Scholes v. Kiyoshi Kawaguchi
Scholes v. Kiyoshi Kawaguchi
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiffs-Appellees Evelyn K. Scholes (Evelyn Scholes ) and Evelyn Wong (Wong ) as Co-Trustees of the Scholes Family Trust (collectively Scholes/Wong ) brought this action in the District Court of the First Circuit, Honolulu Division (District Court),
The Kawaguchis appeal and contend that the District Court erred by: (1) concluding it had jurisdiction and thus denying the Kawaguchis' motion to dismiss or, alternatively, for a stay of the proceedings (hereafter motion to dismiss); (2) concluding that a certificate of title for the property conclusively established that title was held by the Scholes Family Trust, regardless of claims asserted by Kiyoshi in a separate action filed in the Circuit Court of the First Circuit (Circuit Court); and (3) denying the Kawaguchis' motion for reconsideration and two motions to continue the trial.
For the reasons set forth below, we conclude the Kawaguchis sufficiently demonstrated there was an issue of title regarding the property such that the District Court lacked jurisdiction. We thus vacate the Judgment for Possession and Writ of Possession, and remand to the District Court for dismissal.
I. Background
On April 6, 2015, Scholes/Wong filed a Complaint for Ejectment in the District Court against the Kawaguchis alleging, inter alia, that: the Scholes Family Trust is the record title owner of the property; the property is registered property in Land Court with Transfer Certificate of Title No. 779,343; a Warranty Deed recorded on November 10, 2005, evidences the conveyance of the property to the Scholes Family Trust; Kiyoshi, son of Evelyn Scholes, has occupied the property since 1980 and the Kawaguchis currently occupy the property but do not pay rent; the Kawaguchis were advised that their occupancy was terminated by letter dated December 3, 2014; and the Kawaguchis have neglected, failed, and refused to vacate the property. Exhibits attached to the Complaint *1031for Ejectment include: a Short Form Trust, dated September 23, 2014, for the Scholes Family Trust (dated September 18, 2003) naming Evelyn Scholes as Settlor/Co-Trustee and Wong as Co-Trustee; a certificate of title issued on November 10, 2005, which identifies the registered owner of the property as Edward Scholes, Trustee and Evelyn Scholes, Trustee, Trustees of the Scholes Family Trust; and a Warranty Deed recorded on November 10, 2005, which conveyed Edward Scholes and Evelyn Scholes's interest in the property to the Scholes Family Trust.
On April 21, 2015, the Kawaguchis filed the motion to dismiss, pursuant to Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS ) § 604-5(d) (2016).
I claim title to the [property] that is subject to this ejectment action. I was promised the property by my mother, Plaintiff Evelyn K. Scholes, and her husband Edward A. Scholes, and in reliance upon the agreement made improvements to the property, nearly tripling the size of the house on the property and generating a source of rental income. Exhibit "A" is a true and correct copy of a Verified Complaint, which is being filed in Circuit Court, setting forth the basis for my claim to title to the property.
The verified Circuit Court complaint (Circuit Court complaint)
Kiyoshi's Circuit Court complaint asserts claims for: breach of contract, equitable lien, unjust enrichment, and breach of fiduciary duty/constructive trust. The Circuit Court complaint seeks, inter alia, specific performance requiring conveyance of the property to Kiyoshi, as well as damages.
On June 9, 2015, the District Court filed an "Order Denying Defendants' Motion to Dismiss Complaint For Ejectment" (Order Denying Motion to Dismiss ) concluding:
a) that title to the subject property is registered in the Land Court in Plaintiffs' name, which is dispositive; b) that Defendants have failed to raise an issue of title sufficient to oust this court of jurisdiction over the ejectment claim; and c) that Defendants' filing of a Notice of Pendency of Action has no effect to either stay or dismiss the proceedings.
(Emphasis added.)
On June 19, 2015, the Kawaguchis filed a motion for reconsideration of the Order Denying Motion to Dismiss. The motion for reconsideration was denied without a hearing.
The Kawaguchis subsequently filed two motions to continue trial in the District Court. In the first motion, submitted on June 23, 2015, the Kawaguchis pointed to Aames Funding Corp. v. Mores,
In their second motion to continue trial, submitted on June 29, 2015, the Kawaguchis relied upon declarations by their counsel, Ann C. Kemp (Kemp ). Kemp attested that through discovery in the Circuit Court action, Kiyoshi had learned that the notary book for the notary who purportedly notarized Kiyoshi's signature on the 2003 Warranty Deed, which transferred the property out of his name, did not actually contain an entry regarding the Warranty Deed. Kemp's declaration again cites to Aames for the proposition that fraud is a valid basis to challenge a certificate of title. Kemp further attested that, based on the recent discovery regarding the notary book, Kiyoshi would be seeking to amend the Circuit Court complaint to allege forgery and that this would be a further basis for the fraud-based claims he was pursuing in the Circuit Court. This second motion to continue trial was denied on June 30, 2015.
