Court Opinion

ID: 9897157
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-11-14 19:07:53.727334+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:13:53.318412
License: Public Domain

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                                                         Electronically Filed
                                                         Supreme Court
                                                         SCPW-XX-XXXXXXX
                                                         26-OCT-2023
                                                         08:41 AM
                                                         Dkt. 37 OP

           IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF HAWAIʻI

                              ---o0o---

                RICKEY T. RIVERA, JR., Petitioner,

                                 vs.

                 THE HONORABLE LISA W. CATALDO,
        Judge of the Circuit Court of the First Circuit,
               State of Hawaiʻi, Respondent Judge,

                                 and

     LEONA KALIMA; DIANE BONER; RAYNETTE NALANI AH CHONG,
special administrator of the estate of JOSEPH CHING, deceased;
 CAROLINE BRIGHT; DONNA KUEHU; and JAMES AKIONA, on behalf of
         themselves and all others similarly situated,
                    Respondents/Plaintiffs,

                                 and

         STATE OF HAWAIʻI; STATE OF HAWAIʻI DEPARTMENT OF
                       HAWAIIAN HOME LANDS,
                     Respondents/Defendants.

                          SCPW-XX-XXXXXXX

                        ORIGINAL PROCEEDING
                      (CASE NO. 1CC990004771)

                          OCTOBER 26, 2023
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     RECKTENWALD, C.J. AND EDDINS, J., CIRCUIT JUDGE VIOLA,
  IN PLACE OF McKENNA, J., RECUSED, CIRCUIT JUDGE TOʻOTOʻO AND
     CIRCUIT JUDGE OCHIAI, ASSIGNED BY REASON OF VACANCIES

                OPINION OF THE COURT BY EDDINS, J.

                                 I.

     For decades, thousands of Native Hawaiians waited to lease

land pledged to them under the federal government’s 1920

Hawaiian Homes Commission Act.    First the Territory of Hawaiʻi,

then the State of Hawaiʻi, held homestead land in trust for

Native Hawaiian beneficiaries.    Both breached their fiduciary

duties from the start.    See Kalima v. State, 111 Hawaiʻi 84, 88,

137 P.3d 990, 994 (2006) (Kalima I).

     Now Native Hawaiians will receive compensation for the

State’s failure.    In a class action, trust beneficiaries

successfully sued the State.    The State breached its trustee

responsibilities.    The State settled.

     Many beneficiaries died as the case progressed.      Others

waited.   And waited.   Like untold numbers of Native Hawaiians

after 1920 who just wanted to live on the promised homelands.

Our decision accelerates payout to the beneficiaries.

     Because of its extraordinary public importance, we accepted

a petition for a writ of mandamus, an appeal challenging final

approval of the case’s settlement.

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     We hold that Petitioner Rickey T. Rivera, Jr. has no right

to compensation.    He was born beyond the statutory period to

receive a payout from the settlement.

     Rivera also appealed to the Intermediate Court of Appeals

(ICA).   Our decision ends Rivera’s appeal.    We direct the ICA to

dismiss CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX.

                                  II.

     The Hawaiian Homes Commission Act created a land trust to

provide homesteads to Native Hawaiians.     Kalima v. State, 148

Hawaiʻi 129, 133, 468 P.3d 143, 147 (2020) (Kalima II).      Kalima I

and Kalima II chronicle the messy history of the State’s trust

breaches.    And the snail-paced struggles to redress those

betrayals.    Kalima I, 111 Hawaiʻi at 88-97, 137 P.3d at 994-1003;

Kalima II, 148 Hawaiʻi at 133-42, 468 P.3d at 147-56.      We recap

some history.

     In 1991, the legislature waived the State’s sovereign

immunity.    It passed a law that allowed beneficiaries of the

Hawaiian Homes Commission Act to sue the State.      Hawaiʻi Revised

Statutes (HRS) § 674-17 (2016).    The law entitled qualified

Native Hawaiians to compensation for individual trust breaches

that happened between August 21, 1959 and June 30, 1988.      HRS

§ 674-16 (2016).

