2 Hawaii female inmates allege sex assaults at Kentucky prison

What does this have to do with Quiet Title in Ko Hawaii Pae Aina?

The titles to all the aina were quieted with the first and then second mahele and the fact that these quieted titles are being buried under a bunch of paperwork that holds no legal or lawful value, affects directly every Kanaka Maoli, including Kanaka Maoli and their prison sentence.

There’s money to made in them thar kanaka’s!

As one commenter said, they would never be raped here because these guards would have to go home and probably face the families of these women at the grocery store some day.

2 Hawaii female inmates allege sex assaults at Kentucky prison

Accusations not first at Otter Creek facility in Kentucky

By Mary Vorsino
Advertiser Staff Writer

Two female inmates from Hawai’i allege they were sexually assaulted by one or more corrections officers at a Kentucky prison, and police are investigating one of the incidents.

Advertisement
//

Honolulu attorney Myles Breiner said he is representing the two women, who allege the sexual assaults occurred while they were in isolation in a medical unit at the Otter Creek Correctional Center in Wheelwright, Ky.

One of the assaults was reported June 23 and allegedly involved a male corrections officer, Kentucky police said. The other incident, earlier this year, also allegedly involved a male corrections officer at the same prison, Breiner said.

Kentucky state police spokesman Mike Goble said last week that no arrests have been made in the June 23 case. He added that forensic tests have been conducted and that other evidence has been collected.

An October 2007 report of another sexual assault of a Hawai’i female inmate at Otter Creek by a corrections officer led to his firing.

There are 165 Hawai’i women at Otter Creek, a private prison operated by Corrections Corporation of America. In an e-mailed statement, spokesman Steven Owen said, “CCA has a zero-tolerance policy for any form of sexual misconduct and takes any such allegations very seriously.”

He said the company is “in the process of thoroughly reviewing” the allegations, adding that “any public discussion” of the allegations before the completion of an investigation “would be premature and inappropriate.”

Tommy Johnson, deputy director of the state Department of Public Safety, said investigations are under way at the prison in two separate incidents. He would not say whether those incidents are sex assaults, but confirmed that one stems from something that was reported June 23.

“At this point, they’re just allegations,” Johnson said.

Other incidents

The investigations come more than a year after Otter Creek officials said they would change their procedures following a sex assault case involving a Hawai’i inmate and corrections officer. In the October 2007 incident, the inmate alleged the corrections officer came to her room and demanded she perform sex acts.

The officer was fired, and subsequently convicted of a misdemeanor sex offense.

Johnson told that inmate’s relatives in a September 2008 letter that after the incident Corrections Corporation of America immediately changed its operating procedures at Otter Creek to require “whenever possible, a female correctional officer is paired with a male correctional officer in the housing dorms/units.”

The state renewed its $3.6 million annual contract to house Hawai’i inmates at Otter Creek in November. Johnson said the contract is set to expire in October.

Allegations of sexual misconduct involving corrections workers and Hawai’i inmates have surfaced before in other private prisons, including in Oklahoma in 2000 and Colorado in 2005. Those allegations were followed by the felony conviction of a corrections officer in Colorado and inmate lawsuits in both states.

Otter Creek Correctional Center, a 656-bed prison that houses minimum- and medium-security men and women, was also under scrutiny last year after a secretary got a .22-caliber pistol through the facility’s security system, including a metal detector, and then committed suicide in the warden’s office.

Here vs. there

Lawmakers and advocates for the inmates say the new sex assault allegations raise questions about the safety of the women at Otter Creek and the procedures in place to prevent assaults. The allegations could also reignite a debate about whether the state should be shipping female inmates to the Mainland at all.

State Sen. Will Espero, D-20th (‘Ewa Beach, Waipahu), chairman of the Senate Public Safety Committee, said, “We’ve always had issues with the women being so far away.” Espero added that he believes the women should return.

“There’s no reason why we can’t begin to bring some of them back,” he said.

The state pays about $50 million annually to CCA to house some 2,000 male and female inmates in Mainland prisons because there isn’t enough room for them in Hawai’i. All female inmates are at Otter Creek.

The practice of exporting women has been criticized because many of them have children and advocates say long separations can cause irreparable harm to families. Espero said the Hawai’i women on the Mainland should instead be housed at the Federal Detention Center near Honolulu International Airport.

In December, the state Public Safety Department said in a report to the Legislature that holding 164 female inmates at the Federal Detention Center would cost about $84 a day each. That’s $5 million a year — about $1.6 million more than the cost of keeping them at Otter Creek. The report said the detention center has enough space for the female inmates now housed on the Mainland, but they could be held at the facility for no longer than three years because the center isn’t set up for longer stays.

Johnson added that the annual costs of holding the women at Otter Creek is about half of the cost of keeping them in state facilities in Hawai’i. The report also pointed out that about 64 percent of women at Otter Creek had, as of October 2008, five or more years to go before they complete their sentences or are eligible for parole.

Reach Mary Vorsino at mvorsino@honoluluadvertiser.com.

Rubellite Kinney Johnson, Plaintiff-appellant, v. the United States

I Love You Auntie Rubellite but the fact remains…our land cannot be sold, it can only be handed down to our lineal descendants. In this way, Kamehameha III secured our land titles, our Palapala Sila Nui and Palapala Hooko so ownership would never, ever, even though it may appear so (right now) to the general public.
But…until the United States can come up with proof that there was a transfer of jurisdiction from Ko Hawaii Pae Aina to the Provisional Government, later becoming the Territory of Hawaii and then the United States, the lands remain intact here in the original jurisdiction of Ko Hawaii Pae Aina and ownership is held by Kanaka Maoli.

To date, no proof has been forthcoming.

Take note:

1. There are no United States Land Patents here in Ko Hawaii Pae Aina.

2. There are Palapala Sila Nui and Palapala Hooko.

If there are no United States Land Patents that means that all the ingredients needed to meet the requirements to have our land transferred was not met.

Rubellite Kinney Johnson, Plaintiff-appellant, v. the United States, Defendant-appellee

United States Court of Appeals, Federal Circuit. – 976 F.2d 747

Aug. 10, 1992

Before NIES, Chief Judge, RICH, Circuit Judge, and MILLS, District Judge.*

PER CURIAM.

