Keawe v. Kana

30 Haw. 204, 1927 Haw. LEXIS 7
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1927
Docket1767
StatusPublished

This text of 30 Haw. 204 (Keawe v. Kana) 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
Keawe v. Kana, 30 Haw. 204, 1927 Haw. LEXIS 7 (haw 1927).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT BY

BANKS, J.

The plaintiff, appellee, claimed title to a small piece of land located at Kahakuloa oh the Island of Maui. The defendants, appellants, claimed that the title was in them. Because of These conflicting claims the plaintiff brought an action in the circuit court, to which action the defendants were made parties, seeking to have his title quieted. The defendants filed a general denial. The circuit court decided that the title was in the plaintiff and entered judgment accordingly. The defendants have brought the *205 case here on exceptions. The plaintiff predicates his claim of title on adverse possession for more than ten years and also on a deed from a former owner, whose title at the time of the deed is not disputed. As the circuit court viewed the testimony, and as we view it, it is not necessary to consider whether the deed conveyed title to plaintiff — - his title by adverse possession being sufficiently established.

In reviewing the evidence tending to show title by adverse possession we will first consider certain facts that were proven by testimony that was not disputed. In the-year 1914 Elizabeth Keawe Kamali was the owner of ten small pieces of land at Kahakuloa, Maui. These pieces of land were, under nomenclature peculiar to the Hawaiian Islands, known as apanas and were comprised in L. C. A. 6146-D to Kanui. The plaintiff was Elizabeth Kamali’s brother-in-law, she having married his brother. This brother (husband of Elizabeth) died on May 6, 1914. After his death Elizabeth, because of money that had been advanced to her by the plaintiff to defray the funeral expenses of her husband and in recognition of her indebtedness to him for this as. well as other services rendered to her at the time of her husband’s death, agreed to give plaintiff apaña 8 which consists of one acre of land and which is the land involved in this suit. In consequence of this agreement and with the approval of Elizabeth the plaintiff went into possession of apaña 8, enclosed the whole of it with a fence and planted it in fruit and other trees and also planted a small portion of it in potatoes and sugar cane. He also built a small house on the land in which he and his family lived until 1919. In that.year he tore down the small house and built a larger one which he thereafter occupied as a residence.

The material questions of fact in dispute are the date of the plaintiff’s entry on the land and whether he aban *206 doned tlie land at any time prior to tlie expiration of the ten year period provided by the statute for the acquisition of title by adverse possession. It is not disputed that during the continuance of his possession such possession had all thé legal characteristics of adverseness. The circuit judge decided from the testimony that the plaintiff’s possession began in June or July of 1914 and continued without interruption until November 11, 1924.

The case having come here on exceptions to a decision of the circuit court in an action at law tried without a •jury, we are not required to determine whether its findings are true ifi fact but only whether they are supported by substantial evidence amounting to more than a scintilla. If they are so supported we are not at liberty to disturb them. With this purpose in view let us first examine the evidence as to when the plaintiff’s possession began., It is undisputed that it did not begin until after the death of his brother (Elizabeth Kamali’s husband). There is some apparent conflict in the evidence as to when this event occurred. The plaintiff himself testified that it occurred in 1913. The official certificate of death, however, discloses that it occurred on May 6,1914. It may very well be assumed in the face of the official record that the plaintiff was mistaken in fixing the year at 1913 instead of fixing it at 1914. This evidently was the conclusion reached by the circuit court. At all events, according to the plaintiff’s testimony, he went into possession of the land in July following his brother’s death, built a house on it during the same month and exercised other acts of ownership.

It is urged by the defendants that this testimony of the plaintiff as to the date of his entry is inconsistent with other portions of his evidence on that subject and for that reason it is1 not of that substantial character that makes it more than a mere scintilla. With this contention we cannot agree. The inconsistencies in plaintiff’s evidence, *207 pointed out by the defendants, evidently were insufficient to convince the trial court that his statement as to when he took possession of the land was untrue. His testimony being substantial and amounting to more than a scintilla is sufficient to sustain the finding of the lower court.

It is conceded that on November 11, 1924, the plaintiff left the premises in question and took up a homéstead on the Island of Molokai where he has since ¿resided. By that time his possession had ripened into a fee simple title unless he at some time prior thereto had abandoned the land. Between 1914 and 1924 the plaintiff twice went away from the land and lived for a short time elsewhere. Once, during a strike, he came with his family to Oahu where he worked in a cane field for a month and a half or two months and then returned to Xahakuloa and resumed his occupancy of the land in question. On another occasion he went to Lahaina where he took temporary employment as a police officer. He remained at Lahaina about six weeks, after which he again returned to the land. These temporary and brief absences Avere several years after thé plaintiff’s entry upon the premises. They Avere some time after he had built a larger house upon the land than the one he had first built and they were long after he had enclosed the land by a fence and brought it to a state of cultivation. It is fairly inferable from the plaintiff’s testimony that his absences were caused by “hard times” and the necessity of obtaining temporary employment of a casual nature in order to earn enough money to relieve his needs. During these absences the land remained unoccupied by anyone else. The circuit court decided that under these circumstances plaintiff’s absences did not constitute abandonment. We think this conclusion is sufficiently supported by the testimony. The plaintiff did not enter upon the land as a mere trespasser but under a claim of right. His possession from *208 the first was in good faith and under the belief that the land was his. We think under these circumstances that his temporary absences did not as a matter of law constitute abandonment.

We come now to a consideration of the facts upon which thA defendants base their claim of title to the land in question. On August 3, 1915, Elizabeth Keawe Kamali (the one-time owner of apaña 8) executed a mortgage to the Baldwin bank to secure a recited indebtedness of $400. This mortgage was subsequently assigned to the defendants. On August 6,-1924, during the absence of the plaintiff and without his knowledge or consent the defendants entered upon apaña 8 for the purpose of foreclosing their mortgage. This entry consisted in merely walking upon the land, with two witnesses and walking off again, and, as we have just observed, was at a time wken the plaintiff was absent.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Haw. 204, 1927 Haw. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keawe-v-kana-haw-1927.