Kaae v. Richardson
Kaae v. Richardson
Opinion of the Court
OPINION OF THE COURT BY
This was an action of ejectment to recover possession of certain land in the ahupuaa of Waiokama at Lahaina containing
The question is whether the land thus conveyed to the plaintiff is the laiid described in her complaint, in which case there is no doubt of her title by purchase, or, except the strip along the high water mark which is clearly a portion of the ahupuaa, the land of kuleana 199 awarded to John Dawson, upon which a patent was issued October 31, 1879.
. The plaintiff claims that whether the land conveyed to her is a portion of the ahupuaa or not she has used it as her own, claiming it under her deed, and thereby has acquired a title by adverse possession continuing ten years prior to the time of the erection of a house by Kalua Paniani in the latter part of 1905. The defendants resist this claim of adverse possession
Jury was waived and t-lie trial judge gave judgment for the plaintiff with. $150 damages, but it is not clear whether he regarded the evidence as showing 'a title in the plaintiff by purchase or by prescription although he remarks in his decision, “There has been no interruption of possession by any party from the time of Ruth Keelikolani up to the time that Mrs. Ricliardson started to build a house, which is a little more than ten years from the time of Alice E. Shaw’s deed,” and also that “from Darvson’s death in 1851 to the deed from Mrs. Auld to Kalua Paniani (July 27, 1900,) nobody seems to be in possession for Dawson.” We will consider then whether there was evidence to sustain a finding of a prescriptive title, the defendants having excepted to the judgment on the ground that it was not sustained by the evidence.
The evidence is extremely unsatisfactory and yet we do not feel at liberty to set aside the decision on the ground that there was not evidence of a prescriptive title. After plaintiff’s lease of July 14, 1897, until the erection of a house upon the premises in the latter part of 1905, the plaintiff’s adverse holding is clearly established, the difficulty being to regard the evidence as showing adverse possession prior to the lease, being, in substance, the plaintiff’s testimony that when she took the deed in 1894 she took possession of the place, “cut trees on the place and took the wood” and that she paid taxes on the place.
The defendants’ counsel rely upon Akowai v. Lupong, 4 Haw. 259, 261, which was the case of an abandoned or neglected kuleana, in which case the court said that there were many kuleanas totally deserted for over twenty years, but that in order to bar the legal title the konohild’s possession must be “actual, visible, notorious, distinct and hostile” and that the general possession by the konohiki of the ahupuaa in which a
In the present instance 'the kuleana was upon the public highway the ahupuaa comprising only about twenty-five acres. This was not like a kuleana in a large ahupuaa over which cattle and horses of the konohiki would roam without attracting the attention of the owner of the kuleana. Moreover, the adverse possession in this case is not that of the konohiki but of one who claims to have purchased the land and that if she has failed to locate it as a portion of the ahupuaa she has acquired it • by adverse possession.
Upon the whole, a jury, or a judge, sitting in place of a jury, may have been authorized to infer adverse possession from the evidence, slight as it is.
Exceptions overruled.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ALICE K. KAAE v. KAULA RICHARDSON, JOHN RICHARDSON, JOHN HOSE AND ROWENA K. HOSE
- Status
- Published