DocketNumber: No. 1839
Judges: Banks, Parsons, Perry
Filed Date: 3/16/1929
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
This is a proceeding in quo warranto to require the repondent to show by what authority he claims and occupies tjie office of supervisor of the County of Kauai for the district of Waimea. The petitioners, among whom are two unsuccessful candidates for the position now held by respondent, aver among other things that the respondent was not a resident of Waimea either on the Sth day of October, 1927, when he ivas nominated as a Republican candidate for said position at the primary election then and there held, or on the 15th day of November, 1927, at the general election of said district when, he was elected to said office, and that “he has not since said days been and is not now a resident of said district, but is and has for the past seven years been a resident of the district of Koloa, County of Kauai, where he maintains a permanent home for himself and family, conducts his business and pays his poll, road, school, income and property taxes.”
The writ was duly issued as prayed and respondent filed his answer and return to the petition and writ, to which answer and return replication was made by the petitioners. At the hearing petitioners in open court admitted the qualifications of the respondent in every respect except that of residence. After the hearing the trial judge filed his written decision in which is set forth among other things the following statement: “From the evidence adduced I find the following facts: (1) Eric A.
Judgment was thereupon entered that the respondent “Eric A. Knudsen is not qualified to fill the said office of which he performs the duties; that said Eric A. Knudsen be and he hereby is ousted from said office and forbidden to any longer perform its duties; that the office of supervisor of the County of Kauai for and from the Waimea district is vacant; and the County of Kauai is directed to fill the vacancy in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 1640 of the Revised Laws of Hawaii of 1925 by action of its remaining supervisors; and that the petitioners recover of the respondent their costs.”
The case is now before us upon respondent’s appeal from the foregoing judgment. Evidence was admitted at the hearing which may be briefly summarized as follows: respondent, a son of the late Yaldemar Knudsen and Annie S. Knudsen, was born July 29, 1872, at Waimea, two miles west of Kekaha in the district of Waimea, Island of Kauai. Waiawa was the home of respondent’s parents. His father lived there until the latter’s death in 1898 and his mother continued to live there until January or February, 1922. During his minority respondent lived with his parents at Waiawa except for absences from Hawaii spent at school and college and in traveling, and he continued to live there
In 1923 respondent moved from Hoea to Halemanu, a country home of his upon government property at an elevation of about 2500 feet, about fourteen miles up the Waimea valley from the government road, in the Waimea district. Halemanu was occupied under a camping permit granted to the respondent for a period of ten years from5 and after June 1, 1919. The house was large, commodious and Avell furnished and was occupied by respondent and his family and frequently by their guests on Aveek-ends and during school vacations. For
In June 1923 respondent transferred his registration as a voter from the Waimea district to that of Koloa, but on September 5 of that year, after consulting with his attorney, he re-transferred his registration to Kekaha and later filed his nomination papers for the position of supervisor from the distinct of Waimea and Avas nominated at the primary and on November 13, 1923, Avas
In contesting respondent’s claim to a residence sufficient to satisfy the requirements of the statute in the district of! Waimea at the time of the general election November 15, 1927, and from January 2, 1928, when respondent was inducted into the office of supervisor of the County of Kauai from the district of Waimea, until January 26, 1928, the date of the filing of said petition and the issuance of said writ of quo warranto, the petitioners relied upon respondent’s registration above referred to:in the district of Koloa in 1923, upon'adverse inferences from the facts above summarized and upon other facts* the evidence of which may be briefly summarized as follows: in 1920 respondent purchased a fine home on Judd street in Honolulu, which, during the remainder of that year and for part of the year 1921, was occupied by his wife and four children, two of whom were then attending Punahou academy. At this time Hoea was partly dismantled of its furniture, part of which was ¡brought to Honolulu and placed in the Judd street house. In this year respondent executed and acknowledged a deed, the opening paragraph of which referred to him as “of the City and County of Honolulu.” In the same year his address, given by himself, appeared in the Harvard alumni directory as “Koloa, Kauai, Hawaii,” and it was to this last named address that most of his mail was sent. Part of his taxes, including poll and income, were paid in Koloa. On June 14, 1922, a verified petition for letters of guardianship of the
