Kaopua v. Holt

18 Haw. 281, 1907 Haw. LEXIS 28
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Haw. 281 (Kaopua v. Holt) 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
Kaopua v. Holt, 18 Haw. 281, 1907 Haw. LEXIS 28 (haw 1907).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

HARTWELL, J.

The plaintiff’s bill was brought May 15, 1906, to obtain cancelation of a deed made by her "March 3, 1906, by which, for the consideration of $1 and love and affection, she convoyed to her daughter ICeinilia, one of the defendants, all of her right in all of the lands formerly belonging to her deceased husband J. W. R. Ifaopua, and also the land at Lanka on the Island of Hawaii conveyed by her husband to Ifahookano, trustee, and by him conveyed to the plaintiff by deeds of February 27, 1897.

The bill avers in substance that the plaintiff was induced by the daughter to leave her home in Waimea, Island of Hawaii, to visit in Honolulu and that while at the home of the daughter and the daughter’s husband, the defendant George II. Holt, she was persuaded by the daughter to assign to her the dower in Kaopua’s lands and afterwards was shown by the daughter an instrument in writing which she was led by the daughter to believe, and did believe, was an assignment of the dower right only and that under the daughter’s assurance and in the belief that the deed conveyed nothing more than [282]*282the dower she, in consideration of love and affection for her daughter, was induced to execute and deliver the deed believing it to be an assignment of the deed and no more, but that the deed was also a conveyance of her land at Lauka in Ilamakua, Hawaii; that the daughter, taking advantage of the plaintiffs-incapacity, affection and confidence, caused the deed to be prepared inserting therein the land of Lauka, knowing that, the plaintiff had not intended or agreed to convey it and was ignorant that the deed conveyed the land; that the defendants, caused the deed to be prepared 'with the design of robbing, wronging and deceiving the plaintiff and succeeded in theii design and that she did not know that the deed conveyed the Lauka land until her return to her home in Waimea.

The answer admits that the deed was prepared by the defendants and presented to the plaintiff for her signature but denies that either of the defendants led her to believe, or that she did believe, that it was only a relinquishment of dower, but avers that she clearly understood that it included the Lauka land as well; denies that either of the defendants took advantage of the plaintiff or that she did not intend to convey or was ignorant when she executed the deed that it conveyed the Lauka land; avers that the plaintiff’s husband at the time of his death owed more than $1500, leaving no personal property and that all his real property, including the Lauka land, was under a mortgage held by the Honokaa Sugar Co.; that upon the advice of the administrator, Henry Smith, the defendant Holt paid the debts of the estate amounting to more than $1200 and discharged the mortgage claim, the mortgage still remaining a valid lien; that the defendants for more than a year had been investigating the title in the lands included in the mortgage “with the object of clearing them from the mortgage without foreclosing it” and for this purpose sent to Waimea for the plaintiff with the intent of securing from her a deed of her dower and of her interest in the Lauka land; that when the plaintiff was informed of the amounts expended to pay the debts she expressed her entire willingness [283]*283to deed to the daughter her rights in all the property covered by the mortgage and thereupon the deed was prepared, its-contents carefully explained to the plaintiff and she executed the same of her own free will without undue influence on the part of any person.

The lands mentioned in thé plaintiff’s deed were mortgaged by her husband to secure his note for $1515 Avith 12 per cent, interest by mortgage deed dated September 21, 1887, Avhich includes (1) the land at Papuaa and Namoku in Hamakua,. Island of Hawaii, containing 72 acres, R. P. 1774; (2) land at Namoku containing 13 acres, P. P. 6515; (3) land at Lauka in Hamakua containing 60 acres, P. P. 1885, except the portion (30 acres) conveyed to J. Gr. Tucker; (4) land at Hamakua containing 10-‡ acres, P. P. 7010. At the date of Kaopua’s death the mortgage Avas held by the Honokaa Sugar Co., the amount OAving upon it Avhen it was assigned to Holt, January 9, 1901, being $669.26.

In Kemilia Holt v. Kaaukai, 11 Haw. 497 (1898), it was-shown that the Papuaa and Namoku land descended to Kaopua and his sister Maiau who conveyed it November 13, 1876, to his daughters Kemilia and Pode and that Kemilia afterwards bought her sister Rode’s share in the land. Neither this plaintiff nor Kaaukai, Maiau’s husband, had joined in or in Avriting consented to the deed. The court held that the deed Avas therefore void as against Kaaukai’s interest in Maiau’s estate, being I of the whole land. Upon the death of Maiau in 1879 or 1880 her ¿ descended to her husband and i to her brother which, on his death in April, 1900, descended to his six children. Kemilia, having bought Kaaukai’s ■noAv has f by deed and 1-24 by descent from her father, the other five children inheriting 5-24. The plaintiff’s dower in f of this land and Kaopua’s inherited fee in are Avithin the mortgage.

The land is under a lease made by Kaopua October 13, 1890, to the Honokaa Sugar Oo. for the term of fifteen years from November 15, 1892, ending November 16, 1907, at an annual [284]*284rental of $400. Kaopua collected the rent to November 16, 1900, if not for the following year. The administrator collected the rent from November 16, 1901, to November 16, 1902, and charged himself with three years’ rent thereafter ($1200), with a memorandum that it was “advanced by Mrs. Kemilia Kaopua Holt, daughter of decéased, and husband (to whom the right to collect for these three years has been sold). This to prevent lands from being sold by foreclosure of mortgage.” The $1600 thus received were used by the administrator in payment on account of the defendant ITolt of the $669.26 balance of the mortgage which was assigned to Holt and of certain unsecured debts of Kaopua amounting, with expenses •of administration and administrator's commissions and interest on the $1200 rent advanced, to $1600. Kaopua leased all of the Lauka land (the plaintiff’s 30 acres and his own 10 J acres) June 6, 1896, to the Honokaa Sugar Co. at $140 a year for a term of eleven years ending June 6, 1907. The rent has been paid to the plaintiff since her husband’s death. She leased her land August 21, 1905, to the Honokaa Sugar Co. for twelve years from September 15, 1907, at $105 a year for the first ten years and $1 a year for the remaining two years taking in advance $420, the rent of four years, and no further rent is coming until September 15, 1911. The 10-J- acre piece was also mortgaged by Kaopua to the Honokaa Sugar Co. February 10, 1891, to secure his two years’ note for $500 at ten per cent, interest. No part of this note, principal or interest, has been paid since May 16, 1899, and there was ■owing upon it March 3, 1906, the date of the deed to Mrs. I-Iolt, $839.86.

It is agreed that $50 an acre is the salable value of these lands. At that valuation a sale on a foreclosure of the first mortgage, made while the plaintiff’s land is thus under lease, would probably have but one bidder, namely, the lessee, while the 10J acres would be insufficient to satisfy the amount due on the second mortgage. The \ of the Papuaa and Namoku lands would not bring enough to pay the mortgage debt [285]*285($669.26) with interest at twelve per cent, from January 9, 1901, and expenses of foreclosure, made at any time after-March 3, 1906.

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Related

Holt v. Kaaukai
11 Haw. 497 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1898)

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Bluebook (online)
18 Haw. 281, 1907 Haw. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaopua-v-holt-haw-1907.