HART v. Ward
Citation153 Haw. 462
Date Filed2023-12-29
DocketSCAP-22-0000335
Cited0 times
StatusPublished
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
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Electronically Filed
Supreme Court
SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX
29-DEC-2023
10:52 AM
Dkt. 89 OP
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF HAWAIâI
---o0o---
SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX, SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX, SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX,
SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX, SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX, SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX,
SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX, and SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX
CITY AND COUNTY OF HONOLULU, acting by and through the
HONOLULU AUTHORITY FOR RAPID TRANSPORTATION,
Plaintiff/Counterclaim Defendant-Appellee/Cross-Appellant,
vs.
VICTORIA WARD, LIMITED, a Delaware Corporation; 988 HALEKAUWILA,
LLC, a Delaware limited liability company; 1001 QUEEN, LLC, a
Delaware limited liability company; 1118 ALA MOANA, LLC, a
Delaware limited liability company; 1108 AUAHI, LLC, a Delaware
limited liability company; 1100 ALA MOANA, LLC, a Delaware
limited liability company; and âAâALIâI, LLC, a Delaware limited
liability company, Defendants/Counterclaim Plaintiffs-
Appellants/Cross-Appellees,
and
1240 ALA MOANA, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company; THE
HOWARD HUGHES CORPORATION, a Delaware corporation; VICTORIA WARD
ENTERTAINMENT CENTER, L.L.C., a Delaware limited liability
company; ASSOCIATION OF UNIT OWNERS OF 1001 QUEEN, a Hawaiâi
nonprofit corporation; ASSOCIATION OF UNIT OWNERS OF âAâALIâI, an
unincorporated association; ASSOCIATION OF UNIT OWNERS OF 988
HALEKAUWILA, an unincorporated association; and WARD VILLAGE
OWNERS ASSOCIATION, a Hawaiâi nonprofit corporation,
Defendants-Appellants/Cross-Appellees,
and
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WELLS FARGO BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, a national banking
association; BANK OZK, fka BANK OF THE OZARKS, an Arkansas
state-chartered bank; GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY, a New York
corporation, as successor by merger to GENERAL ELECTRIC CAPITAL
CORPORATION, a Delaware corporation; BANK OF HAWAII, a Hawaiâi
corporation, as trustee under (a) that certain Land Trust
Agreement and Conveyance dated October 21, 2004 (Trust No.
89433) and filed as Land Court Document No. 3188119, and
(b) that certain Land Trust Agreement and Conveyance dated
October 21, 2004 (Trust No. 89434) and filed as Land Court
Document No. 3188118; FIRST HAWAIIAN BANK, a Hawaiâi corporation,
as trustee under (a) that certain unrecorded Land Trust
Agreement dated September 20, 2006 (Trust No. FHB-TRES 200601),
and (b) that certain unrecorded Land Trust Agreement dated
September 20, 2006 (Trust No. FHB-TRES 200602); HI 120 REAL
ESTATE COMPANY, INC., a Hawaiâi corporation, fka CONSOLIDATED
AMUSEMENT THEATRES, INC., a Hawaiâi corporation; CONSOLIDATED
ENTERTAINMENT, INC., a Nevada corporation, fka CONSOLIDATED
AMUSEMENT THEATRES, INC., a Nevada corporation; CONSOLIDATED
ENTERTAINMENT, LLC, a Nevada limited liability company; LONGS
DRUG STORES CALIFORNIA, L.L.C., a California limited liability
company; DAVE & BUSTERâS OF HAWAII, INC., a Hawaiâi corporation;
WARD COURT DEVELOPMENT, LLC, a Hawaiâi limited liability company;
ROSS DRESS FOR LESS, INC., a Virginia corporation; CG FAMILY,
INC., a Hawaiâi corporation; and WFM HAWAII, LLC, a Hawaiâi
limited liability company,
Defendants-Appellees/Cross-Appellees.
(CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX, CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX, CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX,
CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX, CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX, CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX,
CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX, and CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX)
SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX
CITY AND COUNTY OF HONOLULU, acting by and through the
HONOLULU AUTHORITY FOR RAPID TRANSPORTATION,
Plaintiff/Counterclaim Defendant-Appellee/Cross-Appellant,
vs.
VICTORIA WARD, LIMITED, a Delaware Corporation; 988 HALEKAUWILA,
LLC, a Delaware limited liability company; 1001 QUEEN, LLC, a
Delaware limited liability company; 1118 ALA MOANA, LLC, a
Delaware limited liability company; 1108 AUAHI, LLC, a Delaware
limited liability company; 1100 ALA MOANA, LLC, a Delaware
2
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limited liability company; and âAâALIâI, LLC, a Delaware limited
liability company, Defendants/Counterclaim Plaintiffs-
Appellants/Cross-Appellees,
and
1240 ALA MOANA, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company; THE
HOWARD HUGHES CORPORATION, a Delaware corporation; VICTORIA WARD
ENTERTAINMENT CENTER, L.L.C., a Delaware limited liability
company; ASSOCIATION OF UNIT OWNERS OF 1001 QUEEN, a Hawaiâi
nonprofit corporation; ASSOCIATION OF UNIT OWNERS OF âAâALIâI, an
unincorporated association; ASSOCIATION OF UNIT OWNERS OF 988
HALEKAUWILA, an unincorporated association; and WARD VILLAGE
OWNERS ASSOCIATION, a Hawaiâi nonprofit corporation,
Defendants-Appellants/Cross-Appellees,
and
WELLS FARGO BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, a national banking
association; BANK OZK, fka BANK OF THE OZARKS, an Arkansas
state-chartered bank; GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY, a New York
corporation, as successor by merger to GENERAL ELECTRIC CAPITAL
CORPORATION, a Delaware corporation; BANK OF HAWAII, a Hawaiâi
corporation, as trustee under (a) that certain Land Trust
Agreement and Conveyance dated October 21, 2004 (Trust No.
89433) and filed as Land Court Document No. 3188119, and
(b) that certain Land Trust Agreement and Conveyance dated
October 21, 2004 (Trust No. 89434) and filed as Land Court
Document No. 3188118; FIRST HAWAIIAN BANK, a Hawaiâi corporation,
as trustee under (a) that certain unrecorded Land Trust
Agreement dated September 20, 2006 (Trust No. FHB-TRES 200601),
and (b) that certain unrecorded Land Trust Agreement dated
September 20, 2006 (Trust No. FHB-TRES 200602); HI 120 REAL
ESTATE COMPANY, INC., a Hawaiâi corporation, fka CONSOLIDATED
AMUSEMENT THEATRES, INC., a Hawaiâi corporation; CONSOLIDATED
ENTERTAINMENT, INC., a Nevada corporation, fka CONSOLIDATED
AMUSEMENT THEATRES, INC., a Nevada corporation; CONSOLIDATED
ENTERTAINMENT, LLC, a Nevada limited liability company; LONGS
DRUG STORES CALIFORNIA, L.L.C., a California limited liability
company; DAVE & BUSTERâS OF HAWAII, INC., a Hawaiâi corporation;
WARD COURT DEVELOPMENT, LLC, a Hawaiâi limited liability company;
ROSS DRESS FOR LESS, INC., a Virginia corporation; CG FAMILY,
INC., a Hawaiâi corporation; and WFM HAWAII, LLC, a Hawaiâi
limited liability company,
Defendants-Appellees/Cross-Appellees.
(CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX)
3
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SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX
CITY AND COUNTY OF HONOLULU, acting by and through the
HONOLULU AUTHORITY FOR RAPID TRANSPORTATION,
Plaintiff/Counterclaim Defendant-Appellant,
vs.
VICTORIA WARD, LIMITED, a Delaware Corporation; 988 HALEKAUWILA,
LLC, a Delaware limited liability company; 1001 QUEEN, LLC, a
Delaware limited liability company; 1118 ALA MOANA, LLC, a
Delaware limited liability company; 1108 AUAHI, LLC, a Delaware
limited liability company; 1100 ALA MOANA, LLC, a Delaware
limited liability company; and âAâALIâI, LLC,
a Delaware limited liability company,
Defendants/Counterclaim Plaintiffs-Appellees,
and
1240 ALA MOANA, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company; THE
HOWARD HUGHES CORPORATION, a Delaware corporation; VICTORIA WARD
ENTERTAINMENT CENTER, L.L.C., a Delaware limited liability
company; ASSOCIATION OF UNIT OWNERS OF 1001 QUEEN, a Hawaiâi
nonprofit corporation; ASSOCIATION OF UNIT OWNERS OF âAâALIâI, an
unincorporated association; ASSOCIATION OF UNIT OWNERS OF 988
HALEKAUWILA, an unincorporated association; and WARD VILLAGE
OWNERS ASSOCIATION, a Hawaiâi nonprofit corporation,
Defendants-Appellees,
and
WELLS FARGO BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, a national banking
association; BANK OZK, fka BANK OF THE OZARKS, an Arkansas
state-chartered bank; GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY, a New York
corporation, as successor by merger to GENERAL ELECTRIC CAPITAL
CORPORATION, a Delaware corporation; BANK OF HAWAII, a Hawaiâi
corporation, as trustee under (a) that certain Land Trust
Agreement and Conveyance dated October 21, 2004 (Trust No.
89433) and filed as Land Court Document No. 3188119, and
(b) that certain Land Trust Agreement and Conveyance dated
October 21, 2004 (Trust No. 89434) and filed as Land Court
Document No. 3188118; FIRST HAWAIIAN BANK, a Hawaiâi corporation,
as trustee under (a) that certain unrecorded Land Trust
Agreement dated September 20, 2006 (Trust No. FHB-TRES 200601),
and (b) that certain unrecorded Land Trust Agreement dated
September 20, 2006 (Trust No. FHB-TRES 200602); HI 120 REAL
ESTATE COMPANY, INC., a Hawaiâi corporation, fka CONSOLIDATED
AMUSEMENT THEATRES, INC., a Hawaiâi corporation; CONSOLIDATED
ENTERTAINMENT, INC., a Nevada corporation, fka CONSOLIDATED
AMUSEMENT THEATRES, INC., a Nevada corporation; CONSOLIDATED
ENTERTAINMENT, LLC, a Nevada limited liability company; LONGS
DRUG STORES CALIFORNIA, L.L.C., a California limited liability
4
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company; DAVE & BUSTERâS OF HAWAII, INC., a Hawaiâi corporation;
WARD COURT DEVELOPMENT, LLC, a Hawaiâi limited liability company;
ROSS DRESS FOR LESS, INC., a Virginia corporation; CG FAMILY,
INC., a Hawaiâi corporation; and WFM HAWAII, LLC,
a Hawaiâi limited liability company,
Defendants-Appellees.
(CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX)
SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX
(Consolidated with SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX, SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX,
SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX, SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX, SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX,
SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX, SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX, SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX,
and SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX)
APPEALS FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIRST CIRCUIT
(CASE NO. 1CC181001564)
DECEMBER 29, 2023
RECKTENWALD, C.J., McKENNA, AND EDDINS, JJ.,
CIRCUIT JUDGE BROWNING, IN PLACE OF NAKAYAMA, J., RECUSED,
AND CIRCUIT JUDGE KAWASHIMA, ASSIGNED BY REASON OF VACANCY
OPINION OF THE COURT BY RECKTENWALD, C.J.
I. INTRODUCTION
This case concerns the amount of just compensation the
Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation (âHARTâ) must pay
for approximately two acres worth of easements on property
previously owned by Victoria Ward, Limited (âVictoria Wardâ).
That property is located in Victoria Wardâs multi-billion dollar
Ward Village development in the Kakaâako neighborhood of Oâahu.
HART obtained the easements to construct portions of its fixed
rail system and a proposed Kakaâako Station.
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Victoria Ward seeks just compensation from HART for
the takings. Victoria Wardâs claimed damages are comprised of
the fair market value of easements on Victoria Wardâs property,
plus between $65 million and over $100 million for alleged
severance damages.
Severance damages compensate property owners for
devaluation of non-taken portions of property. In addition to
seeking damages for lost development opportunities, Victoria
Ward claims that it was forced to modify, redesign, and/or
relocate other building plans in a manner resulting in less
efficient, less valuable, and less profitable projects relative
to what the development could have been worth absent rail and
the associated takings.
