Lum Ah Lee v. Ah Soong

16 Haw. 163, 1904 Haw. LEXIS 23
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 18, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 16 Haw. 163 (Lum Ah Lee v. Ah Soong) 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
Lum Ah Lee v. Ah Soong, 16 Haw. 163, 1904 Haw. LEXIS 23 (haw 1904).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

HARTWELL, J.

This is an appeal from a decree made by the Third Jndge of the Eirst Circuit Court at chambers, perpetually enjoining the defendants from obstructing, interfering with or decreasing in volume the water flowing over a certain dam in Manoa stream called the Paaluhi dam, or in any manner obstructing, interfering with or decreasing in volume the water used in supplying the lands of the complainants on the Ewa side of said stream flowing in the ditch from the dam known as the Bishop dam, and described in the plaintiffs’ bill of complaint, and also awarding to the plaintiffs damages in the sum of $1,700., “resulting to and sustained by the said complainants by reason of the unlawful acts of said respondents in trespassing upon said land, and in obstructing and interfering with and decreasing in volume the water flowing over said Paaluhi dam through said ditch, together with costs in the further sum of $55.50; which said several sums are hereby assessed against the said Ah Soong, Ting Sing, Wong Grong and Eong Yuek, jointly and each of them severally.”

At the first hearing on the bill before Silliman, J., at chambers, a decree was made dismissing the bill. On appeal therefrom this court reversed that decree and remanded the case to the Circuit Judge of the Eirst Judicial Circuit, to ascertain the amount of damage suffered by the complainants in consequence of the respondents’ wrongful acts, and to enter a decree in accordance with his findings thereon and in conformity with the views expressed by this court in its decision. 13 Haw. 378.

It is contended by the defendants “that the testimony for the plaintiffs does not meet the rule requiring a reasonable certainty in the proof of damages;” that the evidence shows three [165]*165distinct canses of loss in addition to the acts of the defendants, namely: “(1) the act of God; (2) the acts of the plaintiffs; and (3) the acts of third parties;” that the extent of the loss from the natural cause of drouth was unsupported by any evidence, although fixed by the circuit judge at one-fourth of the total loss; that the judge made no allowance for loss from the plaintiffs’ own acts, and that the extent of that loss was incapable of ascertainment; and that the same was true of the damage caused by the acts of third parties. The following citations were made in support of this contention: Wakeman v. Mfg. Co., 101 N. Y. 205; Selden v. Cashman, 20 Cal. 57.

The New York case was an action for damages for breach of an agreement by which the defendants were to furnish sewing machines for sale in Mexico, giving the plaintiffs the sole agency for the sale. The plaintiffs had sold fifty machines and sent the order to the defendants for them, which order was filled, but the defendants refused to fill a second order of the plaintiffs for fifty machines. The plaintiffs showed a profit which they could have made of $4.00 on a machine, and the damages were limited by the trial judge to the loss of profits on the machines which they ordered. The plaintiffs claimed damages for a total breach of the agreement. The appellate court, while saying that damages which were merely speculative and imaginary could not be recovered, held that in this case the defendants had a right to establish agencies for the sale of their machines, which 'agencies could not be broken up at the will of the defendants without default of the plaintiffs; that the agreement had value to the plaintiffs, of which they had been deprived by the defendants, and that while that value was uncertain and difficult to estimate, the plaintiffs “should not have been deprived of the damages which they made to appear because they could not make clear the full amount of their damages. All the facts should have been submitted to the jury with proper instructions, and their verdict, not based upon mere specnlation and possibilities but, upon the facts and circumstances proved, would have approached as near the proper measure of justice as the nature [166]*166of the case and the infirmity which attaches to the administration of the law will admit. In 1 Sutherland on Damages, 113, it is said: ‘If there is no more certain method of arriving at the amount, the injured party is entitled to submit to the jury the particular facts which have transpired, and to show the whole situation which is the foundation of the claim and expectation of profits so far as any detail offered has a legal tendency to support such claim.’ ”

Selden v. Cashman, above cited, was an action for wrongful levy, in which the plaintiff claimed that during the levy his store was closed and his business stopped. lie claimed damages for loss done to his business and to his credit, and for the diminution of profits of his trade during the levy. The court held that damages for loss of profits which the plaintiff might have made were too remote and contingent to be allowed, and that “the right of recovery is necessarily limited to such damages as are susceptible of computation.” The facts in that case have no-parallel in those of the present case.

The extract above cited, however, in the New York case from Sutherland states correctly the rule of law, which entitles an injured party to submit to the jury “the particular facts which have transpired,” etc. This view is illustrated in Merritt v. Brinkerhoff 17 Johnson 306, which was an action on the case brought by-several owners of mill seats on a stream against the owner of a mill above for damage resulting to the plaintiffs from the defendant’s stopping the natural flow of the stream, shutting his gate and detaining the water for an unreasonable time, or letting it out in such unusual quantities as to prevent the plaintiffs from using it. During the time in which the injury was alleged to have been caused, it was shown that there was a very severe drouth, but it was testified that there was enough water to turn the mills if the defendant had not stopped the water in his dam. There was, however, considerable diversity of opinion among the witnesses on this subject. The judge charged the jury that the question whether the injury resulted from the defendant’s acts or by reason of the drouth was a question [167]*167for them to decide. This instruction was sustained by the appel late court.

The further contention of the defendants is that the amount of the damages awarded by the Circuit Judge was based on no evidence on which the net value of the last crop was legally determinable.

In considering this two-fold defense, that neither the reasonable cause of the damage, nor its extent, was legally shown, we have carefully examined the record of testimony, and are of the opinion that there was legal evidence on which the award was based. This court having in its former decision held that the case showed that the defendants had infringed upon the plaintiffs’ legal rights, and that the plaintiffs’ taro crops had thereby become diminished in value, the credibility of the testimony concerning the extent of the loss, so far as it legally tended to show such loss, was for the judge to whom it was presented to pass upon. The evidence of the extent of the loss caused by the drouth upon other taro crops in the immediate vicinity was competent to show the extent to which the plaintiffs’ crops suffered from the same cause, and the finding of the judge that one-fourth of the loss was so caused was supported by the testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Haw. 163, 1904 Haw. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lum-ah-lee-v-ah-soong-haw-1904.