HEW v. Aruda

462 P.2d 476, 51 Haw. 451, 1969 Haw. LEXIS 144
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1969
Docket4831
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 462 P.2d 476 (HEW v. Aruda) 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
HEW v. Aruda, 462 P.2d 476, 51 Haw. 451, 1969 Haw. LEXIS 144 (haw 1969).

Opinion

*452 OPINION OE THE COURT BY

LEVINSON, J.

This case began as an action to recover the price agreed to be paid for goods sold and delivered. The plaintiff Joseph New alleged that in 1957 he sold some cattle to the defendant Alfred Aruda and his brother, Enos Aruda, who operated the Aruda Brothers Ranch on the island of Maui. Only Alfred was named defendant in this action, Enos having died. At the jury-waived trial it was shown that the debt sued on had been discharged but a claim for rent of a one-sixth interest in the land was raised by the testimony of the plaintiff Hew. At the end of the trial the complaint was amended to conform to the evidence and the court held in favor of the plaintiff.

The plaintiff was the bookkeeper for the Aruda Brothers Ranch from 1957 to 1965. Sometime in 1957 he purchased from John Aruda, Jr. a one-sixth interest in the 500 acres of land upon which the ranch was operated. The land was left by John Aruda, Sr. to his six children equally as co-tenants. Two of the three brothers, Enos and Alfred, bought another one-sixth interest each in the *453 land from two of the three sisters. The two brothers entered into a general partnership agreement in 1957 and registered the partnership in 1959. Enos served as the managing partner of the ranch.

At the time the agreement to purchase the cattle was made in 1957, the plaintiff claimed that the partnership orally agreed to rent his one-sixth interest in the land. The annual rental was to equal the yearly interest which the plaintiff was paying on the money he had borrowed from the bank in order to finance his purchase of the one-sixth interest in the land. The oral agreement was alleged to have been made on October 1, 1957 and this suit was brought nine years, three months and 22 days later on January 23, 1967. The defendant denied the existence of any rental agreement. The court found that one payment of |810.00 was made on January 31, 1960 to the plaintiff who applied it on account of his claim for rent. The other payments made to the plaintiff were found by the court to have discharged the debt owed the plaintiff for the cattle.

The plaintiff testified that nine yearly statements showing the amounts due as rent Avere presented annually between 1957 and 1965 to Enos Aruda. The original statements were not offered in evidence by either party, nor Avere their existence and whereabouts at the time of trial established. Only the plaintiff’s carbon copies of the statements were offered by him and admitted into evidence as proof of the amounts due for the years 1957 to 1965. Further evidence of the debt was introduced in the form of an entry in the partnership’s books and on the final balance sheet' which the plaintiff kept in his possession until the partnership was dissolved. On cross-examination the plaintiff denied that he had prepared all of the statements at the same time in 1965. There was no rebuttal as Enos Aruda was then deceased.

*454 As part of his theory that no agreement to pay rent existed, the defendant attempted to introduce an oral statement of the deceased managing partner, Enos Aruda, to Judge Wendell Crockett, his attorney at that time. The oral statement was to the effect that there were no outstanding bills against the-partnership other than some miscellaneous bills then owing which were irrelevant to the present suit. The testimony of Judge Crockett was stricken as hearsay upon timely motion by the plaintiff. The defendant argued that the hearsay statement. was admissible as rebuttal because the declarant had since died, making the statement a necessary, if not crucial, part of the defendant’s case.

The trial court found for the plaintiff in the sum of $3,618.65 plus interest, costs and statutory attorney’s commissions. The court found that there had been an account stated for this amount; that the six-year statute of limitations had not run as the yearly accounts stated renewed the claims which at the times the statements were rendered were not yet barred by the statute; and that the statute of frauds was inapplicable as the rental agreement was on a year-to-year basis and therefore permissible under RLH 1955 § 240-4 (now HRS § 666-4).

• The defendant appeals from the judgment contending (1) that the testimony of Judge Crockett, is admissible to show the non-existence, of the rental agreement or the lack of assent to the.account rendered; (2) that if there was an agreement it is barred by the statute of frauds; (3) that the claim for rent prior to 1962 is barred by the statute of limitations; and (4) that. an account• stated may not be used to avoid the statute of frauds or the statute of limitations.

We reverse and remand for a new trial.

*455 I. THE STATEMENT OF THE DECEASED MANAGING PARTNER.

A threshold question raised at trial was whether the alleged rental agreément existed or was a fabrication of the plaintiff, who was the bookkeeper for the partnership. The plaintiff had full access to- the financial records of the partnership which were used at trial to prove the agreement and the accounts stated. He had every opportunity to adjust the records to suit his purposes. Therefore, Enos Aruda’s statement tó Judge Crockett that he had no recollection of any further outstanding bills was relevant to the issue of the existence of the debt and the account stated. If believed by the trier of fact, it could have been dispositive of the entire case. There was no way of proving the matter except by hearsay testimony since the original declarant was forever unavailable because of his death.

Although not adopted in Hawaii, the so-called “dead man’s statute” as it operated in other jurisdictions totally disqualified as a witness the survivor of a transaction with a decedent when the survivor’s testimony was offered against the decedent’s estate. See 2 Wigmore on Evidence § 578 (3d ed. 1940). This archaic rule of disqualification was based upon a belief that without it fraudulent claims against decedents’ estates might prevail. It was also justified as a means of putting the párties in equal positions at trial. “If death has closed thé lips of the oné party, the policy of the law is to close the lips of the other.” Louis v. Easton, 50 Ala. 470, 471 (1873) quoted in 2 Wigmore, supra at 696. This latter rationale ássiimed that statements of the decedent reported by third persons or by the survivor would be barred as violative of the hearsay rule.

• Even without a “dead man’s statute,” the hearsay rule excluding statements of a decedent reported by third *456 persons or the survivor lingers on, as demonstrated by the present case. A blanket rule of exclusion would keep what might be trustworthy and necessary evidence from being admitted. Obviously, exclusion of such evidence gives an undue advantage to the opposing party who is not disqualified by a dead man’s statute but is still able to invoke the hearsay rule.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
462 P.2d 476, 51 Haw. 451, 1969 Haw. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hew-v-aruda-haw-1969.