Lalakea v. Laupahoehoe Sugar Co.

33 Haw. 745, 1936 Haw. LEXIS 30
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1936
DocketNo. 2207.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 33 Haw. 745 (Lalakea v. Laupahoehoe Sugar Co.) 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
Lalakea v. Laupahoehoe Sugar Co., 33 Haw. 745, 1936 Haw. LEXIS 30 (haw 1936).

Opinion

*746 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

PETERS, J.

This appeal is from a decree of a circuit judge at chambers in a statutory proceeding for partition. The respondent minor is the appellant. Petitioner Solomon K. Lalakea, hereafter referred to as the petitioner, and respondent Laupahoehoe Sugar Company, hereafter referred to as the respondent company, are the appellees. The appellant and the respondent company were the only appearing respondents below. The premises, partition of which is sought, are described in R. P. (Grant) 2393, to Kainoa, referred to by name only, area 96 acres, the premises described in R. P. (Grant) 2220, to Kanamu, also referred to by name only, area 81 acres, and a part of R. P. (Grant) 2729, to Keaki, described by metes'and bounds, area 143 acres. For brevity the premises will be hereinafter referred to by their respective R. P. (Grant) numbers.

The petitioner, Solomon K. Lalakea, claims ownership in fee simple absolute of an undivided seven-sixteenths interest in an undivided one-half of R. P. (Grant) 2393, and of an undivided seven-eighths interest in each of R. P. (Grants) 2220 and 2729, subject to the dower interest of *747 his wife, the petitioner Mollie Pang Lalakea, claimed by the latter.

The sole controversy upon this appeal is the validity of the deed through which the appellant claims title, to wit, a deed from T. K. Lalakea to his son Solomon K. Lalakea, the petitioner, dated March 6, 1915, and recorded on May 11, 1915, in the office of the registrar of conveyances of the Territory.

The common source of title is the grantor, T. K. Lalakea.

The respective shares claimed by the petitioner and respondent company are admitted. They together comprise the entirety. It is the respective estates in the shares claimed by them and the estate claimed by the appellant that the validity of the disputed deed affects.

The deed of March 6, 1915, after reserving a life estate in the grantor for his life purports to convey to the grantee an estate for the life of the latter, remainder over to the latter’s heirs.

The petitioner, however, instead of claiming a life estate under the disputed deed to him from his father claims the fee to an undivided one-eighth interest by descent from his father who died intestate May 7, 1915, and the fee to remaining fractional shares claimed by him by descent and purchase from the other heirs of his father. Obviously if the disputed deed is valid T. K. Lalakea, the grantor, did not die siezed of any of the premises subject thereto and neither the petitioner nor the other heirs of T. K. Lalakea, through whom the petitioner claims, acquired any title thereto by descent and the petitioner, in support of any estate in the shares claimed by him, is relegated to the terms of the disputed deed which conveyed but a life estate.

The respondent company claims, in addition to other interests otherwise acquired by it and immaterial to the *748 issues upon this appeal, title to an undivided one-eighth interest in fee in all of the premises, partition of which is sought, as successor in interest of a daughter of the grant- or, T. K. Lalakea, one Hannah Makainai, who successfully challenged the validity of the disputed deed in an action of ejectment instituted by her against her brother, this petitioner, and to whom was adjudged therein on February 9, 1921, an undivided one-eighth interest in the premises as one of the heirs at law of the grantor, T. K. Lalakea. See Hannah Makainai, plaintiff, v. Solomon K. Lalakea, defendant, fourth circuit court Law No. 671. It is equally obvious in this connection that if the disputed deed is valid (and the minor respondent is not estopped by the judgment in the Makainai case to assert its validity) the estate of the respondent company in an undivided one-eighth interest acquired by it from Hannah Makainai is an estate for life and not in fee, the fee being in the minor respondent as a contingent remainderman expectant under the disputed deed.

The undivided shares, title to which was claimed by the petitioner by descent from his father and by descent and purchase from the coheirs of his father, equal in the aggregate the interests conveyed to him by the disputed deed after there is deducted from the latter the undivided one-eighth interest adjudged to Hannah Makainai so that the estate and not the quantum of interest claimed by the petitioner is affected accordingly as the disputed deed is valid or invalid.

The appellant claims, as heir presumptive of his father, a contingent remainder expectant in all the interests of which his grandfather, T. Iv. Lalakea, was seized immediately prior to the execution of the disputed deed, if valid, including a contingent remainder in the undivided one-eighth interest claimed by the respondent company. Obviously his claim depends entirely upon the validity of *749 the disputed deed. If invalid the respective estates in the respective shares claimed by the petitioner and the respondent company are in fee simple and the minor takes nothing under said deed.

The petitioner although admitting estoppel as to the respondent company by the judgment in the MaJcainai case made no claim upon the trial of invalidity of the disputed deed. On the contrary, when called as a Avitness on behalf of the appellant his testimony sustained its due •execution and delivery by the grantor. The issues of invalidity lay betAveen the tAVO respondents. The position of the petitioner in this court is consistent Avith his position beloAV.

The trial judge found that the deed Avas a forgery but if not it had never been delivered by the grantor to the grantee. With these findings Ave are unable to agree.

At the outset it may be apropos to observe that although these same issues have been before this court tAvice before, once in the MaJcainai case in which findings of the trial court jury Avaived against the validity of the disputed deed on the same grounds Avere sustained (see Hannah Makainai v. Solomon K. Lalakea, 26 Haw. 667) and once in an action at laAV to quiet title instituted by the petitioner’s sister, Lily HeAvaheAva, against him in Avhich the validity of the deed Avas attacked upon the same grounds but in which findings of the trial court jury Avaived in favor of the validity of the deed Avere also sustained in this court (see Lily Hewahewa v. Solomon K. Lalakea, supreme court No. 1447, 27 Haw. 544), our conchision in neither of those cases is in anyAvise to be considered as controlling in this case, both of those cases having been at laAV in term and the method of review by writ of error Avhile the present action is in equity, Avas before the circuit court at chambers and is here upon appeal from a decree of the circuit court at chambers. The issues in *750 volved upon tlie appeals in those cases were raised upon error assigned to the decision of the trial court jury Avaived upon the ground that the same Avas contrary to the evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 Haw. 745, 1936 Haw. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lalakea-v-laupahoehoe-sugar-co-haw-1936.