Haynes v. Haas. ( 2020 )


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  •     *** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAIʻI REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
    Electronically Filed
    Supreme Court
    SCWC-XX-XXXXXXX
    05-MAY-2020
    07:51 AM
    SCWC-XX-XXXXXXX
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF HAWAI‘I
    ---o0o---
    ________________________________________________________________
    SHADLEY HAYNES, KURSTIN HAYNES, Individually and as Parent
    and Legal Guardian of Minor Children JH and NH; THE OTHER SIDE -
    ROCKSTARZ - LLC, Petitioners/Plaintiffs-Appellants
    vs.
    GREGORY FOWLER HAAS; FPA GOLD COAST ASSOCIATES, LLC;
    CLARK REALTY CORPORATION; KONA METRO PARKING & WATCHMAN
    SERVICES, INC.; ALLIED SELF STORAGE CENTER; GUIDO GIACOMETTI;
    CHUNG PARTNERS, Respondents/Defendants-Appellees.
    SCWC-XX-XXXXXXX
    CERTIORARI TO THE INTERMEDIATE COURT OF APPEALS
    (CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX; CIV. NO. 12-1-0301K)
    MAY 5, 2020
    RECKTENWALD, C.J., NAKAYAMA, McKENNA, POLLACK, AND WILSON, JJ.
    OPINION OF THE COURT BY RECKTENWALD, C.J.
    I.    INTRODUCTION
    This appeal requires us to address whether a plaintiff
    can recover damages for injury from a common-law public
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    nuisance.    We conclude that, as a matter of law, such a claim is
    cognizable when the plaintiff has suffered individualized harm.
    Plaintiff Shadley Haynes (Shadley) was allegedly
    assaulted by Gregory Haas (Haas) in the parking lot of
    Rockstarz, a bar that Shadley and his wife, Kurstin Haynes,
    owned and operated.      Shadley sustained serious injuries.
    Rockstarz - now closed - was located about 0.3 miles from Allied
    Self Storage Center (Allied).
    Shadley, Kurstin,1 and The Other Side - Rockstarz - LLC
    (collectively, “Plaintiffs”), filed suit in the Circuit Court of
    the Third Circuit alleging that Allied and Chung Partners
    (collectively, “Defendants”) had created and maintained a public
    nuisance by permitting Haas and other homeless individuals to
    live on their premises in violation of Hawai‘i County zoning
    codes.   Plaintiffs alleged that the nuisance was a substantial
    factor in causing Plaintiffs’ injuries and that they are
    entitled to damages.
    The circuit court granted summary judgment in favor of
    Defendants.2    The Intermediate Court of Appeals (ICA) affirmed
    1     Kurstin sued Defendants both as an individual and as the parent and
    legal guardian of JH and NH, Kurstin and Shadley’s children.
    2     The circuit court also granted Chung Partners’ Motion for Costs under
    (continued)
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    the circuit court’s summary judgment orders on the grounds that
    Plaintiffs could not recover damages for public nuisance in the
    absence of a statute designating the activity as a public
    nuisance.    On certiorari, Plaintiffs argue that the ICA gravely
    erred in its conclusion that they were foreclosed from
    recovering damages as a matter of law.
    We hold that a plaintiff can recover damages stemming
    from a public nuisance even absent an explicit statutory
    prohibition of the challenged conduct when the plaintiff has
    suffered individualized harm.         We thus vacate the circuit
    court’s order granting summary judgment to Defendants and the
    ICA’s order affirming the circuit court, and remand for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    II.   BACKGROUND
    A.   Circuit Court Proceedings3
    1.     Complaint
    Plaintiffs filed their Complaint on May 2, 2012, and
    amended it three times.4       Count V of the Third Amended Complaint,
    Hawai‘i Rules of Civil Procedure (HRCP) Rules 54(d) and 68, which the ICA
    affirmed in part. As set forth below, because we vacate the circuit court’s
    grant of summary judgment, we also vacate the award of costs.
    3    The Honorable Ronald Ibarra presided.
    4    Plaintiffs’ Third Amended Complaint also named Defendants Haas, FPA
    (continued)
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    the only count that implicated Allied and Chung Partners,
    alleged:
    59. By allowing Defendant Haas and others to live in
    one of its storage units in violation of land use and
    public health laws, Defendant Allied caused its
    property and the surrounding non-residential area to
    become a home to vagrants, drug users, criminals and
    other dangerous and undesirable people who otherwise
    would not be in this business and industrial area at
    night. As a result, Defendant Allied created a
    condition that was (a) unreasonably dangerous and (b)
    affected a public place, and thereby maintained a
    public nuisance.
    60. As lessee/sub-lessor of the 74-5540 Kaiwi Street
    property (“Allied Storage property”), Defendant Chung
    had a duty not to maintain the hereinabove described
    nuisance on the property.
    61. Defendant Chung breached its duty not to
    maintain the hereinabove described nuisance on the
    Allied Storage property.
