OPINION OF THE COURT BY
This is an action in ejectment to recover certain land described in the complaint as follows:
“A certain house lot and house situated thereon at Halakaa, Lahaina, in the County of Maui, Territory оf Hawaii, and situated on the makai side of Main Street leading to Olowalu from Lahaina * * * lying between the lot of A. N. Hayselden on the west and the lot of Mrs. Annie K. Woolsey on the east, and having a width on Main Street of аbout eighty (80) feet and a depth of about one hundred and twenty (120') feet, and running along the seashore about eighty (80) feet, and of which said lot the plaintiff is the owner in fee simple.”
The case was tried jury waived. Considerable hearsay evidence was admitted, some of it over the objections of the defendants, and some of it without objection. The plaintiff testified that he owned the premises by reason of a deеd from P. W. Beckley to him, which deed bears date July 26, 1907, and was introduced in evidence. The description of the premises as set forth in the complaint is not contained in the deed and the only reference therein to any house-lot or lots is the following: “One-half of the Iliaina of Puunauiki situate at Lahaina, being maliele award No. 81, including the honse-lot on the beach” and “all that parcel of land (house-lot) situatе at Polanui, said Lahaina, described in Royal Patent No. 1191.” The only attempt to identify the premises described in the complaint as either of the house-lots named in the said deed was by the plaintiff who, while a witnеss in his own behalf, referring to the deed from Beckley to himself, said: “The house lot in question is included in that description ‘including the house-lot on the beach,’ ” and
At the close of the plaintiff’s case the defendants moved for a nonsuit, among other reasons on grounds stated by counsel as follows: “Wе ask for a nonsuit on the ground that there is a variance between the proof and the pleadings — the proof being a matter of record being by deed failing to show that the plaintiff has acquired any interest
The case comes here on writ of error, the defendants assigning eight errors, but they have waived all of them except those specified as to the denial of their motion for a nonsuit, the denial of thеir motion for judgment, and to the judgment in favor of the plaintiff.
Whether the house-lot in question-is described or mentioned in Award No. 31 or in Royal Patent No. 1191 is to be determined from one or the other of those instruments, as the сase may be, and not from plaintiff’s interpretation of the deed from Beckley to himself. It is a well settled rule that descriptions of land in a deed must be reasonably certain, either by express language -contained therein or by reference therein to some other deed or instrument or existing conditions capable of ascertainment. If plaintiff’s deed referred to the premises in question as the house-lot described in Award 31, still plaintiff would not be entitled to judgment under the evidence in this case. It may be that the house-lot on the beach is a part of Mahele Award 31, but it is not so described in the complaint nor in the deed from Beckley to the plaintiff. Some ambiguities in a deed may be cleared away by extrinsic evidence. In Kaleleonalani v. Smith,
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with instructions to the circuit court to grant the defendants’ motion for nonsuit.