1Rubellite Kinney Johnson appeals from the November 25, 1991 judgment of the United States Claims Court, No. 91-1627L, dismissing Johnson’s complaint for want of subject matter jurisdiction. We affirm.
2DISCUSSION
3Johnson contends that the United States wrongfully deprived her of property to which she claims entitlement as a descendant of King Kamehameha IV of the Kingdom of Hawaii. The Claims Court (Nettesheim, J.) dismissed Johnson’s complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction on the grounds that (1) Johnson’s quiet title claim is outside the Claims Court’s jurisdiction, and (2) her Fifth Amendment taking claim accrued more than six years (the applicable limitations period) before commencing suit. For these reasons, as explicated in the Claims Court’s November 22, 1991 Order directing dismissal, we agree that the Claims Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction. Accordingly, we adopt the Order, reproduced below, as our opinion in this appeal. We decline to consider Johnson’s latest argument, that the United States has engaged in a ” ‘continuing trespass’ … upon Appellant’s properties,” as improperly raised for the first time on appeal.
4APPENDIX
5Adopted opinion of the United States Claims Court:
6ORDER
7Plaintiff’s complaint was filed on November 21, 1991. It is the court’s obligation to assure itself that it has jurisdiction over a complaint before addressing the merits. Hambsch v. United States, 857 F.2d 763, 765 (Fed.Cir.1988), cert. denied, 490 U.S. 1054 (1989). Pro se plaintiffs are not expected to frame issues with the precision of a common law pleading. Roche v. USPS, 828 F.2d 1555, 1558 (Fed.Cir.1987). Accordingly, plaintiff’s complaint has been reviewed carefully to ascertain whether, given the most favorable reading, it supports jurisdiction in the Claims Court.
8Plaintiff bases jurisdiction on the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1491 (1988). It is well established that the United States, as sovereign, “is immune from suit save as it consents to be sued … and the terms of its consent to be sued in any court define that court’s jurisdiction to entertain the suit.” United States v. Sherwood, 312 U.S. 584, 586 (1941) (citation omitted). “[E]xcept as Congress has consented there is no jurisdiction in the [Claims Court] more than in any other court to entertain suits against the United States….” Id. at 588.
9Plaintiff complains that private property of her ancestor King Kamehameha IV was wrongfully appropriated pursuant to judicial decree of the Supreme Court of Hawaii in 1864 and that the legislature in 1865 rendered the estate inalienable referring to it as the “Crown Lands of Hawaii.” Revenues of the Crown Lands were appropriated by the Provisional Government after 1893. Plaintiff further alleges that in 1894 the Crown Lands were illegally conveyed by the Republic of Hawaii into public domain. According to plaintiff, the Crown Lands eventually were conveyed to the United States under the Treaty of Annexation of 1898 without ascertaining the rights of heirs or successors to the estate of King Kamehameha IV. The United States Court of Claims held in Liliuokalani v. United States, 45 Ct.Cl. 418 (1910), that the Crown Lands belonged to the office of the king and not the individual and that upon the annexation of Hawaii they passed to the United States as part of the public domain. In 1959 the United States conveyed the Crown Lands to the State of Hawaii, reserving some federal territory.
10Plaintiff claims that all conveyances by the United States without first quieting the existing title have been illegal, since the heirs and successors to the Kamehameha estate have not received compensation for their interests. Plaintiff asks that the surviving heirs and successors to the estate be awarded title to the Crown Lands at the time of King Kamehameha IV’s death, that the title granted by the United States to the State of Hawaii in 1959 be rescinded, for a declaration that revenues and lands from former Crown Lands be determined to be the sole and exclusive property of the living heirs and successors of King Kamehameha IV, and for other relief.
11Plaintiff’s complaint can be construed broadly as asking for a declaration of property rights. The Claims Court’s jurisdictional statute, the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1491(a)(3), restricts the court’s jurisdiction to issue declaratory relief to those actions brought by disappointed bidders seeking to enjoin the award of contracts. Plaintiff’s complaint also can be read broadly as a claim for compensation under the fifth amendment of the U.S. Constitution based on a taking of private property for public use without just compensation. Although 28 U.S.C. § 1491(a)(1) gives jurisdiction over such actions, the applicable statute of limitations is six years pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2501. Jurisdiction is foreclosed if the actions of which plaintiff complains took place more than six years before suit was filed. Hart v. United States, 910 F.2d 815 (Fed.Cir.1990).
12To the extent that plaintiff’s complaint states a cause of action against the United States, as opposed to prior governments of Hawaii before it became a State of the United States, plaintiff admits that the United States Government acquired dominion over Hawaii in 1898. The United States exercised dominion over the Crown Lands, according to the complaint, by conveying them to the State of Hawaii in 1959, reserving some federal territory. The statute of limitations has long expired on the more recent of these events. Plaintiff pleads no facts that would toll the statute of limitations. See Japanese War Notes Claimants Ass’n v. United States, 389 U.S. 971 (1968). Indeed, the gravamen of plaintiff’s complaint relating to actions since 1959 concerns the State of Hawaii. Based on the foregoing,
13IT IS ORDERED, as follows:
14The Clerk of the Court shall dismiss the complaint for want of subject matter jurisdiction.
15/s/ Christine Cook Nettesheim
16/s/ Judge

Makila Map

makila_map2

Narciso Billianor, Jr., Maui Land & Pineapple, Honolua

It will be interesting to see the results of this Quiet Title Case…

Appeals court reverses Honolua Bay ruling
Pathway that Lahaina man was blocking not public right of way

By LILA FUJIMOTO, Staff Writer
POSTED: May 2, 2009
Save | Print | Email

WAILUKU – An appeals court has reversed a Lahaina man’s conviction for obstructing access to public property at Honolua Bay in 2006.

In its April 21 order, the state Intermediate Court of Appeals said the issue was whether a pathway used by the public to reach the bay was a public right of way.

According to testimony during his trial, 59-year-old Narciso Billianor Jr. at first told two undercover Maui police officers that they couldn’t go to the beach unless they paid a $5 donation. The officers were carrying bodyboards and posing as tourists. Later in the videotaped encounter, Billianor told the officers he didn’t care about the money and they could go to the beach.

Police set up the sting operation Nov. 26, 2006, to investigate reports of “extortion activity” at the popular West Maui snorkeling and bodyboarding spot.

Lahaina District Judge Simone C. Polak acquitted Billianor of attempted fourth-degree theft and found him guilty of obstructing access to public property, a violation, on Jan. 28, 2008.

He was ordered to perform 100 hours of community service, but the sentence was stayed while he appealed the conviction.

“While the District Court concluded that Billianor did prevent members of the public from traversing a public right of way, the state concedes that there was no evidence that the pathway was a public right of way and requests that Billianor’s conviction be reversed,” according to the Intermediate Court of Appeals order.

The order said, “It appears the evidence was undisputed that the pathway was the private property of Maui Land & Pineapple Company Inc. and not a public right of way.”

Attorney Michelle Drewyer, who represented Billianor, said she and the defendant were pleased with the order reversing his conviction.

“Testimony at trial was really clear – it was privately owned and no easements have been granted to any government entity,” she said. “The statute only pertains to public right of way. It’s a civil case, not a criminal case. Jurisdiction didn’t lie with the criminal courts.”

Billianor had set up a donation table about 30 yards from the shoreline. He said he was collecting money to pay for portable toilets, which he had arranged for, to keep the area clean.

He is among those who have claimed an interest in the land, which is the subject of a separate, pending quiet-title court action.

Billianor’s son, who was 16 years old at the time, also was arrested after allegedly flicking a knife while blocking the way to the beach. Family members said the boy was acquitted of felony charges during a closed Family Court proceeding.

* Lila Fujimoto can be reached at lfujimoto@mauinews.com.
Subscribe to The Ma

Narciso Billianor, Jr., Maui Land & Pineapple, Honolua

Trial in case of Honolua Bay access, theft begins
By LILA FUJIMOTO, Staff Writer
POSTED: November 27, 2007

LAHAINA – Carrying bodyboards and a video camera hidden under a towel, two undercover police officers were walking toward the Honolua Bay shoreline when they were called back to a “donation” table set up on the trail last year.
Behind the table was Narciso Billianor Jr., who stood up and motioned for the officers to approach the table, said Lahaina patrol officer Steven Gunderson.

After he and the other officer said they weren’t interested in making a donation, Billianor’s young son motioned to his teenage brother to approach the officers, Gunderson said.

The 16-year-old boy “took a wide stance, he had a knife of some sort,” Gunderson said. “He kept flicking it open, staring us down.”

At the same time, Billianor “was telling us we need to make a donation because he owns the land and he takes care of the port-a-potties and the upkeep of the trail,” Gunderson said.

“I figured we weren’t going to be going to the beach,” he said. “I’d say it was a threat.”

Gunderson testified Monday in Billianor’s trial in Lahaina District Court.

The 58-year-old is charged with obstructing access to public property and attempted fourth-degree theft in the Nov. 26, 2006, incident, which was captured on videotape.

After at first telling the officers, “This is private property,” and asking for the donation, Billianor later is heard saying, “I don’t care about your money.”

Police organized the undercover operation to investigate reports of “extortion activity” at the popular snorkeling and bodyboarding spot, Gunderson said.

Randall Endo, vice president of community development for Maui Land & Pineapple Co., testified that the table with a sign saying “private property” and “$5 donation” was set up without permission on company land. He said the table was set up 30 to 40 yards from where the water meets the shoreline.

A similar “private property” sign also was put up without company permission on its locked gate along an upper portion of the trail just off Honoapiilani Highway, Endo said.

He described the unpaved trail as a “historical pathway” that goes downhill through vegetation and crosses Honolua Stream to a flat area near kuleana parcels by the shoreline. The key to the gate was given to Billianor as a “potential owner” of one kuleana parcel, which is the subject of a separate pending quiet-title court action, Endo said.

He said Maui Land & Pineapple Co. hasn’t restricted access on foot to the bay, where hundreds of tourists go to snorkel and swim daily. But he said there was no legal grant of easement for public use of the trail.

Endo said he didn’t know of a closing time for the bay, although Lahaina police officer Timothy Hodgens photographed a sign indicating that the bay was closed from 4:30 p.m. to 7 a.m. Hodgens said the “closed” sign was put up by Billianor family members after police arrested Billianor shortly after 4 p.m. that day.

Sgt. Ricky Uedoi recovered a cash box containing $256 that he said was on the table within arm’s reach of Billianor.

