26 Haw. 279 | Haw. | 1922
OPINION OF THE COURT BY
The essential facts of this controversy may be summarized as follows: Tbe respondent Mrs. Collins was tbe. owner of certain land on tbe Island of Maui in tb'is Territory, more specifically described herein, and upon tbe 6tb day of November, 1917, entered into a certain planting contract with one K. Kajiwara, tbe said contract being as follows:
*280 “This agreement made this 6th day of November, A. D. 1917, by and between Mrs. Ida Lou Harris-Collins, of Kuiaha, Hamakualoa, County of Maui, Territory of Hawaii, hereinafter called the Landlady, which expression shall include her heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, where the context so requires or admits of the first part; and K. Kajiwara, of Kuiaha, Hamakualoa, County of Maui, aforesaid, hereinafter called the Tenant, which expression shall include the heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, where the context so requires or admits of the second part; Witnesseth:
“That the Landlady for and in consideration of the promises, agreements and covenants herein contained on the part of the Tenant, to be performed and observed, does hereby empower and authorize the Tenant to enter immediately into and upon, and use and occupy all the uncultivated portion of Homestead Lot No. 32 on both sides of the gulch, situated at Kuiaha, Hamakualoa, County of Maui, aforesaid, for the cultivation of pineapples.
“And the Tenant hereby agrees with the Landlady that he will, in a proper, skillful and husbandman-like manner, clear, plow, harrow, thoroughly prepare and plant with pineapple plants all of said land as aforesaid, weed, cultivate, harvest, haul and deliver all pineapples so harvested to a pineapple cannery, there to be sold by the ton at the then current market price and credited to the Landlady.
“And the said Tenant further agrees to plant all of said land during the year 1918.
“And in consideration of the performance of the above agreement and covenants by the Tenant, the Landlady hereby agrees to pay over to the Tenant of the proceeds-■derived from the sale of all pineapples, aforesaid, Eighty per cent. (80%), and the cannery or purchaser of all such pineapples shall, and is hereby authorized to pay over to the said Tenant his share of Eighty per cent. (80%) of all the proceeds of such sales as above specified and to charge the same to the account of said Landlady.
“It is mutually agreed and understood by and be*281 tween both parties hereto that this agreement shall continue in full force and effect until three crops of pineapples shall have been harvested and delivered as aforesaid, from all of the said premises, in other words, this contract shall terminate after the harvesting of the second ratoon.
“It is also mutually agreed and understood by and between both parties - hereto that all shoots, slips and tops not needed by the Tenant for the cultivation of said premises, may be sold, if possible, and the proceeds divided between the Landlady and Tenant as aforesaid.”
During the year 1918 the said Kajiwara planted six acres of the land described in said contract in pineapples. On October 28, 1918, Kajiwara duly assigned all of his right, title and interest in and to said contract to one Mizubayashi and on the 3d day of October, 1919, the said Mizubayashi duly assigned the same to one 0. Kisaba, one of the petitioners herein. On the said date, to wit, October 3, 1919, Kisaba, as security for the sum of $2425 loaned him by the petitioner the Baldwin National Bank of Kahului, executed to said bank a mortgage, including among other crops of pineapples all of the pineapples belonging to him under the above contract and the assignment thereof to himself, and at the same time executed an order to the Haiku Fruit & Packing Company authorizing them to pay over to the Baldwin National Bank the proceeds of his interest in the pineapples grown on said premises to be applied on said debt.
The petitioners filed their bill in equity and among other things therein allege that the said C. Kisaba entered upon the said lands and thereon planted and cultivated pineapples in accordance with the terms and conditions of said planting contract and has continued to cultivate and plant said land until on or about the 1st day of March, 1920, when' the respondent Manuel Borge “drove the petitioner C. Kisaba and his agent and em
At the conclusion of the hearing the trial judge found" among other things that sis acres of the land described in the contract were planted in pineapples; that there was other land included in the contract which was available for pineapples which was not planted; “that the contract was duly assigned to one C. Kisaba, one of the complainants in this action.” “Kisaba, after his interest attached in October 1919 cultivated and cared for the said six acres up to December 1919.” In the early part of December Kisaba left the premises and moved to a place some twenty miles distant, leaving one Nakasoni in charge. For a short time in December Nakasoni did some work on the six acres but not sufficient to prevént the growth of weeds and grass thereon. The pineapple plants on the said six acres were so neglected that the entire crop was in danger of being destroyed and utterly lost. “On the 12th of February, 1920, the crop of pineapples on the six acre tract was so over-grown with weeds and grass that it was necessary for Mrs. Collins to take some
The contract in question has been referred to as a “lease,” a “planting contract,” a “cropping contract” and an “agreement to plant shares.” We regard the instrument as simply a written contract which speaks for itself, wherein was set forth the rights, duties and obligations of the contracting parties, and the cognomen bestowed upon it cannot change or alter the rules of construction applicable to contracts of this nature.
