Kahau Lawelawe v. Kahalepuna

26 Haw. 615, 1922 Haw. LEXIS 12
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 28, 1922
DocketNo. 1380
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 26 Haw. 615 (Kahau Lawelawe v. Kahalepuna) 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
Kahau Lawelawe v. Kahalepuna, 26 Haw. 615, 1922 Haw. LEXIS 12 (haw 1922).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

PETERS, C. J.

Appellee, plaintiff below, brought an action against tbe administrator of the estate of J. A. Lawelawe, de[616]*616ceased, upon the following rejected claim (omitting title of court and cause):

“Claim of Kahau Lawelawe.
“Territory of Hawaii,
“City and County of Honolulu,
ss.
“Now comes Kahau Lawelawe and on oath deposes and says; that the Estate of Jasper A. Lawelawe owes her in the following amount, to-wit:
“1917
“April 20, To money paid by C. Brewer & Co.
Ltd. as Agents of the Kuhua Agricultural Co. Ltd. for price of land sold, • $7,000.00
“May . . ., By money paid by said J. A. Lawe-lawe to claimant 600.00
Balance due Kahau Lawelawe, . $6,400.00 “Subscribed and sworn to before me this 9th day of June, A. D. 1921.
(Sig.) “Mrs. Kahau Lawelawe (Sig.) “M. T. Furtado
“Notary Public, First Judicial Circuit,
Territory of Hawaii.”

The grounds of the rejection were that the “purported claim is not accompanied by proper vouchers for verification nor does it state how and in what manner the said purported claim is based upon and it is therefore irregular.”

Upon the trial the defendant sought to justify such rejection upon the grounds that the claim was not accompanied by proper vouchers and did not in itself show an existing liability. Objection was also made that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to sustain the judgment, and that if it did, there was a fatal variance between the claim and the complaint for the reason that [617]*617the claim, even if indulged to tbe extent contended for by the appellee, showed an existing liability for moneys paid to the deceased by C. Brewer & Company- Limited, as a consideration for land sold to its principal, the Ku-hua Agricultural Company, Limited, whereas the cause of action alleged in the complaint was for money had and received by the deceased as indorsee of a check given by C. Brewer & Company, Limited, as maker, to the claimant as payee and by the latter indorsed in blank and delivered to the deceased. There was no defense on the merits. The trial court, jury waived, gave judgment for plaintiff.

First as to the claim itself. Section 2894, B. L. 1915, as amended by Act 188, S. L. 1917, contains no requirements as to the form of a claim. It merely provides that creditors present their claims with proper vouchers or duly authenticated copies thereof. Under the circumstances the sufficiency of a claim is to be determined by a consideration of what the claim should contain to satisfy the requirements which its name necessarily implies and the purposes it is designed to accomplish reasonably demand, viewed in the light of the duties of the legal representative of the estate of the deceased debtor generally and in respect to a claim when presented in particular. The term “claim” contemplates a debt or demand enforceable against the deceased in his lifetime by a personal action for the recovery of money. A debt or demand imports a consideration. To constitute a debt the obligation must exist at the time of the death of the deceased debtor. Hence an essential requirement is to show an existing indebtedness by reference to the time of its accrual, consideration and amount. The purposes of a claim are to advise the legal representative of the estate of the deceased debtor of the nature and amount of the alleged indebtedness so that he may intelligently deter[618]*618mine whether the game is just and should be paid and if paid would be available as a bar to any future action that might be prosecuted by the creditor upon the same claim. When presented the administrator or executor, as trustee for all creditors and beneficiaries ultimately entitled, is bound to investigate the claim and if found to be just, make provision for its payment. These requirements are simple and due to the liberality of interpretation accorded to statutes of this character in respect to the remedy provided no formality is required. The sufficiency of a claim is not measured by its ability to withstand a general or special demurrer. A cause of action, as that term is understood in pleading, need not be stated. The rules of pleading do not apply.

The claim in the instant case shows an existing indebtedness. It states the nature of the claim to be, money due and owing the claimant; the amount: $6400. It discloses the consideration of the indebtedness, to wit, money paid the deceased, supplemented by an acknowledgment of the receipt thereof in the shape of a credit for $600 paid on account. It identifies the consideration thereby distinguishing it from any other indebtedness existing in like time and amount by the reference “money paid by C. Brewer & Company, Limited, as agents of the Kuhua Agricultural Company, Limited, for price of land sold.”

The only formal requirement of the statute is that vouchers or authenticated copies thereof accompany the claim. What a “voucher” is depends more or less upon the circumstances of each individual case. The term is usually applied to receipts. But as employed in the statute it also includes written instruments directly, and not collaterally, evidencing the indebtedness. .As between indorser and indorsee a check is evidence of its contents but it is not direct evidence of any existing liability of [619]*619tbe indorsee. Its mere introduction in evidence, unaided by other evidence, would prove nothing further than the fact of indorsement. A cancelled check discloses no liability. Moreover, the check in question was not the property of, nor available to, the claimant. In the natural course of events the bank upon which it was dratvn would return it to the drawer. The check was not a “voucher” within the meaning of the term as employed in the statute and its absence was not fatal to the claim.

We cannot say that the claim in the instant case discloses any peculiar perfections. Whatever its faults it cannot be charged with prolixity. But that is not our concern. The only question is whether it, as a matter of law, in substance, meets the requirements of the statute, and we are satisfied that it does. This determination makes it unnecessary for us to decide the effect of the form of the rejection.

The objection that the amended complaint fails to set forth facts sufficient to support the judgment is without merit. The following quotations of paragraphs 1 and 2 and excerpt from paragraph 10 are sufficient for our purposes:

“1. That on or about the 20th day of April, A. D. 1917, the plaintiff herein conveyed certain lands belonging to her to Kuhua Agricultural Co., Ltd., a domestic corporation, duly created and existing under the Laws of the Territory of Hawaii, and more particularly designated in deed dated April 20th, 1917, and recorded in Liber 468 on page 320, for the sum of Seven Thousand (|7,000.00) Dollars; which amount of Seven Thousand Dollars was paid by check issued by C. Brewer & Co., Limited, through the Bank of Hawaii, Limited, in the name of Kahau Lawelawe, as more fully appears in said check "number 21261; and that said Kahau Lawelawe endorsed said check and sent to J. A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Haw. 615, 1922 Haw. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kahau-lawelawe-v-kahalepuna-haw-1922.