     In 1999, the plaintiffs filed a class action alleging

breaches of the State’s trust responsibility.     In 2009, the

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Circuit Court of the First Circuit sided with them.      The State

was liable.    Kalima II, 148 Hawaiʻi at 136, 468 P.3d 150.

Drawn-out litigation, settlement talks, and law-making ensued.

     In June 2022, the parties settled.     The State agreed to pay

the beneficiary class $328 million.    The legislature, in turn,

appropriated funds for that settlement.     S.B. 3041, S.D. 2, H.D.

1, C.D. 1, 31st Leg., Reg. Sess. (2022); see Act 280 (2022).

     The settlement agreement has two key terms covering the

time frame before eligible class members receive compensation:

final approval by the circuit court, and judicial finality – an

end to all appellate review.

     The circuit court concluded that there were 2,515 eligible

class members.    1,351 class members are alive; 1,164 passed

away.   Class members or their estates will receive $286 million

(the remaining funds appropriated by the legislature go to

attorney’s fees and other expenses).

     The settlement excludes class members who are ineligible

for payment.    HRS § 674-16 has a cut-off date.    Per that law,

the settlement does not pay anyone who “asserted an individual

breach of trust that occurred after June 30, 1988.”

     This law excludes Rivera.    He did not become eligible to

apply for a homestead lease until he turned 18 on August 21,

1988.

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     As final approval neared, the circuit court received

objections.    The court had to determine – at a Hawaiʻi Rules of

Civil Procedure Rule 23 fairness hearing - whether the class

settlement was “fair, reasonable, and adequate.”      See Pub.

Access Trails Hawaiʻi v. Haleakala Ranch Co., 153 Hawaiʻi 1, 32,

526 P.3d 526, 557 (2023) (McKenna, J. concurring) (applying the

“fair, reasonable, and adequate” standard from Federal Rule of

Civil Procedure 23(e) to a Hawaiʻi class action).

     In June 2023, Rivera objected.    Later he withdrew his

objection.    But soon he reappeared, mailing two letters to the

circuit court.    In the first, Rivera insists that he deserves

compensation: the “claim administrator made a mistake.”

Likewise, the second letter complains that the claim

administrator erred.    Rivera asks the circuit court to look at

his claim.

     On July 21, 2023, the court conducted the fairness hearing.

The settlement was “fair, reasonable and adequate.”      All

objections lacked merit.    The court approved the settlement.

And on August 1, it entered final judgment.

     On August 17, 2023, the circuit court received and filed

another letter from Rivera.    Now he wanted to appeal: “I wish to

file an appeal before the deadline of August 31, 2023.”        Rivera

wrote: “The appeal is limited to the issue of special master and

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claims administrator failing to process my claim in a timely

fashion.”

     Because of the settlement’s finality term, Rivera

effectively paused payment to 2,515 class members with vetted

claims.   The circuit court sought input from the parties.            The

State said that so long as Rivera’s appeal is unresolved, the

settlement’s finality term (no more appeals possible) is unmet.

Class counsel countered: Rivera had no right to appeal.

     Circuit Court of the First Circuit Judge Lisa Cataldo

expressed dismay.     “If any case demands that counsel bring to

bear the full measure of their experience, expertise and talents

to develop and consider strategies for a thoughtful,

constructive, creative and legally-compliant resolution short of

disposition by the appellate court, it is this one.”            The

court’s invite spurred no helpful solution.

     On October 9, 2023, Judge Cataldo ordered the clerk to file

Rivera’s appeal with the ICA (case number CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX).

     Before the appeal was docketed, Rivera sent a letter to the

Hawaiʻi Supreme Court:

            Ref: Kalima Lawsuit Case File

            I am a claimant plaintiff in the above case, I respectfully
            understand the Hawaii Supreme Court has established rules
            in order to qualify for settlement payment. I believe I do
            qualify under the rule, but the Special Master refused to
            process my claims. Can you please have [the Court] review
            my records for verification please; my defenses are the
            breach of trust period is from August 21, 1959 through June
            30, 1988. My first attempt to apply was June 15, 1988.
            Enclosed are the records for your review.