    The Third Amended Complaint also alleged that as a
    proximate result of this nuisance, Shadley suffered severe
    physical injuries, traumatic brain injury, and severe emotional
    distress; that Shadley, Kurstin, and their children, JH and NH,
    suffered other special and general damages to be proven at
    Gold Coast Associates, LLC (Gold Coast), Clark Realty Corporation (Clark),
    Kona Metro Parking & Watchman Services, Inc. (Metro), Guido Giacometti
    (Giacometti), and Doe Defendants 1-10. Plaintiffs alleged that Gold Coast
    owned and leased the property where Rockstarz was located, while Clark was a
    property management business. According to Plaintiffs, Metro was a security
    business for parking lots and other areas around the Rockstarz building, and
    Giacometti was the receiver Clark had hired to manage the Rockstarz premises’
    daily affairs.
    In addition to Count V against Defendants, Plaintiffs’ complaint
    asserted one count of assault and battery against Haas, four counts of
    negligence and gross negligence against Gold Coast, Clark, Metro, and
    Giacometti, respectively, and one count against all of the defendants on
    behalf of JH and NH for loss of consortium, intentional infliction of
    emotional distress, and negligent infliction of emotional distress.
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    trial; and that Rockstarz suffered loss of business and
    diminished business reputation.
    2.    Chung Partners’ Motions for Summary Judgment
    In two separate motions for summary judgment, Chung
    Partners argued that it was not liable for Plaintiffs’ damages,
    first because it had no duty to Shadley, and second because it
    had no knowledge of homeless individuals residing in storage
    units.    Allied filed a notice of joinder in both motions.
    Chung Partners argued that under Restatement (Second)
    of Torts §§ 8375 and 3566 (Am. Law Inst. 1979) (Restatement) it
    5    Restatement 2d of Torts § 837 provides:
    (1) A lessor of land is subject to liability for a
    nuisance caused by an activity carried on upon the
    land while the lease continues and the lessor
    continues as owner, if the lessor would be liable if
    he had carried on the activity himself, and
    (a) at the time of the lease the lessor consents to
    the activity or knows or has reason to know that it
    will be carried on, and
    (b) he then knows or should know that it will
    necessarily involve or is causing the nuisance.
    6    Restatement 2d of Torts § 356 comment (a) provides:
    When land is leased to a tenant, the law of property
    regards the lease as equivalent to a sale of land for
    the term of the lease. The lessee acquires an estate
    in the land, and becomes for the time being the owner
    and occupier, subject to all of the liabilities of
    one in possession, both to those who enter the land
    and to those outside of it . . . . [I]t is the
    general rule that the lessor is not liable to the
    lessee, or to others on the land, even though such
    injuries resulted from a dangerous condition existing
    at the time of the transfer.
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    could only be held liable for nuisance on its leased land if it
    possessed the land when the nuisance occurred or (1) would be
    liable if it carried on the alleged nuisance; (2) consented to
    such activity; and (3) knew that such activity would
    “necessarily result in” the nuisance.
    Chung Partners argued that although Hawai‘i case law
    was silent on applying Restatement § 837, “ample case law” from
    other jurisdictions supported its application.7             And, citing Hao
    v. Campbell Estate, 76 Hawai‘i 77, 
    869 P.2d 216
     (1994), Chung
    Partners argued that Hawai‘i cases had recognized Restatement
    § 356’s general rule that “landowner[s were] not liable for
    injuries occurring after a lessee takes possession of the land.”
    Chung Partners submitted a declaration of one of its
    principals, Sung Hun Chung, stating that Chung Partners did not
    know that Allied allowed people to reside in storage units, and
    7     Chung cited to the following cases for support: City of Los Angeles v.
    Star Sand & Gravel Co., 
    12 P.2d 69
     (Cal. Ct. App. 1932) (holding that owner
    of premises leased for purpose attainable without creating nuisance was held
    not liable for creation of nuisance without owner’s knowledge or notice);
    Silverman v. Unsen, 
    147 A. 421
     (Me. 1929) (holding that lessor of shooting
    gallery was not liable to third person for injury resulting from lessee’s
    negligence); Meloy v City of Santa Monica, 
    12 P.2d 1072
     (Cal. Ct. App. 1932)
    (holding that in order to charge landlord with liability, nuisance must
    necessarily result from tenant’s ordinary use of premises, or from purposes
    for which premises were let); Wasilewski v. McGuire Art Shop, 
    187 A. 530
    (N.J. 1936) (holding that landlord renting entire store premises to tenant
    who undertook to make repairs was not liable for pedestrian’s injury when
    caused by tenant’s negligence); Midland Oil Co. v. Thigpen, 
    4 F.2d 85
     (8th
    Cir. 1924) (holding that a tenant, not a landlord, will be “owner” so far as
    negligent injuries to third parties are concerned).
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    furthermore, that Plaintiffs’ complaint failed to even allege
    such information.     Accordingly, Chung Partners concluded that it
    could not be held liable for public nuisance.
    Chung Partners next argued that, contrary to
    Plaintiffs’ assertion, it had no “duty not to maintain” a
    nuisance on Allied’s property.        Chung Partners explained that
    under Hawai‘i case law, “courts are reluctant to impose a duty on
    owners and occupiers of land to protect others against the
    criminal act[s] of third parties.”         And, because Hawai‘i follows
    Restatement § 315,8 only a “special relationship” between Chung
    Partners and Plaintiffs could require Chung Partners to protect
    them from harm by Haas.      In the instant case, Chung Partners
    argued, there was no special relationship between it and
    Plaintiffs.   Accordingly, Chung Partners concluded that it could
    not have been required to control Haas’ conduct.
