Minatoya v. Mousel

625 P.2d 378, 2 Haw. App. 1, 1981 Haw. App. LEXIS 165
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 9, 1981
DocketNO. 6721
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 625 P.2d 378 (Minatoya v. Mousel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minatoya v. Mousel, 625 P.2d 378, 2 Haw. App. 1, 1981 Haw. App. LEXIS 165 (hawapp 1981).

Opinion

*2 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

BURNS, J.

This case involves a boundary dispute between owners of adjoining residential land in Kualoa, Oahu.

In April 1976, Appellant Albertina Mousel (Mrs. Mousel) sent her neighbor Mrs. Minatoya a letter asking her to “please move your garage on to your own property”. There being no response, the Mousels tore up the concrete driveway at the entrance of the garage, extended their panax hedge so as to partially block the entrance to the garage, and padlocked a shower attached to the garage.

In response, appellees filed this action to permanently enjoin the Mousels “from coming upon” their property and for damages for trespass, for interference with use and enjoyment of property and for physical damage to the property.

The Mousels’ title traces back to 1917 when Mrs. Mousel’s father, Mr. Roberts, purchased approximately one-half of an acre of land. In January 1956, Mr. Roberts acquired from the Territory additional land between his property and Kamehameha Highway which had become available because of the realignment of the highway. Immediately thereafter, Mr. Roberts subdivided all of his land into parcels 1, 2, 3,4 and 5. In 1962, solely for purposes of adjusting the north-south boundary between lots 4 and 5, Mr. Roberts consolidated lots 4 and 5 and resubdivided them into lots 4-A and 5-A. Later in 1962 Mr. Roberts died and Mrs. Mousel inherited lot 5-A (Mousel property).

*3 By deed in 1945, Mrs. Minatoya acquired her property (Minatoya property) located on the north side of and adjoining lots 4-A and 5-A between Kamehameha Highway and the ocean. In 1972, she conveyed the property to appellees in trust.

The 1917 deed describes the boundary of the Mousel property fronting Kamehameha Highway and the boundary which adjoins the Minatoya property as:

Beginning at a + on a stone in the stone wall near the sharp turn of Government Road, . . . and running by assumed true azimuths: 1. 188° 27' 220.0 feet along makai line of Government Road; 2. 278° 27' 115.0 feet more or less along remainder of Kualoa to high water.

The 1945 deed describes the boundary of the Minatoya property which adjoins the Mousel property as starting at the same place and running on the same assumed azimuth for the same distance.

In 1945, there was a white wooden fence running along azimuth 274° 40' between the properties. For some time prior to 1955, the Territory of Hawaii Survey Department described the boundary of the Mousel property fronting Kamehameha Highway as running on azimuth 9° 20' for 209.45 feet and it described the boundary adjoining the Minatoya property as running on azimuth 274° 40' along the white fence line to the ocean.

Thus, the Territory used azimuth 274° 40' as the northern boundary of the remnant it sold to Mr. Roberts in 1955; Mr. Roberts used azimuth 274° 40' as the northern boundary of his property when he subdivided his property in 1956; and Mr. Roberts again used azimuth 274° 40' when he resubdivided lots 4 and 5 in 1962.

The crucial factual issue at trial was whether the adjoining boundary ran along azimuth 278° 27' or 274° 40'.

After a bench trial, the lower court concluded that by paper title and by adverse possession the adjoining boundary between the two properties is what the Territory Survey Department said it was, true azimuth 274° 40', and that the Mousels’ acts constituted a tortious trespass upon the Minatoya property. The lower court awarded the appellees the right to a permanent injunction, 1 damages of $50.00 *4 for the locking, $100.00 for the destruction of the driveway and the planting of the hedge, and $1.00 for all other acts of trespass.

PAPER TITLE

The Mousels contend that the appellees (the Minatoyas) failed to prove paper title because their deed specifies that they own only to azimuth 278° 27' and not to 274° 40' and that their boundary starts 220 feet from the + on a stone on the stone wall, not 209.45 feet. This contention ignores the distinction between what is assumed to be true and what is in fact true.

At trial, the Minatoyas introduced the 1945 deed by which they acquired their land which showed the disputed boundary as running along “assumed true azimuth 278° 27'”. However, they also introduced testimony from “an expert in the field of survey” that in this case “assumed true azimuth 278° 27'” is the same as “true azimuth 274° 40'” and that the 220 feet figure is really 209.45 feet.

In its findings of fact, the lower court stated the basis for the expert’s conclusion.

4. In earlier times, without the benefit of the complex and precise scientific equipment now used in surveying, and due in part to the relative abundance of marketable land, surveys based upon assumed azimuths, while not accurate, were nevertheless accepted.
5. The land description based upon an assumed azimuth is only an estimate of the true boundaries so long as the azimuths described remain “assumed”. A true survey, using true azimuths, describes the actual boundaries of the land described. A description based on assumed azimuths and a description based on true azimuths describe the same piece of property, even though the descriptions differ. The difference, if any, is attributable to the “assumed” as opposed to “true” azimuths used as a reference in describing the land.
6. Distances as described in old deeds based on assumed azimuths are apt to be in error, again partly attributable to imprecise instruments used to measure the distances.

These findings are consistent with our supreme court’s thoughts on the subject as stated in In Re Application of Eklund, 51 Haw. 568 at 579, 465 P.2d 552 at 558 (1970).

*5 The lower court’s findings not being clearly erroneous, we find no error in its decision that by paper title the Minatoyas own up to azimuth 274° 40'.

ADVERSE POSSESSION

The Mousels contend that the Minatoyas never claimed any more land than they acquired by the 1945 deed to them and therefore that they do not satisfy the requirement that they possessed the land with hostility. We disagree.

The Mousels’ contention misstates the evidence. The evidence indicates that the Minatoyas always thought their deed included the land up to the fence (which ran along true azimuth 274° 40') between the two properties.

The Mousels’ contention also misstates the law.

It is the rule in this jurisdiction that color of title is not indispensable to prove title by adverse possession if the other necessary elements, namely, actual, open, notorious, continuous and exclusive possession for the statutory period as the apparent owner, are shown to exist, and is [sic] not explained. (Albertina v. Kapiolani Estate, 14 Haw. 321, . . .

Territory v. Pai-a,

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Bluebook (online)
625 P.2d 378, 2 Haw. App. 1, 1981 Haw. App. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minatoya-v-mousel-hawapp-1981.