The trial is scheduled to continue Jan. 28 before Judge Simone C. Polak.

Lila Fujimoto can be reached at lfujimoto@mauinews.com.

Samuel M. Damon v. Territory of Hawaii 1904

This has to do with the Fishing rights that come with the Royal Patent…

U.S. Supreme Court

DAMON v. TERRITORY OF HAWAII, 194 U.S. 154 (1904)

194 U.S. 154

SAMUEL M. DAMON, Plff. in Err., v. TERRITORY OF HAWAII. No. 207. Argued April 12, 1904. Decided April 25, 1904.

Messrs. Francis M. Hatch, Reuben D. Silliman, and J. J. Darlington for plaintiff in error.

Mr. Lorrin Andrews for defendant in error.[ Damon v. Territory of Hawaii 194 U.S. 154 (1904) ]

Page 194 U.S. 154, 157

Mr. Justice Holmes delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an action at law, somewhat like a bill to quiet title, to establish the plaintiff’s right to a several fishery of a peculiar sort, between the coral reef and the ahupuaa of Moanalua on the main land of the island of Oahu. The organic act of the territory of Hawaii repealed all laws of the Republic of Hawaii which conferred exclusive fishing rights, subject, however, to vested rights, and it required actions to be started within

Page 194 U.S. 154, 158

two years by those who claimed such rights. Act of April 30, 1900, chap. 339, 95, 96 (31 Stat. at L. 141, 160). At the trial the presiding judge directed a verdict for the defendant. Exceptions were taken but were overruled by the supreme court of the territory, and the case comes here by writ of error.

The right claimed is a right within certain metes and bounds to set apart one species of fish to the owner’s sole use, or, alternatively, to put a taboo on all fishing within the limits for certain months, and to receive from all fishermen one third of the fish taken upon the fishing grounds. A right of this sort is somewhat different from those familiar to the common law, but it seems to be well known to Hawaii, and, if it is established, there is no more theoretical difficulty in regarding it as property and a vested right than there is regarding any ordinary easement or profit a prendre as such. The plaintiff’s claim is not to be approached as if it were something anomalous or monstrous, difficult to conceive and more difficult to admit. Moreover, however, anomalous it is, if it is sanctioned by legislation, if the statutes have erected it into a property right, property it will be, and there is nothing for the courts to do except to recognize it as a right. Wedding v. Meyler, 192 U.S. 573, 583, ante, p. 322, 24 Sup. Ct. Rep. 322.

The property formerly belonged to Kamehameha IV., from whom it passed to his brother, Lot Kamehameha, and from him by mesne conveyances to the plaintiff. The title of the latter to the ahupuaa is not disputed. He claims the fishery also under a series of statutes and a royal grant. The history is as follows: In 1839 Kamehameha III. took the fishing grounds from Hawaii to Kauai and redistributed them,-those named without the coral reef, and the ocean beyond, to the people; those ‘from the coral reef to the seabeach for the landlords and for the tenants of their several lands, but not for others.’ The landlord referred to seems to have been the konohiki, or overlord, of an ahupuaa, or large tract like that owned by the plaintiff. It is not necessary to speculate as to what the effect of this act of the king would have been standing alone, he then

Page 194 U.S. 154, 159

having absolute power. It had, at least, the effect of inaugurating a system, de facto. But in 1846, the monarchy then being constitutional, an act was passed, article 5 of which was entitled ‘Of the Public and Private Rights of Piscary.’ By the 1st section of this article it was provided again that the same fishing grounds outside the reef should be free to the people, etc.; and then by the second it was enacted that the fishing grounds from the reefs to the beach, or, where there are no reefs, for one mile seaward, ‘shall in law be considered the private property of the landlords whose lands, by ancient regulation, belong to the same; in the possession of which private fisheries the said landholders shall not be molested except’ etc.

By 3 ‘the landholders shall be considered in law to hold said private fisheries for the equal use of themselves and of the tenants on their respective lands; and the tenants shall be at liberty to use the fisheries of their landlords subject to the restrictions in this article imposed.’ Then follows a statement of the rights of the landlord as they have been summed up above, and a provision that the landlords shall not have power to lay any tax or to impose any restrictions upon their tenants regarding the private fisheries other than those prescribed.

The Civil Code of 1859, 387, repeated the enactment of 2, that the fishing grounds within the reef or one mile seaward ‘shall, in law, be considered the private property of the konohiki,’ etc., in nearly the same words, and other sections codified the regulations just mentioned. There was a later repetition in the Penal Laws of 1897, 1452, etc., and this was in force when the organic act of Congress was passed, repealing, as we have said, the laws conferring exclusive fishing rights, but preserving vested rights.

The foregoing laws not only use the words ‘private property,’ but show that they mean what they say by the restrictions cutting down what otherwise would be the incidents of private property. There is no color for a suggestion that they

Page 194 U.S. 154, 160

created only a revocable license, and if they imported a grant or a confirmation of an existing title, of course the repeal of the laws would not repeal the grant. The argument against their effect was not that in this case the ahupuaa did not belong to the fishery, within the words ‘landlords whose lands, by ancient regulation, belong to the same’ (the land seems formerly to have been incident to the fishery), but that citizens have no vested rights against the repeal of general laws. This is one of those general truths which become untrue by being inaccurately expressed. A general law may grant titles as well as a special law. It depends on the import and direction of the law. A strong example of the application of the rule intended by the argument is to be found in Wisconsin & M. R. Co. v. Powers, 191 U.S. 379, ante, p. 107, 24 Sup. Ct. Rep. 107, where a railroad company was held to have no vested right to exemptions proclaimed in a general tax act. The statute was construed not to import an offer, covenant, or grant to railroads which might be built in reliance upon it. But if a general law does express such an offer, as it may, the grant is made. If the Hawaii statutes did not import a grant, it is hard to see their meaning.

However, in this case it is not necessary to invoke the statutes further than to show that, by the law in force since 1846, at least, such rights as the plaintiff claims, and which, as is shown by the evidence, he and his predecessors in title have been exercising for forty years, have been recognized as private property. Such is the view of the leading case, decided in 1858 and acquiesced in, we believe, ever since. Haalelea v. Montgomery, 2 Hawaiian R. 62, 66. In the present instance the plaintiff claims under a royal patent, admitted to have been effective as to whatever, by its true construction, it purported to convey. This patent describes the ahupuaa by metes and bounds, and then the granting clause goes on: ‘There is also attached to this land a fishing right in the adjoining sea, which is bounded as follows,’ again giving boundaries, and continuing: ‘The islands of Mokumoa, Mokuonini, and Mokuoco are a part of Moakalua and are included in the above area.’

Page 194 U.S. 154, 161

The description of what is intended to be conveyed could not be plainer. But the habendum is ‘to have and to hold the above granted land,’ and it is said that, as the fishery of an overlord or konohiki, unlike the rights of tenants, did not pass as an incident of land, but must be distinctly granted, the fishery was not included in the patent. Haalelea v. Montgomery, 2 Hawaiian Rep. 62, 71. Again, we must avoid being deceived by a form of words. We assume that a mere grant of the ahupuaa without mention of the fishery would not convey the fishery. But it does not follow that any particular words are necessary to convey it when the intent is clear. When the description of the land granted says that there is incident to it a definite right of fishery, it does not matter whether the statement is technically accurate or not; it is enough that the grant is its own dictionary and explains that it means by ‘land’ in the habendum, land and fishery as well. There is no possibility of mistaking the intent of the patent. If declares that intent plainly on its face. There is no technical rule which overrides the expressed intent, like that of the common law, which requires the mention of heirs in order to convey a fee. We are of opinion that the patent did what it was meant to do, and therefore that the plaintiff is entitled to prevail.

Judgment reversed.

Mauna Kea Agribusiness Co., Inc. v. Nauka, Awa Pake, Apeo, Kamaliiwahine, Peu, Kupa, Kahoohiki, Lono, Kaleikapuainui, Mele, Kawailehu, Kaoo

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF HAWAI`I



—o0o—






MAUNA KEA AGRIBUSINESS CO., INC., Plaintiff-Appellee



vs.



