-lono-haw-1974.