The case proceeded to bench trial and on July 15, 2015, the District Court entered the Judgment for Possession and Writ of Possession. The Kawaguchis timely appealed.
II. Mootness
As an initial matter, this court granted Scholes/Wong's motion to file supplemental briefs as to whether this appeal is moot. In their supplemental brief filed on March 8, 2017, Scholes/Wong argue this appeal is moot based on orders entered by the Circuit Court after this appeal was initiated, which dismiss most of Kiyoshi's claims against them in the Circuit Court action.
Under the mootness doctrine:
the suit must remain alive throughout the course of litigation to the moment of final appellate disposition. Its chief purpose is to assure that the adversary system, once set in operation, remains properly fueled. The doctrine seems appropriate where events subsequent to the judgment of the trial court have so affected the relations between the parties that the two conditions for justiciability relevant on appeal-adverse interest and effective remedy-have been compromised.
Hamilton ex rel. Lethem v. Lethem,
The Circuit Court orders that Scholes/Wong rely upon for their mootness argument are interlocutory orders and Scholes/Wong do not assert that a final judgment has been entered in the Circuit Court. Moreover, in opposing the mootness argument, the Kawaguchis assert that Kiyoshi intends to appeal once a final judgment is issued in the Circuit Court action. It is unclear at this time whether Kiyoshi will seek and obtain a stay of any judgment entered in the Circuit Court action pending an appeal. See Rule 62 of the Hawai'i Rules of Civil Procedure.
Given these circumstances, Kiyoshi's claims in the Circuit Court related to a constructive trust, rescission of the 2003 Warranty Deed, and specific performance do not appear to be finally adjudicated such that there is an enforceable judgement as to title to the property. Therefore, this appeal is not moot.
III. Subject Matter Jurisdiction
The Kawaguchis contend that the District Court erred by entering the Order Denying Motion to Dismiss, because the District Court did not have subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to HRS § 604-5(d) after the Kawaguchis raised a question of title to the property.
In its Order Denying Motion to Dismiss, the District Court concluded, inter alia , that "title to the subject property is registered in the Land Court in Plaintiffs' name, which is dispositive" and "[d]efendants have failed to raise an issue of title sufficient to oust this court of jurisdiction over the ejectment claim[.]"
HRS § 604-5(d) provides in pertinent part that "[t]he district courts shall not have cognizance of real actions, nor actions in which the title to real estate comes in question[.]" Further, District Court Rules of Civil Procedure (DCRCP) Rule 12.1 provides:
Pleadings. Whenever, in the district court, in defense of an action in the nature of an action of trespass or for the summary possession of land, or any other action, the defendant shall seek to interpose a defense to the jurisdiction to the effect that the action is a real action, or one in which the title to real estate is involved, such defense shall be asserted by a written answer or written motion, which shall not be received by the court unless accompanied by an affidavit of the defendant, setting forth the source, nature and extent of the title claimed by defendant to the land in question, and such further particulars as shall fully apprise the court of the nature of defendant's claim.
Thus, "[u]nder the plain language of Rule 12.1, an affidavit that raises a defense to the court's jurisdiction must set forth the source, nature, and extent of the title claimed by defendant and further particulars sufficient to fully apprise the court of the nature of *1034defendant's claim." Deutsche Bank Nat'l Tr. Co. v. Peelua,
A. Constructive Fraud
Here, Scholes/Wong attached a certificate of title to their Complaint for Ejectment, which identifies the Scholes Family Trust as the registered owner. The Hawai'i Supreme Court has consistently expressed that "conclusive effect is to be given the certificate of title on the question of title to land." Bank of New York Mellon v. R. Onaga, Inc.,
Notably, however, certain claims of fraud have been recognized as exceptions to the conclusive effect of a certificate of title.
If the intent and purpose of the law pertaining to the registration of land titles is to be preserved, the integrity of certificates of title must be scrupulously observed and every subsequent purchaser of registered land who takes a certificate of title for value, except in cases of fraud to which he is a party, is entitled under the provisions of section 5041 to hold the same free from all encumbrances except those noted on the certificate and the statutory encumbrances enumerated.[7 ]
In re Bishop Tr. Co.,
Furthermore, with respect to entry of a new certificate of title, HRS § 501-106(b) (2006) expressly provides:
§ 501-106 Entry of new certificate.
....