The circuit court granted a dozen summary judgment
motions, which are the subject of this interlocutory appeal. 1
These summary judgment orders touch on a wide variety of
disputes. Most importantly, the circuit court ruled that
Victoria Ward is estopped from seeking severance damages, though
the orders also address such issues as the appropriate valuation
methodology for lost parking spaces, the extent to which a party
may be entitled to just compensation for a speculative
construction project, and the effect of pre-dispute
1 The Honorable John M. Tonaki presided.
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communications and local ordinances on a condemneeâs ability to
seek just compensation. In addition to appealing the partial
summary judgment orders, the parties appeal an order pausing the
accrual of blight of summons interest, and two orders denying or
denying in part motions to strike.
We acknowledge the factual and legal complexity of
this case, and the circuit courtâs legitimate concern with
narrowing the issues for trial. However, we conclude that in
several circumstances, the circuit court incorrectly used
summary judgment to resolve disputed factual issues. Most
notably, the question of whether Victoria Ward is estopped from
seeking severance damages involves disputed questions of fact
and should be presented to a jury.
We affirm (1) the orders granting HARTâs partial
summary judgment motions 2 and 7, (2) the orders granting
Victoria Wardâs partial summary judgment motions 1 and 3, and
(3) the order pausing blight of summons damages accrual during
pendency of this appeal. We affirm in part and vacate in part
the order granting HARTâs partial summary judgment motion 1.
We vacate (1) the orders granting HARTâs partial
summary judgment motions 3, 5, 9, 10, and 11; and (2) the orders
granting Victoria Wardâs partial summary judgment motions 2 and
4.
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We dismiss (1) HARTâs cross-appeal concerning the
denial of their motion to strike J. Douglas Ingâs declaration
and (2) HARTâs appeal concerning the grant in part and denial in
part of their motion to strike Brian Leeâs and Steven J. Scottâs
respective declarations.
We remand the case to the circuit court for further
proceedings.
II. BACKGROUND
A. Factual Overview
1. The takings
This appeal arises out of a condemnation action filed
in 2018 by the City & County of Honolulu (âC&Câ) acting by and
through HART, against Victoria Ward to take multiple acres of
Victoria Wardâs sixty-acre âmaster-planned and permitted, mixed-
use development communityâ located in Kakaâako (âWard Villageâ).
The purpose of the taking was to construct a segment of railway
and the proposed Kakaʻako Station within Ward Village.
In its current state, Ward Village is planned to
comprise six distinct âland blocks.â All of the physical
takings by HART occur on Land Block 1 and Land Block 5, and the
Kakaâako Station is slated to be built on Land Block 1 in a
manner that would sever the property. The location of the
Kakaâako Station was central to two summary judgment orders on
appeal, as Victoria Ward alleges that the Station prevents it
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from building a sixth condominium tower on Land Block 1 (the
âLost Towerâ).
A critical question before this court is whether
Victoria Wardâs severance damages claims are legally
compensable, or if Victoria Ward is precluded from seeking
severance damages due in large part to: (1) the Master Plan
Permit language requiring a future rail project to be âaddressed
and incorporatedâ by Victoria Ward; (2) Victoria Wardâs
continued compliance with the Master Plan Permit, including
physically modifying structures in order to accommodate rail;
and (3) Victoria Wardâs enjoyment of benefits in the form of
preferential development opportunities and the receipt of
billions of dollars in revenue as a result of the Master Plan
Permit.
2. Ward Village planning and permitting
The HawaiÊ»i Community Development Authority (âHCDAâ) is
a key player in this dispute, though not a party to this appeal.
HCDA is vested with rulemaking, planning, development, and
financing authority with the mission of re-developing the
KakaÊ»ako area. See Hawaiâi Revised Statutes (âHRSâ) §§ 206E-4, -
7, -31, -33 (2014). HCDA established rules and development
plans for the KakaÊ»ako neighborhood, including the âMauka Rulesâ
first enacted in 1982 and subsequently amended numerous times.
The Mauka Rules were promulgated in order to re-plan the Kakaʻako
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neighborhood to meet various community needs including
affordable housing, public facilities and open spaces, and mixed
pedestrian-oriented and mixed-use development. Hawaiâi
Administrative Rules (âHARâ) § 15-22-1 (repealed 2011).
In April 2008, Victoria Wardâs predecessor in
interest, General Growth Properties, Incorporated (âGGPâ),
submitted a planned development application for Ward Village
(âMaster Plan Submittalâ or âSubmittalâ). 2 The HCDA reviewed the
Master Plan Submittal because HCDA has planning jurisdiction
over the Kakaâako district, where Ward Village is located.
HCDA approved Victoria Wardâs Master Plan Submittal
and issued its Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and
Decision and Order for a Master Plan Permit (âMaster Plan
Permitâ or âPermitâ) in 2009. In the Master Plan Permit, HCDA
noted that it reviewed the Master Plan Submittal to ensure that
it was âconsistent with the provisions of the Mauka Area Plan
and [Rules].â
Planned developments like Ward Village benefit from
greater planning flexibility in exchange for public benefits
provided via the development project. See HAR §§ 15-22-110 to
2 The 2005 Mauka Rules were in effect at the time the Ward Village
Master Plan Permit was approved by HCDA. See Mauka Area Rules, 15 HAR
Chapter 22 (repealed 2011). Thus, Ward Village was subject to the provisions
of the 2005 Mauka Rules and their detailed development regulations. HAR
§ 15-22-8 (repealed 2011).
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-121. HCDA, through the Mauka Rules, encouraged particular
forms of development in an âincentive zoning system.â
HAR § 15-22-110(c) (repealed 2011). The incentives available to
developers under the 2005 Mauka Rules included benefits like
preferential height limitations and greater density allowances.
Id. Victoria Ward sought several modifications to development
rules for their planned projects, and HCDA reviewed the requests
on a project-by-project basis.
The Master Plan Permit itself does not entitle
Victoria Ward to develop individual projects, and Victoria Ward
is required to obtain a project permit from HCDA for each
individual building project. As of 2018, HCDA had allegedly
granted Victoria Ward seven individual project permits for
condominium projects, and numerous permits for commercial
developments comprising one-half of the total development
allowable under the Master Plan Permit.
The Master Plan Submittal did not explicitly
illustrate a Kakaʻako Station within Ward Village, and Victoria
Ward asserts that the Submittal instead reflects plans to build
the Kakaâako Station âon or above Queen Street (rather than its
currently planned location by HART on Victoria Wardâs
property).â Further, the Master Plan Submittal reflects plans
to build a 240-foot mixed residential/office mid-rise building
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on Land Block 1 over the parcel that HART now proposes as the
site of the Kakaâako Station.
The Master Plan Permit enumerated sixteen detailed
conditions on Victoria Wardâs development of Ward Village,
including requirements for open space, cultural preservation,
and reserved housing. None of the conditions explicitly refers
to a rail project. Instead, the rail project is referenced in
Paragraph 85 of the Master Plan Permitâs Findings of Fact
section which states in relevant part:
High Capacity Transit Corridor and Station: The City
and County of Honoluluâs (âC&Câ) High Capacity Transit
proposal could have a major impact on the proposed Master
Plan. The C&Câs current preferred transit route is
situated within the Mauka portion of the master plan area.
The proposed location of the transit station will influence
access to residential areas and places of employment.
[Victoria Ward] and the C&C have been engaged in
discussions regarding the precise alignment and exact
location for the transit station within the Master Plan
area, and will continue to do so. As part of individual
project development permit applications for this area, a
more detailed transit route and station location shall be
addressed and incorporated.
(Second emphasis added.)
The âaddressed and incorporatedâ language of Paragraph
85 of the Master Plan Permit was central to many of the circuit
courtâs partial summary judgment orders, and it plays a key role
in a number of the interlocutory appeals before this court.
In December 2010, Victoria Ward and HCDA entered into
the Master Plan Development Agreement for the Ward Neighborhood
Master Plan (âMaster Plan Development Agreementâ or âDevelopment
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Agreementâ), which granted Victoria Ward the right to develop
Ward Village under the Master Plan Permit. The Development
Agreement also stated that Victoria Ward would proceed in
compliance with the Permit and that the Permitâs terms and
conditions would âremain in full force and effect.â The
Development Agreement specified that the Master Plan Permit
would last for a term of fifteen years, and it is set to expire
on January 14, 2024.
In addition to the language in Paragraph 85 of the
Master Plan Permit, requiring a future rail route and station
location to be âaddressed and incorporated,â Victoria Ward and
its predecessor in interest, GGP, made numerous representations
to public authorities stating that rail would be integrated into
Ward Village. The Master Plan Submittal itself referred to
âconnections with a balanced set of transportation modes,â
â[e]fficient and alternative transportation modes,â and
â[t]ransportation oriented development connections.â A
subsequent project application submitted by Victoria Ward five
years later stated that â[t]he rail station is planned to the
[s]outh of the site and will further enhance public
transportation options.â HART asserts that Victoria Ward used
similar statements to attract investment and sell units to the
public, generating more than two billion dollars in revenue.
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Based on the Master Plan Permitâs âaddressed and
incorporatedâ language and Victoria Wardâs subsequent conduct
and representations, the circuit court granted HARTâs motion for
partial summary judgment (âMPSJ") No. 3, precluding Victoria
Ward from seeking the vast majority of the severance damages
allegedly resulting from HARTâs taking. HARTâS MPSJ No. 3
itself was central to the courtâs orders granting MPSJ Nos. 5,
concluding that Victoria Wardâs claim relating to the âLost
Towerâ â or a luxury condominium tower on the site of the
Kakaâako Station â is too speculative, and 11, concluding that
Victoria Wardâs claims for severance damages for modifications
to buildings fail as a matter of law.
Neither party disputes that Victoria Ward is entitled
to some form of just compensation. Rather, a significant
portion of the interlocutory appeals concern Victoria Wardâs
ability to collect severance damages for impacts to non-taken
properties. The alleged impacts to Ward Village properties
include stairwell enclosure, increased screening, and noise
mitigation, among other claimed damages.
B. Procedural Background
HART filed its Complaint in October 2018 seeking to
condemn approximately two acres of Victoria Wardâs real property
within the Ward Village master plan area. Victoria Ward filed
an Answer and Inverse Condemnation Counterclaim (âCounterclaimâ)
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in order to recover just compensation and severance damages for
property interests taken or damaged.
After HART filed its Complaint, HART obtained an Order
of Possession before final judgment through an expedited
procedure under HRS § 101-29 (2012). The Order of Possession
specified that HART was thereby awarded all real property
interests it sought, as well as the ability to âdo such work in
the Easements as may be required for the purposes for which
condemnation of the Easements is sought.â Thus, HART already
has possession of the properties in question, and this appeal
solely concerns Victoria Wardâs right to just compensation due
to HARTâs takings.
In August 2021, HART filed multiple motions for
partial summary judgment directed at establishing, as a matter
of law, that Victoria Ward was precluded from pursuing a variety
of damages claims. The circuit court granted a significant
portion of HARTâs motions relating to severance damages, thereby
limiting Victoria Wardâs ability to recover such damages as part
of its inverse condemnation counterclaim against HART.
Victoria Ward subsequently moved to file an
interlocutory appeal of the circuit court orders granting or
granting in part HARTâs MPSJs. The circuit court granted
Victoria Wardâs motion and also sua sponte allowed HART to
appeal any adverse MPSJ orders. The circuit court additionally
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paused the accrual of âblight of summonsâ interest during the
pendency of the interlocutory appeal.
Victoria Ward filed nine notices of appeal: eight
regarding summary judgment orders and one regarding the stay of
âblight of summonsâ interest accrual. HART filed a single
notice of appeal regarding five orders: four partial summary
judgment orders and an order granting in part and denying in
part HARTâs motion to strike two exhibits.
HART applied to transfer each interlocutory appeal to
this court, which granted the application and consolidated the
appeals. During the transfer applicationâs pendency, HART moved
to dismiss all of Victoria Wardâs appeals for lack of subject
matter jurisdiction. Unless otherwise noted, these motions are
denied.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
âAn appellate court reviews the circuit courtâs grant
of summary judgment de novo.â Hawaiian Dredging Constr. Co.,
Inc. v. Fujikawa Assocs., Inc., 142 Hawaiʻi 429, 434, 420 P.3d
360, 365(2018) (brackets and internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Gillan v. Govât Emps. Ins. Co., 119 Hawaiâi 109, 114,194 P.3d 1071, 1076
(2008)). âSummary judgment is
appropriate âif the pleadings, depositions, answers to
interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the
affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to
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any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a
judgment as a matter of law.ââ Id. (quoting Hawaiâi Rules of
Civil Procedure (âHRCPâ) Rule 56(c) (2000)).
