Kaname Fujino v. Clark

71 F. Supp. 1, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2652
CourtDistrict Court, D. Hawaii
DecidedApril 22, 1947
DocketCiv. 704
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 71 F. Supp. 1 (Kaname Fujino v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Hawaii primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaname Fujino v. Clark, 71 F. Supp. 1, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2652 (D. Haw. 1947).

Opinion

McLAUGHLIN, District Judge.

This suit is founded upon Section 9(a) of the Trading with the Enemy Act, 50 U.S. C.A.Appendix, § 9(a), and has been brought by the plaintiff to recover six parcels of real property vested under the Act and Executive Order No. 9095, as amended, 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix, § 6 note, by the Custodian on December 3, 1943 (Vesting Order No. 2724; Fed. Reg. 16937).

From the evidence the following data is derived and recorded as the Court’s

Findings of Fact.

1. This Court has jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject matter (50 U.S., C.A.Appendix § 9(a).

2. Plaintiff is a citizen of the United States and a resident of Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii.

3. Defendant is the Attorney General of the United States and as such is successor to the Alien Property Custodian (11 Fed.Reg. 1198).

4. On December 3, 1943, the Custodian vested title to six parcels of land in Honolulu.

5. Plaintiff was the record owner of the land the title to which the Custodian vested.

6. At all times herein involved, Yotaro Fujino and Chiyono Fujino, parents of plaintiff, were residents, nationals, and subjects of Japan. In Japan Yotaro Fujino disposed of the scrap iron shipped there by his Hawaiian business enterprise and arranged for the shipment of cement to his company in Hawaii.

7. Prior to March 21, 1941, Yotaro Fujino was the record owner, as well as the true and beneficial owner, of this land.

In 1940 Yotaro Fujino, age 55, discussed with his Hawaiian attorney who was visiting Japan his Hawaiian business affairs. The strained international situation was a factor in this discussion. At this conference Yotaro Fujino perfected his plan to give his Hawaiian land to his only son, and to incorporate his business located thereon and to give his family shares therein in such a way that he could retain control of them and of their shares. Based upon this plan, he issued appropriate instructions to his attorneys in fact in Hawaii through correspondence with his business advisor, Seitaro Yamamoto.

In discussing his plans with his son, Yotaro Fujino told his son when he directed him to execute a power of attorney to the same two men who held a like power from his father that some day he would give the whole business in Hawaii to him, but that in the meantime he should go to school and prove himself and show that he can run the business.

8. On February 20, 1941, Yotaro Fujino executed in Japan a general and new power of attorney to Tokuichi Tsuda and Yasuo Tsutsumi of Honolulu, by the terms of which he authorized his attorneys in fact, amongst other things, “to buy, take on lease and otherwise acquire, and to hold, sell, mortgage, hypothecate, pledge, lease and otherwise dispose of, and in any way and every way and manner deal with real property, leaseholds, and other interests in real property” Plaintiff’s (Exhibit E). Tsuda and Tsutsumi have acted under this and a prior similar power since 1935, the year in which Yotaro Fujino went to Japan to reside permanently. This new 1941 power of attorney was executed because of the confusion arising from two nearly identical powers executed by him in 1935 prior to leaving for Japan, in one of which his first name was spelled “Yootaro”.

9. At all times here involved Tsuda and Tsutsumi were also attorneys in fact under general powers of attorney for plaintiff’s mother and for the plaintiff. As of the date of trial Tsuda and Tsutsumi still held unrevoked powers of attorney from the plaintiff, his father, and his mother.

10. For years prior to November 27, 1940, plaintiff’s father, Yotaro Fujino, was the sole owner of a business known as the Oahu Junk Company and Oahu Lumber and Hardware Company. On November 27, 1940, the Oahu Junk Company, Ltd., was incorporated, and upon December 2, 1940, all of the assets of Yotaro Fujino’s business enterprise, except the real estate here involved, were transferred by Yotaro Fujino, acting through his attorneys m fact, to Oahu Junk Company, Ltd., “in consideration of the * * * issuance to *3 him of 790 shares of capital stock” of the corporation (Defendant’s Exhibit No. 4). This stock was issued of record at Yotaro Fujino’s direction as follows:

Yotaro Fujino (Father) 238 shares
Chiyono Fujino (Mother) 118 shares
Kaname Fujino (Only son, plaintiff) 200 shares
Katsue Fujieki (Daughter) 117 shares
Shizue Maneki (Daughter) 117 shares

At the same time the plaintiff, his mother, and each daughter executed promissory notes to Yotaro Fujino for the par value of the shares registered in their names. Yo-taro Fujino required his wife, son, and daughters to execute these notes to him so that he could retain control over them and their stock in the corporation.

11. The real property here involved, except for a small parcel, was and is occupied by the business enterprise, whether as a sole proprietorship or as a corporation, as its principal place of business, and was and is necessary and indispensable to the conduct and operation of the business.

12. On March 13, 1941, Yotaro Fujino, while working out his plan to give his real estate to his son, through his attorneys in fact mortgaged to a local bank this real property for $15,000, and the indebtedness has since been paid by the Oahu Junk Company, Ltd. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit K)

13. On March 21, 1941, the attorneys in fact of Yotaro Fujino purporting to act for him under the power of attorney dated February 20, 1941 (Plaintiff’s Exhibit E) executed a deed to the real estate here involved by which they purported to convey it to the plaintiff as a gift. The deed was not delivered to the plaintiff until May 1941 when he returned from Japan, and it was not recorded until May 19, 1941. Plaintiff endorsed for the bank his father’s mortgage note at the time the deed was delivered to him.

14. Three months after the deed was delivered to plaintiff, at the suggestion of the attorneys in fact, rent was paid plaintiff by the corporation from the date of the deed. The rental figure of $300 per month net was suggested by Tsuda and Tsutsumi and accepted without question by plaintiff. Plaintiff used the rental money to support himself, to help his sisters, and to care for his father’s family obligations. In addition a tax liability of his father’s — $8,000— was paid by plaintiff through a transaction by which the corporation loaned plaintiff the money and credited the rent as it fell due against the loan; the $8,000 was to be credited upon plaintiff’s note to his father (Plaintiff’s Exhibit P). Plaintiff knew nothing of the value of the land, nor the rental value thereof. He took no active part in the management of the corporation. The management of the business and the real estate was left entirely to the attorneys in fact, and plaintiff with regard to each did what he was advised to do by his father’s attorneys in fact.

15. Although record title to the six parcels of land stood in plaintiff’s name, he did not have or purport to exercise complete and absolute ownership of the property. Notwithstanding the deed, plaintiff’s father, the grantor, has, through his attorneys in fact and personally, retained control and the beneficial ownership of the land.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 F. Supp. 1, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaname-fujino-v-clark-hid-1947.