Pilipo v. Scott

21 Haw. 609, 1913 Haw. LEXIS 26
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 21 Haw. 609 (Pilipo v. Scott) 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
Pilipo v. Scott, 21 Haw. 609, 1913 Haw. LEXIS 26 (haw 1913).

Opinion

OPINION- OP THE COURT BY

ROBERTSON, C.J.

Tbe plaintiffs (defendants-in-error) brought an action in the circuit court against the defendant to recover rent alleged to be due and unpaid under a lease of certain land situate on the Island of Hawaii. The venue was changed from the third to the first judicial circuit and the case was tried jury waived. The claim was for $1113 for unpaid rent accruing during the period from March 1st, 1902, to September 1st, 1905. The defendant pleaded the general issue, and at the trial claimed an eviction on the part of the plaintiffs, which, it was contended, relieved her from the obligation to pay the rent. The circuit court found against the defendant’s claim, and judgment was entered for the plaintiffs for the amount asked together with interest and costs aggregating the sum of $2026.09. The plaintiff-in-error seeks to have that judgment reviewed.

It appears that the lands known as Holualoa 1 and 2, situate in the district of North Kona, Island of Hawaii, were purchased many years ago by a Hawaiian hui composed of about seventy-five members, the original number of shares being 400 which subsequently was reduced to 353 through the retirement by purchase or otherwise of 47 shares. At the time of the execution of the lease in question the plaintiff, Elizabeth K. Pilipo, owned 56 of the shares, subject to the dower interest [611]*611therein of her mother, Esther N. Pilipo. The lands extend from the sea np into the mountain forests, comprising a total area of 7330 acres of which 6189 acres are situated above the upper government road. We understand it to have been admitted by counsel for the respective parties at the trial' that the whole of the tract above the upper road had been leased by the hui prior to 1894. That part of the land therefore plays no part in this controversy.

The plaintiffs and the defendant executed.an indenture dated August 21, 1894, whereby, the former demised to the latter “fifty-three (53) shares out of their’fifty-six (56) shares undivided of the land of Holualoa, in North Kona, Hawaii * * * but excepting and reserving therefrom to the lessors in the portion of the land makai of the upper government road, three (3) undivided shares of their fifty-six (56) shares, which said shares shall contain a house-lot near the sea adjoining the kuleana of H. N. Kakulu deceased.; also the houses, pineapples and coffee planted by the lessors adjoining the new road running from Kailua mauka on both the upper and lower sides of said road; also other plants or trees planted by them; also the Koa and Ohia forest trees in the forest, excepting such as may of necessity be cut for the purposes of agriculture of the lessee, -x- -x- * * rp0 pave arL¿ to hold the said fifty-three (53) shares undivided * * * * for thirty years from and after the first day of September, A* T>. 1894 * * *.” The lessee covenanted, among other things, that “in entering upon the land makai of the upper government road not to enter or interfere with the parcels of the said land now occupied by members of the hui (hoa aina) either as house-lots or agricultural purposes in places heretofore planted by them,” and “that if the said land of Holualoa shall be divided between the several share-holders during the term of this lease to exercise all reasonable diligence to secure for the lessors favorable locations for their said shares.” And there was a covenant on the part of the lessors [612]*612that “in ease the land shall be divided during the existence of this lease then the said lessee shall have the sole power and authority to control the division of the shares hereby leased.”

The members -of the hui were' tenants in common of the lands of- Holualoa in proportion to their respective ownerships of shares, so-called, each share representing-a 1/353 interest in the land: Upon the execution of the lease, and by virtue of it, the lessee became a tenant in common of the lands of Holualoa with the members of the hui, including Miss Pilipo, in the proportion that the interest demised to her -bore to the whole. We do not accept the view of counsel for the plaintiff-in-error that the lease demised to the lessee an undivided 53/353 interest in the- land clear and that all the exceptions mentioned in the lease were intended to be included in the three shares or inteiests which were not demised. We hold the proper com struction of the language of the lease to be that the lessors demised-53/56 of their interest in the common land but reserved and excepted therefrom the houses, pineapples and coffee planted by the lessors adjoining the Kailua road, meaning the land upon which the houses stood and upon which the pineapples and coffee trees were growing, also the other plants or trees mentioned, including the forest trees. The language purporting to except and reserve three shares in the land makai of the upper road which should include the house-lot near the sea was used loosely and inaccurately, for the three shares referred to were undivided interests in the whole land "and were not .included in the general description. An .exception in a deed or lease withholds from its operation" some part or parcel of the premises, which,' but for the exception, would pass by. the general description. A reservation is the creation ,of some new right issuing out of the thing granted, and which .did not exist before as an independent right, in behalf of the grantor or lessor. The three shares were not included in the demise and no statement that they were excepted or reserved was necessary [613]*613or appropriate. The language of the purported exception above referred to had no more effect than to designate the house-lot near the sea as 'being a portion of the premises -which the lessors intended to occupy as against the lessee as a portion of their remaining interest in the premises. Neither party could rightfully claim, as against the other, the right to the exclusive possession of any part of the land , (except the pieces expressly excepted in the lease the right to the possession of which as against the lessee the lessors retained) unless by virtue of some regulation or custom of the hui. The members of huis such as the hui of Holualoa usually agree upon by-laws or regulations to govern the use and occupancy of the common property. The rules of this hui, if it has any, were not in evidence though there was testimony tending to show that there was at least a custom among the members to recognize and respect individual occupancy in that part of the land which was adapted to agricultural use. What terms or conditions, if any, were imposed on such occupancy did not appear.

Soon after obtaining the Pilipo lease the defendant secured leases of individual interests from other members of the hui who had been cultivating portions of the agricultural belt, and acquired altogether 85 shares. The defendant then undertook to take possession of. a portion of that belt containing an area of about 71 acres lying between the upper government road and the Kailua road, bounded on the north side by the J. C. Munn land (L. O. A. 3660) and on the south by the Scott trail, by erecting fences on such portions of the boundary of the tract as were not already fenced and by posting a notice at each of the four corners of the tract. This area contained coffee trees in bearing and was valuable on that account. The defendant proceeded to clear off the guava and other wild growth. An allotment of the agricultural belt separate from the rest of the common land lying above and below it would give to each hui share a little less than- one acre. There was evidence tending to show [614]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 Haw. 609, 1913 Haw. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pilipo-v-scott-haw-1913.