4 Haw. 82 | Haw. | 1878
Opinion of the Court by
(Justice Judd having drawn the codicil referred to, and testified in the case, did not sit.)
The matter before the Court may be stated thus: The plaintiff herein is the devisee under the second item of the •codicil of the will of Ilis late Majesty Lunalilo, in these words:
“Second — After the decease of my father, I devise the premises at Waikiki, Oahu, known as my Marine Residence, to Queen Emma, her heirs and assigns forever.”
Upon the death of the father, the defendants were constituted trustees, as provided in the will, and took possession of the whole estate. In pursuance of the codicil they put the plaintiff in occupation of certain premises at Waikiki, of about four acres in extent, on which stand the residence, a detached cottage and the outbuildings. These premises are a portion of a tract called by Hawaiians “Kaluakau.” Action of ejectment was brought at the October Term to recover the remaining twenty-five acres, and verdict rendered for the plaintiff. The bill of exceptions, and the instructions given or refused on the defendants’ part will complete the statement of the case.
BILL 03? EXCEPTIONS.
The plaintiff claimed certain land (as set forth by metes and bounds in her declaration) as part of L3malilo’s Marine Residence at Waikiki, under the devise to her of that property.
I. The plaintiff’s counsel offered evidence to show the testator’s understanding of the term “Marine Residence,” and of his use of the land claimed as part of Ms “Marine Resi
II. The plaintiff’s counsel offered evidence of what was known and used as the “Marine Residence” in 1868, and at various other dates prior to 1872, the date of the testator’s will, to the admission of which evidence defendants’ counsel objected and duly excepted to its admission by the Court.
III. The evidence of the plaintiff showed that the plaintiff is now in possession of a certain parcel of land, and the buildings thereon marked as “ Pahale ” on the plan filed herein by her counsel. That said house lot was enclosed on all sides in such manner as to keep out animals or with the object of keeping out animals.
On this evidence the defendants’ counsel moved the Court to rule that a verdict should be rendered for the defendants, and duly excepted to its refusal of such motion.
IV. When all the evidence on both .sides was closed, the defendants’ counsel moved the Court to instruct the jury that a. verdict for the defendants should be rendered, and duly excepted to the refusal of such motion.
Instructions given for the defendants are hereto appended. The exceptions are allowed.
instructions asked by defendants and given, except the fourth.
'I. The plaintiff is entitled under the will only to the premises which, at the testator’s death, was known as his ‘‘Marine Residence.” If the land marked as “Pahale,” meaning “house lot,” on the plaintiff’s survey, is all that the will called for, the plaintiff cannot recover, and the defendants are entitled to a verdict.
II. It is immaterial whether the land claimed would be of use or convenience to the owner of the “Marine Residence”
IH. As the residence did not receive its name until about 1872, the earlier bounds of the testator’s property, as used for his grass-house, are immaterial to this ease, and evidence in regard to it is to be disregarded.
IV. The evidence is insufficient in law to sustain a verdict for the plaintiff’. (This instruction refused.)
V. If the jury have doubt as to the extent of the devise, the defendants are entitled to a verdict, or, in other words, the burden of proof is on the plaintiff’, which burden of proof is to be held more strictly than in ordinary cases.
VI. The question of right of way to the mauka land is immaterial, as the occupants of that land will look out for themselves.
PER CURIAM.
The plaintiff' offered evidence to show what was “ known as my Marine Residence,”, on the ground that there was a latent ambiguity in the words expressing the subject devised. Taking Lord Bacon’s definition of ambiguitas latens — “that which seemeth certain and without ambiguity for anything which appeareth upon the deed or instrument, but there is some collateral matter out of the deed that breedeth the ambiguity.” It would seem that there was such an ambiguity here from the fact that the buildings were placed at one end of a large tract of land, and as the plaintiff claimed not set off by a definite partition and not separated in use from the portion delivered to the plaintiff’. As the plaintiff claimed that the whole tract was “known” as the premises intended to be devised, she should have been permitted to show it by evidence if she could. Upon the question of treating this as a latent ambiguity, we may well say with Metcalf, J., in American
But we desire to place our decision on this point on a broader ground than this, that the evidence in question was IDroperly admitted in the first instance, and to hold the doctrine that if evidence has been wrongly admitted because it was incompetent or irrelevant, and if the Judge shall, upon its appearing to be such, instruct the jury to disregard it, it is not a ground of exception. The jury is sworn to render verdict according to law, and, by our statute, must receive the law from the Court. When the Court has instructed that some
The only instruction refused to defendants was the fourth. But on examination of the evidence sent up with the bill of exceptions we fail to see how it could have been given. The testimony of Crabbe and Kaai supports the verdict, and is sufficient in law if the jury have taken that rather than the testimony given, for the other side. Not that taking either view was a matter of discredit to the veracity of- the- witnesses- supporting the other, for the subject was somewhat of the nature of an opinion, as to what witness had “known” as the certain premises. It cannot be said that the testimony on either side was of the most decisive and positive character, and it was plainly the province of the jury to- find which of that put before them preponderated, and the Court may not set such finding- aside.. The exceptions are overruled.