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Together with that letter were documents, like notices Rivera

received from the Hawaiian Claims Office.     Rivera didn’t pay the

petition filing fee, or ask to waive the fee.     Then on October

10, the court clerk received a check from him.      That day, the

clerk docketed Rivera’s letter as an original proceeding in this

court.

     We treated Rivera’s letter as a petition for a writ of

mandamus.   See Erum v. Llego, 147 Hawaiʻi 368, 391, 465 P.3d 815,

838 (2020) (we construe self-represented filings liberally to

provide a route to relief).     Because Rivera’s petition and

appeal raise the same issue, we stayed the ICA proceedings

pending resolution of the petition.

                                 III.

     We reject Rivera’s petition for a writ of mandamus.

     Writs are rare.     Writs are an exceptional remedy; they are

no substitute for appeal.    Gannett Pac. Corp. v. Richardson, 59

Haw. 224, 227, 580 P.2d 49, 53 (1978).

     The Hawaiʻi Constitution and Hawaiʻi Revised Statutes allow

us to issue writs.     Art. VI of the Hawaiʻi Constitution vests the

“judicial power of the State” in this court and the lower

courts.   Judicial power includes the ability to advance justice.

State v. Moriwake, 65 Haw. 47, 55, 647 P.2d 705, 712 (1982).

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     HRS § 602-5(3) (2016 & Supp. 2022) confers original

jurisdiction over writs.   And HRS §602-5(5) allows us to issue

writs or orders to aid our jurisdiction.

     More broadly, HRS § 602-5(6) empowers the Hawaiʻi Supreme

Court to do justice.   This court has the power to “make and

award such judgments, decrees, orders and mandates, issue such

executions and other processes, and do such other acts and take

such other steps as may be necessary to carry into full effect

the powers which are or shall be given to it by law or for the

promotion of justice in matters pending before it.”      HRS § 602-

5(6).

     The Hawaiʻi Supreme Court also has general supervisory

powers over the state’s lower courts.     “The supreme court shall

have the general superintendence of all courts of inferior

jurisdiction to prevent and correct errors and abuses therein

where no other remedy is expressly provided by law.”      HRS § 602-

4 (2016).

     “Extraordinary writs are appropriate in extraordinary

circumstances.”   Womble Bond Dickinson (US) LLP v. Kim, ___

Hawaiʻi ___, 2023 WL 6861305, at *9 (2023).     “[T]here are rare

and exceptional situations where despite the availability of

alternative remedies, the special and exigent circumstances of

the particular case may move this court to issue its writ.”

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Sapienza v. Hayashi, 57 Haw. 289, 293, 554 P.2d 1131, 1135

(1976).

     When issues of “considerable public importance” are at

stake, we may exercise our supervisory power.      Kaneshiro v. Au,

67 Haw. 442, 446, 690 P.2d 1304, 1308 (1984).      Sometimes lower

courts require “immediate need of direction from this court on a

procedural and substantive matter of public importance.”

Gannett, 59 Haw. at 227, 580 P.2d 53.      The value of speedy

resolution may also prompt this court to step in: to “allow the

matter to rest until the appeals process has run its course

would forestall the expeditious presentation” of important

public issues.   Sapienza, 57 Haw. at 294, 554 P.2d 1135.       A long

lull may cause public harm.    Id.

     Because of this case’s extraordinary public importance, we

accepted the petition.   Now we resolve it.

     1,351 people, and the descendants of 1,164 more, await

long-overdue compensation.    We feel there is a critical and

immediate need to provide decisive direction.

     Here, the ordinary timeline for appellate review delays

justice.   Per Hawaiʻi Rules of Appellate Procedure (HRAP) Rule

28, an appellant gets 40 days to file their brief, and a

respondent receives another 40 days to answer.      Then the

appellant has 14 days to reply.      Extensions may happen.    See

HRAP 29(a).   After that, the ICA takes time to decide.

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Following the ICA’s judgment, a party has 30 days to apply for

cert.    And this court has 30 days to accept or reject the cert

application.    HRAP 40.1.

