A decree was made in 1855, by the Hawaiian court having
jurisdiction, to the effect that one who was guardian of a minor
had wrongfully obtained from the Land Commission registration in
his own name of property belonging to the minor, and that he, and
his heirs claiming the property after his decease, held the
property as trustee for the ward, and should convey the same to
him; the decree was acquiesced insofar as possession was concerned,
but no deed was ever executed, and subsequently those holding under
the heirs of the guardian having commenced an ejectment suit
relying on the legal title, the grantee of the ward brought this
suit to enjoin prosecution of the ejectment suit; meanwhile, in a
suit between a grantee of the ward and others claiming under the
heirs of the guardian, it was held that a title registered by the
Land Commission could not be attacked; the record in that suit,
however, did not disclose the relations of the guardian and the
ward; this Court having affirmed that judgment, the Hawaiian courts
in this case, while admitting that they had fallen into error in
the former decision by reason of not giving full effect to the
guardianship relations, followed it because it had been affirmed by
this Court.
Held that:
In
Lewers & Cooke v. Atcherle, 222 U.
S. 285, the suggestion that the relation of guardian and
ward existed had no substantial foundation on the record, and this
Court followed the decision of the local court, the relationship of
guardian and ward having now been cleared up and the record in this
case showing that it did exist, the courts of Hawaii should have
given full effect to that fact, notwithstanding the affirmance by
this Court of the prior and contrary decision of the Hawaiian court
when it did not appear, and so the judgment is reversed and the
case sent back to the Hawaiian court.
Under the law of the Hawaiian Islands as far back as 1846, a
guardian could not, through the instrumentality of an award of the
Land Commission, obtain a title to the property of his ward
which
Page 238 U. S. 120
would be so immune from subsequent attack that the wrong would
be without redress.
There is nothing to hinder a court from changing its action on a
different view of law after an interlocutory decree or to hinder a
party to the action from availing itself of such change unless the
decision has the finality of
res judicata.
A corporation, grantee of a portion of the grantor's property,
is not a privy to a grantee of another portion, and a judgment
against the latter in a suit in which the corporation was not a
party, although some of its officers as individuals had notice
thereof and took some part in the defense, is not
res
judicata if the acts of such officers were, as in this case,
merely individuals, and not authorized by the corporation.
In order to make a judgment against the grantor available to the
grantee of the title, his covenantor must receive notice of the
suit and have an opportunity to defend.
21 Haw. 441 reversed.
The facts, which involve the title to land in Hawaii, are stated
in the opinion.
Page 238 U. S. 124
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Appeal to review a decree of the Supreme Court of Hawaii which
reversed a decree of the Circuit Judge of the First Judicial
Circuit enjoining the prosecution of an action of ejectment brought
by Mary H. Atcherely, one of the appellees, against appellant for
the recovery of certain described lands, decreeing that appellant
had the equitable title to the lands and that appellees, including
Dickey and Watson, who were made parties pending the suit, held the
naked legal title thereto as tenants in common, one half thereof by
Mary H. Atcherley and one quarter thereof by each of the other
appellees, as trustees of appellant. The decree required that the
appellees execute a conveyance of such title to appellant.
The bill alleges that one David Kalakaua, under and through whom
the appellant company (designated hereinafter as complainant)
claims, on or about December 29, 1856, litigated his title with the
following parties, under whom defendant Atcherley claims title,
to-wit: Kinimaka, Pai, his wife, and their children, in the Supreme
Court of the Hawaiian Islands, in equity, alleging that Kinimaka
held title to the lands in trust and as guardian
Page 238 U. S. 125
of Kalakaua, and not otherwise, and praying that he, Kinimaka,
be declared trustee of the lands for Kalakaua, and be decreed to
convey the same in fee to Kalakaua; that summons was duly issued
and served on Kinimaka, who, before filing answer, died, leaving a
will devising the lands to his children, whom he left surviving
him, and his widow, Pai; that these facts were suggested to the
court, and it was prayed that the widow and children be made
parties to the suit, and a guardian
ad litem be appointed
for the children, it being alleged that they became trustees of the
property in the same manner and under the same trust as
Kinimaka.