In his written decision the trial judge found that at the time of the election in 1927 and thereafter the respondent resided in Koloa. Said he: “The respondent contended that when he came to Koloa to take charge of the sugar cane business of Knudsen Brothers as manager, he did not intend to make it his permanent place of residence, but designed to retain his domicile in the district of Waimea, residing at Halemanu. It seems to me the evidence conclusively shows that the said Eric A. Knudsen changed such intention, and became in fact and intention, domiciled in the district of Koloa which appears to be the center of his affairs. Under such circumstances, I cannot but regard his residence in said district of Koloa, at least as a place of fixed present domicile, notwithstanding he may have had a floating intention to return to Hoea at some future period. As to his residence at Halemanu, I find the testimony of the respondent and his witnesses not clear and convincing to establish a domicile there. In the absence of any avowed intention, and- of acts which indicate a contrary intention, a long-continued residence is regarded as a controlling circumstance in determining the question of domicile. That the respondent is domiciled in the district of Koloa, where he maintains a home for himself and family, conducts his business, pays
As has been frequently held, a finding of fact made by a circuit judge upon conflicting testimony is entitled to great yeiglit in this court. See Lymer v. Kumalae, 29 Haw. 392. It will be noted, however, that in the case at bai’ there is little conflict in the testimony as to probative facts — the conflict lying chiefly in the ultimate facts deducible therefrom and in the conclusions of law to be based thereon. In appeal upon quo warranto it has been held that we have the power and that it is our duty, if the evidence requires it, to reach a different conclusion from that reached by the trial judge. See Lymer v. Kumalae, 29 Haw. 392, 400. In the case at bar the evidence requires such different conclusion. Respondent’s testimony explains the business, official, educational and recreational reasons for his sojourns at Koloa Gap and Koloa beach, explains the convenience of receiving his mail there and explains the recital of Koloa and Honolulu addresses in instruments signed by him. Rut even in the absence of such explanations the incidents named are insufficient in themselves to overcome h!is direct, and uncontradicted statement of facts showing a legal residence for voting and election purposes in the district of Waimea. There is no “absence of any avowed intention” or of “acts which indicate a contrary intention,” as premised by the circuit judge in the above quoted part of his decision. With respect to Hoea, respondent testified that in 1923 and prior thereto he always considered his absence from that place as merely temporary absence and that whenever he left ¡ Hoea it was always his intention to return to his home at Hoea. With respect to Halemanu, which he testified was his home after 1923, he said that on all
The general qualifications of county officers are set forth in section 1611, R. L. 1925, which provides in part as follows: “Any person shall be eligible to fill any elective office treated by the provisions of this chapter who shall be a citizen of the United States of America and of the Territory of Hawaii and who shall have been a duly qualified elector of said Territory and of the county in which he shall be elected for at least one year next prior to his election, and in case of the members of the board of supervisors, the same qualifications, except as otherwise provided by law, shall be required and, in addition thereto, except when elected at large, they shall continue to reside within the district from which they were elected during the period of their incumbency.”
Section, 1586, R. L. 1925, refers specifically to Kauai supervisors and provides as follows: “The board of supervisors of the County of Kauai shall consist of one member from each district. Every supervisor shall be a person residing in the district or districts for which he is candidate and shall be elected by the duly qualified electors of such district or districts.”
The uncontradicted facts in the case are sufficient to show that the respondent on October 8, 1927, and at all times subsequent thereto, Avas “a person residing in the district or: districts for which he is a candidate” and that he has continued to reside within the district from which he was elected during the period of his incumbency within the purview of the two statutes last above quoted. This is shown by the fact that he has for that period maintained1 at Halemanu, in the district of Waimea, a permanent and fixed abode with the accompanying intention there to remain. See Hapai v. Pratt, 19 Haw. 1.
On the Avhole evidence appellant was entitled to judgment. The judgment of ouster is accordingly reversed.