Hapai v. Brown
Hapai v. Brown
Opinion of the Court
OPINION OP THE COURT BY
In a statutory action to quiet title to the ahupuaa of Kaonoulu on the Island of Maui instituted by the present plaintiffs in error the plaintiffs claimed certain undivided interests under the will of one Keaka. The trial court held that under the will the whole ahupuaa was devised in fee to one Paakuku under whom the defendants, now defendants in error, claim. On appeal this ruling was reversed, this court holding that the devise was to Paakuku and her brothers and sisters (the plaintiffs claiming under the brothers and sisters) as tenants in common.' Ante,p. 499. Further proceedings were then had in the trial court. It was stipulated, as at the former trial, that “the plaintiffs claim title to the land described in the' complaint herein through and under the children of Keaka, the sister of Hewahewa, the original awardee of the land in question, other than the daughter of said- Keaka, namely, Paakuku, and that defendants claim title to said land through and under said Paakuku.” The will of Keaka, dated February 12, 1850, was proven and evidence was introduced tending to show that by descent and by mesne conveyances the interests of the brothers and sisters of Paakuku had become vested in the plaintiffs. The defendants then announced that they claimed title to the whole land, first by virtue of a former judicial adjudication, second by descent and mesne conveyances and third by adverse possession and in support of their first defense offered in evidence a certified copy of the records of the supreme court in the case entitled Kahoiwai et al. v. Paakuku et al. including as a part thereof a certified copy of a deed from Keaka to Paakuku dated March 11, 1868, purporting to convey the whole ahupuaa. The evidence was received against the objection of the plaintiffs. The defendants offered to introduce proof of their other defenses but the court, being of the opinion that the claim of res judicata
The main question presented by the assignments of error is whether the defense of res judicata, was successfully established.
The suit in equity was instituted in November, 1871. In their bill the complainants alleged that Keaka died on March 17, 1868, seized of the ahupuaa of Kaonoulu and other property mentioned; that complainants were children and heirs of deceased children of Keaka and that defendant Paakuku was likewise a daughter of Keaka; that after Keaka’s death Paakuku went into possession of the ahupuaa jointly with the complainants and had continued in such joint possession until .the filing of the bill, save as to a portion of the land which was sold by Paakuku; that on February 12, 1850, Keaka made a will which was admitted to probate on December 15, 1868; that by said will Keaka devised all her property “to all her heirs in common * * * and the said defendant Paakuku was made a quasi trustee of said estate, to hold it only for the use and benefit of all the heirs of the said Keaka”; that “regardless of the said trust” and without the consent of the complainants Paakuku on November 10, 1869, sold certain portions of the land so devised; that Paakuku had collected rents for the ahupuaa and had failed to account for them or for the proceeds of the sale of the land; that Paakuku had executed to one Wong Ko a lease of the ahupuaa “in fraud of the rights of” the complainants; that Wong Ko was “committing great waste and destruction upon the trees, timber, saplings and firewood growing” on the ahupuaa by. cutting them and was thereby causing irreparable injury to the inheritance; that Wong Ko and Paakuku were “not able pecuniarily to respond in damages”; and that Paakuku had been “guilty of a breach of trust”. The claim
On June 6 and October 6, 1873, evidence was taken before a master, evidently by consent of the parties, relating to the execution of the deed of Keaka on March 11, 1868, the grantor’s physical and mental condition at the time and the other surrounding circumstances. At a hearing before the court on November 6, 1873, the attorney for Paakuku “asks that the testimony recorded and taken before the Master on the 6th of June and October 9th, 1873, be admitted.” The minutes are silent as to any objection to the request and the transcript was presumably received for there are indications in the opinion of
On behalf of the plaintiffs in error it is contended that the decree does not on its face contain any adjudication that the complainants in the equity suit had no title and that it should be regarded as a dismissal of the bill on the ground of., lack of jurisdiction to determine the issue of title; and further that in aid of its interpretation the remainder of the record cannot be referred to. It is now too well settled, however, to admit of doubt .that if upon a plea of res judicata the judgment relied upon as constituting the former adjudication does not of itself declare with certainty the precise scope of the matters adjudge ed, resort may be had, in aid of its interpretation in this respect, to the pleadings, the opinion of the trial court, the findings of fact and the testimony. “It not being certain” from the decree “which was the precise point determined resort may be had to the proceedings to ascertain which of the two points was determined.” Rawlins v. Honolulu Soap Works, 9 Haw. 496, 501, 502. In that case “the proceedings and the decision” in the former action were examined for the purpose stated. So, also, in George v. Holt, 9 Haw. 47, 48, the declaration, the answer and the transcript of the evidence were resorted