NAUKA, AWA PAKE, also known as AWA and C.W. AWA; ALINA
APEO (w), also known as ALINA CHUNG PEU (w); KAMALIIWAHINE
CHUNG PEU; CHUNG PEU; KUPA (w), also known as KUPA
KAHOOHIKI (w); LONO (w), also known as LONO KAHOOHIKI (w);
KALEIKAPUAINUI (k), also known as KALEIKAPUAINUI
KAHOOHIKI (k); MARY, also known as MELE KAHOOHIKI, MELE
KAWAILEHUA KAOO and MARY KAOO; K.M. KAHOOHIKI, also known
as MAHOE KAHOOHIKI, heirs or assigns, and ALL WHOM IT MAY
CONCERN, Defendants-Appellees



and



HEIDIE CARIAGA, MELINDA HURLEY, APRIL ISABEL, DAVID KAOO,
GUY KAOO, HIRAM KAOO, JAN KAOO, JOSEPH KAOO, MARGARET KAOO,
MAYVIN KAOO, THANYA KAOO, SARAH KAOO-LAVEA, BEATRICE MIURA,
DANTON SUGAI, GAYLE SUGAI, MILTON SUGAI, and SABURO SUGAI,
Defendants-Appellants



NO. 25916



APPEAL FROM THE THIRD CIRCUIT COURT
(CIV. NO. 02-1-0316)



AUGUST 25, 2004




MOON, C.J., LEVINSON, NAKAYAMA, ACOBA, AND DUFFY, JJ.


OPINION OF THE COURT BY ACOBA, J.

We hold that the Circuit Court of the Third Circuit (the court) did not err in awarding Plaintiff-Appellee Mauna Kea Agribusiness Company, Incorporated (Mauna Kea) summary judgment against Defendants-Appellants Heidie Cariaga, Melinda Hurley, April Isabel, David Kaoo, Guy Kaoo, Hiram Kaoo, Jan Kaoo, Joseph Kaoo, Margaret Kaoo, Mayvin Kaoo, Thanya Kaoo, Sarah Kaoo-Lavea, Beatrice Miura, Danton Sugai, Gayle Sugai, Milton Sugai, and Saburo Sugai (collectively, Kaoos), in its quiet title action because Mauna Kea satisfied one of the exceptions to the good faith notice requirements under City & County of Honolulu v. Bennett, 57 Haw. 195, 209, 552 P.2d 1380, 1390 (1976). For at the time, Mauna Kea or its predecessors would have no reason to suspect, under the law precluding illegitimate children from inheriting patrilineal intestate property, that a cotenancy existed with the Kaoos or their ancestors.

I.

Mauna Kea filed this action to quiet its title to Apanas (2) 1 and 2 of Land Commission Award 10304 (the Properties), situated at Ka, Hawaii. The Properties were awarded to Nauka, who devised to E. Mose Kalaikoa, who conveyed to S. Kalaiko. S. Kalaiko died intestate, whereupon title to a one-fifth interest descended to each of S. Kalaikoa’s five heirs: (1) Naiheahuahu Kalaikoa; (2) Kailiuakea; (3) Mose Kalaikoa; (4) Keamalu; and (5) Kupa, also known as Kupa Kahoohiki (Kupa).

Four-fifths of the Properties vested by mesne conveyances and corporate mergers in Mauna Kea through the first four heirs named above. Mauna Kea claims title to the remaining one-fifth interest of S. Kalaikoa’s fifth heir, Kupa, by adverse possession.

Kupa did not convey her interest in the Properties during her life and died intestate, whereupon title to her one-fifth interest descended in one-twentieth interests to each of her four issue: (1) Lono, also known as Lono Kahoohiki (Lono); (2) Kaleikapuainui, also known as Kaleikapuainui Kahoohiki (Kaleikapuainui); (3) K.M. Kahoohiki, also known as Mahoe Kahoohiki (K.M. Kahoohiki); and (4) Mary, also known as Mele Kahoohiki, Mele Kawailehua Kaoo and Mary Kaoo (Mary). (3) Mary did not convey her one-twentieth interest in the Properties during her life and died intestate, whereupon title to her one-twentieth interest allegedly descended to her sole heir, Samson Kaoo. Samson Kaoo died on September 11, 1932. Kaoos are either illegitimate issue, or descendants of illegitimate issue, of Samson Kaoo.

According to the declarations of Edward Andrade Jr. and John C. Cross, from as early as the 1950s to the 1990s, Mauna Kea and its predecessors openly, notoriously, continuously, and exclusively used the Properties for agriculture, particularly for sugar cane. The declarations also evidence that from the 1990s to the present, Ernest Souza, lessee of Ka Agribusiness Co., Inc., a predecessor in title of Mauna Kea, has openly, notoriously, continuously, and exclusively used the Properties for dairy operations.

II.

Mauna Kea commenced this quiet title action on September 11, 2002, contending that its predecessors in title were in adverse possession of the remaining one-fifth of the Properties in excess of 10 years prior to May 4, 1973, and in excess of 20 years prior to September 11, 2002. (4) Accordingly, Mauna Kea submits that the claims of all other persons having an estate or interest in the one-fifth share of the Properties are barred.

In their answer, Kaoos asserted that they had an undivided interest in the Properties as lineal heirs of Samson Kaoo, who, as mentioned previously, was the issue of Mary, the lineal heir to a one-twentieth interest in the Properties.

On March 5, 2003, Mauna Kea filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that there was no genuine issue of material fact, and that it was entitled to judgment as a matter of law on the grounds that (1) there was no evidence that title to an interest in the Properties vested by deed, devise, or descent in Samson Kaoo; (2) even if there was evidence that an interest in land vested in Samson Kaoo, Kaoos cannot inherit by intestate succession through Samson Kaoo by operation of Revised Law of Hawaii (RLH) § 3307 (1925) (5) and Machado v. Kualau, 20 Haw. 722, 723 (1911); and (3) assuming, arguendo, Kaoos could establish title by descent from Samson Kaoo, Mauna Kea had nonetheless satisfied all of the elements as to adverse possession.

In their memorandum in opposition, Kaoos asserted (1) that there is evidence to support the finding that an undivided interest in the Properties vested in Samson Kaoo from his mother, Mary; (2) that Trimble v. Gordon, 430 U.S. 762 (1977), and Reed v. Campbell, 476 U.S. 852 (1986), required the court to retroactively apply Trimble to invalidate RLH § 3307 and thereby permit them to assert their inheritance rights against Mauna Kea’s adverse possession claim; and (3) that (a) a co-tenancy existed between Mauna Kea and themselves in the Properties; (b) Mauna Kea failed to give actual notice to them as co-tenants, of its hostile holding for the requisite statutory period pursuant to Bennett, 57 Haw. at 209, 552 P.2d at 1390; and (c) Mauna Kea failed to satisfy the statutory period of adverse possession as to Apana 2.

In its reply memorandum, Mauna Kea maintained that the court need not address the constitutionality of RLH § 3307 inasmuch as Mauna Kea had satisfied all of the elements of adverse possession, including those under Bennett. It thus argued that the case could be decided without regard to that statute. (6)

On May 20, 2003, the court granted Mauna Kea’s motion for summary judgment. The court declined to determine the constitutionality of RLH § 3307. But, the court posited that were Trimble applied retroactively, resulting in the purported creation of a co-tenancy relationship, Mauna Kea would still have satisfied a Bennett exception to the requirement of actual notice:

Even if Trimble were to apply retroactively, this does not necessarily mean that Plaintiff fails on its motion for summary judgment. The issue would be whether, in accordance with Bennett, Plaintiff acted in good faith towards Defendnts.

At the time of Samson Kaoo’s death, under [RLH § 3307], his illegitimate children could not inherit from his estate. Therefore, . . . neither his illegitimate children nor their descendants would have been considered co-tenants of Plaintiff’s predecessors in interest as a matter of law. Further, Plaintiff’s predecessors in interest could not have reasonably predicted that the Trimble opinion would be issued in 1977 and retroactively applied. As such, as a matter of law, the Court determines that the Bennett good faith or notice requirement is satisfied by constructive notice and “open and notorious possession” of [the Properties].

(Emphasis added.)

On May 29, 2003, the court entered final judgment in favor of Mauna Kea and against Kaoos and all other defendants, (7) awarding Mauna Kea title to the Properties in fee simple absolute. Kaoos filed this appeal on June 23, 2003.

III.


