Royal Patents

3/19/2011 5:14:39 PM - last modified
Royal Patent Number(RP)123456789LCA Number:
Patentee: TestIsland:Oahu
District:HiloTMK3-9-017
Ahupua'aIli
Statistics: 589768 characters 93257 words
This is only a test document - Kukuau 1st.DOC

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Kukuau 1st Ahupuaa, District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, Boundary Commission, Hawaii, Volume A, No. 1, p. 234

Kukuau, District of Hilo
Waiaka, District of Kohala
Waikahekahe, District of Puna

Lahaina, August 4th 1873
Imua o ka Mea Hanohano R.A. Lyman, Ke Komisina Palena Aina no Ka Mokupuni o Hawaii

Owau no o ka mea nona ka inoa malalo iho nei ke noi aku nei au imua ou e hoomaopopoia a e hooiaioia na palena o ke Ahupuaa o Kukuau e waiho la ma Hilo ma ka Mokupuni o Hawaii, ame Waiaka ma Waimea Hawaii, ame Waikahekahe ma Puna, Hawaii; aka ke hooili pu aku nei au i ka Palapala Sila o Waiaka ame Waikahekahe a naui ke Komisina Palena Aina o ke Mokupuni o Hawaii e noonoo no ia mau aina a iloko oia Palapala Sila a`u e hooili aku nei ua lilo o Waiaka ia hoi Ahupuaa ma Kahu a a ua lilo no o Pahoehoe ma Kona ia hoi oia Ka mea hoakaka ia oe Komisina Palena Aina o Hawaii.

A nolaila e olelo oe i ka mea ana aina e ana.
Owau no, me Ka Mahalo,
(signed) P. Nahaolehua
Lima Hooponopono Waiwai o
Albert Kuniakea


Kukuau 1st Ahupuaa, District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, Boundary Commission, Hawaii, Volume B, pps 160-166

The Ahupuaa of Kukuau 1st, District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, 3d Judicial Circuit

On this, the 16th day of December A.D. 1873, the Commission of Boundaries for the Island of Hawaii, 3d Judicial Circuit, met at the Court House in Hilo, Hawaii, on the application of P. Nahaolehua, Guardian of Albert Kuniakea for the settlement of Kukuau 1st, situated in the District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii.

Notice of hearing served by publication in the Hawaiian Gazette of [left blank] and Kuokoa of [left blank] 1873, and due notice personally served on owners or agents of adjoining lands, as far as known.

Present: E.G. Hitchcock for applicant and Crown Commissioner.

for Petition see Folio 234 Book A.

Testimony
Keikemahine, kane, sworn, I was born at Kau at the time of Niaukuni, moved to Hilo when a child and have resided here ever since; the boundaries of Kukuau were told me by old kamaaina. Kaainapau, my brother, was one of them. He lived on the land and was the cause of my coming here. All these kamaaina are now dead.

I have been a canoe builder.

Commencing at the Waialama river which belongs to both lands, the boundary runs to the head of the river at a place called Palaoa, on Kukuau 1st; thence to Pohakunui, at Kipi's place the boundary between Kukuau 1st and Waiakea is in a swail [swale] (what I call a kahawai) just outside of this place, thence to Waipio, a water hole on Kukuau 1st. The land is very narrow there. Thence to Wainaku, a pool of standing water where rushes are growing. The boundary line runs along side of Waipio, thence to Kahawa, belonging to Kukuau; thence to Holokoiki, an old planting place, mostly belonging to Waiakea; Kukuau taking only a small part of it; thence to Kukuinui, a kahawai with kukui [page 161] trees in and around the boundary running in the old road to Kaumuunumoa; thence on the road; thence still following the road to Kumuniu, an old cocoanut tree, thence up the road to Naiheakealahou, where there is a well of water and a graveyard; thence to Huawai, a bathing place belonging to Waiakea; from this place all the pahoehoe belongs to Waiakea; thence to Kuaiaina, the junction of two roads, one from Waiakea and one from Kukuau. Pahoehoe and the trees growing on it belong to Waiakea, and the ohia on the Hilo side belongs to Kukuau 1st. Thence to Haaipopolo, where the bush begins and where they used to catch birds. The forest all being on Kukuau 1st; thence the boundary runs to Kanekaulukaau, an old planting place in the woods, belonging to Waiakea. Palaa is the name of the adjoining planting place on Kukuau; thence to the Hilo side of Ohuliipe, a heiau belonging to Waiakea. This heiau is on a hill and from it you can see the sea. The boundary lines is some distance from this hill. It follows up a ridge that runs mauka and makai; and is the dividing line. It is where the painiu grows. Thence from the ridge to Nehuiki, where we used to get canoes eight fathoms long, very large koa and ohia grow together; thence to Kalaholona; thence to Kailihololei, where the bird catchers used to catch oo; thence to Muanui, another bird catchers place. This is as far as I know the boundaries of Kukuau 1st.
Cross-examined.

Kapu, kane, sworn, I know the boundaries between Waiakea and Kukuau 1st. I heard them from my parents. Koi, kane and Palau, wahine (both now dead), who were born on Waiakea. I was also with Webster when he surveyed Waiakea. He surveyed the line between Kukuau and Waiakea. His kamaaina were Kukelekai [page 162] and Kahaoleopuni, both from Kukuau 1st. There was no Waiakea kamaaina present to show boundaries. I do not know as any one was hunted up from Waiakea.

Kukelekai is dead, Kahaoleopuni is at Hamakua and is blind. That was the first time that I ever saw the boundaries. Commencing at a pile of stones on the Puna side of the Waialama river; thence to Hanalei fish pond, on Waiakea there is a strong wall between the fish pond and the river which is the boundary between the two lands; thence to Kumu, on the bank of the Waialama river; thence to Kalanakama, where the Government road to the volcano runs through the land; thence to Huia, on Kukuau, there is a small kahawai there belonging to Waiakea and the level land on the Hilo side belongs to Kukuau; thence to Upeeloa where Lauhala trees are growing. at this place there is a kahawai between the two lands that runs into Huia kahawai; thence to an old planting ground called Lohoiki. All the men that I have seen planting at this place belong to Kukuau; therefore I say this place belongs to Kukuau.

Thence to Kukuinui at the kahawai of Upeeloa (This land, kahawai runs down and enters into the other kahawai of Upeeloa). The gulch is the dividing line; thence to Kapuahi, a kaahumanu belonging to Waiakea; thence follow the ancient road to Kauunuunumoa, up to Kilohana, an old resting place; thence still up the old road to Kumuniu; thence up the road to Koumuumumoa, belonging to Waiakea; thence along old road to a place called Naiheakealahau, belonging to Waiakea; thence along to Kahueawai still following road; thence to Kaaipopolo, thence to a large ohia tree, marked W at the edge of the forest. This is as far as I went with Webster, and this is all that I saw at that time. I have been told the following From the edge of the forest the boundary runs to the Hilo side of Ohuliipe, a heiau, the woods are not very thick there, and the [page 163] painiu grows on a ridge close to the boundary. The boundary runs along the Hilo base of the ridge. I have always heard that from Ohuliipe, the land of Kukuau only run[s] to the aa, opposite to Nahuina, which is the junction of Kamana and Piihonua roads. I have been to Nahuina and know the place. It is on the old lava flow called Poohina; the flow of 1852 has flowed over it there. Kukuau is cut off by Kaamano and Waiakea. The ohia at this place is scrubby, being on the aa; below it is tall.
Cross-examined

Boundary Commission adjourned. Case continued to December the 17 instant.
R.A. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries, 3d Judicial Circuit.

Boundary Commission opened and case continued on the 17 of December A.D. 1873 according to adjournment from the 16th instant.

Kaaua, kane, sworn, I was born at Waiakea uka at the time of Akakai mokuakai. I know a part of the boundaries between Kukuau 1st and Waiakea. Kuakaahalawa and Keike, who were bird catchers and canoe makers and old settlers on the land, and who knew all the boundaries, told them to me. Commencing  at the sea side on the Puna bank of the Waialama river, the boundary between Kukuau and Waiakea runs mauka to Kumu, a noted jumping off place and boiling springs at the head of the Wailama river; thence in a swail [swale] to Kalanakama, a place on the Government road to the volcano. The swail is on Waiakea; thence in the swail mauka to the Puna side of Kipi's yard; thence to the water hole of Waipio, belonging to Kukuau 1st; thence to Wainaku, a water hole where rushes are growing, belonging to Kukuau 1st; thence to Kahana, on Kukuau 1st, where there is a lauhala grove, aa and pahoehoe. [page 164] The boundary runs near to a swail, but the swail is on Waiakea. The old road to Kaumuumumoa is near the boundary and on Kukuau 1st the boundary running between the road and the awaawa.

Thence along this old road to Kalopoiki (I do not know as this place belongs to either land); thence along the old road to Kukuinui, where the kahawai runs on to Kukuau 1st and belongs entirely to that land, taking the name of Waiola gulch. Kukuinui is a grove of Kukui trees in the gulch; thence along the old road to Kapuahi, a kaahumanu (called so from its being an old bird ground); thence to Kilohano; thence to Pilenui; thence to Kumuniu, there leaving the old road to Koumuumumoa, the boundary runs up a branch road, that leads to Kahakauwila, and runs along said road to Mananui; one side of the road belonging to Waiakea and the other to Kukuau 1st.

Thence to Niaheakealahau where Waiakea takes all the road and Kukuau 1st is confined to the tall ohia; thence the boundary runs to the Hilo side of a bathing place called Kuawai; this place is on Kukuau 1st; thence to Kahuakamoa (in olden times a noted place for cock fighting); thence the boundary runs along the line of the old road (now used for drawing down wood) to Kuaiaina, where the roads from Kukuau and Waiakea join. The pahoehoe and trees on it belong to Waiakea, and the forest on the Hilo side to Kukuau 1st. Thence to Kaaipopolo, a place where popolo now grows.

Notes: Witness states that Mr. Webster marked a tree, on the opposite side from Kaaipopolo, as the true boundary between the two lands, but as he objected to that boundary Mr. Webster changed the survey to Kaiipopolo.

There is a large tree with a blaze on it at this place; thence to Ohuliipii, a hill on Waikea [sic]. I do not know of there being a heiau there in olden times; thence [page 165] to a place called Kanoa; thence to Mehuiki, an old canoe building place; thence to Kaileo, another canoe building spot where koa trees are growing. I have lived there; thence to Kalaiholona, a canoe building place; thence to Kailihelelei, a grove of koa trees; thence to Muanui, a great bird catching place; thence to Hoaa, the boundary is on a line with Hoaa, but the place itself is way inside of Waiakea. I have always been told that Kukuau ends at Piliiki. I do not know what other lands join above it. Opuloa, kane and Nahua (now dead) and Kaawa from Olaa were the kamaaina with Webster. Kahaole Opunui now living in Hamakua was a kamaaina of Kukuau 1st.
Cross-examined.

Puaa, kane, sworn, I know the boundaries of Kukuau 1st. I obtained my information from old kamaaina, and from having lived near there all my life. I always heard that the Waialama river is equally divided between Waiakea and Kukuau 1st.

Commencing at Kumu and from thence the boundary runs to Kalanakama; thence in a small swail [swale to the Puna side of Kipi's yard; thence to Upeeloa; thence to Kalopoiki; belonging to both lands; thence to Kapualii, a kaahumanu; thence along the old road to Nahoanaomua; thence to Kilohano; thence along the old road to Kumunui; thence to where the road branches off to Hakauwila's house; thence to Waiheakealahau, here the Pahoehoe belongs to Waiakea and the woods to Kukuau 1st; thence to Hueawai; thence along the old road to Kahuakamoa; thence still following the old road, to Kuaiaina; thence to Kupiinau, where it leaves Waiakea road and runs to Kaaipopolo. At this place the pahoehoe ends and the bush begins; thence to Kahamoule; thence to Umilehu; thence to Kanoa; thence to [page 166] Nehuiki; thence to Kailio; thence to Kailihelelei; thence to Muanui; thence to Lapanaia. To this point the boundary runs towards Kalaieha and the base of Mauna Loa. From this point it runs toward Hamakuka and Mauna Kea. From Lapanaia the boundary runs up to a point between Hoaa and Kaunuapakea where Kukuau 1st is cut off by the junction of Kaamana and Waiakea. This is all I know the boundaries of Kukuau 1st.
Cross-examined.
R.A. Layman

Decided to be as given in J.M. Lydgate's notes of survey. Certificate issued January 21, 1875.

No. 58 Folio 101, Liber I or No. 3
R.A. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries, 3d Judicial Circuit.

For costs see folio 105, Liber I.

For Certificate see No. 58, Folio 101, Liber I.

[note: in the following book the page number is added at the end of the word in this document, although in the original text it might be in the middle of a word]


Kukuau 1st Ahupuaa, District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, Boundary Commission, Hawaii, Volume 1, No. 3, pps 101-105

For Testimony of Kukuau 1st, See Folio 160 Book A.

No. 58

Land Boundary Commission, Hawaii 3rd Judicial Circuit

Certificate of the Boundaries of Kukuau 1st, District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, 3d Judicial Circuit.

Upon the application of P. Nahaolelua and by virtue of the authority vested in me by law, as sole Commissioner of Land Boundaries for the island of Hawaii, 3d Judicial Circuit; I hereby decide and certify the boundaries of the Ahupuaa of Kukuau 1st, situated in the District of Hilo, island of Hawaii to be as hereinafter set forth.
Given under my hand at Hilo, Hawaii
This Twenty-first day of January A.D. 1875
R.A. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries, 3rd Judicial Circuit

Boundaries of Kukuau 1st
Commencing at the Southwest corner of this land at a blazed ohia tree and a Kawao tree marked KW standing 100 fe4et or so South of the lower end of a small branch of the lava flow of [page 102] 1855; The place is called Kapualei, and running thence along the land of Waiakea (Magnetic bearings) North 27° 50' West 1150 feet across the lower end of said branch of lava flow to an 'awaawa" in the woods; Thence makai along land of Kukuau 2d

South 89° 35' East 26100 feet
North 60° 50' East 23600 feet to gingers at the lower edge of the woods;
North 49° 20' East 1416 fe4et to pile of stones on ahua on upper edge of belt of woods; Thence through said woods
South 68° 00' East 198 feet
South 63° 27' East 187 feet
South 27° 55' East 51 feet to ohia tree marked K [with three bars on lower leg of K];
South 75° 10' East 201 feet to a pile of stones on Kilohana ahua;
North 68° 31' East 165 feet to gingers;
North 7° 12'  East 311 feet;
North 5° 07' East 206 feet to gingers;
North 37° 40' East 419 feet to pile of stones and gingers;
North 43° 50' East 1270 feet to pile of stones near trail below the woods;
North 46° 37' East 730 feet to pile of stones on ahua;
North 38° 00' East 358 feet to pile of stones and gingers;
North 32° 57' East 223 feet;
North 19° 54' East 252 feet;
North 39° 00' East 580 feet;
North 25° 00' East 1710 feet;
North 18° 00' East 910 feet;
North 43° 25' East 755 feet;
North 20° 00' East 260 feet to gingers;
North 20° 00' East 563 feet to gingers on edge of water run;
Thence along the water run
North 31 [or 51?] 00' East 738 feet;
North 23° 50' East 511 feet;
North 13° 30' West 558 feet;
North 35° 25' [page 103] East 819 feet; to K and pile of stones on edge of gulch; Thence leaving gulch
North 60° 23' east 471 feet to pile of stones and gingers;
North 36° 30' East 760 feet to blazed kukui tree and pile of stones on island in water run;
North 41° 30' East 730 feet to a pile of stones and an arrow cut in the rock near small water run;
North 61° 52' East 589 feet to a pile of stones;
North 42° 00' East 564 feet to a pile of stones;
North 48° 00' East 723 feet to a pile of stones;
North 36° 32' East 870 feet to a pile of stones;
North 30° 42' East 1410 feet to a pile of stones at Makaliiaina;
North 42° 13' East 1750 feet to pile of stones and gingers;
North 24° 13' east 1118 feet to buried bottles in the wall of the Kahue kuleana; Thence through this kuleana
North 28° 00' East 247 feet to corner of wall;
North 30° 27' East 563 feet to gingers and a buried red wood post;
North 41° 30' East 121 feet to buried bottle at the Southeast corner of Hio's kuleana on Kukuau 2d.
North 50° 15' East 1903 feet to lower corner of Kanakaole's kuleana on Kukuau 2d;
North 29° 50' East 380 feet;
North 35° 12' East 350 feet to seashore; Thence along the changeable seashore and across the Waiolama stream
South 60° 00' East 320 feet to land of Waiakea; Thence along Waiakea
South 32° 35' West 452 feet [page 104] to a pile of stones;
South 4° 30' East 410 feet along marsh;
South 63° 50' West 257 feet;
South 36° 20' West 193 feet to lower side of road to Kilauea near gully;
South 33° 00 West 427 feet;
South 35° 17' West 616 feet;
South 30° 00' West 307 feet;
South 34° 14' West 280 feet;
South 20° 40' West 348 feet;
South 41° 50' West 260 feet;
South 10° 00' West 268 feet;
South 54° 50' West 376 feet;
South 63° 45' West 121 feet;
South 71° 20' West 167 feet;
South 0° 40' West 44 feet;
South 43° 38' West 128 feet;
South 81° 00' West 198 feet;
South 34° 00' West 148 feet;
South 6° 30' West 260 feet;
South 13° 19' West 123 feet;
South 32° 50' West 265 feet;
South 37° 45' West 245 feet;
South 29° 30' West 313 feet;
South 32° 34' West 296 feet;
South 33° 23' West 966 feet;
South 50° 24' West 959 feet;
South 66° 15' West 1395 feet;
South 19° 00' West 1753 feet to cross crack in Lava;
South 9° 37' West 595 feet;
South 22° 00' West 2900 feet to the top of small hill called Kilohana;
South 24° 42' West 750 feet;
South 42° 30' West 853 feet;
South 1° 00' West 1035 feet;
South 11° 30' West 200 feet
South 30' 42' West 1068 feet to a small ohia tree;
South 24° 30' West 771 feet; Thence up an opening in the woods  (now mostly grown up)
South 14° 16' East 492 feet;
South 10° 21' West 677 feet;
South 12° 43' West 473 feet;
South 46° 35' [page 105] West 312 feet;
South 47° 35' West 919 feet;
South 45° 20' West 734 feet;
South 51° 20' West 1876 feet;
South 59° 24' West 189 feet;
South 65° 00' West 821 feet;
North 73° 00' West 472 feet;
North 87° 00' West 400 feet to blazed ohia tree, at the end of this opening (a dry tree still standing) and foreign yellow ginger; Thence through the woods still along land of Waiakea
South 58° 30' West 23,968 feet; thence
North 83° 50' west 27,650 feet to point of commencement and containing an are oaf 4840 acres
R.A. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries, 3rd Judicial Circuit

Surveyed by J.M. Lydgate
Costs paid in full $41.- Witnesses 4.-; & 2 days hearing 20.- 38 folio testimony 9.50; Certificate 2.-; Stamp 1.-; description certificate 18 folio 8.50; Paid Witness also 4.-;
4.-; 41.00; 45.-.


Kukuau 1st Ahupuaa, District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, Boundary Commission, Hawaii, Volume D, No. 5, pps 287-379

The Ahupuaa of Kukuau 1st, District of Hilo, island of Hawaii

Land Commission Award No. 8515, Royal Patent by name only, No. [left blank; 1666 & 8089 & 8171]

Hilo, Hawaii, June 7, 1900

The Commission of Boundaries for the Island of Hawaii met at Sheriffs Office, Hilo, Hawaii, after due notice published in English in the Hawaii Herald for three weeks and in Hawaiian in Elele Hawaii, published at Hilo, Hawaii for three weeks as follows:

Notice Commissioner of boundaries

Notice is hereby given that on the 27th day of April, A.D. 1900, Mrs. J.L. Richardson, by her attorney, A.B. Loebenstein, filed application for the final settlement of the boundaries of the Ahupuaa of Kukuau First, District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, Fourth Judicial District, and that Certificate of Boundaries, No. 58, issued January 21, 1875, be set aside, and that a corrected Certificate of Boundaries of said land be issued. It is hereby ordered that all parties interested in the boundaries of Kukuau appear before me at the court House, South Hilo, Hawaii, at 10 a.m. June 7, 1900, and show cause, if any, why said petition should not be granted.
Rufus A. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries, Island of Hawaii, Third and Fourth Judicial Circuits
Hilo, Hawaii, May 8, 1900, 40-3

And also notice personally served on J.F. Brown, Agent of Public Lands on the part of the Government who own land of Waiakea, and W.R. Castle for the Owners of Kukuau 2d.

Mr. A.B. Loebenstein not having finished the new survey of Kukuau 1st, the hearing is adjourned to the 23d day of June A.D. 1900 at 10 a.m. at Hilo Court House, Hilo, Hawaii
Rufus A. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries, Island of Hawaii, 3rd & 4th Judicial Circuits, Hawaiian Islands
[page 288]
Notice published in Hawaiian in Elele Hawaii reads as follows:
Hoolaha a Ke Komisina Palena Aina.
Oiai ua waiho ia mai he palapala noi kupono i hana ia ia`u e Mrs. J.L. Richardson, ma o A.B. Loebenstein la kona hope, no ka hooponopono hopeloa ana i na Palena Aina, a e hoopau i ka Palapala Hooiaio Palena Aina Helu 58, i hookpua ia ma ka la 21 0 Januari M.H. 1875, a e hoopuka hou i Palapala Hooiaio Palena Aina i hooponopono hou ia, no ke ahupuaa o Kukuau 1, apana o Hilo, Hawaii. Apana Hookolokolo Kaapuni Eha. Nolaila ke kauoha ia Aku nei ma kai, o na poe apau i kuleana i na palena aina o Kukuau 1, e hele mai lakou imua o`u ma ka Hale Hookolokolo o Hilo Hema, Hawaii, ma ka hora 10 o ke kakahiaka o ka la 7 o June, M.H. 1900, a e hoike mai i na kumu, ina he kumu kekahi e ae ole ia ai ke noi o ua palapala noi la i olelo ia.
Rufus A. Lyman, Komisina Palena Aina, Mokupuni o Hawaii, Apana Hookolokolo Kaapuni Ekolu me Eha, Hilo, Hawaii, Mei 8, 1900.  43-3

Hilo, Hawaii, June 23, 1900
The Commission of boundaries for the Island of Hawaii met at Sheriff's Office, Hilo, Hawaii, by adjournment from June 7, 1900, and the survey not being finished the hearing was adjourned to the 2nd day of July, A.D. 1900.
[copy of newspaper clippings]

[page 289]
Ahupuaa of Kukuau 1st continued
Hilo, Hawaii, July 2, 1900

The Commission of Boundaries for 3rd and 4th Judicial Circuits, Hawaiian Islands, Territory of Hawaii, met at 2 p.m. at the Office of A.B. Loebenstein, for hearing of evidence in re re-opening Certificate No. 58, Boundaries of land of Kukuau 1, Hilo, Hawaii.

This case was set for June 7, 1900, and adjourned to June 23d 1900 and adjourned to July 2, 1900.

Present: A.B. Loebenstein for Mrs. J.L. Richardson, present owner of Kukuau I, Carl S. Smith for owners of Kukuau II.

E. D. Baldwin was personally notified of time of hearing, and being detained on Government land business gave his consent for Commissioner of Boundaries to take the evidence of A.B. Loebenstein as to his new notes of survey of Kukuau I, having the right reserved for him to cross examine Mr. A.B. Loebenstein if he deems it necessary to do so, after examining his evidence and notes of survey filed.

Petition read as follows:
Honorable R.A. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries for the third and fourth Judicial Circuit
Sir:
The undersigned respectfully applies for a rehearing on the matter of the boundaries of the Ahupuaa of Kukuau First, Land Commission Award No. 8515, Hilo, Hawaii, and that the same may be duly certified as by law required.
The undersigned would respectfully show as follows:

First: that she is the owner in fee of the said Ahupuaa

Second: That the boundaries of said Ahupuaa were settled by the Honorable R.A. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries for said Circuit under certificate No. 58, dated the 21st day of January A.D. 1875 and a certificate thereof was duly issued, a copy whereof is hereunto annexed and made part hereof, marked Exhibit A.

