Horner v. Kumuliili

10 Haw. 174
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 10 Haw. 174 (Horner v. Kumuliili) 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
Horner v. Kumuliili, 10 Haw. 174 (haw 1895).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT BY

JUDD, C.J.

This is a suit brought before Henry Dickenson, Esq., Special Commissioner of Water Rights for the District of Lahaina, Maui, alleging a controversy between plaintiffs and defendants in respect to the amount of water, method and time of its use upon lands owned or held by both parties. The water in question flows from its sources at the head through a deep valley called Kauaula, situated in the rear of the town of Lahaina. The entire stream is taken up and used upon land in the valley on both sides of the stream for irrigating crops of kalo and on the flats below for sugar cane. Except on occasions of freshets none of the water is wasted by running into the sea. This region was formerly thickly populated, and the kuleanas granted to natives by the Land Commission within and outside of the valley are numerous. The plaintiffs own the extensive sugar plantation which occupies a large portion of the old town of Lahaina. They have acquired a large number of the ahupuaas which, though small in area are very numerous in the district of Lahaina. They have also acquired by purchase and by lease many kuleanas. A list of all the lands, ahupuaas, ilis and kuleanas under the water system of the Kauaula stream, as awarded by the Land Commission is given in the complaint, and a separate list of the lands owned or held by the plaintiffs is also given. It was evident to us [176]*176from an inspection of this territory that a large number of kalo patches formerly in cultivation and irrigated from the stream of Kauaula were disused and were grass grown, but it was impossible from simple inspection to ascertain how long ago their disnse had begun. Doubtless many of them are owned by plaintiffs and the water to which they were entitled is used upon their cane fields below. Erom the testimony we gather that a goodly number of other kalo patches had been abandoned by their native owners, some through disinclination to work them and others through inability to get a sufficient quantity of water to.cultivate them profitably. Doubtless the stream itself has diminished somewhat in quantity during the last half century from reasons that are conjectural. Mr. James Campbell says that the freshets or storm waters which every one could use at will to fill all their patches are much less frequent now than when he was a resident of Lahaina from 1851 to 1876. The plaintiffs claim and we find it established by the evidence, that the ancient method of dividing and distributing the water of Kauaula stream was by length of time and use. Generally the ahupuaas or ilis of land of a certain name situated on the level land below or “makai” has land, mainly kalo patches, in the valley above or “mauka” bearing the same name. One or two lands makai have no counterpart mauka, and at least one land mauka has no counterpart makai. These mauka kalo patches are similar to the “leles” or outlying portions of an ahupuaa, well known on other islands of this group as “leles” though as a rule they seem not to> be so called in Lahaina. In order to irrigate these lands small ditches or auwais were dug in very ancient times, through which the water was led from the main stream on to the lands. On the Kaa-napali or western side there are three main auwais, the first one nearest to the head of the valley is “Piilani,” then below it is “Waimana,” then “Puuhuliliole.” On the Olowalu or eastern side are, first, “Puupapai,” then “Muliwaikane.” There are numbers of other auwais of much lesser length which start from the stream, irrigate a few patches and then turn into the [177]*177stream. The ahupuaas and ilis in this part of Lahaina were divided into two principal divisions each containing eleven lands. In order to make the division even, a few lesser ahn-pnaas were bracketed in pairs and treated as one land, and have one “water day.” Division one, for example, had the water during the day, and Division two during the night, the day being from 5 o’clock a. m. to 5 o’clock p. m., and the night being the remainder of the twenty-four hours. While during eleven consecutive days the lands in Division one were having the water in rotation according to an arranged schedule during the day, the lands in Division two were having it at night. Then, when the last land .in each division had been watered, a shift was made, beginning the list again, and Division two received the water in the day time and Division one took it at night, and so on in endless rotation. We find this general resume of the water system of Kauaula to be well established by the positive evidence adduced by the plaintiffs, the admissions of many of defendants’ witnesses, and the testimony of some of the defendants themselves given in suits between themselves respecting water rights in this locality. The contention of defendants’ counsel is that while this method of division did apply to the main body of the ahupuaa or ili makai, it did not apply to the kalo lands mauka which they claim had the right to a continuous flow of water. It seems that at present all these ahupuaas and ilis of land makai and a large portion of the kuleanas within them as well as about one-fourth in area of the kuleanas containing kalo patches in the mauka part, are owned by or under the control of the plaintiffs. About all of the area makai is in cultivation in sugar cane, requiring water about once a week. (In this discussion we use thfe term “day” as meaning day or night as the case may be.) The ancient method of using the water was this: When the “day” of a certain ahupuaa, named “Hooka” for example, came around,, the kalo patches belonging to it and bearing the same name, being mauka, had the water first run into them by the lateral auwai until they were filled, then the water would be turned [178]*178back into the main stream and tlien taken out' on to the land below named “Kooka.” But this gave the water to the land below, planted in sngar cane, only once in eleven days, which was not often enongh for successful cultivation of cane, and therefore the owners of the plantation began deviating from the “eleven day” system, and would use as needed the water of the days to which other ahupuaas were entitled on the ahupuaa whose cane needed it. The plantation owning the ahupuaas and taking care that the kuleanas within them, not owned by them, were filled before the diversion was made were not disturbed by the kuleana holders, and the plaintiffs now claim that they have acquired the right to do this by twenty years continuous and adverse use, that is by prescription. Possibly the plantation was not disturbed by suits, since no one was injuriously affected by the change. But having thus used the water upon the lands they have acquired, indiscriminately, without reference to the old right in rotation of days and nights as fixed by the ancient system, the plaintiffs claim and urge that the system must be strictly ajDplied and enforced as to the kule-anas or kalo patches mauka. In considering this we remark that though the water of this water course was undoubtedly divided by some method or other in ancient times, the method of division of the water now sought to be enforced by the plaintiffs is hardly fifty years old, and being the result of the planning of several leading “konohikis” or head men under the chiefs or other persons (the land owners) assisted by the governor of the island, it was more or less elastic according to circumstances. The konohiki endeavored to secure equality of division and to avoid troublesome quarrels between tenants; and when the quantum of water in the stream was diminished through drought he saw to it that the quantity used by each was divided equally.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Haw. 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horner-v-kumuliili-haw-1895.