The standard of review to be applied by this court in reviewing an award of summary judgment is the same standard applicable to the circuit court’s consideration of the summary judgment motion. Morinoue v. Roy, 86 Hawai`i 76, 80, 947 P.2d 944, 948 (1997) (citing Amfac, Inc. v. Waikiki Beachcomber Inv. Co., 74 Haw. 85, 104, 839 P.2d 10, 22 (1992)). Summary judgment is appropriate “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Hawai`i Rules of Civil Procedure (HRCP) Rule 56(c).

IV.

Kaoos raise two points on appeal: (1) genuine issues of material fact remain in dispute regarding the existence of a co-tenancy and the application of the good faith notice requirement and (2) the court erred inasmuch as RLH § 3307 should have been retroactively invalidated.

V.

“It is well established that one claiming title to real property by adverse possession must bear the burden of proving by clear and positive proof, each element of actual, open, notorious, hostile, continuous[,] and exclusive possession for the statutory period.” Morinoue, 86 Hawai`i at 81, 947 P.2d at 949 (quoting Lai v. Kukahiko, 58 Haw. 362, 368-69, 569 P.2d 352, 357 (1977) (citations omitted)). “The burden of clear and positive proof derives from the long-observed proposition that adverse possession is to be taken strictly, and every presumption is in favor of a possession in subordination to the rightful owner.” Id. (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).

Kaoos make no discernable argument in opposition to these elements of Mauna Kea’s adverse possession claim. They contend only that there is a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether Mauna Kea and its predecessors established constructive good faith notice of its hostile possession to its alleged co-tenants. In Bennett, this court said that

because of the general fiduciary relationship between cotenants, a tenant in common claiming by adverse possession must prove that he acted in good faith towards the cotenants during the statutory period. In most circumstances, this requirement of good faith will in turn mandate that the tenant claiming adversely must actually notify his cotenants that he is claiming against them.

Bennett, 57 Haw. at 209, 552 P.2d at 1390 (emphasis added); see also Morinoue, 86 Hawai`i at 83, 947 P.2d at 951.

The good faith requirement, however, can be satisfied by less than actual notice where: (1) the adverse possessor has no reason to suspect that a co-tenancy exists; (2) the tenant in possession makes a good faith, reasonable effort to notify the co-tenants, but is unable to locate them; or (3) the tenants out of possession already have actual knowledge that the tenant in possession is claiming adversely to their interests. Bennett, 57 Haw. at 289, 552 P.2d at 1390; see also Morinoue, 86 Hawai`i at 83, 947 P.2d at 951; Petran v. Allencastre, 91 Hawai`i 545, 556, 985 P.2d 1112, 1123 (App. 1999) (reasoning that “a cotenant in possession ought to have known of a cotenancy if evidence thereof existed in the Bureau of Conveyances”). “In these limited circumstances, the notice requirement will be satisfied by constructive notice and open and notorious possession.” Bennett,
57 Haw. at 209-10, 552 P.2d at 1390 (footnote and internal quotation marks omitted).

Kaoos maintain that Mauna Kea had “reason to suspect” their ancestors were co-tenants. Id. at 209, 552 P.2d at 1390. But, at the time of Samson Kaoo’s death in 1932, his illegitimate children could not inherit from his estate under RLH § 3307. (8) Moreover, in Machado, this court had confirmed the restrictive effect of the statute prior to Samson Kaoo’s death.  Machado involved an appeal from an ejectment action. 20 Haw. at 722. There, father, the owner of the land in controversy, died intestate leaving defendant son (Son) and a grandson (Grandson). Id. Son was legitimate; however, Grandson was the illegitimate issue of father’s deceased daughter. Id. Grandson conveyed his inherited interest in the land to plaintiff. Id. Thereafter, plaintiff brought an action to eject Son. Id. The trial court entered a decision in favor of plaintiff pursuant to RLH § 2511, the indentically worded predecessor to RLH § 3307. Id. This court set the trial court’s decision aside on appeal, noting that “[t]he illegitimate [Grandson] is rendered by [RLH § 2511] capable of inheriting from his mother, but not from any one else.” Id. at 723. This court concluded, in applying RLH § 2511, that

[i]n the case at bar the mother of the illegitimate [Grandson] left no property. The inheritance is not from her, but from her father [i.e., the illegitimate child’s grandfather], the patentee. The statute has given to the illegitimate [Grandson] the capacity to inherit from his mother, but not from his grandfather.

Id. at 723-24. Accordingly, this court entered judgment in favor of the defendant Son.

Under RLH § 3307 and Machado, at the time of Samson Kaoo’s death, Kaoos would have been “capable of inheriting from [their] mother, but not from [Samson Kaoo].” Machado, 20 Haw. at 723. Neither Samson Kaoo’s illegitimate children nor their descendants would have inherited the interest of Samson Kaoo, their ancestor. In the absence of such an interest, they would not have been considered co-tenants of Mauna Kea’s predecessors in interest as a matter of law. Thus, on this ground, Mauna Kea was not afforded any “reason to suspect” that Kaoos might be co-tenants. Bennett, 57 Haw. at 209; 552 P.2d at 1390.

Furthermore, as the court indicated, Mauna Kea’s predecessors in interest could not have reasonably predicted that Trimble would be issued in 1977 so as to impute a “reason to suspect” a co-tenancy. Id. at 209, 552 P.2d at 1390. Accordingly, we hold that the court was correct in deciding that Mauna Kea satisfied the Bennett good faith actual notice requirement by constructive notice and open and notorious possession of the land. Id. at 209-10, 552 P.2d at 1390.

VI.

In Ka Agribusiness Co. v. Heirs or Assigns of Ahulau, No. 24420, slip op. at 10 (Haw. Aug. 9, 2004), we invalidated, inter alia, RLH § 4815 (1935), (9) the successor statute to RLH § 3307. There, plaintiff sought to quiet its title to real property it had acquired from father’s only legitimate child. Id. Defendants were the heirs of father’s illegitimate children, who had been prevented from inheriting from father by operation of RLH § 4815. Id. The circuit court granted plaintiff summary judgment. Id. at 8. On appeal, we held that RLH § 4815 is constitutionally invalid for violating the U.S. and Hawai`i constitutions’ equal protection clauses and for offending the “state interest in avoiding unjustified discrimination against children born out of wedlock.” Id. at 24 (quoting Reed, 476 U.S. at 856). (10)

We have no reason to retroactively invalidate RLH § 3307 here, because, assuming arguendo that RLH § 3307 were to be invalidated in this case, Mauna Kea has, as indicated supra, established that it had no “reason to suspect that a cotenancy exist[ed]” with the Kaoos, and the Kaoos have failed to supply any evidence to the contrary. Bennett, 57 Haw. at 209; 552 P.2d at 1390 (emphasis omitted).

VII.

Kaoos argue that even if they do not have an interest, the heirs of Kupa do, because “a co-tenancy existed between Mauna Kea . . . and the heirs of Kupa regardless of the operation of [RLH § 3307].” Assuming, arguendo, there were legitimate issue of Kupa, that would not raise a genuine issue of material fact.

A party responding to a summary judgment motion must set forth facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial. HRCP Rule 56(e). HRCP Rule 56(c) requires that the facts be material. A fact is material if proof of the fact would have the effect of establishing or refuting one of the essential elements of a cause of action or defense asserted by the parties. If it does not have that effect, then it would not be a material fact. A genuine issue with respect to that fact would not foreclose the granting of a summary judgment motion.

Ka, slip op. at 10-11 (citations omitted). Whether Mauna Kea acted in good faith towards the other descendants of Kupa would neither establish Kaoos’ claim of title to the alleged one-twentieth interest of Samson Kaoos’ illegitimate issue, nor refute Mauna Kea’s adverse possession defense to Kaoos’ claim. See Ka, slip op. at 10 (holding that the presence of parties with potential interests in a property that is the subject of a quiet title action is not “indispensable” to quiet title to said property, under Mossman v. Hawaiian Trust Co., 45 Haw. 1, 361 P.2d 374 (1961)).

Furthermore, as was noted in Ka, “[a] bill to quiet title may not be defeated by showing that the plaintiff’s interest, otherwise sufficient to support the bill, is subject to possibly superior rights in third persons not parties to the suit.” Ka, slip op. at 11 (quoting United States v. Oregon, 295 U.S. 1, 24 (1935)). Moreover, “[i]t is enough that the interest asserted by the plaintiff in possession of land is superior to that of those who are parties defendant.” Id. (quoting Oregon, 295 U.S. at 25). Therefore, Kaoos cannot argue that Mauna Kea’s claim should fail because it is “subject to possibly superior rights in third persons[,]” such as other descendants of Kupa.