Third: The upon said certificate of boundaries an application was made to the Minister of the Interior [page 290] for a Patent to issue for the said Ahupuaa but that after much delay it appeared that the Patent could not issue upon said certificate inasmuch as the note of survey and description set forth in said certificate were incorrect and that a plot made out and a map thereof made the said metes and bounds failed to meet and produce a uniform map. That the said survey was also in other respects incorrect and uncertain and when laid down and followed interfered with the boundaries of other lands, to wit: the Ahupuaa of Waiakea, the Ahupuaa of Punahoa 2nd, and the Ahupuaa of Kukuau 2nd. Upon the last two of which Royal Patents have already been issued and that further more there are other and gross errors in the said certificate which can in no other way be certified than by a rehearing

Fourth: Petitioner would further show that the said Ahupuaa contains the same premises as set forth in Land Commission Award 8515 in the name of Keoni Ana.

Fifth: Petitioner further makes known that the names of the adjoining lands with the owners thereof are as follows; to wit:
Upon the North side: Kukuau 2nd, Owners Kukuau Land Co.; Punahoa 2nd, Owners Hilo Sugar Co.
On the South side: Waiakea, Owner the Republic of Hawaii, and within the town of Hilo, Land Commission 1091, Hio; Land Commission Award 11045, B. Kanakaole; Land Commission Award 4329B, Kanaina.

Wherefore Your Petitioner Respectfully Prays that proper notices as required by law many be issued to the adjoining owners to appear and show cause why, if any they have, the boundaries should not be awarded and certified as claimed and that a day may be set fort the hearing of all parties interested in said matter and that the proper metes and bounds of said land may be decided and a certificate thereof duly issued as required by law and your petitioner will ever pray.
[page 291]
Dated this 27th day of April, A.D. 1900
(Signed) Mrs. J.L. Richardson by her Attorney, A.B. Loebenstein

Letter of J.F. Brown of May 185h, 1900, and of W.R. Castle of May 13th 1900 read and made a part of evidence.

Copy
Commission of Public Lands, Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands, May 18th 1900
R.A. Lyman, Esquire, Commissioner of Boundaries, 3rd & 4th Judicial Circuits
Dear Sir:
Yours of May 10th with reference to re-hearing in matter of boundaries of Kukuau 1st is duly to hand.

I am aware of the uncertainties and discrepancies in the old certificate and should be glad to see them rectified. I do not know whether I could personally attend a hearing on June 7th but if I am not present, Mr. E.D. Baldwin with whom I have discussed the matter, will attend and represent this office.
Yours truly,
(Signed) J.F. Brown, agent of Public Lands

Copy
W.R. Castle, Attorney-at-Law, Merchant Street, Opposite Post Office, P.O. Box 154
Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands, May 13th, 1900

R.A. Lyman, Esquire, Commissioner of Boundaries, 3rd & 4th Judicial Circuits, Hilo, Hawaii
Dear Sir:
Yours of the 10th instant notifying me as legal owner of Kukuau II that the matter of the boundaries of Kukuau I would be heard on June 7th was duly received.

With thanks for your courteous statement [page 292] of the matter. I desire to say that I have mailed notice to Mr. Carl Smith of Hilo, who will represent the interest of Kukuau II in the matter. I have no doubt everything will be easily arranged.
Very sincerely yours,
(Signed) W.R. castle, per A.N. Campbell.

A.B. Loebenstein, sworn says, On behalf of Mrs. J.L. Richardson, present owner of Kukuau I, I made an application for a rehearing and issuing of a new certificate of Boundaries for land of Kukuau I with a view of obtaining a Patent that would embody a [sic] true and accurate boundaries of the land, it appearing upon a study and investigation of the survey of this land, and the adjacent lands that the Certificate No. 58 issued by R.A. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries of third Circuit on January 21, 1875, which was based on a survey executed by J.M. Lydgate in 1874 was not consistent with itself, or the boundaries of certain adjacent lands, notably Punahoa 2, Land Commission Award #387, Royal Patent 1949.

The said land of Punahoa being awarded and patented under a survey executed by Thomas Metcalf in 1849 to upper side hill, and from second hill to its extreme upper and at its intersection with land of Piihonua by survey executed by H.M. Lyman about 1851. The survey of Kukuau 1st as executed by Mr. Lydgate appeared to ignore the settlement of the boundaries of land of Punahoa 2nd and an award or patent by survey, and which had held good for nearly twenty-five years, and instead of bringing the extreme upper corner or liens of Kukuau 1st to where they would be naturally cut off by the earlier survey and ownership of Punahoa 2nd extended into and beyond the boundaries of the last mentioned land.

Up to the year 1891, the information lodged [page 293] in the Archives of the Government Survey Office with respect to the upper boundaries of these lands, appeared to be more or less one of compilation and one of paper lines. In my surveys executed subsequently, of the lands of Kaumana and Ponahawai, at the instance of the Government and of Kukuau 2nd for the owners of said land, I fixed the upper corners of Punahoa 2nd on the ground, also the points on the South boundary of Punahoa 2nd, where the lands of Kukuau 1st and 2nd were cut off by the earlier survey of Punahoa 2nd.

This work, after being tested by Mr. C.J. Lyons, at that time assistant in charge of Government Survey Office, was approved by the Government, and the points fixed by me, were accepted by them as part of Government records. I fixed these points Geodetically.

The tracing which I file as an exhibit, was one executed for me by the Government survey, by data furnished by me to them, and expr4sses the view taken by them, in reference to lands of Kukuau 1st and 2nd and of land of Punahoa 2nd.
(Exhibit marked Exhibit AA).

Kukuau 1st is bounded on North side by Kukuau 2nd, Certificate No. 52, and in my resurvey of boundary between Kukuau 1st and 2nd I rigidly adhered where possible to the description on record given in the two Certificates of the boundary between the two lands.

The only changes made being those where bearings and distances on magnetic meridian were given between two pints on the extremities of a line, were altered to the bearings of such a line were referred by me to true meridian, and the length of that course or those courses were dominated by marks or monuments found at those particular points. I had already surveyed the boundary between these two lands from the sea coast to the lava flow for the Kukuau land Company as early as 1888 or before that, and the alotments, [sic] pieces sold by the [page 294] Kukuau Land Company, along boundary of Kukuau 1st followed the description in Certificate of Boundaries.

The land of Kukuau 2nd has been patented by survey, and I have followed the notes of survey given in the Patent, except changing Magnetic bearings, and altering distance to correspond with the true distances between marks and monuments that I found that agreed with those described in notes of survey given in Certificate of Boundaries.

I was accompanied by Mr. E.G. Hitchcock, one of the owners of Kukuau 2nd at time line was cut through woods from the lower edge of woods, from the gingers shown in description, through forest, to the end of the South 60° 50' West line Magnetic bearing, applying the magnetic Declination at the gingers, and running out said line by the true Meridian. The only change effected being the one of shortening this line from the length given in Certificate of 23,600 feet to 19,580 feet. Having for my authority the next course given by Mr. Lydgate, in the Certificate of 26,100 feet obtained by encroachment and cutting into land of Punahoa 2nd.

These are the only changes made in line between the two Kukuaus. The line having actually been cut through the woods, and the addition of a missing course and distance along Land Commission Award 4329B, Kanaina, owned until lately by Estate of Asa Clark and now owned by H. Hackfeld and Co.

In reference to the South boundary of the land adjoining Waiakea. The description given by Mr. Lydgate of this boundary agrees in the main with the description given in notes of survey made by William Webster about 1852, for Kamehameha III between the sea coast and the lower edge of the woods. With which boundaries I became acquainted in 1890 or 1891 when I surveyed them for the Waiakea Mill [page 295] Co., and at that time found a number of old monuments along old boundary, or a few feet distant from boundary North or South of it. At that time I also had the assistance of old Kamaaina, Punini, Manuia, Puaa and others now dead. The point, Kilohana, given by Webster, was found by me, and its location, accepted by Government Survey Office. From Kilohana I ran the line both toward sea shore, and to the lower edge of woods.

I surveyed first for W.H. Shipman from Kilohana to shore, and a couple of years later i surveyed from Kilohana to edge of woods. I faithfully followed out the Webster survey in making the present survey from Kilohana to Government road, and have also referred to the evidence taken when boundaries of Waiakea and Kukuau 1st were described before the Boundary Commissioner in such matters as I was in doubt, as to boundaries North east of Government road to volcano, and at the point described by the Lydgate survey at the sea beach in boundary of Kukuau 1st and 2nd, have applied the width for Kukuau 1st as given in Certificate No. 58 for Kukuau 1st. Assuming all acretions [sic] between said line and present sea beach, within external lines projected at right angles to present sea beach.

Cross-examined
I know that Mrs. J.L. Richardson applied to the Government for a patent for Kukuau 1st based on certificate No. 58, and it was not given to her, as the survey had been proved to be incorrect.

I adhered to the Webster survey to point on makai side of Volcano Street, and from that point I ran to the Kawa or jumping off place above Kumu spring.

The Commissioner reserved the right to examine the witness further, if he wishes to, and also for E.D. Baldwin to cross examine witnesses.
Case continued to Saturday July 14th, 1900.
Rufus A. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries, 3rd & 4th Judicial Circuits, Hawaiian Islands

[page 296]
Hilo, Hawaii, July 14th, 1900.
The Commission of Boundaries for the 3rd and 4th Judicial Circuits, Island of Hawaii, met according to adjournment, from the 2nd instant. Mr. A.B. Loebenstein and Mr. Carl Smith, both being absent from Hilo, attending the July term of Circuit Court, 4th Judicial Circuit, the case is continued until return of parties to Hilo, and notice of hearing is to be given personally to each of the agents for the interested parties.
Rufus A. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries, 3rd & 4th Judicial Circuits

Hilo, Hawaii, August 4th, 1900.
The Commission of Boundaries for the 3rd and 4th Judicial Circuits met at the office of A.B. Loebenstein for Mr. E.D. Baldwin to examine maps and cross question Mr. A.B. Loebenstein on all points that he wishes to. Notice having been personally given to all interested parties.
Present: E.D. Baldwin, Carl S. Smith and A.B. Loebenstein.

Question raised as to whether case can be closed today.

The Commissioner ruled that hearing go on, and question of closing case today, can be brought up and argued at close of hearing today.
A.B. Loebenstein
Cross examined, continued
By E.D. Baldwin for J.F. brown, Agent, Public Lands

Question by Commissioner: Why is it that you disregard entirely the boundary between Waiakea and Kukuau 1st from a point a short distance above Front Street as given in certificate of Boundaries of Kukuau 1st. No. 58, to point given in said certificate on Makai side of Front  Street?
[page 297]
Answer: the point below Front Street given in my survey as the extreme East angle station 95, on boundary between this land and Waiakea, is identical with that point on boundary of Waiakea and Kukuau 1st given in the Lydgate Survey, recorded in Certificate No. 58, of the Boundaries of Kukuau 1st, and noted therein as South 60° 00' East 320 feet to land of Waiakea, running across land, from land of Kukuau 2nd.

Question By E.D. Baldwin: Is not the second course below the lower corner of Kanakaole's kuleana on Kukuau 2nd described in Certificate of Boundaries as North 35° 12' east 350 feet to seashore described as running from a point above road instead of a point below road, as it should have been?
Answer: Yes.

Question: Has not the line below East corner of Kanaina's kuleana Land Commission Award 4239B been considered to have been run wrong by Lydgate as shown by the gap on Northwest side adjoining Ponohawai, and adjusted to run parallel to the boundaries of the second piece of Ponahawai, Certificate No. 47.
Answer: I do not know and it does not appear so, in the official map of the town of Hilo executed by E.D. Baldwin.

Question: Considering all the discrepances [sic] shown in the Certificate of Boundaries of Kukuau 1st at the lower end; why do you change the boundary starting from a little above Front Street on the boundary of Waiakea, and running to the seashore from the line so carefully run on the ground by myself, E.D. Baldwin, acting for all parties concerned, both the Lessees and the Government, and fenced by H. Hackfeld & Co.?
Answer: the application on the part of the owner of Kukuau 1st for a reopening and rehearing on the boundaries as described in Certificate of Boundaries No. 58, was based on the existence of errors and omissions in the Lydgate survey, on which this Certificate was [page 298] based. The fact of errors and omissions being clearly shown, would in my judgement as a surveyor, authorize one merely to correct such errors or supply such omissions where found, and not necessarily to discard the whole of such survey and which applies particularly to the case in question.

The lack of continuity and uniformity in the description of the boundary of Kukuau 1st on its West side, adjacent Kukuau 2nd have been covered by a study of the relations of Section 1 and 2 of boundary Certificate No. 52 of Kukuau 2nd which clearly shows the omission of the line along Land Commission Award No. 4239B Kanaina, as I have already indicated in my direct examination.

I could not professionally accept a point or fix a line on the boundary of this land and of Waiakea, without a previous determination from some known point, which i have done, and which conforms to the same points and lines along the sea beach, as shown on the Official Map of the town of Hilo.

I do not recognize the authority of either persons or officials, of arbitrarily settling upon lines or boundaries, which have the stamp of legal approval, except by means provided under the law.

Court adjourned until 1:30 p.m.

Commission of Boundaries met at 1:30 and waited until 2 p.m. for E.D. Baldwin to appear. At 2 p.m. E.D. Baldwin and Carl S. Smith appeared and argued for a continuance of the case for a few days.

Commissioner ruled that hearing go on as far as E.D. Baldwin could go today, and that then he would then hear arguments for and against a continuance of the case.
Cross questioning of A.B. Loebenstein continued by E.D. Baldwin.

Question: Has not Lydgate from a point a little [page 299] way above Front street, on the boundary of Waiakea, followed notes of survey of Waiakea made by William Webster to the lower edge of the woods?
Answer: It is given in the Boundary Certificate No. 58, land of Kukuau I but as an actual matter of fact, the lines of the Webster survey are from the woods to the sea beach and not from the beach to the woods.

Question: How did you fix the point above Front Street, that Lydgate took for his Initial point, and then adopted Webster's survey?
Answer: I discarded that point, for the reason that the Webster survey did not reach that point, and for the further reason that the traditions, and kamaaina evidence from the Volcano Road to the sea beach are matters of record.

Question: Does not Webster's survey tie the above point, the point in question to the Northwest corner of land of Piopio, survey of Piopio having been made by him?
Answer: It does.

Question: Then why did you disregard that distance, locating above mentioned point, when it had been located and recorded by William Webster, a reputable surveyor?
Answer: For the reason that the North West angle of Piopio, Certificate No. 29 is largely hypothetical and doubtful at this day. This being the same point as the one described in Certificate No. 29 of the Boundaries of Piopio, reading as follows: Commencing at the North West corner of Piopio at high water mark, opposite a stone marked PW &c. I have further, on repeated occasions followed out the boundaries of Piopio and have never been able to find or identify this particular point, nor been able to make it agree, either in bearing or distance with the point given by Webster on the line of Waiakea and Kukuau, and the point in question above Front Street. Had I adhered to the description I would have encroached and trespassed within boundaries of Waiakea, a land now [page 300] owned by the Government.

Question: Whenever you have had anything to do with Webster's surveys, did you not find them as a general thing, consistent surveys as compared to other Magnetic surveys?

Answer: I have found them superior, if anything to contemporaneous surveys excepting where boundaries were contiguous to Marsh or tide lands; although as a matter of fact, the doubtful interpretations on his part were balanced by the careful descriptions of pints to which his surveys led., by giving the names of lands or the delimitations of his bearings and distances by natural monuments and land marks.

Question by Commissioner: Is the line given by you, running toward seashore form the east corner of kuleana, Kanaina Land Commission Award 4239B the same line as the one given in Certificate of Boundaries of the portion of Kukuau 2nd that is situated on the makai side of Front Street, and also the line given in the Royal Patent No. 5706, of Kukuau 2nd?
Answer: It is the identical line described the Certificate of Boundaries of Kukuau 2nd, Apana 1, and also in the Royal Patent of Kukuau 2nd.

Question by Commissioner: From the lower edge of woods to the extreme South angle on Boundary of Waiakea that is between Stations 50 and 51 - did you follow the course and distance given in notes of survey given in the old Certificate of Boundaries of Kukuau 1st?
[Answer:] I did, only changing from Magnetic bearings to true bearings and I run the present survey out on the ground.

Question by E.D. Baldwin: From Stations 46 to 47 or course 47- in your notes of survey of Boundary between lands of Kukuau 1st and 2nd, did you follow the course and distance given in the [page 301] Patent of Kukuau 2nd?
Answer: I followed the course but not the distance.

Question by Commissioner: Why did you not follow the distance given in the Patent of Kukuau 2nd?
Answer: For reasons that I have already explained in my direct evidence.
The description in Certificate No. 52 of Kukuau 2nd from a point a little above Government road, Volcano Road to upper mauka angle, had been run by Lydgate along North boundary of Kukuau 2nd to a point within land of Punahoa 2nd, an award by survey, and also patented by survey and its upper or mauka line within land of Punahoa 2nd to the South West angle, where Kukuau 2nd turns toward sea coast, the South boundary following along land of Kukuau 1st.

Within the woods and along Kukuau 1st the Certificate indicates two long lines to a point at the lower edge of the woods marked by a clump of Gingers, planted by Mr. Lydgate, and noted by him.

The fact that a portion of Kukuau 2nd encroached beyond what Mr. Lydgate should have considered its legal boundary, that is to say, the South boundary of Punahoa 2d, would vitiate any claim for that portion of it. There was therefore presented to the surveyor the problem of arriving if possible, at the original intent of Mr. Lydgate, at the time these surveys were executed in 1873 or 1874.

In the one case by the running the line out down from above, the land of Kukuau 2nd would have exhibited a width disproportionate with the plans filed by Mr. Lydgate, and seriously cutting into Kukuau 1st. While on the other hand to have run out the full distance of the line from the gingers at lower edge of woods up, would result in practically cutting [page 302] land of Kukuau 1st in two. The presentation of these facts was duly made to the owners of both Kukuau 1st and Kukuau 2nd and an expression of opinion furthermore obtained from Mr. C.J. Lyons, at that time assistant in charge of the government survey bureau. In response to which I obtained his opinion on the facts of the case.

While I did not consider this in may way authorative [sic], but as merely indicating the views held by them. I submitted the same to the respective owners of both lands. And the cutting off of the line from the gingers to the angle in the woods was duly authorized and endorsed by them. I would further add that a surveyor when confronted with questions of this nature, will exercise his judgement, as to when or when not to adhere rigidly to a given description which shows clearly in the face of it., that followed out, it would result in an absurd interpretation. It is for this reason that the South line of Kukuau 1st from the lower edge of the woods beginning at the gingers, was not altered from the original descriptions, and the line along Waiakea from there on, both the course and distance were modified to conform to the South boundary of Punahoa 2nd which boundary would naturally dominate. I would further say that there is no evidence on record to show that either the Kukuau 1st and second boundary, or the Kukuau 1st and Waiakea boundary were ever actually run out on the ground from the gingers through the woods. From the woods to the seashore there are monuments or piles of stones on both side of land.

Case continued until Friday, August 10th, 1900, at 10 a.m.
Rufus A. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries, 3rd & 4th Judicial Circuits, Island of Hawaii
[page 303]
Case reopened Friday, August 10th, 1900
Cross examination continued

What is bearing of your course #95?
North 31° 14' East 747.6 feet
What is Webster's magnetic bearing?
North 32° 35' East 452 feet magnetic.

Does your bearing agree with Webster's?
No.
What is the bearing and distance of your course #94?
North 03° 19' East 410.7 feet true.
What is Webster's bearing?
North 4° 30' West 410 feet Magnetic.
Does your course agree with Webster's?
It is the same course allowing for change in time.

What is the bearing of your course #93?
North 48° 55' East 362 feet True.
What are Webster's bearing and distances from gully on Volcano Road to point near Kumu Spring?
There is no spring described in Webster's survey.

What are the two next bearings and distances in Webster's survey from gully on volcano Road?
North 36° 20' East 193 Magnetic
North 63° 50' East 257 feet
Does your course 93 agree with Webster's?
It does not.

Does line from Kilohana along Waiakea to seashore run over any part of 80-81 flow.
It does
About what distance is line on said flow?
About 3550 feet by courses, 3100 feet air line.
Is that distance shown on your map?
It is.

Government asks for map. Map is exhibited and distances verified.

Was this mass of lava there when Webster run his courses?
I don't think so.
[page 304]
Question by Commissioner. In going down from the fish pond wall toward the sea, did you find the old Iwi aina?
I did.
Of what did the iwi aina consist?
Of an old Kuauna of dirt capped by rock and stones and placed in a manner according to ancient custom.
About how far down?
Below the line of a fence which extends across Kukuau 1 above the line of Front Street.

Did you find above Front St. where Waialama had flowed toward Waiakea?
Yes.
Is it distinct?
Distinct to one who in my profession is accustomed to deal in land matter and monuments.

Did the Iwi Aina extend to it?
Yes, and beyond it toward the beach forming an angle of which one line is identical with original bank of Waialama, the other bank being the Kuauna which I described.

Did you examine and see if there were any other iwi ainas close to it going toward Waiakea and toward town?
There is another iwi aina going toward Waiakea but I did not consider it important enough to enter this controversy.
Where did it extend?
It extends towards Waiakea to near the end of course 94.
Is it a stony region?
It is not a stony region and the stones must have been quarried at some distance.
It is a stone of bluish gray appearance while the stone between Wailoa and Wailama is black and porous while this stone is denser and looks like the stone above Waiolama.

[page 305]
the time of construction of this Iwi aina and the purposes for which it was constructed are facts well known to old kamaainas and others.

How does your course 95 4un in reference to the Iwi aina?
Practically the same but having in view the elimination of short courses and distances for the purpose of better identification in the future, I abandoned a short distance from the lower end of the Kuauna, leaving it in Waiakea.

Did you ever test Webster's survey form the road to the beach to see where his last course ended at the seashore?
I have. About 80 feet from the end of said line and due east from my Waiakea Kukuau line.

Did you ever test it running in an easterly direction to see if the Piopio line was the same?
I did, finding it practically coincident.

Does the boundary run through the Keliikolani house?
It does and is so shown on the official maps.

In starting from lower edge of woods on boundary of Kukuau 1st and 2nd as given in Royal Patent South 67° 55' west and from that angle to the extreme mauka end of land, will it run into Punahoa 2nd as patented?
It will not. I have actually located the Southwest corner of Punahoa 2nd.

If you run line between Waiakea and Kukuau 1st as certified in Certificate #58 to the extreme Southwest corner of Kukuau 1 on Waiakea, will it cut Kukuau in two?
It will not.

Will it leave Kukuau 1st cut off by Waiakea?
It will have it as given by survey of Lydgate. [Continued Part 2 page 306]

[Kukuau 1st, Part 2, page 306]
The lines given by C.J. Lyons are not authoritative but are an office assumption, and are not corroborated by other authority.

Does a portion of Kukuau 2nd as patented extend into the land already patented as Punahoa?
It does.

Cross-examined by E.D. Baldwin.
How does the end of your line as given South 67° 55' west 19.580 feet agree with same point on Exhibit A? [AA? a second A is written over the question mark]
Identical and co-terminus.
Is the course given North 76° 36' 30" West 21,303 feet the same as shown on Exhibit A? [AA? a second A is written over question mark]
It is.

Mr. Smith asks: Have you any copy of the patent?
I have.
Mr. Baldwin introduces as evidence a map of the plan of Kukuau 2nd as surveyed by Lydgate (marked Exhibit C).

E.D. Baldwin, sworn,
Introduces a plan of Kukuau exhibit D by Baldwin, copy from Webster's original map of the lower end of Piopio and Waiakea, signed by C.J. Lyons, Exhibit E.

