In re Macfarlane

11 Haw. 166, 1897 Haw. LEXIS 5
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 11 Haw. 166 (In re Macfarlane) 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
In re Macfarlane, 11 Haw. 166, 1897 Haw. LEXIS 5 (haw 1897).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

JUDD, C.J.

We subjoin'the decision of tbe Circuit Judge appealed from and adopt its statement of tbe pleadings and of the facts found from the evidence.

“This is a petition that a writ of mandamus be issued to J. B. Castle, Collector-General of Customs, commanding him to register the Steamship ‘China’ in his office as a Hawaiian vessel and to issue to petitioner a certificate of such -registry, tbe allegations of tbe petition being in brief: that petitioner is a Hawaiian citizen and is the sole owner of the said steamship; that on the 2d day of July last said steamship, having then a British register, was conveyed by her owner, the China S. S. Co. of London, England, to petitioner by a bill of sale of that date; that there[167]*167upon the Hawaiian Consul in London granted to petitioner, upon application, a provisional register of said steamship as a Hawaiian vessel, and that petitioner is now the holder of said provisional register; that on the 5th day of August current petitioner surrendered to the British Consul-General in San Francisco the former British register of said steamship and caused, her to be put .under the Hawaiian flag; that on the 11th inst. petitioner made application to respondent for the registry of' said steamship as a Hawaiian vessel, in writing and under oath and otherwise in form as required by statute; that the respondent wholly neglects and refuses to grant said application, assigning no reason for such refusal, and that the only reasons assigned by the Minister of Foreign Affairs and the Minister of Finance for refusing to allow said application to be granted, are that the-Minister of Foreign Affairs has informed the United States-Minister that, pending the present Treaty of Annexation, no Hawaiian registers shall be granted to any foreign built vessels and that the petitioner is not the bona fide owner and is not wholly the owner of said steamship.

“Upon the filing of the petition, an alternative writ was issued,, commanding the respondent to issue to the petitioner said Hawaiian register of said steamship, or to show cause to the contrary within three days after service of the writ.

“In his return to the writ, respondent avers that he is not satisfied that no legal impediment exists to granting the register applied for, that he is informed and believes that petitioner is not tbe sole owner of said steamship, stating the reasons for such belief on his part, and that he is informed and believes that petitioner is not a Hawaiian citizen.

“At the conclusion of the trial herein, at which evidence was-introduced on behalf of the petitioner, but none for the respondent, the latter moved to quash the alternative writ and to dismiss the petition. In support of this motion, it is contended (T) that it appears from the evidence that the petitioner is not a Hawaiian citizen, (2) that it likewise appears that petitioner is not the sole-owner of the steamship, and (S') that the respondent is vested bv law with discretionary power to pass upon the question of whether or not any legal impediment exists to the registry of the vessel and that consequentlv this court cannot, by mandamus or otherwise, interfere with the respondent’s exercise of that power.

“Upon the evidence I find, as facts, that the Steamship-‘China’ was built in Glasgow, Scotland, in 1889, at a cost of [168]*168$740,000, which was borne by the Pacific Mail S. S. Co. of New York. When ready for sea, the title to her was placed in the name of one Donald McGregor, and upon the latter’s death, it was transferred by his executors to the China Steamship Co., Ltd., an English corporation, for a nominal consideration. On the 2d of July ult., the said steamship having then a certificate of British Registry, the China Steamship Co. executed a bill of sale whereby it transferred to the petitioner herein sixty-four shares being the entirety of and in the ‘China,’ the consideration named in said bill of sale being the sum of Five Shillings. The China Steamship Co., possessing no other property, .thereupon disincorporated. On the same day the petitioner executed and delivered to the Pacific Mail S. S. Co. a mortgage of the ‘China’ and all of her appurtenances and freights and earnings, for the alleged consideration of $200,000. This was the value placed upon the steamer by Lloyd’s, surveyor in San Francisco. As a matter of fact, no money was paid to or by the petitioner or the Pacific Mail S. S. Co., in this transaction. Petitioner has also executed, — but whether on that same day or subsequently does not appear upon the evidence, — a power of attorney authorizing the Pacific Mail S. S. Co. to carry on the business of the steamship,- and C. P. Huntington, President of said company and in its behalf, has in turn executed and delivered to petitioner an instrument in writing whereby said company agrees to save petitioner harmless from all claims and demands whatsoever in respect of said steamship.

“George W. Macfarlane, the petitioner was bom in these islands in the year 1847, of British parents. His birth was recorded by his parents at the British Consulate in Honolulu in a registry containing the names of persons born here of British parents. Since the entry of his name in said registry, petitioner has not in any way claimed or renounced allegiance either to Great Britain or to Hawaii, nor has he forfeited his rights as a Hawaiian citizen. He has not at any time received any letters of denizenship or citizenship, nor taken any oath of allegiance to any government of this country.

“On the 2d July, ult., the Vice-Consul for the-Hawaiian Islands in London granted to the petitioner, upon the latter’s application therefor, a provisional certificate of registry of the ‘China’ as a Hawaiian vessel to enable the said vessel to proceed to Honolulu for the purpose of obtaining permanent registry, said provisional certificate to take effect upon the surrender to the British Consulate at San Francisco of the ship’s certificate [169]*169of British registry. In accordance with this condition, the latter certificate was duly surrendered on August 5th last, and on or about that date the steamer was placed under the Hawaiian flag, and shortly thereafter proceeded to Honolulu. Upon arrival at this port, petitioner made application to the respondent for permanent registry, making oath, as required by law, that he was a Hawaiian citizen and the sole owner of the steamer, exhibiting the bill of sale and the mortgage, and complying in other respects with the provisions of the law on the subject. The Collector-General caused the vessel to be measured and her tonnage correctly ascertained and, on August 11th last, notified the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the application. On the 13th of August, said Minister wrote, in reply: ‘I do not propose to make inquiry of the British Consul at this port in regard to any possible legal impediment, for the reason that it is the policy of this Government to grant no further registers to foreign built vessels excepting where such vessel may have formerly been under the American flag;’ and on the same day respondent refused petitioner’s application, stating as his reason for such refusal, that he was ‘not satisfied, as required by law, that no legal impediment exists against the granting of such register.’ These proceedings were then instituted.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Haw. 166, 1897 Haw. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-macfarlane-haw-1897.