Lalakea v. Laupahoehoe Sugar Co.

35 Haw. 262, 1939 Haw. LEXIS 5
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1939
DocketNos. 2326 AND 2327.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 35 Haw. 262 (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., 35 Haw. 262, 1939 Haw. LEXIS 5 (haw 1939).

Opinion

*266 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

PETERS, J.

This is a suit for partition. The legal title of particular shares or interests claimed in the property subject to suit Avas in controversy. The issues involving title Avere first heard and determined by the circuit judge in chambers, jury Avaived. From an interlocutory decree entered and filed on January 16, 1935, determining such issues an appeal Avas taken to this court. (See Lalakea v. Laupahoehoe S. Co., 33 Haw. 745.) Upon remand the circuit judge ordered partition in kind of parts of the property and the sale of the remainder. Sale Avas made; the sale confirmed and a final decree entered accordingly on November 23, 1936.

The case is noAV pending before this court upon the joint appeal of petitioners Solomon Iv. Lalakea and Mollie Pang Lalakea and upon the joint appeal of the respondent Lily HeAvahewa in her capacity as contingent remainder-man expectant and of the respondent Thomas Kanamu Lalakea, a minor, by his next friend Lily HeAvahewa from the final decree.

First as to the pending motions to dismiss appeals. The Laupahoehoe Sugar Company, a corporation, a respondent and cross-complainant, has filed motions to dismiss both appeals. Similar motions upon other grounds have also been before this court. (See 34 HaAV. 232, 244, 729.) In the pending motions certain grounds are common *267 to both, vis., (a) that the appellants failed to serve their respective notices of appeal upon appellees as required by R. L. H. 1935, § 3501; (b) that appellants failed to serve non joining parties who could be found within the Territory with a copy of their respective notices of appeal as required by R. L. H. 1935, § 3502; (c) that appellants in their notices of appeal failed to use the names of other persons against whom the decree appealed from was rendered as required by R. L. H. 1935, § 3502. The motion to dismiss, directed to the joint appeal of Lily Hewahewa and the minor Thomas Kanamu Lalakea, contains the additional ground that while purporting to he made by both appellants the same is signed only on. behalf of Lily Hewahewa and not on behalf of the minor.

The grounds common to both motions will be considered first. .

Those lettered (a) and (b) will be considered together. Upon the motion to dismiss the appeal of Lily Hewahewa in her capacity as a contingent remainderman expectant and Thomas Kanamu Lalakea, a minor, by his next friend Lily Hewahewa, the record of this court was supplemented after the motion to dismiss was filed by the affidavit of service of one of the attorneys for appellants. To this affidavit no traverse Avas filed. From the affidavit it appears that the affiant served the appeal and notice of appeal filed on behalf of the appellant Lily HeAvaheAva in her capacity as contingent remainderman expectant and on behalf of Thomas Kanamu Lalakea, a minor, by his next friend Lily HeAvaheAva, upon the attorneys for the Laupalioehoe Sugar Company and upon the attorney for the petitioners Solomon K. Lalakea and Mollie Pang Lalakea and upon Harry Irwin, Esq., avIio, prior to said appeal, had been acting as the guardian ad litem of the said Thomas Kanamu Lalakea, by depositing in the post office at Hilo an envelope, postage prepaid, duly and prop *268 erly addressed to each of said attorneys, containing a certified copy of the appeal and notice of appeal of said appellants. Of tlie respondents named but three personally appeared in the circuit court, vis., Laupahoehoe Sugar Company, a corporation, Thomas Kanamu Lalakea, a minor, by Harry Irwin, Esq., his guardian ad litem, and Lily Hewahewa. The remaining respondents, including Lily Hewahewa, were in default and orders of default and decrees pro confesso had been entered against them both upon the bill of complaint of the petitioners and upon the cross-complaint of the respondent and cross-complainant Laupahoehoe Sugar Company. Later, Lily Hewahewa was permitted by the court to intervene in the case. (See 34 Haw. 242.) Moreover, prior to the expiration of the return days fixed by the summons issued upon the bill of complaint of the petitioners and the cross-complaint of the respondent and cross-complainant Laupahoehoe Sugar Company, an order of class representation had been entered in the circuit court Avlierein and AAdiereby the minor Thomas Kanamu Lalakea and his guardian ad litem Harry Irwin, Esq., Avere appointed to represent the heirs of the petitioner Solomon K. Lalakea and all other persons then living and those thereafter to be born avIio might then have or might thereafter acquire any contingent or other interest or estate in remainder upon the death of said Solomon K. Lalakea in the lands subject to a certain deed from T. K. Lalakea to the said Solomon K. Lalakea, dated March 6, 1915, in order to protect their rights, if any, and to bind them by such order and decree as the court might make therein. All of the knoAvn respondents, with the exception of the Laupahoehoe Sugar Company and the ITaAvaiian Insurance & Guaranty Company, Limited, including the said Lily HeAvalieAva, against Avhom defaults and decrees pro confesso had been entered, were heirs presumptive of Solomon K. Lalakea and remaindermen *269 expectant under tlie said deed from T. K. Lalakea to Solomon K. Lalakea, dated March 6, 1915, aforesaid. The record discloses that the only interest the respondent Hawaiian Insurance & Guaranty Company, Limited, had in the premises subject to suit was as mortgagee under a mortgage to it from the petitioner Solomon K. Lalakea and his wife and that the mortgage, so far as it affected the premises in suit prior to final decree, had been fully released.

Under the circumstances the only parties affected by the entry of the final decree from which the appeals were taken were the petitioners Solomon K. Lalakea and his wife Mollie Pang Lalakea, the respondent Laupahoelioe Sugar Company, the respondent-minor Thomas Kanamu Lalakea and the respondent Lily Hewahewa. The orders of default and decrees pro confesso, so far as their personal appearance ivas concerned, eliminated all of the respondents other than those named, both as appellees under the provisions of section 3501 or as “persons” against whom a decree “was rendered” or as “persons who have not joined in the appeal” within the meaning of the provisions of section 3502. By R. L. H. 1935, § 4755, it is provided that “all parties who shall not have appeared in the suit on or before the return day or within such further time as may be allowed by the court shall be deemed to be in default and as consenting to any partition or other disposition of the property as shall be decreed in accordance with the provisions of this chapter.”

Upon the record it affirmatively appears that the appellants Lily Hewahewa, in her capacity as contingent remainderman expectant, and Thomas Kanamu Lalakea, a minor, by his next friend Lily Hewahewa, respondent, served the petitioners and the respondent Laupahoelioe Sugar Company with copies of their notice of appeal. So that if, under section 3501, they were required to serve a *270

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 Haw. 262, 1939 Haw. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lalakea-v-laupahoehoe-sugar-co-haw-1939.