The Commissioner of Public lands consents to a reopening of Kukuau 1st, Boundary Certificate #58 on the ground of these being omissions and errors found in the Lydgate survey. This was for the purpose of correcting these errors and not for the purpose of fixing these inaccuracies by an exactly described survey. Patent was refused on the grounds that there were omissions, errors and also that both lines of Kukuau 1st on entering the woods were wrong and should be shortened back to agree with Kaumana and Kukuau 2nd adjustments which adjustments were [page 307] made by A.B. Loebenstien and always accepted up to this time. Report upon Kukuau 1 survey was made by C.J. Lyons who called the Minister of Interior's special attention to the above enumerated points.

Lydgate's survey of Kukuau 1st begins at the South West corner, from thence running to Kukuau 2nd and then down along Kukuau 2nd to the seashore. The lines of this survey it would be almost impossible to follow if it was not for his description of well known points, as he entered Hilo Town he described going to well known kuleana corners, but if his bearings and distances are run on the ground they will not strike these corners, but the corners, being well defined, are accepted as his actual points. As he nears the sea his survey has the same mixed condition and he apparently leaves out a course along the Kanaina kuleana, e.g. surveyors so assume and have added this course to his survey.

Course No. 43 of Lydgate's survey is described as running from the South East corner along first piece. Kukuau 2nd, Certificate No. 52.

The bearing of this course has also been assumed by all reliable surveyors to be erroneously located as plainly shown by survey of 1st piece, Certificate #52; Both lines of which have been adjusted by the owners concerned as plainly shown on Exhibit D.

It has been assumed in both these lines that Lydgate actually ran the line on the ground as adjusted and entered it in the survey wrong.

The Ponohawai survey line 2nd piece Certificate #47 is also by Lydgate and substantiates this assumption. Upon this showing it seems that Lydgate's surveys of Kukuau 1st and 2nd become perfectly unreliable at the seashore and cannot be used as a [page 308] basis for determining the width of Kukuau 1 along the seashore as shown upon Exhibit B. and described in Mr. Loebenstein's notes of survey of Kukuau 1st. For the more accurate determination of the Waiakea Kukuau seashore points, which point at its best must be a somewhat adjusted point from the very closely located old Webster seashore point which spot is now above Front Street inland owing to the sea accretion of beach and has been ascertained within a close degree of accuracy by its location from gully and Kumu Spring also distance 818 feet from the Northwest corner of Piopio as given in Webster's survey of Waiakea. This point was located by myself carefully in July 1898 for all parties concerned for both adjoining lessees and the Government. All of which parties wished the line located and fixed so that it could be fenced, and that they would have no further trouble about the same. The Waiakea Sugar Co. people were anxious to have the line run in a hurry as their contractor, Jack Wilson, was fast completing his contract of leveling off the sea beach, part of Waiakea, but I took time enough to make a thorough study of the matter obtaining from Honolulu a copy of Webster's original notes of survey of Waiakea and then located all known points on the beach after which I ran said line from Webster's point nearly parallel to the adjusted line of Kukuau 1st and Kukuau 2nd which is about perpendicular to the somewhat circular sea beach. This line is now fenced by Hackfeld & Co. Lumber Yard.

I claim that it is based upon an accurate magnetic survey by Webster and is as near the truth of the matter as any surveyor could get at the same, which the line shown upon Exhibit B is based upon a [page 309] survey which by the mere wish to reopen the Boundary certificate is shown not only to be unreliable but inaccurate.

We also take exceptions to the line of Kukuau 1st and Waiakea and Mr. Loebenstein's notes of survey from seashore to Kilohana.

Course #95 of Mr. Loebenstein's surveys is north 31° 14' East true.

Webster's magnetic line is North 32° 35' East ; this line is plainly ignores Webster's survey. Webster's Magnetic line changed to true should be North 39° 55' East True.

Course numbered as 94 of Loebenstein's survey is North 93° 19' West True 410.7 feet.

Webster's magnetic course of this same line North 04° 30' West 410 feet Magnetic making a declination of 7° 49' which agrees very nearly with Webster's survey.

Course numbered as 93 of Loebenstein's survey is North 48° 55' East True 362 feet. This course is substituted for Webster's two very accurately described courses. North 63° 50' East Magnetic 257 feet and North 36° 20' East magnetic 193 feet showing a declination on the first course of over 20° and on the second course of 12° 35'.

This  absolute disregard of an accurately described survey we most decidedly object to as there has been no reason or evidence produced or shown that these lines of Webster are wrong. On the contrary, Webster described course North 33° 0' East Magnetic 427 feet as running to the makai side of the road at the crossing of a small gully which small gully is now plainly visible and in existence at the present day. The only other small gulch is some 200 feet south of this point but there is no evidence of a gully at Mr. Loebenstein's point below the Volcano Road. Webster's survey plotted from Kilohana hits this gully nearly exactly as well as Kumu Spring also comes within a close distance [page 310] of the point at his seashore which measures 818 feet from the Northwest corner of Piopio as described in Webster's survey.

Question by Commissioner: Have you runt he line on the ground from Kilohana and did you find the Puhala tree mentioned by Webster?
Answer: I have not run the line on the ground, but have plotted it on the map.

This certainly does not show any necessity of disregarding any lines of this survey which was made at a time when kamaainas were well posted in regard to the Crown boundaries and by a man who was not only careful with his work but has shown that he does not even get list in gulches and swamps.

The line as described in Mr. Loebenstein's survey from Kilohana to Kumu Spring gradually works itself over on to Waiakea land by his shortening a few of the lines as given by Webster. I refer to a few of the courses from near Kilohana down and mainly by the application of too large a declination.

Mr. E.D. Preston of the United States coast survey while here, determined the exact declination of Hilo which was very small and so he reported, also in magnetic observations by the said E.D. Preston of different parts of the world he records an average annual yearly change of form one minute to two and a half minutes and shows that the period are very irregular. Some years it is increasing or decreasing at the rate of one and a half minutes and then changes to two and a half minutes yearly.

Mr. Lyons of the Government Survey is our authority for a change of about one and a half minutes per annum here, which I have had many opportunities to verify and have found this annual change [page 311] generally a little larger than one and a half minutes per annum change.

This line plots as I have said accurately from Kilohana to gully and Kumu Spring by the application of Hilo's average declination of about 8° 30' or 7° 20' for the year 1851.

That  there are local attractions and exceptions to an average declination in certain spots upon the line I am well award of but as shown by a study of the differences of Loebenstein's and Webster's courses the declination is about on an average of 7° 50' for 1851, which is large and accounts fully for the swinging of this long line on to Waiakea land little by little as it is run down from Kilohana.

Also would like to call your attention to the fact that this line from Kilohana crosses about 3400 feet on the new flow of 1880 and 1881 which mass of rock would change all magnetic conditions existing at the time of Webster's survey and make it impossible to run said line from Kilohana makai under the same condition that Webster did.

I will refer to another inconsistency of Mr. Loebenstein's survey which is one of the points I referred to upon which Patent was refused formerly and that is the mauka or forest boundary line of this land, as referred to in surveys. So as to understand this matter and better present the same, I have prepared a copy of Lydgate's original survey of Kukuau 1st and 2nd on a scale of 2000 feet to 1 inch.
Exhibit AA and C.

My object is to first show that there is some general radical error in Lydgate's work supposed to be made in his plots which can be better understood by laying his original plans o the more accurately detailed plan marked as Exhibit AA, nearly all of which upper located points are from Mr. Loebenstein's work and will call special reference to the [page 312] point Ka waa o Ka Moi, on the Kaumana Kukuau 2nd boundary which point has been assumed and accepted by the Government as located by Mr. Loebenstein correctly which point does not agree with Mr. Lydgate's map.

The point also became the mean of locating Kukuau 1st and 2nd point described as end of course numbered 47 of Loebenstein's survey, which course was shortened 4020 feet so as to make it agree in a similar position with the location of Kawaa o ka Moi. We claim from the same errors in Lydgate's survey and reasoned that Waiakea and Kukuau point in the woods opposite this point should be similarly located and the distance in the course numbered in Mr. Loebenstein's survey 51 shortened 4020 feet so as to agree with a similar shortening on Kukuau 1st and 2nd line and that from these points the bearings be run as described by Lydgate.

At 6 p.m. the Court adjourned to 9 o'clock Saturday, August 11, 1900.

Hilo, Hawaii, August 11, 1900
Commission of Boundaries met according to adjournment.

Present: A.B. Loebenstein and E.D. Baldwin.

E.D. Baldwin continued.
Cross-examined by A.B. Loebenstein

Question: You say in your direct evidence that the lines now fenced in by Hackfeld & Co. was run by you after a very careful survey?
Answer: I did
Question: In running this line you ran it as the boundary between Waiakea and Kukuau 1st?
Answer: I did.
Questions: Will you please state to the Commissioner what the difference is in the bearing between the Certificated line of Ponahawai towards the sea from Front St. on the side adjoining Kukuau 2nd and the West line of Kukuau 2nd from the common angle at [page 313] the upper edge of Front St. given in both the Certificates of Ponahawai and Kukuau 2nd as a redwood post and buried bottles at the road near the beach, meaning Front Street.
Answer: I do not remember, or keep in my memory all existing bearings, but that these two bearings are clearly set forth in the two certificates or parts of Certificates above referred to and the difference of those two bearings can be easily ascertained.

Question: How long is it since you have personally investigated the difference between these two bearings?
Answer: It was during the time I was making the survey of Hilo town and vicinity, as shown by the Government Survey Map dated 1891, but since then I have had occasion to relocate and study up the boundaries in connection with a redwood post and buried bottles at the road near the beach.

Question: Do you recognise [sic] this map as a map executed by you?
Answer: I do, as a partly finished copy of my amp.

Question: Partly finished in what respect?
Answer: That all the details as shown on my own original map are not shown in this copy.

Question: By details, have you reference to Boundary lines?
Answer: I think most of the Boundaries lines are shown.

Question: Did you, or did you not state in your testimony that you ranged out the line between Kukuau and Waiakea at and from the sea beach as now indicated by a fence, and which you located by a reference and study of what you considered the true line of Kukuau 1st and 2nd and adjusted to the Ponohawai line as certificated?
Answer: I did not make any such statement.

Question: Did you, or did you not state that the Kukuau 1st and 2nd boundary line, from the North East angle of the Kanaina kuleana was run on an erroneous bearing, and that therefore the width of Kukuau 1st from the end of that line, would be based on incorrect assumption?
I refer to Exhibit D.

[page 314]
Answer: In making the statement I said it was assumed by all reliable surveyors that Lydgate had run this line erroneously and that the width of Kukuau 1st from the end of that line was based on incorrect assumption.

Question: Then what did you assume as the bearing of the correct line between Kukuau 1st and 2nd?
Answer: I never had occasion to make surveys for settling the Kukuau 1st and 2nd line at the seashore.

Question: Referring again to your Exhibit D, will you state the adjusted lines of the Kukuaus, based on similar reasons for adjusting the North boundary of Kukuau 2nd, will you explain where, from what point and to what point you would assign the width of Kukuau 1st at the sea beach as given by Mr. Lydgate in certificate No. 58. Kukuau 1st?
Answer: If determining the width of Kukuau 1st at the sea beach is to be based on Lydgate's survey, which I now refer to the certificate of Kukuau 1st, not patented Certificate of Kukuau 2nd, which survey in said certificate of Kukuau 1st is proved erroneous at a point just above this line, by the assumed ommission [sic] of a course along the Kanaina kuleana, that by this showing Lydgate's survey as given in Kukuau 1st is erroneous and cannot be used as a basis for determining the sea beach width of Kukuau 1st.

Note: A.B. Loebenstein files Royal Patent No. 5706 of Kukuau 2nd as Exhibit F.

Question: You state Mr. Baldwin assumed, assumed by whom?
Answer: I would state that I assume that a course is left out along the Kanaina kuleana and that such is the fact is very apparent by examining the Lydgate surveys.

Question: You stated in your direct evidence that the lines of the Webster survey from Kilohana down towards the sea beach, had not been accurately run out on the ground? [page 315]
[Answer:] I said that the line as run by Mr. Loebenstein, as described in his notes of survey and shown on map marked Exhibit B, will not run from Kilohana to the sea according to Webster's survey near Kilohana, mainly an application of two [sic too] large a declination had thrown this line, little by little over onto Waiakea. I would add, which is plainly shown by Mr. Loebenstein's line striking at a point below the Volcano Road, about 100 feet South of the small gully, described in Webster's survey.

Mr. Loebenstein: I object to the answer as it does not state actual facts.

Mr. Baldwin. I would like to say my evidence is already in, and no objections made to it as in direct.
Objection overruled.

Question: Have you run out the lines of the Webster Survey from the point at the lower edge of the woods to Kilohana, and from Kilohana to the Volcano Road?
Answer: I have not, I have only tested the same on accurate maps of the vicinity in question.

Question: Then you have not, as an actual fact, run out any portion of this boundary line on record as the Webster survey, between well known points or monuments on the ground?
Answer: I have located and occupied very accurately points of the Webster survey below the Volcano road, and sea shore, but have not runt he said line on the ground, above the Volcano Road to Kilohana or from Kilohana to the woods.

Question: Is it your invariable practice to apply the overage declination or change in the magnetic meridian in all cases?
Answer: I generally apply the average magnetic declination in all cases, which conditions of new lava flows, and buildings, stone or wood one also fences and walls have been built since any old survey was made, these conditions referred to changing the magnetic declination in such a way that it makes it almost [page 316] impossible to run the old survey lines under the same conditions as they were originally run.

Question: Is it not a fact that you have entirely disregarded the application of the annual change and declanation [declination] of the Metcalf surveys?
Answer: I would say that we, the government survey, generally have, upon many proofs shown upon the ground in running the Metcalf old surveys that his instrument read about 1° too large. I would also state that I have Mr. C.J. Lyons as my authority, as far as I remember, that he had obtained Metcalf's original instrument by which he made his surveys, and that he had compared the same with Standard Magnetic needles.

Question: And is that Hypothesis borne out by work actually run out on the ground between well known points?
Answer: I have generally found it so.

Question: Suppose you had not known about this peculiarity of Metcalf's instrument, but had merely the knowledge of a line between two well known and marked points, accepted as indicating a boundary, by a line run from one to the other, would you have disregarded the actual bearing of such a line by an adherence to the theory of a certain annual change in the Magnetic Meridian?
Answer: Well known and marked points on the boundary, if they are generally found to be near the old survey lines as run, are generally accepted as those lines.

You have called attention to the accuracy of the Webster survey, will you please state whether the Government, which owns both the lands of Waiakea and Piihonua, have adhered to the lines and descriptions given by Webster in the survey of Waiakea adjoining Piihonua, Kaaumana, Kukuau 1st and Kukuau [page 317] 2nd.

There is a large tract of land that up to the present day stands between Webster's survey of Waiakea, and Lydgate's survey of Piihonua. I know of no understanding between the Government and the Lessees of Piihonua and Waiakea, to whom the said tract belongs. Lydgate made surveys of Kukuau 1st and 2nd and of the adjoining lands and also of Piihonua, which have been certificated. Kukuau 2nd has been patented which differs from Webster's survey.

All of which surveys seem to disagree with Punahoa 2nd which has been already surveyed and patented which seems to show that kamaaina's evidence was hard to get for locating the points of the boundaries in the woods. In the evidence formerly taken before the Commissioner of boundaries of the upper part of Humuula, along the upper parts of Piihonua and Waiakea, which evidence I had an opportunity to go very thoroughly over when trying to locate on the ground the upper points of Piihonua and Waiakea.

This evidence seemed to be clear, and agree fairly well up to point Puoo and a few points below, at Kaeewai, and Kaeleku. Beyond this point towards Waiakea, did not seem to be clear. In fact I was unable to make out any defined points on the Waiakea boundary on the Hamakua side of Kipu and Pohakuloa on the Waiakea boundary along Keauhou and Humuula.

In fact the Kamaaina in this evidence referred to on the Humuula boundary referred to numerous points which seemed to differ, and I was unable to locate or ascertain the same the same [sic] from the evidence, with the exception that they seemed to agree on a Mawae as being the corner of Waiakea and Piihonua. That Lydgate took a different Mawae is plainly shown by the two surveys Waiakea and Piihonua also differences and overlaps in the surveys below, [page 318] showed that both Lydgate and Webster had great difficulty in ascertaining the exact boundary points from the kamaaina in the days those surveys were made. The Webster Mawae seems to have been overrun by the 1855 lava flow. Lydgate's Mawae is some way below Webster's Mawae on the 1855 flow. The Government does not or has not, that I know of, claimed that Webster's lines extending from the upper end of the woods to his Mawae should be the line of Waiakea, and that numerous flows on the mountain side seemed to mix up the old kamaainas in getting at the actual boundary points above the woods to the above mentioned lands.

Commissioner asks E.D. Baldwin.
Where do you claim that the unsettled portion between Piihonua and Waiakea commences?
I will file an exhibit showing where the unsettled portion between Piihonua and Waiakea is situated.

Question by Mr. Loebenstein: You stated that the Mawae located by Lydgate was not identical with Webster's.
I did.
Will you state where the Webster's mawae is located?
I stated formerly.
Will you state how you located the Webster mawae?
I did not locate the same on the ground. I made an effort to find his mawae and locate the same, if possible. I ascertained the approximate position from his survey lines from Kulani and Kipu Hills. I did not run these lines on the ground but ascertained the approximate position of the mawae on the map, went to this place about which place I could tell from my many points located upon the 1880-81 and especially upon the 1855 flow and, as far as I remember, the place was either covered by the 1855 or 1881 flow.

Why then, Mr. Baldwin, admitting the [page 319] accuracy of Webster's surveys, did you in your report to the Government file with them a map which fixes the boundary of Waiakea and Piihonua on Lydgate's mawae?
I did not file any such map.

Loebenstein. I call attention to Exhibit G, entitled "Traced from E.D. Baldwin's Government Survey Map of Mt. [mountain] for Mr. A.B. Loebenstein, January 16, 1894, with added lines, C.J.L.

By Mr. Baldwin: I would like to add in explanation that I object to having a tracing filed marked as Tracing from E.D. Baldwin's Government Survey map of Mt. When such tracing is not a fac similar copy of my mountain map which map is on file in the Government Survey Office and can be referred to at any time to prove that this copy is not a fac similar copy of the same.  Said tracing as filed as Exhibit G has numerous noes and boundary lines which are plainly added by Mr. C.J. Lyons and are in his handwriting on Exhibit G.

You stated Mr. Baldwin, that you had approximately located the position of Webster's mawae. Did you run out or ascertain the bearing and distance from that point to point at lower edge of woods?
I did not.

You are not then prepared to state whether the bearing and distance are correct?
Generally speaking, Webster's surveys are correct for Magnetic Survey. I did not test this however.
Do you know the point Kipu?
I do.
Do you know the point meant by him as a pile of stones at end of course North 33° West 36800 feet.

At the time I was at Kulani Hill triangulating from Kulani station. It was my intention to locate accurately Webster's Kipu point as well as the above mentioned heap of stones and had with me at that time Kamaki as guide and Kamaaina. He with Young Chamberlain cleared a line from a station above Kulani to a spot which he called this pile of stones, e.g. the corner of [page 320] Keauhou joining Waiakea. He showed a long stone called Pohakuloa at the boundary point. I did not personally go to this point. Soon afterward being called to Honolulu we did not traverse or locate the line.

Then you do not know whether this bearing agreed or otherwise with Webster's?
I did not test the point.
Do you know the point Mawae on the Volcano Road?
I know the Mawae on the Volcano Road at the boundary of Waiakea and Keaau.
Is it a well known land mark?
It is.

Do you know the hill known as Kulani?
I do.
Did you conform to the Webster description of the line between Mawae and the point 2000 feet from the top of the hill called Kulani?
I did.
We carried Webster's line to the top of the hill. He described it as going to the foot.

We accepted the line on his magnetic bearing from the top of the hill to the first station in woods above Olaa on the distance given by Lydgate from the top of the hill to this point and from these, there was a slight adjustment of line to mawae.

Having described Mr. Webster's survey of Waiakea as an accurate survey which should not be disregarded, why have you disregarded the bearing and distance given by him from Mawae to that point 2000 feet below Kulani Hill and why have you disregarded the points given by him in his survey of Waiakea along the upper boundary tho this point Mawae and thence to the lower edge of woods?

In regard to the Kulani Point this point was certifcated in both Olaa and Keauhou survey which certificates we had to go by. The enormous size of Kulani Hill may account for part of the difference in running from Kulani [page 321] to mawae. Webster stated to the foot of Kulani Hill. We assumed his course and bearing on running to the foot of the hill directly in line with the top, which is our assumption, and running this line from our assumed point may account for our not hitting Mawae exactly as there is nothing to show in Webster's survey what foot of Kulani Hill he took.

In referring to Webster's surveys being accurate I would like to state that I always referred to its accuracy as referred or compared with all other magnetic surveys, whoever made by.

I would like to state that I have had no occasion to run the line at the edge of woods joining Waiakea and Kukuau 1st therefore have not disregarded the same, but it is generally assumed by the Government as this line already interferes with settled boundaries, that it should be disregarded.

A.B. Loebenstein: You are then aware of a fact that the line from mawae interferes with settled boundaries?
I believe it does but have not actually plotted the same upon accurate maps to test the same.

It is your opinion as a surveyor that a settled boundary would hold against a survey or description which does not have the force of a legal document.
It certainly should.

Referring again tot he Webster line from Mawae to Kulani, is it not a fact that this line is brought to within 2000 feet of the top of the hill?
It is so stated, in Webster's survey.

Did you not state in your direct evidence that the Webster survey being an accurate survey should not be disregarded?
I so stated in my evidence and referred to the special points that is the boundary from Kilohana to the seashore.

Had you any reason to believe that the line from Mawae to Kulani was a less accurate line than the line from Kilohana to the seashore? [page 322]
I had no reason to believe so.

Is not a fundamental proposition in law, as well as in survey practically, that precedence must be given not alone to natural and marks but also to artificial monuments where found and identified. as against mere metes and bounds?
It is.

In the survey of a line such as the one between Kilohana and the seashore, and from Kilohana to the woods, would you adhere to a theoretical correction of change in the magnetic meridian as against well known land marks recorded not alone as evidence but further more actually found on the ground?
In regard to the theoretical change in the Magnetic meridian, I would state that theory ahs by long practise [sic] become established facts also that the declination or the average established declination can be applied to boundaries exactly which is clearly shown and substantiated, in running the line from Kilohana towards the seashore, a mass of new rock has a tendency to enlarge the declination which in this case of running from Kilohana towards the seashore would throw the Webster line gradually towards and onto Waiakea. In referring to the line as run from Kilohana of a to makai side of road at the crossing of a small gully by applying the average declination to this line from Kilohana to the said gully. This line will hit this gully almost exactly and in running from this said gully along Webster's courses, and distances as given in his surveys towards the sea, we not only strike Kumu Spring but the point of the North West corner of Hanalei fish pond, the line runs practically along the Iwi Aina or Kuauna to the point at Webster's seashore, which point agrees nearly with the distance 818 feet given in Webster's survey to the Northwest corner of Piopio. This shows that by applying the average Declination corrected for the average and change from 1851 the year of Webster's survey to the present [page 323] day not only brings the survey down from a well known point Kilohana but to other well known points such as small gully at the Volcano road, Kumu Spring and the Northwest corner of Hanalei fish pond. It also agrees with Webster's own distance mentioned in his survey tieing [sic] his seashore to the Northwest corner of Piopio.

Had you known of land marks or monuments on the boundary of Waiakea and Kukuau 1st between Kilohana and the point below the Volcano road, would you then have applied your theoretical and actually change in magnetic Meridian?
If there were any well known, well described points that could be determined, as the points of Webster's line, they certainly would have had weight in my consideration.

Would you, or would you not, have made such points dominate as against bearings and distances?
I depends entirely about what the points in question area.

