Yin Tai Lum v. Hee Kwong

42 Haw. 87, 1957 Haw. LEXIS 23
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 12, 1957
DocketNo. 3033
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 Haw. 87 (Yin Tai Lum v. Hee Kwong) 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
Yin Tai Lum v. Hee Kwong, 42 Haw. 87, 1957 Haw. LEXIS 23 (haw 1957).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

MARUMOTO, J.

This is an appeal by respondents from the final decree of a circuit judge wbicb decreed that individual respondents Hee Kwong, Hee Young, Hee Yee, Hee Hau, Ng Sheong Hee and Hee Hop pay $21,660.54 to corporate respondent L. Koon Oban, Limited, and that tbe corporate respondent pay to petitioner’s counsel, out of tbe payment made by individual respondents, $7,000 as counsel fee and $190.70 for costs incurred on bebalf of petitioner. Tbe only question before tbis court is whether tbe circuit judge erred in imposing personal liability upon individual respondents to tbe extent of $21,660.54. Respondents have [88]*88not raised any question regarding that portion of the decree which orders corporate respondent to pay counsel fee and costs incurred. Hereafter the expression “respondents” will refer to individual respondents. Corporate respondent will be referred to as Noon Chan.

This case started as a suit for injunction by a minority stockholder of a corporation against the corporation and a majority of its directors, who also owned or controlled a majority of its capital stock, to enjoin the continuance of the tenancy of a property of the corporation by another corporation, in which such directors owned a majority interest, at an allegedly inadequate rental.

The case was previously before this court on appeal by petitioner from the decree of another circuit judge which dismissed the petition after petitioner adduced his evidence and rested. On that appeal this court reversed the decree of dismissal and remanded the case for further proceedings. The facts adduced by petitioner are stated in the opinion reported in 39 Haw. 532.

We set forth in this opinion such facts as are material to the decision on this appeal, although portions thereof may be a repetition of the facts stated in the prior opinion of this court.

The following situation existed at all times pertinent to this case. Petitioner owned 24 per cent of the capital stock of Noon Chan and was one of its eight directors. Respondents owned or controlled 52 per cent of the stock and constituted a majority of its directors. Koon Chan owned a building at the corner of King and Nuuanu streets in Honolulu. A portion of the building was rented to American Drug Company, Limited, hereafter referred to as American Drug. Respondents, with the exception of Ng Sheong Hee, were directors of American Drug.

Respondents are related, Hee Kwong being the father and the others being his sons. When the suit was filed, [89]*89respondents, with the exception of Ng Sheong Hee, owned 72 per cent of the capital stock of American Drug. At the time that the original trial was held, the stock ownership of such respondents had been reduced to 49.9 per cent. Such reduction was effected by the transfer of the shares owned by Hee Yee, principally to relatives of respondents.

Petitioner filed the instant suit on April 5, 1946. At that time Koon Chan was receiving a rent of $515 per month from American Drug. Petitioner alleged that such rent was manifestly inadequate and was fraudulently contrived by respondents to secure benefit to themselves as stockholders of American Drug to the injury of petitioner through diminution of dividends and depreciation of the value of the shares of Koon Chan owned by him. He sought an injunction against the continuance of the tenancy of American Drug at such rent or any other inadequate rent.

On September 19, 1946, Hee Kwong, as president of Koon Chan, notified American Drug that, effective October 1, 1946, the rent would be $800 per month plus 4 per cent of its monthly gross sales over $20,000. The other respondents ratified the president’s action over the objection of petitioner.

On May 15,1947, respondents, again over the objection of petitioner, voted to grant a five-year lease to American Drug at a rent of $1,000 per month. Such lease was executed on May 16, 1947.

Petitioner objected to the above mentioned rents because he maintained the position that the rent should be at least $1,500 per month or $600 per month plus 5 per cent of monthly gross sales over $12,000.

The original trial started on May 19, 1947. The circuit judge dismissed the suit in view of the action taken by respondents in increasing the rent. This court, upon review of the evidence in the record, held that such evidence made the several rental contracts suspect and required [90]*90respondents to show their entire fairness by clear and convincing proof. The opinion of the court was filed on October 7, 1952. At that time the five-year lease had already expired and it was not possible to grant the injunction sought by petitioner. However, this court held that under the prayer for general relief the circuit judge could grant other appropriate relief, and remanded the case for further proceedings consistent with the opinion.

The trial upon remand was conducted by the circuit judge who entered the final decree. Upon the evidence adduced at the original trial and the further trial on remand, the circuit judge concluded that respondents failed to meet the burden of establishing the entire fairness of the rent charged to American Drug. He found that respondents might reasonably have obtained the rent of $1,200 in the open market for the premises. The sum of $21,660.54 mentioned in the decree is the difference between the rent that might reasonably have been obtained in the open market and the rent actually obtained from American Drug during the period commencing July 11, 1945, and ending May 31, 1952.

We agree with the circuit judge that respondents failed to meet their burden. However, we think that respondents should be held accountable only for the difference between the rent which might reasonably have been obtained in the open market and the rent actually obtained for the period commencing February 1, 1946, and ending May 31, 1952. This would reduce their liability to Noon Chan from $21,660.54 to $17,611.04, as follows:

Difference between $1,200 and $515, or $685 per month for 8 months, between February 1, 1946, and September 30, 1946.......................................................................................... $ 5,480.00
Difference between $1,200 and $1,183.62 (average monthly rent on percentage basis), or $16.38 per month, for 8 months between October 1, 1946, and May 31, 1947.......... 131.04
[91]*91Difference between $1,200 and $1,000, or $200 per month, for 5 years between June 1, 1947, and May 31, 1952........ 12,000.00
Total .............................................................................. $17,611.04

We think that respondents should be held accountable for the difference only from February 1, 1946, because February 1946 was the first rental period after petitioner specifically asserted that the rent charged for the American Drug premises was inadequate. Petitioner voted for the rent of $515 per month for the premises at the directors’ meeting held on June 25, 1943. He did not question the adequacy of such rent until January 28,1946. On that day he wrote to the board of directors of Koon Chan that the rent of $515 per month was manifestly inadequate and that a fair and reasonable rent would be $600 per month plus 5 per cent of monthly gross sales in excess of $12,000. He demanded that the directors promptly revise the tenancy accordingly.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Powers v. Shaw
619 P.2d 1098 (Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals, 1980)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 Haw. 87, 1957 Haw. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yin-tai-lum-v-hee-kwong-haw-1957.