Hawaii Housing Authority v. Schnack

39 Haw. 543
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1952
DocketNO. 2906.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 39 Haw. 543 (Hawaii Housing Authority v. Schnack) 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
Hawaii Housing Authority v. Schnack, 39 Haw. 543 (haw 1952).

Opinion

*546 OPINION OP THE COURT BY

LE BARON, J.

This is an interlocutory appeal (by way of a bill of exceptions) from a decision of the trial judge in eminent-domain proceedings resolving the issue of public use in the affirmative. That issue was raised in the court below by an answer of one of the respondents who owns a parcel of the area of land sought to be condemned. The answer denied that “clearance, replanning and reconstruction of this area \i. e.: one in which ‘unsanitary and unsafe housing conditions exist’] and the provision [i.e., ‘providing’] of safe and sanitary dwelling accommodations for persons of low income are public uses and purposes for which *547 public money may be spent and private property acquired,” as alleged in the petition in the language of a legislative finding and declaration. (See R. L. H. 1945, § 3501.)

It is pertinent at this juncture to note that such answer consists of a mere categorical denial that those particular uses and purposes are public in character and constitutes nothing more than an assertion that they are not public uses and purposes, without alleging facts to support either the denial or assertion. Nor does the answer dispute the factual composition of such uses and purposes as ones of slum clearance and of improvement of housing conditions for persons of low income, with respect to an overcrowded and congested area where unsanitary and unsafe living conditions exist, but only questions their public character as they are described by the petition in the language of the legislature declaring them to be public uses and purposes.

The issue of public use, so raised and framed, thus concerns only the character of certain well-defined uses and purposes as to whether it be public or private. That issue was “set for immediate trial, without a jury and without regard to position on the calendar,” as provided by statute. (R. L. H. 1951, Act 12 amending R. L. H. 1945, c. 8, § 319, par. 7.) At the outset of trial on such issue as the sole issue, the trial judge took judicial notice of the legislative finding and declaration that the same uses and purposes as involved in the issue are public uses and purposes. (R. L. H. 1945, § 3501.) He further took judicial notice of the public character of the petitioner as a public body and agency of government created and organized solely to promote the general welfare, and without any motive or possibility of private gain in the acquisition of the area and in the employment of those uses and purposes as indicated by the provisions of section 3531 of the Revised Laws of Hawaii 1945. He then ruled in *548 effect that the facts so judicially noticed gave rise to presumptions in favor of the public character of the particular uses and purposes involved in the issue and sufficed as prima facie proof of public character until contradicted and overcome. Accordingly, he relieved the petitioner of the burden of going forward with evidence, on the affirmative of the issue and gave the respondent full opportunity to adduce evidence on the negative. But the respondent, although requested by the trial judge to adduce evidence, refused to do so. Thereupon the trial judge rendered his oral decision, and subsequently his written decision, based on facts judicially noticed.

The specification of alleged errors does not challenge the correctness either of the decision of the trial judge or of the declaration of the legislature -that the particular uses and purposes as involved in the issue are public uses and purposes. Nor does it question the existence or strength of the presumptions in favor of the public character of those uses as found to arise by the trial judge. But it does challenge the correctness of the ruling in shifting from the petitioner to the respondent the burden of going forward with evidence. That challenge presents the sole question meriting consideration on interlocutory appeal. It is whether the facts judicially noticed by the trial judge are sufficient as a matter of law to constitute a prima facie case of public character for the uses and purposes involved and to support a judicial determination in the affirmative of the issue of public use where, as here at the trial on that issue, those facts were not disputed and the presumption arising from them not contradicted or overcome.

The facts, judicially noticed, are briefly that the legislature has found and declared the same uses and purposes as those involved in the issue to be public uses and purposes for which the condemnation of private property is author *549 ized, and that the character of the petitioner is public and its employment of those same uses and purposes so limited by statute that private profit accruing to anyone is precluded. The reasonable tendency of these facts to prove the public character rather than a private one for those uses and purposes is indicated by the strong presumptions arising from such facts in favor of such public character. That tendency is aided by common knowledge that slum clearance and improvement of overcro.wded and congested living conditions, so as to eliminate unsanitary and unsafe housing accommodations and in their place to substitute sanitary and safe dwellings, promotes the public health, safety and welfare. Such facts, in the face of a bare denial of public character, affect the course of further inquiry as a matter of law.

The general rule is that “Primarily, the right to declare what shall be deemed a public use is vested in the legislature ; and consequently, when the public nature of a use for which a taking has been authorized by law is disputed, the question as it presents itself to the courts is whether the legislature might reasonably have considered the use public, not whether the use is public.” (18 Am. Jur. 675, § 46.) This rule rests on the presumption that a use is public if the legislature has declared it to be such. The strength of that presumption is gauged by the high regard which the courts have for a declaration of public use by the legislature as a decision of a co-ordinate department of the government on a matter within its knowledge and duty. Illustrative of such regard, all the authorities agree that legislative findings and declarations of public use are entitled to great weight. Moreover, a legislative finding and declaration that the particular uses, as here involved, are public is “entitled not only to respect but to a prima facie acceptance of its correctness.” (Dornan v. Phila. Housing Authority et al., 331 Pa. 209, 200 Atl. *550 834, 840.) Indeed, “where [as here] the Legislature declares a particular use to be a public use the presumption is in favor of this declaration, and will be binding upon the courts unless such use is clearly and palpably of a private character." (West et al. v. Whitehead et al., 238 S. W. 976, 978 [Tex. Civ. App. 1922].) But that does not mean that either the decision of the legislature or the presumption is conclusive, for the issue of public use is a judicial question and one of law to be decided on the facts and circumstances of each particular case.

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Bluebook (online)
39 Haw. 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawaii-housing-authority-v-schnack-haw-1952.