Given, a point between the North angle of Court House and the South angle of Mr. Severance's house, the bearing given in a Certificate description as North 33° West 250 feet, the actual bearing however between these two said points being North 34° West 263 feet which course and distance would you as a surveyor be called upon to adopt.

I would like to state that we are here to consider the boundaries in question and that the question has no bearing upon the boundaries in question therefore, I do not wish to worry my brain in thinking it out.

By A.B. Loebenstein: Referring to a map of the Town of Hilo made by you somewhere about 1891, on which you indicate certain lines and boundaries, will you state on what assumption of annual magnetic change you projected the line of Kukuau 1st and Waiakea from a point above Land Commission Award 2663 Kahue to the point at Government Road. The boundary line leaving the kuleana at the extreme Northeast angle of same, and I now file the map as Exhibit H.

I would say that I plotted said line on an average declination as referred to Webster's well [page 324] known points below the volcano road to the first course below said Northeast corner of Land Commission Award 2663 Kahue also from said course as shown through said Northeast corner from Lydgate's notes of survey given in Certificate of Boundaries #58, which describes the course as mentioned by me as being the first course below Land Commission Award 2663, as running South 10° 0' West subsequently having obtained a copy of Webster's original notes of survey, which gives the same course as running North 10° 0' West on referred to as running in the direction we mentioned as South 10° East. The course as I plotted it before would not hit if carried mauka in all its courses Kilohana, but as Lydgate states, in his surveyor reaching Webster's line thence along the land of Waiakea in accordance with the survey of Webster as far as the edge of the woods, he evidently assumed Webster's survey, therefore the line as plotted by me from this first point mentioned as being the first point North of the Northeast corner of Land Commission Award 2663 Kahue is not in accordance with Webster's as shown on Map of Hilo Exhibit H. From said above mentioned point the course as shown plotted on my map of Hilo, Exhibit H is certainly wrong and should be according to Webster's survey as shown upon Exhibit D.

Do I understand you to say, Mr. Baldwin, that from the Government Road to the course which you give as South 10° West Magnetic 268 feet in Certificate 58 of the Lydgate survey, which you did not project the same as on the course given by Webster, is in all other respects identical with the Webster survey to the said point? Referring to Exhibit H.

I say that question is ambiguous to me and I do not quite understand the latter part of said question.

Is your line between Waiakea and Kukuau 1st beginning at the Government Road to the beginning of line which in your copy of Map of Hilo Town (filed as Exhibit H) and plotted on a course of South 10° West 268 feet according to certificate #58, identical with the Webster survey?
It is.

[page 325]
Did you run out this line on the ground?
I did not.

Did you arrive at the result indicated in the copy filed as Exhibit H, by an application of the change in the Magnetic Meridian since 1851 as you have before indicated?
I applied an average magnetic Declination of as far as I remember, 8° 30' corrected for annual change from 1851 to the date of this map which, I believe, made the average declination about 7° 20', as far as I recollect.

Mr. Baldwin, if I recollect rightly, is this the same declination which is your direct evidence you make as the average declination from Kilohana down?
It is, practically.

And you have applied this Declination irrespectively of local conditions such as the lava flow mentioned and the general lack of uniformity which at points at not great distance one from the other are matters of frequent occurrence?
I would like to state that I have applied this average declination with a full knowledge of the general local attractions that may be considered in treating of magnetic surveys and especially in consideration of great changes upon the grounds over which Webster ran his line in 1851.

How could you have obtained this information without an actual investigation on the ground, knowing by your own experience that the deviation of some points is much greater than at others?
If one long portion of this line as described from Kilohana to the Volcano road of a length as shown i the cross examination of 3400 feet becomes covered with a mass of new rock I hold that it is about absolutely impossible to follow the magnetic survey line made in 1851 over this mass of rock and retrace it above on the rock exactly over the identical points which were run by Webster in 1851. I hold that as this mass of rock of 1880-1881 flow has overrun this line it is sufficient reason to show that some average declination [page 326] must be applied to locate Webster's old line from Kilohana running towards the Volcano Road.

Commissioner asks: Do you mean that you must allow the same average declination on the portion between Kilohana and the road that is not covered by the new lava flow?
I have not claimed that this average declination should be applied to at all points on that line.  Have tested it on the map but not on the ground.

You have stated, Mr. Baldwin, both in your direct examination and in your cross examination you have testified an accurate survey purporting to be a description of the boundaries of Kukuau 1st between Kilohana and the point at or below the Government Road. You have also stated that you have applied the same test from the Government Road to a point at the beginning of the South 10° West line there is a discrepancy of nearly 75 feet in the direction of the line going toward Kilohana?

The tracing filed as Exhibit H of my Hilo Town Map is a copy from another tracing made at my office which tracing at my office was made some years ago from my original map on file in the Government Survey Office, which original map is also a copy from my working sheet filed in said Government Survey Office, making Exhibit H. The tracing in my office is considerably worn from use and repeatedly carrying it out through the town by several parties who have asked for the same which has caused the same to become somewhat distorted and stretched so that a copy of it cannot be filed here to test for minor discrepancies in distances. This copy of my Hilo map, Exhibit H, was not traced at my office to file for showing exact distances.
[page 327]
This tracing marked Exhibit D, has it been made from the same tracing as Exhibit H?
It is, and is a sketch map drawn up from said tracing so as to better show the discrepancies between Webster's line and Loebenstein's lines.

You state the discrepancies between Webster's line and Loebenstein's line. Do you refer to Webster's line as you understand it?
Yes, as surveyed by Webster.
And as run out on the ground by you?
I stated formerly that I did not run out the line on the ground.

Commissioner asks: you stated that in fixing Hackfeld's line of fence you took the sea point of Webster's survey?
I took the sea point of Webster's Survey as near as it could be run referring it to his described point at gully at Volcano Road to Kumu Spring then to the Northwest corner of Hanalei fish pond, which Northwest corner or Kuauna is a somewhat broad and rounded corner and it is not shown exactly just which part of this rounded corner is the exact spot, but by running from a spot in this kuauna to Webster's sea beach point it is practically the same course and runs about along the somewhat irregular iwi aina or Kuauna. I adjusted this point lightly within a few feet so as to make it correspond with the distance from the Northwest corner of Piopio. I applied the local declination.

Question by Commissioner: In starting from Webster's sea point and running from thence to the sea shore as the boundary between Waiakea and Kukuau, did you run that line on the assumption that the patented line of Kukuau 2nd and adjoining Kukuau 1st was wrong[?].
Answer: I did not. I ran it on the assumption that it should run perpendicular to the sea coast which is the common law in running boundaries over accretions from the sea. I did state in my former evidence that I found this line as I ran [page 328] it which is now fenced by Hackfeld & Co.'s lumber fence just about parallel to the fence that was at that time on the adjusted line of the Kukuau's as adjusted by agreement between the owners.

Question by Commissioner: where the corner of Kukuau 1st and Kukuau 2nd is fixed by patent of Kukuau 2nd and a Certificate of Kukuau 1st issued in accordance with that patented and giving the width of beach line of Kukuau 1st that existed when certificate was granted, why did you entirely disregard the width of Kukuau 1st as certificated to, in running from Webster's corner to the beach along Hackfeld's fence without certificate being set aside and assume that the patented line was an error?

(At this point a map by Mr. Loebenstein showing lower end of Kukuau 1st was filed by request of Commissioner and marked I.)

I, as a reliable surveyor, was forced to disregard the survey as given on Kukuau 1st which ahs proven to erroneous and that said survey of the Kukuau 1st does not describe the course as shown beginning at the Northeast corner of Certificate of Boundaries #52 1st piece of Royal patent 5706 as shown upon Exhibit D and Exhibit I.

That the magnetic course of Lydgate in Kukuau II, certificate #58 described, as North 29° 50' East 380 feet is described as running from the North east corner of certificate of Boundaries #52, 2nd piece also Royal Patent 5706 and that the course described as Magnetic North 35° 12' East 350 feet to seashore is described as running from the end of the first mentioned course and that the course Magnetic South 60° 0' East 320 feet to Waiakea is described as running from the end of the last mentioned course, which three courses starting as they do from a definitely named point Northeast corner of Certificate #52, 2nd piece part of Royal Patent 5706 and that the said three courses say nothing about joining certificate of Boundaries #52 1st piece also part of Royal Patent 5706, that the two first named courses which are part and parcel [page 329]. I claim of this survey as described in Kukuau I being the line as shown on Exhibit D known as Lydgate's width of Kukuau at sea beach about 307 feet mauka of this line as shown upon Exhibit D and Exhibit I which line as brought 307 feet mauka was at the time Lydgate's survey still upon the sea beach and the mere assumption of surveyor that Lydgate omitted a course between these points as mentioned by Lydgate's courses and bearings above is only their assumed idea in regard to this boundary at the sea coast. I have not referred to the patented line of Kukuau 2nd part of Royal Patent 5706 piece 1, as this survey is not mentioned in the Certificate of Kukuau 1st and that I have just shown by Lydgate's survey of Kukuau 1st as described in Boundary Certificate #58 that his sea beach width is not described as running from the Northeast corner of said first part of Royal Patent 5706 and that this discrepancy in Mr. Lydgate's survey of Kukuau 1st as by Certificate #58 is shown and is ample evidence for a reliable surveyor to disregard the survey as given in Kukuau I Certificate.

Question by Commissioner: Did you, in making your map of the town of Hilo, Exhibit H, disregard the line of Kukuau as patented by patent of Kukuau 2nd and make Kukuau 1st and above sea beach?
I did not. I assumed Lydgate had left out a course.

But in fixing the width of Kukuau 1st, in fixing the Hackfeld line, you assumed that he had not left out a course?
I stated that I assumed Lydgate's survey was inaccurate and therefore did not use it.

Did you know that his last course to seashore is identical with the line in Patent 5706 Piece I, described as running from Kanaaina [Kanaina?] Kuleana North 35° 12' East 350 feet along boundary of Kukuau I and that both courses terminated in Patent of Kukuau II and Certificate of Kukuau I terminated at sea shore?
I did.

Did not that Patent establish corner of [page 330] Kukuau 1st and Kukuau 2nd at the sea beach?
If said survey can be proved as a correct survey.
Does not the law fix that corner for the Boundary Commissioner?
It does, and specially states so in the Civil Laws, Hawaii, P. 143, Section 282.
And why does the surveyor have more powers than the Commissioner of Boundaries?
It is the fist time I knew I had.

By Commissioner: Did you not state that you paid no attention to that corner in fixing the width of Kukuau 1st and running the Hackfeld line?
I did in reference to Kukuau 1st boundary and not in reference in any way whatever to first piece in Royal Patent 5706.

And did you assume that Lydgate's beach line along sea shore did not run from lower corner of Kukuau 2nd and 1st as patented in first piece described in Patent of Kukuau 2nd?
I assumed this on my Hilo map marked as Exhibit H but in my location of the Hackfeld line I did not consider Lydgate's survey in reference to this beach line accurate enough to take it into account.

And then in case the Government had sold the land adjoining Kukuau 1st and patented it by your survey, would they have violated the law?
They would have violated no law.

If they had issued a patent to Kukuau 1st on your survey, would it be in accordance with law.
It would be more in accordance with the law as an accurately described survey, if said survey, which in this case as I can only refer to one line, the Hackfeld fence line ahs been settled according to law.

Has it been certified to by a Commissioner of Boundaries?
My line as run by me and fenced by Hackfeld has not been before a Commissioner of Boundaries.
[page 331]
You stated that the survey given in piece 1 Royal Patent 5706 is erroneous. I what point is it erroneous?

The first piece in Royal Patent 5706 has been assumed to be erroneous on its western boundary where it joins Ponahawai Certification #47, 2nd piece have been made by Mr. Lydgate and that the magnetic bearings of the courses do not agree on the referred to west line. The assumption that the error was on the patented side of Kukuau 2nd was based upon the evidence shown upon the ground of the west line of Ponahawai , 2 piece, Certification #47, which line has been now fenced and I think the same was fenced some years ago, and also the assumption was taken by Mr. C.J. Lyons in an understanding with the Kukuau 2nd people that the Government claimed this as the line that Lydgate had run for both these piece of Ponahawai and Kukuau 2nd, and that Lydgate had made a similar error on both sides of the first piece described in said patent.

Does that piece plot larger area than called for in the patent?
I have not plotted it, so I do not know.

Then, it is merely based on an assumption by C.J. Lyons as a surveyor that Lydgate did not run to those points.
It is not only based upon the assumption of C.J. Lyons but upon my assumption and also the Kukuau 2nd owner's assumption which is plainly shown upon my Exhibit D. That the Kukuau 2nd owners were willing to make adjustments based upon this assumption and actually did make such adjustments between the owners of Kukuau 1st and Kukuau 2nd and Ponahawai 1st and 2nd piece.

And you have no evidence to show that Lydgate did not run to the points given in the Patent?
We have no further evidence than is clearly shown upon Exhibit D and the willingness to make adjustments on these assumptions.

You have no evidence to show that Lydgate [page 332] did not find evidence that there was a mistake in the running of Ponahawai line, when he came to runt he Kukuau 2nd line, and so adopted the Northwestern sea corner of Kukuau 2nd as patented when he went on the grounds with kamaainas?

It does not seem to be when all parties concerned seemed to be willing to adjust the Kukuau 2nd to the Ponohawai line as run by Lydgate.

Were the owners that you refer to as willing to adjust the line, the same owners as applied to have Kukuau 2nd settled and patented, and got it patented?
They were not.

Then how does it show that the owners who got it settled and patented regarded it as an error and did not regard it as correct?
The owners of the land when applying for a certificate of Boundaries generally have the land surveyed and trust this matter to the surveyor, which survey was certificated as shown by the boundary certificate under Lydgate's survey; both certificate of Kukuau 2nd and Ponahawai being of the same date, September 5, 1874 as shown by the Boundary Commissioner's books.

Have you any proof to show that the Administrator of the Estate of P.O. Dias did not come and examine the land before taking out the Patent or making enquiries by letter or otherwise?
We have none that I know of.

You have assumed that Mr. Lydgate made a mistake on both sides of Apana 1[?], Certificate #52 from Front Street to sea beach. Is it not as reasonable [an] assumption that the line between Kukuau 2nd and Ponahawai is wrong and between Kukuau 1st and Kukuau 2nd is right, is it not as reasonable to assume that one line may be incorrectly described by Mr. Lydgate and the others correctly described especially the line between Kukuau 2nd and Kukuau 1st which survey was of a later date?

I go largely upon the assumption of the owner [page 333] in question whose adjustments are of
 record on the ground.

Then you have stated as a positive fact and render oath that a certain line now fenced and described in Exhibit D as adjusted line of the Kukuau's based upon similar reasons for adjusting North line was fixed by what you call an adjustment on the part of the owners of Kukuau 1st and Kukuau 2wnd for the reason that there was assumed to exist an erroneous bearing of the North line. This statement you still adhere to?

I base my assumption upon the fact that the late E.G. Hitchcock, as attorney in fact for the owners of Kukuau 2nd, once came to me and said that there was something wrong with the boundaries of first piece 5706 and wished to know whether I could survey and adjust said line. The line as fenced upon the ground and marked upon Exhibit D or as the adjusted line of Kukuau 1st and Kukuau 2nd or rather I would state to adjust a line at this same place, but I did not run or make the adjustments for him.

In reference to the Western line joining Ponahawai I know that Mr. Lyons made some adjustment with W.R. Castle.

Does this so called adjusted line of the Kukuaus agree in bearing with the Lydgate line of Ponahawai and Kukuau?
It does not.

In this copy of your map of the Town of Hilo, marked as Exhibit H you indicate a certain point above the present sea beach and I would suppose from the plan on the edge of the swamp as Webster's point between Waiakea and Kukuau 1st at sea beach.

Is this the point which you state as having tested with the Northwest corner of the land of Piopio and agreeing with the distance of 818 feet given by Webster?
It is somewhere near the point.
How near? (referring to Exhibit H).
As shown by Exhibit H the map being a tracing I cannot ascertain just how near as Webster's sea [page 334] point referred to was not referred to on that tracing to the Northwest corner of Piopio.

Will you please inform the Commissioner how the Northeast corner of Kukuau 1st was found by you and placed on the Map (Exhibit H)?

I plotted Lydgate's survey on the assumption that he had omitted a course.

Then you supplied a course extending from the end of Lydgate 's line at sea beach to the last point of Webster's survey?

I connected the said survey as shown on said plot Exhibit H.

Question: Taking into consideration the fact that Lydgate made the width 320 feet?
Answer: I plotted Lydgate's survey on the assumption that he had omitted a course.

At whose request did you run a fence line presumed by you to be on the boundary between Kukuau 1st and Waiakea?
First by Mr. Kennedy, Manager of Waiakea Sugar Co., Lessees of Waiakea, a short while after this by Mr. Rodick, Manager of the Hilo branch of Hackfeld & Co. Lessees of the portion of Kukuau 1st below Front Street and then when I was at Honolulu about this time, I spoke to Prof. Alexander, under Surveyor General at that time concerning the Government interest in Waiakea in the boundary, who said that he wished this line properly settled.

Did you communicate with the owners of the land at this time with regard to your intention to run this line?
I understood Mr. Rodick or at least he gave me the impression as far as I remember, that Hackfeld & Co. had leased this tract of land from the owners of Kukuau 1st and that it was understood they were to ascertain the boundaries of said tract especially on the east side joining Waiakea as there was absolutely nothing on the ground to show where lessees line run.

Then as a matter of fact you communicated with the lessees of Waiakea and with the Government the owner of Waiakea through its representative Professor W.D. Alexander while on the other hand you [page 335] did not communicate or confer with the owners of Kukuau but merely the lessees?

I was asked by Mr. Kennedy representing the lessees of Waiakea & conferred with the survey Department on the Government's part and did not confer directly with the owner of Kukuau 1st.

Question by Commissioner: Did you confer with the Agents of Public Lands?
Yes, I conferred with him.

By A.B. Loebenstein: Your map of the town of Hilo of which this is a copy, is it referred by a system of coordinates to the Halai Meridian?
Yes

Will you please take this scale and indicate the coordinates North from the Halai Station to the end of the Lydgate line on the boundary of Waiakea and Kukuau 1st? (Exhibit H)
It appears to be about 2118 feet.
Will you give the coordinates East from Halai Station?
About 5922 feet.
Will you give this point of Lydgate's on the boundary of Waiakea and Kukuau filed as Exhibit I, taking these same coordinates you have just indicated.

I would like to state before making the measurement on the map that the coordinates above referred to cannot be very accurately taken off from the map which shows that the coordinates squares have contracted.

Witness for Government marks said point on Exhibit I. E.D. Baldwin by request of the Commissioner of boundaries for identification.

 The map which you filed as Exhibit D on what is its information based?
Most of the detail is a copy of my Hilo town map, Exhibit H. The coordinates the Northwest corner of Piopio survey. Waialama Reference Point the lower boundaries of Kukuau I and II are from a partly finished working sheet of Hilo Town in my office.

Is this exhibit D a map containing lines on which [page 336] you have based the views presented by you and representing the Government in this controversy?
It is.
Will you indicate by this scale the coordinates of the point on this map purporting to be the lower end of the Webster Waiakea and Kukuau 1st line at the sea beach.
I will do so as near as I can from map measurements in daylight. The Commissioner says that if you measure it now, you can verify it by daylight..

5789 feet East 1874 feet North
Will you indicate on Exhibit I this point of which you have just given the coordinates referring to Halai?
Point is indicated on map and marked point A by Commissioner

Commission of Boundaries adjourned until 1 p.m. August 13th, 1900.
[margin note:] adjourned to August 14, & August 14 adjourned to August 20, 1900 (continued part 3)

[Kukuau 1st, Part 3, Page 336 continued]
Hilo, Hawaii, August 13, 1900
The Commission of Boundaries met at 1 p.m. and as E.D. Baldwin is still sick abed the Commission of Boundaries adjourned until 1 p.m. August 20th, 1900
Rufus A. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries, 3rd & 4th Judicial Circuits, Hawaiian Islands

Hilo, Hawaii, August 20, 1900
The Commission of boundaries for 3rd and 4th Circuits, Hawaiian Islands met at 2:30 p.m. by adjournment from Tuesday, August 13th, 1899.

Present: A.B. Loebenstein on part of Applicant, E.D. Baldwin for Agent Public Lands.

Cross examination of E.D. Baldwin continued

By Commissioner: I believe you said that you applied the local declination on course from wall of fish pond to Webster's seashore point.
Yes, corrected from time of Webster's survey to the declination at the present time.
Why did you not apply the average Magnetic declination to Webster's course, to Webster's sea [page 337] point?

The local magnetic declination at this point, the Waiolama station is a little less than the average magnetic declination. If I remember rightly the average declination at the Volcano Road is very nearly the same as the local magnetic declination..

Question by A.B. Loebenstein: What do you consider the magnetic declination in Hilo and more especially the points in dispute to be at the present day?
From 8° to 8° 30'

What do you consider the magnetic declination to have been in 1851 or 1852 about the time Webster's [sic] executed his survey?
From 6° 50' to 7° 20'.
Did you state that you received this information from C.J. Lyons?
I did not.
From whom did you receive the information.
From my own observations all over Hilo town and vicinity.
Your observations made in 1851 or 1852?
No.
Is it not an actual fact that the magnetic declination in 1851 and 1852 was about 7° 30'?
No.
Is it not an actual fact that the magnetic declination in1 851 and 1852 was about 7° 30' East?

We have nothing to prove that it was. Later observations and study on magnetic needles make it a little less.

You state that your observations have led you to conclude that the magnetic declination in 1851 and 1852 was between 6° 50' and 7° 20' East; to arrive at this conclusion would you not consider that your observations require to be extended over a long period, to arrive at a result sufficiently accurate for basing your supposition upon.

Of course, my magnetic observations in Hilo vicinity are not based upon any very long period of observations but very much longer periods have been observed by members of the Government survey, especially C.J. Lyons, and he has found the average yearly change to be a minute and a half. I have also corroborated it in other places [page 338] besides Hilo on rerunning well defined lines form one point to another, where I found the difference to be a minute and a half, or generally a little more instead of less.

Did you find this to be the case on Waiakea and Kukuau boundary?
Where I made the average magnetic corrections, I seemed to hit well known points very closely for a magnetic survey.

What points?
Running from the gully at the Volcano Road towards the sea and also toward Kilohana I seemed to hit the points.
What gully and what point at sea?
The gully 200 feet or so North of large gully or at 170 feet South of wall running along South boundary of Haleopuniu [Haoleopunui] and Puniono kuleana, measuring along Volcano road.

Did you or did you not state that you fixed Webster's seashore point on the ground, by running line from Volcano Road?
I did not run it out on the ground.

You stated a few minute ago that Mr. Lyons had made observations for a number of years whereby the declination of the magnetic North of 1851 or 1852 as well as of the present day had been determined. Am I correct?
I did not name exactly 1851 or 1852. I did state that Mr. Lyons had made observations for a term of years, and determined the annual change.

Is it not a fact that this annual or secular change, is a more or less inconstant factor and that while it may have amounted to this minute na a half for a particular period, that at other periods the declination may have remained constant and at others either greater or less?

That is why we base observations and speak of them as the average annual change.
Mr. Preston, in his very consise [sic] treatise, speaks of this annual change as being somewhat [page 339] irregular and where it has been shown to be increasing, it seems to increase for a long period on an average, and then jump larger, and sometimes come back to the average. Our own annual changes, the declination is growing larger every year.

Were Mr. Preston's observations made in this Longitude?
They were made all over the world, and also on these Islands.

Please to look at this map Exhibit A.A. Would you then state whether the lines projected on a declination of 7° 30' East estimated by Mr. C.J. Lyons as the declination existing about 1852 or 1853 is incorrect?
I would not. I think that they come about the average declination of that locality, as stated by Mr. Lyons in his title.

You have stated that by applying this declination you found the lower edge of road at gully crossing the Kilohana to agree with the lines of Webster's survey. Is this correct?
I tested the line by an average declination and found them to agree very nearly.
You applied this declination of 7° 20' to every course.
Yes, I did for the purpose of testing the survey.