We view the evidence in the light most favorable to
the non-movant. Winfrey v. GGP Ala Moana LLC, 130 Hawaiâi 262,
271, 308 P.3d 891, 900(2013). The movant bears the burden of showing that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See Kaneohe Bay Cruises, Inc. v. Hirata,75 Haw. 250, 258
,861 P.2d 1, 6
(1993).
An opposing party may not counter a motion for summary judgment
merely upon âallegations or denials of the adverse partyâs
pleading,â but instead âmust set forth specific facts showing
that there is a genuine issue for trial.â HRCP Rule
56(e) (2000).
â[S]ummary judgment should not be granted unless the
entire record shows a right to judgment with such clarity as to
leave no room for controversy and establishes affirmatively that
the adverse party cannot prevail under any circumstances.â
Balthazar v. Verizon Haw., Inc., 109 Hawaiâi 69, 72, 123 P.3d
194, 197(2005) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting State v. Zimring,52 Haw. 472, 475
,479 P.2d 202, 204
(1970)).
Any issues requiring a different standard of review
are so noted below.
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IV. DISCUSSION
A. Victoria Ward is Not Precluded from Seeking Severance
Damages
The central issue of this appeal concerns whether the
Master Plan Permit and Victoria Wardâs conduct preclude Victoria
Ward from collecting severance damages arising from HARTâs
takings â valued by the parties between $65 million and over
$100 million. Victoria Ward claims damages for the loss of
valuable development opportunities and for allegedly being
forced to undergo costly modifications and re-designs which
further reduced the efficiency and value of the Ward Village
properties.
We hold that, by entering into the Master Plan Permit
and Development Agreement, Victoria Ward is obligated to address
and incorporate rail. But it is the province of the jury to
determine the contours of this obligation and to calculate the
amount of severance damages, if any, to which Victoria Ward is
entitled.
The order granting HARTâs MPSJ No. 1 is affirmed as to
paragraphs 1(a), 1(c), 1(d), and 2, but vacated as to paragraph
1(b). In light of the admissible evidence disputing HARTâs
theory that Victoria Ward is precluded from seeking severance
damages, the order granting HARTâs MPSJ No. 3 is vacated. The
order granting HARTâs MPSJ No. 11 is also vacated. Finally, the
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orders granting HARTâs MPSJ No. 2 and Victoria Wardâs MPSJ No. 1
are affirmed.
1. There is a genuine dispute of material fact as to
whether Ordinance 07-001 and the Locally Preferred
Alternative âestablishedâ the rail route and location
of the Kakaâako Station within Ward Village
One important question is whether the rail route and
Kakaâako Station location were known at the time of the Master
Plan Submittal, Master Plan Permit, Development Agreement, or
subsequent individual project applications. HARTâs MPSJ No. 1
concerned the legal effect of Ordinance 07-001, enacted by the
Honolulu City Council in 2007. Crucially, Ordinance 07-001
selected a âlocally preferred alternativeâ (LPA) which generally
defined a rail route and location for the Kakaâako Station. 3 The
LPA was a route chosen out of several viable options provided to
the City Council by the Honolulu Department of Transportation
Services. Specifically, Section V of the LPA (labelled âSection
V â Nimitz Highway/Halekauwila Street/Kapiolani Boulevardâ)
appears to show a route going through Ward Village along
Halekauwila Street, through the location of the now-planned
Kakaʻako Station, and finally continuing along Queen Street.
The circuit courtâs order granting in part and denying
in part HARTâs MPSJ No. 1 specified:
3 In addition to selecting the LPA, Ordinance 07-001 authorized the
C&C to prepare an environmental impact statement for the LPA and established
an excise tax to fund rail construction and operations.
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1. There being no genuine issues of material fact,
the Motion is GRANTED as follows:
a. Ordinance 07-001 is a legally enforceable
legislative action by the Honolulu City
Council;
b. The ordinance approved the locally-preferred
alternative and established the alignment of
rail and the KakaÍako station within Ward
Village; and
c. The [HCDA] as the permitting authority for
KakaÍako, and the Ward Village area, was
obligated to consider Ordinance 07-001 in its
planning and permitting;
d. In its 2009 master plan permit for Ward
Village, the HCDA, pursuant to Ordinance 07-
001, required that as a part of individual
project development permit applications, the
high-capacity transit route and station
location be addressed and incorporated.
2. There are genuine issues of material fact such
that this Motion is DENIED as to Plaintiffâs request
for a ruling that the Victoria Ward, Ltd. Defendants
cannot recover severance damages with regard to the
Lost Tower (defined in the Motion as the alleged
abandonment of the development of a 400-foot tall
luxury condominium purportedly planned for the
KakaÍako Station site) or any other project directly
in conflict with alignment of the rail line and
station as defined in Ordinance 07-001. The Court
finds that at this point this is an issue that with
consideration of the other factors must be submitted
to the jury for its determination.
(Emphases added.)
As set forth below, the circuit court was correct that
Ordinance 07-001 was legally enforceable, HCDA was obligated to
consider it, the Master Plan Permit required the rail route and
Kakaâako Station to be addressed and incorporated, and Victoria
Ward was not precluded from recovering severance damages as a
matter of law. However, the court erred in ruling that
Ordinance 07-001 and the LPA âestablishedâ the rail alignment
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and location of the Kakaâako Station within Ward Village as a
matter of law. Accordingly, the circuit courtâs order granting
HARTâs MPSJ No. 1 is affirmed as to paragraphs 1(a), 1(c), 1(d),
and 2, but vacated as to paragraph 1(b).
The parties dispute the extent to which the LPA
âestablishedâ the location of the guideway and station, as
opposed to simply expressing a preference. HART asserts that,
although the rail alignment changed slightly since Ordinance 07-
001 was enacted, the Ordinance and LPA made clear â at least two
years prior to the grant of the Master Plan Permit in
2009 â that the rail guideway and Kakaâako Station would be
constructed within Ward Village in a manner consistent with the
LPA. Consequently, HART argues that HCDA was under a legal
obligation to require any Ward Village structures to
âaccommodate, and not conflict with,â rail as set out in the
LPA. As a result of HCDAâs alleged obligation to ensure that
all structures were in accord with the LPA, HART asserts that
HCDA could not legally approve any projects that conflicted with
the LPA. Thus, under HARTâs theory, Victoria Ward is precluded
from recovering severance damages for any projects that would
otherwise conflict with the rail line or Kakaâako Station
location, as defined by the LPA.
We disagree with HARTâs position. There is a dispute
of fact as to whether the LPA established definite plans to
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build the Kakaâako Station within Ward Village, or if the LPA
instead contemplated a station near, but outside of, Ward
Village.
Ordinance 07-001âs text simply states that â[t]he city
administration is authorized to proceedâ with preparing an
environmental impact statement for the LPA, and with âplanning
and preliminary engineering.â The Ordinanceâs text does not
reflect certainty as to a rail route or station location. At
oral argument, HARTâs attorneys indicated that the Master Plan
Permit explicitly references the LPA as the rail route that
Victoria Ward was obligated to address and incorporate. This is
not entirely so. The Permit states that â[t]he C&Câs current
preferred transit route is situated within the Mauka portion of
the master plan area.â The text did not explicitly require
Victoria Ward to incorporate the route as reflected in the LPA.
Rather, the Permitâs use of the word âcurrentâ and subsequent
phrasing, âa more detailed transit route and station location
shall be addressed and incorporated,â indicate the tentative
nature of the LPA and likelihood of future alterations, despite
the existence of the LPA at the time of entry into the Master
Plan Permit.
Consistent with this interpretation, the HCDA Staff
Findings report prepared in response to the Master Plan
Submittal similarly states that a preferred route and station
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location had been identified, âbut due to its tentative nature,
the [Master Plan Submittal] does not identify the preferred
route or exact station location for the proposed transit
network,â and that âthe C&Câs proposal for the alignment as well
as [the] transit station within the Master Plan area still
appears to be tentative and may change.â
In sum, both parties present substantial evidence in
support of their positions, and determination of the disputed
question of whether Ordinance 07-001 and the LPA âestablishedâ
the rail route must be presented to a jury. Accordingly, we
affirm the circuit court order granting HARTâs MPSJ No. 1 as to
paragraphs 1(a), 1(c), 1(d) and 2, and vacate as to paragraph
1(b).
2. The Master Plan Permit does not preclude Victoria Ward
from seeking severance damages as a matter of law
The circuit court ruled that Victoria Ward complied
with and benefitted from the Master Plan Permit such that
Victoria Ward cannot recover severance damages arising out of
its obligation to comply with the terms of the Master Plan
Permit. The circuit court order granting HARTâs MPSJ No. 3
specifically stated:
1. The Ward Neighborhood Master Plan, the HCDAâs Findings
of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Decision and Order, and
the Master Plan Development Agreement for the Ward
Neighborhood (collectively, the âMaster Plan Permitâ)
required all project development permit applications to
address and incorporate rail and the KakaÍako station in
the development of Ward Village.
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2. Neither General Growth Properties, the Victoria Ward,
Ltd. Defendantsâ predecessor in interest, nor any of the
Victoria Ward, Ltd. Defendants ever challenged the Master
Plan Permit. Instead, the Victoria Ward, Ltd. Defendants,
by signing on to the Development Agreement for the Ward
Neighborhood, affirmatively accepted and agreed to comply
with the terms and conditions of the Master Plan Permit,
including the requirement to address and incorporate Rail.
3. Under this very same Development Agreement, the Victoria
Ward, Ltd. Defendantsâ development projects have thrived
and derived tremendous profit from the HCDA's approval of
numerous individual project developments.
4. The Victoria Ward, Ltd. Defendants have complied with
the Master Plan Permit requirement to address and
incorporate Rail as to individual projects it has developed
under the Master Plan Permit, in particular: Ke Kilohana,
Aâaliâi and Aeâo have incorporated design accommodations for
the rail project.
5. The Victoria Ward, Ltd. Defendants have also obtained a
number of variances and modifications from their
development permits through the HCDA in order to address
Rail.
6. Not only has this Master Plan requirement to address and
incorporate Rail been known to the Victoria Ward, Ltd.
Defendants from the outset of their development plans, but
this requirement has been adopted and complied with in the
planning of all of their projects to date.
7. After entering the Master Plan Development Agreement
with HCDA, and benefiting immensely from this agreement,
and complying with the terms of this agreement for the
entirety of its development activity in the Ward
Neighborhood, as a matter of law, the Victoria Ward, Ltd.
Defendants cannot now recover severance damages based on
compliance with the terms and conditions of the agreement,
which the Victoria Ward, Ltd. Defendants were legally
obligated to do.
8. The Victoria Ward, Ltd. Defendants are prohibited from
recovering severance damages on the basis of the burden
imposed by HCDA pursuant to the Master Plan Permit
requiring the Victoria Ward, Ltd. Defendants to address and
incorporate Rail.
9. This ruling does not affect the Victoria Ward, Ltd.
Defendantsâ constitutional right to recover just
compensation for the value of the property interests HART
is taking in this eminent domain action.
(Emphases added.)
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a. The meaning of the Master Plan Permit is disputed
There is a genuine issue of material fact as to the
meaning of the Master Plan Permit requirement that future rail
plans be âaddressed and incorporated,â and there is a dispute as
to the contemporaneous intentions of the parties. A factfinder
should have the opportunity to ascertain the partiesâ
understanding of the phrase âaddressed and incorporatedâ in
light of the partiesâ representations and actions both at the
time the Master Plan Permit was granted and after the fact.
Given the existence of a genuine dispute of material fact, the
circuit court erred in granting the MPSJ, thereby depriving
Victoria Ward of the opportunity to have the matter of severance
damages decided by a jury.
