Waiakea Mill Co. v. Vierra

35 Haw. 550, 1940 Haw. LEXIS 19
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1940
DocketNo. 2435.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 35 Haw. 550 (Waiakea Mill Co. v. Vierra) 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
Waiakea Mill Co. v. Vierra, 35 Haw. 550, 1940 Haw. LEXIS 19 (haw 1940).

Opinion

*551 OPINION OP THE COUBT BY

COKE, C. J.

In the year 1921 the commissioner of public lands of the Territory of Hawaii, called “the commissioner,” entered into what is designated “Special Homestead Agreement No. 1901” with Mrs. Hannah Vierra. By the terms of the agreement the commissioner undertook to convey to Mrs. Vierra a fee simple title in and to house lot 20, block 802, and homestead lot 7, section B, of the Waiakea Homesteads at Hilo, Hawaii, upon compliance by her of all the provisions of said special homestead agreement. In 1932 Mrs. Vierra died intestate leaving surviving her Eddie Vierra, her widower, and John Makaimoku, John H. lopa, Paul lopa, George lopa and Eddie Vierra, Jr., her children. At the time of Mrs. Vierra’s death the homestead agreement was in full force and it is not questioned that up to that time she had complied with those provisions of the contract requiring the continuous maintenance of a home on the property for a period of at least five years, the cultivation of the land and the planting and maintenance of trees upon the residence portion in compliance with the provisions of the contract and had performed all of the other covenants of the agreement on her part to be performed, although the final installment of the monetary consideration for the property, which would entitle her to a patent, had not yet been paid. There was also outstanding at the time a written contract between her and the Waiakea Mill Company, which con *552 tract commenced in 1922 and terminated in 1938. By the terms of the contract the Waiakea Mill Company was to take possession of said lot 7, section B, and cultivate and bring to maturity successive crops of sugar cane and as such crops became mature to harvest and to process the same into raw sugar and to sell the sugar at the prevailing price and from time to time to render to Mrs. Yierra written statements of account. Mrs. Vierra was to receive from the Waiakea Mill Company for the use of the property a stipulated percentage of gross returns received from the sale of the raw sugar produced from the sugar cane grown on her homestead lot.

In August, 1937, the Waiakea Mill Company, being indebted to whomsoever might be the legal successor or successors to the rights of Mrs. Yierra under the contract with her as aforesaid and being uncertain as to whom it should make settlement of its obligations growing out of said contract, filed a suit in equity in the circuit court of the fourth judicial circuit pursuant to chapter 118, R. L. H. 1935, by which it prayed “that a declaratory judgment shall be entered herein declaring that the said Sections 1598 and 1630 are in all respects valid and that they govern and apply to the case stated, and said Sections determine the descent of the property left by the deceased and that title to said land and said contract vested in Eddie Vierra.”

Eddie VieiTa, the widower, filed his answer claiming the property by descent pursuant to the provisions of sections 1598 and 1630, R. L. H. 1935. L. M. Whitehouse, the land commissioner, in his answer supported the claims of Yierra. Eddie Yierra, Jr., through his guardian ad litem, appeared and claimed a one-fifth interest in the property and the other four children of Mrs. Yierra in their answer asked that they, together with their brother Eddie Yierra, Jr., be adjudged the owners of the property *553 as tenants in common subject to the right of curtesy in Eddie Vierra, Sr., as the surviving husband of Hannah.

The cause coming on before the circuit judge upon the pleadings and the stipulation of the parties and there being no questions of fact involved, the judge entered an order reserving for the consideration of this court the following questions of law: “Question No. 1: Do the five children of Hannah Vierra, deceased, succeed to the rights of their mother in and to said Special Homestead Agreement #1901 by virtue of that provision in the said Special Homestead Agreement which provides that The “purchaser” shall be held to mean the said Mrs. Hannah Vierra, her heirs and those Avho shall laAvfully hold under her’ notwithstanding the provisions of Section 1598 R. L. H. 1935? Question No. 2: Was the enactment of Act 160 of the Session LaAvs of 1929 (Section 1598 R. L. H. 1935) an attempt on the part of the Territorial Legislature to change the laws relating to public lands and therefore invalid legislation as being in violation of Section 73 of the Organic Act of the Territory of Hawaii?”

Briefs on the reserved questions have been filed in this court in behalf of the Waiakea Mill Company, the commissioner of public lands and the adult children of Mrs. Vierra.

In the opening paragraph of the agreement Mrs. Vierra is referred to as the “purchaser” but a subsequent paragraph broadens this designation and specifically provides that “the purchaser shall be held to mean the said Mrs. Hannah Vierra her heirs and those who shall laAvfully hold under her.” Another clause in the agreement prohibits the purchaser from conveying, mortgaging, leasing or transferring the property before patent Avithout the Avritten consent of the commissioner of public lands and of the government of the Territory. At the time the agreement Avas entered into the children of Mrs. Vierra *554 were presumptively her heirs (see section 4813, R. L. H. 1935), and as such, pursuant to section 4810, R. L. H. 1935, would, in the event of their mother’s death intestate, become the owners of the property by descent, subject to the curtesy right of the husband reserved to him under section 4830, R. L. H. 1935. In 1929 the legislature passed an Act entitled: “An Act to amend chapter 40 of the Revised Laws of Hawaii 1925, relating to public lands, by adding thereto a new section to be known as section 529-A.” This Act provides that “in case of the death of any owner of the legal title to any homestead agreement, special homestead agreement, right of purchase lease, cash freehold agreement, or special sale agreement, in the absence of any devise or bequest, the land so held shall vest in the relations of the decedent in the manner set forth in Section 505.” This Act, whether it may be considered a law relating to public lands or one relating to descent, purports to give to the widow or widower of the holder of a special homestead agreement who might die intestate priority over the children of such homesteader. In other words, the widow or widower would inherit to the exclusion of the children of the deceased homesteader.

Counsel for the adult children urge that the legislature, by the Act of 1929 (now section 1598, R. L. H. 1935), could not have intended that the statute should be retroactive nor that it should affect the rights of parties under the terms of a Avritten contract entered into prior to its enactment; that the Act must be held to have merely a prospective application; that otheiwise the statute would contravene the provisions of section 10 of article I of the Federal Constitution which prohibits the enactment of any laAV impairing the obligation of contracts. Counsel further argue that if the Act is a statute, as its title indicates, relating to public lands, it is void because it Adolates section 73 of the Organic Act which reserves *555

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Bluebook (online)
35 Haw. 550, 1940 Haw. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waiakea-mill-co-v-vierra-haw-1940.