Takizo Motonaga v. Tokumatsu Ishimaru

38 Haw. 158, 1948 Haw. LEXIS 18
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 1948
Docket2668
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 38 Haw. 158 (Takizo Motonaga v. Tokumatsu Ishimaru) 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
Takizo Motonaga v. Tokumatsu Ishimaru, 38 Haw. 158, 1948 Haw. LEXIS 18 (haw 1948).

Opinion

*159 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

LE BARON, J.

The plaintiff brought ejectment against the defendant for restitution of a one-half portion of a leasehold. After trial, jury waived, the trial judge rendered decision in favor of the plaintiff and entered judgment accordingly for possession and damages.

Aside from painstakingly attacking various reasons for restitution advanced by the trial judge in his decision and findings made therein, the assignment of errors presents but one paramount question, the answer to which is decisive of the appeal. That question challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the judgment and is whether or not the trial judge erred in adjudging that the plaintiff is entitled to restitution.

At this juncture it is pertinent to note that, upon the record, this court deems an equitable defense to have been properly invoked, irrespective of the fact that it was not formally pleaded, the defendant having filed, by way of defense, an amended answer alleging sufficient facts and circumstances upon which the defense may be fairly rested. That this was the theory below is indicated by the brief of the plaintiff, if not by that of the defendant, which concedes that the trial judge' assumed “the existence of equitable estoppel” as between the lessee and the defendant’s predecessor in actual possession. Consonant thereto, the plaintiff argues before this court that the “Defendant has failed to prove all the elements necessary to give rise *160 to an equitable estoppel.” Further, the efficacy of the appeal depends squarely upon whether an equitable defense has been sustained, it being the only bar under the evidence to the plaintiff’s assertion oí right to possession. The duty of this court, therefore, is to consider the question presented in the light of that defense, the overruling of which being the underlying error to which the question, by necessary implication, is directed. So considered, the question is one of law to be decided upon the undisputed evidence and the reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom.

The lessee obtained the leasehold from the lessor for a term of twenty-five years. Knowing that a certain religious organization desired a location upon which to erect a temple and priest house, the lessee immediately invited it, for that purpose, to enter upon a one-half portion of the leasehold. As an inducement, the lessee called attention to the length of her lease and, in effect, promised that should her invitation be accepted she would not assert her right to possession under the lease for its full term provided that the portion’s lease rental and taxes were paid as the sole limitation or condition. The association accepted the lessee’s invitation. It relied upon her promise by (1) entering into possession, (2) forming itself into an eleemosynary corporation, hereinafter designated as the “shrine,” so as to effectuate the purpose implicit in its acceptance of the invitation, (3) erecting the temple and priest house, which are permanent and valuable buildings, and (4) expending substantial sums of money in the erection thereof, all of which the lessee not only permitted but encouraged and assisted in as an active member of the association and of the shrine.

The shrine, after being in possession for some eighteen years, voluntarily dissolved itself as a corporation, whereupon the shrine’s president was appointed trustee. He *161 now presumably bolds tlie office of trustee and stands undischarged therefrom, there being nothing to the contrary in the record. The dissolution was precipitated by the written suggestion of the foreign funds control. It followed the cessation of the shrine’s religious activities upon the outbreak of war, when some of its officers and members and its priest were interned as enemy aliens. Shortly after the priest’s internment and approximately two years before dissolution, the shrine expressly permitted the defendant to enter into possession without limitation of time. It required him to care for the premises and pay the lease rental and taxes but reserved no rental for itself. Pursuant thereto, the defendant entered into possession and has stayed therein ever since. His possession, having been permissive before dissolution, is impliedly so thereafter, the trustee, as the shrine’s successor and privy in law, doing nothing to indicate the contrary. As a matter of lawr and fact, the permissive possession of the defendant, therefore, constitutes a tenancy at will which has endured up to the present time, none of the parties thereto having terminated it. The lease rental and taxes were paid to the lessee from the time of the association’s entry until one year after the trustee had filed a report with the territorial treasurer, when the lessee refused to accept further payments from the defendant. The plaintiff, on becoming assignee of the lease, persisted in such refusal, the defendant at all times standing ready and willing to pay. One month before she refused to accept such payments, the lessee, for a valuable consideration, executed a written assignment of her lease to the plaintiff upon the written consent of the lessor. The plaintiff thereupon sought the defendant’s ouster and instituted the instant ejectment against him.

This court is of the opinion that the undisputed evidence establishes not one but two distinct grounds of equi *162 table defense to the plaintiff’s otherwise good title. Both grounds are doctrines which are recognized by courts of law within the more comprehensive doctrine of equitable estoppel. One is the doctrine of part performance and the other the kindred doctrine of promissory estoppel. The ground of part performance, however, was not urged as such, either below or on appeal. But incidents thereof were argued and are in controversy. They will be considered briefly. Clearly, the invitation and promise of the lessee, as acted upon by the shrine with the lessee’s assistance, constituted a partially performed oral assignment of the one-half portion of the leasehold which equity would enforce because a refusal to do so would amount to a fraud in the light of the substantial performance of the shrine, made pursuant to the assignment. (See Neale v. Neales, 9 Wall. 1; Riggles v. Erney, 154 U. S. 244; Whitney v. Hay, 181 U. S. 77; Vierra v. Shipman, 26 Haw. 369.) There, thus was created in the shrine an estate or interest of corresponding dignity to that which the lessee had acquired from the lessor. On dissolution, such estate or interest survived to the trustee as the shrine’s successor and privy in law. This refutes the plaintiff’s argument that the shrine obtained a mere parol license, revocable at the lessee’s pleasure, which terminated when the shrine ceased to exist as a corporation. The defendant argues that the shrine assigned its estate or interest to him but this court takes the view of the trial judge that there is no credible evidence to that effect, the only right acquired by the defendant being that of permissive occupancy as far as either the shrine or trustee is concerned.

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Bluebook (online)
38 Haw. 158, 1948 Haw. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/takizo-motonaga-v-tokumatsu-ishimaru-haw-1948.