Reference to the remainder of the record leaves no doubt that it was adjudged in the equity suit that the complainants, the predecessors in interest of the present plaintiffs in error, .had no title to the ahupuaa of Kaonoulu. The pleadings presented the issue as to the execution and the validity of the deed and as to the relative force and effect of the will and the deed. Evidence was taken as to the fact and the circumstances surrounding the execution of the deed. An examination of the written opinion shows clearly that the court found that the deed had been executed and delivered as alleged and that its execution was free from suspicion and ruled as matter of law that the deed was operative as a conveyance of the ahupuaa to Paakuku alone, that the will was not operative as a devise to Paakuku and her brothers and sisters and that, for these reasons, the complainants had no title. Chief Justice Allen, after
It is further contended that a court of equity is wholly without jurisdiction to try the title to real estate and that Chief Justice Allen’s decree was consequently void. This objection is raised now for the first time. It was not raised' in the equity suit. On the contrary, the trial and the determination of the issue of title was with the consent of the parties. ' Under the circumstances the objection to a trial of the title by the court of equity must now be deemed to have been waived. In Kuala v. Kuapahi, 15 Haw. 300, a suit in equity to quiet title where the entire controversy turned on the issue of adverse possession, this court held that “the mere fact that the title had not first been adjudicated at law cannot avail the defendant” and said: “It seems to be pretty well settled that, as it is variously expressed;
The equity case tried before Chief Justice Allen was not purely an ejectment bill. The complainants alleged that they were in possession, jointly with Paakuku, the latter claimed that such of the complainants as were residing on the land were there by her permission and the court made no express finding on the subject. The inference, if any need be resorted to, must be, in support of the validity and regularity of the proceedings, that the court found that the complainants were in possession. The suit was far from being “without traces of equity jurisdiction”. It was alleged that Paakuku was a trustee, that she had committed a breach of the trust and that she had committed and suffered waste, and discovery and an accounting from her, an injunction against waste, and a partition of the lands were prayed for. The case was not “wholly foreign to equity jurisdiction.” It was not “on its face such that equity could have no jurisdiction over it”, but on the contrary presented on its face familiar subjects of jurisdiction in equity. Even if interposed in limine the objection could have been at most that equity was “without jurisdiction in the particular case merely for some special reason or the absence of some particular element”, namely a prior adjudication at law of one only of the many issues involved. Moreover, it is inexact to say that there is any inherent want of power in a court of equity to determine an issue of title to land. “The determination of title to real estate is within the scope of the general jurisdiction of a court of equity.” Beyer v. LeFevre, supra. “I may observe that the question which I have decided is one of law and not of equity, and that a partition suit being an exercise by the Court of administrative rather than contentious jurisdiction, it might not have been right that I should have dealt with it if any one objected. But no one did object, in fact; and I think that, under the circumstances, I do not go beyond the limits of my proper jurisdiction, and that I do what is best
Tbe record in tbe equity suit, was properly admitted in evidence and shows a valid, former adjudication that tbe predecessors in interest of tbe present plaintiffs in error derived no title under tbe will of Keaka to the land described in tbe declaration in tbe case at bar. That adjudication is binding as against tbe plaintiffs in error and in favor of tbe defendants in error. H. C. & S. Co. v. Wailuku S. Co., 14 Haw. 50.
In tbe power of attorney (February, 1875) offered in evidence by plaintiffs Paakuku is claimed to have recited that she took tbe land under tbe will of Keaka. There was no offer to prove that any one acted in reliance upon tbe declaration, if it was made, or was misled by it. Tbe instrument alone did not tend to prove an estoppel. Probate Record No. 1022, In re Estate of Paakuku, was offered by plaintiffs “for tbe purpose of showing that in 1876 tbe children of Keaka did not regard tbe determination of tbe partition suit as decisive of their rights in tbe land in controversy and * * * all regarded tbe partition suit and determination thereof as of no binding force whatever”. It is not claimed that in Probate Case No. 1022 any adjudication was bad of tbe rights now under consideration. “Tbe proceeding”, it was stated in the offer of tbe record, “was never decided * * * and is still in abeyance.” Tbe views
The assignments* of error are not sustained. The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- HENRY C. HAPAI, G. W. A. HAPAI AND NELSON K. SNIFFEN v. MAY K. BROWN, ARTHUR M. BROWN, HER HUSBAND, BLANCHE WALKER, JOHN WALKER, HER HUSBAND, WALTER F. DILLINGHAM, ROBERT W. ATKINSON, AND HENRY WATER-HOUSE TRUST COMPANY, LIMITED, A CORPORATION
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