Okuna v. Nakahuna

594 P.2d 128, 60 Haw. 650, 1979 Haw. LEXIS 118
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedApril 30, 1979
DocketNO. 6253
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 594 P.2d 128 (Okuna v. Nakahuna) 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
Okuna v. Nakahuna, 594 P.2d 128, 60 Haw. 650, 1979 Haw. LEXIS 118 (haw 1979).

Opinion

*651 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

RICHARDSON, C.J.

Matsuhei Okuna, plaintiff-appellant, brought an action pursuant to Chapter 669 of the Hawaii Revised Statutes (1976) seeking to quiet title to a parcel of land 1 located in Punaluu, Ka‘u, County of Hawaii. His complaint alleged, in essence, that appellant and his predecessors in interest had acquired title to the subject parcel by adverse possession and that appellant was therefore entitled to a decree adjudging him the true owner of the property. In her answer and counterclaim, Helen E. Dahlberg, defendant-appellee, denied appellant’s allegations as to acquiring title by adverse possession and sought to quiet title in herself by virtue of deed and adverse possession. 2 After a trial without jury, the court below concluded, inter alia, that appellant had failed to establish title by adverse possession because he had not shown the required element of hostility by clear and positive proof. The court also concluded that appellee had not proven ownership either by adverse possession or by deed. This appeal followed.

We affirm.

The sole issue raised in this appeal is whether the trial court erred in concluding that appellant had failed, as a matter of law, to establish title to the subject property by adverse possession. In our review, we note the following factual determinations and legal conclusions made by the trial court in rendering its decision:

FINDINGS OF FACT

5. Plaintiff’s father, Mitsuhei Okuna, claimed to be the owner of the property since the early 1930’s. The . *652 family went to the property from time to time to pick fruits from the loulu palm trees and coconut trees. After the Okunas obtained a car in 1934, the visits to the property became more frequent.
6. In 1946, Mitsuhei Okuna allowed Emilio Tutero to live on the property rent free. Mr. Tutero gave Mr. Okuna squid because Mr. Okuna liked squid. Mr. Tutero built a minimal house on the property. He later built a chicken coop. Mr. Tutero repaired the stonewalls surrounding the property because the 1946 tidal wave had damaged the wall. He subsequently maintained the wall during his residence there. Mr. Tutero cleaned the property and planted coconut trees and pumpkin which he used for his opelu fishing business.
Mr. Tutero cleared the property but retained the plum, lauhala and loulu trees.
He kept cats and dogs on the property. Mr. Tutero built a small shack to house his outboard motor.
Mr. Tutero and the Defendant knew each other during Mr. Tutero’^ stay on the property in issue. No one told Emilio Tutero to leave the property. He kept the area clean and the shacks that he built and the motor-house were visible from the public road.
Mr. Tutero had a canoe and outboard motor for his fishing operations. He sometimes fished with Mr. Kiyota Ito. Mr. Tutero also had some army tents that he had received, and set up the canvas tent near his house. The shacks and the tents were badly damaged in the 1960 tidal wave.
Mr. Tutero lived on the property from 1946 to 1960 and did not live anywhere else. He recognized Mr. Okuna as the owner of the property.
7. Mr. Mitsuhei Okuna died in 1954, leaving the Plaintiff as the residuary beneficiary of his Will and estate.
Plaintiff allowed Emilio Tutero to continue to reside on the property. Plaintiff frequently visited Mr. Tutero and picked coconuts from the property.
*653 8. Plaintiff testified that no one tried to remove Mr. Tutero from the property and no one told his father or him to get Mr. Tutero off the property.
9. After Mr. Tutero left in 1960, Plaintiff continued to visit the property and to gather coconuts. He saw nothing on the property to suggest that someone was living there or using the property.
10. Mr. Kiyota Ito is a fisherman who has lived in Punaluu since 1940 when he was 39 years old. He is now 74 years of age and still goes fishing.
Mr. Ito knew Plaintiff’s father since the early 1930’s and maintained a social relationship.
Mr. Ito understood that Plaintiff’s father owned the property in issue.
Mr. Ito knew Emilio Tutero and visited him from time to time. He lived about a 5-minute walk from the property in issue.
Mr. Ito frequently passed by along the public road fronting the property in issue — sometimes more than twice a day on his way to and from throw-net fishing. While Mr. Tutero was living there, Mr. Ito could see that the property was kept clean, that Mr. Tutero lived there, he saw the house, could see and hear the animals on the property. Mr. Ito also saw coconut trees being planted and he also saw loulu palms and lauhala trees.
Mr. Ito has lived in Punaluu continuously since he was about 39 years old in 1940 and met other people in the community who were also acquainted with the property. He has heard this property being discussed by others in the community and testified that the Punaluu community reputation of the ownership of this property was that Mr. Okuna was the owner of the property. Mr. Ito testified that during the time he has been living in Punaluu, he has never heard that Mr. Okuna was not the owner of the property.
Mr. Ito was once hired by the Defendant to do yard work. He recalls an incident where he asked the Defendant whether he should pick up the stones on the *654 “Okuna” side of the stonewall and the Defendant replied, “Okuna place, no touch.”
Mr. Ito stated that, to his knowledge, no one else claimed to be owner of the “Okuna” property.
11. Jeannette Howard returned to her childhood home in Punaluu in 1949 at the age of 19. She stated that she is familiar with the area in Punaluu and that she believed that a Mr. Napoleon owned the subject property.
She saw Emilio Tutero living there when she returned in 1949 and observed that Mr. Tutero lived there until 1960. She saw a small shack with iron roofing, cats and dogs on the property, and that he kept the land clean.
12. The Defendant has been familiar with the Punaluu area since childhood. The Defendant had a beach home adjacent to the subject property. She saw Emilio Tutero on the subject property but assumed that he was a squatter and was not occupying the property as an owner.
She did not have any knowledge of Plaintiff’s claim to this property until the institution of this action.
She purchased the subject property from Hazel Wadell in July, 1965.

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Bluebook (online)
594 P.2d 128, 60 Haw. 650, 1979 Haw. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/okuna-v-nakahuna-haw-1979.