VIII.

For the foregoing reasons, the court’s May 29, 2003 order granting Mauna Kea’s summary judgment against Kaoos and its May 29, 2003 final judgment are affirmed.


On the briefs:

Andrew B. Spenger (Native
Hawaiian Legal Corporation)
for defendants-appellants.

Donald E. Scearce (Cades
Schutte) for plaintiff-
appellee.

1. The Honorable Greg K. Nakamura presided.

2. “Apana” is Hawaiian for “stratum, flat, especially a coral flat.” M. Pukui & S. Elbert, Hawaiian Dictionary 29 (rev. ed. 1986).

3. According to Mauna Kea, there is no Bureau of Conveyances record, department of health death record, or probate record relating to the estates or determinations of the heirs of Lono, Kaleikapuainui, or K.M. Kahoohiki, the other issue of Kupa.

4. “The statutory period required for establishing title to real property through adverse possession was twenty years in the 1880s, but was reduced to ten years in 1898.” Morinoue v. Roy, 86 Hawai`i 76, 81 n.6, 947 P.2d 944, 949 n.6 (1997) (citations omitted). However, the statutory period was restored to twenty years in 1973, but without affecting rights that had already matured as of that date. Id. (citing Hawai`i Revised Statutes (HRS) § 669-1(b)) (citation omitted); see HRS § 669-1 (Supp. 2003).

5. RLH § 3307 prevented patrilineal intestate inheritance by illegitimate children. The statute provided as follows:

Every illegitimate child shall be considered as an heir to his mother, and shall inherit her estate, in whole or in part, as the case may be, in like manner as if he had been born in lawful wedlock.

6. In response to point (c), Mauna Kea submitted amended declarations for Edward Andrade Jr. and John C. Cross regarding Apana 2, which established that it could satisfy the elements of adverse possession for the statutory period as to Apana 2 of the Properties.

7. The judgment was also against all unknown parties claiming an interest in the Properties.8.       See supra note 5.9. RLH § 4815 provided that “[e]very illegitimate child shall be considered as an heir to his mother, and shall inherit her estate, in whole or in part, as the case may be, in like manner as if he had been born in lawful wedlock.”

10. In Ka, we decided that Trimble would not be given retroactive effect under the circumstances of the case. Retroactive effect in Trimble was not afforded in Ka, because (1) plaintiff was an innocent purchaser who detrimentally relied on RLH § 4815; and (2) defendants’ paternity had not been conclusively established.

