11 Haw. 326 | Haw. | 1898
OPINION OF THE COURT BY
Tbis is an action of ejectment to recover an undivided balf of a piece of land at Kalin, Honolulu, Oahu, being a portion of the land covered by Royal Patent 3573, L. C. A. 733. The jury found for the plaintiff. The defendant Kaioipahia brings the case to this court on three exceptions.
An exception was taken to the refusal of the trial judge to allow the defendant to introduce testimony as to the value of the buildings on the land. The testimony was ruled out as immaterial. Upon what theory could it have been admitted? It was the title, not the value, of the property that was in issue. If the theory was that here, as in some states, one who has in good faith put improvements upon the land of another under a mistake as to the title, may claim the value of the improvements, still the evidence was inadmissible in this case, for the value of such improvements in those states may be claimed, in the absence of statutes providing otherwise, only by way of set-off to a claim for mesne profits and in this case there was no claim for mesne profits. We express no opinion as to whether the value of such improvements may be set-off against a claim for’mesne profits here. If the theory was that this was a case in which a tenant
An exception was taken to the refusal of the trial judge to instruct the jury, as requested by defendants, to render a vei’dict for the defendants for the reason that the plaintiff had conveyed his interest in the land to a third party, one Wong Wa Foy. One witness, a lawyer, testified, on cross-examination by defendant’s counsel, that he had drawn a paper, on its face a deed, but intended as a mortgage of this land from the plaintiff to Wong Wa Foy, to secure money with which to meet the expenses of' this suit, supposed then to be about $200, but that, when it was afterwards ascertained that the expenses would probably amount to about $400, Wong Wa Foy was paid the amount he had loaned, the mortgage to him was torn up and a new mortgage made to the witness for $400. Defendant contends that there should have been a reconveyance by Wong Wa Foy and that until such reconveyance the title was in him and not in the plaintiff. It will be unnecessary to go into the question of the theory of mortgages in this country with respect to the status or legal rights of the parties thereto. It is well settled that as between the mortgagor and a stranger, whatever may be the rule as between mortgagor and mortgagee and those claiming under the latter, the right of possession is in the mortgagor; also that payment of a mortgage on its law day or prior thereto by consent discharges the mortgage and revests the entire title in the mortgagor even as against the mortgagee without any reconveyance, and in this case the evidence was such that the jury might have found that the mortgage was satisfied on or before the day upon which the debt which it secured became due. On either of these grounds the right of possession might have been found to have been in the mortgagor, the plaintiff, as against the defendant. This assumes, of course, that the jury might have found that the deed was in fact a mort
The exceptions are overruled.