That subsequently (March 8, 1858) Kalakaua filed a petition for
administration upon the estate of one Kaniu, deceased, under whom
he claimed title to the lands, and for the appointment of a
guardian
ad litem for the minor children of Kinimaka.
That, upon the filing of such petition, George E. Beckwith,
administrator of the estate of Kinimaka, was appointed guardian
ad litem of the minor children of Kinimaka, and notice was
served on him as such administrator and guardian, and upon Pai to
show cause why letters of administration might not issue to
Kalakaua upon the estate of Kaniu, deceased.
That, upon proceedings being had, a decree was rendered
adjudging Kalakaua to be the devisee of Kaniu, and directing
letters to be issued to him.
That, on June 19, 1858, Kalakaua filed a further petition
alleging the same facts substantially which he had alleged in the
petitions of December 29, 1856, and March 16, 1857, with the
additional fact that one Richard Armstrong had been appointed
guardian of the minor children of Kinimaka, and prayed that he
might be ordered to convey the lands to Kalakaua, and that a
summons was duly served upon Armstrong as guardian of the children
and upon Pai; that Armstrong and Pai subsequently answered; that
evidence was taken, the case heard upon
Page 238 U. S. 126
the merits, and on November 2, 1858, the court duly entered the
following decree:
"David Kalakaua against Richard Armstrong, guardian of David
Leleo, Kaniu, and Kinimaka, minor children of Kinimaka, deceased.
The court did order, adjudge, and decree in this matter that Mr.
Armstrong, the guardian of David Leleo, Kaniu, and Kinimaka, minor
children of Kinimaka, deceased, do convey to David Kalakaua, the
plaintiff in this case, the land named Onoulimaloo, on the Island
of Molokai, and the first Apana of land set forth in Royal Patent
1602 filed in this cause."
That it did not appear either from the records of the court or
from the registry of deeds in Honolulu that the decree of the court
was in fact obeyed, but, it is alleged that, after the decree,
Kalakaua
"ceased to be molested in any way by either the widow and heirs
aforesaid of said Kinimaka or by the said Armstrong in their
behalf, and retained open, notorious, and indisputable possession
and dealt with the said land in all ways as his own, and continued
to do so until he disposed of said property."
The bill here made "all the papers, pleadings, and exhibits of
whatever kind in said equity proceedings" a part of it, and asked
leave to refer to them as if actually incorporated therein. Then
came the following:
"And in this connection, the plaintiff attaches hereto a copy of
the original Land Commission award and royal patent [they were not
previously referred to in the bill] and copies of the original
record of evidence given before the Land Commission in support of
said Land Commission award and royal patent, the same being
referred to and made part of the evidence in said equity
proceedings instituted in the years 1856 and 1857 above referred
to, which said copies are made part of this bill."
That the successors in title of Kalakaua (the conveyances being
set out) had retained and had been in the same kind of possession
and exercised the same disposition
Page 238 U. S. 127
as he. That such possession in Kalakaua and his successors was
known to the children of Kinimaka; that they attained their
majority respectively in 1867, 1871, and 1877, and at no time did
they or any of them assert any claim to the land or deny the rights
of Kalakaua or his successors, but acquiesced in his and their
possession.
The manner by which defendants obtained the title they assert
was set out, and it was alleged that, owing to the failure of
Armstrong to obey the decree of the court and convey the interest
of the children of Kinamaka, as ordered by the court, complainant's
required chain of title was incomplete, and that the action in
ejectment of Mary H. Atcherley, one of the defendants, sought "to
take unconscionable advantage of the above-mentioned technical
error in the chain of title." A cloud upon the title of complainant
was asserted hence to follow, and that it would be inequitable to
permit her to prosecute her action of ejectment, and that, as naked
trustee of the title, she should be required to convey it to
appellant.
An injunction, temporary and permanent, was prayed, and that
Mary H. Atcherley, the defendant, be declared trustee and be
required to convey the property to complainant.