    8    Restatement § 315 provides:
    There is no duty so to control the conduct of a third
    person as to prevent him from causing physical harm
    to another unless:
    (a) A special relation exists between the actor and
    the third person which imposes a duty upon the actor
    to control the third person’s conduct, or
    (b) A special relation exists between the actor and
    the other which gives to the other a right to
    protection.
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    In Chung Partners’ second Motion for Summary Judgment,
    it noted that Restatement § 821B construed public nuisances as
    unreasonable conduct of a certain nature.9          Second, Chung
    Partners pointed out that in Littleton v. State, 
    66 Haw. 55
    , 67,
    
    656 P.2d 1336
    , 1344-45 (1982), this court held that for behavior
    to be a public nuisance, the act or use of the property at issue
    must have been in a public place or somewhere the public
    frequently congregated.
    Chung Partners further maintained that people could
    not be nuisances; only their unreasonable conduct could be a
    nuisance if it interfered with a common right.            And even if
    Allied created a nuisance, it did not create an unreasonable
    interference with any right common to the general public or to
    9    Restatement § 821B provides:
    (1)   A public nuisance is an unreasonable
    interference with a right common to the general
    public.
    (2)   Circumstances that may sustain a holding that
    an interference with a public right is unreasonable
    include the following:
    (a)   Whether the conduct involves a
    significant interference with the public health, the
    public safety, the public peace, the public comfort,
    or the public convenience, or
    (b)   whether the conduct is proscribed by a
    statute, ordinance, or administrative regulation, or
    (c)    whether the conduct is of a continuing
    nature or has produced a permanent or long-lasting
    effect, and, as the actor knows or has reason to
    know, has a significant effect upon the public right.
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    the Plaintiffs 0.3 miles away.
    3.      Plaintiffs’ Response to Chung Partners’ Motions for
    Summary Judgment
    Citing Littleton v. State, 66 Haw. at 67, 
    656 P.2d at 1344-45
     (1982), and Territory v. Fujiwara, 
    33 Haw. 428
    , 429-30
    (1935), Plaintiffs argued that a court may not decide at summary
    judgment whether a public nuisance exists; instead, that
    question is reserved for the fact-finder.           Plaintiffs also
    argued that, as a matter of law, defendants can be held liable
    for public nuisances that extend from activity on the
    defendants’ property.
    Plaintiffs next noted that the use of the storage
    units for residences was “illegal” because the area was zoned as
    “General Industrial.”      Furthermore, Plaintiffs relied on the
    expert testimony of Spike Denis, a premises security expert,
    that it was reasonably foreseeable that homeless residents would
    commit assault, not only on the premises but in the surrounding
    community.
    Plaintiffs presented evidence that the encampment at
    Allied was long-running and obvious.         For example, Plaintiffs
    quoted from the declaration of James Smith, who stated that he
    resided in a storage unit, and that Roy Ebert, who worked under
    Sung Hun Chung, told Smith “what I don’t see, I don’t know,” in
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    reference to residential use of the storage unit.              Plaintiffs
    further stated that Allied changed its name to Kaiwi Storage
    after this incident, and hired Metro to address the issue of
    homeless individuals residing in units.           Metro employees working
    there after the assault testified that they observed signs of
    residential use on the property.
    Plaintiffs argued Chung Partners was liable for the
    nuisance maintained by Allied because one of Chung Partners’
    principals, Sung Hun Chung, knew or should have known of the
    homeless situation on Allied’s leased property.             On the date of
    the incident, Plaintiffs alleged, Sung Hun Chung was not only
    the managing partner of Chung Partners, but also the manager and
    secretary of Allied.      Further, Sung Hun Chung had an office and
    P.O. box on Allied’s premises for nearly six years.
    Accordingly, Plaintiffs argued Sung Hun Chung knew or should
    have known about Allied’s homeless residents.10
    10    Plaintiffs presented two other alternative theories of liability.
    First, Plaintiffs argued that there were unresolved issues of material fact
    as to whether Chung Partners, as transferee of Allied’s business in 2012,
    assumed Allied’s liabilities. Though the purchase and sale agreement was
    written as a sale of assets, Plaintiffs raised several factual issues that
    they contended could have supported Chung Partners’ liability.
    Second, Plaintiffs argued that Chung Partners was never out of
    possession of the premises leased to Allied, and therefore Chung Partners was
    tenants-in-common with Allied and equally liable for Allied’s torts. The
    Allied premises were originally leased by the Trustees of the Lili‘uokalani
    (continued)
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    The circuit court heard Chung Partners’ Motions for
    Summary Judgment and Allied’s Notice of Joinder, and
    subsequently granted the three motions in a minute order.               The
    court’s minute order was brief and did not explain its specific
    rationale for granting Defendants’ motions for summary judgment.
