Stibbard v. Rego

38 Haw. 84, 1948 Haw. LEXIS 30
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1948
Docket2667
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 38 Haw. 84 (Stibbard v. Rego) 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
Stibbard v. Rego, 38 Haw. 84, 1948 Haw. LEXIS 30 (haw 1948).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

PETERS, J.

This case arises out of a controversy between adjoining property owners, «¡., the petitioners and the respondent Albert Rego, over the right of the former to use a private way lying along the easterly boundary of their premises and running over and along the adjoining premises of the respondent Albert Rego.

The adjoining properties are situate on the northerly side' of Iao Road in Wailuku, Maui. County. Prior to severance on March 17, 1932, the whole premises, of which they form a part, were owned by one Mary B. Rego and she is the common source of title of the present owners. Severance was effected by the conveyance of March 17, 1932 by Mary B. Rego of one half of the easterly half of the premises abutting upon Iao Road to her daughter Rose *85 R. Rodrigues 1 aud the rear half of the easterly half to her son Albert. 2 The respondent Albert Rego acquired title to the adjoining premises owned by him by the aforementioned deed of his mother Mary B. Rego, dated March 17, 1932, 3 and by the conveyance by his sister to him by deed dated August 17,1934, 4 supplemented by the exchange deeds between mother and son of June 5, 1939. 5 A brief abstract of the instruments through which the respective parties derived title is contained in the marginal note below. 6 Petitioners acquired title to the premises owned *86 by them by an agreement of sale in which they Avere the purchasers and the respondents Albert Rego and his wife Evelyn Avere the sellers, dated August 30, 1940, 7 and the deed to them by the sellers as grantors executed pursuant to the agreement of sale dated December 6, 1943. 8

By the terms of the agreement of sale, the purchase money was payable in monthly installments and a deed to the purchasers Avas conditional upon full payment of the purchase price. It contained a provision that the purchasers might at any time pay the AAdiole or any part of installments required though the same be not due.

The private way in controversy is described in the amended bill of complaint as a “10 foot strip (road) : Beginning at a point on the center line of said Roadway the azimuth and distance from the point of beginning, i. e. the Southeast corner of the lot described in a Deed from Mary B. Rego to Alberti Rego, dated June 5, 1939, and recorded in the Bureau of Conveyances in Book 1535, *87 Page 490, being 85° 22' 00" 72.38 feet thence 1. 169° 39' 30" 94.7 feet.”

The petitioners pray reformation of both the agreement of sale and deed by which they acquired the premises owned by them upon the grounds of mistake and inequitable conduct on the part of the sellers and grantors by which they were mistakenly induced to believe that the premises subject thereto included the fee of the private way or, in the alternative, a determinative decree that said way is an easement appurtenant to the premises owned by them and in the event of reformation or in the event of denial of reformation and a determinative decree that the private way constituted an easement as claimed, injunctive relief against the temporary obstruction of the way by the respondents Albert Rego and wife Evelyn.

It does not appear that the respondent Evelyn Rego has any interest in the premises over which the private way is situate and is apparently a party respondent solely for the purposes of reformation. Mary B. Rego, the other respondent, Avas made a party by reason of some reversionary interest allegedly claimed by her in the fee of the private way. Neither are affected by our conclusions.

The respondents Albert Rego and wife filed a joint answer denying mistake on the part of the petitioners and inequitable conduct on their part; denied the existence of an easement appurtenant to the premises OAvned by the petitioners and asserted the affirmative defense of ratification by the petitioners of the agreement of sale and deed by the payment by them of the installments required in the agreement of sale, the acceleration by them and payment of the balance of the purchase price and the execution by them of a mortgage on the premises, all after knoAvledge by them of the alleged defects in the agreement of sale and deed in not including the fee of the Avay. Mary B. Rego filed a separate answer. Comment upon its allega *88 tions is unnecessary.

The trial judge did not pass upon the issues of mistake and inequitable conduct but sustained the defense of ratification and refused to entertain jurisdiction of the petitioners’ claim of an easement appurtenant to the premises owned by them. The bill was accordingly dismissed.

It is crystal clear that at the time Mary B. Rego, the common source of title of the adjoining owners, effected a severance of the premises by the conveyances by her of March 17, 1932 to her daughter and son, respectively, of the northeast and southeast one quarters of the easterly half of the premises, she impliedly reserved the existing private way, the location of which was and is as described in the amended bill of complaint. Mr. Thompson in his treatise on the law of real property recognizes the principle “that when a continuous and apparent easement or servitude is imposed by the owner of land upon one part of it for the use and benefit of another part, a purchaser, in the absence of an express reservation or agreement on the subject, takes the servient property subject to the easement or servitude.” 9

Mary B. Rego, the common predecessor in title of the petitioners, and Albert Rego acquired the whole premises, of which the controverters own parts, from one Asue on December 6, 1924. 10 At that time there was a dwelling house on the westerly half and this dwelling house was still on the premises when purchased by petitioners. There was also at the time of the original acquisition a driveway running from the rear of the premises to the adjoining Iao Road in a general north-south direction. This driveway adjoined the easterly side of the dwelling house and *89 was distant from tlie northeast corner of the house about seven and a half feet and three feet from the southeast corner. Also adjoining the house on its northeasterly side and facing the driveway was a shed suitable for a garage. This driveway, upon the severance effected on March 17, 1932, was within the lot conveyed to Albert and partially within the lot conveyed to Rose. The remainder was within the remaining property retained by Mary B. Rego. By the reconveyance from mother to son of June 5, 1939, the driveway is wholly within the lot reconveyed and its westerly boundary is coextensive with the common boundary between the premises of the petitioners and those of the respondent Albert Rego.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 Haw. 84, 1948 Haw. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stibbard-v-rego-haw-1948.