Territory of Hawaii Ex Rel. Bailey v. Gay

32 Haw. 404, 1932 Haw. LEXIS 21
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedApril 25, 1932
DocketNo. 2050.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 32 Haw. 404 (Territory of Hawaii Ex Rel. Bailey v. Gay) 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
Territory of Hawaii Ex Rel. Bailey v. Gay, 32 Haw. 404, 1932 Haw. LEXIS 21 (haw 1932).

Opinions

*405 OPINION OP THE COURT BY

PERRY, C. J.

(Banks, J., dissenting.)

In this suit, instituted “in the circuit court of the -first judicial circuit, Territory of Hawaii, at chambers, in equity,” the Territory of Hawaii and others as petitioners seek to enjoin the respondents Gay & Robinson, co-partners, and the Hawaiian Sugar Company, Limited, a corporation, from maintaining a certain dam and diverting water from the Koula stream which is one of the sources of the Hanapepe river. The allegations of the petition material to be considered in this opinion are substantially as follows: “That from the time of the great Mahele in the year 1846, and theretofore beyond the memory of any person now living, certain lands in said valley of Hanapepe, now the property of the Territory of Hawaii, have received and used and continue to receive and use water from said Hanapepe river as an appurtenant to said land. That the Territory of Hawaii is the owner of 220.72 acres of land entitled to water for irrigation purposes, by ancient custom and usage as aforesaid, and by *406 reason of said ownership is entitled to the use of water from said Hanapepe river in the amount of approximately 50,000 gallons per ácre per day or a total of 11,036,000 gallons in every twenty-four hours;” that the petitioners other than the Territory and four of the respondents are tenants of the Territory with respect to the lands above referred to;-that the respondents Gay & Robinson “are the owners of a piece of land situate within said ahupuaa of Hanapepe known as the ili of Koula; that said ili of Koula extends from said peak known as Kawaikini in a southerly direction to a place about five miles north of said Hanapepe Bay near the junction of said ili of Koula and the ili of Manuahi; that the said Hanapepe river and the Hiloa stream have their source near the said Kawaikini, and the eastern branch of said river flows over the entire length of said ili of Koula; that the land known as the ili of Koula is not entitled to water for irrigation purposes;” that the McBryde Sugar Company, respondent, is the OAvner of 110.65 acres of land in Hanapepe valley entitled to Avater for irrigation purposes; that certain of the respondents are owners of land within the same valley entitled to water for irrigation purposes and that certain others of ■ the respondents are owners of tOAvn lots in the village of Hanapepe and as such are entitled to water for domestic purposes; that the “Hawaiian Sugar Company, about the year 1900, * * * constructed across the Hiloa stream * * * a cement dam about seventy-five (75) feet in length and about five (5) feet in height on the lower side, and likeAvise constructed a similar cement dam across the Hanapepe river, also seventy-five (75) feet in length and five (5) feet in height, * * * and by means of said dams and said ditches and flumes” conveyed away from the stream practically all of the water of said Hanapepe river, at the points where the dams are located; that the dams were constructed

*407 and are being maintained with the consent and approval and under the authority of Gay & Robinson, lessors of the Hawaiian Sugar Company; that Gay & Robinson as lessors and the Hawaiian Sugar Company as lessees claim that they are absolutely entitled to all of the waters so diverted; that the waters so diverted “are enormously in excess of the amounts to which said lands of Gay and Robinson or said lands under lease to said Hawaiian Sugar Company are entitled by ancient custom and usage; that a portion of the waters so diverted as aforesaid by said Hawaiian Sugar Company and Gay and Robinson are surplus waters; that not only surplus waters of the Hanapepe river are thus diverted but that the major portion of the waters to which these petitioners and respondents other than Gay & Robinson are entitled by prescription are also diverted by said Hawaiian Sugar Company and Gay and Robinson in the manner hereinabove set forth; that as a result of said diversion, the merest trickle of water is left in the Hanapepe stream below said dams except in times of excessive rainfall; that such artificial drying up of the stream by said dams has deprived petitioners and all of them of the amount of water to which their lands and all of them have been entitled by ancient custom and usage from time immemorial; * * * and that it is the intention of said Gay and Robinson and said Hawaiian Sugar Company to continue to divert the water as aforesaid.”

The prayer is that the court grant an injunction “restraining the said Gay and Robinson and the said Hawaiian Sugar Company, their agents, attorneys and servants, from illegally diverting water from said Hanapepe river and from said Hiloa stream” and that Gay & Robinson and the Hawaiian Sugar Company be ordered to destroy the dams “so that the flow of said river and said stream may continue in its natural course.” The *408 prayer is also “for such other and further relief” as to the court may seem meet.

The respondents Gay & Robinson and Hawaiian Sugar Company filed separate demurrers, but upon the same grounds. Those grounds are: that the averments of the •bill do not show cause for relief; that the bill is multifarious in joining and confusing two distinct causes of action, one relating to the surplus waters and one relating to waters to which the parties are entitled by prescriptive rights, — the first of these being in controversy only between the Territory on the one hand and Gay & Robinson and the Hawaiian Sugar Company on the other hand, and the other being in controversy between all of the parties named as petitioners and respondents. The petitioners have offered in this court to amend their bill by omitting all allegations relating to surplus water and, Avere' it not for other reasons about to be referred to, should be permitted to do so.

Another ground of demurrer is that the court “has no jurisdiction to determine the matters and things averred in” the bill “which involve the general settlement of the rights of the several parties petitioner and respondent in the waters of Hanapepe valley according to their several holdings and in accordance with ancient right and usage, since such jurisdiction is confided by chapter 172 of the Revised LaAvs of Hawaii 1925, to the circuit judges only within their respective circuits.” A third ground of attack on the bill was presented in argument in the trial court, although not referred to in the demurrers, and that was that, in view of the fact that the lands and the waters involved in this case are situated on the Island of Kauai, in the fifth circuit, and that the OAvners and the Avitnesses are resident there and are very numerous, it Avould be highly unjust, inequitable and oppressive for the circuit judge of the first circuit to maintain juris *409 diction and as a matter of justice and equity the controversy should be heard and determined in the fifth circuit.

In 1860, by a short, simple Act (Laws 1860, p.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Haw. 404, 1932 Haw. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/territory-of-hawaii-ex-rel-bailey-v-gay-haw-1932.