    Chung Partners then filed a Motion for Costs pursuant
    to HRCP Rules 54(d)11 and 6812.       In its Memorandum of Support,
    Trust to Chung Partners. Chung Partners thereafter subleased a portion of
    the premises to Allied, but the sublease did not provide specific metes and
    bounds of the premises. Therefore, Allied and Chung Partners were co-tenants
    in equal possession of the premises under Hawai‘i law and Allied maintained
    interest in all of the larger area.
    11   HRCP Rule 54(d) provides in relevant part:
    (d) Costs; Attorneys’ Fees
    (1)   Costs Other Than Attorneys’ Fees. Except
    when express provision therefor is made either in a
    statute or in these rules, costs shall be allowed as
    of course to the prevailing party unless the court
    otherwise directs; but costs against the State or a
    county, or an officer or agency of the State or a
    county, shall be imposed only to the extent permitted
    by law...
    (2) Attorneys’ Fees.
    (A)   Claims for attorneys’ fees and
    related nontaxable expenses shall
    be made by motion unless the
    substantive law governing the
    action provides for the recovery of
    such fees as an element of damages
    to be proved at trial.
    12   HRCP Rule 68 provides:
    At any time more than 10 days before the trial
    begins, any party may serve upon any adverse party an
    (continued)
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    Chung Partners alleged that after a failed attempt to mediate,
    it offered to settle for $25,000 pursuant to HRCP Rule 68 on
    August 6, 2015, with “each party to bear their own fees and
    costs,” which Plaintiffs rejected.          Chung Partners incurred
    costs of $29,429.69 prior to its Offer of Settlement and
    $35,546.76 after the offer was rejected.           After a hearing, the
    court granted Chung Partners’ Motion for Costs in the amount of
    $22,085.22 without stating whether it was granting the motion
    based on HRCP Rule 54(d) or Rule 68.
    offer of settlement or an offer to allow judgment to
    be taken against either party for the money or
    property or to the effect specified in the offer,
    with costs then accrued. If within 10 days after the
    service of the offer the adverse party serves written
    notice that the offer is accepted, either party may
    then file the offer and notice of acceptance together
    with proof of service thereof and thereupon the clerk
    shall, in accordance with the agreement, enter an
    order of dismissal or a judgment. An offer not
    accepted shall be deemed withdrawn and evidence
    thereof is not admissible except in a proceeding to
    determine costs. If the judgment finally obtained by
    the offeree is not more favorable than the offer, the
    offeree must pay the costs incurred after the making
    of the offer. The fact that an offer is made but not
    accepted does not preclude a subsequent offer. When
    the liability of one party to another has been
    determined by verdict or order or judgment, but the
    amount or extent of the liability remains to be
    determined by further proceedings, either party may
    make an offer of judgment, which shall have the same
    effect as an offer made before trial if it is served
    within a reasonable time not less than 10 days prior
    to the commencement of hearings to determine the
    amount or extent of liability.
    (Emphases added).
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    B.   ICA Proceedings
    1.    Opening Brief
    Plaintiffs appealed the circuit court’s orders
    granting summary judgment and awarding costs to Chung Partners.
    They argued that under Hawai‘i case law, whether a public
    nuisance existed and whether a plaintiff’s injuries were
    proximately caused by a defendant’s breach of a statutory duty
    were questions for a jury to decide, citing to this court’s
    opinions in Littleton v. State, 
    66 Haw. 55
    , 67, 
    656 P.2d 1336
    ,
    1345 (1982) and Territory v. Fujiwara, 
    33 Haw. 428
    , 429-30
    (Terr. 1935).     Plaintiffs also contended that there remained
    genuine issues of material fact as to the existence of a public
    nuisance on the Allied premises and Chung Partners’ liability
    for it.
    Plaintiffs also argued that the circuit court’s award
    of costs to Chung Partners was improper.           First, Plaintiffs
    argued that because summary judgment was inappropriate, Chung
    Partners was not the prevailing party.           Plaintiffs then argued
    that even if summary judgment were proper, the award of costs
    was still inappropriate because applying HRCP Rule 68 as written
    could deprive Plaintiffs of the constitutional right to have a
    jury decide liability.
    Plaintiffs also asserted Chung Partners’ HRCP Rule 68
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    offer of settlement was defective because it did not offer to
    pay Plaintiffs’ costs, nor would the offer fully and completely
    resolve all of Plaintiffs’ claims because it did not include an
    admission of liability.       Thus, Plaintiffs concluded the circuit
    court erred in granting Chung Partners’ Motion for Costs.
    2.    Answering Briefs13
    Allied first disputed Plaintiffs’ claim that
    homelessness could be a public nuisance.           Relying on Restatement
    13    Haas’ liability for the assault was not contested on appeal. However,
    Haas filed an Answering Brief to the ICA that asserted the following four
    points of error in the circuit court’s ruling:
    (1) Judge Ibarra had a conflict of interest because
    he presided over both the criminal and civil case in
    the same matter. After the jury convicted Haas in
    the criminal trial, “numerous rulings” were made,
    including summary judgment;
    (2) Haas did not assault anyone and was attacked by
    employees of Rockstarz who were drinking alcohol and
    using drugs. The alleged attack against Haas
    resulted in serious injuries including permanent
    paralysis to half of Haas’ face and four broken
    teeth. Haas required stitches and facial surgery,
    including metal plates in his eye socket;
    (3) there was evidence spoliation of a hard drive
    containing surveillance camera footage. The footage,
    according to Haas, was hidden from prosecutors and
    police for over a year until a third party notified
    the prosecutor that the video evidence existed. Haas
    then alleged that Haynes’ attorney “spoiled” the
    evidence because the footage could not be viewed from
    the hard drive, despite the police purchasing a
    special player for the hard drive; and
    (4) that he was “definitely not living at the Kona
    storage facility and in fact never slept there.”
