Re Land Title, Sing Chong Co.

37 Haw. 49, 1945 Haw. LEXIS 28
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 1945
DocketNo. 2542.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 37 Haw. 49 (Re Land Title, Sing Chong Co.) 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
Re Land Title, Sing Chong Co., 37 Haw. 49, 1945 Haw. LEXIS 28 (haw 1945).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT BY

PETERS, J.

This is a proceeding for the registration of title to land, authorized by the provisions of Revised Laws of Hawaii 1935, chapter 144, as amended.

The applicant, a Hawaiian corporation, by its application filed July 25, 1941, sought to have registered in it the fee-simple title to the ahupuaa of Kaalaea, situate at *50 Kaalaea, in the district of Koolaupoko, Oahu, and certain kuleanas situated within the external boundaries of the ahupuaa. The ahupuaa of Kaalaea is intersected by the Kamehameha Highway which, along the path of intersection, runs in an approximately north-south direction. For purposes of decree the application was amended to set off as a subdivision of the ahupuaa that portion thereof, with its included kuleanas, lying below and easterly of the highway and between the highway and the sea. This subdivision was identified as lot B and we shall hereinafter refer to this area as lot B irrespective of whether the reference has application to the conditions obtaining before or after the filing of the application before the land court.

Within lot B, in addition to the segment of the ahupuaa, are three kuleanas, viz., apañas 2 and 3 of L. C. A. 10208 and apaña 2 of L .C. A. 7700. The title of L. C. A. 7700, apaña 2, with a right of way over the adjoining land of the ahupuaa to the highway, came in controversy before the land court, the applicant claiming fee-simple title thereto by adverse possession, the respondent, Kaaoaoaloa Kukahiko (w), the present plaintiff in error, a similar estate by descent from the original awardee. It is to the decree of the land court registering the fee-simple title to the kuleana in controversy in the applicant that this writ of error is directed.

The assignments and specifications in error present for review the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the findings of the judge of the land court upon the necessary concomitant legal elements constituting adverse possession. It will suffice, for the purpose of this appeal, to consider but one — the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the findings that the possession of the kuleana in question by the predecessors in interest of the applicant was “hostile” as that term is employed in the definition of adverse possession, i. e., possession for oneself under claim of right. *51 The applicant was duly organized as a body corporate on April 20, 1931. Neither it nor its predecessors in interest claimed color of title nor did it or they claim to have ever personally occupied the kuleana in dispute. Applicant depended for its proof of adverse possession .upon year to year tenancies in parol by its predecessors in interest to three separate tenants, viz., to one Iwata from year to year for five years from 1914 to 1919; to one Hori from year to year for five years from 1919 to 1924; and to one Kakuda from year to year from 1924 to 1936. There was some evidence to the effect that prior to Iwata’s tenancy some Chinese were planting rice on lot B but who they were or the circumstances of their occupancy does not appear. At any rate applicant did not rely upon the possession of these Chinese in support of its claim to a prescriptive title.

The applicant claimed that title to the kuleana in dispute thus acquired by prescription was conveyed to it by deed of May 8, 1936, from the Hawaiian Trust Company, Limited, the receiver of Sing Chong & Company, a copartnership, in the matter of Chong Kong Young, et al., petitioners, v. Hong Chan Shee, et al., respondents, numbered and docketed in the circuit court of the first circuit at chambers as equity number 2961, an action for the dissolution of the copartnership Sing Chong & Co. The Hawaiian Trust Company, Limited had been appointed temporary receiver on February 13, 1929 and permanent receiver on June 24 following. The only predecessor in interest of the Hawaiian Trust Company, Limited, as such receiver during the prescriptive period claimed was the copartnership Sing Chong & Company.

Prior to the year 1934 the location of L. C. A. 7700, apaña 2 within the ahupuaa of Kaalaea was unknown to the predecessors in interest of the applicant. While they knew that this kuleana was within the ahupuaa lying be *52 ldw tlie highway, its location had not been determined and its presence in the ahupuaa was not disclosed to the three tenants through whom the applicant claimed; these tenants at all times believing, to the extent of their occupancy of land within lot B, that they were in the possession of land owned by their lessors.

There is no evidence of any occupancy of the kuleana in dispute by the plaintiff in error or her predecessors in interest. Nor was she aware of the location of the kuleana 'within the ahupuaa prior to 1934. The common source of information of the exact location of the kuleana was a survey caused to be made by her in that year. The judge of the land court characterized the kuleana in controversy as a “lost” kuleana and that term so aptly fits the situation and reflects conditions existing during the prescriptive period that we shall adopt the term and hereafter refer to the kuleana in dispute as the “lost” kuleana.

To the extent that the lost kuleana was occupied by the successive tenants of the predecessors in interest of the applicant their possession was apparently open, peaceful, and visible and if leased to them by their respective lessors with the intention on the part of the latter to disseise the true owner and through their tenants to hold the same for themselves, such occupancy and possession was hostile to the true owner and was sufficient in law to support a prescriptive title thereto. 1 The possession of a tenant inures to the benefit of his landlord and constitutes the possession of the landlord for the purpose of securing to the latter the benefits of adverse possession and the benefit of the bar of the statute of limitations. 2 Possession, however, to be adverse must be hostile. Anyone in possession of land, with no claim whatever thereto, “must in presumption of law be in possession in amity with and *53 in subservience to that title.” 3 The great weight of authority is to that effect. 4 And although actual continuous and exclusive possession for the statutory period unexplained gives rise to the presumption of hostility, 5 the evidence in this case in our opinion rebuts the presumption and leaves the case in that condition where we cannot say that the findings upon the issue of hostility have for their support that substantial evidence more than a mere scintilla necessary in this jurisdiction to support findings of fact.

The only evidence importing a denial of the title of the true owner to the lost kuleana was the conclusion of of one Loo Chow, who became the manager of Sing Chong & Company, the copartnership, in 1914.

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Bluebook (online)
37 Haw. 49, 1945 Haw. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/re-land-title-sing-chong-co-haw-1945.