Henriques v. Vinhaca

20 Haw. 702
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 20 Haw. 702 (Henriques v. Vinhaca) 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
Henriques v. Vinhaca, 20 Haw. 702 (haw 1911).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

DE BOLT, J.

The plaintiff filed his declaration in the circuit court of the third circuit seeking to recover from the defendant the sum oí one thousand dollars unliquidated damages for the breach of an alleged contract of which the following is a copy: “I received from J. G. Henifiques the amount of $10.00 in account of the $550.00, for the balance of the least of 7-% acres of land that my husband leasted from J. G. Henifiques. Also all the improvements that, is on the land. This is with the condition if the bargain that J. G. Henifiques made with Nomura be settle. That is if Nomura take back his place again. Then the bargain that I made with J. G. Henifiques be good. But if Nomura won’t take back liis place then I Mrs. Vinhaca have to return to J. G. Henifiques the $10.00. This option is good only for one month. Mrs. Christiana Vinhaca, her X mark.”

To the plaintiff’s declaration the defendant, interposed a demurrer which the court sustained. • The garnishee did not appear. The plaintiff brings the case here on exceptions.

The allegations of the declaration, so far as they are essential to a correct understanding of the questions involved, are, in substance, as follows: That in or about the year 1896 the plaintiff executed to one John Vinhaca, the husband of the defendant, since deceased, the lease in question, which is still in full force and effect; that in or about the year 1909, John Vinhaca died, and that ever since his death the defendant has [704]*704assumed to own and deal with, and has in fact dealt with the lease and the land thereby demised, in all respects as though she was the owner of the lease, and the lessee in succession to her husband; that on October 24, 1910, the defendant signed and delivered the written instrument above set out to the plaintiff; that prior to the execution of the instrument mentioned, the plaintiff had entered into a contract with one Nomura, whereby the plaintiff might purchase and receive from Nomura an assignment of a certain lease held by him for certain land; that because of the advantages offered to the plaintiff in and by the instrument of October 24, 1910, the plaintiff, after the execution of the same, and prior to November 22, 1910, withdrew from and abandoned his contract with Nomura, and that by reason of so having abandoned the Nomura contract it became and was obligatory upon the defendant within one month from and after the execution of tire instrument of October 24, 1910, and upon tender to her by the plaintiff of the sum of $540, and upon request from the plaintiff, to execute and deliver to the plaintiff an assignment of the lease in question; that on November 22, 1910, the plaintiff tendered to the defendant the sum of $540 and demanded- that she execute and deliver to him the assignment of the lease mentioned, but that she declined said tender and refused to accept the same or any part thereof and refused and has ever since refused and still refuses to execute such assignment to the damage of the plaintiff in the sum of $1000.

The declaration further alleges that the Bank of Hawaii, Ltd., the garnishee, is the attorney, factor or agent of the defendant and has in its hands certain of the goods, moneys and property of the defendant so concealed that the same cannot be levied upon by writ of attachment or execution against the defendant and that the garnishee is indebted to* the defendant in a sum not certainly known to the plaintiff but believed by him to be the sum of $800.

The plaintiff prays judgment for the sum of $1000 and re[705]*705quests that there be inserted in the process to be issued the usual statutory direction to the officer serving the same to leave a true and attested copy thereof with the g’arnishee.

The grounds of demurrer are, that the alleged contract is unenforceable, (1) because the defendant was, within the knowledge of the plaintiff, without authority to make the same; (2) because of uncertainty and ambiguity; (3) because of the want of mutuality; (4) because of the want of consideration; (5) because of the failure of the plaintiff to perform all conditions precedent on his part; (6) because the property of the defendant in the hands of the garnishee is not subject to garnishment by the plaintiff in this action.

The decision of the court below, upon its face, purports to have sustained the demurrer on the sixth ground therein mentioned, namely, that the property of the defendant in the hands of the garnishee was not subject to garnishment by the plaintiff in this action, assigning as a reason for the ruling the fact that the amount sought to be recovered by the plaintiff was unliquidated., The plaintiff was granted leave to amend his declaration by striking therefrom all matter pertaining to the garnishment, but he declined to so amend, whereupon the court rendered its decision dismissing the entire cause of action and directed judgment to be entered for the defendant for costs, to which decision the plaintiff duly excepted.

The defendant now, in this court, urges other grounds of the demurrer, as well as the one upon which the court below apparently based its decision. The plaintiff opposes this position of the defendant and contends that the court below, by strong implication, if not expressly, overruled the first five grounds of demurrer, and that the defendant has no right to a review of the court’s decision upon any of those grounds, they not being before us, as he claims, on the exceptions taken. The defendant contends, however, that under the authority of Colburn v. Holt, 19 Haw. 65, the plaintiff’s exceptions must be overruled if any of the grounds of' the demurrer are good, [706]*706whether considered by the court, below or not. The rule laid down in the case cited, the correctness of which we do not question, has no application in this case so far as regards the sixth ground of demurrer, which ground, in the view we take of the case, in no way involves the merits of the declaration as to the plaintiff’s claim against the defendant. If the declaration states a “good, cause of action against the defendant, and for the purpose of considering the sixth ground of demurrer it must be assumed that it does so state a good.cause of action, then it follows, necessarily, that the only question raised by the sixth ground of demurrer was the sufficiency of the declaration as to the garnishment. If this ground of demurrer was well taken, and we think it was, it required and could only justify the court in sustaining the demurrer as to the garnishment. The court had no right or power upon this phase of the case to rule upon the sufficiency of the declaration as regards the plaintiff’s claim against the defendant. It is clear that a plaintiff may state a good cause of action against a defendant and fail to show facts sufficient to hold a garnishee, in which event the defendant would be put upon his defense and the garnishee would be discharged.

We cannot agree with the contention of the defendant, that-she has the right to have the action dismissed as. to her also, because the garnishment was improperly made a part of the plaintiff’s action.' This view does not accord with reason. The authorities are against it. Drake on Attachment, §§411, 459a; 20 Cyc. 1101.

Whether the question as to the sufficiency of the garnishment may be raised by demurrer or should have been raised by a motion to discharge the garnishee, we need not say in this case, as counsel have not raised that question.

With regard to the remedy of garnishment, section 2114, R.

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20 Haw. 702, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henriques-v-vinhaca-haw-1911.