    Further, being homeless did not have anything to do
    with this incident.
    Given our disposition of the case, we need not address Haas’ arguments.
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    § 821B(1) and Littleton, 66 Haw. at 67, 
    656 P.2d at 1344-45
    ,
    Allied defined public nuisance as unreasonable conduct that
    interferes with a public right.        According to Allied, Plaintiffs
    claimed the circumstance of homelessness, as opposed to the
    conduct of homeless people, was the nuisance.            Allied also noted
    that the mere act of being homeless did not interfere with a
    right common to the general public and that Plaintiffs failed to
    provide any evidence of unreasonable interference with some
    public right.    Allied concluded that homelessness was not a
    public nuisance.
    Finally, Allied argued that Plaintiffs failed to point
    to any evidence in their Opening Brief that the assault was
    reasonably foreseeable.      Nor, Allied contended, was there any
    evidence presented that Allied knew or should have known
    homeless people were sleeping in rented units.            Finally, the
    normal and usual operation of a self-storage business did not
    involve liability for an assault by an alleged homeless resident
    “almost half a mile away” from the property.
    The arguments in Chung Partners’ Answering Brief
    mirrored those presented by Allied, and additionally contested
    Plaintiffs’ assertion that it knew or should have known of the
    homeless individuals residing in storage units.            Chung Partners
    also argued that it did not assume liability for Allied’s torts
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    through its purchase of Allied’s assets, which occurred almost a
    year after the incident.
    Further, Chung Partners asserted that the circuit
    court did not err in awarding it costs.           Because the court
    granted summary judgment against Plaintiffs, Chung Partners
    argued that the claim that Plaintiffs were deprived the right to
    have a jury determine its liability was inapplicable because it
    was entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
    3.    ICA’s Memorandum Opinion
    The ICA held that the circuit court did not err in
    granting summary judgment.        The ICA noted that in bringing their
    public nuisance claim, Plaintiffs sought monetary damages rather
    than equitable or injunctive relief.          Although no party had
    raised this argument, the ICA determined from a review of the
    case law that this court recognizes that only declaratory and
    injunctive relief – but not monetary damages – can be recovered
    for public nuisance claims not founded on a statutory duty.14
    The ICA took the position that in Littleton, liability was
    predicated upon a statutory duty to prevent a public nuisance.
    14    The ICA cited several cases as examples, including Akau v. Olohana
    Corp., 
    65 Haw. 383
    , 
    652 P.2d 1130
     (1982) (holding plaintiffs only had
    standing for public nuisance claims seeking declaratory and injunctive
    relief), and Ideta v. Kuba, 
    22 Haw. 28
     (Haw. Terr. 1914) (holding unlawful
    obstruction of a public road or highway also constitutes a public nuisance
    for which a claim for injunction can be brought).
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    And, in Fujiwara, which Plaintiffs also relied on, the court
    considered whether defendants maintained a public nuisance that
    violated a criminal statute.        Accordingly, the ICA disagreed
    with Plaintiffs’ interpretation of these cases and found that
    summary judgment was appropriate.
    With respect to costs, the ICA determined that
    awarding costs to Chung Partners, the prevailing party, was
    proper under HRCP Rule 54.        Despite this, the ICA concluded that
    Chung Partners’ settlement offer was not a valid Rule 68 offer
    because it excluded “costs then accrued.”            Therefore, the ICA
    held that the circuit court erred in granting Chung Partners’
    Motion for Costs under HRCP Rule 68, and it remanded the case to
    the circuit court to determine the appropriate amount of costs
    to award Chung Partners under HRCP Rule 54(d).
    C.      Application for Writ of Certiorari
    On certiorari, Plaintiffs argue that the ICA gravely
    erred in affirming the circuit court’s rulings granting summary
    judgment on the theory that a plaintiff can only recover damages
    for public nuisance where the defendant has violated a statutory
    duty.    As a result, Plaintiffs also contend that the ICA erred
    by affirming the award of costs to Chung Partners under HRCP
    Rule 54(d).
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    III.    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    On appeal, the grant or denial of summary judgment is
    reviewed de novo.      State ex rel. Anzai v. City and Cnty. of
    Honolulu, 99 Hawai‘i 508, 515, 
    57 P.3d 533
    , 440 (2002).
    [S]ummary judgment is appropriate if the pleadings,
    depositions, answers to interrogatories, and
    admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if
    any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any
    material fact and that the moving party is entitled
    to judgment as a matter of law.
    Kahale v. City and Cnty. of Honolulu, 104 Hawai‘i 341, 344, 
    90 P.3d 233
    , 236 (2004) (citation omitted).
