Nakookoo ex rel. Thompson v. Noholoa

19 Haw. 667, 1909 Haw. LEXIS 66
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 19 Haw. 667 (Nakookoo ex rel. Thompson v. Noholoa) 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
Nakookoo ex rel. Thompson v. Noholoa, 19 Haw. 667, 1909 Haw. LEXIS 66 (haw 1909).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

PERRY, J.

(Wilder, J., dissenting.)

This is an action at law to quiet the. title to certain land situate in Honolulu, Oahu. The defendant filed an answer of general denial and with it a plea in bar setting' up in substance the following: That in June, 1906, one Hikaalani Hobron Noholoa residing at Kalaupapa, Molokai, died testate seized in fee of the land in controversy; that the defendant was at that time her husband; that in the circuit court of the second circuit of this Territory, in probate, Tlikaalani’s will was upon the filing of a petition, the publication of notice and such other proceedings as are usually had in such cases admitted to probate on December 12, 1906; that at the hearing upon that petition the will, the original of which was in Hawaiian, was translated into English, a copy of the translation being attached to the plea, and that such translation was adopted by the court as correct; that subsequently in the same court a petition entitled “Tn the matter of the estate of Hikaalani Ilobron Noholoa, de[668]*668ceased,” was filed by one Kaimiola Nakookoo Gray for the appointment of an administrator of the estate of the decedent situate without Kalaupapa and alleging that petitioner was a niece and heir at law of Hikaalani, that the will devised to this defendant only such property as was situate at Kalaupapa, and that decedent left the land now in controversy and certain other real estate and also certain moneys outside of Kalaupapa and within this Territory; that at the hearing of the last mentioned petition defendant appeared and opposed it on the ground that all of the property belonging to the decedent was devised by her will; that at the hearing Kaimiola offered in evidence the rocord of the proof of the will already referred to including the translation filed at the first hearing; that the court made an order denying the petition for administration; that on appeal the supreme court of Hawaii affirmed that order on the ground that the will devised all the property of Hikaalani wherever situate to this defendant (18 Haw. 2G5) ; that Kaimiola appealed to the supreme court of the United States assigning as error the action of the supreme court of Hawaii in deciding the case upon the translation referred to and its ruling in construing the will, that by the latter the decedent left to 'this defendant all of her property wheresoever situate and whether within or without Kalaupapa; that on such appeal the supreme court of the United States sustained the decree of the supreme court of Hawaii (214 U. S. 108, 113); that subsequently but prior to the institution of this action Kaimiola died; that Hikaalani left surviving her as heirs at law this defendant and Kaimiola the daughter of one Nakookoo the brother of Hikaalani and no others; that the present plaintiffs are nieces of Kaimiola and grand nieces only of Hikaalani and that their only claim to the land in question is as heirs at law-of Kaimiola.

To this plea plaintiffs filed a replication denying that at the hearing of the petition for the probate of the will the trans[669]*669lation above mentioned was adopted by the court as correct, denying the correctness of the statement as to the relationship of the plaintiffs to Ilikaalani and admitting the truth of all the other allegations of fact contained in the plea.

The court below sustained the plea in bar and upon the pleadings entered judgment for the defendant. Plaintiffs bring a writ of error.

In this court the plaintiffs abandoned their contention that they are entitled to the land as heirs of Ilikaalani and rely solely upon the claim of title derived through Kaimiola as her heirs. Plaintiffs, therefore, are the privies of Kaimiola. If the latter if living- would have been bound in this case by the former proceedings tlio plaintiffs are now bound. Was Kaimiola concluded? We think she was.

Whatever conflict, real or apparent, there may be in the statements elsewhere of the principles in the law of res judicata or in the manner of the application of those principles to the circumstances of particular cases, as much of the law as is involved in the case at bar is settled in this jurisdiction. “A final decision fixes certain rights and in a contest as to such rights it is incumbent upon parties to put in their whole case. If they do not, it is their fault and they cannot afterwards be permitted to set up what they previously omitted. Consequently so far as the subject matter or ultimate thing adjxxdged is concerned it is conclusively presumed that every intermediate point that might have been raised was settled whether it was raised or not. But as to a different subject, only sxxch points as xvcrc actually raised and decided in respect of the first sxibject are regarded as settled. Eor although the sxxbject is different, still the parties have actually had their contest over the intermediate point and should not be pex-mitted to have a second contest; but intermediate matters not litigated or decided in the first proceeding are not regarded as settled as to a different subject, for not only haxe they not been decided in fact but [670]*670there was no duty to litigate them in the first case except so far as that case was concerned. A party may waive his right to litigate á matter as to one thing without waiving his right to litigate it as to another thing, for he may waive his right to the thing itself without waiving his right to another thing. * * * Of course, these propositions are stated subject to other, established principles, such as that the parties must be the same, the matter must be directly in issue and the court must be one of complete jurisdiction. We may add also that another proposition relied on in argument, namely, that there is no estoppel as to matters that may be merely inferred from a judgment, applies only to inferences that are possible or probable and not to those that are necessary.” Hawaiian Commercial Sugar Co. v. Wailuku Sugar Co., Id Haw. 50, 54, 55.

Passing for the moment the question of jurisdiction, it is ’apparent that within these principles the plaintiffs are bound. The parties in the two proceedings, that is, the petition for administration and the present ‘action, are the same. While circuit judges sitting in probate have jurisdiction under our statute to sell the land of the decedents when necessary to pay debts it may be assumed for the purposes of this case that the first proceeding was solely for the appointment of an administrator of the personal property and that this action relates to a different subject matter, the title to the land. The ultimate matter adjudged in the first case, the right to administration regardless of the will, is not involved in this, but two points which do arise in the case at bar and which are essential to the plaintiff’s case did arise and were adjudicated in the first. Those points are the correctness of the translation of the will and the construction of that will. The plaintiff’s predecessor, Naimiola, not only was a party to the first proceeding hut actually litigated these two intermediate points. She herself offered in evidence, with the record of the probate of the will, the translation which was adopted as correct by the circuit judge in [671]*671probate and by the two appellate courts in succession. Direct issue likewise was raised as to the proper construction of the will as thus translated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 Haw. 667, 1909 Haw. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nakookoo-ex-rel-thompson-v-noholoa-haw-1909.