You also stated that the average correction applied by me (A.B. Loebenstein) was 7° 50'.
I did about the average of 7° 50'.

How is it possible for you to have determined the point at lower edge of Volcano Road and Kilohana on your assumption of 7° 20' declination whereas, as an actual matter of fact such a correction would have extended the line to a greater length and distance from the point at the lower edge of Volcano Road to at least 134.6 feet Northwest of the point by lower edge of road as determined by me (A.B.L.) from an actual survey on the ground by applying the excessive declination of 7° 50' or 7° 54' which you have [page 340] commented upon?

I would state that on a careful study of Mr. Loebenstein's survey from Kilohana down towards the sea; that on the first eleven courses he has applied an average a little over 7° 50' declination and that on these long courses it would carry it rapidly towards Waiakea on the other courses he runs up to about 7° 40' a little more or less.

That applying this larger declination on the long courses, running over some 3400 feet of new formed rock which I have found generally increases the declination from lines run before the rock was there. For this reason Loebenstein's line was carried further towards Waiakea, and would naturally carry it on the Puna side of gully, even though the rest of bearings came nearer the average declination.

You have not answered my question. I have asked you why you state that the 7° 20' declination ties the Webster line as he describes it from Kilohana to makai side of Volcano road whereas by applying the 7° 20' declination the said point would be nearly 134 feet distant from Loebenstein's point below the makai side of Volcano Road.

By the 7° 20' declination we practically hit the small gully described by Webster and by continuing on this line to seacoast we practically check with Webster's measurement to Northwest corner of Piopio. While Mr. Loebenstein's line in coming down from Kilohana, hits a point below Volcano Road, as shown on both Exhibits D and I from which point to get to Kumu Spring, and Northwest corner of fish pond, he has to radically change Webster's survey.

In Exhibit D you show a line as the Webster line, based on a 7° 20' declination. This point at the lower edge of Volcano Road is distant about 70 feet Easterly from the Puniono kuleana. Now which is the correct line? The Webster line calculated to reach the [page 341] gully or the Webster line you have merely tested on the map to reach a gully?

The line ....

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.... y according to the evidence and testimony of those two?
Answer: Well, we did not run the boundary line as that was not in question, it was simply to notice approximately in regard to the rental of the land, who to pay the rent in to, Waiakea being Crown land and Kukuau being private land, which Mr. Shipman held both at that time.

Question: Have you indicated on this plan the boundary line between Waiakea and Kukuau, approximately, as shown by the kamaaina?
Answer: It was shown me at the time approximately along Volcano Street, also at the head of the Waialama stream.
Question: Will you please indicate to the Commissioner the line on this plan if you have indicated by a line the approximate line between Kukuau and Waiakea
[Answer:] (makes a mark written in pencil, a dotted line showing the boundary of Waiakea and Kukuau.)
Question: this line that you identify as having made or plotted, according to the information given to you by kamaainas in 1884?
Answer: Yes

Question: Were any remonstrances made or any doubts then cast upon the location of that line [page 551], was there a difference of opinion, in other words?
Answer: No, not that I know of. We were not fixing the boundary, we simply wanted information to determine the line between Kukuau and Waiakea.
Question: Did you have an assistant from the Waiakea land or from the Kukuau land?
Answer: There was no disagreement.

Question: You show on this plan a double meander line in which you have written the words Kalanakamaa Gully, was this pointed out to you as the gully by that name?
Answer: Yes, it was known as the Kalamakaaa Gully, it was a deep narrow gully which almost always overflowed during a freshet, very dangerous and was impossible to cross when there was no bridge during a heavy rain.

Question: Have you ever, at any time, surveyed kuleanas originally owned in Haolepuoli?
Answer: No sir.

Question: Have you ever made a boundary of Waiakea nearer than where you show it.
Answer: Yes. I have made it up further towards Kukuau.
Question: How much further?
Answer: I should say about half way, or where it is indicated here.
Question: The scale on this map is 66'?
Answer: Yes, I would not say exactly half way, but somewhere near half way.
Question: You never heard of the boundary of Waiakea or Kukuau being almost at the extreme end of this line?
Answer: No, sir, I don't remember it being there.
Question: How long have you been a resident of Hilo Mr. Lyman?
Answer: I was born here. I lived away in Honolulu ten years, in Kauai eight or nine years.
Question: Kalanakamaa Gully, do you recognize the name from your early resident in Hilo or latterly?
Answer: I have always known it by that name.
Question: You have heard of no other Gully called Kalanakamaa Gully?
Answer: No sir.

Cross-examination
Mr. CS. Smith:
Question: You stated that you did not do any surveying [page 552] of any kuleanas in the immediate vicinity of this land surveyed by Exhibit "W"?
Answer: I said I never surveyed Haolepuoli.

Question: Did you survey any others?
Answer: the one above it, Aiona.
Question: that land was not adjoining the land of Waiakea was it?
Answer: No, it was on Kukuau.

Question: On the land which you have indicated here by a dotted line over which you have written in pencil "Boundary of Waiakea and Kukuau" was that the line which was pointed out to you by these native witnesses in '84?
Answer: Yes sir.
Question: Did they pretend to point out to you the exact line, or did they give you general information to give you the approximate line?
Answer: It was approximately. First they said it was the boundary on the road, then they went around the boundaries and came to the boundary at the beginning and said that was the boundary of Waiakea.

Question: This map was not one for the purpose of giving the exact boundary of Waiakea and Kukuau 1st?
Answer: No.
Question: Do you remember how many there were?
Answer: There were not more than two of them that professed to know, the others were assisting in the work of cutting the boush [sic].
Question: Do you mean to say that your witnesses to this line, kamaaina witnesses, were about two in number?
Answer: That is my recollection.
Question: You were not then surveying for any other purpose than to make the boundary for a Government Pound were you?
Answer: That was all.
Question: Have you ever surveyed any line of Kukuau and Waiakea between the north end of this dotted line and its other portions, in other words, have you ever done any other surveying on Kukuau and Waiakea boundary? [page 553]
Answer: Not as to the boundary.
Question: So this is the only time at which you ever surveyed the boundary between Kukuau and Waiakea?
Answer: Well, I cannot say positively as to that, because I have surveyed Kaihelua, which I believe touches the boundary part way, and also Kahui above, there are surveyed kuleanas above, but were not measured for the boundary. None of those boundaries but this.
Question: Then, Judge Lyman, your information concerning the boundary at the west indicated on Exhibit "W" was derived largely from the two or three kamaainas that you had at the time?
Answer: Entirely.

Question: So if they were incorrect regarding their location of the boundary between Kukuau and Waiakea you were also incorrect.
Answer: Yes sir. I did not regard fixing the boundary at that time.
Question: You stated in your direct examination that you heard from other sources that the boundary between Kukuau and Waiakea lay at the point on the Hilo side of your dotted line as indicated here?
Answer: Yes.
Question: Do you recall where you heard that that you base your information regarding the boundary of Waiakea and Kukuau?
Answer: Well, I have been shown it on the ground at sometime by one or more natives. I do not remember how many natives professed to know the boundary.
Question: And they located it, the boundary, as you have indicated it here?
Answer: Not one [on?] the Road?

Question: Do you recall how far on the Hilo side those witnesses stated to you that the boundary lay?
Answer: No, I cannot say. I have never measured it.
Question: Could you give the Boundary Commissioner a general impression?
Answer: I should say it was half way, or the dotted line to the northwestern limit.
Question: Will you out[?] a mark on Exhibit "W" showing where that boundary cut the makai edge of [page 554] Volcano Street as you recall it, for identification purposes, approximately
[Answer:] (makes a mark on the map)
Question: Now the mark that you have indicated with a circle around it was about the place where the Waiakea and Kukuau boundary cut Volcano street according to the other kamaaina witnesses at another time, was it?
Answer: Yes, I don't know whether they were witnesses.

Question: What do you understand by kamaaina witnesses in survey?
Answer: People who were acquainted with the locality and could know of the boundaries in some way, through their ancestors.
Question: would you class men who had told you of the location of the boundaries of Kukuau and Waiakea, knew the point passing through the mark in a circle as that class of witnesses / viz.: kamaaina witnesses?
Answer: Yes, I considered at the time just as reliable as one who knew about that property.

Question: Do you know of another Gully in the immediate vicinity of this land crossing Volcano Street, but which gully runs along the Hilo side of what you have described as the Kalanakamaa Gully, a somewhat smaller gully?
Answer: Yes, there is a much smaller gully on the Hilo side.
Question: About how far was this smaller gully in the point that you have indicated on the Exhibit "W" with the line surrounded by a circle?
Answer: I think it was between that and the western corner of the point.

Question: Now this gully which you have indicted here by a parallel line as Kalanakamaa Gully is simply a small depression in the land which is sometimes filled with water and sometimes dry?
Answer: It was a sharp, deep, gully, kept scoured out by each freshet during the heavy rains, but would dry up when there was no rain, and finally the supply of water was shut off in some way [page 555] after the flow of '81, as there has been no water in it since that time. [Continued Part 10, Page 555 continued]
[Kukuau 1, Part 10, page 555 continued]
Question: What happened to if [sic it] after the flow of '81?
Answer: The supply of water seemed to be shut off in the smaller gully which runs on the Hilo side.
Question: The water in both Gullys has it ceases since the flow of '81?
Answer: Yes. This Kalanakamaa Gully here was usually filled with water, and was very dangerous, and the Waiakea Mill Co. built a stone wall to keep the water from flowing over, the remains can be seen there yet, after a time they had a bridge, occasionally it would be washed away and you could not cross it.

Question: You said that you were born in Hilo, Judge Lyman?
Answer: Yes sir.
Question: In your lifetime you have become familiar with the language so that you are employed by the Court in cases where accurate interpretation of the Hawaiian language is required, translating papers and other documents, you profess to have more than an ordinary knowledge and familiarity with the Hawaiian language more than most haoles, now, you are also familiar with the Hawaiian customs and habits?
Answer: Yes sir, to a certain extent.
Question: Do you know of any reason why this Gully should have been called Kalanakamaa Gully, Judge Lyman?
Answer: I do not think I ever had any reason explained to me.
Question: Does anything suggest to you why it was?
Answer: One thing, not exactly on that line there is a line between the rocky line and the good soil of Hilo town.

Question: Just a little farther on that line, Judge Lyman, you say that there is, near here, a dividing line between the rocky line and the earthen soil of Hilo town?
Answer: Yes.
Question: Towards which portion of the country does the rocky soil lay.
Answer: On the Waiakea, also on the Puna. [page 556]
Question: and the earth soil is on the Hilo side, is it not?
Answer: Yes.
Question: This was the line of the old trail from Hilo to Puna was it not?
Answer: No, the old trail to Puna is along the beach through Waiakea.
Question: Was there not, however, in former days a road near what is known as the Volcano Road now coming in from Puna?
Answer: Yes, that was the mauka trail to Puna.
Question: Parties coming from Puna over this trial would they not have to cross the rock path for a considerable distance before arriving at this point on Kalanakamaa Gully?
Answer: Yes sir.
Question: how would they walk, in their bare feet or with sandals?
Answer: In their sandals?
Question: What is the Hawaiian word for sandals?
Answer: Kamaa.
Question: Upon arriving at the point where the rocky path terminated and the soft soil began, what would they do?
Answer: Take off their sandals and probably take a rest there.

Question: You are familiar with the topography of that land?
Answer: Yes sir, somewhat.
Question: Do you know of a little eminence in the rise of the ground, just about at the end of the rocky path and the soft earth going from the town out?
Answer: Yes, sir.
Question: How much of a rise is that, Judge?
Answer: It is twelve or fifteen feet.
Question: You knew that in old times, did you not?
Answer: Yes sir.
Question: Do you know whether or not there was a Puhala tree there?
Answer: Yes sir, there are a number extending right up mauka on that rocky land.
Question: this tree that I refer to being on this little rise of ground was a good sized Puhala tree many years ago?
Answer: Not an unusually large one, a common sized Puhala tree.
Question: Do you know of any reason why that point [page 557] should be called Kalanakamaa if it was called Kalanakamaa, could you give nay explanation which would be consonant with the facts that we have elicited?
Answer: Not know from knowledge. I could guess.
Question: I mean from a consistent reason for calling that point Kalanakamaa?
Answer: I have no special reason from my own knowledge.
 
Question: could you give a reason from the nature of an exact surmise from the nature of the land?
Answer: It would be a natural place for people to take off their sandals coming from Puna or the Volcano where they would leave the rocks.
Question: would that, or would that not be a very natural name to that particular spot that I have indicated where the Puhala trees are?
Answer: I do not think that it is confined to that exact spot, the name includes also that gully and all that region.
Question: Is there any other reason why they should give that name to the Gully except that it is near that point?
Answer: Except being near that locality.
Question: Have you any idea, either from your own mind or your own knowledge, or any knowledge that you have gained at all, how much of that spot the word Kalanakamaa is intended to denote?
Answer: I could not define the boundaries.
Question: And that word would mean to the natives that it was a place for rest, where they would sit down and eat sugar cane, and do you know of any other names that were given to other localities by reason of some particular thing that was done by the natives other than Kalanakamaa?

Answer: There is but I do not recall them at the minute.
Question: Do you know whether or not Judge Lyman, from this small emminence [sic] that we have indicated before, you could, while sitting there see the surrounding country around Hilo to advantage because it is high?
Answer: Yes sir.
Question: Was it a natural resting place for persons who were coming from Puna?
Answer: Yes sir.
Question: Will you indicate on this map with a [page 558] pencil by a mark about where the rise in the ground is located, as near as you can from the western point from the Pound above the road? Will you put a figure two (2) with a circle around it to indicate about what you have pointed out on the map as being the top of that mound?
Answer: Its top is along here (making a mark). You come up on a sharp rise of ground and come up here almost level.

Question: What one is the sharp rise of ground, Mr. Lyman?
[Answer:] (points out) there is house near there.
Question: Is that house on the Aiona kuleana on top of the rise on in the hollow towards Hilo?
Answer: There is a house down in the hollow and also on the top of the rise, one is a new house on the Aiona land, the old house is down in the hollow near Volcano Street.

Question: The place where the top is not here? Running up does it make a point here or makai of Hilo?
Answer: Practically runs up along here.
Question: You stated that the land or this high portion which begins at figure two in the circle continued at about level?
Answer: Yes, I think it rises a little from there makai side right to the Gully on the Hilo side of the point marked circle two.

Question: There is a sharp decline, sharp depression?
Answer: Yes sir.
Question: That is not a Gully?
Answer: Not a Gully, but it is hollow on the Waiakea side towards Kukuau down the lava flow.
Question: On the Hilo side there was no rise beginning at the same level, was there?
Answer: The land was lower, the land on the Hilo side was approximately lower. That is all.

Re-Direct Examination.
By Mr. Loebenstein:
Question: You stated in your cross-examination that from this point which you have indicated here; two in a circle, that the ground gradually rose coming out toward Waiakea?
Answer: I think it is makai. I did not mean on the road, very [page 559] little, if any.
Question: Still it rises?
Answer: A very little but not as much.
Question: Do you remember having stated that a person could look out toward Puna on that point for a considerable distance?
Answer: I think I could as far as the Gully, but no farther.
Question: Consequently, the Gully is the highest point, you could see some trails toward Kalepolepo point?
Answer: Yes sir.

Question: Then at the Gully it is at its highest rise? And not the point that you have indicated as circle two that is not the highest point?
Answer: No.
Question: the old Puna trail and old Volcano road did it follow the present volcano Street, or did it meander a little towards what is now the Government Pound?
Answer: Yes, I think it did a little.
Question: It is practically just the same?
Answer: Yes sir.
Question: then within the Pound is the Gully higher than it is on the road? Or in other words, is there not a little mound just below the road just a little bit higher itself?
Answer: From there over to the Gulch it is pretty nearly level.
R.A. Lyman: You spoke of there being several Puhala trees, do you know what kind of Puhala trees they were?
Answer: Nothing more than the ordinary tree.
Question: Do you know who exercised ownership over them?
Answer: No, I do not, I never had charge of them.

Testimony of W.H. Shipman
W.H. Shipman being first duly sworn testified as follows:
By Mr. A.B. Loebenstein:
Question: Mr. Shipman you are by occupation a rancher are you not?
Answer: Yes sir.

Question: As such have you had anything to do with the land of Waiakea?
Answer: Yes.
Question: As lessee?
Answer: Yes.
Question: Since when?
Answer: Since 1877.
Question: and you had possession of that land as [page 560] lessee continuously until when?
Answer: About two years ago, I think, 1899, 1900, somewhere along there.
Question: Do you remember exactly?
Answer: No.
Question: did you obtain the lease directly from the Government Crown Lands?
Answer: No, it was transferred to me.
Question: By whom?
Answer: Hawaiian Agricultural Co.
Question: did the Hawaiian Agricultural Co. have a representative there managing their ranch?
Answer: Mr. Lyman.
Question: Which Mr. Lyman?
Answer: Mr. Rufus A. Lyman.
Question: Upon obtaining possession of the land did you familiarize yourself with the boundary or boundaries of the lands held, especially at or by the present Volcano road?
Answer: Well, I inquired about it, yes.
Question: You inquired of whom?
Answer: A man by the name of Kaukini, a man that was living on Waiakea.
Question: Was he a kamaaina?
Answer: Kamaaina as far as I know, he had been working on the place before. I got it, and [he] worked for me afterwards, after I got it.

Question: Did he indicate to you where the boundary of Waiakea and Kukuau adjoined the Volcano road?
Answer: Yes sir.
Question: Could you describe about where it was?
Answer: He told me the boundary at Kalanakamaa Gulch.
Question: What gulch is that?
Answer: It is the Gulch joining onto the road down to Kaihenui's, right by the road, at the road that leads down to Kaihenui's. there was a bridge across it at the time it was called by that name.
Question: Was there water running in the gulch at that time?
Answer: When there was a freshet up to the time of the '81 flow.
Question: Did you ever know or hear of any other Gulch or Gully being called Kalanakamaa?
Answer: No.
Question: Did you ever hear of any other point but the one shown you by Kaukini in 1877 as being the point at or by the Volcano road where the boundary [page 561] of Kukuau and Waiakea joined at that time?
Answer: No.
Question: As a matter of fact, when did you first hear that any other point on the volcano Road was claimed as the boundary of Kukuau and Waiakea?
Answer: In the first place Mr. Fred Lyman surveyed it he made the point a little Hilo, toward town when he made the survey of the Pound.
Question: who made the survey of the pound?
Answer: Mr. Fred Lyman.
Question: At whose request?
Answer: By the Government, he was looking around for different places.
Question: Were you Lessee of Waiakea at the time?
Answer: I was.
Question: Then he fixed the Boundary between the two lands at the Pound different at that time?
Answer: A few feet different from what I had been told.
Question: Upon what land did you consider the site of the pound to be located up to the time Mr. Fred Lyman surveyed it?
Answer: Well, the Pond was not located at that time.
Question: Were you led to believe by his plan that the boundary was a little further this way?
Answer: Yes sir.

Question: Do you recognize this plan Mr. Shipman? (showing him Exhibit "W")
Answer: I would not say that this is the one he drew or not. He drew one and I had a plan of it. I had it in my possession sometime just the same as that.
Question: As a matter of fact, do you ever remember giving that plan to any one, myself for instance?
Answer: I think I gave it to you some years ago.
Question: some years ago?
Answer: Yes.
Question: then as a matter of fact, until recent years you always had believed that the boundary of Waiakea and Kukuau was at that Gully, Kalanakamaa?
Answer: Yes.
Question: Did Mr. Kaukini also point out to you Kalanakamaa Gully, above the road as being the boundary between Waiakea and Kukuau?
Answer: No, he just said that this was the boundary of Waiakea and Kukuau at that point. [page 562]

Question: Was the boundary higher there at the point where he pointed the boundary out?
Answer: It was higher on the flow - pahoehoe flow.
Question: You were also Lessee of Kukuau were you not?
Answer: Yes.
Question: Were you also Lessee of Kukuau in 1877?
Answer: I think I was.
Question: You never heard of a controversy, or none at least came to your ears that Kalanakamaa gully being the boundary between the two lands Kukuau and Waiakea at that time?
Answer: No, I never heard of anything different for years.
Question: For years?
Answer: No.
Question: When did you first hear of any other point?
Answer: Some three or four years ago.
Question: And then what did you hear?
Answer: It was pointed out tome by some natives at Kukuau at a little gully.
Question: That was three or four years ago?
Answer: Yes, I think so.
Question: But before that you never heard of anything different?
Answer: No.

Question: Did Kaukini show you any other points on the boundary of Kukuau and Waiakea, as for instance, Kaununumoa?
[Answer:] Well he showed me marks at different places.
Question: And you found marks on the points made on the places he pointed out?
Answer: Yes.
Question: Then you had reason to believe him to be a good kamaaina?
Answer: I suppose so, he always lived on the land.
Question: He pointed out the old marks?
Answer: Only that far.

Cross-examination
By C.S. Smith:
Question: this boundary that he pointed out to you was pointed out to you by this man alone? This Kaukini whom you have mentioned?
Answer: Yes.
Question: You say you believed him to be a good kamaaina?
Answer: I suppose he was. He always lived on the land as far as I know. [page 563]
Question: Did you ever ask him?
Answer: No.
Question: He is dead now?
Answer: Yes.
Question: How old was he when he died?
Answer: When he died he was a man somewhere between forty and fifty years.
Question: You do not know where he was born?
Answer: I do not know.
Question: What part of Waiakea did he live?
Answer: He lived just above the cut by Mr. Kennedy's.
Question: how far from this boundary?
Answer: I do not know exactly.
Question: One half mile or one mile?
Answer: More than that.
Question: How long did he live at this place, after you knew him?
Answer: I think he lived there up to the time he died, I am not sure.
Question: Had probably lived there sometime before that, as long as you had known him?
Answer: Yes.
Question: About a mile on the Puna side?
Answer: By Mr. C.C. Kennedy's.

Question: Was he the kamaaina who pointed out the Kalanakamaa Gully as the boundary of Kukuau and Waiakea?
Answer: Yes.
Question: You stated, I think, that no one else had pointed out any other point except two or three years ago?
Answer: Except when Fred Lyman surveyed it, he made it a little different.

Question: As a matter of fact, Mr. Shipman, at the time that you have mentioned that Kaukini pointed this boundary out to you land was not particularly valuable in that particular portion, was it, in 1877?
Answer: Not as valuable as it is now.
Question: Or as valuable as it has been for the last ten years?
Answer: No.

Question: Any cane grown on that land?
Answer: Yes.
Question: In 1877 was the Waiakea Mill Co. growing cane there?
Answer: What land do you refer to?
Question: I am referring to the land of Kukuau, there never was any cane on that.

Question: That land has become valuable, more recently by reason of the fact that the town has grown out in that direction?
Answer: I suppose so.
Question: That is the only value there is to the land [page 564] in the immediate vicinity of the boundary near the road?
Answer: Yes.
Question: Is it not a fact that the town has grown in that locality?
Answer: Yes.
Question: How long ago was it that the town had grown in that direction so that it could make this land desirable for residence?
Answer: Just a few years ago.
Question: Are there any houses built at or close to the boundary?
Answer: There was a house there in 1877 where the one is now, a new house.
Question: Did you ever make any investigation from any other kamaaina, Mr. Shipman, except Kaukini?
Answer: No. I never did.

Question: what was the reason for your making an investigation at that time as to the boundaries of Waiakea and Kukuau?
Answer: I was not looking into the boundaries particularly, we were around looking after stock and I asked him where the boundary of Waiakea was. I was not very particular, as I had the two lands, afterwards we went mauka and he showed me the points mauka.
Question: And that is the only time you ever questioned Kaukini regarding these boundaries?
Answer: I always heard that was the boundary. I never heard anything different.
Question: You said it was about three or four years ago that you first heard that the boundary was in a different place?
Answer: I think about that time.
Question: And what made you think that the boundary was different at that time?
Answer: Mr. Fred Lyman put the boundary in a new place. It was only a few years ago, that I was told that the boundary was a little this side.
Question: have you ever, at any time, had reason for finding out definitely where the boundaries were Mr. Shipman, for instance, have you ever made a survey of them, or ever had nay grounds for making an investigation, or from any other source of investigation? [page 565]
Answer: I never had any survey made around there that I remember of.