    IV.   DISCUSSION
    The ICA erred in holding that a plaintiff can only
    recover damages for public nuisance where the defendant has
    violated a statutory duty.        Because there are genuine issues of
    material fact as to whether Plaintiffs’ claims were viable,
    summary judgment was improper.         Accordingly, Chung Partners’
    Motion for Costs also should have been denied.
    A.   The ICA Erred by Concluding That Damages Were Not
    Recoverable for Public Nuisance Actions Absent a Statutory
    Duty
    In Littleton, the court wrote:
    A nuisance has been variously defined to mean that
    which unlawfully annoys or does damage to another,
    anything that works hurt, inconvenience, or damage,
    anything which annoys or disturbs one in the free
    use, possession, or enjoyment of his [or her]
    property or which renders its ordinary use or
    physical occupation uncomfortable, and anything
    wrongfully done or permitted which injures or annoys
    another in the enjoyment of his [or her] legal
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    rights.
    . . .
    A nuisance, to be a public nuisance, must be in a
    public place, or where the public frequently
    congregate, or where members of the public are likely
    to come within the range of its influence[.]
    66 Haw. at 67, 
    656 P.2d at
    1344 (citing 58 Am. Jur. 2d Nuisances
    § 1 at 555 (1971); City of Burlington v. Stockwell, 
    47 P. 988
    ,
    989-90 (Kan. App. 1897)).
    In the instant case, the ICA held that equitable
    relief is a plaintiff’s only remedy in public nuisance actions
    in the absence of a statutory duty to refrain from conduct
    creating or maintaining a public nuisance.           On certiorari,
    Plaintiffs challenge this holding, asserting that it improperly
    interprets Littleton, 66 Haw. at 69, 
    656 P.2d at 1339
    . We agree
    with Plaintiffs that a different conclusion is warranted.
    In Littleton, the court addressed whether the City and
    County of Honolulu could be liable for damages to a plaintiff
    who had been injured on the beach by a washed-up log when the
    City failed to fulfill its statutory mandate under HRS § 46-12
    to remove debris that could constitute a “public nuisance.”                  Id.
    at 66, 
    656 P.2d at 1344
    .      After examining HRS § 46-12’s
    legislative history, which characterized O‘ahu’s beaches and
    shores as “valuable assets” that needed “regular maintenance[,]
    vital to the tourist industry [and] recreation[,]” we explained:
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    We think . . . that the City has the sole
    responsibility to remove and clear all seaweed, limu,
    and debris “which is likely to create an unsanitary
    condition or to otherwise become a public nuisance”
    from those shores and beaches around Oahu which are
    likely to be used with some frequency by . . . the
    public. So that if the City fails to perform this
    statutory duty and permits a condition to exist
    which, of itself, creates an unreasonable risk of
    harm, then the City may be held liable for any
    resulting injury. Its liability would be predicated
    upon the breach of a statutory duty which leads to
    harm.
    Id. at 66-67, 
    656 P.2d at 1344
     (emphasis added) (citation
    omitted).
    It was from this passage that the ICA derived its rule
    that, absent such a statutory duty, a plaintiff could obtain
    only equitable relief in a public nuisance action.
    A closer look at Littleton, however, as well as other
    cases from our jurisdiction, does not support such a narrow
    rule.   As the ICA observed, this court has generally awarded
    injunctive and declaratory relief, rather than damages, in
    public nuisance actions.       See Akau, 
    65 Haw. 383
    , 
    652 P.2d 1130
    (1982) (holding that plaintiffs had standing to assert a public
    nuisance claim and seek injunctive or declaratory relief);
    Ideta, 
    22 Haw. 28
     (holding that an unlawful obstruction of a
    public road was a public nuisance from which a suit for
    injunction could be brought); Cluney v. Lee Wai, 
    10 Haw. 319
    (Haw. Rep. 1896) (holding that plaintiffs were entitled to
    injunctive relief from nuisance of loud instruments during the
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    nighttime); City and Cnty. of Honolulu v. Cavness, 
    45 Haw. 232
    ,
    233, 
    364 P.2d, 646
    , 648 (1961) (holding that abatement by
    demolition of building that constituted a public nuisance was
    appropriate remedy).
    However, none of these cases, including Littleton,
    expressly rejected a claim for damages in the absence of a
    statutory duty.     To the contrary, several cases from our
    jurisdiction suggest that damages are available even absent the
    breach of a statutory duty.
    In Choy Too v. Kaiwiki Sugar Co., 
    32 Haw. 611
     (1933),
    the Supreme Court of the Territory of Hawai‘i held that in a
    wrongful death action, a complaint alleging both negligence and
    nuisance could proceed as one cause of action for damages.               
    Id.
    In that case, the wife of the decedent, on behalf of their
    children, sued Kaiwiki Sugar Company and alleged that the
    decedent was killed: “(1) [by] the negligent and wrongful act of
    the said defendant and (2) by the said defendant maintaining a
    public nuisance.”     
    Id. at 612
    .     The court explained:
    We think the complaint only alleges one cause of
    action which, in separate counts, is presented in two
    different aspects. . . . Only one right is sought to
    be enforced and that is the right of the plaintiffs
    to recover damages for the wrongful or negligent
    death of their father. . . . The case presents the
    familiar rule that in actions ex delicto, such as
    this, the plaintiff does not state two or more causes
    of action but only one, when, in different counts, he
    bases his right to recover on different grounds, so
    long as these grounds are not inconsistent with each
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    other and relate to the vindication of one primary
    right.