Victoria Ward maintains that it never relinquished any
rights to recover compensation, including for severance damages
arising from the takings, and that no permitting document or
ordinance mandated such. HART, in contrast, asserts that by
agreeing to the Master Plan Permit with the provision that a
future rail network shall be âaddressed and incorporated,â
Victoria Ward cannot subsequently seek severance damages for
claimed impacts to Ward Village arising out of HARTâs
acquisitions of property related to rail.
The record contains evidence indicating that key
players within the HCDA, Victoria Ward, and HART disputed the
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meaning and effect of the Master Plan Permit at various times
throughout the permitting and construction process.
The HCDAâs decisionmaking authority is vested in the
HCDA Board of Directors (âHCDA Boardâ). HRS § 206E-3(b)(3)
(2014). The declarations of several HCDA Board members, in which
they set forth their respective understandings of the Master
Plan Permit, individual permitting procedures, and the HCDAâs
general practices around permitting, raise a question of fact as
to whether the Master Plan Permit required Victoria Ward to
forgo compensation to which it would otherwise be entitled.
C. Scott Bradley served on the HCDA Board from
2006 â 2012, and as the Board Chairperson in 2011. Bradley
noted that he did not understand the Master Plan Permit to have
precluded Victoria Ward from collecting severance damages:
â[t]he HCDA Board did not condition the master plan permit on
any condition that Victoria Ward waive or agree to forego
compensation to which it would otherwise be entitled due to
construction of the rail project in and around Ward Village.â
Steven J. Scott served on the HCDA Board from
2015 â 2016, during which time he reviewed several individual
Ward Village building projects. Although Scott did not serve on
the HCDA Board at the time the Master Plan Permit was granted,
he stated generally, in relation to the question of whether
Victoria Ward waived its right to compensation:
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I also do not think that HCDA expects or expected Victoria
Ward . . . or any Howard Hughes company to waive
compensation or damages owed because of the rail project.
I do not recall any discussion at any time regarding such a
waiver.
. . .
Based on my experience, if HCDA wanted to impose a
condition, like a dedication of land to the rail project,
it would have stated it specifically and explicitly in the
permits.
(Emphasis added.)
Anthony J.H. Ching, the HCDA Executive Director from
2008 â 2015, supplied a Disclosure Report to provide both
factual information and expert opinions, and a Rebuttal Report
to rebut the Callies Report supplied by Victoria Ward. When
deposed, Ching noted that no HCDA permits or applications
constituted an agreement by Victoria Ward to disclaim its right
to sue for severance damages:
Q. Mr. Ching, [the Master Plan Permit] does not say
anywhere that Victoria Ward would be waiving its damages
claims in a subsequent eminent domain action, correct?
. . .
A. Again, without finding a legal opinion, it does â it
would not appear so.
. . .
Q. [O]ut of all of the documents that you reviewed in
connection with your either disclosure report or rebuttal
report concerning Victoria Wardâs individual plan
development projects [including the permit applications,
HCDA staff reports, and HCDA approval documents], none of
those documents state that Victoria Ward waived or
otherwise gave up any damages claims in this eminent domain
action or in a future eminent domain action, correct?
A. To the best of my recollection, yes.
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Victoria Ward also contends that the Master Plan
Permit was understood to mean that Victoria Ward would simply
coordinate rail plans with HART and C&C officials. This
alternative interpretation of the âaddressed and incorporatedâ
language is supported by Victoria Wardâs representations to HART
prior to the litigation. For example, in a 2015 letter to HART
Executive Director Daniel Grabauskas, Victoria Ward stated:
âAccordingly, prior to HART seeking to acquire any of the
Subject Parcels . . . we request for HART to review the
modifications proposed by our traffic engineering firm and to
incorporate the modifications to address the previously
identified impacts.â (Emphases added.) Further, Deepak
Neupane, the HCDA Executive Director from 2020 - 2022 and
previous HCDA Director of Planning and Development from
2006 - 2019, clarified that the Master Plan Permit language
simply meant âthat the development will be coordinated with
transit station locations and the route. . . . [T]he thinking
was that the C&C and the developer would, you know, coordinate
each otherâs development plan.â
Finally, neither the Master Plan Permit nor the
Development Agreement explicitly states that Victoria Ward must
forgo just compensation in the event of an eminent domain action
by HART, nor do they explicitly require an exaction or
dedication of property by Victoria Ward for a rail project. The
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absence of any such condition is striking, especially in light
of the Master Plan Permitâs otherwise explicit conditions. For
example, the Master Plan Permit includes the requirement that a
designated park space be âdedicated through a perpetual easement
for public use gathering areasâ and that Victoria Ward allot
245,638 of square feet for open space. Victoria Ward was also
never required to make modifications to its Submittal to reflect
a rail route and station within Ward Village.
In contrast to the above evidence supporting Victoria
Wardâs position that the Master Plan Permit does not preclude it
from seeking severance damages, HART points to numerous
statements in the Master Plan Permit Submittal and Development
Agreement, as well as Victoria Wardâs individual building permit
applications, to argue that Victoria Ward understood that it
would voluntarily â and without additional compensation beyond
the benefits of the Master Plan Permit â accommodate rail. On
their face, these statements acknowledge the rail route and
Kakaâako station location, the rail projectâs impact on Ward
Village, and Victoria Wardâs continued obligation to coordinate
with HART. For example, the June 5, 2013 permit application for
Ke Kilohana, located on Land Block 5, stated:
This project will accommodate the Honolulu Rail Transit
that cuts through a corner of the project site, and will
address pedestrian flow from the rail transit station
across Ward Avenue.
. . .
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This project is adjacent to the planned rapid transit
guideway. Although the elevated transit rail does not
necessarily produce more noise than the existing commercial
activities, it elevates the noise contours higher by
several floors. A higher platform will again provide
needed buffer between the adjacent transit rail and the
residential floors.
The permit application for âAâaliâi, on Land Block
1, stated:
The HART rail guideway is proposed through the north
portion of the site, and subsequently ʻAʻaliʻi has been
designed to accommodate the proposed HART guideway and
required setbacks.
. . .
The construction plans and related requirements for
the HART elevated rail system have been incorporated into
the Ward [Master Plan] and specifically into the design of
ʻAʻaliʻi. As required by HART, the elevated guideway with
three columns, impact the planning and use of ʻAʻaliʻi, along
the mauka boundary and Queen Street frontage. The impact
to the planning of Land Block 1 has been significant with a
substantial amount of acreage being isolated or encumbered
by HART use.
The benefit of the planned transit station is that
residents and visitors will have convenient access to
rail. . . . All of the planned residential units within
Land Block 1 are within a five-minute walk (1/4 mile) . . .
of the Ward Station.
HART also points to the testimony of former HCDA
Executive Director, Anthony Ching, who concluded:
The Master Plan Permitâs requirements with respect to
Rail obligated, and put the burden on, [Victoria Ward] to
plan and design individual development projects within the
Master Plan in a manner that accommodated and incorporated
Rail. Indeed, the Master Plan provided [Victoria Ward]
with great flexibility to do so. Conversely, it did not
allow [Victoria Ward] to accommodate and incorporate Rail
into its plans for Ward Village under the Master Plan and
then, years later, seek damages from HART for doing
so â that is not how a condition of approval for an
entitlement works.
. . .
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It is my further opinion that, if [Victoria Ward] had
advised the Authority on any given project permit
application that [Victoria Ward] had not accommodated Rail
or could only accommodate Rail at the cost of millions of
dollars â which [Victoria Ward] would later seek from
HART â that the Authority would have either rejected the
permit application; or forced [Victoria Ward] to re-plan
and/or redesign the project.
The above evidence reflects a genuine issue of
material fact as to the meaning of the Master Plan Permit and
whether the Permit precluded Victoria Ward from collecting
severance damages for impacts to non-taken properties.
Accordingly, a jury should have the opportunity to ascertain the
partiesâ understanding of the Master Plan Permit.
b. HART has not sufficiently established estoppel by
acceptance
In addition to the Master Plan Permitâs ambiguous
meaning, there is a dispute of material fact as to whether
Victoria Ward is precluded from seeking severance damages under
an âestoppel by acceptanceâ theory. The principle of estoppel
by acceptance is based in the notion that the acceptance of
certain benefits may preclude a party from asserting â to
another partyâs disadvantage â a right inconsistent with a
position previously taken. We hold that there is a genuine
dispute of material fact as to whether Victoria Ward adequately
reserved the right to collect severance damages in exchange for
the benefits arising from the Master Plan Permit and the
accommodations of rail. Thus, Victoria Ward is not precluded as
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a matter of law from seeking severance damages under an estoppel
by acceptance theory.
HART is careful to specify that Victoria Ward did not
waive its right to seek compensation, but that Victoria Ward
âhas no constitutional right to recover damages on the basis of
having voluntarily complied with the terms of the 2009 Master
Plan Permit, where [Victoria Ward] has reaped the benefits of
doing so for over a decade.â
HART repeatedly points to Victoria Wardâs
representations voluntarily welcoming rail and promising to
âembraceâ transit. Noting the multitude of benefits derived
from the Master Plan Permit â namely the greater building
flexibility, preferential density allowances resulting from
transit-oriented development, and the ability to collect
billions of dollars in revenues through the sale of units made
more valuable in part due to their proximity to rail â HART
contends that Victoria Wardâs severance damages claims are
barred as a matter of law. Under HARTâs theory, Victoria Ward
should have challenged the Master Plan Permit prior to accepting
the benefits derived from it. Because Victoria Ward
affirmatively accepted the benefits of the Permit, its
subsequent claim for severance damages constitutes an
inconsistent legal position.
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However, Victoria Ward contests the notion that it
voluntarily agreed to incorporate rail without seeking damages.
Victoria Ward presents evidence showing that it protested the
takings and reserved its right to seek compensation consistently
over the course of a decade.
In a 2009 letter to the Honolulu Department of
Transportation Services regarding a draft environmental impact
statement, Victoria Wardâs predecessor in interest, GGP,
outlined a number of potential impacts from rail including the
loss of parking, loss of buildings, and impacts to future
development opportunities in Ward Village. The letter proposed
alternate routes to reduce impacts on Ward Village and
encourages the parties to work together âwith respect to the
methods of construction, the construction timeline, staging
areas, utility relocation and related matters so that the impact
upon our properties and the business conducted thereon is
minimized to the greatest extent possible.â The letter to the
Department of Transportation Services concludes:
We have not attempted to outline all of the effects that
the proposed project will or may have upon our properties,
both current and future uses, such as those envisioned in
the recently approved Master Plan for the Ward
properties. . . . We reserve all of our rights and
remedies, at law and in equity, in connection with the
[HART] project and its effects upon our properties and the
businesses conducted therein.
(Emphasis added.)
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In a 2014 letter to the former HART Executive Director
Daniel Grabauskas, Victoria Ward reiterated its intention of
working with HART to âensure that the KakaÊ»ako Rail Station and
the Rail Transit Project are designed in a harmonious manner
with the Master Plan,â and that:
Victoria Ward, Limited, . . . is the owner of several
parcels, either in fee or as the owner of one hundred
percent (100%) of the beneficial interest under a recorded
trust agreement, . . . that have been the subject of
notices and communications from HART and its various
contractors. [Victoria Ward] understands that HART seeks
to acquire, through negotiated sale or its condemnation
powers, some or all of the Subject Parcels as part of the
Honolulu Rail Transit Project . . . and further intends to
place a rail station (the âKakaÊ»ako Rail Stationâ) on one of
the Subject Parcels.
As HART is no doubt aware, the Subject Parcels are subject
to a Master Plan for high-density commercial and
residential development and redevelopment. [Victoria Ward]
will seek to be fully compensated for all property acquired
or impaired as a result of this sale or condemnation,
especially to the extent that a condemnation impacts
[Victoria Ward]âs ability to develop and/or redevelop
pursuant to the Master Plan. Independent of that concern,
[Victoria Ward] believes that it may be possible for
[Victoria Ward] and HART to mutually benefit from the
cohesive integration of the Kakaʻako Rail Station and Rail
Transit Project into the existing and planned developments
pursuant to the Master Plan.
