Keaunui v. Poka

4 Haw. 237
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 Haw. 237 (Keaunui v. Poka) 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
Keaunui v. Poka, 4 Haw. 237 (haw 1879).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judd, J,

This is a writ of error corara nobis, and the following is the assignment of error: “That an action of ejectment was by them (the plaintiffs) entered in the July Term, 1879, of the Supreme Court against said Poka and all above named, and that said action came on to be heard at said term before a jury, [238]*238and a verdict was returned for the plaintiffs for one-half of the premises claimed. And your petitioners deem themselves aggrieved by said verdict and assign the following cause of error, viz.: During said trial it was proved that Kekuaiwahia, w., the awardee and owner of the premises in dispute, died in the .year 1848, leaving her surviving, her husband Poka, no children, and other kindred of her own, through whom these plaintiffs claim; and that her husband Poka died a few days after her. And the jury were thereupon instructed that said Poka was heir of one-half of the property of said Kekuaiwahia; ■and that the plaintiff's were entitled to one-half only, they •claiming through the kindred of said Kekuaiwahia. And your complainants say, that at the time of the death of said Kekuaiwahia and Poka, the statute of descent now in force had not been enacted; and thUt by the law then in force said Poka was not entitled to any part of the property of his wife as his heir, but that all her property descended to her kindred at •the expiration of the courtesy of her husband.”

The following is the record in the case: “The parties to the suit having agreed to take a verdict for one-half of the ■land, and each pay one-half of the costs, the Court, at 11:45 a. m., addresses the jury and directs them to bring in a verdict accordingly; and without retiring the jury returned a unanimous verdict for the plaintiffs of one-half the land, the defendants to have the other half. The costs to be equally divided.”

BY THE COURT.

■It appears .from the above record that the parties came to an agreement, that is to say, for reasons best known to themselves, they made a compromise, and agreed that the Court should instruct4he jury to return a verdict for the plaintiff's for one-half-of .the land, and for the defendants for the other half. The Court did as requested and the verdict was returned accordingly, which was followed by a judgment in due course. The plaintiffs in fact consented to judgment against themselves [241]*241of the land constituting these Islands was included in some division, larger or smaller, which had a name, and of which the boundaries were known to the people living thereon or in the neighborhood. Some persons were specially taught and made the repositories of this knowledge, and it was carefully delivered from father to son.

The divisions of the lands were to a great extent made on rational lines, following a ridge, the bottom of' a ravine or depression, but they were often without these and sometimes in disregard of them. Sometimes a stone or rock known to the aboriginals and notable from some- tradition, or sacred uses, marks a corner or determines a line-. The- line- of growth of a certain kind of tree, herb or grass, the- habitat of a certain kind of bird, sometimes made a division,. Through some parts of the country which must always have been unfrequented by the general population, as thick forests, rough and barren molmtain lands, their division lines lay, where they could be traced out by some persons at least in charge of the territory, whose business it was to know them.

A principle very largely obtaining- in these divisions of territory was that a land should run from the sea to the mountains, thus affording to the chief and his people a fishery residence at the warm seaside, together with the products of the high lands, such as fuel, canoe timber, mountain birds, and the right of way to the same, and all the varied products of the intermediate land as might be suitable to the soil and climate of the different altitudes from sea soil to mountainside or top. But this mode of allotment had numerous exceptions, because some of the lands were for some reasons not always understood, and perhaps arbitrary in the beginning, very wide at the top, cutting off a great number of other lands from the mountain; others in like manner wide in the lowlands, cut off land from the sea.

The contour of lands which have been surveyed and plotted is most irregular. The only general description would be that [242]*242the lilies are not rectilinear, and that there is no preference for right angles. In size ahupuaas are found of from a hundred acres up to thousands, in several instances containing more than one hundred thousand and more than two hundred thousand acres.

The statute which establishes the office of Commissioner of Boundaries prescribes that the holders of lands granted by name only shall, apply to such Commissioner for the settlement and determination of the boundaries of what is claimed, presenting a general description of them, by “ survey or otherwise.” After notice to owners of adjacent lands, the Commissioner sits to hear evidence of what are the ancient lines of the land in question, hearing, what is offered by the petitioner and adversely to him by others whose interests are affected. He may aid his information by going on the ground, and is to endeavor to obtain all information possible to enable him to arrive, at a just decision. An appeal liesto the Supreme or Circuit Court, on record of the evidence of witnesses before the Commissioner, which may be supplemented by further testimony.

The late owner of the Ahupuaa of Pulehunui-, Governor W. L. Moehonua, since deceased, having made application to the Commissioner of Boundaries, regular proceedings were had and the Commissioner arrived at a judgment which is formulated in the description notes and map of a certain survey made on behalf of the petitioner, or of the representative of-his estate. That is to say, the petitioner showed to the satisfaction of the Commissioner that the survey which he presented and claimed by followed the true and ancient boundaries of Pulehunui. And the judgment of the Commissioner was that Pulehunui be and was- by metes and bounds, courses and distances, and area as set forth in his certificate, adopting the potes of the survey.

Appeal is brought to this Court by the owners of the adjacent land of "Waikapu. The controversy may perhaps be [243]*243made intelligible without a diagram from verbal description. Pulehunui, as given by the Commissioner, contains an area of 16,687 78-100 acres. It extends from the peak ofj Kilohana on the rim of the crater of Haleakala, at an altitude of 10,000 feet, in a nearly west direction for about fifteen miles. The eastern or mountain portion is comparatively narrow, often less than half a mile wide. The western portion reaches to the low land of the Island and grows broader up to the western boundary joining the lands of Waikapu, being at this end from three to four miles wide.

The matter in dispute is the western boundary. The appellants claim that the judgment of the Commissioner gives Pule-hunui about 5,000 acres belonging to Waikapu, which should be cut off from Pulehunui by a western boundary lying within though not parallel to that awarded.

The boundary given by the Commissioner includes about 2,000 feet along the sea coast from a sand spit known as Kihei to a point of rocks called Kalaepohaku. The line claimed for Waikapu would cut Pulehunui off from the sea. This is one of the most explicit issues in the case.

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Related

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Haw. 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keaunui-v-poka-haw-1879.