Copies of the proceedings referred to in the bill were annexed
to it as exhibits. Among these, we have seen, were the award of the
Land Commission and the royal title. The latter recites that --
"Whereas the Board of Commissioners to Quiet Land Titles has
awarded to Kinimaka by award No. 129 a freehold estate less than
allodial in the premises mentioned below, and,"
"Whereas, Kinimaka has paid into the government treasury
eighty-two and 50/100 dollars for the government's rights in said
land,"
"Therefore, by this Royal Patent, Kamehameha III . . . shows . .
. that he has conveyed and
Page 238 U. S. 128
granted in fee simple to Kinimaka that land at Honolulu on the
Island of Oahu with these boundaries. . . . It is granted in fee
simple to him, his heirs and devisees. . . ."
The lands in suit were part of the lands conveyed.
Mary H. Atcherley, then being sole defendant, demurred to the
bill on the ground that it did not set out a cause of action.
By stipulation of the parties, in order to determine the
question whether the decree of 1858 was
res judicata, the
circuit judge made a
pro forma ruling sustaining the
demurrer to the bill and dismissing it.
The complainant appealed to the supreme court of the territory,
it being stipulated that complainant should do so.
The supreme court reversed the decree. 14 Haw. 651. In its
opinion, it recited the facts with great fullness, completed the
allegations of the bill by the exhibits attached, and then disposed
of the contentions as follows:
1. The decree adjudging Kalakaua to be the owner of the land,
and requiring conveyance of it to be made to him by Armstrong as
guardian of the children of Kinimaka, was not ambiguous, but it
took certainty from the averments of the bill and the record, and
there could "be no doubt that it was the intention of the court to
order the conveyance of the interests of the minors."
2. The minors were bound by the decree notwithstanding "they
were not named as parties defendant in the suit." This was decided
on the authority of Hawaiian cases and the power of guardians over
the estates of their wards established by them, and upon the
general principle of collateral attacks upon judgments. And,
specifically replying to the contention that the decree was not
binding because of "the lack of service and upon the merits," and
that the court should refuse to enforce the decree, it was
said:
Page 238 U. S. 129
"It is not contended that the court must in all such cases
reexamine the former proceedings, but merely that it may, in its
discretion, do so. Assuming that to be so, we decline to retry the
old case. The guardian appeared and contested the complainant's
claim, presenting in opposition substantially the same views now
sought to be urged by the respondent. The ward's interests were not
permitted to go by default, but were fully defended by counsel. The
decree, while not carried out by the execution of a conveyance, was
in fact acquiesced in, as appears by the bill, by all concerned,
and complainant and his successors in interest from that time
continuously until about January, 1900, held open, notorious, and
undisturbed possession of the land. Under the circumstances, and
after a lapse of more than forty years, we do not think that the
court should examine into the merits of the former proceedings, or
refuse to enforce the decree for the reasons suggested."
Upon the filing of the mandate of the supreme court in the court
below, Mary H. Atcherley filed an answer in which she admitted many
of the allegations of the bill, denied some -- among others, the
undisturbed possession of the land in Kalakaua and his successors,
as alleged, and the inferences from it -- asserted the validity of
her title, and the staleness of complainant's demand, it having
been
"brought forty-three years, or more than four times the term of
the statute of limitations, since the alleged date of the alleged
decree ordering Richard Armstrong to give a conveyance."
That to enforce a conveyance from her without giving her an
opportunity to be heard upon the matters set forth in the bill
would deprive her of property without due process of law, contrary
to the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United
States.
By a supplemental answer, she alleged the following, which we
state narratively:
Since the filing of the answer, the complainant Kapiolani
Page 238 U. S. 130
Estate, Limited, has parted with all of its estate in the land
by a deed of a small portion to certain named parties and the
balance, with covenants of warranty, to Lewers and Cooke, Limited,
a Hawaiian corporation.
June 29, 1906, that corporation brought suit in the Court of
Land Registration to register its title to the land conveyed.