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF HAWAI`I —o0o— MAUNA KEA AGRIBUSINESS CO., INC., Plaintiff-Appellee vs. NAUKA, AWA PAKE, also known as AWA and C.W. AWA; ALINA APEO (w), also known as ALINA CHUNG PEU (w); KAMALIIWAHINE CHUNG PEU; CHUNG PEU; KUPA (w), also known as KUPA KAHOOHIKI (w); LONO (w), also known as LONO KAHOOHIKI (w); KALEIKAPUAINUI (k), also known as KALEIKAPUAINUI KAHOOHIKI (k); MARY, also known as MELE KAHOOHIKI, MELE KAWAILEHUA KAOO and MARY KAOO; K.M. KAHOOHIKI, also known as MAHOE KAHOOHIKI, heirs or assigns, and ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN, Defendants-Appellees and HEIDIE CARIAGA, MELINDA HURLEY, APRIL ISABEL, DAVID KAOO, GUY KAOO, HIRAM KAOO, JAN KAOO, JOSEPH KAOO, MARGARET KAOO, MAYVIN KAOO, THANYA KAOO, SARAH KAOO-LAVEA, BEATRICE MIURA, DANTON SUGAI, GAYLE SUGAI, MILTON SUGAI, and SABURO SUGAI, Defendants-Appellants NO. 25916 APPEAL FROM THE THIRD CIRCUIT COURT (CIV. NO. 02-1-0316) AUGUST 25, 2004 MOON, C.J., LEVINSON, NAKAYAMA, ACOBA, AND DUFFY, JJ. OPINION OF THE COURT BY ACOBA, J. We hold that the Circuit Court of the Third Circuit (the court) did not err in awarding Plaintiff-Appellee Mauna Kea Agribusiness Company, Incorporated (Mauna Kea) summary judgment against Defendants-Appellants Heidie Cariaga, Melinda Hurley, April Isabel, David Kaoo, Guy Kaoo, Hiram Kaoo, Jan Kaoo, Joseph Kaoo, Margaret Kaoo, Mayvin Kaoo, Thanya Kaoo, Sarah Kaoo-Lavea, Beatrice Miura, Danton Sugai, Gayle Sugai, Milton Sugai, and Saburo Sugai (collectively, Kaoos), in its quiet title action because Mauna Kea satisfied one of the exceptions to the good faith notice requirements under City & County of Honolulu v. Bennett, 57 Haw. 195, 209, 552 P.2d 1380, 1390 (1976). For at the time, Mauna Kea or its predecessors would have no reason to suspect, under the law precluding illegitimate children from inheriting patrilineal intestate property, that a cotenancy existed with the Kaoos or their ancestors. I. Mauna Kea filed this action to quiet its title to Apanas (2) 1 and 2 of Land Commission Award 10304 (the Properties), situated at Ka, Hawaii. The Properties were awarded to Nauka, who devised to E. Mose Kalaikoa, who conveyed to S. Kalaiko. S. Kalaiko died intestate, whereupon title to a one-fifth interest descended to each of S. Kalaikoa’s five heirs: (1) Naiheahuahu Kalaikoa; (2) Kailiuakea; (3) Mose Kalaikoa; (4) Keamalu; and (5) Kupa, also known as Kupa Kahoohiki (Kupa). Four-fifths of the Properties vested by mesne conveyances and corporate mergers in Mauna Kea through the first four heirs named above. Mauna Kea claims title to the remaining one-fifth interest of S. Kalaikoa’s fifth heir, Kupa, by adverse possession. Kupa did not convey her interest in the Properties during her life and died intestate, whereupon title to her one-fifth interest descended in one-twentieth interests to each of her four issue: (1) Lono, also known as Lono Kahoohiki (Lono); (2) Kaleikapuainui, also known as Kaleikapuainui Kahoohiki (Kaleikapuainui); (3) K.M. Kahoohiki, also known as Mahoe Kahoohiki (K.M. Kahoohiki); and (4) Mary, also known as Mele Kahoohiki, Mele Kawailehua Kaoo and Mary Kaoo (Mary). (3) Mary did not convey her one-twentieth interest in the Properties during her life and died intestate, whereupon title to her one-twentieth interest allegedly descended to her sole heir, Samson Kaoo. Samson Kaoo died on September 11, 1932. Kaoos are either illegitimate issue, or descendants of illegitimate issue, of Samson Kaoo. According to the declarations of Edward Andrade Jr. and John C. Cross, from as early as the 1950s to the 1990s, Mauna Kea and its predecessors openly, notoriously, continuously, and exclusively used the Properties for agriculture, particularly for sugar cane. The declarations also evidence that from the 1990s to the present, Ernest Souza, lessee of Ka Agribusiness Co., Inc., a predecessor in title of Mauna Kea, has openly, notoriously, continuously, and exclusively used the Properties for dairy operations. II. Mauna Kea commenced this quiet title action on September 11, 2002, contending that its predecessors in title were in adverse possession of the remaining one-fifth of the Properties in excess of 10 years prior to May 4, 1973, and in excess of 20 years prior to September 11, 2002. (4) Accordingly, Mauna Kea submits that the claims of all other persons having an estate or interest in the one-fifth share of the Properties are barred. In their answer, Kaoos asserted that they had an undivided interest in the Properties as lineal heirs of Samson Kaoo, who, as mentioned previously, was the issue of Mary, the lineal heir to a one-twentieth interest in the Properties. On March 5, 2003, Mauna Kea filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that there was no genuine issue of material fact, and that it was entitled to judgment as a matter of law on the grounds that (1) there was no evidence that title to an interest in the Properties vested by deed, devise, or descent in Samson Kaoo; (2) even if there was evidence that an interest in land vested in Samson Kaoo, Kaoos cannot inherit by intestate succession through Samson Kaoo by operation of Revised Law of Hawaii (RLH) § 3307 (1925) (5) and Machado v. Kualau, 20 Haw. 722, 723 (1911); and (3) assuming, arguendo, Kaoos could establish title by descent from Samson Kaoo, Mauna Kea had nonetheless satisfied all of the elements as to adverse possession. In their memorandum in opposition, Kaoos asserted (1) that there is evidence to support the finding that an undivided interest in the Properties vested in Samson Kaoo from his mother, Mary; (2) that Trimble v. Gordon, 430 U.S. 762 (1977), and Reed v. Campbell, 476 U.S. 852 (1986), required the court to retroactively apply Trimble to invalidate RLH § 3307 and thereby permit them to assert their inheritance rights against Mauna Kea’s adverse possession claim; and (3) that (a) a co-tenancy existed between Mauna Kea and themselves in the Properties; (b) Mauna Kea failed to give actual notice to them as co-tenants, of its hostile holding for the requisite statutory period pursuant to Bennett, 57 Haw. at 209, 552 P.2d at 1390; and (c) Mauna Kea failed to satisfy the statutory period of adverse possession as to Apana 2. In its reply memorandum, Mauna Kea maintained that the court need not address the constitutionality of RLH § 3307 inasmuch as Mauna Kea had satisfied all of the elements of adverse possession, including those under Bennett. It thus argued that the case could be decided without regard to that statute. (6) On May 20, 2003, the court granted Mauna Kea’s motion for summary judgment. The court declined to determine the constitutionality of RLH § 3307. But, the court posited that were Trimble applied retroactively, resulting in the purported creation of a co-tenancy relationship, Mauna Kea would still have satisfied a Bennett exception to the requirement of actual notice: Even if Trimble were to apply retroactively, this does not necessarily mean that Plaintiff fails on its motion for summary judgment. The issue would be whether, in accordance with Bennett, Plaintiff acted in good faith towards Defendnts. At the time of Samson Kaoo’s death, under [RLH § 3307], his illegitimate children could not inherit from his estate. Therefore, . . . neither his illegitimate children nor their descendants would have been considered co-tenants of Plaintiff’s predecessors in interest as a matter of law. Further, Plaintiff’s predecessors in interest could not have reasonably predicted that the Trimble opinion would be issued in 1977 and retroactively applied. As such, as a matter of law, the Court determines that the Bennett good faith or notice requirement is satisfied by constructive notice and “open and notorious possession” of [the Properties]. (Emphasis added.) On May 29, 2003, the court entered final judgment in favor of Mauna Kea and against Kaoos and all other defendants, (7)awarding Mauna Kea title to the Properties in fee simple absolute. Kaoos filed this appeal on June 23, 2003. III. The standard of review to be applied by this court in reviewing an award of summary judgment is the same standard applicable to the circuit court’s consideration of the summary judgment motion. Morinoue v. Roy, 86 Hawai`i 76, 80, 947 P.2d 944, 948 (1997) (citing Amfac, Inc. v. Waikiki Beachcomber Inv. Co., 74 Haw. 85, 104, 839 P.2d 10, 22 (1992)). Summary judgment is appropriate “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Hawai`i Rules of Civil Procedure (HRCP) Rule 56(c). IV. Kaoos raise two points on appeal: (1) genuine issues of material fact remain in dispute regarding the existence of a co-tenancy and the application of the good faith notice requirement and (2) the court erred inasmuch as RLH § 3307 should have been retroactively invalidated. V. “It is well established that one claiming title to real property by adverse possession must bear the burden of proving by clear and positive proof, each element of actual, open, notorious, hostile, continuous[,] and exclusive possession for the statutory period.” Morinoue, 86 Hawai`i at 81, 947 P.2d at 949 (quoting Lai v. Kukahiko, 58 Haw. 362, 368-69, 569 P.2d 352, 357 (1977) (citations omitted)). “The burden of clear and positive proof derives from the long-observed proposition that adverse possession is to be taken strictly, and every presumption is in favor of a possession in subordination to the rightful owner.” Id. (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). Kaoos make no discernable argument in opposition to these elements of Mauna Kea’s adverse possession claim. They contend only that there is a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether Mauna Kea and its predecessors established constructive good faith notice of its hostile possession to its alleged co-tenants. In Bennett, this court said that because of the general fiduciary relationship between cotenants, a tenant in common claiming by adverse possession must prove that he acted in good faith towards the cotenants during the statutory period. In most circumstances, this requirement of good faith will in turn mandate that the tenant claiming adversely must actually notify his cotenants that he is claiming against them. Bennett, 57 Haw. at 209, 552 P.2d at 1390 (emphasis added); see also Morinoue, 86 Hawai`i at 83, 947 P.2d at 951. The good faith requirement, however, can be satisfied by less than actual notice where: (1) the adverse possessor has no reason to suspect that a co-tenancy exists; (2) the tenant in possession makes a good faith, reasonable effort to notify the co-tenants, but is unable to locate them; or (3) the tenants out of possession already have actual knowledge that the tenant in possession is claiming adversely to their interests. Bennett, 57 Haw. at 289, 552 P.2d at 1390; see also Morinoue, 86 Hawai`i at 83, 947 P.2d at 951; Petran v. Allencastre, 91 Hawai`i 545, 556, 985 P.2d 1112, 1123 (App. 1999) (reasoning that “a cotenant in possession ought to have known of a cotenancy if evidence thereof existed in the Bureau of Conveyances”). “In these limited circumstances, the notice requirement will be satisfied by constructive notice and open and notorious possession.” Bennett, 57 Haw. at 209-10, 552 P.2d at 1390 (footnote and internal quotation marks omitted). Kaoos maintain that Mauna Kea had “reason to suspect” their ancestors were co-tenants. Id. at 209, 552 P.2d at 1390. But, at the time of Samson Kaoo’s death in 1932, his illegitimate children could not inherit from his estate under RLH § 3307. (8) Moreover, in Machado, this court had confirmed the restrictive effect of the statute prior to Samson Kaoo’s death. Machado involved an appeal from an ejectment action. 20 Haw. at 722. There, father, the owner of the land in controversy, died intestate leaving defendant son (Son) and a grandson (Grandson). Id. Son was legitimate; however, Grandson was the illegitimate issue of father’s deceased daughter. Id. Grandson conveyed his inherited interest in the land to plaintiff. Id. Thereafter, plaintiff brought an action to eject Son. Id. The trial court entered a decision in favor of plaintiff pursuant to RLH § 2511, the indentically worded predecessor to RLH § 3307. Id. This court set the trial court’s decision aside on appeal, noting that “[t]he illegitimate [Grandson] is rendered by [RLH § 2511] capable of inheriting from his mother, but not from any one else.” Id. at 723. This court concluded, in applying RLH § 2511, that [i]n the case at bar the mother of the illegitimate [Grandson] left no property. The inheritance is not from her, but from her father [i.e., the illegitimate child’s grandfather], the patentee. The statute has given to the illegitimate [Grandson] the capacity to inherit from his mother, but not from his grandfather. Id. at 723-24. Accordingly, this court entered judgment in favor of the defendant Son. Under RLH § 3307 and Machado, at the time of Samson Kaoo’s death, Kaoos would have been “capable of inheriting from [their] mother, but not from [Samson Kaoo].” Machado, 20 Haw. at 723. Neither Samson Kaoo’s illegitimate children nor their descendants would have inherited the interest of Samson Kaoo, their ancestor. In the absence of such an interest, they would not have been considered co-tenants of Mauna Kea’s predecessors in interest as a matter of law. Thus, on this ground, Mauna Kea was not afforded any “reason to suspect” that Kaoos might be co-tenants. Bennett, 57 Haw. at 209; 552 P.2d at 1390. Furthermore, as the court indicated, Mauna Kea’s predecessors in interest could not have reasonably predicted that Trimble would be issued in 1977 so as to impute a “reason to suspect” a co-tenancy. Id. at 209, 552 P.2d at 1390. Accordingly, we hold that the court was correct in deciding that Mauna Kea satisfied the Bennett good faith actual notice requirement by constructive notice and open and notorious possession of the land. Id. at 209-10, 552 P.2d at 1390. VI. In Ka Agribusiness Co. v. Heirs or Assigns of Ahulau, No. 24420, slip op. at 10 (Haw. Aug. 9, 2004), we invalidated, inter alia, RLH § 4815 (1935), (9) the successor statute to RLH § 3307. There, plaintiff sought to quiet its title to real property it had acquired from father’s only legitimate child. Id. Defendants were the heirs of father’s illegitimate children, who had been prevented from inheriting from father by operation of RLH § 4815. Id. The circuit court granted plaintiff summary judgment. Id. at 8. On appeal, we held that RLH § 4815 is constitutionally invalid for violating the U.S. and Hawai`i constitutions’ equal protection clauses and for offending the “state interest in avoiding unjustified discrimination against children born out of wedlock.” Id. at 24 (quoting Reed, 476 U.S. at 856). (10) We have no reason to retroactively invalidate RLH § 3307 here, because, assuming arguendo that RLH § 3307 were to be invalidated in this case, Mauna Kea has, as indicated supra, established that it had no “reason to suspect that a cotenancy exist[ed]” with the Kaoos, and the Kaoos have failed to supply any evidence to the contrary. Bennett, 57 Haw. at 209; 552 P.2d at 1390 (emphasis omitted). VII. Kaoos argue that even if they do not have an interest, the heirs of Kupa do, because “a co-tenancy existed between Mauna Kea . . . and the heirs of Kupa regardless of the operation of [RLH § 3307].” Assuming, arguendo, there were legitimate issue of Kupa, that would not raise a genuine issue of material fact. A party responding to a summary judgment motion must set forth facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial. HRCP Rule 56(e). HRCP Rule 56(c) requires that the facts be material. A fact is material if proof of the fact would have the effect of establishing or refuting one of the essential elements of a cause of action or defense asserted by the parties. If it does not have that effect, then it would not be a material fact. A genuine issue with respect to that fact would not foreclose the granting of a summary judgment motion. Ka, slip op. at 10-11 (citations omitted). Whether Mauna Kea acted in good faith towards the other descendants of Kupa would neither establish Kaoos’ claim of title to the alleged one-twentieth interest of Samson Kaoos’ illegitimate issue, nor refute Mauna Kea’s adverse possession defense to Kaoos’ claim. See Ka, slip op. at 10 (holding that the presence of parties with potential interests in a property that is the subject of a quiet title action is not “indispensable” to quiet title to said property, under Mossman v. Hawaiian Trust Co., 45 Haw. 1, 361 P.2d 374 (1961)). Furthermore, as was noted in Ka, “[a] bill to quiet title may not be defeated by showing that the plaintiff’s interest, otherwise sufficient to support the bill, is subject to possibly superior rights in third persons not parties to the suit.” Ka, slip op. at 11 (quoting United States v. Oregon, 295 U.S. 1, 24 (1935)). Moreover, “[i]t is enough that the interest asserted by the plaintiff in possession of land is superior to that of those who are parties defendant.” Id. (quoting Oregon, 295 U.S. at 25). Therefore, Kaoos cannot argue that Mauna Kea’s claim should fail because it is “subject to possibly superior rights in third persons[,]” such as other descendants of Kupa. VIII. For the foregoing reasons, the court’s May 29, 2003 order granting Mauna Kea’s summary judgment against Kaoos and its May 29, 2003 final judgment are affirmed. On the briefs: Andrew B. Spenger (Native Hawaiian Legal Corporation) for defendants-appellants. Donald E. Scearce (Cades Schutte) for plaintiff- appellee. 1. The Honorable Greg K. Nakamura presided. 2. “Apana” is Hawaiian for “stratum, flat, especially a coral flat.” M. Pukui & S. Elbert, Hawaiian Dictionary 29 (rev. ed. 1986). 3. According to Mauna Kea, there is no Bureau of Conveyances record, department of health death record, or probate record relating to the estates or determinations of the heirs of Lono, Kaleikapuainui, or K.M. Kahoohiki, the other issue of Kupa. 4. “The statutory period required for establishing title to real property through adverse possession was twenty years in the 1880s, but was reduced to ten years in 1898.” Morinoue v. Roy, 86 Hawai`i 76, 81 n.6, 947 P.2d 944, 949 n.6 (1997) (citations omitted). However, the statutory period was restored to twenty years in 1973, but without affecting rights that had already matured as of that date. Id. (citing Hawai`i Revised Statutes (HRS) § 669-1(b)) (citation omitted); see HRS § 669-1 (Supp. 2003). 5. RLH § 3307 prevented patrilineal intestate inheritance by illegitimate children. The statute provided as follows: Every illegitimate child shall be considered as an heir to his mother, and shall inherit her estate, in whole or in part, as the case may be, in like manner as if he had been born in lawful wedlock. 6. In response to point (c), Mauna Kea submitted amended declarations for Edward Andrade Jr. and John C. Cross regarding Apana 2, which established that it could satisfy the elements of adverse possession for the statutory period as to Apana 2 of the Properties. 7. The judgment was also against all unknown parties claiming an interest in the Properties. 8. See supra note 5. 9. RLH § 4815 provided that “[e]very illegitimate child shall be considered as an heir to his mother, and shall inherit her estate, in whole or in part, as the case may be, in like manner as if he had been born in lawful wedlock.” 10. In Ka, we decided that Trimble would not be given retroactive effect under the circumstances of the case. Retroactive effect in Trimble was not afforded in Ka, because (1) plaintiff was an innocent purchaser who detrimentally relied on RLH § 4815; and (2) defendants’ paternity had not been conclusively established.