Mr. Loebenstein: I would like to offer in evidence the original Notes of Survey made by Mr. John Lydgate of Kukuau First.
Commissioner: If there is no objection we will mark the same Exhibit "3" and place on file with the other Exhibits. [following is handwriting of 2nd scribe] [ ]

I hereby certify that the foregoing transcript is a true and correct report of the evidence taken on the 11th and 12th day of July A.D. 1902 at Hilo, Hawaii.
(Signed) G. Ball, Stenographer

Continued on page 566


Kukuau 1st Ahupuaa, District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, Boundary Commission, Hawaii, Volume D, pps 566-572

(Continued from page 565 of this book)

The Ahupuaa of Kukuau 1st, District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii
Land Commission award No. 8515, R.P. No. 1666 (by name only) [Keoni Ana]

Hilo, Hawaii, March 2d 1903
Commission of Boundaries for the 4th Judicial Circuit, Island & Territory of Hawaii met at the District Court Room, South Hilo, Hawaii, at 10 a.m.

W.S. Wise appeared for Kinney, McClanahan & Bigelow, Attorneys for Mrs. J.L. Richardson, and Carl S. Smith, as Attorney for the Territory of Hawaii.

W.S. Wise filed Notice of Motion & Motion to close the taking of evidence for the matter of the Boundaries of Kukuau 1st.

Carl S. Smith asked to have case continued until Thursday morning March 5th 1903, as the Commission of Public Lands (E.S. Boyd) is quite sick on Maui, and he, the Attorney has had no opportunity to hear from him, since the notice of Motion to close taking of evidence was furnished to Commission of Public Lands, and to the Attorney.

Mr. W.S. Wise of Wise & Ross, makes no objection to having case continued to the 5th instant, receiving right to communicate with Mrs. Richardson's lawyers.
Case continued to 10 a.m. Thursday the 5th day of March 1903.
Rufus A. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries, 3rd and 4th Judicial Circuits, Island & Territory of Hawaii.

Hilo, Hawaii, March 5th 1903.
The Commission of Boundaries met, and continued the case until March 19, 1903 to give Carl S. Smith, attorney for the Territory of Hawaii, to see the Commissioner of Public Lands in Honolulu, and to take steps to have the evidence of C.J. Lyons & J.M. Lydgate taken at once, or have case closed & submitted [page 567] to the Commissioner of Boundaries for his decision.
Rufus A. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries, 3rd and 4th Judicial Circuits, Island & Territory of Hawaii.

Hilo, Hawaii, March 19th, 1903
Commission of Boundaries met at the South Hilo District court Room, according to adjournment from the 5th instant.

Notice of Motion & Motion to close taking of evidence in this case, presented as follows:

Before Rufus A. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries for the Third and fourth Judicial Circuits, Territory of Hawaii

In the Matter of the Boundaries of Kukuau

To H.E. Cooper, Superintendent of Public Works, and E.S. Boyd, Commissioner of Public Lands, and Carl S. Smith, Attorney for the Territory of Hawaii, in the matter of the boundaries of Kukuau and to whom it may concern.

Please take notice that over six months have elapsed since the hearing of evidence in the above entitled cause was continued to enable the Government to take the evidence of C.J. Lyons and J.M. Lidgate, and thus far no steps, to our knowledge, have been taken to secure said evidence, and that therefore we will on the 2nd day of March next, move before said Commissioner of Boundaries, that the taking of evidence be closed and the cause submitted forthwith to said Commission for a final Adjudication, and we give you and each one of you formal notice herewith that upon said 2nd day of March at 10 a.m.  in the city of Hilo at the Court House of said city, we shall ask to be heard upon each motion.
(Signed) Kinney, McClanahan & Bigelow, Attorneys for Mrs. J.L. Richardson
Dated at Honolulu, February 11th 1903

[page 568]
Mr. Wise of Wise & Ross argued for having the taking of evidence in the above matter, closed at once, and that the above motion should be granted.

Mr. Parsons of Smith & Parsons appeared in place of Carl S. Smith, and asked to be allowed a reasonable time to look into the case, and to try and get the evidence of C.J. Lyons taken.

The Commissioner of Boundaries filed copy of his letter dated February 5th 1901, should be Feb. 5, 1903
To E.S. Boyd, Commissioner of Public Lands
Marked Commissioner's Exhibit No. 1.
Also copy of letter from E.S. Boyd, Commissioner of public Lands, dated February 10, 1903
Marked exhibit No. 2
Also copy of letter dated February 20th 1903, from E.S. Boyd, Commissioner of Public Lands, to Commission of Boundaries
Marked Exhibit No. 3.
And made them a part of the record of this case as follows:
Also copy of letter, dated March 11, 1903 from Carl S. Smith marked Commissioner's Exhibit No. 4, Exhibits read as follows:
[page 569]
Commissioner's Exhibit No. 1.
Hilo, Hawaii, February 5, 1901 [sic]
E.S. Boyd, Esquire, Commissioner of Public Lands, Honolulu, Oahu
Dear Sir:
At the hearing for the settlement of boundaries of Kukuau 1, held August 8, 1901, Carl S. Smith stated that he wished to have the case continued to have the evidence of C.J. Lyons and J.M. Lydgate taken for the Government by Depositions in Honolulu, and Mr. Ballon asked to have the evidence of F.S. Lyman and W.H. Shipman taken for Mrs. J.L. Richardson.

The evidence of F.S. Lyman and W.H. Shipman was taken at Hilo on the 11th and 12th of July 1902, and Mr. Smith said he would try to have things got ready to have evidence of Lyons and Lydgate taken in Honolulu.

Now I hear that Mr. Smith is going to the States as soon as the Circuit Court now in session at Hilo, is finished, and I would like to have the case closed up before he goes.

If you are going to have the evidence taken, I would like to have it done now, and to have the Attorneys file their Briefs, so that the case can be got out of the way.
IN haste, I remain,
Your truly obedient Servant
(Signed) Rufus A. Lyman, Commissioner of boundaries 3rd & 4th Circuits, Territory of Hawaii

Commissioner Exhibit No. 2 (reads as follows)
Commission of Public Lands, Territory of Hawaii, Honolulu, February 10th, 1903
Rufus A. Lyman, Esquire, Hilo, Hawaii
Sir:
Yours of February 5, 1901 (this is probably a mistake) in re Kukuau 1, matter was received today, and to say that your request as to depositions of C.J. Lyons and J.M. Lydgate and Briefs to be filed in this case will be attended to at an early date; [page 570] and would call your further attention that when same are filed, they must be filed when the Commissioner of Boundaries opens his Court (or whatever you may call it) for hearing this case.
Yours respectfully
(Signed) E.S. Boyd, Commissioner of Public Lands

Commissioner's Exhibit No. 3
Hilo, Hawaii, February 20th, 1903
E.S. Boyd, Esquire
Commissioner of Public lands, Honolulu, Oahu
Sir:
Your favor of the 10th instant is at hand, and contents noted.

The date of my letter should have been February 5, 1903, instead of 1901.

I have received a copy of notice from Kinney, McClanahan & Bigelow, Attorneys for Mrs. J.L. Richardson that they sent to you and others, that they will move on Monday the 2nd day of March next, at the Court House in Hilo, at 10 a.m. to be heard by me upon said motion.

I hope that you will be able to have the case closed soon.
Yours in haste,
(Signed) Rufus A. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries 3rd & 4th Judicial Circuits

Commissioner's Exhibit No. 4
Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii, March 11, 1903
Rufus A. Lyman, Esquire, Hilo, Hawaii
Dear Sir:
After several days in Honolulu I have just been able to obtain an interview with [page 571] Mr. Boyd, relative to the haring of the Boundaries of Kukuau first. Mr. Boyd and I very much wish to have the testimony of Mr. Lyons taken by you before the close of the testimony in this case. To this end we have requested Mr. Lyons to go to Hilo and he now has the matter under consideration. By this same mail I am writing Mr. Parsons upon the subject and trust that you will be able to give the Government any further time which may be necessary to enable us to close the presentation of our testimony.
Very truly yours,
(Signed) Carl S. Smith

The above copies of the Exhibits are made a part of the record in this case.

The Commissioner of Boundaries gave the following ruling:
The Government or Attorneys for the contestants have made no good showing why the Motion to chose the taking of evidence in this case, should not be closed, after the Commissioner of Boundaries reopened this case August 6, 1901 in order to allow the Attorney for the Commission of Public Lands or the Government of the Territory of Hawaii, to introduce the evidence of C.J. Lyons & J.M. Lydgate & others for the Contestants, and from that time to the present time, the Commissioner of Boundaries has not been requested to appoint a Commission to take the evidence of C.J. Lyons or of J.M. Lydgate or to summon them to appear before him at Hilo, Hawaii to give their evidence in this case.

It appears to the Commissioner of Boundaries that twenty months is ample time for the contestants to have procured the evidence of these two witness[es], and to have presented it to the Commissioner for his consideration.

That Carl S. Smith, Attorney for Contestants has wished to have the testimony of these two witnesses submitted to the Commissioner, but for some unknown reason has not been able to get the evidence taken & submitted to the Commissioner.

But as Carl S. Smith, the Attorney who has [page 572] had charge of the case for the Contestants has gone to the States for quite a long visit, and Mr. C.F. Parsons, his Partner, has had no opportunity to get acquainted with the case, the Commissioner is willing to give him an opportunity to examine the evidence &c., but is unwilling to continue the case another six months, to have the evidence of C.J. Lyons and J.M. Lydgate taken.

As the Commissioner of Boundaries has been called as a witness in a case to be tried at the April Term of the Circuit Court, IIId Circuit, at Kailua, North Kona, Hawaii, this case is continued for Thirty days, and at the end of Thirty days will close the case.

That if the Commissioner of Public lands wishes to have the evidence of C.J. Lyons & J.M. Lydgate taken, he must have it taken before the end of thirty days from date, as the taking of evidence in this case must be closed by the 18th day of April A.D. 1903.

C.F. Parsons asked to have an opportunity to examine all the exhibits in this case.
The Commissioner said when would given him all the time he need to examine Exhibits &c., and to prepare & filed Brief after the taking of evidence is closed.
Rufus A. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries, 3rd & 4th Judicial Circuits, Island & Territory of Hawaii


Kukuau 1st Ahupuaa, District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, Boundary Commission, Hawaii, Volume D, pps 573-577

Kailua, North Kona, Hawaii, 3rd Circuit, island & Territory of Hawaii
11 a.m. April 13th 1903
I received a letter from Governor S.B. Dole, dated April 7th 1903, that reads as follows:
Executive chamber, Territory of Hawaii, Honolulu, April 7th 1903
Mr. R.A. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries, Hilo, Hawaii
Sir:
I desire to make a change in the offices of Commissioner of Boundaries for the 3rd and 4th Judicial Circuits, as I contemplated doing two years ago, but which purpose was not concurred in by Mr. Cooper, then Acting Governor.

If you should prefer to forward your resignation by the return mail from Hilo, that course would be agreeable to me, otherwise I will forward notice of your removal next week.
Very respectfully,
(Signed) Sanford B. Dole.

A copy of the above letter marked Commissioner's Exhibit No. 5 is placed on file with other Exhibits in this case, and made a part of the record.
Rufus A. Lyman, Commission of Boundaries 3r4d & 4th Judicial Circuits, Territory of Hawaii

See next page

[page 574]
Hilo, Hawaii, April 22, 1903
On the 17th day of April, 1903, I received a Telephone at Kailua, North Kona, Hawaii, from Mrs. R.A. Lyman, saying a letter dated April 13, 1903 has been received from Governor Dole, removing you form position of Commissioner of Boundaries of the Third & Fourth Judicial Circuits.

On my return to Hilo, Hawaii, in the afternoon of April 20th 1903, I received said letter that reads as follows:

Executive Chamber, Territory of Hawaii, Honolulu, April 13th 1903
Mr. Rufus A. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries, Hilo, Hawaii
Sir:
Pursuant to my letter of last week, I hereby remove you from the position of Commissioner of boundaries for the 3rd and 4th Judicial Circuits.

You are requested to deliver the records and property of the office to Mr. Frederick S. Lyman of Hilo.
Very respectfully
(Signed) Sanford B. Dole, Governor

A copy of above letter is marked Commissioner's Exhibit No. 6 is placed on file with the Exhibits in the Matter of the Boundaries of Kukuau 1, and also a copy of my letter of this date to Governor Dole, marked Commissioner's Exhibit No. 7, to show the way I have been removed from Office, after I have done all I can to try and get evidence, the Government wished to introduce in the Supreme Court April Term 1900, and ruled out by majority of Justices of Supreme court brought into the records of this case. [page 575]

It seemes [sic] that I have been removed, so as to have me out of Office, before the 18th of April, 1903, the day set by me for closing the taking of evidence in this case.

No one on part of contestants, has asked to have time extended, on account of my being detained at the April term of Circuit Court, Third Circuit, until noon of April 18, 1903, so as not to allow me to close case, or to receive the evidence of C.J. Lyons & J.M. Lydgate.

I ordered last survey made, and I find on examining the notes of survey and map filed and sent back to Commissioner of Boundaries by Supreme Court, April 30th 1901, to be passed on by Commissioner, that said notes of survey, and map have been made in accordance with order given September 20, 1900.

Commissioner's Exhibit No. 7, reads as follows:
Hilo, Hawaii, April 22d, 1903
S.B. Dole, Esquire, Governor, Territory of Hawaii
Sir:
I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your favor of the 7th instant, on the 13th of this month at Kailua, North Kona, Hawaii, and on the 17th instant, I received a Telephone at Kailua from Mrs. R.A. Lyman, notifying me, that your favor of the 13th instant removing me from Office as Commissioner of Boundaries for the 3rd and 4th Judicial Circuits had been received at Hilo.

I returned to Hilo on the 20th instant and am waiting for the return of F.S. Lyman from Kona, and will turn over the Boundary books, papers &c, as soon as he is ready to receive them.

In justice to my family, and to myself, I would most respectfully ask you to inform me, why I am removed from office in this way, without being informed of the reasons for the removal, or given any opportunity to make any explanations?

Abut two years ago my brother told me, you wished to appoint him in my place, as I had done something out of the way, and when you was [were] in Hilo, I spoke to you, and told you that if I had been charged with doing anything out of the [page 576] way, that I would like to know what it was, and be allowed to explain to you about what I had done, and you replied that you did not know anything about it.

After the case of the Boundaries of Kukuau 1 had been sent back to me from the Supreme Court, for me to pass on the Survey that I ordered made, I reopened the case in August  1901, to give the Commissioner of Public Lands an opportunity to introduce the evidence of C.J. Lyons & J.M. Lydgate, as the majority of the Judges of the Supreme Court had ruled that the evidence of Lyons & Lydgate could not be taken in the Supreme Court, and I wished to give the Commissioner of Public Lands an opportunity to introduce all the evidence he wished to, so that if he took an appeal from my decision, the Supreme Court, would have the evidence before them.

Early last February I notified the Commissioner of Public Lands, that I wished he would have the evidence taken, as soon as possible, so I could close the case before his Attorney, Carl S. Smith went to the States, as Mr. Smith expected to be away six months.

The Commissioner of Public Lands replied that he would have it attended to soon.

The next day Kinney, McClanahan & Bigelow served notice on Commission of Public Lands & others, that they were going to present a motion to have the taking of evidence closed..

At the hearing of this motion, I continued the case, as I heard the Commissioner of Public Lands was sick at Maui, and when case came on, I continued it for two weeks to give Mr. Carl S. Smith an opportunity to see Commissioner of Public Lands in Honolulu.

At the end of two weeks the Motion for closing taking of evidence was argued by W.S. Wise for Petitioner, and C.F. Parsons of Smith & Parsons for the Government, and as Mr. Smith had written me, that the government was very anxious to have C.J. Lyons' evidence taken, I continued the case 30 days to April 18, 1903, to give the Government every opportunity to take Mr. C.J. [page 577] Lyons' evidence, but declined to continued the case another six months, after I had reopened the case in August 1901, and maps belonging to the Fedral [sic] Government from Hilo Custom House, and maps belonging to different [sic] persons, had been filed as exhibits, as were being kept tired up indefinitely.

Mr. Carl S. Smith had told me several times, that he had endeavored to bring the case to a close, but was unable to get it attended to in Honolulu.

I felt that in justice to all parties, case should be brought to a close, so it could be finally decided and the Maps returned to the proper owners.

It has been in my hands about three years, and the Government took out an appeal over two years ago, and the Supreme Court sent it back two years ago, as they ruled the Government took out an appeal before the final decision was given.

Before I gave my decision setting aside notes of Survey filed by A.B. Loebenstien, & ordering a new survey, Mr. E.D. Baldwin, Agent for Government Lands in Hilo, and acting for Commissioner of Public Lands, stated in Court that he had no more evidence to offer for the Government, and filed a Brief, that he had prepared before he came to Court that day.
Respectfully Yours,
(Signed) Rufus A. Lyman

No answer has been received up to August 28th 1903.
I hereby certify that the foregoing record is a true record of the proceedings in the Matter of the Boundaries of the Ahupuaa of Kukuau 1, District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii from the reopening of the case August 5th & 6th 1901 to the date that F.S. Lyman takes the Books, Records & Exhibits of the Commissioner of Boundaries, 3rd & 4th Judicial Circuits, Territory of Hawaii. Recorded book 5 pages 397-577 inclusive. I also certify that the copies of Records kept by J.H. Van Gieson, and G. Bell, are true copies of the Typewritten copies made by them from their short hand notes.
Rufus A. Lyman, Ex. Commissioner of Boundaries, 3rd & 4th Judicial Circuits, Territory of Hawaii.


Kukuau 1st Ahupuaa, District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, Boundary Commission, Hawaii, Volume D, No. 5, pps 622-645

Re Boundaries Kukuau 1st, Hilo, Hawaii, Hawaiian Islands
Hilo, November 14, 1903 before F.S. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries
A Motion to set the above entitled matter for a hearing, having been filed on the 12th instant by Mssrs Kinney and McClanahan and (See page 628 Motion) Wise and Ross
Attorneys for Mrs. J.L. Richardson

W.S. Wise appeared for the Motion
Carl S. Smith appeared for the territory of Hawaii.

Mr. Smith explained that status of the case at the present time, as being unfinished.

After looking into the matter, on motion of W.S. Wise, it was mutually agreed by the parties that a hearing of the Case be set for December 3d 1903,a t 9 a.m. at the Office of the Commissioner of Boundaries. Consel [sic] to notify their Principals.
F.S. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries

December 3d 1903, 9 a.m.
W.S. Wise appeared for Applicant, also R.A. Lyman, under subpoena, Mr. Vicars, Mr. M.M. Spring, Stenographer for Wise and Ross.

Sent for Carl S. Smith, the Representative of the Territory. Mr. Parsons appeared for the Territory, and asked for a continuance of one week, to prepare, as he knows nothing about the case, and Mr. Smith cannot leave the session of the Circuit Court
Continued for one week from today, December 10, 9 a.m.
F.S. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries
[page 623]

In Re Kukuau 1st, Hilo, Hawaii
Hilo, Hawaii, December 10, 1903

The Boundary Commission met in the Office of the Commissioner of boundaries, at 9 a.m.
W.S. Wise appeared in behalf of the applicant.
C.F. Parsons, for the Territory
R.A. Lyman, and A.B. Loebenstein, also present.

Motion by Parsons that the applicant, before proceeding further with the case, be required to file as a potion of the original application in this Case, a Map of the proposed change of the boundary claimed, as required by section 281, Civil laws, Territory of Hawaii.

Motion argued by applicant's counsel that it had been practically waived in not asking for it at that time, and the case has proceeded until now without it.
Mr. Parsons does not know about the matter.
Motion overruled.

Motion by Parsons to continue for two weeks, to prepare, as a new Commissioner of Public Lands, J.W. Pratt, has just been appointed, amended to one week, so that Mr. Smith, who is now in the Circuit Court Term, can be present, having acted for the Territory, he being familiar with the case.
Continued to December 17th 9 a.m.
F.S. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries

[page 624]
Hilo, December 17, 1903
At the Office of the Commissioner of Boundaries by continuance from the 10th instant
W.S. Wise appeared for applicant
J.W. Pratt, Commissioner of Public Lands
Carl Smith, Attorney for Territory, also R.A. Lyman, present.
Motion by Carl Smith, viz.:

Before the Boundary Commissioner of the 3rd and 4th Circuits
In Re Boundaries of Kukuau First

Motion for an Order
Comes now the Territory of Hawaii, owner of the fee simple of the Ahupuaa of Waiakea, and moves the commissioner of boundaries hearing this cause to make and enter an order in this cause requiring a map of the Kukuau First showing the boundaries of the said land as proposed by the petitioner in this case.

This motion is based upon the records and exhibits in this case together with the affidavits hereto attached.
Smith and Parsons
For the Motion
Hilo, Hawaii, December 15, 1903

Affidavit in Support of Motion.
Carl S. Smith, being duly sworn says upon his oath that he is one of the attorneys for the Territory of Hawaii in the cause now pending before the Commissioner of Boundaries for the Third and Fourth Judicial Circuits of the Territory of Hawaii, and as such attorney has had exclusive and sole charge of the hearing of this cause from the time of filing of the notice of appeal to the Supreme Court until the date thereof except the hearings of two applications for continuance made before the Honorable F.S. Lyman, Boundary Commissioner.

This affiant further says that at the [page 625] time of the original hearing of this matter and before the appeal the Government at all times insisted that a map of the lands in question together with notes of survey showing the proposed location of the boundaries of said land should be filed as provided by law. That this affiant has been informed by E.D. Baldwin, who is the Surveyor of the Territory of Hawaii, that A.B. Loebenstein had asked that the filing with the Boundary Commissioner of such a map be postponed until the same could be completed by said A.B. Loebenstein. That said E.D. Baldwin is now in the City of Honolulu and for that reason cannot be present before the Commissioner for the purpose of making such statement upon oath.

That upon the hearing before the Boundary Commissioner from time to time demanded from the said A.B. Loebenstein that he furnish the Commissioner and file in this cause such a map, and that said Loebenstein at all times postponed the filing of the same and asked at each of such times for further time within which to complete this work on the same..

That this affiant went to the office of the Commissioner on the 16th day of December, 1903, and asked said Commissioner whether such a map had been filed in this cause and was thene [sic] and there informed by said Commissioner that no such map had been filed.

And this affiant further states that sufficient time and opportunity has been given to make and produce such map as that called for. That the Territory of Hawaii has at no time waived the filing of such map but at all times has demanded the production of such map; and it is the belief of this affiant that said petitioner is willfully [page 626] withholding the production of said map.

And this affiant further says that the Territory of Hawaii cannot safely proceed with this cause until such map is produced and filed herewith.
Carl S. Smith
Sworn to before me on the 16th day of December 1903
F.S. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries

It appears from the records, that maps, and Notes of Surveys, have been filed at different times, in this case, but do not agree with the decision of the Boundary Commissioner; and further testimony has been introduced, to determine the correct boundaries.

A correct Survey and Notes will have to be presented before a final decision and certificate can be issued.

At the present stage of the case, Applicant appears to have complied with the requirements of the Law.
Motion overruled: the case may proceed.

W.S. Wise states that he is ready with testimony, but it being Rebuttal, cannot be brought in until the testimony of the Territory is closed.

J.W. Pratt, asks that the hearing be continued until February 15th for him to prepare.

W.S. Wise strongly objects to continuance.