September 16, 1907, it was decreed that the corporation had a good
title which was entitled to registration. The decree was reversed
by the supreme court of the territory March 5, 1908, that court
holding that the corporation had no title, legal or equitable, to
the land. 18 Haw. 625. The case was remitted to the Court of Land
Registration for further proceedings, and that court dismissed the
petition of the corporation. The latter appealed from the decision
to the supreme court of the territory, which court modified the
decree, and, on March 24, 1909, entered a final decree that the
corporation had no title, legal or equitable, to the land. 19 Haw.
334. Upon appeal to this Court, the decision was affirmed.
[
Lewers & Cooke, Ltd v. Atcherley, 222 U.
S. 285.]
The decree of the Supreme Court of Hawaii is in full force and
effect, and it is alleged that
"the proceedings in the Court of Land Registration, the Supreme
Court of Hawaii, and the Supreme Court of the United States were
upon the merits of the case, and the cause of action so finally
adjudicated was the same right and cause of action as that on which
complainant in this case has founded its bill."
There was a replication to the answer and an amendment to the
amended bill, and it appears that Mary H. Atcherley conveyed an
undivided half of the property to Lyle A. Dickey and Edward M.
Watson, two of the defendants. They were made parties by consent
and answered in the case, in effect repeating the answers of their
grantor.
It was decreed that (1) the allegations of the bill and
replication of complainant were true. (2) The defendants
Page 238 U. S. 131
and each of them were estopped from litigating against or in
opposition to the claim of complainant. (3) The defendants held the
legal title to the land as tenants in common, one-half by Mary
Atcherley and one-fourth by each of the other defendants. (4) Such
title and titles were held by the defendants respectively as
trustees for complainant, and that each of them should be decreed
to execute conveyance thereof to complainant, all and singular, the
matters appertaining to the title having theretofore been litigated
between the predecessors in title of the complainant and defendants
respectively, and that the same were
res judicata. (5)
Defendants should be permanently enjoined from further prosecuting
that certain action in ejectment then pending on the law side of
the court, wherein Mary H. Atcherley was plaintiff and complainant
was defendant.
A conveyance was decreed to be made accordingly, and in case of
default after thirty days, the clerk of the court as its
commissioner should make such deed. Further prosecution of the
action in ejectment was enjoined.
The decree was reversed by the supreme court of the
territory.
The opinion is somewhat difficult of condensation. It rapidly
reviews the steps in the litigation exhibited in 14 Haw. 651, 18
Haw. 625, 19 Haw. 47 and 334, and
222 U. S. 222 U.S.
285. Then this comment was made:
"Notwithstanding the statement made in the
Lewers &
Cooke case (19 Haw. 48) that there had been no reversal of the
facts found by the Court of Land Registration, the fact found by
that court that Kinimaka 'was the natural guardian of the minor'
was not included in the findings of fact certified up by this court
on the appeal to the United States Supreme Court. And the fact that
the guardianship relation existed, vitally important though it was,
seems to have received scant consideration in that case. That
Kinimaka was the testamentary guardian of
Page 238 U. S. 132
Kalakaua's property seems to be beyond the range of dispute at
this time. If the relation existed in fact, a question as to the
regularity of the appointment would not prevent the assertion of
any rights the ward would otherwise have against the guardian. 'It
is not essential that a legal guardianship should exist; the
doctrine (constructive fraud) applies wherever the relation
subsists in fact.' 2 Pom.Eq.Jur. § 961."
"We are satisfied that this court fell into error in the
Lewers & Cooke case in taking the view that the equity
suit before Chief Justice Allen constituted an attack on the award
of the Land Commission, and that the decree in that suit amounted
to a setting aside of the award. None of the prior decisions in
this jurisdiction which were cited in support of the view taken are
authority for the conclusion reached, as an examination of them
will show."
Hawaiian cases were reviewed, and the court said:
"The question now presented is whether a minor, on coming of
age, could obtain relief in equity against a guardian who had, in
fraud of his ward, presented a claim and obtained in his own name
an award from the Land Commission of title to the minor's land.
This question was neither involved nor discussed in any of those
cases."
