Hana Ranch, Inc. v. Kumakahi

720 P.2d 1023, 6 Haw. App. 341, 1986 Haw. App. LEXIS 61
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1986
DocketNO. 10535
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 720 P.2d 1023 (Hana Ranch, Inc. v. Kumakahi) 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. Kumakahi, 720 P.2d 1023, 6 Haw. App. 341, 1986 Haw. App. LEXIS 61 (hawapp 1986).

Opinion

[343]*343OPINION OF THE COURT BY

HEEN, J.

In this quiet title/partition action, Plaintiff-Appellant Hana Ranch, Inc. (Hana Ranch) appeals from the judgment below in favor of Defendants-Appellees Wayne Hinano Brumaghim (Wayne), Margaret K. I. B. Bartholomew (Bartholomew), Everett M. Brumaghim (Everett), Leslie Medeiros (Medeiros), George Ezaki, Betty S. Ezaki, James F. Fleming, Elizabeth Fleming, Virginia S. Youlin, and Hattie DeRego (DeRego) (Defendants-Appellees will be collectively referred to in this opinion as Defendants). Defendant-Appellant1 Murray English (English) appeals from the same judgment. We dismiss Hana Ranch’s appeal for lack of appellate standing and affirm the judgment against English’s attack.

FACTS

The basic dispute here is over title to a fractional share of a one-tenth undivided interest (Nakuina interest) in land located in Hamoa, Hana, Maui, and originally granted to Keohokalole under Mahele Award 3, Royal Patents 4473 and 6923.2 Keohokalole conveyed all the land in the grant to Charles R. Bishop, trustee, who subsequently conveyed one-tenth undivided interests in the whole to ten individuals, one of whom was Nakuina. The Nakuina interest was conveyed to Kalawa by Kauhane, who claimed to be Nakuina’s father and heir. All the parties to both appeals in this case claim title to the Nakuina interest through Kalawa: Hana Ranch through a deed from Kalawa to its predecessor in [344]*344title dated October 7, 1886, and Defendants and English as heirs of Kalawa.3

On December 1, 1976, Hana Ranch filed its complaint in this case to quiet title and partition the Hamoa land. Malcolm Keawe Brumaghim (Malcolm), Myron Kamohoalii Brumaghim (Myron) and Wayne4 were allowed to intervene and answer the complaint. Bartholomew answered the complaint, although she was not named as a defendant, and the record does not reveal a motion by her to intervene. English also was allowed to intervene.

In its complaint, Hana Ranch alleged that it was the owner of an undivided 175321 /252000ths interest (approximately 69.5718%) in the property under a March 2, 1975 decree of the land court in Hana Ranch’s Land Court Application No. 1602 (hereafter land court decree), and that it owned an additional 16402/252000ths (approximately 6.51%)5 under deeds not registered with the land court. In the course of the proceedings in the instant case, Hana Ranch was able to settle its differences over paper title to the unregistered interests with all parties below except Defendants.

In accordance with the trial court’s pre-trial order, the first phase of the trial, dealing with the claimants’ proof of title began on June 6, 1983.6 On the first day of trial, Defendants orally stipulated that Hana [345]*345Ranch was the owner of the 75.5288% interest it claimed in the property.7 On November 17, 1983, all of the defendants remaining below filed a written stipulation agreeing to the allocation of undivided interests among all the parties, except English, of 97.5804386% of the 169.073 acres. The written stipulation allocated the following percentages of the 169.073 acres to Defendants

Wayne Hinano Brumaghim 1.2723600

Margaret K. I. B. Bartholomew 1.2723600

Everett M. Brumaghim 1.2723600

Leslie Medeiros 0.8142600

George Ezaki 1.1053300

Betty S. Ezaki

James F. Fleming 0.5526600

Elizabeth Fleming

Virginia S. Youlin 0.2394800

Hattie DeRego 1.1053300,

and allocated 75.5288% to Hana Ranch. Of the remaining 16.83712% interests, 14.4175% were allocated to the other defendants below and 2.4195614% were reserved to cover expenses and fees, and for allotment to those parties who might prove themselves to be entitled to more by adverse possession. The written stipulation also provided that the undivided interests of Wayne, Bartholomew, and Everett would be reduced proportionately if the trial court found that English was entitled to an interest in the land. In an order dated September 26, 1983,8 the trial court held that English was not entitled to a share in the Nakuina interest. On November 23, 1983, Hana Ranch filed a motion to vacate the written stipulation on the ground that it violated the trial court’s duty to protect unknown owners under Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) [346]*346§ 668-9 (1976),9 and it was not signed by Hana Ranch. The motion was denied on February 8, 1984. On January 12, 1984, however, Hana Ranch filed its own “Stipulation for Entry of Judgment” signed by its attorney only, in which it agreed to entry of a judgment awarding to all the parties except Defendants title to the undivided interests alloted them by Defendants’ stipulation.

In its attempt to defeat Defendants’ claims to the Nakuina interest, Hana Ranch filed a motion on August 11, 1983, for permission to present testimony to show that its paper title to the Nakuina interest was included in the 69.5718% undivided interest registered in Hana Ranch by the land court decree and, consequently, title to that interest could not be vested in Defendants. The motion was granted and the trial court heard testimony from John Hanchett, Hana Ranch president, regarding registration of the Nakuina interest. The transcript of Hanchett’s testimony is not in the record on appeal; however, the parties agree that the tenor of his testimony was that Hana Ranch had proven its title to the Nakuina interest before the land court and, under that court’s decree, Hana Ranch was the owner of the Nakuina interest.

On October 31, 1984, the trial court entered its Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law (First FOF and COL) holding in substance that Defendants did not have paper title to the Nakuina interest because Kalawa had conveyed the interest before his death. On November 13, 1984, Bartholomew and Medeiros filed a motion for reconsideration of [347]*347the First FOF and COL. The motion was joined in by DeRego, Wayne, Myron and Malcolm and was granted by the trial court on December 7, 1984. On December 31, 1984, new Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law (Second FOF and COL) were filed. They read as follows:

FINDINGS OF FACT
1. Over Defendant’s objections, John Hanchett, the President of Plaintiff, was permitted to testify as an expert witness that Kalawa’s undivided interest in the land had been registered in Plaintiff in Land Court Application 1602 on the theory that Plaintiff had proved good paper title to Kalawa’s undivided interest in Land Court Application 1602.
2. The record in Land Court Application 1602, however, shows:
a. In its Land Court application, Plaintiff alleged that it was the owner in fee simple of an undivided 175321 / 252000ths (69.5718%) interest in the land and that the heirs of Kalawa, among others, were “co-tenants of the remaining fractional undivided interest in said land. (See paragraph III, page 4 of the Application-Langa Exhibit 11. Emphasis added.)
b. The Examiner of the title in Land Court Application 1602 found that the “Applicant has not good paper title

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Bluebook (online)
720 P.2d 1023, 6 Haw. App. 341, 1986 Haw. App. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hana-ranch-inc-v-kumakahi-hawapp-1986.