It appears from the record that the decision and the decree based thereupon were predicated upon the neglect and abandonment by Kisaba of the premises in question,
It is the general rule, and the rule Avhich has been approved and adopted by this court, that the breach by the lessee of the covenants or stipulations on his part to be kept and performed, contained in the lease, does not work a forfeiture of the term in the absence of an express proviso to that effect in- the lease. (16 R. C. L., Landlord & Tenant, 1115, 1116.) A lessor cannot reenter on the demised premises for, nonpayment of rent unless the lease contains a proviso for forfeiture and reentry upon nonpayment. (Wirt v. Philips, 1 Haw. 61 (102).) Even where the lease or contract does contain a covenant permitting reentry in case of a breach the rule is that the party seeking to enforce the covenant must comply with its terms and conditions. “A party endeavoring ■ to enforce a forfeiture must comply strictly with the tenor of the contract that he is acting under.” (Mini v. Hilo Sugar Co., 15 Haw. 480, 484.) The mere breach of the contract- does not of itself work a forfeiture.
It is therefore manifest that neither the neglect of the party of the second part to said contract, therein
It should be borne in mind that the entire property of Mrs. Collins, known as Homestead Lot. No. 32, consists of the lands described in this contract, namely, “all of the uncultivated portion of Homestead Lot. No. 32 on both sides of the gulch,” and in addition thereto seventeen acres not included in this contract; that the “entire land is surrounded by a complete enclosure. The seventeen acres áre not separated from the six acres by any fence;” that the seventeen acres were, under a contract between the same parties dated September 14, 1915, at all times from that date up to the time of the trial of this cause in the undisputed possession of the same parties who are asserted to have abandoned the six acres, and that their right to the possession of the seventeen acres has never been questioned as far as the record shows.
From the evidence we are unable to discover any abandonment of the land described in the contract or of the crops growing thereupon. Whether or not there was only part performance on the part of the tenant or whether the groAAdng crop had at times been neglected are questions beside the issue. The most positive and weighty evidence which the record discloses is the testimony of Mrs. Collins herself Avhich clearly establishes an illegal eviction of the tenant and not an abandonment by him. She among other things stated to the man thus engaged in cultivating some portion of the land, that there was no contract in effect because it had been broken in 1918 by Kajiwara’s failure to plant all of the land, and drove him off, thus forcing an abandonment upon him. And of course where a party has attempted to terminate a contract on a stated ground such- action cannot afterwards be justified on the ground that some other
There was in this instrument no right of reentry reserved upon failure to perform the covenants or conditions of the agreement nor any stipulation therein that a failure to perform should not operate as a forfeiture or termination of the contract, nor does the evidence disclose any ground for presuming that the contract had been abandoned.
The respondents contend that the contract in question was a “cropping contract” and that the occupier had no interest in the growing crop. What are sometimes denominated “cropping contracts” are usually for one year or for a single crop. Contracts of this nature are entirely different from the instrument under consideration. In the case of Gray v. Robinson, 33 Pac. 712, 713, cited by respondents in support of this contention, the court says: “The general rule, as laid down by the weight of authority, is that the character of a contract to cultivate lands oh shares is fcojbe determined by ascertaining the intention of the parties as expressed in the language they have used,”—which we regard as exceedingly sound, but we have been unable to discover any rule of construction by which an eviction of the tenant or occupier could be converted into an abandonment by him.
The respondents further contend that the petitioners are not proper parties to the suit and that the mortgage in question is not binding upon the respondents. In view of our opinion in the case we do not discover any merit in this contention.
The decree appealed' from is reversed and the cause is remanded to the court below for further proceedings consistent herewith.