Jellings v. Pioneer Mill Co.

30 Haw. 184
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1927
Docket1761
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 30 Haw. 184 (Jellings v. Pioneer Mill Co.) 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
Jellings v. Pioneer Mill Co., 30 Haw. 184 (haw 1927).

Opinion

OPINION OB’ THE COURT BY

PERRY, C. J.

This is an action of ejectment for the recovery of a piece of land described in tbe declaration by metes and bounds, containing an area of 2.13 acres, situate at Kaanapali, Labaina, Maui, and being part of tbe ili of Moomubu, apaña 28 of L. O. A. No. 11216 to M. Kekauonobi. Tbe! case was tried without a jury and judgment rendered for the defendant.

By stipulation duly filed, tbe parties agreed that tbe following were facts: that tbe particular piece of land in dispute ;was a portion of apaña 28 of L. C. A. 11216 *185 to M. Kekauonohi; that Levi Haalelea was the heir p#- — " M. Kekauonohi; that the ili was conveyed by Charles C. Harris, as administrator of the estate of Levi Haalelea, to J. A. Nahaku by deed dated June 13, 1866, and recorded; that J. A. Nahaku sold the ili “to different people and it is agreed that there were twenty-nine (29) shares in all”; that on June 30, 1921, the trustees of the estate of H. P. Baldwin, deceased, conveyed to one Lahela Reimann all of their right, title and interest in “that part of apana 1, of L. C. A. 11216 to M. Kekauonohi (known as the Moomuku Hui Lands) lying mauka of the government road in Honokawai, between apaña 2 of L. C. A. 4249 to Kameeui and apana 1 of L. C. A. 3699 to Meeau, and containing an area of three (3) acres, more or less”; that “the true survey of the piece of land in dispute” is in accordance with the description set forth in the declaration, this description showing that the area of the land is 2.13 acres, “more or less”; that at the time of the conveyance from the trustees of the estate of Baldwin to Lahela Reimann the trustees “owned 23 % shares (1/29 undivided interest each) in said land of Moomuku, Kaanapali, Maui, and Pioneer Mill Company, Limited, y2 share of (1/29 undivided interest)”; that on June 22, 1922, Lahela Reimann and husband conveyed to Mary Kalua all of their right, title and interest in “that part of apana 1 of L. C. A. 11216 to M. Kekauonohi (known as the Moomuku Hui Land) lying mauka of the government road in Honokawai between apaña 2 of L. C. A. 4292 to Kameeui and apana 1 of L. C. A. 3699 to Meeau and containing an area of three (3) acres, more or less”; that Mary Kalua and husband, on October 27, 1922, executed and delivered to the defendant, the Pioneer Mill Company, Limited, a deed which was recorded in 1922, whereby they purported to convey all of their right, title and interest in and to a piece or parcel of land containing an *186 area of 2.13 acres, described in the same terms as is the piece desdribed in the declaration; that since the filing of this action the company has acquired five shares or 5/29 interest in the land in dispute; that the plaintiff claims the1 land in dispute by virtue of a deed from Mary Kalua and husband, dated January 9, 1926, and duly recorded, which purports to convey a piece of land containing ari area of 2.13 acres, described in the deed in the same terms as is the piece described in the declaration.

Undisputed evidence shows the following facts: Mary Kalua wafe born on January 11, 1905, married May 6, 1922, and became of age on January 11, 1925. Beginning with February, 1925, and continuing throughout that year and ending in December, 1925, the defendant constructed improvements on the land described in the deed to it from Mary Kalua at a cost in excess of $13,000. The improvements consisted of a dairy, a barn, a milk room, a well, a well-house and a tank. The foundations for these improvements were all of concrete. The deed to the defendant was executed on April 27, 1922, when the grantor was of the,age of seventeen years and nine months. The same grantor’s deed to the present plaintiff, which may be taken as an act of disaffirmance of the earlier deed, was on January 9, 1926, two days less than one year after the grantor arrived at the age of majority. This action was comménced on January 13, 1926.

The deed of a minor, it is well settled, is voidable and not void and may be avoided by the grantor, after reaching majority, by some act of disaffirmance. A conveyance to another grantee is such an act of disaffirmance. As to the length of time within which a minor may successfully disaffirm aijter reaching majority, courts differ, some taking the view that the whole period of the statute of limitations should be allowed and others holding that a reasonable time is all that can be accorded for the purpose. *187 This court has shown its inclination towards the latter view. As early as 1856 Chief Justice Lee of this court charged a jury that “when a minor purchases land he must make his election within a reasonable time after reaching his majority whether he will keep the land and pay for it, or disaffirm the contract and return the land”. Kahanu v. Thompson, 1 Haw. 421, 422. In McCandless v. Lansing, 19 Haw. 474 (1909) the majority of the court evidently acted upon the view that the disaffirmance must be within a reasonable time, holding that under the circumstances of that case a delay of two years and ten months was not unreasonable. The minority expressly favored the view that the disaffirmance must be within a reasonable time and that the minor did not have the whole period of the statute of limitations within which to decide whether to affirm or to disaffirm. Ib. 479, 481. As was said in the minority opinion (Ib. 483, 484) : “It may not be out of place to refer to the cases of Thurston v. Bishop, 7 Haw. 421, 437, and Estate of Kealiiahonui, 8 Haw. 93, 99. In the first of these the court held that it was the duty of a person whose claim had been denied by the Land Commission during his infancy ‘to assert his claim to this land within a reasonable time after his coming to full age’, and in the second that ‘in any case of improper action by a proohein ami, where the infant might obtain relief, the application to the court must be made by the infant promptly on becoming of age, otherwise the infant’s silence will amount to an affirmance’. The principle there involved is not precisely the same but it is closely related to that involved in the case at bar. In Nawahi v. Hakalau Plantation Co., 14 Haw. 460, where a lease of a minor’s land had been made to the defendant by the guardian, the court held that while the lessee was absolutely bound by the lease the ward or landlord might or might not at his option terminate the lease ‘on arriving at major *188 ity’ ”, — by which must have been meant, within a reasonable time after arriving at majority. To our minds this is the better rule. It is sufficiently liberal to those who have executed deeds Avhile minors. It sufficiently protects them from their ignorance and improvidence. At the-same time it is more in keeping Avith the certainty and stability that ought to accompany titles, with a proper use and development of lands and with the due transaction of business. On this general subject see further: 1 Devlin on Deeds, Sec. 91; Goodnow v. Empire Lumber Co., 31 Minn. 468, 470-472; Bigelow v. Kinney, 3 Vt. 353, 359; Hieatt v. Dixon, 26 S. W. (Tex.) 263, 264; Davis v. Dudley, 70 Me.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Haw. 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jellings-v-pioneer-mill-co-haw-1927.