J.W. Pratt, states that the evidence he has to offer is now being prepared in the Government Survey Office at Honolulu, that he is going to Kohala tomorrow, and will reach Honolulu next Tuesday, so that he can send the statement and evidence by the Mauna Loa mail of that week, to arrive in Hilo [page 627] Monday, December 28, 1903 at 10 a.m.
F.S. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries
Continued until December 28, 1903, 10 a.m.

The Boundary Commission met in the Commissioner's Office at 10 a.m. December 28, 1903.

On looking over the numerous papers and maps on file in the case, it is found that a Map and Notes of Survey are on file; made by A.B. Loebenstein according to the decision of the Commissioner of Boundaries, September 20, 1900; being Exhibits "N" and "1" respectively.

Commissioner of Boundaries
Carl S. Smith filed a Stipulation admitting evidence of Curtis J. Lyons, assistant Survey, and asked to postpone the hearing to the 29th instant.
W.S. Wise appeared for applicant
Continued until tomorrow, December 29, 1903
F.S. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries

The Boundary Commission met in the Fireman's Hall, Tuesday, December 29th, 1903, Hilo, Hawaii.
Continued from December 28th
Present: W.S. Wise  & H. Vicaro for applicant
Carl Smith for Territory; R.A. Lyman, and E.D. Baldwin
The Stipulation filed yesterday was read.
See page 629 Stipulation

[page 628]
Before the Honorable Commissioner of Boundaries
Of the Fourth Judicial Circuit, Territory of Hawaii

Motion
In the Matter of the Boundary of Kukuau 1st

To the Honorable F.S. Lyman, Commissioner
Now Comes Mrs. J.L. Richardson, by Messrs Kinney & McClanahan and Wise and Ross her attorneys and moves the Honorable Commissioner to set the above entitled matter down for hearing.
Kinney & McClanahan
Wise & Ross
Attorneys for Mrs. J.L. Richardson

Messrs Smith & Parsons,
Attorneys for the Government
You will please take notice that we will call the above motion up for hearing before the Honorable F.S. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries of the Fourth Judicial Circuit, Territory of Hawaii, on Saturday morning November 14th A.D. 1903 at nine o'clock, or as soon thereafter as the matter can be heard.
Kinney & McClanahan
Wise & Ross
Attorneys for Mrs. J.L. Richardson
Dated, Hilo, Territory of Hawaii, November 12th 1903

[page 629]
Before the Commissioner of Boundaries for the Fourth Judicial Circuit

In the Matter of the Boundaries of Kukuau 1st
Stipulation admitting evidence of Curtis J. Lyons, Assistant surveyor

It Is Hereby Stipulated by and between the parties hereto that the attached letter of Curtis J. Lyons to Walter E. Wall, Territorial Surveyor, signed April 10, 1903, together with the plans numbered 1 and 2 therein referred to, be admitted in evidence, subject to the introduction of evidence in contradiction of the same.

It is further Stipulated that the said letter be taken as if the sworn testimony of Curtis J. Lyons, it being understood that the said Lyons is at the present time in bad health and unable to give testimony in the matter, applicant not however admitting said evidence to be true or the conclusions correct..

This stipulation is entered into on behalf of the applicants on the condition that this testimony be submitted and that the decision of the Commissioner be made before midnight of December 31st, 1903. In default of decision being rendered and made at that time, this stipulation is to be of no force and effect.

In witness whereof the parties hereto have hereunto set their hands this 23 day of December 1903.
James W. Pratt
Commissioner of Public Lands
Kinney, McClanahan & Cooper
Attorneys for Applicants [continued Part 11, page 630]

[Kukuau 1, Part 11, page 630]
Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii, March 25th 1903
Mr. Walter E. Wall, Territorial Surveyor;
Sir:
In reference to the question of boundary of Lower Kukuau (South), adjoining Waiakea and especially as to the line from the Government road to the point known as Kilohana, I would state as follows:

This line was described first by William Webster in 1851 as part of the boundary of the land of Waiakea, surveyed by him for the King Kamehameha III.

This description was incorporated in the subsequent leases of said land Waiakea.

When the boundary of Kukuau South was certified by Mr. Rufus A. Lyman in 1873-75, Certificate No. 58 [Huumuula], the same description word for word was incorporated in the said Certificate as a part of said boundary of Kukuau.

Now that the matter is reopened before the same Boundary Commissioner (whether rightly or wrongly it is not pertinent here to say), said Commissioner does not claim to be setting aside the original line specified above, but to be newly describing it in terms of true meridian and thereby locating it accurately on the ground..

Granting that he has the right so to do, which right however, I claim should not be acknowledged, it appears that two surveyors, Mr. Baldwin, Government Survey, and Mr. A.B. Loebenstein, surveyor for owner of Kukuau, and also claiming to be attorney, have made separate and divergent true meridian descriptions and location of this line, both accepting Kilohana as the upper end of the said line, Having made an examination [page 631] of the claims of each I would unhesitatingly approve of Mr. Baldwin's as against the other for the following reasons:

1st: That Mr. Webster's survey was made with a theodolite, with a certain uniform meridian, and that this meridian varied 7° 20 East from the true meridian. This fact I had ascertained and made a memorandum of, twenty years previous to the coming up of this question, by comparison of his work with the Government triangulation. To run this line therefore it is not necessary to go into the question of change of declination, nor even of the present declination, but simply to apply said 7° 20' to the magnetic bearings given. I have been furnished with the coordinates of Kilohana and of the lower end of Baldwin's line, upon which figures both surveyors practically agree, and find by actual calculation that starting form Kilohana, and running down the given bearings and distances with the above mentioned correction of 7° 20' (Northeast) the line will reach practically, i.e. within a few feet under the limit of the corner of the point claimed by Mr. Baldwin. Upon this I speak positively. As to marks claimed to be on the line I do not think that Webster left any on a crooked line.

2d. there is certainly one point below the road on which both parties are agreed within a few feet; the Northwest corner of the fish pond marked as Hanalei on town map. Now to reach this point from the road station of Loebenstein's survey would require the utter ignoring of one of Webster's courses, 2nd below road, viz.; North 63 ° 50' East 257 feet, without any apparent reason or authority.

See C, D, E on attached plan No. 1

3rd. Webster's map of this part of [page 632] Waiakea is on file in the Survey Office and was carefully drawn to a large scale (600 feet to an inch). It gives the distance by scale from a recognized point on the road to the eastward, viz.; the road junction with the west edge of the Piopio Fish Pond or Mohouli.*

Measuring this on the map confirms absolutely Baldwin's contention. In fact I cannot see how any respectable surveyor can uphold the contention that the Easterly line is correct.

I think the above three positions as stated settle the point where the line should cross the road, provided the Webster survey is to be strictly followed. Webster was a careful and accurate surveyor, and I think that i have showed that there is no chance for error in the above deductions.
Respectfully submitted,
(Signed) Curtis J. Lyons, Assistant
[Diagram]
Honolulu, April 10, 1903,
See Plan No. 2
No. 1. [Words on map: Top: Sea; upper left: Pohahawai, Certificate of Boundary No. 47, 2d piece; Kukuau 2d Certificate of boundary No. 32, For Lidgate's original Map Government Survey Office. Reg. Ho c[?],L.C.A. 4239B, Kanaina; L.C.A.  1106, Haae; Left: On Line "true north"
Upper Middle Deed to J.C.[?]; Northfeld Lumber yard; Upper Middle right: Front Street; East Junction of Webster's N.W.L. of Piopio; Piopio St.; Middle: Hanalei Fish Pond; Canal; Lower left: L.C.A. 2696 Puniono; L.C.A.3206 [Haoleopunui], Letters C, D, E.
Line from Kilohana; Lower right : Section below road. Reduction of tracing furnished by E.D. Baldwin to the Land Commission, Red Line Baldwin, Green, Loebenstein.
C.D. Line where bearing North 63° 50' East 247 is set aside by Loebenstein survey
E. point where surveys practically agree
Scale 500 ft. to inch.
[Diagram:]
Plan 2, page 633
[words on map:]
Upper right: Scale 600 ft to an inch; Webster's Meridian; Top center: road, marsh; Wailoa; Left Hilo Bay; stump; Piopio Acres 44.15; Right: Fish pond, Waiakea; Lower left: Kukuau, road from Hilo; Lower center: Waiakea; 1800 ft "compare map of Hilo Town";
Lower right: pond; Fish pond; Tracing of Webster's original Map of Waiakea enlarged section. Note in script (in quotes above) by C.J. Lyons; Made in Government Survey Office, Curtis J. Lyons
 
[page 634]
Testimony
December 29, 1903
E.D. Baldwin, sworn, I have investigated the boundaries regarding the survey by Loebenstein, from Volcano road to sea shore, here is a Map showing it..
(Government offers Map, marked Exhibit #4)

The green line represents the surveyed line given in Loebenstein's last description at the time case was taken to the supreme court (Exhibit 1); this is the description, green line is that given on it. I took that line and run it on the ground. I made a very careful exact survey. We have fixed points in town all tied to Halai Trig. Station. Are tribly [triply] tested and accurate. We commenced at makai side of volcano Road, running makai, located line, we have a Government pound Station; from that we located Loebenstein's pile of rocks makai of Volcano Road, on an elevation between two gullies; Webster's line runs to a gully; the place is called Kalanakamaa, no name of gully, the government witnesses gave name Kalanakamaa, located very nearly 180 feet Southeasterly; the green line shows Applicant's present contention and former contention, below volcano Road, as surveyed by Loebenstein; we went down and found a second pile of stones about 20 feet above bluff over Kumu Springs; his course #93, says "to a + marked on bluff overhanging Kumu Spring and bathing place." I examined bluff and all around, but could not find any mark; then run off his coordinates and found it exactly, the pile of rocks is still there. Course #92, from pile by Volcano road runs to his +, marked on Map, + on pahoehoe, solid pahoehoe clearly marked +, comes to it exactly; it is a little over 20 feet above bluff over Kumu Spring, and on the Waiakea side of bluff; the 20 feet is directly above the bluff, but 50 feet from the ledge overhanging Kumu Spring, towards Waiakea. Webster's survey is supposed to run to Kumu, which is known as the boundary.

I ran line by Webster's survey, shown by red line on my Map, runs right through Kumu Spring; Loebenstein's line is nearly 50 feet South of Spring; there is nothing in immediate vicinity to tie it to; the nearest is to Fish Pond, Hanalei, is about 400 feet from Spring; starting from corner of Fish Pond, and running up by Webster's survey we came to within less than 20 feet of Kilohana, a fixed point, about 2 1/2 miles [page 635] distant, going right over Kumu Spring, and the location at Volcano Road. Kalanakamaa, is where people coming from Puna, rocky land, took off sandals and hung up on a breadfruit tree, pointed out to me by many natives. It is the highest point around there, can look all over the country. From corner of Pond up, we come into a gully, which Webster followed to above Volcano Road. The breadfruit tree is directly above the Puniono kuleana, Northwest from gully, mauka of the road, about 70 feet from our station below the road and about 50 feet Northwest from red line.

Exhibit T (Exhibit T Webster's Survey) Course #50, I found that small gully makai of Volcano road; we hit it exactly, running from Fish Pond and Kumu Spring and also running to sea and across to corner of Piopio, 818 feet; 54th course agrees exactly with Webster's description. The pile of rocks in little gully makai of Volcano road, marked in centre, is checked to Kilohana, and to gully, down Webster's line, and across to Piopio, as surveyed by Webster; and to Webster's sea point.

Exhibit E. On map of Piopio, corner at Volcano road, measure along Volcano road to the line of Kukuau and Waiakea; it agrees with the distance on the Map. Running down Kukuau, locate Webster's sea point.

Lidgate's Map of Kukuau 2 runs the line of Ponahawai direct to the sea, and the boundary of Kukuau 1st, similar, but his description swung both the lines East about 115 feet, and the Kukuau 1st side is paralel [sic]; the rule of surveys is, when the plan and description differ, to follow the plan.

Lidgate apparently surveyed some by True, and some by Magnetic bearings; his Magnetic are the best; before any Government Stations were fixed. In the Kukuau survey he had it in True, and changed to Magnetic.

Loebenstein, in running line from corner of Kanaina kuleana ran it on Lidgate's description of Kukuau 1d, and from that sea point, ran across to 30 feet West of where Webster fixes sea point above at right angles. The green lines along Kanaina kuleana, is Loebenstein's description #1, first up from sea shore, 1st call, 2 to Kanaina kuleana, and 3d call along Kanaina kuleana. On the Waiakea side of Kukuau 1st green line is Loebenstein's 1st survey; we located the point of that map. [Margin note:] (Exhibit 4) "A.B. L's nail X on beach, below present Front Street.

In Exhibit #1 (Loebenstein's latest description), this is the end of 95th course, across beach side of Kukuau 1st, is about 115 too short to reach from the sea corner of Kukuau 2d as shown by the plot, to reach Loebenstein's nail point, on Kukuau 1st [page 636] and Waiakea. According to Lidgate's plot of Kukuau 2d, the point marked A, is Lidgate's point of Kukuau 1st and Waiakea. Do not know how Loebenstein arrived at this point. The only way he could locate it would be to run Lidgate's bearings and distances along Kukuau 2d and along beach by his bearing and distance of Kukuau 1st, along beach; but comparing with Lidgate's plan Kukuau 1st would be wider than it appears from his description; from Ponahawai.

From pile of rocks at Volcano road down to sea, does not come near Loebenstein's corner; and from Kukuau 2d across by Loebenstein's description would take off from Kukuau 1st, which the government does not claim.

Loebenstein, on the Waiakea boundary, from beach up to Kumu, follows Webster's courses and distances, but from there to Volcano road assumes a course not given by Webster.

If he started from volcano road and run down by Webster, would go over 100 feet into Waiakea. We laid it out according to his coordinates, and found the exact spot, a small galvanized nail, and occupied that point.

Loebenstein stated that he point galvanized iron pipe there, call 95, to pipe drive in below front street; we could find no pipe there; we occupied his Station, scraped sand 30 feet around there. I examined, shortly after his testimony in August 8; we examined in September.

Loebenstein testified he put iron pipe at corner of Hanalei Fish Pond; We occupied the point by his coordinates, but found no pipe there, only a small stake 3 inches in ground; the corner is about 46 feet North of Loebenstein's corner; the corner of Pond wa changed when digging the canal.

Cross-examined:
Running a line on a variation of 12° 10', and on 12° 20'; could not say what would be the difference at end of line 2 1/2 miles long; could figure it out (asked to figure it). Webster's Survey was made 1851. I ran along to Kilohana in 1900. Tom. Cook assisted me, and I had Janeway triangulate up there some.

The Lava flow of 1880-1 was after Webster's survey. About 3/4 mile covered by lava on the Kukuau Waiakea line; 2 1/2 miles to Kalanakamaa; if you run by Magnetic lines would be trouble, but Webster used a Theodolite; his variation was 7° 20'; he used back angles and Lyons got declination from Kulani, and made Variation 7° 20' [page 637]; now we have the true bearings; the lava flow makes no difference. Kilohana is a resting place, a large mound, a large pile of stones on high brow of hill; pahoehoe mound, by old trail, is a well established point, no dispute. Webster run on 7° 20' variation, and even on 7° 30' would be but little different; about a degree, on present declination 8° 20', one degree different from 1851.

The two culverts under Volcano road, at little gully, shows that water ran there; no mark of Webster's at Kumu; no marks are mentioned by him on lines; he mentions localities, like a stream, ridge, Spring &c. I have investigated the land above Kilohana, and made this Map from surveys by myself, Loebenstien, and description of Kukuau 1st, and data in Survey department; location of Lava flows.
(Map filed, Marked Exhibit 5)

The two red lines on Map, show Lidgate's survey; it does not reach down to Kilohana; the lower red lines show Loebenstein's survey. I took Loebenstein's starting points, by his coordinates; pencil line shows survey, by Exhibit #1, which runs way to the South of Waiakea line as laid out by Lidgate; nothing cuts off above, only end of lines; leaves 1100 acres between the two Kukuaus, approximately; it is more than 1000 acres.

I investigated it with Lyons; had surveys of Kaumana, and Pohahawai, and Kukuau 1st, the original Maps; I also wrote to Lidgate and he was here and say my Maps; said it was just as he ran the lines, as he remembered.

Lidgate was here in town, and saw this Map; I had written to him first, asking what he had done, and when here, he examined this Map and said it agreed with the work he had done; said he followed up the old trail through woods; and Kawaaokamoi cut across the land; he had the kamaainas with him, and the owners of the land too; cut across at points marked A [in circle] and B [in circle], which points the owners agreed were on the boundaries. The distances were taken from the original Maps of Kukuau 1st; they are South East from Kawaaokamoi. Loebenstein, in a former survey gave North mark A [in circle] as this, and South corner a good deal further mauka, but his later survey pushes both corners nearly 4000 feet above A [in circle].

Mr. Lyons and I went over the plot and found Lidgate replotted part of his work over again, which would make the addition; We found also that Lidgate did not run those lines; he only went through the woods once, in the road, [page 638] on the North line of Kukuau 2d, in numerous small courses up to Kawaaokamoi, then he cut out on the lava flow.
If we run up Lidgate's survey, North line from Kawaaokamoi up to upper and of Kukuau 2d and down the other side comes down to A [in circle], and not to Loebenstein's corners we actually plotted out Lidgate's notes of survey, and found this. Checked Lidgate's A [in circle], and B [in circle], by going around the survey.

Cross-examined.
The line on Map between Kukuau 1st and Kukuau 2d, is the same course, but is 4000 feet longer in the Patent than to A [in circle] on this Map. The next line corresponds in course and distance with the Patent exactly.

I compiled this Map from various sources; This Map (Exhibit C) has an error in distance of 4000 feet; the new Map shows the error; a different scale; the description gives exact distance, 23,600 or 23,700 feet (measured on Map) up from edge of woods, first course (on exhibit C) Lidgate's, to first angle, (A on Baldwin's compiled Map); 23,600 feet is the distance given in the Patent.

On Baldwin's Map, from edge of forest to A [in circle] is 19,500 + feet, and is about 4000 feet shorter than the line given in Lidgate's Map, and the Patent; the Patent does not go back into Kukuau 2d. The Patent follows up the North side to "Kawaaokamoi," then gives course and distance to upper and, then across, and down to point A [in circle], as by this compiled Map, then down the next course is 4000 feet too long; runs into Kukuau 2d, below woods.

When Lyons and I replotted Lidgate's lines below Kawaaokamoi, we found that he replotted about 4000 feet of distance, which is 4000 feet more than is given in the Patent of Kukuau 2d.

(Exhibit F. Kukuau 2d patent) South 87.35. Loebenstein's dotted line is intended to be the same as the Patent, and is some distance above upper end of the land. Divergence of line 10' difference, would be about 38 feet in 2 1/2 miles; a right angle distance.

Examined by Court
The Patent of Kukuau 2d gives North boundary as on this compiled Map, and down to lower edge of woods at a known point on boundary of Kukuau 1st and Kukuau 2d; is about 4000 feet too long on that side. And of Station 46 (Loebenstein, Kukuau 1st running up) Patent running down, while if we run up South side of Patent, it will not close with the North side by 4000 feet; the survey in the Patent does not close.
The Territory closed testimony.

[page 639]
Rebuttal
A.B. Loebenstein, sworn, I made a survey of Kukuau 1st according to the decision of the former Boundary Commissioner; this is the description (Exhibit 1) and this is the Map (Exhibit N) to my recollection the Map is identical with Patent line of Kukuau 2d. I made this survey on the ground, and cut the lines through all the way.

The line from lower edge of woods, ginger, by Lidgate direction and distance, given in Kukuau Patent, 23,600 feet, run out on Magnetic bearing, the same as the Kukuau 2d Patent.

The boundary of Kukuau 1st, South line, crossed Volcano road practically midway, through gate of government Pound.

Distance and bearing is the same, of Patent and Kukuau 1st from upper end down, 26,000+ feet. I know Kumu Spring below. On this Map the green line is my line - mark + on bluff overhanging Kumu spring, I got it partly from Webster survey, partly from Kamaaina testimony on record.

Lidgate's sea point (Exhibit 4) East corner of Kukuau, I got it form North East angle of Kanaina kuleana; this survey was made by myself, with aid of Sisson and others; points marked pipe, mean it. I do not know anything about the doubling up Baldwin [to] speak of.

Court: I have tested the Kukuau 2d survey, cannot say if it will close. I have run out the line from the head of Punahoa down along Kaumana, and also the short call by Lidgate in the Patent.

Redirect: Along South line of Punahoa, along Kaumana, to head of Punahawai, I found a discrepancy of 4000 feet.

Following from South West angle of Punahoa Patent around by certificate of Boundaries of Kaumana, to where Kukuau 1 and 2, are cut off by Waiakea and Piihonua. I find these distances in Kukuau Patent, to agree perfectly with Lidgate's description and my action was endorsed by Lyons. Kukuau 1st and 2d join each other.

Court: Kukuau 2d patent carries the land some distance above Punahoa, along Piihonua, then up along Waiakea, and across, and down to Kukuau first. I ran out all these lines on the ground and located the corners of both Kukuaus and Punahoa.

Court: Kukuau 2d Patent carries the land some distance above Punahoa, along Piihonua, then up along Waiakea, and across, and down to Kukuau first. I ran out all these lines on the ground and located the corners of both Kukuaus and Punahoa. Kukuau overlaps the corner of Punahoa a little, but that is an earlier Patent and holds good.

R.A. Lyman, sworn, Was born and brought up in Hilo, am acquainted with Kukuau 1st. I saw the corners as fixed by Lidgate, near sea, on North side joining Kukuau 2d corner established by Lidgate, as pointed out by Kapu and others (L) [Exhibit L?], saw red wood post [page 640] at sea coat at that time, set by Lidgate, also a red wood post about the point
"A.B.L." on Map. I saw them while survey was being made. North West corner of Kukuau 2d as patented.

In latter part of 1866, Kamehameha V was at Hilo, stopping in the long house of Keelikolani; he directed me to take charge of Waiakea, Crown Land; he was King, and had dismissed the konohiki; he sent Kapu, Kaaua, and other old men to point out the boundary of Kukuau and Waiakea above old water wall above the road; at that time Kukuau 1st was held under Lease, represented by John Ena; Kamehameha V sent these men to show me the boundary, as people were cultivating at Upleoa, on Waiakea and Kukuau down towards the volcano road; they pointed out boundary along gulch, said, said it was Kalanakamaa gulch, crossing it where it used to overflow; follow down a ridge through middle of Kalolo kuleana to a point on Puna side of ridge, crossing Volcano road to about where Loebenstein's pile of stones now stands by Pound gate; all the kamaainas but Kaaua agreed. He said it should follow down gulch to Puna of that; from Volcano road pointed out in a direct line to precipice above Kumu spring, close to where Kumu gulch empties into Kumu; from there pointed out along edge of Waiolama to angle in Hanalei Fish pond; below pond, along North West side of Kaihenui's kalo patch, along iwi aina toward shore.

They said Webster's sea point was washed away at the time Waiolama ate into beach and almost went into Kaihenui's house on North side of Keelikolani's house; they claimed that when Waiolama went in that direction it carried Kukuau into Waiakea, as Waiolama belonged to Kukuau 1st; said that when Webster surveyed Waiakea, the sea came up to the present Front Street. Waiolama was flowing toward Waiakea; that was first time boundaries were definitely pointed out to me.

Waiakea natives pointed out boundaries, the same at different times, up to survey in 1874, and up to time Lease was parted with to Hawaiian Agricultural company, in 1877. Kapu and Kaaua, I think it was, the kamaainas who went with Webster to survey, were sent with Lidgate to survey, and the told me they pointed out the same points they showed me.

