Hana Ranch, Inc. v. Kanakaole

623 P.2d 885, 1 Haw. App. 573
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 23, 1981
DocketNO. 6648
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 623 P.2d 885 (Hana Ranch, Inc. v. Kanakaole) 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
Hana Ranch, Inc. v. Kanakaole, 623 P.2d 885, 1 Haw. App. 573 (hawapp 1981).

Opinion

*574 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

PADGETT, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment below quieting title to certain land situate at Kawela, Hana, Maui. The land in question is basically the property granted by King Kamehameha IV under Grant 2930 to twenty grantees. The original Grant consisted of approximately 181.93 acres. On this appeal, the disputes involve two undivided l/20th interests in the property, specifically, the l/20th deriving from the original Grantee Kapule and the l/20th deriving from the original Grantee Kaholokahiki. As to the l/20th interest deriving from Kapule, the dispute is between the Appellants Hokoana on the one hand and the Appellees Sentinella on the other. As to the l/20th deriving from Kaholokahiki, the dispute is between the Appellant Flores on the one hand and the Appellee Hana Ranch, Inc. on the other. The Notice of Appeal was also taken in the name of Cecilia Makekau whose claim involved a different l/20th interest but no further steps have been taken on that appeal. Counsel for the appellants, on oral argument, stated that he did not represent that appellant. Accordingly, pursuant to Rule 73(a) of the Hawaii Rules of Civil Procedure (HRCP), the appeal of Cecilia Makekau is dismissed.

The complaint below was one for partition under Chapter 668, Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS), and to quiet title under Chapter 669, HRS. The judgment below, with respect to the two interests in question, was in favor of the Sentinellas and Hana Ranch, Ltd., respectively, on the quiet title issue. Appropriate recitals were contained in the judgment so as to *575 make it final for purposes of appeal under the provisions of Rule 54(b), HRCP. Since different facts and legal issues are involved in the case of each of the two shares in dispute, we will deal with them separately.

HOKOANA-SENTINELLA

At the threshold, we are met with the contention on the part of the Appellees Sentinella that the Hokoana appeal should be dismissed for lack of standing. This is based upon the fact that the person intervening and appearing in the court below as a party was John Hokoana, Jr. (although John Hokoana, Sr. apparently was physically present in the courtroom). His proof showed that his father was still living and that the claim was one of heirship coming through John Hokoana, Sr. In other words, John Hokoana, Jr. had no present interest in the property even under his claim. The appeal was filed in the name of both John Hokoana, Sr. and John Hokoana, Jr. While the Hokoanas are represented by counsel at the appellate level, John Hokoana, Jr. was pro se at the trial level and John Hokoana, Sr. made no appearance as a party in the record at all.

It is apparent from the testimony of Bernice Hokoana, the wife of John Hokoana, Jr., that the Hokoanas, in asserting a claim to the property in question, are pursuing some sort of an ohana concept either as heirs of C. K. Kapule, who was alive in the late 19th century or as descendents of one Kapule who is alleged to have died in 1818 and to have been a kahuna giving prayers at the court of Kamehameha I. The cultural concepts upon which modern law and society, with respect to matters such as heirship, descent and the ownership of real property, are based, often diverge widely from those of early Hawaiian society, which are still held by some persons of Hawaiian descent today. These differences can cause both failures to understand and misunderstandings. This is evident, for example, in the dialogue between the attorneys in this case and the Hokoanas’ witness Bernice Hokoana. Cases of this nature, i.e. cases to quiet title to real property, are *576 particularly likely to involve such failures to understand and misunderstandings. It behooves the court in the pursuit of justice on behalf of all the parties not to be over nice in the application of modem, technical, legal concepts in determining standing in such cases. Accordingly, we rule that the Appellants Hokoanas had sufficient standing to present their appeal to this court.

Finding of Fact No. 18 below read:

Defendant John H. Hokoana, Jr. has not produced any credible evidence linking his family genealogy to the original Patentee Kapule or the property in question or rebutting the Sentinellas’ prima facie showing of adverse possession.

We affirm that Finding as not being clearly erroneous.

The evidence of the Hokoanas’ witness, Bernice Hokoana, was to the effect that her husband and her father-in-law were heirs of one C. K. Kapule through his brother Aene and were descendents of one Kapule a “minister” at the court of Kamehameha the Great. Exhibit H-l in evidence is the record of certain litigation between Aene and his brother C. K. Kapule with respect to certain lands in Waiehu, Maui, which C. K. Kapule and Aene along with another deceased brother had inherited from their father Kula. Kula apparently acquired the land in the Mahele as Land Commission Award 3432, Royal Patent 5171. This evidence does not link C. K. Kapule to the Kapule who was an original grantee to the land in question.

We note from the reports of the Supreme Court of the State of Hawaii that at approximately the same time, there was a Kapule in Waiehu, Maui who left five living children and who was involved in the purchase of certain other lands. Kapule v. Mokuhiwa, 12 Haw. 15(1899). Whether this Kapule and C. K. Kapule were the same person or whether this Kapule was the same person as the original grantee of the lands in question, the evidence does not reveal. If he was the same person, of course, his children rather than his brother’s children would be his heirs.

Moreover, the Indices of Land Commission Awards reveal that there was a Kapule who was awarded land at *577 Paauhau 3 in Hana, Maui in the Mahele by Land Commission Award 5178. His connection with C. K. Kapule, with the other Kapule appearing of historic record and with the grantee of the premises in question is unknown.

Bernice Hokoana’s testimony at trial did not establish that the Kapule who was an original grantee of the premises in question was one of the Kapules in the Hokoana family tree. Accordingly, that part of the finding of the court below is correct and is affirmed.

As to the finding that the Sentinellas had title by adverse possession, the record is clear that Hana Ranch, Ltd. and its predecessors since 1899 have been in possession of the land in question under a succession of leases from the present Sentinellas and their forebearers. It is also clear that the Sentinellas have been claiming title to the Kapule share of the land during all of that period based on a recorded deed of February 4, 1899 from Kamai Auki whose parents were, according to the deed, the heirs of Kapuleole. The deed recitals are competent evidence of descent. Apo v. Dillingham, Investment Corporation, 57 Haw. 64, 549 P.2d 740 (1976). The record, however, does not set forth the relationship of Kapuleole to the grantee Kapule. The court below found record title in the Sentinellas.

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623 P.2d 885, 1 Haw. App. 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hana-ranch-inc-v-kanakaole-hawapp-1981.