20 Haw. 567 | Haw. | 1911
OPINION OP THE COURT BY
This is a statutory action to quiet title to certain parcels of land situate on the Island of Kauai. At the close of the plaintiff’s case the defendants moved for a directed verdict and the motion was granted and the verdict accordingly rendered for the defendants. The exceptions are to the direction and to the verdict.
In limine' the defendants moved to< dismiss the bill of exceptions on two grounds. The first is that “it does not affirmatively appear by said bill of exceptions that the same was presented to or allowed by the judge trying the cause * * ' f within the time allowed by law * * * or any valid extension thereof.” By a certificate endorsed by the trial judge, at the request of this court, on the bill of exceptions after the ar
The second ground is, in substance, that the order granting the extension of time related merely to the filing of the bill and not to its presentation. Upon the court directing the jury to render a verdict for the defendants, counsel for the plaintiff said: “I desire to ask for thirty days after the receipt of the transcript, to make and file a bill of exceptions,” to which the court replied, “It is so ordered.” Upon the return of the verdict and the denial of a motion for a new trial the court again allowed counsel’s, request, stated in these words: “I want to ask for thirty days after the receipt of a copy of the transcript within which to file a bill of exceptions.” Defendants’ point is that the time granted was merely for filing and not for presenting the bill of exceptions and that the two are distinct matters, citing Ii Estate v. Mele, 14 Haw. 311, and Booth v. Schnack, 19 Haw. 659. To construe the order of the circuit judge as relating strictly to a mere filing would he to impute to him the purpose to grant to plaintiff time within which to perform a nugatory act. "Where the word “filing” requires a strict technical construction it would undoubtedly not be deemed to include a presentation, but under the circumstances of this case there can be no doubt that it was used as meaning and including the presentation as well as the filing. The motion to dismiss was for these reasons denied.
At the trial the parties stipulated that the following should be regarded as facts: “That the plaintiff and the defendants both claim an interest, in the lands described in plaintiff’s complaint under the same source of title, to-wit, as heirs of Isaac
Polikapu, a witness, testified on direct examination that Isaac Kahilina had “an elder brother” and that his name was Paulo, and also “a sister” named Kapeka. On cross-examination the following questions and answers occurred: “Q. Don’t you know as a matter of fact that Paulo- was a son of Kenoi by her first
It is urged, however, in support of the instruction and the verdict that no evidence whatever was adduced tending to show that Paulo died prior to the institution of this action. An examination of the record does, indeed, show that there was no such evidence, and also that there was no evideneé tending to show that the parents of Isaac Kahilina and his wife, Ana Kini, died before Isaac and that Isaac left no issue surviving him- — all facts indispensable to the vesting of title in the present plaintiff; the son of Ana, -the daughter of Paulo.
This failure of evidence cannot now be taken advantage of by the defendants. The motion and the instruction proceeded on the assumption that the fact was, or at least that there was a sufficiency of evidence to- show it, that Paulo and the parents o-f Ana Kini died before Isaac and that the latter left no children — in short, that Paulo inherited as heir of Isaac unless section 2513 forbade it. The point- was not mentioned in the trial court. It would be unfair to the plaintiff to- permit it to be presented for the first time in this court. Had it been advanced at the trial the defect could have been cured by. the introduction of other evidence. It may well be in this case, as in Makekau v. Kane, 20 Haw. 203, 211, that the facts were all such as to vest the title in the plaintiff, that they could easily have been proven to be so, that the defendants were well aware of them and that the omission to make objection at the trial was due to- such knowledge. The rule that a correct judgment is not to be set aside merely because an incorrect reason was given for it does not apply to the case under consideration. “A theory of a case or an assumption of fact adopted by the trial court with the acquiesence of the parties will be followed by an appellate court to which the cause is taken. * * * Appellate courts are especially careful to prevent injustice re-
The fact that there was evidence that Paulo was a full brother of Isaac of itself requires that a new trial should be granted. Since, however, the question of the effect of the deed of Ana Kini on the transmission of the title to the heirs of Paulo, if the latter was the half brother of Isaac, seems certain to arise upon a new trial, we shall pass upon it.
The witness Xuiki testified, “I was present when I saw the deed made out from Kahilina, from Kahilina’s wife, deeded it over to> Mika, and from Mika to Isaac.” Aside from this statement and the admission that “the property set forth and
Section 2513 reads as follows: “Kindred of the half blood. The kindred of the half blood shall inherit equally with those of the whole blood in the same degree; provided, however, that where the inheritance came to the intestate by descent, devise or gift of some one of his ancestors, all those who are not of the blood of such ancestor shall be excluded from such inheritance.” The person from whom the inheritance, devise or gift immediately came to the intestate, and not the remote source of the gift, is the one referred to in the proviso in such statutes as this. Brower v. Hunt, 18 Ohio St. 312, 313, 343; Prickett v. Parker, 3 Ohio St. 395, 396, 397; Nicholson v. Halsey, 1 Johns. Ch. 417; Patterson v. Lamson, 45 Ohio St. 77, 86, 87; Estate of Ehu, 9 Haw. 393, 394. Without deciding whether gifts other than testamentary are within the contemplation of the statute, Mika, and not the wife, is the person from whom the alleged gift “came” in this instance. The law itself rendered the wife incapable of making such a gift by deed to her husband. It was for this reason that the deed was executed
Mika, under the assumed facts, was not an “ancestor” of Isaac. He was an utter stranger in blood and • relationship, from whom Isaac could not under any circumstances have inherited. The word “ancestor” embraces all persons from whom a title by descent could be derived under any circumstances. Greenlee v. Davis, 19 Ind. 60, 62; 3 Washburn, Real Property, 18; Prickett v. Parker, supra; Brewster v. Benedict, 14 Ohio 368, 385, 386; Estate of Ehu, supra. Not all “gifts,” irrespective of their source, are referred to in the proviso, but only those that come from “some one of his ancestors,” The words last quoted are an essential part of the provision and must be given effect. The statute cannot be read as though they were not there. That Ana Kini conveyed to Mika and •Mika in turn to Isaac did not, therefore, prevent the children of a brother of the half blood, not of the blood of Ana Kini, from inheriting from Isaac Kahilina, the intestate.
The exceptions are sustained .and a new trial granted.