In a March 2015 letter to Grabauskas, Victoria Ward
expressed concern over design plans which would âeliminat[e]
several ingress and egress passageways.â The letter proceeded
to list the impacts on ingress and egress in greater detail, and
concluded:
Please allow this letter to serve as notice to HART that
the above mentioned impacts are not acceptable to [Victoria
Ward] and will cause significant damages to [Victoria
Ward], including, but not limited to, damages related to or
resulting from the reduced accessibility to the Subject
Parcels for [Victoria Ward]âs current and future residents
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and customers and for customers of [Victoria Ward]âs
current and future tenants, and damages related to or
resulting from HARTâs taking of portions of Block M where
improvements are planned to be located. Accordingly, prior
to HART seeking to acquire any of the Subject Parcels from
[Victoria Ward], we request for HART to make alterations
and modifications to its design of the Rail Transit Project
to address the above referenced impacts and to respond to
this letter with such modifications.
Victoria Ward consistently reserved its right to
collect damages for impacts to its properties through letters to
Grabauskas, all in response to various developments in HARTâs
project. In an April 2015 letter, Victoria Ward stated:
For all these reasons, and as stated in my last
letter, the above mentioned impacts are not acceptable to
[Victoria Ward] because they will cause significant
problems to the general public traveling to and in Kakaʻako
and to current and future residents in Kakaʻako. In
addition, the impacts will cause significant damages to
[Victoria Ward], including, but not limited to, damages
related to or resulting from the reduced accessibility to
the Subject Parcels for [Victoria Ward]âs current and
future residents and customers and for customers of
[Victoria Ward]âs current and future tenants, and damages
related to or resulting from HARTâs taking of portions of
Block M where improvements are planned to be located.
Accordingly, prior to HART seeking to acquire any of the
Subject Parcels from [Victoria Ward], or any parcels in
Kakaá·Ÿako, we request for HART to review the modifications
proposed by our traffic engineering firm and to incorporate
the modifications to address the previously identified
impacts.
(Emphases added.)
In response to a Letter of Offer from HART to acquire
portions of Ward Village property in November 2015, Victoria
Ward contested HARTâs estimate of just compensation and noted:
Victoria Ward is entitled to compensation not only for the
value of the property that may be taken by HART, but also
for all damages caused by HARTâs taking to the remaining
property owned by Victoria Ward. . . . [T]he identified
âTotal Just Compensationâ figure does not include, any
severance or other damages that Victoria Ward will suffer
by HARTâs taking and by the [HART rail project].
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In response to a later Letter of Offer from HART,
Victoria Wardâs attorneys sent a letter in 2018 again
reasserting Victoria Wardâs right to collect severance damages:
As you know, Victoria Ward is also entitled to
compensation not only for the value of the property taken,
but also for all damages caused by HARTâs takings to the
remaining property.
The above-quoted statements are just a sample
reflecting Victoria Wardâs consistent opposition to HARTâs plans
and are sufficient to raise a dispute of fact with regard to
HARTâs motion for partial summary judgment premised on an
estoppel by acceptance theory.
Because the meaning of the Master Plan Permit is in
dispute and there is a dispute as to HARTâs estoppel by
acceptance theory, we vacate the order granting HARTâs MPSJ No.
3.
3. There is a genuine dispute of material fact as to the
âstairwell claim,â the âscreening claim,â and the
âsetback claimâ
HARTâs MPSJ No. 11 sought to preclude Victoria Ward
from collecting damages in relation to structural modifications
to buildings in Ward Village. In granting HARTâs MPSJ No. 11,
the circuit court stated that the motion was granted âon the
same grounds previously statedâ in its order granting HARTâs
MPSJ No. 3. In light of our holding vacating HARTâs MPSJ No. 3,
and due to the multitude of factual disputes relating to HARTâs
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MPSJ No. 11, we also vacate the order granting HARTâs MPSJ No.
11.
Of note, HARTâs MPSJ No. 11 specifically related to
three components of Victoria Wardâs severance damages claims:
(1) the âstairwell claim,â or the allegation that HARTâs actions
forced Victoria Ward to enclose a stairwell in the Ke Kilohana
tower resulting in a loss of approximately 10,000 square feet of
developable floor area totaling $3 million in lost profits and
$512,000.00 in direct costs to construct the enclosure itself;
(2) the âscreening claim,â in which Victoria Ward alleges that
HART required it to screen parking structures for the Ke
Kilohana, âAâaliâi, and Aeâo towers totaling $382,483.00 in
damages; and (3) the âsetback claim,â which refers to Victoria
Wardâs assertion that it was required to push back the Aeâo tower
eighteen feet from Queen Street, as opposed to the ordinary
fifteen-foot setback requirement, resulting in a loss of 1,181
square feet of commercial space, totaling $484,000.00 in damages
from lost development opportunities.
For all three of these claims, HART argues that
Victoria Ward failed to establish a causal link between the
claimed damages and a demand by HART to make the modifications.
HART claims that Victoria Ward made the specific modifications
âfor its own design reasonsâ and that because â[Victoria Ward]
cannot prove that HART caused any of the alleged damages related
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to the Stairwell Claim, the Screening Claim, or the Setback
Claim,â Victoria Ward failed to satisfy its burden of proof.
The evidence presented by both parties is in large
part ambiguous and circumstantial, requiring a factfinder to
weigh credibility and evaluate many separate pieces of evidence.
In sum, there is a genuine dispute of material fact that should
be presented to a jury.
In the âstairwell claim,â Victoria Ward and HART
dispute the precise qualities of the stairwell enclosure that
HART would have accepted in light of their safety concerns.
HART asserts that an âopen stairwell with mesh, screening, or
something similarâ would have accomplished the safety objectives
without reducing developable space. HART cites to the
deposition testimony of In-Tae Lee, an engineering director for
HART, who implied that HARTâs safety concerns could have been
allayed through less costly means:
Q. And HART suggested that that stairwell be enclosed
instead of open to avoid that safety risk, correct?
A. Iâm not sure of that. I thought it -- as long as it
prevented objects from being thrown off, that would satisfy
HART.
Instead of proving that Victoria Ward was obligated to
build a solid, fully-encompassing enclosure, HART asserts that
Victoria Wardâs evidence instead simply shows that HART
expressed concern about objects being thrown from the stairs,
but that a simpler mesh screen or fence would have sufficed in
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both allaying HARTâs concerns and preserving Victoria Wardâs
plans for an exterior staircase that would prevent Victoria Ward
from having to cut down on developable square footage space.
Victoria Ward, in contrast, presents the statements of
numerous architects and other witnesses with personal knowledge
who attest that HARTâs expressed concerns necessitated the
design of a stairwell enclosure. Thus, the âstairwell claimâ
involves a disputed issue of material fact.
As to the âscreening claim,â Victoria Ward cites to
more testimony, declarations, and HART communications
establishing that parking structures were screened due to HARTâs
concern that objects would be thrown onto the rail guideway. In
contrast, to support HARTâs assertion that the screenings
contribute to aesthetic or other functional purposes, HART
presented evidence that all four sides of the parking structures
are screened (rather than solely the rail-facing sides).
Viewing all evidence in the light most favorable to Victoria
Ward, there is a genuine issue of material fact as to the
impetus giving rise to the screening claim.
Finally, with regard to the âsetback claim,â Victoria
Ward presented evidence that the additional setback along Queen
Street was to allow additional room for âHARTâs rail guideway
and 10-foot safety and maintenance buffer, placement of utility
infrastructure next to the Aeâo building, and associated road-
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widening to accommodate HARTâs placement of columns in Queen
Street.â This evidence included communications by both Victoria
Ward and HART referring to proposed building plans and concerns
that rail could conflict with construction in Ward Village.
This evidence is sufficient to raise a genuine issue of material
fact.
In light of the admissible evidence, the circuit court
erred in granting HARTâs MPSJ No. 11. There is a dispute of
fact as to whether the modifications and re-designs were
undertaken due to requirements imposed by HART, or to satisfy
Victoria Wardâs extraneous preferences. Accordingly, this court
vacates the order granting HARTâs MPSJ No. 11 and remands for
further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
4. The circuit court did not err in granting HARTâs MPSJ
No. 2 or Victoria Wardâs MPSJ No. 1
The circuit court order granting HARTâs MPSJ No. 2
specified that the Master Plan Permit required Victoria Ward to
affirmatively accommodate and incorporate rail in the planning
and design of its Ward Village projects. The order did not
specify the contours of this obligation, nor did it explicitly
preserve or deny Victoria Wardâs right to seek severance
damages.
In light of the above discussion and holdings, the
order granting HARTâs MPSJ No. 2 is affirmed. Victoria Ward was
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required to address and incorporate rail, but the nature of this
obligation is to be determined by a jury. We also affirm the
order granting Victoria Wardâs MPSJ No. 1, which simply held
that Victoria Ward did not waive or forfeit its constitutional
right to just compensation.
B. The Circuit Court Erred in Granting HARTâs MPSJ Nos. 5 and
9 Relating to the Lost Tower
Victoria Ward asserts that, in the absence of rail, it
could have built a sixth tower on Land Block 1 (the âLost Towerâ
claim). The circuit court ruled that Victoria Ward is
prohibited from arguing in favor of an award of compensation for
the loss of a supposed 400-foot luxury Lost Tower, and for the
relocation of units from the Lost Tower to less valuable or less
efficient locations around the parking podiums of existing
buildings within Ward Village (the âpodium unitsâ claim). The
Lost Tower claim and related podium units claim comprise a
significant portion of Victoria Wardâs total damages sought.
In its order granting HARTâS MPSJ No. 5, the circuit
court ruled that âevidence of [the Lost Tower] would be
speculative and unduly confusingâ to a jury. The circuit court
also noted that the ruling overlaps with its ruling on HARTâs
MPSJ No. 3 which prohibited Victoria Ward from recovering
severance damages on the basis of the Master Plan Permit.
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In its order granting HARTâS MPSJ No. 9, the circuit
court ruled that it would prohibit Victoria Ward from seeking
severance damages for the relocation of âLost Towerâ units to
less valuable and less efficient âpodium unitsâ â or residential
real estate surrounding parking podiums â largely based on its
rulings in relation to HARTâs MPSJ Nos. 1, 2, 3, and 5.
The circuit court erred in granting HARTâs MPSJ Nos. 5
and 9. The circuit courtâs decisions were based on its
conclusion that Victoria Wardâs claim for just compensation
arising from the inability to develop a sixth tower on Land
Block 1 would be âoverly speculativeâ and confusing to a jury.
However, Victoria Ward has presented sufficient evidence to
withstand summary judgment. Accordingly, we vacate the circuit
court orders granting HARTâs MPSJ Nos. 5 and 9 and remand to the
circuit court in order to allow Victoria Ward to present to a
jury its claims for severance damages relating to the Lost Tower
and podium units.
1. The Lost Tower and HARTâs MPSJ No. 5
HART seeks to preclude Victoria Ward from arguing for
including the âLost Towerâ â a 400-foot luxury condominium tower
that Victoria Ward purportedly planned to build on the site of
the Kakaâako Station â in its appraisal of Land Block 1, on the
grounds that the Lost Tower is too speculative and part of an
âex post facto development scheme, admittedly reverse engineered
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by [Victoria Ward] and its expert witnessesâ to increase the
overall damages figure.
The Lost Tower claim centers on a dispute over how to
calculate the âhighest and best useâ of Land Block 1. Eminent
domain proceedings are intended to award landowners âan amount
of just compensation which as nearly as possible approximates
the value which a free market would attach to the taken
property.â City & Cnty. of Honolulu v. Market Place, Ltd., 55
Haw. 226, 242,517 P.2d 7, 19
(1973). A standard valuation method in eminent domain cases calculates just compensation as the difference between the fair market value of condemned property immediately before the taking (i.e., the condition unaffected by the taking) and the fair market value of the remaining property after the taking. Territory v. Adelmeyer,45 Haw. 144, 149
,363 P.2d 979, 983
(1961). The fair market value of the property in both the âbeforeâ and âafterâ conditions is calculated by estimating the highest and best use, defined as the use of property âthat will generate the most profit.â Highest and Best Use, Blackâs Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). âThe highest and best use of a property is the one that is physically possible, legally permissible, financially feasible, and maximally productive.â Menard Inc. v. Cnty. of Clay,886 N.W.2d 804, 811
(Minn. 2016); see also Twp. Of Manalapan v. Gentile,231 A.3d 631
, 637 (N.J. 2020) (âTo constitute the
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âhighest and best use,â a use must be â1) legally permissible,
2) physically possible, 3) financially feasible, and
4) maximally productive.ââ).