       The beneficiaries have waited decades, across two

centuries.    Many have died before receiving homestead land or

compensation for the State’s breach of its trust duties.

Justice demands ending this case.      Paying the beneficiaries.

Now.

       A prompt appellate resolution serves the public interest.

Our resolution is an appropriate use of our authority under HRS

§§ 602-4 and 602-5.

                                 IV.

       Rivera has standing to appeal the circuit court’s order

approving the settlement.    His letters preserved grounds for

appeal.

       Courts liberally construe a self-represented litigant’s

filings to promote “equal access to justice and an opportunity

to be heard.”    Makila Land Co., LLC v. Kapu, 152 Hawaiʻi 112,

121, 522 P.3d 259, 268 (2022).    A court assesses a pro se

submission to favor a route to relief when a reasonable

construction lets the party go on.      Erum, 147 Hawaiʻi at 391, 465

P.3d at 838.

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     Rivera has preserved the one issue that animates his

appeal: eligibility to receive compensation.     His letters to the

circuit court protested: “I disagree with the notice that I do

not qualify for payment.”   He included several claim-related

documents and asked the circuit court to consider his

eligibility.   Later his August 17 letter announced: “I wish to

file an appeal before the deadline of August 31, 2023.”      We must

reasonably construe these filings to pave a route to relief.

Rivera gets his day in appellate court.     We decide the petition

on the merits.

                                  V.

     The question Rivera raises in his ICA appeal mirrors the

one he raises to this court: is he entitled to payment from the

settlement pot?

     He is not.

     The reason is elementary.    Rivera was too young to get a

homestead lease during the statutory claim period.

     In 1991, the legislature passed Act 323.     The Act empowered

Native Hawaiians to seek compensation for the State’s fiduciary

breaches.   HRS § 674-1 (2016).   The State waived its sovereign

immunity.   HRS § 674-16(a).   The people of Hawaiʻi, through their

elected officials, took responsibility.     Native Hawaiians were

gravely harmed.   The legislature awarded “individual

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beneficiaries under the Hawaiian home lands trust” compensation.

HRS § 674-1.

     HRS Chapter 674 limited the compensation period from

statehood’s first day - August 21, 1959 - to June 30, 1988.        HRS

§ 674-16(a).    The Hawaiian Homes Commission Act requires

homestead applicants to be at least 18 years old.      1985 Haw.

Sess. Laws, Act 60, § 2 at 93-94.      To receive compensation, a

class member must have been eligible for a lease – and thus at

least 18 – by June 30, 1988.

     Rivera was born too late, August 21, 1970.      He turned 18 on

August 21, 1988, almost two months after the June 30 statutory

deadline.

     Many settlement class members waited decades for homestead

land that never came.    But Rivera was too young to get a lease.

So he lacks any claim to compensation.      The claims administrator

and circuit court correctly concluded that he was ineligible for

compensation.

     We end Rivera’s case.    Because the legal issue is the same,

our holding moots Rivera’s appeal in CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX.

                                 VI.

     We deny the petition.    Per HRS §§ 602-4 and 602-5, we order

the ICA to dismiss CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX.

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     There are no appeals left.    This petition ends all

appellate review in case number 1CC990004771.       We remand to the

circuit court.

Rickey T. Rivera, Jr.                  /s/ Mark E. Recktenwald
(on the briefs)
                                       /s/ Todd W. Eddins
Petitioner
                                       /s/ Faʻauuga L. Toʻotoʻo
Carl M. Varady, Thomas R.
Grande (on the briefs)                 /s/ Dean E. Ochiai
for respondents Leona Kalima,          /s/ Matthew J. Viola
Diane Boner, Raynette Nalani Ah
Chong, special administrator of
the estate of Joseph Ching,
deceased, Caroline Bright, Donna
Kuehu, and James Akiona, on
behalf of themselves and all
others similarly situated

Donna H. Kalama, Craig Y. Iha,
Jordan A.K. Ching, Linda Lee K.
Farm (on the briefs)
for respondents State of Hawaiʻi
and State of Hawaiʻi Department
of Hawaiian Home Lands

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