Smith v. Laamea

29 Haw. 750, 1927 Haw. LEXIS 61
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedApril 28, 1927
DocketNo. 1730.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 29 Haw. 750 (Smith v. Laamea) 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
Smith v. Laamea, 29 Haw. 750, 1927 Haw. LEXIS 61 (haw 1927).

Opinion

*751 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

PERRY, C. J.

This is an action at law to quiet the title to a piece of land containing an area of 1.60 acres situated within the ili of Maunalua on the Island, of Oahu. At the trial it was expressly admitted by the defendant that the paper title to the whole ili of Maunalua is in the present plaintiffs and that the ili of Maunalua includes *752 the small lot which is the subject of this suit. In other words, it was expressly admitted by the defendant that the paper title to the piece of land in question is in the plaintiffs. The defendant’s sole claim was that he had acquired title to the land by adverse possession for more than the statutory period of ten years. The plaintiffs having proven their paper title, in the main by the admissions of the defendant, rested. The defendant thereupon introduced evidence tending to support his claim of adverse possession. Thereafter the plaintiffs introduced evidence which, while recognizing that the defendant had lived upon the land for more than ten years next preceding the commencement of the action, nevertheless tended to show that that occupancy was not hostile and adverse but was permissive and with full recognition of the title of the true owners. Some evidence in rebuttal was introduced by the defendant. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendant and judgment was entered accordingly. The case is brought to this court by writ of error.

■The jury having been selected and sworn,, the trial proper commenced on April 20, 1926, and continued for twenty-two days, until and including May 25, 1926. Many witnesses were examined on each side and some documentary evidence Avas introduced. The trial throughout was conducted with care and thoroughness. The transcript of the testimony adduced covers fourteen hundred pages. There was evidence which, if it had been believed by the jury, would have supported in laAV a verdict for the defendant; but, as expressly admitted in this court by defendant’s counsel and verified by us by an examination of the record, there was also ample evidence in law justifying the verdict which was rendered in favor of the plaintiffs. There is not the *753 slightest' reason for setting aside the verdict on the theory of lack of evidence to support it. The errors assigned relate, in the main, to the giving and the refusal of instructions and to rulings admitting or excluding evidence.

1. It is assigned as error that the presiding judge refused to give defendant’s requested instruction No. 15, reading as follows: “If you believe from the evidence in this case that David Kui Laamea paid $1.00 a year solely for the right to fish in the sea fisheries of Maunalua, the fact of such payment would not prevent said Laamea from acquiring the property in question by adverse possession; provided he complied with the requisites of adverse possession as contained in these instructions.” Upon this subject the following instruction, being plaintiffs’ No. 21, was given: “The defendant admits that he paid the Maunalua Ranch one dollar a year and claims that it Avas for the privilege of fishing-in the sea fishery of Maunalua only. In this connection I instruct you that the OAvner of any portion of the ili of Maunalua Avould have the right to fish in the sea fishery Avithout paying- therefor. Persons not owning land in Maunalua Avould have no right to fish there Avithout first obtaining the privilege from the owner. It is for you to consider, therefore, whether by paying one dollar a year the defendant recognized and conceded that he did not oavu or claim to oavu the land in dispute, and if you find the fact to be that such payment constituted a recognition of title in Mr. Damon or the trustees of the Bishop Estate, then his occupancy of the land Avas not adverse possession within the meaning of the law, and it will be your duty to return a verdict for the plaintiffs.” The defendant’s claim was that one Paakai had for a period of years prior to his death occupied the land in question and that the defendant took up his *754 residence on the same land shortly before Paakai’s death; that shortly prior to Paakai’s death Paakai made an oral gift to the defendant of the land and of his canoes and nets and perhaps other personalty; and that beginning with Paakai’s death and continuing until the institution of this action the defendant had occupied the land under claim of ownership and in a manner altogether complying with the requisites of adverse possession. The plaintiffs sought to show by their evidence that Paakai’s occupancy was permissive and not adverse, that after Paakai’s death someone other than the defendant had occupied the land in question, that the defendant, like Paakai, had not occupied as large a piece of land as is now claimed by him and is described in the present declaration and had not lived on the land for as long a period of years as he claims to have there lived and that in any event his occupancy, like Paakai’s, was, until a few days before the commencement of this action, permissive and not adverse. The plaintiffs sought to prove the alleged permissive nature of the occupancy of Paakai and of the defendant by showing, that which is undisputed, that no kuleanas whatever were ever awarded by the land commission out of the lands of the ili of Maunalua, that certain Hawaiians were'permitted by the plaintiffs’ lessee, Mr. S. M. Damon, to live upon portions of the ili of Maunalua, subject to the duty to perform labor for the Maunalua Ranch at stated times, ordinarily • on a stated day of each week, such labor consisting of the trimming of trees, the cleaning of water holes for use by the cattle, the clearing of the land from noxious weeds and occasionally the driving and branding of cattle; and further that the privilege of living upon the land and the further privilege of fishing in the sea of Maunalua *755 depended upon the duty of each dweller to pay a nominal rent of one dollar per year. It should he added that the evidence of the plaintiffs further tended to show that the performance of this labor and the payment of this rent also entitled the dwellers to pasture one or more horses upon the land of Maunalua but that the duty to labor and to pay the rent applied irrespective of whether the dwellers did or did not have horses to be pastured on the ili. On the other hand there was some evidence from the defendant and perhaps from others of his witnesses to the effect that the payment of one dollar per year was merely for the privilege of fishing in the sea adjoining the ili.

As long ago as 1858 it was declared by this court that one who receives a conveyance of a portion of an ahupuaa acquires “along with it a common right of piscary in the fishing ground adjacent”, — that is to say, he becomes “for the purposes of the law governing this subject a tenant of the ahupuaa and as such entitled to take fish in the sea adjoining.” Haalelea v. Montgomery, 2 Haw. 62, 71. The court, continuing, said at pages 71, 72: “We understand the word tenant, as used in this connection, to have lost its ancient restricted meaning, and to be almost synonymous at the present time with the word occupant, or occupier, and that every person occupying lawfully any part of” an ahupuaa “is a tenant within the meaning of the law.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Pioneer Mill Co., Ltd. v. Dow
978 P.2d 727 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1999)
Pub. Access Shoreline v. HAWAII CTY PLANNING COMMISSION
903 P.2d 1246 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1995)
Hong v. Kong
683 P.2d 833 (Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals, 1984)
City and County of Honolulu v. Bennett
552 P.2d 1380 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1976)
Yin v. Midkiff
481 P.2d 109 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1971)
Lyon v. Bush
412 P.2d 662 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1966)
Young v. Price
395 P.2d 365 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1964)
Asataro Tagami v. Meyer
41 Haw. 484 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1956)
Territory ex rel. Sylva v. Bishop Trust Co.
41 Haw. 358 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1956)
Territory v. Tr. Est. Kanoa, dec.S.
41 Haw. 358 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1956)
Bishop v. Kalua
36 Haw. 164 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1942)
Watumull v. Tax Commissioner
34 Haw. 84 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1937)
Mid-Pacific Dress Manufacturing Co. v. Cadinha
33 Haw. 456 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1935)
Solomon v. Niulii Mill & Plantation, Ltd.
32 Haw. 571 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1932)
Lemes v. Sociedade Lusitana Beneficente De Hawaii
32 Haw. 522 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1932)
Russell v. Makainai
31 Haw. 599 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1930)
Territory v. Kimbrel
31 Haw. 81 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 Haw. 750, 1927 Haw. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-laamea-haw-1927.