"The case of the guardian of a minor obtaining an award in his
own name of land belonging to his ward is analogous to the case of
a guardian who purchases land with money belonging to the ward,
and, in violation of his fiduciary duty, intentional or otherwise,
takes the title in his own name. In such a case, it is well
settled, equity, regarding the land as being the property of the
ward, will declare and enforce a constructive trust in favor of the
ward, and order the conveyance of the legal title. 3 Pom.Eq.Jur.
§§ 1052, 1058."
After further review of the case and consideration of the rights
of Kalakaua, the action and duty of Kinimaka, the character and
effect of the proceedings which he had instituted
Page 238 U. S. 133
and which were instituted against him by Kalakaua, and, after
his death, against his devisees, the court declared that certain
principles resulted therefrom, and that "within these principles,
then, the decree of 1858 was not erroneous, but right."
The character of the awards of the Land Commission was
considered and described and their proper relation to the questions
and rights of the parties in the case, and this was said:
"If the decree in
Kalakaua v. Pai and Armstrong was
right it, ought to be enforced. I f the decision in the
Lewers
& Cooke case was correct, the present bill should be
dismissed, but if it was wrong, in justice to the appellee, it
ought not to be followed if it can be avoided."
"Being of the opinion that this court was wrong in the
conclusion reached in the
Lewers & Cooke case, and
that the decree of 1858 was not 'erroneous in a fundamental
principle,' and, for the reasons stated in the former opinion in
the case at bar, should not be reopened, we should feel inclined to
depart from the ruling made in the
Lewers & Cooke case
were we not bound by it because of its having been affirmed by the
United States Supreme Court."
"
* * * *"
"It makes no difference that, in making that decision, the
Supreme Court followed the opinion of this court upon a matter of
local law (222 U.S.
222 U. S. 294), and that we
now believe that that opinion was not well founded. If the former
ruling is to be reversed, the reversal is to be made by that Court,
and not this. The most that we can do now is to respectfully point
out wherein, in our judgment, the former opinion was wrong. This we
have done, believing it was our duty to do it, and with this our
duty in the premises ends."
We have been at pains to recite the pleadings in the case, the
steps in the litigation they detail, and the ruling and comments of
the supreme court in order to bring the factors of judgment under
review in proper connection
Page 238 U. S. 134
and to estimate the constraint the court deemed that it was
under to follow the decision of this Court in the
Lewers &
Cooke case, and whether the court was justified in its view of
that case.
The case at bar easily resolves itself into a few simple facts
and principles which may be summarized from the pleadings and
findings of fact. Kaniu, whose adopted son Kalakaua was, on the day
of her death, by oral will and according to the custom of the
country, appointed him her heir and left him all of her property.
Kinimaka was Kalakaua's guardian, and at a session of the Board of
Land Commissioners, procured the land to be awarded to himself.
Then followed litigation -- commenced by Kalakaua, to declare
Kinimaka his trustee of the title -- which continued after the
latter's death against his children, properly represented, and his
widow, which resulted in the decree (November 2, 1858) establishing
Kalakaua's title to the land.
The decree was not complied with as directed, but was in effect
obeyed, and Kalakaua retained possession of the land, and he and
his successors have ever since continued in the open possession of
it, of which possession the children of Kinimaka were aware and at
no time asserted any claim to the lands or denied the rights of
Kalakaua and his successors thereto, but at all times acquiesced in
the possession of Kalakaua and his successors in title.
Then came the action of ejectment by defendant Atcherley and
this suit to enjoin its prosecution.
The bill was dismissed upon demurrer and the case carried to the
Supreme Court of Hawaii, which reversed the decree.
Pending the suit, the complainant transferred its interest by
warranty deed to Lewers & Cooke, Limited. The latter instituted
suit in the Court of Land Registration to register its title, and
it was decreed by that court that it had a good title which was
entitled to be registered. The
Page 238 U. S. 135
decree was reversed by the Supreme Court of Hawaii, and
subsequently this Court affirmed the judgment of the supreme
court.