    
    Id. at 625
     (Emphasis added).       In other words, the territorial
    court recognized that a plaintiff could recover damages in a
    public nuisance action.      
    Id.
    Damages for nuisance claims were also permitted in
    Fernandez v. People’s Ice and Refrigerating Co., 
    5 Haw. 532
    , 533
    (1886), and Whitesell v. Houlton, 
    2 Haw. App. 365
    , 366, 
    632 P.2d 1077
    , 1078 (1981).     In Fernandez, the Supreme Court of the
    Kingdom of Hawai‘i awarded damages to the plaintiff when soot and
    smoke from the furnace of an ice factory caused specific harm to
    the plaintiff and his property, finding that necessity of
    providing ice to the public was not a defense to the claim.                  5
    Haw. at 535.    And in Whitesell, the ICA determined that a
    defendant whose banyan tree encroached onto a neighboring
    property could be liable for damages from the tree’s falling
    branches.    2 Haw. App. at 365-66 (although “non-noxious plants
    ordinarily are not nuisances,” in cases where overhanging
    branches or roots cause harm to other property, “the damaged or
    imminently endangered neighbor may require the owner of the tree
    to pay for the damages[.]”).
    Chung Partners argues that Fernandez and Whitesell are
    inapplicable because those cases concerned private, rather than
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    public, nuisances.     Chung Partners’ argument lacks merit.
    First, the text of the cases does not limit their applicability
    to either “public” or “private” nuisances.           In fact, neither
    case specifies to which category the nuisance belonged.              And
    this court and others have recognized that nuisances can
    properly be classified as both.        See Fujiwara, 
    33 Haw. at 429-30
    (“Nuisances are classified into public nuisances and private
    nuisances, or sometimes as both public and private.             The latter
    are sometimes called mixed nuisances, or . . . those which are
    public and which at the same time cause special damages to
    private individuals.”); Prins v. Schreyer, 
    406 A.2d 439
    , 442
    (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 1979) (explaining that public nuisances
    could be classified as (1) per se or statutory nuisances; (2)
    nuisances that prejudice public health or comfort; and (3)
    nuisances “which in their nature are not nuisances, but may
    become so by reason of their locality, surroundings, or the
    manner in which they may be maintained”) (citing Burley v. City
    of Annapolis, 
    34 A.2d 603
     (Md. 1943)).
    Thus, our case law does not require a statutory breach
    in order for a plaintiff to assert a claim for damages.
    Littleton provides an example of when a statute would give rise
    to a damages remedy, but does not limit damages to statutory
    violations.   Furthermore, although this court has provided
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    injunctive relief in public nuisance cases, we have not
    explicitly rejected a damages remedy.
    In order to clarify our public nuisance law,
    Plaintiffs ask this court to adopt Restatement § 821C,15 which
    allows an individual to sue for damages under a public nuisance
    theory if they have suffered a harm different than that of the
    public.16   Under the Restatement, “when the public nuisance
    causes personal injury to the plaintiff or physical harm to his
    land or chattels, the harm is normally different in kind from
    that suffered by other members of the public.”             Restatement
    (Second) of Torts § 821C, cmt. d (Am. Law Inst. 1979).               The
    Restatement rule would therefore allow Plaintiffs in this case
    15    Restatement § 821C (Who Can Recover for Public Nuisance) provides:
    (1) In order to recover damages in an individual
    action for a public nuisance, one must have suffered
    harm of a kind different from that suffered by other
    members of the public exercising the right common to
    the general public that was the subject of
    interference.
    (2) In order to maintain a proceeding to enjoin to
    abate a public nuisance, one must: (a) have the right
    to recover damages, as indicated in Subsection (1),
    or (b) have authority as a public official or public
    agency to represent the state or a political
    subdivision in the matter, or (c) have standing to
    sue as a representative of the general public, as a
    citizen in a citizen’s action or as a member of a
    class in a class action.
    16    In Akau, we cited to Restatement § 821C(2) with respect to standing to
    note the “trend in the law . . . away from focusing on whether the injury is
    shared by the public, to whether the plaintiff was in fact injured.” See 65
    Haw. at 386 n.3. However, we did not specifically adopt Restatement § 821C
    through that opinion.
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    to sue for damages since they are alleging a personal injury.
    A number of jurisdictions have adopted a rule
    consistent with Restatement § 821C.         See, e.g., Birke v. Oakwood
    Worldwide, 
    169 Cal. App. 4th 1540
    , 1550 (2009); Gilmore v.
