Kupau v. Waiahole Water Co., Ltd.

37 Haw. 234, 1945 Haw. LEXIS 8
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1945
DocketNo. 2593.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 37 Haw. 234 (Kupau v. Waiahole Water Co., 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
Kupau v. Waiahole Water Co., Ltd., 37 Haw. 234, 1945 Haw. LEXIS 8 (haw 1945).

Opinion

*235 OPINION OP THE COURT BY

LE BARON, J.

After trial, jury waived, of appellant’s action to quiet title to a portion of certain lands, the trial judge denied appellant’s claim and confirmed that of appellee, whereupon appellant excepted to the judge’s decision and judgment.

The pertinent facts are undisputed. The original grantor, Sylvester Cullen, had two sons, Sylvester, Jr., and James. By deed in 1885 for the consideration of one dollar and natural love and affection he “granted, bargained and sold” to them as cograntee parties the certain lands, together with inter alia “all the estate, right, title, interest, property possession, claim and demand whatsoever of * * * [the grantor] either in law or in equity, of, in and to the * * * granted premises and every part and parcel thereof.” The deed contains a habendum clause “TO HAVE AND TO HOLD * * * unto them * * * [the cograntees ] for and during the term of their natural lives; and from and after the death of both * * * unto the heirs of their bodies in equal shares; hut should * * * [they] decease without leaving heirs, begotten of their bodies; then and in such case, the estate hereby granted shall revert unto my heirs at law.” The record is silent as to the ages of the sons and whether either had children in esse at the time of the execution of the deed.

In 1919 cograntee Sylvester, Jr., died leaving three children, one being Sylvester III.

*236 In 1922 Sylvester III deeded to appellee an undivided one-sixth interest in the land, each of the other two children of Sylvester, Jr., subsequently deeding to appellee a like interest.

In 1924 Sylvester III died, the record not disclosing whether he left issue.

In 1933 cograntee James died leaving three children, who each prior thereto had conveyed a one-sixth interest to appellee.

In 1934 one of the children of James deeded by quitclaim all right, title and interest in the land to appellant. In 1937 and 1941, respectively, the two surviving children of Sylvester, Jr., did likewise.

The only part of the title in issue is the one-sixth undivided interest described in the deed of Sylvester III, appellant conceding that appellee has good title to five-sixths. The appellant claims a three-fifths portion of such one-sixth by virtue of the three quitclaim deeds. Appellee’s claim is for the entire one-sixth interest, based upon the Sylvester III deed.

Both claims stem from the deed of 1885 and depend for efficacy upon the character of the interests in remainder of the children of Sylvester, Jr., after his death, the basic issue presented being whether Sylvester III conveyed to appellee a vested interest or one contingent upon Sylvester III surviving his uncle, James. Appellant asserts it was so contingent and that by predeceasing his uncle the conveyed interest was defeated in the hands of the appellee, that it became vested in the five surviving children on the death of James as an acquired interest in addition to those already conveyed to appellee and that three fifths of it was later effectively quitclaimed to appellant. Appellee asserts that it became an indefeasible vested interest of Sylvester III and incapable of being defeated after his father’s death, that the surviving chil *237 dren acquired no additional interest and hence the quitclaims conveyed nothing. The trial judge sustained the appellee’s assertion and this court reaches the same result.

The granting clause is general, as well as are the recitals of the deed, containing no words of limitation or setting forth the character of the estates created and in'tended to be created, whereas the habendum is specific, expressing limitations descriptive thereof. The habendum therefore controls in explaining and qualifying such estates, the deed from the relationship of its parties and from its four corners being an absolute conveyance of the title to the lands and in the nature of a family settlement by the grantor upon his sons foi their lives with fee simple remainder over to the heirs of their bodies, but whether the estate in remainder of the body heirs of the son first to die is a vested one after his death or contingent upon the death of his brother is obscured by ambiguities throughout the habendum. These ambiguities are all of the same nature, each having a direct bearing upon the basic issue presented, and intrinsically due to the dealing by the language with separate and distinct subjects as if they were one and the same. This is exemplified by the controlling phrases of the habendum, i. e., “the term of their natural lives,” “the death of both,” “the heirs of their bodies,” “heirs, begotten of their bodies,” and “the estate hereby granted.” There is nothing in the deed upon which to resolve such ambiguities and therefore the habendum itself is ambiguous and susceptible to two constructions — one of joint import and the other of several. To construe its language to be of joint import literally and strictly according to exact connotation of its phrases not only would be-unreasonable but would frustrate the paramount intention of the grantor, which was to make a valid conveyance of fee simple, and reach the absurd result that he expected not only the remainder estate to be created at a time which *238 in all probability would never occur, but also to be vested in persons who could not possibly come into existence, it being improbable that his sons would die simultaneously and impossible for them to procreate heirs from their joint bodies.

The deed being incapable' of operating in its literal and strict form, it must be made to operate in one which by law will effectuate an intention founded upon reason and common sense. (See Goodtitle ex dim. Edwards v. Bailey, Cowp. pt. 2, 597, 98 Eng. Rep. 1260, 11 Eng. Rul. Cas. 48, 14 Eng. Rul. Cas. 795.) Consequently, the literal and strict must give way to the liberal and broad in carrying out the intent of the grantor. This the appellant recognizes. He urges in effect that the phrase “unto them * * * for and during the term of their natural lives” be construed as creating a life estate in joint tenancy, the phrase “from and after the death of both” to mean “from and after the death of the survivor,'” which in itself admits that one death would be antecedent to the other, and the phrase “the estate hereby granted” to refer to the remainder estate in fee simple. This forms a construction which remains essentially one of joint import albeit not altogether literal and strict. It does not purport, however, to apply to the entire language. By reason of the necessity of not construing the remaindermen to be the heirs procreated from the joint bodies of the life tenants, it cannot be applied to that portion and appellant is forced to accept in part the construction of several import that the remaindermen Avould be “the heirs or heirs begotten of their respective bodies.” On the other hand the appellee insists in effect that such is but a compromise which unreasonably attempts to settle one ambiguity by two different methods.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 Haw. 234, 1945 Haw. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kupau-v-waiahole-water-co-ltd-haw-1945.