HART argues that there was never a realistic plan to
build a sixth tower on Land Block 1, and that the Lost Tower
claim is âreverse engineered.â Victoria Ward did not submit any
applications, specific plans, or detailed designs of a 400-foot
"Lost Tower" on Land Block 1. Even if a plan existed, HART
claims, it would not have been legally permissible since it
would conflict with the construction of the Kakaâako Station and
thus violate the Master Plan Permit obligation to address and
incorporate rail. Because the highest and best use of property
in both the âbeforeâ and âafterâ conditions must be legally
permissible, and because the Lost Tower conflicts with the
Master Plan Permit, HART concludes that Victoria Ward must be
prohibited from seeking severance damages related to the âLost
Tower.â
HART points to the 2008 Master Plan Submittal which
only depicts a 240-foot tall residential mid-rise/office
building on the site of the Kakaʻako Station, rather than a 400-
foot luxury residential tower. According to the Submittal, a
majority of buildings surrounding the Lost Tower were planned to
be residential mid-rise/office structures. Thus, not only did
Victoria Wardâs sole relevant submission to the HCDA represent a
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building on Land Block 1 directly contradicting Victoria Wardâs
description of the Lost Tower, but further, the pattern of
development surrounding the site of the alleged Lost Tower
conflicts with Victoria Wardâs alleged Lost Tower plans.
Victoria Ward responds that, under the Master Plan
Permit, it had the right to develop Land Block 1 with six
condominium towers. Consequently, the highest and best use of
Land Block 1 in the âbeforeâ condition consists of the five
towers already slated to be built, plus the Lost Tower. Land
Block 1 is less valuable in the âafterâ condition, because the
Kakaʻako Station prevents construction of a sixth tower on Land
Block 1.
Victoria Ward notes that the Master Plan Submittal
reflects a Ward Village building â though not a 400-foot tall
luxury condominium tower â precisely on the spot where the
Kakaʻako Station is now planned to be built. This preliminary
plan indicates that Victoria Ward had planned to build some
structure on the site of the Kakaâako Station.
Victoria Ward presents additional evidence in favor of
its Lost Tower claim. First, Howard Hughesâs then-Senior Vice
President of Development, Race Randle, submitted sworn
declarations stating that the highest and best use of the land
without HARTâs taking would be to construct a residential tower:
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If Victoria Ward was not prevented from developing the
planned tower at the Kakaʻako Station location and guideway
because of HARTâs taking [o]f this land, in its highest and
best use it would be constructed as a âluxuryâ or âupperâ
tier condominium tower, similar to Aeʻo, ʻAʻaliʻi, Koʻula, and
Anaha towers.
In another declaration, Randle asserted that the Lost
Tower âcould have been the same height as AeÊ»o and Ê»AÊ»aliÊ»i or up
to approximately 400 feet.â Randle separately testified that
Land Block 1 is uniquely valuable because it rests in âthe heart
of the neighborhood,â surrounded by amenities.
Victoria Ward also points to testimony from experts on
both sides of this case stating that the highest and best use of
the land without the taking would be to build a sixth tower on
Land Block 1, and that the Lost Tower could exist but for the
KakaÊ»ako Station. Two of Victoria Wardâs expert appraisers
concluded that the before condition entails six towers on Land
Block 1. Even HARTâs expert appraiser recognized that, in the
âbeforeâ condition without rail, Victoria Ward could have built
six towers on Land Block 1:
Q. [ ] Iâm talking before condition without rail, okay, the
without-rail scenario. Do you have six towers on Land
Block 1?
. . .
A. [ ] If youâre asking me in the before condition was
there potential to build six towers on Land Block 1 in the
before condition, the answer is yes.
Q. [ ] Okay. And does your before condition assume that?
A. My before condition assumes that the developer would do
what [Victoria Ward] . . . has done from the beginning,
which was to continue to scope the â the market, adjust,
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and react to the market and the regulatory environment as
they moved forward.
. . .
Q. Well, do you have a before condition that has six towers
on Land Block 1 or not?
. . .
A. I have a before condition that has a certain amount of
square footage â buildable square footage available on Land
Block 1, recognizing that there was an opportunity to have
used that square footage in a variety of ways, including
six towers, if desired.
(Emphasis added.)
Another HART expert submitted a report reflecting
scenarios with six towers on Land Block 1 without rail and
confirmed the physical feasibility of this scenario as the
âbeforeâ condition. Although the experts disagree as to the
precise value of damages owed to Victoria Ward as a result,
Victoria Ward correctly states that â[t]his is a classic battle
of the experts for the jury to consider.â
The circuit court agreed with HART and granted its
motion for partial summary judgment. In its order, the circuit
court specifically noted that Victoria Ward lacked any design
plans or permits for the purported Lost Tower:
3. Given the stakes, that the Victoria Ward, Ltd.
Defendants are saying that the taking was of this parcel of
land where they intended to build such a tower, it would
seem that the first thing the Victoria Ward, Ltd.
Defendants would have provided to the Court would have been
plans, drawings, at least conceptual design, as to what
type of development this would have been. The Victoria
Ward, Ltd. Defendants never took any material steps in the
development of this alleged lost tower. Based on Race
Randleâs [HRCP Rule] 30(b)(6) deposition testimony, it
appears that the Victoria Ward, Ltd. Defendants believed
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such efforts would be futile in light of the Master Plan
requirement to address and incorporate rail. As such, it
would appear that the so-called âlost towerâ was in fact a
tower that never existed.
(Emphasis added.)
We review the circuit courtâs order granting partial
summary judgment de novo, contrary to HARTâs suggestion that
this appeal consists of an evidentiary matter that should be
reviewed under the abuse of discretion standard.
a. There is a genuine dispute of fact as to whether
Victoria Ward presents a reasonable argument for
a probable future use
A propertyâs highest and best use is often
hypothetical, because even prospective uses of a property may
affect its value on the open market. Thus, a party may â within
certain limits â offer a proposed or hypothetical development
plan to demonstrate the likelihood of market demand for the
property and, accordingly, its value. Market Place, 55 Haw. at
243,517 P.2d at 19
â 20 (â[O]nce a reasonable argument is made for a probable use, . . . competent evidence tending to show the value of that use should be admitted.â (quotation, citation, and ellipsis omitted)); Adelmeyer, 45 Haw. at 147â48,363 P.2d at 982
.
This calculation method, and specifically the process
of deriving a value for the hypothetical âbeforeâ condition, may
involve some speculation and a âclash of rival experts.â
Adelmeyer, 45 Haw. at 163,363 P.2d at 989
. This court has
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clarified that the highest and best use need not be ââthe use at
the time of takingââ or even ââthe zoning at the time of
taking[.]ââ State v. Pioneer Mill Co., Ltd., 64 Haw. 168, 178,637 P.2d 1131, 1138
(1981) (quoting State v. Midkiff,55 Haw. 190, 193
,516 P.2d 1250, 1253
(1973)). Rather, a condemnee like Victoria Ward is permitted to âadvance any reasonable argument for a probable future useâ when calculating just compensation for a taking. Id. at 178,637 P.2d at 1138
â 39 (emphasis
added); see Nichols, Eminent Domain, § 18.05[3] (âThe owner may
introduce evidence of the highest and best prospective use even
though such owner has no plans to sell the property or utilize
it for that use. The prospective use will not be admissible,
however, if the asserted use
. . . depends on a [zoning] variance which legally cannot be
granted.â).
In Adelmeyer, we set a relatively low threshold before
a landowner can present evidence of a putative highest and best
use to a jury: â[a]ny competent evidence of matters, not merely
speculative, which would be considered by a prospective vendor
or purchaser or which tend to enhance or depreciate the value of
the property taken is admissible. . . . The only question,
then, is one of competence of the witnesses and their
testimony.â 45 Haw. at 147â48, 363 P.2d at 982 (emphasis
added) (citation omitted). If there is then a conflict âas to
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the highest and best use of the property, the question is
properly one left to the jury.â State v. Dillingham Corp., 60
Haw. 393, 408,591 P.2d 1049, 1058
(1979) (quoting Alabama Power Co. v. Hamilton,342 So.2d 8
(Ala. 1977). Thus, the proffered
uses that should be excluded from jury consideration are those
that are illegal, illogical, physically or financially
unfeasible, or otherwise so remote or improbable as to not
figure materially in the considerations of the hypothetical
willing buyer and seller.
Adelmeyer, Market Place, and subsequent cases
establish that a use asserted by a condemnee may be presented to
a jury even if the asserted use is hypothetical and disputed.
Contrary to the circuit courtâs reasoning, the existence of
development plans is not a necessary condition, and the relevant
question for the circuit court was whether a sixth tower on Land
Block 1 was reasonably probable such that a hypothetical willing
buyer would consider it when negotiating the sale of the
property. See Market Place, 55 Haw. at 242â43, 517 P.2d at 19â
20. In fact, concrete development plans are often irrelevant to
establishing market value, since the inquiry into the highest
and best use considers all feasible uses. Rather, the highest
and best use may be established through expert testimony and
studies regarding the feasibility of prospective future uses.
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Taking the evidence, as set forth above, in the light
most favorable to Victoria Ward, there is a genuine dispute of
material fact as to whether Victoria Ward presented a
âreasonable argument for a probable future use[.]â Pioneer
Mill, 64 Haw. at 178,637 P.2d at 1139
. Thus, the circuit court
erred in depriving Victoria Ward of an opportunity to present
this fact-intensive question to a jury.
b. HART cannot limit damages to the difference in
value of two âafterâ conditions
It is critical in eminent domain disputes that courts
accurately conceptualize the âbeforeâ condition without the
government taking. This court has clarified that condemnors may
not force condemnees to compare two âafterâ conditions:
A major goal of the valuation process in eminent domain
proceedings is to determine market conditions for the taken
property as though no condemnation had ever been
contemplated. . . . [T]he condemnor may not bootstrap
itself to a lower value for taken property by showing that
the very act of taking itself and the preparations
therefor[e] adversely affected market conditions, thereby
lowering fair market value or eliminating a reasonably
probable use.
Market Place, 55 Haw. at 246â47, 517 P.2d at 22 (emphasis
added) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
Hawaiâi caselaw goes to great lengths to clarify that
property in the before condition must be completely detached
from the government taking. See id. By presupposing that
Victoria Ward could never build the âLost Towerâ pursuant to the
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Master Plan Permit, HART obscures the distinction between the
before and after conditions.
HART claims that both parties agree that the highest
and best use of the property is to implement the Master Plan
Permit. And because the Master Plan Permit contains the
requirement to incorporate rail, HART concludes that the before
condition cannot omit the inclusion of the rail guideway and
Kakaâako Station. However, this leads us back to a critical
dispute of fact â the meaning of the Master Plan Permit.
This dispute over Victoria Wardâs right, or lack
thereof, to build the Lost Tower is one that depends in part on
determining the significance of the Master Plan Permitâs
provision that a future rail network would be âaddressed and
incorporated.â It is possible that a jury would find that the
Permit definitively caused any Lost Tower plans to be legally
impermissible. In other words, Victoria Ward was on notice that
it could not develop Land Block 1 with six condominium towers.
In that case, Victoria Ward would not be able to recover damages
related to the Lost Tower, as the building would be a legal
impossibility. However, it would be erroneous for the court to
compare two after conditions (i.e., two conditions with rail)
and Victoria Wardâs failure to produce detailed plans or
renderings of a âLost Towerâ is not itself dispositive or a
sufficient basis on which to grant partial summary judgment.
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For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the order
granting HARTâs MPSJ No. 5.
2. Relocation to Podium Units
Victoria Ward alleges that because it was prevented
from building the Lost Tower, it was subsequently forced to
relocate approximately 285,000 square feet of residential floor
area from the Lost Tower to less efficient and less valuable
parking podiums on Land Block 1 and Land Block 5. 4
HART contends that Victoria Ward was motivated to
build mixed residential-parking podiums for reasons entirely
separate from re-locating residential units from the alleged
Lost Tower. Specifically, HART claims that Victoria Ward built
the mixed-use podiums âto create a more active, inviting
streetscape that is more pedestrian-oriented and aesthetically
pleasing, and to respond to demonstrated market demand for such
units â reasons that have nothing to do with Rail or any Lost
4 Here, âparking podiumsâ refer to mixed-use structures that
integrate parking, residential, and commercial units. Specifically, parking
podiums are lined by commercial and/or residential units facing outward to
the surrounding streets and which hide the parking structure. Podiums are
typically shorter in height than towers, and podium roofs often house
amenities like pools and recreational space.
