Pae AKA Liu v. Stevens Treas. T.H.

41 Haw. 490, 1956 Haw. LEXIS 16
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1956
DocketNO. 3025.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 41 Haw. 490 (Pae AKA Liu v. Stevens Treas. T.H.) 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
Pae AKA Liu v. Stevens Treas. T.H., 41 Haw. 490, 1956 Haw. LEXIS 16 (haw 1956).

Opinion

*491 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

STAINBACK, J.

This case was argued and submitted to the full court. The term of one of the justices, in the interim, having expired and he having left the bench, it was stipulated by all parties that the case be decided and opinion rendered by the two remaining justices.

Plaintiff filed suit in the court below against Ruth Lehua Stevens and Samuel Stevens alleging that they conspired to deprive plaintiff of his interest in certain lands in Honolulu. Also named as a defendant was the treasurer of the Territory; in his complaint plaintiff alleged that the treasurer should, by virtue of section 5099, Revised Laws of Hawaii 1935 (now section 12699, Revised Laws of Hawaii 1945), make payment to plaintiff for damages sustained by him for loss of his land because of the negligence of the land-court examiner in failing to discover that plaintiff was a minor and thus causing registration of plaintiff’s title in the land court without notation upon the certificate of registration that plaintiff was a minor.

Stipulation as to the facts was made and the court rendered its decision finding for the defendant-treasurer; the appeal is from such part of the decision.

The stipulated facts, in substance, are as follows:

On February 12, 1920, plaintiff was born in Honolulu, the child of John Lui and Sarah Lui, and on May 13,1920, he was baptized in Honolulu under the name of Raymond Louis.

In September 1926 plaintiff assumed the name of Raymond Pae and has been known by that name since that time. The surname was that of his uncle, John Naaeao Pae, by whom he was being reared.

Plaintiff graduated from the public schools of Honolulu and in 1940 he was married under the name of Joseph Lui, which was his brother’s given name, as he felt his own *492 Hawaiian name of Kealohaokalani was too long and difficult.

On March 30,1938, John Naaeao Pae died in Honolulu, leaving a will dated July 1, 1935 by which he bequeathed and devised all of his property to his two nephews, Joe Pae and Raymond Pae, equally and share and share alike. Included in the property so devised was a parcel of land on the northwest side of Emma street in the City and County of Honolulu, containing an area of 9,080 square feet. The will was duly admitted to probate and while probate was pending the defendant, Samuel Stevens, stated in the presence of plaintiff to Charles E. Cassidy, attorney for the estate of John Naaeao Pae, that plaintiff was an adult. Plaintiff remained silent. On December 5, 1938, the circuit judge at chambers of the first judicial circuit entered an order approving accounts, determining trust and distributing the estate of John Naaeao Pae. The order provided in part that:

“The persons entitled, as distributees, to have delivered to them all of the property belonging to said estate remaining in the hands of said Administrator, are as follows, to wit:
“JOSEPH PAE, also known as Joe Pae, Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii, adult and nephew of said deceased, and
“RAYMOND PAE, Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii, adult and nephew of said deceased.”

On February 17, 1939, plaintiff and his brother Joseph Pae mortgaged the land in question to the Liberty Bank of Honolulu to secure a $2,500 loan, which mortgage was duly recorded in the bureau of conveyances of the Territory of Hawaii. On June 17, 1939, plaintiff and his brother Joseph executed a second mortgage to G. D. Crozier to secure loans up to $1,000 for costs and expenses in connection with the land-court registration of this parcel and *493 another parcel which is not involved in this action.

In September 1939 plaintiff and his brother Joseph executed a power of attorney to Ruth Lehua Stevens, the power of attorney being duly recorded in the bureau of conveyances of the Territory of Hawaii.

On October 9,1939, plaintiff executed a third mortgage to the Honolulu Finance and Thrift Company, Limited, subject to the two prior mortgages, to secure a loan of $500, which mortgage was duly recorded in the bureau of conveyances.

On October 11, 1939, Jordan Freitas, Jacob F. Carrereo, and plaintiff and his brother, by Ruth Lehua Stevens, their attorney in fact, signed an agreement which provided, in substance, that Jordan Freitas had paid $1,700 to Jacob F. Carreiro in escrow to be released to plaintiff and his brother Joseph, or their authorized representative, in part payment for the premises in question, provided a land-court certificate of title issued to plaintiff and his brother indicating that they held a fee-simple title thereto and that a land-court deed sufficient to convey such title be delivered by plaintiff and his brother to Jordan Freitas, and further provided that if no such deed be delivered within ninety days then Joseph F. Carreiro was to return the $1,700 to Jordan Freitas.

On October 24, 1939, Ruth Lehua Stevens, acting with the knowledge and consent of the plaintiff and of his brother Joseph Pae, and under authority granted by power of attorney of September 1939 heretofore referred to, made a written application to the land court of the Territory of Hawaii for the registration of the title to this land. The abstract of title prepared by William L. Ewaliko, who was properly licensed to engage in the business of making abstracts and certificates of title, was filed with the land-court application. The abstract referred to the order approving accounts, determining trust and distrib *494 uting estate as heretofore set forth, named and described the distributees as “Joseph Pae, also known as Joe Pae, adult and nephew of John Naaeao Pae, and Raymond Pae, adult and nephew of John Naaeao Pae, as tenants in common.”

On October 24, 1939, the land-court application was duly referred to P. C. Morris, an examiner of titles. The examiner did not question plaintiff or examine the records of the bureau of vital statistics of the board of health in an effort to determine whether or not plaintiff was an adult. However, the name of Raymond Pae does not appear in the records of the bureau of vital statistics of the territorial department of health.

On January 17, 1940, the land court entered a decree registering the land in question, in which it described the registered owners as Joseph Pae, unmarried, and Raymond Pae, unmarried, giving their addresses and describing them as tenants in common in equal shares. The decree did not describe plaintiff as a minor. On the same date the land court, pursuant to said decree, issued original certificate of title.

On January 19, 1940, Ruth Lehua Stevens, acting by authority of the power of attorney heretofore referred to, deeded the land in dispute to Jordan Freitas and Carrie Freitas, husband and wife, for $5,750. Of this sum $3,785 was used to satisfy the Liberty Bank mortgage, the Crozier mortgage and the Honolulu Finance and Thrift Company mortgage. Plaintiff himself did not receive any of the $5,750 which Ruth Lehua Stevens converted to her own use.

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Related

Pae v. Stevens
42 Haw. 661 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1958)
Pae v. Stevens
256 F.2d 208 (Ninth Circuit, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
41 Haw. 490, 1956 Haw. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pae-aka-liu-v-stevens-treas-th-haw-1956.