Lai v. Kukahiko

569 P.2d 352, 58 Haw. 362, 1977 Haw. LEXIS 122
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 23, 1977
DocketNO. 5922
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 569 P.2d 352 (Lai v. Kukahiko) 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
Lai v. Kukahiko, 569 P.2d 352, 58 Haw. 362, 1977 Haw. LEXIS 122 (haw 1977).

Opinion

*363 Per Curiam.

Defendants Kulani Kukahiko and Went-worth Kealoha (appellants) have appealed from an adverse judgment in a quiet title action brought by plaintiffs TungMing Lai and Chin-Yu Lai, husband and wife, and Arthur K. Trask and Nana Reeder Hall Trask, husband and wife (appellees), in a jury waived trial involving two parcels of land situated in Kaalaea, Koolaupoko, Oahu, Hawaii. Judgment was entered quieting title in plaintiffs and dismissing defendants’ counterclaim of title in fee to the same parcels by adverse possession. We affirm.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

The property in dispute consists of two one-acre parcels of land located on the southerly side of Pulama Place at Kaalaea, Koolaupoko, Oahu, Hawaii, and being portions of a larger acreage of land commonly referred to as “Kiha” land, of Royal Patent 689, Land Court Award 7696 to Kiha no Keolewa. Appellees claim title to the land by adverse possession established by their predecessors in interest, George Manuia Galbraith (hereinafter Manuia Galbraith) and Hoohila Hilda Galbraith Kawelo, also known as Hilda G. Kawelo, Manuia Galbraith’s daughter (hereinafter Hilda Kawelo). Appellees also claim title by a lost grant from George Galbraith, who appellees assert is the father of Manuia Galbraith, and John Montgomery, tenants in common to Kiha by virtue of a conveyance in 1863 from one Paul F. Manini. Paul F. Manini bought the land in 1861 from the original grantee, Keolewa.

Appellants assert superior title to the entire L. C. Aw. 7696, which includes the disputed parcels, by adverse possession established by their predecessor in interest, Kaaoaoloa Kukahiko, also known as Alice Kukahiko.

In rendering judgment herein for the appellees, the trial court made the following findings of fact and conclusions of law, inter alia:

FINDINGS OF FACT:
*364 3. Hoohila Hilda Manuia Galbraith Kawelo derived all of her right, title and interest to Kiha no Keolewa from her father George Manuia Galbraith by way of inheritance and succession. George Manuia Galbraith derived all of his right, title and interest from his father George Galbraith and John Montgomery, tenants in common, by deeds of conveyance, which deeds are now lost. George Galbraith and John Montgomery derived all of their right, title and interest to Kiha no Keolewa from Paul F. Manini by deed of conveyance dated February 7, 1863, recorded in the Bureau of Conveyances of the State of Hawaii in Book 16, page 228. Paul F. Manini derived all of his right, title and interest to Kiha no Keolewa from Keolewa by deed of conveyance dated April 24, 1861, recorded in the Bureau of Conveyances of the State of Hawaii in Book 16, page 228. Keolewa was awarded the Kiha lands at Kaalaea, Koolaupoko, Oahu, by Land Commission Award No. 7696 and Royal Patent No. 986. A lost grant is established.
4. Hoohila Hilda Manuia Galbraith Kawelo, her father George Manuia Galbraith, her husband Joseph Kawelo, her sons, her daughters, and their families farmed Kiha by raising cattle and pigs and planting taro, pineapple, sugar cane, and other vegetables since the conveyance to grandfather George Galbraith; and for a period of at least 112 years were in open, notorious, actual, continuous, hostile, and exclusive possession of the Kiha land; and continuously fenced and maintained hostile and exclusive possession thereof with traditions of family burial grounds and heiau monuments of Kiha. Hoohila Hilda Manuia Galbraith Kawelo did not pay real property taxes prior to 1965, but since the case of Re Land Title, Wong, 47 Haw. 472, 1965 to present has paid taxes on Kiha.
a. Witness Paul Newalo, Sr. who was in the general contracting business and who employed Joseph Kawelo, Hoohila’s husband, from time to time as a truck driver, since 1907, saw George Manuia Galbraith farming the land of Kiha some time in 1913. Specifically, Newalo did *365 not see John Kukahiko, the father of Defendant Kulani Kukahiko, working in the land of Kiha. Newalo knew of the Galbraith-Kawelo burial grounds.
b. Witness William P. Kapu supported the claim of Hoohila Hilda Manuia Galbraith Kawelo, predecessor in title to plaintiffs herein. His father was in the taro business, making and selling poi, and was also in the rice business in the adjoining district of Kahaluu; since he was a boy Kapu helped his father haul taro and rice from 1910 to 1925; he saw George Manuia Galbraith grow taro in the land of Kiha which Kapu and his father made into poi from George Manuia Galbraith’s taro, from the land of Kiha; Kapu saw the various types of taro that were grown by the Galbraith-Kawelo family; and Kapu saw John Kukahiko, father of Respondent Kulani Kukahiko, but Kapu did not see John Kukahiko in the land of Kiha. Kapu saw John Kukahiko work in a parcel of land which adjoined Kiha.
5. Respondent Kulani Kukahiko attempted to remove the Kawelo family in 1961. Respondent Kukahiko built a fence on Kiha in 1937. Respondent Kukahiko visited the Kiha lands about fifty times from the period 1946 to present, without more. Respondent Kukahiko’s mother Alice Kukahiko began to pay taxes on Kiha since 1935 to present. Alice Kukahiko collected rental on two occasions from a farmer living on a portion of Kiha, — But from all the evidence Defendant has failed to prove adverse possession, amounting to a disseisin of Hoohila Hilda Manuia Galbraith Kawelo.

Conclusions of law:

1. Plaintiffs Tung-Ming Lai and Chin-Yu Lai have good right, title and interest and are the present owners in fee simple of the parcel of land described [herein];
2. Plaintiffs Arthur K. Trask and Nana Reeder Hall Trask have good right, title and interest and are the present owners in fee simple of the parcel of land described [herein];
*366 3. Respondents Kulani Kukahiko and Wentworth Kealoha did not possess the Kiha lands adversely for a period of twenty years.
4. Respondents Kulani Kukahiko and Wentworth Leialoha’s [sic] counterclaim filed herein is without merit and is dismissed with prejudice.

The appellants attack findings of fact numbers 3, 4, and 5 as being clearly erroneous and unsupported by the evidence; conclusions of law 1 and 2 as being erroneous because based on facts 3 and 4; conclusion of law number 3 as erroneous because it ascribes adverse possession to defendants only and not to defendants and defendants’ predecessor in interest; that conclusion of law number 4 as erroneous because based on findings of facts numbers 3,4 and 5.

Appellants claim that the facts do not support appellees’ predecessors’ claim of right to the property. Appellants further contend that because Manuia Galbraith refused to pay taxes on Kiha land, 1 and Hilda Kawelo did not pay taxes until 1965 or 1966, and because Manuia disclaimed having “paper title” to the land, 2 this was evidence of abandonment of right in or claim to the property.

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Bluebook (online)
569 P.2d 352, 58 Haw. 362, 1977 Haw. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lai-v-kukahiko-haw-1977.