In the context of floor area, âefficiencyâ is a function of converting
gross square footage to âsaleable net square footage.â Victoria Wardâs
appraiser concludes that towers are more than 70% efficient in generating net
saleable area, compared to the 55-65% efficiency of podiums. Race Randle,
Howard Hughesâs former Senior Vice President of Development, clarified that
podiums are less efficient because, among other reasons, hallways serve homes
on a single side of the hallway (i.e., units facing outward to the street)
whereas tower hallways constitute âshared gross floor areaâ serving units on
each side of the hallway.
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Tower.â HART also argues that Victoria Wardâs mixed-use concept
for the parking podiums had existed from the initiation of the
development of Ward Village, and that the use of podiums for
housing was reflected in both the Master Plan Permit and
Honoluluâs Complete Streets policy which encourages the
development of accessible, multi-modal, and habitable streets
that enhance community interaction, sustainability, and safety.
Citing a lack of causal effect between HART planning
the Kakaʻako Station on Land Block 1 and Victoria Ward building
mixed residential-parking podiums, HART claims that the rail
project had no impact on Victoria Wardâs decision to place
residential units in the parking podiums of âAâaliâi, Koâula, and
The Park, and that Victoria Wardâs decision was instead
motivated by design and community planning reasons.
HART points to numerous statements in the record in
which several of Victoria Wardâs experts suggested that podiums
may have been built for aesthetic and multi-functional purposes
beyond simply housing units from the Lost Tower. HART also
refers to Victoria Wardâs permit applications in which Victoria
Ward refers to the potential of parking podiums to âmove parking
uses up and away from the street, thereby improving the street
environmentâ and âprovide additional open space, and create
street-level retail space that will enhance the walkability of
the neighborhood.â HART further presents statements by Victoria
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Ward executives lauding the aesthetics of parking podiums
relative to bare parking structures.
Although HART presents evidence of alternative motives
driving Victoria Wardâs decision to build residential units
within parking podiums, Victoria Ward introduced sufficient
evidence to create a factual dispute as to whether the rail
project was the cause.
Victoria Ward was not required to build residential
units in podiums. Further, Race Randleâs testimony indicates
that Victoria Ward built podium units to house residential units
that could no longer be built on Land Block 1. Randle stated in
a deposition:
Q. [I]f [Victoria Ward] could have built all of that 7.6
million square feet of residential [floor area] by adding a
tower at the Kaka[â]ako Station and guideway location
without using podium residential [floor area], thatâs how
it would have proceeded; is that correct?
A. That would have been our preference, yes.
In response to a question by HART asking whether
Victoria Ward had âlost the ability to transfer the âlostâ floor
area off Land Block 1 and construct it on another, comparable
parcel,â Randle responded: â[Victoria Ward] does not believe
there is a comparable parcel.â (Emphasis omitted.) Randle
further stated in a deposition that â[r]esidential development
in the podiums is less efficient and less valuable, or less
desirable . . . than residential space in the tower,â and that,
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when compared to towers, âthe cost per net square foot is much
higher, because [podiums are] a lower efficiency product.â
One of Victoria Wardâs expert appraisers, Michael
Waldron, stated during his deposition:
[Q:] Did you reach an opinion that absent the project
[Victoria Ward] would have built zero residential units in
podiums [within Land Block 1?]
. . .
[Waldron:] Yes, that is my opinion. Conceptually, in the highest
and best use in the before condition.
Contrary to HARTâs assertion that the evidence here is
âundisputed,â there is a clear dispute as to causality: Victoria
Ward asserts that, in the âafterâ condition with rail, it had to
re-locate units to parking podiums. HART counters that Victoria
Ward cannot prove that the impetus for locating residential
units within podiums was the loss of area on Land Block 1 for a
supposed sixth tower. Drawing all reasonable inferences in
favor of Victoria Ward, it has presented sufficient evidence to
raise a question of fact as to whether it was forced to relocate
units from the Lost Tower to less valuable podiums. This
question should be presented to a jury, and we accordingly
vacate the order granting HARTâs MPSJ No. 9.
3. Motion to strike J. Douglas Ingâs Declaration
HART cross-appealed a circuit court order denying
HARTâs motion to strike J. Douglas Ingâs declaration. The
declaration was submitted by Victoria Ward in its opposition to
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HARTâs MPSJ No. 9. This court lacks jurisdiction to review
HARTâs cross-appeal.
As Victoria Ward points out, the circuit courtâs order
granting leave for the parties to file interlocutory appeals
specified that (1) parties could appeal âthe orders granting the
Motions for Partial Summary Judgment,â and (2) HART could cross-
appeal âany of the adverse rulings on the Motions for Partial
Summary Judgment,â which were âthe orders granting the Victoria
Ward Defendantsâ Motions for Partial Summary Judgment Nos. 1, 2,
3, and 4.â
âWe cannot disregard a jurisdictional defect in an
appeal and are required to dismiss an appeal on our own motion
when we conclude that we lack jurisdiction.â Wylly v. First
Hawaiian Bank, 57 Haw. 61, 62,549 P.2d 477, 479
(1976) (per
curiam). We therefore dismiss on our own motion HARTâs cross-
appeal of the circuit courtâs denial of its motion to strike.
C. Victoria Ward Can Only Use the Replacement Cost or Cost to
Cure Valuation Method if it Does Not Exceed the Diminution
in Value from Lost Parking
Victoria Ward seeks compensation for the cost of
building a new parking structure to house parking spots that
might be lost due to the rail construction, and to satisfy the
increased parking demand from the presence of the rail station
in Ward Village. Victoria Wardâs parking expert estimated that
several hundred on-street and off-street parking spaces would be
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lost in the area surrounding the Kakaʻako Station, with a
âreasonable probability of adverse effects and substantial
impairment on the remaining parking supplies in the area.â
In its MPSJ No. 7, HART sought to prevent Victoria
Ward from pursuing its lost parking claim. Unlike some of the
other summary judgment motions on appeal, the order granting
HARTâs MPSJ No. 7 did not outright prohibit Victoria Ward from
seeking severance damages. Instead, the circuit court simply
narrowed the breadth of available valuation methods, which is
within the courtâs authority in eminent domain cases.
Victoria Wardâs preference would be to value its
damages at the âreplacement cost.â This valuation method is
also referred to in this appeal as the âcost to cure.â Under
this approach, Victoria Ward would be entitled to damages equal
to the cost of ameliorating the effects of the taking (i.e., the
cost of building replacement parking spots).
In contrast, HART convinced the circuit court to
impose a traditionally used methodology for calculating damages
in partial takings cases like this one. The circuit court ruled
that Victoria Wardâs damages may be valued at the replacement
cost (or cost to cure) only if that value is less than the
diminution in fair market value of the property between the
âbeforeâ condition (no loss of parking) and the âafterâ
condition. Thus, Victoria Ward may still recover the
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replacement cost associated with parking, but only after making
the requisite showing.
The circuit courtâs analysis was correct. In partial
takings cases, if the cost to restore the untaken property to a
pre-taking condition exceeds the difference in property value
between the before and after conditions, then the condemnee is
entitled only to the difference in value. See Territory v.
Honolulu Plantation Co., 34 Haw. 859, 867(Haw. Terr. 1939). This methodology ensures that courts balance the goal of making landowners whole for a taking with the practicality of ensuring that a condemnee does not receive an undue windfall as a result of a taking. See City & Cnty. of Honolulu v. Bonded Inv. Co., Ltd.,54 Haw. 385, 394
,507 P.2d 1084, 1091
(1973) (âTo award [the] condemnee less than the value of the property taken would be unjust to him; to award him more than its value would be unjust to the public.â) (parentheses omitted) (quoting Garrow v. United States,131 F.2d 724, 726
(5th Cir. 1942)). This
methodology also enforces condemneesâ duty to mitigate damages.
We have previously restricted just compensation as the
circuit court did here. See City & Cnty. of Honolulu v.
Collins, 42 Haw. 199, 217 (Haw. Terr. 1957) (âJust compensation
includes all elements of value that inhere in the property, but
it does not exceed market value fairly determined.â). While it
is the province of the jury to assess damages, it is the
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province of the court to guide the jury as it does so. See
Silva v. Souza, 14 Haw. 46, 48 (Haw. Terr. 1902) (âIt is the
province of the jury to assess the damages according to the rule
of law, which it is the province of the court to lay down for
their guidance.â) (Emphasis added.)
Evidence of the cost to cure âis admissible only when
the cost to cure is no greater than the diminution in value of
the remainder if the condition is left uncured.â 4A Nichols,
Eminent Domain, § 14A.04[2][a]. The order did not absolutely
preclude Victoria Wardâs favored valuation methodology â it only
imposed a precondition on its use. That condition was intended
to achieve a guiding purpose of eminent domain law: to ensure
that landowners are âput in as good [a] position pecuniarily as
[they] would have occupied if [their] property had not been
taken.â United States v. Miller, 317 U.S. 369, 373 (1943).
Here, the circuit court, in an effort to balance the need to
make Victoria Ward whole with the risk of an undue windfall,
applied a limiting principle restricting Victoria Wardâs favored
methodology to instances in which its use would not result in
unwarranted gain contrary to the guiding principles of eminent
domain law.
Victoria Wardâs claims for severance damages
concerning lost parking presents a triable factual issue, and
the circuit court explicitly preserved Victoria Wardâs right to
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seek such severance damages. The circuit court acted within its
authority in imposing a precondition on Victoria Wardâs
preferred methodology because this action was consistent with
the applicable legal principles..
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the circuit
courtâs order granting HARTâs MPSJ No. 7. As for Victoria
Wardâs request to be given an opportunity to prepare another
appraisal in response to this holding, Victoria Ward should
direct this request to the circuit court on remand.
D. Victoria Ward Can Collect Severance Damages for Alleged
Damages to Land Block 3
The order granting HARTâs MPSJ No. 10 precluded
Victoria Ward from seeking severance damages related to Land
Block 3. This issue centers on the effect of the following
phrase, found in partiesâ 2020 Joint Stipulation : â[b]oth
parties will appraise Land Block 3 as a distinct larger parcel.â 5
5 The 7/23/2020 Joint Stipulation states, in relevant part:
4. Exception as specifically provided below, the Parties
will conduct their appraisals based on the following:
. . .
c. Victoria Ward contends that a compensable taking
and/or compensable damages have occurred from Land Block 3;
Plaintiff disputes that contention (as described in more
detail in paragraph 5 below).
. . .
5. The parties do not agree about whether there is a
compensable taking and/or compensable damages on Land Block 3.
Both Parties will appraise Land Block 3 as a distinct larger
parcel, including analyzing severance damages if any, and special
benefits if any, subject to the following:
a. Plaintiff reserves all arguments that there is no
compensable taking and/or damages to Land Block 3 and/or that
Victoria Ward is not otherwise entitled to compensation related
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The parties agree that HARTâs partial physical taking extends to
Land Blocks 1 and 5.
Victoria Wardâs severance damages claims concerning
Land Block 3 include parking loss, ingress and egress loss
resulting from the loss of a left turn, and ten years of
construction and noise. Because it is undisputed that HART did
not execute any physical takings on Land Block 3, Victoria
Wardâs just compensation claim as to Land Block 3 only concerns
severance damages.
HART argues that Victoria Ward cannot recover
severance damages for impacts to Land Block 3, because (1) no
physical takings were executed on Land Block 3 and (2) Land
Block 3 is a distinct parcel to be appraised separately from the
rest of Ward Village. In other words, Land Block 3 was not
âtaken or damaged,â because all the physical takings took place
elsewhere, and any real-world impacts to the property are
discounted because the parties stipulated that Land Block 3 is
to be appraised as a distinct parcel. HART is careful not to
to Land Block 3. Victoria Ward reserves all arguments to the
contrary.
b. If Plaintiff successfully establishes that Victoria
Ward is entitled to compensation for Land Block 3 (or that the
amount of compensable damages should be reduced), Plaintiff
cannot offset any special benefits allegedly accruing on Land
Block 3 against damages to other Land Blocks, including Land
Block 1 or Land Block 5.