    Stanmar, Inc., 
    633 N.E.2d 985
    , 993 (Ill. App. 3d 1994); T&L
    Redemption Center Corp. v. Phoenix Beverages, Inc., 
    561 N.Y.S.2d 619
    , 621 (1990) (“It is [] clear [] that one who suffers damage
    or injury, beyond that of the general inconvenience to the
    public at large, may recover for such nuisance in
    damages . . . .    This is old law.”); Johnson v. Bryco Arms, 
    304 F. Supp. 2d 383
    , 391 (E.D.N.Y. 2004).          Such a rule is sensible:
    There are numerous differences between an action for
    tort damages and an action for an injunction or
    abatement, and precedents for the two are by no means
    interchangeable. In determining whether to award
    damages, the court’s task is to decide whether it is
    unreasonable to engage in the conduct without paying
    for the harm done. Although a general activity may
    have great utility, it may still be unreasonable to
    inflict the harm without compensating for it. In an
    action for injunction, the question is whether the
    activity itself is so unreasonable that it must be
    stopped. It may be reasonable to continue an
    important activity if payment is made for the harm it
    is causing but unreasonable to continue it without
    paying.
    On the other hand, an award of damages is
    retroactive, applying to past conduct, while an
    injunction applies only to the future. In addition,
    for damages to be awarded, significant harm must have
    been actually incurred while for an injunction harm
    need only be threatened and need not actually have
    been sustained at all. (See [Restatement] § 821F,
    comment b). To maintain a damage action for a public
    nuisance, one must have suffered damage different in
    kind from that suffered by the general public; this
    is not necessarily true in a suit for abatement or
    injunction. (See [Restatement] § 821C).
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    7 Am. Law of Torts § 20:5, Public Nuisance (2019) (emphases
    added) (citing Restatement § 821B, cmt. i (Am. Law Inst. 1979)).
    Restatement § 821C is consistent with our existing
    case law and logically sound.        We thus adopt the rule as stated
    therein as Hawai‘i law.      The purpose of damages in public
    nuisance actions is to compensate plaintiffs who have suffered
    special harm from past nuisance conduct.          Abatement of a present
    harm constituting a nuisance would not have the same effect of
    compensating a harmed person for their past injuries.              In this
    case, resolving all disputed facts in Plaintiffs’ favor,
    Plaintiffs meet the test set forth in § 821C.            Thus, the ICA
    erred by affirming summary judgment for Defendants.
    Under Hawai‘i law, “[w]hether the act or thing [alleged
    to create a nuisance] is really so hurtful or prejudicial to
    others as to render it a common nuisance, is a question of fact
    to be determined by the jury, court or magistrate called to pass
    upon the same.”    Fujiwara, 
    33 Haw. at 430
    ; see also Littleton,
    66 Haw. at 67.
    In this case, the circuit court’s minute order
    provided no explanation for why it granted Defendants’ motions
    for summary judgment.      Defendants sought summary judgment on
    several bases, including that there was no nuisance and that
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    there was no duty owed to Shadley.          However, viewing “the
    evidence and the inferences drawn therefrom in the light most
    favorable” to Plaintiffs as the non-moving party, genuine issues
    of material fact exist with respect to whether Defendants
    created or maintained a nuisance and whether Chung Partners was
    liable to Plaintiffs as lessor of Allied.            We thus vacate the
    circuit court’s judgment in favor of Defendants and the ICA’s
    judgment affirming the circuit court.
    By vacating the grant of summary judgment, we do not
    determine that allowing homeless individuals to reside on
    private property necessarily creates a public nuisance.               The
    jury is best situated to determine whether the facts of this
    particular case, including the commercial nature of the alleged
    transaction between homeless individuals and Defendants and the
    fact that the incident took place in an industrial area.17
    17    At oral argument on Defendants’ motions for summary judgment,
    Plaintiffs’ counsel made fact-specific arguments as to the alleged nuisance
    present here:
    I think if you’re a commercial business and you’re
    operating illegally and providing a base for people
    to be in an area at [] night where they’re not
    supposed to be . . . the question is is it a public
    nuisance? Suppose you had a camp that was very well
    regulated. . . . You had [] a security guard there
    who watched everyone and you were really trying to
    help these people. I don’t think that would be a
    nuisance because you would have it under some
    control.”
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    B.   Because Chung Partners Was Not the Prevailing Party, It Was
    Not Entitled to Costs Under HRCP Rules 54(d) or 68
    The circuit court erred in entering judgment in
    Defendants’ favor.      Thus, the order awarding Chung Partners its
    costs pursuant to HRCP Rules 54(d) or 68 was also incorrect.                  We
    vacate the circuit court’s and ICA’s judgments accordingly.
    Further, we decline to address Plaintiffs’ argument as to the
    constitutionality of HRCP Rule 68 because the issue is moot.
    V.   CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the circuit
    court’s August 5, 2016 and August 18, 2016 final judgments and
    the ICA’s May 16, 2019 judgment on appeal affirming in part.                  We
    further vacate in full the circuit court’s July 2, 2016 amended
    judgment awarding costs to Chung, and remand for proceedings
    consistent with this opinion.
    James J. Bickerton and                     /s/ Mark E. Recktenwald
    Bridget G. Morgan-Bickerton
    (Nathan P. Roehrig with                    /s/ Paula A. Nakayama
    them on the briefs)
    for petitioners                            /s/ Sabrina S. McKenna
    Gregory K. Markham                         /s/ Richard W. Pollack
    (Keith K. Kato and
    Kristen K. Souza with him                  /s/ Michael D. Wilson
    on the briefs)
    for respondent Chung Partners
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