Klausmeyer v. Makaha Valley Farms, Ltd.

41 Haw. 287, 1956 Haw. LEXIS 12
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 1956
DocketNO. 2956.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 41 Haw. 287 (Klausmeyer v. Makaha Valley Farms, Ltd.) 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
Klausmeyer v. Makaha Valley Farms, Ltd., 41 Haw. 287, 1956 Haw. LEXIS 12 (haw 1956).

Opinions

*289 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

RICE, J.

This is an appeal from a decree of a judge of the circuit court, first circuit, at chambers, in equity, acting and hereinafter’ referred to as “chancellor,” dismissing a bill in equity for an injunction, which was filed by the petitioners-appellants, hereinafter referred to as the “petitioners,” against the respondents-appellees, hereinafter referred to as the “respondents.”

David Orth Klausmeyer and Marie Blackwell Klausmeyer, the petitioners, are husband and wife. They have sought by their bill to have the respondents, and each of them, Makaha Valley Farms, Ltd., Makaha Beach Company, Ltd., Waianae Village Properties, Ltd., and Capital Investment Company, Ltd., Hawaiian corporations, “their affiliates, subsidiaries, servants, assignees, officers and employees,” enjoined and restrained “from the removal of sand from the beach” of a parcel of land (“Lot K-l-A”), owned by respondents, “immediately adjoining” a beach lot (“Lot 196”), owned in fee simple by the petitioners, as tenants by the entirety, alleging that “* * * the removal of sand from the beach of said parcel of land adjoining petitioners’ said lot 196 will cause irreparable damage to petitioners in that the removal of * * * large quantities of sand by respondents will cause a shifting of the sand from petitioners’ said * * * land in order to fill in the area from which respondents have removed the sand * *

At the time of the filing of the petitioners’ bill, on April 11, 1953, Judge Bonald B. Jamieson granted an ex-parte temporary restraining order, prohibiting the respondents from removing sand in commercial quantities from “the beach and property described in the petition.”

On April 20 the respondents filed a motion to dissolve said restraining order and such motion was heard on April 22. At that time the court, to wit, the Honorable Wilford D. Godbold, judge presiding in equity, who thenceforth as chancellor, presided at all hearings and exercised jurisdic *290 tion over all proceedings in the instant matter, modified the temporary restraining order to the extent that the respondents were allowed to remove sand in commercial quantities from within the boundary lines of their own property, but were restrained from removing sand from the area below high water mark. Therefore, under the modified order the respondents were not prohibited from proceeding in connection with the removal of sand for the purpose of complying with an allegedly pending contract.

On April 23, 1953, the respondents Makaha Valley Farms, Ltd., Capital Investment Company, Ltd., and Waianae Village Properties, Ltd., filed answers in the proceedings. It was alleged in the answers filed that the fourth named respondent, the Makaha Beach Company, Ltd., “neither is nor was at any time mentioned in the said petition as a corporation existing under the laws of the Territory of Hawaii or otherwise.” Also, the said Makaha Valley Farms, Ltd., by its answer denied that it had or at any time mentioned in the petition had any right of control over the property referred to in the bill of complaint. Further, it denied the removal by it of any sand or other material, and also denied that it had any intention of removing sand or other material from the premises described in the petition.

The respondent Capital Investment Company, Ltd., admitted “the purchase by the Petitioners of Lots 195 and 196 from MAKAHA BEACH COMPANY, LTD.,” as alleged in paragraphs II and III of the petition (which admission was erroneous as to paragraph II of the petition and as to lot 195, purchased from Makaha Valley Farms, Ltd.), but alleged that it had no knowledge that the petitioners in purchasing their said lots were beach properties. This respondent, Capital Investment Company, Ltd., further admitted that it had the management and control of the land and property of the Waianae Village *291 Properties, Ltd., and that, as managing agent of the properties of said Waianae Village Properties, Ltd., it had recently removed for commercial purposes “Three Hundred (300) yards of sand from property owned by the said Waianae Village Properties, Ltd., at a point above high water and approximately Six Hundred (600) feet from the nearest boundary of said petitioners’ lots and it is the intent and purpose of this Respondent to remove additional sands from said area all of which is within the boundary of property owned by the said Waianae Village Properties, Ltd., and vj'hieh this Respondent has a legal right to remove; * * (Emphasis added.)

The answer of the respondent Waianae Village Properties, Ltd., contained identical admissions and denials as those contained in the answer of the respondent Capital Investment Company, Ltd.

A replication to such answers was duly filed by the petitioners on April 28.

It appears from the record submitted to this supreme court, and so it is noteworthy, that after petitioners had introduced a great deal of evidence on their behalf and then rested, the respondents filed, in open court in the proceeding before the chancellor, on June 23, 1953, a “MOTION TO DISMISS,” and thereby moved that the petition filed by the petitioners be dismissed upon the grounds that: (I) “said petition does not show any cause of action whereby said Petitioners are entitled to the relief prayed for therein;” (II) “said petition does not allege that the said Petitioners have suffered any injury arising out of any acts on the part of said Respondents, or any of them to entitle said Petitioners to the relief prayed for in said petition;” (III) “said Petitioners have utterly failed to prove by competent evidence that they have suffered any injury arising out of any acts on the part of said Respondents, or any of them;” (IV) “said *292 Petitioners have utterly failed to prove by competent evidence that they have suffered any damages arising out of any acts on the part of said Respondents, or any of them;” and (V) “said Petitioners have utterly failed to prove by competent evidence that they are entitled to any relief whatsoever in equity as against said Respondents, or any of them.”

The said motion to dismiss was denied, the chancellor saying: “The court at this time is not going into the merits of the case, or attempt to weigh the preponderance of the evidence one way or the other, but the court does find that the petitioner has alleged a cause of action, and the court further finds that the proof has established not only a threatened injury but a prima facie showing, — strike the word ‘established’ — the petitioner has made a prima facie showing that there has occurred and had occurred, prior to the time that the case was filed, damage and injury to the petitioners by the evidence that the petitioner produced. There was a prima facie showing [of] the shifting of sand from one area to the other. There was a showing that upon the removal of sand from Lot K-l-A, that that would affect the area all up and down the cove. It is true that there was no showing that any damage or injury has manifested itself as yet. However, the court believes that the petitioner has established a prima facie case, and for that reason will deny the motion to dismiss.”

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Bluebook (online)
41 Haw. 287, 1956 Haw. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klausmeyer-v-makaha-valley-farms-ltd-haw-1956.