(b) The new certificate or memorandum shall be binding upon the registered owner and upon all persons claiming under the registered owner, in favor of every purchaser for value and in good faith; provided that in all cases of registration procured by fraud the owner may pursue all the owner's remedies against the parties to the fraud, without prejudice however to the rights of any innocent holder for value of a certificate of title; and provided further that after the transcription of the decree of registration on the original application any subsequent registration under this chapter procured by the presentation of a forged deed or other instrument, shall be void.
(Emphasis added.) Thus, although certificates of title are generally "conclusive and unimpeachable," certain types of fraud are a valid basis to challenge a certificate of title.
In Aames, like this case, the Hawai'i Supreme Court addressed whether the District Court had jurisdiction over an ejectment action involving property registered in Land Court.
Important to this case, Aames also addressed the fraud exception noted in In re Bishop Tr. Co. On this issue, the Supreme *1035Court stated that "[t]hree types of fraud have been recognized in this jurisdiction in the mortgage context: (1) fraud in the factum, (2) fraud in the inducement, and (3) constructive fraud."
Here, the Kawaguchis assert that they properly raised an issue regarding title to the property because Kiyoshi's declaration and the Circuit Court complaint assert a constructive fraud claim against his mother, Evelyn Scholes, who allegedly made the promise in question and is the Settlor and a Co-Trustee of the Scholes Family Trust (the registered owner of the property), and against Wong, also a Co-Trustee of the Scholes Family Trust in place of her deceased father. "Constructive fraud is characterized by the breach of [a] fiduciary or confidential relationship." Aames,
In Kam Oi Lee v. Fong Wong,
The Hawai'i Supreme Court affirmed the trial court and recognized that:
A constructive trust arises where a person holding title to property is subject to an equitable duty to convey it to another on the ground that he would be unjustly enriched *1036if he were permitted to retain it, A constructive trust will be imposed if a transfer of land was obtained in an abuse of a confidential relationship.
The basic prerequisites for the application for an abuse of confidence constructive trust are: (1) a confidential relationship; (2) conveyance to the grantee based upon, and arising out of a confidential relationship; (3) a promise to hold for, or reconvey to, the grantor or a third person; and (4) a subsequent refusal to reconvey resulting in the grantee's unjust enrichment.
In Keanu v. Kamanoulu,
On appeal, the Supreme Court of the Territory of Hawai'i held that:
The questions presented for our consideration are those which concern parties to a transaction between whom there exists that relationship which the law terms confidential. The record before us shows that the relationship between the plaintiffs and the defendant was confidential in fact as well as in law, and that both actual and constructive fraud has been committed in this case.
By the weight of authority, if a person, by means of a parol promise to reconvey, obtains an absolute conveyance without consideration, or a devise, from one to whom he stands in a fiduciary or confidential relation, a violation of the promise is a constructive fraud, and ground for holding him as a constructive trustee, although there may have been no intention not to perform at the time of the promise.
Here, the Kawaguchis' motion to dismiss the District Court ejectment action, and the attachments thereto, assert a fiduciary relationship existed between Kiyoshi, his mother Evelyn Scholes, and Edward Scholes. Kiyoshi's affidavit and Circuit Court complaint also set forth the request and promise he asserts was made to him by his mother and Edward Scholes, that if Kiyoshi assisted in making improvements to the home, the property would be given to him in consideration of his contributions toward the property. Kiyoshi claims that he relied on this promise in making significant improvements *1037to the property, including increasing the size of the house from about 900 square feet to nearly 3,000 square feet. He claims his mother and her husband moved to Las Vegas and obtained a loan, secured by the property, to purchase their Las Vegas home. Kiyoshi also claims he screened tenants and rented portions of the subject property, and that he remitted the rental proceeds to his mother. Kiyoshi's verified Circuit Court complaint asserts a claim for "breach of fiduciary duty/constructive trust" and alleges:
30. By virtue of their relationship, and the agreement which they had with respect to the Wanaka Street Property, Defendants were in a fiduciary relationship with Plaintiff.
31. By not putting Plaintiff back on title after the 2003 re-finance transaction, and threatening to evict Plaintiff and sell the Wanaka Street Property, Defendants violated Plaintiff's trust and breached their fiduciary duties to Plaintiffs.
The registered owner of the property is the Scholes Family Trust. In turn, Evelyn Scholes, who is a purported party to the alleged constructive fraud, is the Settlor and Co-Trustee of the Scholes Family Trust. Based on In re Bishop Trust Co. , Aames and HRS § 501-106(b), as well as the cases discussed above regarding constructive fraud and constructive trust, we conclude the Kawaguchis raised a challenge to the property's title sufficient to divest the District Court of jurisdiction. The facts attested to in Kiyoshi's affidavit, the allegations in his Circuit Court complaint, and his claim therein for breach of fiduciary duty/constructive trust, set forth the "source, nature, and extent of the title claimed by defendant[,]" as well as "further particulars sufficient to fully apprise the court of the nature of defendant's claim." Peelua,
B. Forgery
In their second motion to continue trial, submitted on on June 29, 2015, the Kawaguchis presented an additional basis for alleging fraud, i.e. forgery.
