Kaiser Hawaii Kai Development Co. v. Murray

412 P.2d 925, 49 Haw. 214
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedApril 11, 1966
Docket4444
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 412 P.2d 925 (Kaiser Hawaii Kai Development Co. v. Murray) 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
Kaiser Hawaii Kai Development Co. v. Murray, 412 P.2d 925, 49 Haw. 214 (haw 1966).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

LEWIS, J.

By submission pursuant to R.L.H. 1955, c. 227, the parties have presented for determination a question arising under an agreement dated April 27, 1961, between the trustees of the Estate of Bernice P. Bishop, hereinafter referred to as “Bishop,” and Kaiser Hawaii Kai Development Co., hereinafter referred to as “Hawaii Kai.”

[215]*215The agreement is appended to and made a part of the submission. It provides that Hawaii Kai is to develop, improve and subdivide lands owned by Bishop for leasing, and Bishop is to execute leases of the subdivided lands as lessor, receive the rents and other charges collected under the leases, and pay them out making certain payments to itself as well as others, the balance to go to Hawaii Kai for a stated period. The question in difference is when, and under what conditions, Bishop is entitled to reimburse itself for certain real property taxes it has paid on a tract of land known as “Koko Kai Unit 1,” subdivided, developed and improved by Hawaii Kai pursuant to the agreement. This tract, according to the submission, typifies a number of tracts involving the same question.

The parties are agreed that Bishop’s right of reimbursement for real property taxes is (1) confined to real property taxes on improved land that is ready for leasing but not leased, and (2) commences as of January 1 following the completion of a tract ready for leasing provided that at least six months1 shall have intervened. In this case January 1, 1962 is the applicable date, according to the submission. The tract, Koko Kai Unit 1, was ready for leasing in June 1961. It consists of 109 residential lots and a pump station.

As each lot is leased, the lease provides that the lessee shall pay the real property taxes on the demised premises, and provides as well for the proration of accrued taxes between the lessee and Bishop as of the commencement of the lease. No question is presented as to taxes for which lessees are responsible.

[216]*216The submission shows that as of June 30, 1963, 104 of the 109 residential lots in Koko Kai Unit 1 still were not leased, and Bishop had paid real property taxes with respect to these 104 unleased lots in the sum of $57,033.42 from and after January 1, 1962. For the same period, up to the date of leasing of each of the five leased lots, Bishop had paid real property taxes on these five lots in the sums of $137.41, $64.73, $257.01, $104.23, and $106.10, respectively, a total of $669.48. By June 30, 1963, Bishop had received as rent for the five leased lots the sums of $1,300, $1,333.33, $666.68, $2,000, and $2,000, respectively, a total of $7,300.01. Thus, the rents on these five lots totaled $6,630.53 over and above the aforesaid taxes on the same lots. The reimbursement of the taxes on these five lots is not in controversy.

The controversy concerns the reimbursement of the $57,033.42 of taxes on the unleased lots. Bishop contends “that it may reimburse itself the entire amount out of any monies received by it with respect to any lots anywhere leased pursuant to The. Agreement to anyone other than Hawaii Kai or an organization controlling or controlled by Hawaii Kai.” Hawaii Kai contends “that Bishop cannot recoup property taxes respecting any lot until a lease thereof has been made, and then it is only entitled to be reimbursed for real property taxes paid with respect to the lot in question for the period January 1, 1962 until the date of the lease out of rentals received for the lot in question.” Thus, under Bishop’s position, it may have recourse to the above sum of $6,630.53 as well as other rents received under the agreement as a means of reimbursement of the real property taxes on the 104 lots not leased, while under Hawaii Kai’s position this sum of $6,630.53 may not be so applied, and Bishop must look to the rents of each of the 104 lots, as each lot is leased, for reimbursement of the taxes paid on that lot prior to the [217]*217date of the lease. We are of the opinion that Hawaii Kai’s position is correct.

We have set out, in the Appendix, Article C of the agreement and a portion of Article F, that is, Section F-8. We deem these parts of the agreement determinative. Article C provides in the first paragraph of Section C-l, which is unnumbered, that Bishop shall “out of its own funds” pay all real property taxes assessed against the lands which are the subject matter of the agreement2 “not paid by lessees.”3 Then follows the provision that the tax payments thus made by Bishop “shall not be treated as paid out pursuant to the provisions of Section F-8 (a) hereof.” These provisions in turn are “subject to the following limitations,” referring to paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of Section C-l. To appreciate the significance of the foregoing it is necessary to refer first to Section F-8.

Section F-8 provides that the monies received by Bishop “with respect to one or more Lots covered by any lease or leases thereof” shall be “accounted for” and “paid out” in accordance with three paragraphs, designated (a), (b) and (c). Since the balance of the monies received, after the payments provided for by paragraphs (a) and (b) of Section F-8, goes to Hawaii Kai for a thirty-year period pursuant to paragraph (c), and since only paragraph (a) of Section F-8 speaks of taxes, it is seen that the statement in the unnumbered first paragraph of Section C-l that the tax payments made by Bishop shall be “out of its own funds” and “shall not be treated as paid out pursuant to the provisions of Section F-8 (a) hereof” [218]*218is a general 'statement that Bishop has no right of reimbursement for these tax payments. The added provision of this paragraph, “* * * subject to the following limitations,” makes this general statement subject to paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of Section C-l, which set out the exceptions to the general statement.

Turning now to paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of Section C-l, we note that paragraph (a) relates to apartment, hotel and commercial lots, while paragraph (b) relates to residential lots. Paragraph (b) provides that “respecting each Residential Lot” the first January 1 following a date which is six months after the completion of “the Tract in which said Lot is located,” shall constitute the “tax accumulation date.” We shall have occasion to comment later on the terminology “tax accumulation date.” The important point now is that, under the terms of the agreement, each lot has its own tax accumulation date. Though the several lots in a given tract necessarily will bear the same tax accumulation date, care was taken to state that the designated date should constitute the tax accumulation date “respecting each * * * Lot.”

Paragraph (c) of Section C-l provides that “on all Lots described in subdivisions (a) and (b),” not leased by the applicable tax accumulation date, Bishop shall continue to pay the taxes, and “as to all such taxes paid or payable by Bishop for the period between the tax accumulation date and the date the Lot in question is leased, Bishop shall be entitled to reimbursement for such taxes with respect to the Lot in question under the provisions of Section F-8(a).” Thus paragraphs (b) and (c) constitute a clear statement that the right of reimbursement exists only with respect to a particular lot for the taxes on that lot between the tax accumulation date and the date of leasing. And, as seen, the right of reimbursement does not exist at all except as set out in these paragraphs [219]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

The Minesen Company
D. Hawaii, 2021
Pancakes of Hawaii, Inc. v. Pomare Properties Corp.
944 P.2d 83 (Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals, 1997)
Kaiser Development Co. v. City & County of Honolulu
649 F. Supp. 926 (D. Hawaii, 1986)
Castro-Nuno v. Immigration & Naturalization Service
577 F.2d 577 (Ninth Circuit, 1978)
United States v. Haas and Haynie Corporation
577 F.2d 568 (Ninth Circuit, 1978)
Kekoa Ex Rel. Enomoto v. Supreme Court
516 P.2d 1239 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1973)
Kaiser Hawaii Kai Development Co. v. Murray
412 P.2d 925 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1966)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
412 P.2d 925, 49 Haw. 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaiser-hawaii-kai-development-co-v-murray-haw-1966.