The determining proposition in the case (
Lewers &
Cooke case) was that the award of the Land Commission was
"conclusive against every form of attack" except by appeal by a
party who had presented his claims to the board. The court
considered it immaterial from whom Kinimaka received the lands, or
whether he was guilty of actual fraud or had an honest belief in
his title. And it was said:
"The objection to the decree of 1858 appears to go to the
jurisdiction of the court over the subject matter, for the Land
Commission's award was the final decision of a court of record
which was the only court of competent jurisdiction to decide claims
to land accruing prior to its establishment, and its decision could
not be attacked except by appeal provided by law."
But the court further said that, even if the objection did not
go to the jurisdiction of the court, the result would be the same
because of the finality of the Land Commission's award. 18 Haw.
625, 638-639.
See also 19 Haw. 47, 334.
The suit in the Court of Land Registration and the action of the
courts thereunder were set up in the present suit as
res
judicata. The trial court decided against the defense and
other defenses, and decreed the relief prayed by complainant. The
decree was reversed by the supreme court.
We have given excerpts from the opinion of the court showing the
grounds of its action. It will be observed that the court frankly
declared that it had fallen into error in the
Lewers &
Cooke case by deciding that the equity suit in which the
decree of 1858 in favor of Kalakaua was rendered was an attack on
the award of the Land Commission, and that the decree amounted to a
setting aside of the award, but felt that it was its duty to adhere
to the decision as it had been affirmed by this Court, and,
explaining
Page 238 U. S. 136
our affirmance, said that the "vitally important" fact that
Kinimaka "was the natural guardian of the minor [Kalakaua] was not
included in the findings of fact certified up." And the court
(Supreme Court of Hawaii) declared: "That Kinimaka was the
testamentary guardian of Kalakaua's property seems to be beyond the
range of dispute at this time." This relationship necessarily was
the important fact. Without it, Kalakaua had no claim of title;
with it, his right and the right of complainant as his successor
are established and the decree of 1858, establishing his title, was
correct, and the decree in the
Lewers & Cooke case
erroneous.
But defendants say, granting the latter decree was erroneous,
the decree of 1858 was also erroneous, and that the case then
presents the opposition of one erroneous judgment to another, and
the last should prevail. And to establish that the decree of 1858
was erroneous, they enter into a discussion of the laws of Hawaii,
the consideration of the principles upon which the Hawaiian
Monarchy was established in 1845-47, the abolition of the old
feudal tenures of land, the creation of a court (the Board of Land
Commissioners) to quiet land titles, the awards of which were to be
final, and the foundation of fee-simple titles to the Kingdom. But
the contentions thus presented have intricate character, and can
only have clear comprehension in local experience and
understanding, and are best determined by local interpretation and
the decisions of the courts "on the spot;" and this we recognized
when we affirmed the decree in the
Lewers & Cooke
case. The powers of the Land Commission, we said,
"involved obscure local history concerning a time when the forms
of our law were just beginning to superimpose themselves upon the
customs of the islanders. Such customs are likely to be distorted
when transmitted into English legal speech."
And such consideration and defense moved or tended to move to
the decision in the case. A reference, it is true,
Page 238 U. S. 137
was made to the contention that Kinimake was guardian of
Kalakaua, but the fact was dismissed as being a suggestion having
no substantial foundation, and also, again deferring to the local
judgments, it was said of the suggestion that
"it would be going very far to apply the refined rules of the
English Chancery concerning fiduciary duties to the relations
between two Sandwich islanders in 1846 on the strength of such a
fact."
This relationship has since been cleared up and given definite
obligations and duties, and even in 1846, under the law of the
islands, a guardian could not, through the instrumentality of an
award of the Land Commission, obtain a title to the property of his
ward which was immune from subsequent attack, and the wrong of it
be without redress. The fact of guardianship being established, and
such being its legal consequences under the law of Hawaii,
according to the latest decision of the Supreme Court of Hawaii, it
would be going far to say that a decision was intended to be made
against it by the comment which we have mentioned or by the other
comments in the opinion.