Kiyoshi's Circuit Court complaint asserted that he was on title to the property prior to the 2003 Warranty Deed. He further asserted that the 2003 Warranty Deed, which removed him from title, conveyed the property to Evelyn Scholes and Edward Scholes and he received no consideration for his interest in the property. Kiyoshi further asserts that in 2005, Evelyn Scholes and Edward Scholes conveyed the property to the Scholes Family Trust. HRS § 501-106(b) provides in part that a new certificate of title "procured by the presentation of a forged deed or other instrument, shall be void." Kemp's declaration regarding potential forgery of Kiyoshi's signature on the 2003 Warranty Deed, along with the existing record in the case, raised another fraud-based claim that could challenge whether the certificate of title held by the Scholes Family Trust is valid. In short, Kiyoshi sufficiently set forth the source, nature and extent of title that he claimed and the particulars to fully apprise the District Court of the nature of his claim. Peelua,
*1038We thus conclude that Kiyoshi's assertion of forgery related to the 2003 Warranty Deed, supported by Kemp's declarations and the existing record, provided an additional ground to establish that the District Court lacked jurisdiction in this case.
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, the Judgment for Possession and the Writ of Possession, both entered on July 15, 2015, in the District Court of the First Circuit, Honolulu Division, are vacated. This case is remanded to the District Court with instructions to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
The Honorable Michael K. Tanigawa presided.
The record reflects that Evelyn Scholes is the mother of Wong and Kiyoshi, who are apparently half-siblings. Evelyn Scholes was married to Edward Scholes, who is Wong's father and who is now deceased.
HRS § 604-5(d) provides:
§ 604-5 Civil jurisdiction.
...
(d) The district courts shall not have cognizance of real actions, nor actions in which the title to real estate comes in question, nor actions for libel, slander, defamation of character, malicious prosecution, false imprisonment, breach of promise of marriage, of seduction; nor shall they have power to appoint referees in any cause.
The copy of the Circuit Court complaint attached to Kiyoshi's affidavit was unfiled. The Circuit Court complaint was later filed on April 21, 2015, the same day the Kawaguchis' motion to dismiss was filed in District Court. A filed copy of the Circuit Court complaint was thereafter attached to Scholes/Wong's opposition to the Kawaguchis' motion to dismiss. Thus, the District Court had a filed copy of the Circuit Court complaint while considering Kiyoshi's motion to dismiss.
The Circuit Court complaint asserts that Edward A. Scholes died on February 16, 2014, and that "[u]pon information and belief, [Wong] became a successor Co-Trustee [of the Scholes Family Trust] upon the death of her father Edward A. Scholes."
Scholes/Wong submit with their supplemental brief a First Amended Complaint filed by Kiyoshi in the Circuit Court on October 20, 2015. In addition to the claims asserted in the original Circuit Court complaint (breach of contract, equitably lien, unjust enrichment, breach of fiduciary duty/constructive trust), the First Amended Complaint added allegations that Kiyoshi did not sign the 2003 Warranty Deed and that "[u]pon information and belief, although the purported signature of [Kiyoshi] on the 2003 Warranty Deed was notarized, the book maintained by the notary who purportedly notarized his signature contains no record of [Kiyoshi's] signature being notarized." The First Amended Complaint asserts additional claims for: rescission of the 2003 Warranty Deed; declaratory relief; and injunctive relief. Like the original Circuit Court complaint, the First Amended Complaint requests specific performance and damages. Scholes/Wong also attach Circuit Court orders which dismiss the claims for breach of fiduciary duty/constructive trust, breach of contract, rescission, declaratory relief, and injunctive relief.
The reference to "section 5041" in the quote is a reference to Revised Laws of Hawai'i (RLH) § 5041 (1935), which is a predecessor statute to HRS § 501-82 (2006 and 2016 Supp.).
Although Aames discusses the types of fraud recognized in the mortgage context, and this case does not involve a mortgage foreclosure, the discussion about fraud in Aames is nevertheless pertinent here. First, no logical basis is apparent that would preclude application of the Aames analysis about fraud to this case. Second, fraud exceptions qualifying the conclusive effect of a new certificate of title are set forth in HRS § 501-106(b).
"Forgery" is defined as "[a] false or altered document made to look genuine by someone with the intent to deceive[,]" Forgery, Black's Law Dictionary, 10th ed. 2014.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Evelyn K. SCHOLES and Evelyn Wong As Co-trustees of the Scholes Family Trust Dated September 18, 2003 v. KIYOSHI KAWAGUCHI And Sung Sook Kawaguchi
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published