Wailuku Agribusiness Co., Inc. v. Ah Sam

145 P.3d 784, 112 Haw. 241
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 1, 2006
Docket25930
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 145 P.3d 784 (Wailuku Agribusiness Co., Inc. v. Ah Sam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wailuku Agribusiness Co., Inc. v. Ah Sam, 145 P.3d 784, 112 Haw. 241 (hawapp 2006).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

WATANABE, Presiding J.

This appeal stems from an action filed by Plaintiff-Appellee Wailuku Agribusiness Co., Inc. (Wailuku) in the Circuit Court of the Second Circuit (the circuit court) against “Kalapuna (k) and his wife, Kekui (w), Kaho-lolio (w), also known as Hololio Hennessee (w) [ (all now deceased) ], Heirs or Assigns, and Ml Whom It May Concem[,]” (Named Defendants) to establish ownership, by paper title or adverse possession, of two parcels of land located at Waikapü, Maui, Hawaii. Defendants-Appellants (Appellants), 3 who claim to be descendants and heirs of the sister of the original grantee of the two parcels, contend that the circuit court 4 erroneously granted summary judgment in favor of Wai-luku on Wailuku’s adverse possession claims.

We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

By Land Commission Award (L.CAw.) 8672, dated September 27, 1852, Kaluau (k) (Kaluau) acquired the following three parcels of land situated in Waikapü, Maui, Hawaii: (1) Apaña 5 1, which consisted of 1.55 acres of “[t]aro and open dry land” located in Kuaiwa, *245 Waikapü; (2) Apaña 2, 6 which consisted of .25 acres of “[t]aro land” located in Kuaiwa, Waikapü; and (3) Apaña 3, which consisted of .06 acres of “irrigated field” located in Háli'ipálala, Waikapü.

Kaluau did not convey title to the ápana during his lifetime and died intestate and unmarried around 1855. He was survived by his mother, Kekiu 7 (w) (Kekiu); his father, Kalapuna (k) (Kalapuna); his sister Kaholo-lio 8 (w) (Kahololio); his sister Kahaleamau 9 (w) (Kahaleamau); and his nephew Kaluau-Opio 10 (k) (Kaluau-Opio), the son of Kaluau’s deceased brother.

At the time of Kaluau’s death, the laws governing intestate succession provided, in relevant part, as follows:

If the intestate shall leave no issue, his estate shall descend one half to his widow, and the other half to his father and mother as tenants in common; and if he leaves no widow, nor issue, the whole shall descend to his father and mother, or to either of them if only one be alive [.]

An Act to Regulate the Descent of Property both Real and Person, 1850 Penal Code of the Hawaiian Islands, at 181 (emphasis added). Thus, Kaluau’s ápana would have descended to Kalapuna and Kekiu, as tenants in common, if both were living at Kaluau’s death.

On October 13, 1855, Kalapuna, Piena (k) (Piena) (Kalapuna’s brother-in-law or cousin-in-law), and Puuweuweu 11 (w), also known as Puweuweu and Puuweweu (Puuweuweu) (Piena’s wife), executed a deed that sold and conveyed to John Richardson (Richardson), for the amount of $30, “the land which was inherited by us from [Kaluau] ..., being that entire piece of land situate at Kuaiwa, Waika-pu, Maui” (the Deed to Richardson). The deed was signed by Kalapuna, Piena, and Puuweuweu by “x” marks, witnessed by Asa Hopu (Hopu) and Nelly Richardson (Nelly), but not recorded until June 10, 1878, after Nelly personally appeared before Hawai'i Supreme Court Justice A. Francis Judd and acknowledged that: (1) on October 13, 1855, she was living with her brother, Richardson, who was now deceased; (2) she saw Kalapu-na, Piena, and Puuweuweu, all now deceased, place their “x” marks to the deed; and (3) she and Hopu, who was now deceased, signed their names to the deed as subscribing witnesses.

During the intervening twenty-three years between the execution and recording of the Deed to Richardson, the following events allegedly occurred:

• Richardson died intestate, and pursuant to an order filed in Probate No. 1210, the administrators of his estate conveyed, by deed dated September 7, 1860, what Wailuku alleges is Apaña l, 12 to James *246 Louzada. Through mesne conveyances, Wailuku acquired this property on November 20,1894.
• On October 2, 1866, Kahaleamau (Ka-luau’s sister and Kalapuna’s daughter) filed a petition with circuit court Judge A.M. Kahalewai (Judge Kahalewai) in Probate No. 321, requesting that: (1) she be appointed the administrator of the estate of Kalapuna, who had recently died intestate; and (2) Kalapuna’s estate be settled.
• By an order entered on October 31,1866, Judge Kahalawai appointed Kahaleamau as administrator of Kalapuna’s estate and directed that “once [Kahaleamau has] paid the demand of the Court of $10 and taken possession of [Kalapuna’s] property, it shall belong to [Kahaleamau and Kahololio, Kalapuna’s] surviving children.”
• On August 1,1873, Kahololio filed a petition with the “Circuit Court of Maui” in In re Estate of Kaluau, Probate No. 649, requesting that she be appointed the administrator and an heir of Kaluau’s estate.
• On October 30,1873, after taking depositions of various witnesses who testified that Kaluau had died circa 1855, survived by his mother and father, both since deceased, with Kaluau’s mother dying first, the circuit court concluded as follows:
On the evidence adduced the Court decrees that Haleamau (w) Kahololio (w) and Kaluau-opio (k) are equally entitled to inherit in the property of Kaluau (k) Deed, being the only surviving blood relations of the deceased.
• On December 15, 1873, Royal Patent 6483 13 was apparently posthumously issued to Kaluau for the three apaña awarded by L.C. Aw. 8672.
• On January 7 and March 3, 1875, Ha-leamau (Kaluau’s sister) and Kaluau-Opio (Kaluau’s nephew) along with their spouses, deeded their respective interests “in all the estate of Kaluau (k) of Waikapu, Maui, deceased intestate” to Kahololio.

Pursuant to summary judgment orders entered on December 9, 2002, 14 March 7, 2003, and April 28, 2003, the circuit court decided Wailuku’s adverse possession claims of Defendants in Wailuku’s favor. The orders were reduced to a final judgment on June 2, 2003, and this appeal followed.

II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

A. Wailuku’s Complaint

On February 7, 2002, Wailuku commenced this quiet title action against named Named Defendants, alleging, on information and belief that:

1. Apana[ ] 1 and 3 of Land Commission Award 8672, Royal Patent 6483, were granted to Kaluau, who did not convey during life and died intestate circa 1855, whereupon title descended to his parents:
A.

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Bluebook (online)
145 P.3d 784, 112 Haw. 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wailuku-agribusiness-co-inc-v-ah-sam-hawapp-2006.