Keeaumoku Kapu talks about Quiet Title

His Royal Patents, Keiki, how he came to the truth and the steps he took in his life after he discovered the truth. Some very good information on Quiet Title.

Makai, Puamana, Punihele, Nahalai, Nohouka, et al

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTH CIRCUIT

STATE OF HAWAII

SUMMONS TO DEFENDANTS MAIKAI (w); PUAMANA (w); PUNIHELE (w); NAHALAI (w), and her sibling, NOHOUKA (k); PAELE (k); KAAI (w); KAPAHU (w), also known as KAPAHU PAPIOHULI and KAPAHUWAHINE; PAUL KAMAI, also known as PAUL NAWAIKAULANA KAMAI, his wife, GRACE KAMAI, his children, PAUL KAMAI JR., PAULA KAMAI, EVANGALYN KAMAI, MELINDA KAMAI, NANCINE KAMAI, and his siblings, ELIZA KAMAI, also known as ELIZA MALOMA ILIKANA KAMAI and ELIZA HOOKANO, FRANCIS KAMAI, also known as FRANCIS K. KAMAI, WINIFRED KAMAI, also known as WINIFRED MILILANI KAMAI, and NICHOLAS KAMAI; CECELIA P. KAMAI; their heirs or assigns, and ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:

YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that Plaintiffs, MITSUGI YOKOTAKE, trustee under unrecorded Revocable Living Trust dated June 25, 1996, made by Mitsugi Yokotake as settler, and CLARA N. L. YOKOTAKE, also known as CLARA C. YOKOTAKE, trustee under unrecorded Revocable Livinig Trust dated June 25, 1996, made by Clara N. L. Yokotake, also known as Clara C. Yokotake, as settler, have filed a complaint in the Fifth Circuit Court, State of Hawaii, CIVIL NO. 07-1-0103, (i) to quiet the title to, (ii) to partition, and (iii) for an accounting re, that portion of Land Commission Awards 9194 and 9123, Royal Patent 7882, to Kahewana, situate at Waimea Valley, Waimea, Kauai, Hawaii, within TMK (4) 1-5-2-24.

YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to appear in the courtroom of the Honorable KATHLEEN N.A. WATANABE, Judge of the Fifth Circuit, 3970 Kaana Street, Courtroom 6, Lihue, Hawaii 96766, on Wednesday, September 26, 2007, at 1:00 p.m., or to file an answer or other pleading and serve it before said day upon Plaintiffs’ attorney, JOSEPH N. KOBAYASHI, whose address is P. O. Box 589, Kapaa, Kauai, Hawaii 96746. If you fail to do so, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. DATED: Lihue, Hawaii, July 26, 2007. DOREENA OLIVAS CLERK, FIFTH CIRCUIT COURT (Hon. Adv.: Aug. 3, 10, 17, 24, 2007) (A-287212) Updated on 08/10/2007.

Archie Kalepa at Jaws Maui

A descendant of Dallas K. Kalepa, Archie Kalepa, lifeguard, surfer, surfing Jaws Maui.

Have to click on the link to go to YouTube, embedding was disabled by request…

Archie Kalepa and friends surfing Jaws, Peahi, Maui.

This video was shot and edited by Dennis Earley.