4 Haw. 198 | Haw. | 1879
Opinion of the Court by
This is an action for the possession of a piece of laud known by the name of • Haleaha, in Koolauloa, Island of Oahu, patented to Aikaula. The plaintiff at the trial established that he was the undoubted heir at law to Aikaula, and thereon ■rested his case.
The bill of exceptions goes on to state as follows: “The defendant offered to show that the land claimed had been taken by the defendant’s ancestor, over twenty years ago, in •exchange for other lands which the plaintiff’s ancestor entered upon, and has since sold; and this evidence was given against the plaintiff’s objection and its admission was excepted to by the plaintiff. The Court instructed the jury that if they be
The portion of the bill of exceptions 'which reads as follows r
“And even if the possession under the exchange had not been held for twenty years, they would hold the fact of an ex- ■ change for a long time to be an estoppel to plaintiff’s claim,” was the only portion insisted on at the hearing, and it was not doubted that if the defendants had held possession for twenty-years and over, this title would be good by prescription. On the other hand it was thought that the case of Kamohai vs. Kahele, 3d Haw. Hep., 530, should control the case, and that case- justified the instruction laid down in the bill of exceptions. In arguing his exceptions counsel for plaintiff expressly said that he- hoped to induce the Court to overrule the above-mentioned case,' showing thereby that he thought that the case now under consideration was similar.
But the cases are entirely dissimilar. In Kamohai vs. Kahele, the plaintiff 'himself had procured that the defendant’s ancestor should purchase the land in question of another person whom he stated to- be the- owner; the plaintiff had been, very active in the sale-, saw the money paid and the deed signed. And it was held, in effect, that under' those circumstances the plaintiff was estopped from setting up a title in
But it is an invariable rule that the- hill of exceptions should set forth as much of the evidence as shows that the-Judge erred in his. ruling, and in the law applicable to the case’. Fuller vs. Raby, 10 Gray, 288. “But the- duty of the party taking exceptions does not stop here; he should set forth the testimony-sufficiently so that the Appellate Court may ascertain whether the jury were misled in any material degree; for it would be enough that the decision is- right on the undisputed facts of the case; a new trial would do no.good, but would merely subject the parties to an expensive litigation to correct a theoretical error which is not at all important to a correct decision.” Munro vs. Potter, 34 Barb., 367.
Now this bill of exceptions sets forth no testimony at all, and might have been dismissed on that ground. But we have had recourse to the Judge’s notes, and find that the testimony is overwhelming that the exchange took place more than twenty years ago. Kupau says that he- marks the time of exchange because it occurred before he was admitted to practice law, and that was in 1857. Kane says that his son was born after the exchange, and he was born the 11th of March, 1858. Kopaea says that- it was before Kaaikaula went to
The exceptions are therefore overruled, and judgment ordered on the verdict.