When I examined survey by Loebenstein, and found it [page 641] did not agree with the Patent of Kukuau 2d, and Webster's point at sea coast, which he disregarded, I directed him to make new notes of survey, to conform with Patent of Kukuau 2d, from the sea up, and to follow to extreme mauka end of Kukuau 2d, then to follow notes of survey in Certificate of Boundaries of Kukuau 1st, across head of Kukuau 1st, and down along Waiakea to Kilohana, and from Kilohana to point on volcano road, as run by Loebenstein, which struck pile of stones and puhala tree at Upeloa, and to pile stones below Volcano road on Puna side of Pound gate, from there in straight line to Kumu, as pointed out to me by Kapu and other natives, from head of Kumu to follow Webster's survey to his sea point, 818 feet from West corner of Piopio; from there to supply course and distance to Lidgate's North East corner of Kukuau 2d, and across to Waiakea; all these points were showed me by kamaainas, as near as I can tell, the point by Volcano road is as shown me by kamaainas, and from there direct to Kumu Spring.

Cross-examined: Loebenstein was directed to follow line to Kumu. I saw Lidgate's Red Wood posts; as near as I could tell now, looking from Kanaina corner, looked a little distance towards Waiakea, to post, could not tell how many degrees; could not locate it now; there are so many houses there.

About 1874, it was shifting sand; sand used to wash both ways; it is difficult to locate posts without surveys; there are so many changes; as near as I can tell, locate posts on Map, as Lidgate's; locate points on land by looking; past was to the right; looking towards sea. I used to go there looking after fish in sea, and in river; have not been there lately; did not talk to Loebenstein about posts; they being established by Royal Patent, at time of survey by Lidgate, marks above and below.

I had Lease of both Kukuaus, and was told to see they were surveyed correctly; those men told me they pointed out boundary to Webster; I settled the boundaries before, and reopened case for the Government to bring in evidence.

There was no Pound then; it was established after I left Hilo. I sent kamaainas with Lidgate; know that he surveyed below Volcano road; he said he went there; I asked the Government to put him on as a witness; 21 months ago. I am not interested in this matter, excepting being Boundary Commissioner. I went to Honolulu to explain Exhibits, was asked by Kinney; was there a couple of days could not say exactly how many [page 642] days; had to wait over one steamer. (Boundary Commission Records, pages 572-8, Book D.)  I wrote this - page 575 shows why I did not have the hearing at the time set; I had no interest in case except as Boundary Commissioner.

Testimony closed at 4:30 p.m.

Decision
Before Frederick S. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries, Fourth Judicial District, Territory of Hawaii

In the Matter of the Boundaries of the Land of Kukuau 1st, District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, Territory of Hawaii.

I do  hereby decide that the Boundaries of the Land of Kukuau 1st, in the District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, Territory of Hawaii, are and hereafter shall be as set forth i the description given in the Survey made by A.B. Loebenstein, now on file, dated July 19th 1901, as directed by order of the Commissioner of Boundaries of the Fourth Judicial District, Territory of Hawaii, dated September 20th 1900.

Certificate of Boundaries to be issued accordingly, on payment of the costs and fees of the Boundary Commission.
Frederick S. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries, Fourth Judicial District. Territory of Hawaii
Hilo, Hawaii, December 31st 1903

(Book C, 4, page 154)

Territory of Hawaii
Before the Boundary Commissioner of the Fourth Circuit,
Honorable F.S. Lyman, Commissioner.
In the Matter of the Boundaries of Kukuau 1st.
Exception to Ruling of Commissioner.
Now comes the Territory of Hawaii and notes its exception to the ruling of the Commissioner in the above entitled cause, that the Territory of Hawaii as Appellant herein pay to the Commissioner on appeal not only one half of the total costs, and disbursements in the above cause already paid in amounting to $220.60 but also the additional sum of $402.10 being the petitioners respondants share of said disbursements and costs.
James W. Pratt, Commissioner of Public Lands
(Filed February 10, 1904)

[page 643]
Bill of costs
The Land of Kukuau 1st, Hilo, Hawaii, Mrs. J.L. Richardson
To Commissioner of Boundaries, December 31, 1903

[columns for year, Item, Dr[?] costs & fees]
1900, To R.A. Lyman, Commissioner, [Owed], [Summation]
1900, To 6 days hearing in 1900, $60.00
1900, To Notices Hawaii Herald, 10.00
1900, To Recording Testimony, 74.50
1900, To Certified Copy, certificate of Boundaries, 5.50; 150.00
1901, To Services J.H. Van Gieson, for papers and 3 days, 6.50
1901, To Services J.H. Van Gieson, Typewriting 440 folio @ 30c, 134.70; 141.20
1902, To Services G. Bell, Typewriting 55 folio, 16.50
1902, To Services G. Bell, 2.00; 18.50
1901, 2, 3, To 7 days hearings, July, August and March 1903; 70.00
To Copying 540 folio evidence &c in Records 135.00; 205.00
Total to R.A. Lyman; 514.70

1903, December 30, To F.S. Lyman, Commissioner
1903, To 8 days service on the case 80.00
1903, To Record 44 folio testimony @ 25c 11.00
1903, To Certificate of Boundaries 2.00
1903, To 30 folio description in Certificate @ 50c; 15.00; 108.00
Total Costs $622.70

E & O Exhibits
It is Ordered that the Contestant, i.e. the Government of the territory of Hawaii, pay of the above Costs, 220.60
And the Applicant pay the remainder, 402.10
F.S. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries

1900, Received from the Government on costs $150.-
1901, Received from the Government 1/2 Van Gieson bill; 70.60; 220.60
1901, Received from Mrs. J.L. Richardson on costs 71.60
1905, January 19, Received from Mrs. J.L. Richardson on costs 331.50; 402.10
F.S. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries

[page 644]
Hilo, Hawaii, January 27, 1904, Office of the Commissioner of boundaries, 3d and 4th Judicial Districts, Territory of Hawaii

In the Matter of the Boundaries of Kukuau 1st, Hilo, Hawaii

Carl S. Smith, of Smith and Parsons, appeared for the Territory of Hawaii, and presented the following Motion for Extension of time within which to perfect appeal; and stated that he had served Wise and Ross with the Motion, and that said Firm declined to appear in the matter.

Motion heard, and granted, extending the time in which to perfect Appeal to the 15th day of February 1904 as the Costs have not yet been received from Honolulu.
F.S. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries

(Motion filed January 27, 1904)
Before the Boundary Commissioner for the Third and fourth Judicial Circuits, Territory of Hawaii.

In Re the Boundaries of Kukuau First

Motion for Extension of the time within which to Perfect appeal

Comes now the Territory of Hawaii, and the Commissioner of Public Lands, the owners of the land of Waiakea, respondents in this cause, and moves that the time within which an appeal my be taken, perfected and allowed in this cause to the Supreme Court shall be extended to the fifteenth day of February, 1904.
(Signed) Smith & Parsons, For the Motion
Hilo, Hawaii, January 27, 1904

Service by copy acknowledged, Wise & Ross

[page 645]
Before the Boundary Commissioner for the Third and Fourth Judicial Circuits, Territory of Hawaii.

In the Matter of the Boundaries of Kukuau First

Order extending time for Appeal

This matter coming on this day to be heard upon the motion of the respondents for an extension of time within which to take and perfect an appeal herein to the Supreme Court, it is hereby ordered that the time for taking and perfecting an appeal here be and is hereby extended to the fifteenth day of February, 1904.
Witness my hand on this 27th day of January, 1904
Frederick S. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries, The Third and Fourth Judicial Circuits

(Notice of Appeal, filed January 30, 1904)
Before the Boundary Commissioner of the Third and fourth Judicial circuits.

In the Matter of Boundaries of Kukuau First.

Notice of Appeal
The Territory of Hawaii and the Commissioner of Public Lands, respondents in this cause come now and give this notice of intention to appeal and do hereby appeal from the decision of the Commissioner of boundaries for the Third and Fourth Judicial Circuits made and entered in this cause on or about the 31st day of December, 1903, and do hereby appeal from the said decision to the supreme court of the Territory of Hawaii.
The Territory of Hawaii, James W. Pratt, commissioner of Public Lands.
By Smith & Parsons, Their Attorneys
Hilo, Hawaii, January 30, 1904


Kukuau 1st Ahupuaa, District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, Boundary Commission, Volume D, No. 5, pps 650-652

Re Kukuau 1st, Hilo, Hawaii

The Balance of Costs - $402.10 was paid February 10, 1904, by J.W. Pratt, Commissioner of Public Lands

The Bond of J.W. Pratt, Commissioner of Public Lands, with E.D. Baldwin, surety, for Costs in the Supreme Court, was filed February 13, 1904

The balance of Costs and expenses accrued, $402.10, having been paid on the tenth day of February, by J.W. Pratt, Commissioner of Public Lands, appellant, and the bond for $100.00, costs in the Supreme Court, being filed this 13th day of February, 1904, thereby perfecting the appeal to the Supreme Court of the Territory of Hawaii.
Frederick S. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries, 3d and 4th Judicial Circuits, Territory of Hawaii.

Before the Boundary Commissioner for the Third and Fourth Judicial Circuits.

In Re Boundaries of Kukuau First

Certificate of Appeal
I hereby certify that in the above entitled cause J.W. Pratt, as Commissioner of Public Lands of the Territory of Hawaii, and the Territory of Hawaii, as owner of the land of Waiakea, respondents in this cause, have duly noted on appeal from the final decision of the boundary Commissioner in this cause and have duly completed the said appeal to the supreme court as provided by law; and that accompanying this certificate all of the records, exhibits and files in this cause transmitted to the Supreme Court.
In witness whereof I have hereto set my hand on the fifteenth day of February, 1904.
Frederick S. Lyman, Boundary Commissioner

[page 651]
Re Kukuau 1st, Hilo, Hawaii
January 18, 1905
Received Remittitur of the case from the Supreme Court, with papers and exhibits, returned) and January 19th, Mrs. J.L. Richardson, paid the balance, $331.50 of her shore of the total costs, as per decision December 31, 1903, and the Original Certificate of Boundaries of December 31, 1903 was delivered to her; also Exhibits "A," and "3" and also a certified copy of the Certificate of Boundaries; $10.25 paid
Frederick S. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries

"In the Supreme Court, Territory of Hawaii

In the Matter of Kukuau 1st

Appeal from Judgment of the Boundary Commissioner

The appeal, in the above entitled cause having been dismissed the records and files herein are hereby ordered remitted to the Honorable F.S. Lyman, Boundary Commissioner.
By the Court
(Signed) George Lucas, Clerk
Honolulu, December 5, 1904”

In the Supreme Court of the Territory of Hawaii, October Term, 1904

In the Matter of the Boundaries of Kukuau 1st, Island of Hawaii
Remittitur
This matter duly appealed from the Commissioner of Boundaries of the island of Hawaii, to the Supreme Court of the Territory of Hawaii and is by said Court duly ordered remitted to said Commissioner: therefore
[margin note: H.S.]
It is Ordered:
That said cause be and the same is hereby remanded to said Commissioner of Boundaries, together with the records, exhibits, maps, and notes of evidence filed in said cause.
Dated: Honolulu, January 16, 1905
(Seal) By the Court Henry Smith
Clerk Supreme Court, Territory of Hawaii

[page 652]
Re Kukuau 1st, Hilo Hawaii

February 1905

The Government Costs paid on appeal to Supreme Court, returned to J.W. Pratt, Commissioner of Public Lands, $402.10
Frederick S. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries

The Exhibits on file, returned from the Supreme Court, were delivered to A.B. Loebenstein, attorney for Petitioner:

1. Exhibit F - Copy Royal Patent No. 5706, Kukuau 2d, Hilo
2. Exhibit G -Tracing of Hilo Mountain lands
3. Exhibit J - Calculation Sheet
4. Exhibit L - Calculation Sheet
5. Exhibit V - Copy of Waiakea Lease to R.A. Lyman
6. Exhibit W - Plan of Government Pound, Waiakea
7. Exhibit Y - Calculation Sheet
8. Exhibit Z - Calculation Sheet
9. Exhibit K - Lidgate plan of Punahoa 1st, Hilo.
10. Exhibit X - Loebenstein line of Waiakea, Kukuau 1st (tracing)
11. Exhibit P - Plan of Hilo Harbor
12. Exhibit AA - Plan of Hilo lands, 1: 24000
13. Exhibit 1 - Plan of Hilo Front St., Scale 1:6000
14. Exhibit B - Plan of Kukuau 1st, Scale 1:6000
15. Exhibit N - Plan of Kukuau 1st, Scale 1:24000
16. Exhibit Q - Map of Hilo Bay, by J.E.G. Jackson, 1882
17. Exhibit O - Map of Hilo Bay by Magnetic Variation, 1888
(Signed) A.B. Loebenstein, Surveyor & Attorney, for Mrs. J.L. Richardson
in re boundaries Kukuau 1st
February 20, 1905


Kukuau 1st Ahupuaa, District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, Boundary Commission, Hawaii, Volume C, No. 4, pps. 154-159

No. 189

Certificate of Boundaries of the Land of Kukuau 1st, District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, U.S.A.
 
Keoni Ana, Royal Patent #1666 (by name) Land Commission Award # 8515.

Commission of Boundaries, Fourth Judicial Circuit, Territory of Hawaii, Frederick S. Lyman, Commissioner

In the Matter of the Boundaries of the land of Kukuau 1st, District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, Territory of Hawaii, U.S.A.

Judgement
An application to decide and certify the Boundaries of the Land of Kukuau 1st, District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, having been filed with the Commissioner of Boundaries on the 27th day of April, A.D. 1900 by Mrs. J.L. Richardson, by her attorney A.B. Loebenstein, in accordance with the provisions of an Act to facilitate the settlement of Boundaries, now therefore, having duly received and heard all the Testimony offered in reference to the said boundaries, and having endeavored otherwise to obtain all information possible to enable me to arrive at a just decision, which will more fully appear by reference to the records of this matter by me kept in Book No. 5, D, page 622, and it appearing to my satisfaction that the true, lawful and equitable boundaries are as follows, viz.:

Beginning at a point on the sea beach at high water mark, the coordinates of which point are North 2491.62 East 5701.38 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai, the North boundary of this land follows the boundary of the land of Kukuau 2d and its allotments by the following courses and distances, measured by the true meridian:

1.    South 15° 00' West 183.0 feet along Land Commission Award 8521B
2.    South 43° 22' West 350.0 feet along Land Commission Award 8521B to the East angle of Land Commission Award 4239b, Kanaina, the coordinates of said point being North 2060.42, East 5413.78 feet referred to Hawaiian Government Survey Station Halai. [page 155]
3.    South 21° 04' West 307.0 feet along Land Commission Award 4239B, Kanaina, to South angle thereof;
4.    South 31° 17' West 376.0 feet along Land Commission Award 11045B, Kanakaole;
5.    South 55° 54' West 1131.5 feet along Land Commission Award 11045B, Land Commission Award 3205, and Land Commission Award 1091, to the South angle of Land Commission Award 1091, Hio;
6.    South 49° 26' West 307.2 feet to West angle of Mill Street;
7.    South 40° 44' West 370.7 feet to North angle of stone wall, the present North angle of Land Commission Award 2664, Kahua;
8.    South 36° 20' West 251.5 feet through Land Commission Award 2664, Kahua, to a pipe, the coordinates of which point are North 133.04, East 3542.96 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
9.    South 34° 04' West 1198.0 feet to old water hole, the coordinates being South 839.57 East 2871.89 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
10.    South 49° 56' West 1764.0 feet to Makaliiaina, the coordinates being South 1994.79 East 1521.91 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
11.    South 39° 10' West 1410.0 feet to a + under Lidgate mound of stones the coordinates being South 3087.99 East 631.41 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
12.    South 69° 12' West 984.2 feet to + under mound of stones at edge of lava flow;
13.    South 54° 46' 30” West 721.6 feet to + under mound of stones on lava;
14.    South 49° 11' West 582.8 feet to + under mound of stones on lava;
15.    South 70° 41' West 587.8 feet to + under mound of stones on lava;
16.    South 50° 32' West 728.6 feet to + under mound of stones on lava, the coordinates being South 4892.2 West 2434.9 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
17.    South 45° 03' West 758.5 feet to + under mound of stones on lava;
18.    South 70° 03' 30” West 470.0 feet to + under mound of stones on lava;
19.    South 44° 36' West 817.4 feet to + under mound of stones on lava;
20.    South 03° 52' East 555.6 feet to + under mound of stones on lava;
21.    south 33° 16' 30” West 511.0 feet to + under mound of stones on lava, the coordinates being South 7153.2 West 4264.2 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
22.    South 38° 52' West 738.0 feet to + under mound of stones on lava;
23.    South 29° 25' West 823.0 feet to + under mound of stones on lava;
24.    South 52° 11' West 155.0 feet to + under mound of stones on lava;
25.    South 52° 32' West 600.0 feet to + under mound of stones on lava;
26.    South 27° 12' West 910.0 feet to Lidgate's mound of stones on grazing land, the coordinates being South 9709.3 West 6142.8 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
27.    South 36° 20' West 307.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
28.    South 34° 51' West 1403.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
29.    South 48° 19' West 174.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
30.    South 46° 40' West 406.0 feet to + under mound of stones, the coordinates being [page 156] South 11502.3 West 7552.4 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
31.    South 28° 25' West 252.5 feet to + under mound of stones;
32.    South 41° 07' 30” West 226.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
33.    South 48° 57' West 365.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
34.    South 53° 07' West 742.0 feet to + under Lidgate mound of stones on Kilohana ridge, the coordinates being South12577.7 West 8690.0 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
35.    South 49° 06' West 793.0 feet to + under mound of stones near lower edge of forest;
36.    South 51° 51' West 435.5 feet to + under Lidgate mound of stones;
37.    South 51° 55' West 164.5 feet to + under mound of stones;
38.    South 46° 27' 30” West 419.0 feet to + under mound of stones at lidgate's gingers;
39.    South 09° 20' West 206.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
40.    South 10° 04' West 191.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
41.    South 14° 22' West 133.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
42.    North 57° 20' 30” West 165.0 feet to + under Lidgate's mound of stones;
43.    North 70° 32' west 209.7 feet to + under Lidgate mound of stones at Lidgate's ohia K, remarked [triangle with X in it]
44.    North 47° 29' West 233.3 feet to + on smooth rock outside of woods;
45.    North 61° 04' 30” West 197.5 feet to + under Lidgate mound of stones in open, the coordinates being South 13849.0 West 10835.1` feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
46.    South 57° 58' west 1460.0 feet across open to + under mound of stones at Lidgate's clump of gingers in forest, the coordinates being South 14622.6 West 12072.8 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
47.    South 67° 55' west 23600.0 feet to marked trees surrounding a + cut in the rock, the coordinates being South 23495.1 West 33941.5 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
48.    North 81° 17' West 26100.0 feet to + under mound of stones on which is now the lava flow of 1880 at extreme Northwest angle of land, adjoining Waiakea, the coordinates being South 19539.7 West 59740.1 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
49.    South 19° 35' East 1150.0 feet across lower branch of said flow to point of woods surrounded by marked trees at top this land adjoining Waiakea, to Southwest angle, the coordinates being South 20623.2 West 59254.7 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
50.    South 75° 09' East 27258.0 feet along Waiakea to marked trees surrounding a mound of stones, the coordinates being South 27609.2 [page 157] West 32999.6 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai; [32999.0 feet in R.P 8172]
51.    North 65° 35' East 23960.0 feet to + under mound of stones at Lidgate's gingers, the coordinates being South 17704.9 West 11182.5 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
52.    North 85° 08' East 781.0[?] feet to + under mound of stones;
53.    North 72° 08' East 803.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
54.    North 62° 31' East 267.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
55.    North 58° 52' East 1388.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
56.    North 53° 00' East 732.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
57.    North 55° 42' East 1219.0 feet to + under old mound of stones at lower edge [of] forest, the coordinates being South 15430.0 West 6689.0 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
58.    North 19° 18' East 1152.0 feet to + under old mound of stones at lower edge forest;
59.    North 06° 40' West 489.0 feet to + under mound of stones at old trail;
60.    North 37° 12' East 1189.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
61.    North 33° 07' East 758.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
62.    North 38° 21' East 1071.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
63.    North 20° 50' East 194.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
64.    North 09° 08' East 1025.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
65.    North 50° 25' East 837.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
66.    North 32° 52' East 757.0 feet to + under mound of stones (Webster) on Kilohana ahua, the coordinates being South 9072.7 West 3278.9 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
67.    North 29° 54' East 2887.0 feet to + under mound of stones a little above edge of lava flow;
68.    North 17° 32' East 594.0 feet to + under mound of stones on lava, the coordinates being South 6004.7 West 1662.4 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
69.    North 26° 53' East 1749.5 feet to + under mound on lava flow;
70.    North 74° 05' East 1392.0 feet to + under mound of stones on lava flow, the coordinates being South 4062.5 East 467.7 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
71.    North 58° 14' East 957.0 feet to + under old mound of stones below lava flow;
72.    North 41° 13' West 964.0 feet to + under old mound of stones below lava flow;
73.    North 40° 24' East 295.0 feet to + under old mound of stones below lava flow;
74.    North 37° 02' East 312.4 feet to + under old mound of stones below lava flow;
75.    North 46° 43' East 244.5 feet to + under old mound of stones below lava flow;
76.    North 37° 23' East 264.5 feet to + under old mound of stones below lava flow;
77.    North 22° 09' East 122.8 feet to + under old mound of stones below lava flow;
78.    North 15° 13' East 259.5 feet to + under old mound of stones below lava flow;
79.    North 41° 51' East 148.0 feet to + under old mound of stones below lava flow;
80.    North 88° 37' East 198.0 feet to + under old mound of stones below lava flow;
81.    North 51° 06' East 128.0 feet to + under old mound of stones below lava flow; [page 158]
82.    North 09° 22' East 44.0 feet to + under old mound of stones below lava flow;
83.    North 79° 14' East 167.0 feet to + under old mound of stones below lava flow;
84.    North 71° 16' East 121.0 feet, the coordinates being 1306.9 East 3429.1 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
85.    North 61° 16' East 376.0 feet to + under mound of stones in gully by old puhala tree (W), now cut down;
86.    North 02° 24' West 268.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
87.    North 49° 32' East 260.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
88.    North 28° 49' East 348.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
89.    North 41° 49' East 280.0 feet to + under mound of stones, the coordinates being South 179.9 East 4304.9 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
90.    North 37° 06' East 307.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
91.    North 46° 12' East 616.0 feet to + under mound of stones;
92.    North 40° 42' East 447.0 feet to  under mound of stones a little below the lower edge of the Volcano Road, the coordinates being North 830.3 East 5225.7 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
93.    North 48° 55' East 362.0 feet to a + marked on ledge overhanging Kumunui spring and bathing place;
94.    North 03° 19' East 410.7 feet the boundary following the base of the cliff at the water edge and the Kuauna of the Hanalei fish pond to a pipe in said Kuauna;
95a.    North 39° 52' East 452.0 feet to original Northeast angle of Kukuau 1, the Northwest angle of Piopio, as per survey of Wm. Webster, Esquire in 1851, distant 818.0 feet being North 81° 02' East (true) the coordinates being North 1818.30 feet East 5312.36 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
95.   North 18° 24' East 308.4 feet to a pipe driven in the ground below Front Street, the coordinates being North 2117.22 East 5905.78 feet referred to Hawaii Government Survey Station Halai;
96.   North 15° 00' East 299.4 feet to edge sea-beach at high water mark, thence along said sea-beach at high water mark to point of commencement, the direct bearing and distance being
97. North 75° 14' West 294.2 feet to said point of commencement.
Containing an area of 4520.0 Acres, more or less, as surveyed by A.B. Loebenstein.
July 10th 1901

It is therefore adjudged, and I do hereby certify and decide that the boundaries of said land of Kukuau 1st are, and hereafter shall be as hereinbefore set forth, and that Certificate of Boundaries No. 58 is hereby cancelled and set aside.

Given under my hand at Hilo, Island of Hawaii, the 31st day of December A.D. 1903
Frederick S. Lyman, Commissioner of Boundaries, Fourth Judicial Circuit, Territory of Hawaii

Copy 33 folio

[No. 189, Kukuau 1st Ahupuaa, District of Hilo, Island of Hawaii, 4520  Acres, 1903]