Hurley v. Knudsen

30 Haw. 887, 1929 Haw. LEXIS 54
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1929
DocketNo. 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 Haw. 887 (Hurley v. Knudsen) 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
Hurley v. Knudsen, 30 Haw. 887, 1929 Haw. LEXIS 54 (haw 1929).

Opinion

This is a proceeding in quo warranto to require the respondent to show by what authority he claims and occupies the office of supervisor of the County of Kauai for the district of Waimea. The petitioners, among whom are two unsuccessful candidates for the position now held by respondent, aver among other things that the respondent was not a resident of Waimea either on the 8th day of October, 1927, when he was nominated as a Republican candidate for said position at the primary election then and there held, or on the 15th day of November, 1927, at the general election of said district when he was elected to said office, and that "he has not since said days been and is not now a resident of said district, but is and has for the past seven years been a resident of the district of Koloa, County of Kauai, where he maintains a permanent home for himself and family, conducts his business and pays his poll, road, school, income and property taxes."

The writ was duly issued as prayed and respondent filed his answer and return to the petition and writ, to which answer and return replication was made by the petitioners. At the hearing petitioners in open court admitted the qualifications of the respondent in every respect except that of residence. After the hearing the trial judge filed his written decision in which is set forth among other things the following statement: "From the evidence adduced I find the following facts: (1) Eric A. *Page 889 Knudsen was not a bona fide resident of the district of Waimea either on the 8th day of October, 1927, or on the 15th day of November, 1927; (2) Eric A. Knudsen has not since said 8th day of October, 1927, or the 15th day of November, 1927, been and is not now a bona fide resident of said district of Waimea, but on the contrary has" (sic) "and is actually residing in the district of Koloa, County of Kauai; (3) Said Eric A. Knudsen usurps and intrudes into, and is unlawfully holding and exercising, the office of supervisor of the County of Kauai from the district of Waimea."

Judgment was thereupon entered that the respondent "Eric A. Knudsen is not qualified to fill the said office of which he performs the duties; that said Eric A. Knudsen be and he hereby is ousted from said office and forbidden to any longer perform its duties; that the office of supervisor of the County of Kauai for and from the Waimea district is vacant; and the County of Kauai is directed to fill the vacancy in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 1640 of the Revised Laws of Hawaii of 1925 by action of its remaining supervisors; and that the petitioners recover of the respondent their costs."

The case is now before us upon respondent's appeal from the foregoing judgment. Evidence was admitted at the hearing which may be briefly summarized as follows: respondent, a son of the late Valdemar Knudsen and Annie S. Knudsen, was born July 29, 1872, at Waimea, two miles west of Kekaha in the district of Waimea, Island of Kauai. Waiawa was the home of respondent's parents. His father lived there until the latter's death in 1898 and his mother continued to live there until January or February, 1922. During his minority respondent lived with his parents at Waiawa except for absences from Hawaii spent at school and college and in traveling, and he continued to live there *Page 890 until July, 1906. In the fall of 1900, upon respondent's return to Hawaii, he registered and voted at Kekaha in said district of Waimea. Thereafter respondent was elected to the territorial house of representatives, 1903 session, from the Island of Kauai and became vice-speaker of that body. He was returned to the house of representatives for the 1905 session and then became its speaker. In 1906 he was elected to the territorial senate from Kauai for a four-year term, at the expiration of which he was reelected to the same office and was president of the senate at its 1911 and 1913 sessions. During all of those years respondent was registered and voted in the same precinct in the Waimea district. In 1905 respondent was married and the following year built a home for himself and wife at Hoea in the Waimea district not far from Waiawa upon government land formerly leased to his father, which respondent continued to occupy and improve until 1923. Three of his four children were born there. In 1921 the lease to Hoea expired. Respondent had attempted to obtain a renewal of the same and later to obtain the place in exchange for other land and had failed in both instances. He then, under date of November 8, 1921, filed an application for preference right to purchase Hoea and on May 13, 1924, his claim was officially denied.

In 1923 respondent moved from Hoea to Halemanu, a country home of his upon government property at an elevation of about 2500 feet, about fourteen miles up the Waimea valley from the government road, in the Waimea district. Halemanu was occupied under a camping permit granted to the respondent for a period of ten years from and after June 1, 1919. The house was large, commodious and well furnished and was occupied by respondent and his family and frequently by their guests on week-ends and during school vacations. For *Page 891 convenience, however, respondent in the year 1919 and thereafter spent much of his time at Koloa where he and his brother Augustus Knudsen, in partnership, had extensive business interests which were managed by the respondent. For this purpose the respondent and his family occupied a house owned by the two partners in Koloa Gap in the district of Koloa where he transacted much of the partnership business and from which he used to take his children to school at Lihue. Part of his time and theirs was spent with his mother (then over eighty years of age) at the latter's Koloa beach home. During much of this time respondent used to visit the Waimea district on business two or three times a week, sleeping on frequent occasions at Hoea or Halemanu. Respondent's business interests in the Waimea district included a cattle ranch, thirty acres of cane land at Hanapepe, partly owned by himself, other lands under lease to the Waimea Sugar Company, a kuleana near Mana, 1200 bee hives from which he used to ship thirty or forty tons of honey and a quantity of wax every year, a large warehouse in Waimea and trucks and paraphernalia used in connection with the honey business. During this time respondent was a member, and part of the time president, of the Kekaha Precinct Club, trustee of the Waimea Foreign Church and president of the Waimea Hall Association. On a number of occasions respondent represented Kekaha as a delegate to conventions in Honolulu.

In June 1923 respondent transferred his registration as a voter from the Waimea district to that of Koloa, but on September 5 of that year, after consulting with his attorney, he re-transferred his registration to Kekaha and later filed his nomination papers for the position of supervisor from the district of Waimea and was nominated at the primary and on November 13, 1923, was *Page 892 elected at the general election, taking office January 2, 1924, as such supervisor, to which office he was reelected in 1925 and 1927. During all this time respondent was a registered voter in the Waimea district, maintaining a home as above set forth at Halemanu and having a place of business at Koloa where he spent much of his time.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Haw. 887, 1929 Haw. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurley-v-knudsen-haw-1929.