For instance, the present case was referred to as pending, and
it was said that, as it had not passed to a final decree, there was
nothing in the form of action of the court to hinder the court from
adopting the principle laid down, even though it thereby should
overrule an interlocutory decision previously reached. And we may
add that there was nothing to hinder the court from changing its
action, which it did, we have seen, on a different view of the law,
or the complainant from availing itself of such change, unless,
indeed, the first decision had the finality of
res
judicata.
This is contended, it being urged that the decision of the Land
Commission had such binding effect as well on complainant as on
Lewers & Cooke, Limited. The contention is based on the
following findings of fact:
"In the suit of Lewers & Cooke, Limited, referred to in
Page 238 U. S. 138
these findings, C. W. Ashford, then vice-president of Kapiolani
Estate, Limited, and now its counsel in this case, appeared at the
trial in the Court of Land Registration and assisted counsel for
Lewers & Cooke, Limited, in the conduct of the case by
examining three witnesses, and did this at the request of John F.
Colburn, who was the treasurer of Kapiolani Estate, Limited, and
the officer of Kapiolani Estate, Limited, who, in the regular
course of business, employed attorneys for it. Said John F. Colburn
was a witness on behalf of Lewers & Cooke, Limited at that
trial."
"Messrs. Kinney, Marx, Prosser, & Anderson, while attorneys
for Kapiolani Estate, Limited, in this case, were retained by
Kapiolani Estate, Limited, through John F. Colburn, its treasurer,
to appear as counsel for Lewers & Cooke, Limited at two
hearings before the Supreme Court of Hawaii subsequent to the final
decision, and so appeared, and also, on such retainer, signed the
assignment of errors upon appeal from the Supreme Court of Hawaii
by Lewers & Cooke, Limited, to the Supreme Court of the United
States. The Kapiolani Estate, Limited, was not, however, named as a
party to said suit of Lewers & Cooke, Limited, and its counsel
took no further part by its direction in the proceedings."
In passing on the contention, the Supreme Court of Hawaii
said:
"Counsel for appellants [appellees here] contend that, under the
decree in the
Lewers & Cooke case, the whole matter is
res judicata. But, as the appellee [appellant here] was
not a party to that case and is not a privy of Lewers & Cooke,
Limited, the ground is untenable."
As to the last proposition -- that is, that complainant was not
a privy of Lewers & Cooke, Limited -- the view of the court
seems to be sustained by
Wood v. Davis,
7 Cranch. 271, and
Cadwallader v. Harris, 76 Ill. 370. The
first proposition is one of fact. There was a distinct issue upon
the fact, and the conclusion of the court was
Page 238 U. S. 139
virtually a decision upon the issue that the acts described were
not authorized by the complainant corporation, but were individual.
And we may say it is disputable besides if they constituted an
appearance of the complainant.
Schroeder v. Lahrman, 26
Minn. 87.
The principle invoked by defendants is that one who warrants a
title is concluded by a judgment against the title in a suit
brought against his grantee, even when the title is aggressively
used.
Andrews v. Denison, 16 N.H. 469. But in favor of
whom and under what conditions? In favor of the grantee undoubtedly
when he brings suit on his covenant against his vendor. But will it
be available in favor of the successful assailant of the title?
Wood v. Davis and Cadwallader v. Harris, supra, are
authority against the proposition.
But, granting this is disputable, and cases may be cited the
other way, it is well established that in order to make the
judgment available even to the grantee of the title, his covenantor
must receive notice of the suit and an opportunity to defend it.
Such notice was not proven in this case. We certainly cannot assume
that notice was given against the decision of the supreme court
virtually to the contrary, accepting, indeed, the finding of the
trial court. The trial court, as we have seen, found that the
allegations of fact contained in complainant's bill of complaint,
as finally amended herein, and in its said replication, were true.
The replication contained a denial of the averment of the
supplemental answer that complainant had notice of the proceedings
in the Court of Land Registration, the Supreme Court of Hawaii, or
the Supreme Court of the United States, though it admitted
"that certain of its officers and directors in their capacity as
individuals (but not in their capacity as such officers or
directors of said complainant corporation) were aware of the
pendency of said proceedings."
Decree reversed and cause remanded for further proceedings
in accordance with this opinion.