(Emphases added.)
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characterize the Joint Stipulation as a waiver. Rather, HART
emphasizes that there has been âno legally cognizable taking or
compensable damaging as to Land Block 3.â
The circuit court ruled in large part that because
Land Block 3 constitutes a distinct larger parcel, and because
HART did not take any property from Land Block 3, Victoria Ward
could not recover âseverance damages or under inverse
condemnationâ for damages related to Land Block 3. The circuit
court relied both on a plain reading of the Joint Stipulation
and the partiesâ subsequent conduct â specifically, Victoria
Wardâs statements in support of one of its motions for partial
summary judgment.
We vacate the order granting HARTâs MPSJ No. 10. The
circuit court erred in placing undue emphasis on an ambiguous
phrase of the Joint Stipulation and misapplied Victoria Wardâs
statements made in a separate context.
In a partial taking, where the state condemns only a
portion of the entire property, the state must pay the fair
market value of taken property and severance damages for damage
to the remainder. The right of property owners to recover
severance damages for impacts to property is set forth in the
state constitution and HRS § 101-23. Haw. Const. art. I, § 20
(âPrivate property shall not be taken or damaged for public use
without just compensation.â (emphasis added)); HRS § 101-23
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(1990) (â[D]amages which will accrue to the portion not sought
to be condemned by reason of its severance from the portion
sought to be condemned, . . . shall also be assessed.â).
The People of Hawaiâi added the phrase âor damagedâ to
the Hawaiâi Constitution in 1968 following the construction of
the H-1 freeway to provide remedies for property owners whose
property lost value or usefulness although no physical taking
was executed. The Framers of the 1968 Constitution considered
such effects as they relate to highway construction in adding
the âor damagedâ provision to the constitution. See 2
Proceedings of the Constitutional Convention of Hawaiâi of 1968,
at 27-31.
Shortly after the 1968 constitutional amendment was
adopted, this court emphasized the importance of severance
damages, stating:
It was not until a constitutional amendment in 1968 that
the words âor damagedâ were included in [Article I § 18 of
the Hawaiʻi Constitution].[6]
. . .
Prior to the [1968] amendment [adding the âor damagedâ
clause], only the owner of physically âtakenâ property was
entitled to compensation in Hawaiʻi, and those whose
property was merely consequentially âdamagedâ by the
primary taking were without recourse. . . . The chief
purpose in adding the âor damagedâ clause to the
Constitution was to remedy this situation.
Market Place, 55 Haw. at 230-31,517 P.2d at 12-13
.
6 The eminent domain provision is now Article I § 20.
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Although the Joint Stipulation states that Land Block
3 constitutes a distinct larger parcel, and despite the fact
that HART is not taking portions of Land Block 3, property
owners are entitled to severance damages for impacts to non-
taken properties. Neither the Joint Stipulationâs text nor the
partiesâ subsequent conduct supports the circuit courtâs
conclusion that there was no genuine dispute of material fact as
to whether Victoria Ward can recover severance damages related
to Land Block 3.
a. The Joint Stipulationâs text
The circuit court indicated that the âdistinct larger
parcelâ phrase was a significant factor in its decisionmaking.
However, the Joint Stipulation text is ambiguous, and the
accompanying text cuts in favor of Victoria Ward.
The Stipulation language immediately following the
âdistinct larger parcelâ phrase states, â[b]oth Parties will
appraise Land Block 3 as a distinct larger parcel, including
analyzing severance damages if any, and special benefits if any,
subject to the following.â Both parties agree in the
Stipulation that there were no physical takings within Land
Block 3. This leaves open solely the possibility that Victoria
Ward could recover severance damages on Land Block 3. It makes
little sense (1) for the parties to agree that no takings took
place on Land Block 3, (2) for the parties to intend to sever
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Land Block 3 from Ward Village in a manner that would preclude
the collection of severance damages, and (3) for Victoria Ward
to explicitly reserve the right to seek damages related to Land
Block 3. In fact, the Joint Stipulationâs accompanying text
would be rendered meaningless and absurd if its language were
read to constitute a surrender of severance damages, only to
then immediately refer to the appraisal of severance damages and
offsetting special benefits.
The accompanying Joint Stipulation language does not
constitute an explicit disavowal, but rather seems to have the
opposite intention:
Victoria Ward contends that a compensable taking and/or
compensable damages have occurred from Land Block 3;
Plaintiff disputes that contention . . . .
The Parties do not agree about whether there is a
compensable taking and/or compensable damages on Land Block
3. . . .
[HART] reserves all arguments that there is no compensable
taking and/or damages to Land Block 3 and/or that Victoria
Ward is not otherwise entitled to compensation related to
Land Block 3. Victoria Ward reserves all arguments to the
contrary.
(Emphases added.)
In light of the quoted passages, which preserve
Victoria Wardâs ability to exercise its constitutional right to
seek just compensation for impacts to Land Block 3, it was
erroneous for the circuit court to treat one short and
contradictory phrase in the Stipulation as dispositive of this
question.
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b. The partiesâ subsequent actions
Stipulations bind the parties thereto, and courts use
contract law principles to review them. See Provident Funding
Assocs., L.P. v. Gardner, 149 HawaiÊ»i 288, 297, 488 P.3d 1267, 1276 (2021). â[I]n the face of an ambiguity, âthe courtâs objective is to ascertain and effectuate the intention of the parties as manifested by the contract in its entirety.ââ Id. at 298, 488 P.3d at 1277 (emphasis and brackets omitted) (quoting Hawaiian Assân of Seventh-Day Adventists v. Wong, 130 Hawaiâi 36, 45,305 P.3d 452, 461
(2013). Here, there are both textual
ambiguities, noted above, and a genuine dispute as to the
partiesâ intentions and understandings of the Joint Stipulation.
The circuit court correctly sought to interpret the
âdistinct larger parcelâ language by reviewing the partiesâ
conduct. To do this, the court looked to Victoria Wardâs
arguments in favor of Victoria Wardâs MPSJ No. 3 (âVictoria
Ward]âs MPSJ No. 3â). Victoria Wardâs MPSJ No. 3 concerned
special benefits, or beneficial impacts from a taking that can
be used to offset severance damages. Victoria Wardâs MPSJ No. 3
is not to be confused with HARTâs MPSJ No. 3, which precluded
Victoria Ward from seeking severance damages.
In the memorandum in support of Victoria Wardâs MPSJ
No. 3, Victoria Ward stated that âall claims as to Land Block
3 â including severance damages and offsetting special benefits
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- must be assessed separate and apart from all other claims
related to any other land blocks of Ward Village.â (Internal
quotation omitted.) Subsequently, in the order granting HARTâS
MPSJ No. 10, the circuit court cited this language as revealing
Victoria Wardâs intentions and understanding of the Stipulation:
When the Court refers to how the parties have treated the
stipulation, the Victoria Ward, Ltd. Defendantsâ argument
in support of their Third Motion for Partial Summary
Judgment: to Enforce the Partiesâ 7/23/20 Joint Stipulation
[Dkt. 1710], which dealt with special benefits, included
the statement that âbecause the parties have stipulated
that Land Block 3 is a separate larger parcel, all claims
as to Land Block 3 including severance damages and
offsetting special benefits must be assessed separate and
apart from all other claims related to any land blocks in
Ward Village.â Thus, the Court is looking at the wording of
the stipulation and how the parties, including the Victoria
Ward, Ltd. Defendants, have interpreted the stipulation.
It was erroneous for the circuit court to rely so
heavily on Victoria Wardâs statement in support of Victoria
Wardâs MPSJ No. 3 to interpret the Joint Stipulation language at
issue in HARTâs MPSJ No. 10. The issues central to HARTâS MPSJ
No. 10 and Victoria Wardâs MPSJ No. 3 are different. Victoria
Wardâs MPSJ No. 3 concerned whether future development rights
could qualify as a special benefit. Paragraph 6 of the Joint
Stipulation contains clear language indicating that future
development rights do not count as a special benefit in relation
to Land Block 3. Furthermore, HARTâS MPSJ No. 10 and Victoria
Wardâs MPSJ No. 3 concern different provisions of the Joint
Stipulation. Victoria Wardâs statements in support of Victoria
Wardâs MPSJ No. 3 do not clearly reflect a position in relation
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to HARTâS MPSJ No. 10. HARTâS MPSJ No. 10 concerns the
application of Paragraph 5 of the Joint Stipulation. The
statements made by Victoria Ward in favor of Victoria Wardâs
MPSJ No. 3 have minimal value toward interpreting Paragraph 5 of
the Joint Stipulation, because there is an explicit provision
applicable to the dispute in Victoria Wardâs MPSJ No. 3 (i.e.,
whether special benefits to Land Block 3 could offset damages on
other land blocks):
If Plaintiff successfully establishes that Victoria Ward is
not entitled to compensation for Land Block 3 (or that the
amount of compensable damages should be reduced), Plaintiff
cannot offset any special benefits allegedly accruing on
Land Block 3 against damages to other Land Blocks,
including Land Block 1 or Land Block 5.
The Joint Stipulation language is silent on damages,
but clear and specific to the question at the heart of Victoria
Wardâs MPSJ No. 3: whether HART could apply special benefits
from Land Block 3 (where there was no physical taking) to offset
damages arising from takings on Land Blocks 1 and 5. The issue
in Victoria Wardâs MPSJ No. 3 contrasts with the dispute in this
appeal, where Victoria Ward seeks to preserve its right to seek
severance damages to Land Block 3 from Land Blocks 1 and 5. The
Joint Stipulation is not clear with regard to the latter issue.
Accordingly, the circuit court erred in (1) relying on
the Stipulationâs ambiguous text; then (2) buttressing its
interpretation of the text by reference to Victoria Wardâs
subsequent pleadings, which were specific to a separate question
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that was addressed explicitly by a different passage of the
Stipulation.
c. The circuit court should review the factual
questions on remand
Rather than relying on an ambiguous phrase or Victoria
Wardâs actions in relation to a separate provision of the Joint
Stipulation, the circuit court should, on remand, allow a jury
to determine whether Land Block 3 and the affected parcels of
land are sufficiently united via application of the âthree
unitiesâ test. See Cnty. of Kauaâi v. Hanalei River Holdings
Ltd., 139 Hawaiʻi 511, 520-23, 394 P.3d 741, 750-53 (2017).
Hawaiʻi law is clear that a landowner does not
necessarily need to have suffered a physical taking in order to
claim severance damages to a parcel of land. Haw. Const. art.
I, § 20; Market Place, 55 Haw. at 230â31, 517 P.2d at 12â13.
Under the three unities test, a landowner like Victoria Ward may
recover for damages to separate and independent tracts of land,
like Land Block 3, provided that the landowner establishes the
following factors shared between the condemned and remaining
parcels of land: (1) unity of title, (2) physical unity, and
(3) unity of use. City & Cnty. of Honolulu v. Bonded Inv. Co.
Ltd., 54 Haw. 523, 525,511 P.2d 163, 165
(1973); Hanalei River Holdings, 139 Hawaiʻi at 521,394 P.3d at 751
. No single factor
is dispositive of a condemneeâs claim for severance damages, and
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the Joint Stipulation designating Land Block 3 as a âdistinctâ
or physically separate parcel does not preclude Victoria Ward
from collecting severance damages on Land Block 3.
The aforementioned analysis requires a factfinder to
evaluate and weigh many separate pieces of evidence.
Accordingly, this question is properly reserved for a jury. For
the foregoing reasons, we vacate the order granting HARTâs MPSJ
No. 10 and remand for trial.
E. Victoria Wardâs Damages May Be Offset by Special Benefits
from the Transit-Oriented Development Overlay Plan
Victoria Ward disputes HARTâs ability to offset just
compensation by the total sum of benefits arising out of the
Kakaʻako Community Development District Transit-Oriented
Development (âTODâ) Overlay Plan.
The HCDA completed an initial draft of the TOD Overlay
Plan in 2013 with the intent of fostering urbanized development
and greater residential density in proximity to public transit.
The TOD Overlay Plan final draft was published in 2016, and it
highlights numerous forms of incentive-based zoning in which
portions of Ward Village received a more generous maximum floor
area ratio (âFARâ) compared to pre-existing standards in the
Master Plan Permit in the absence of the TOD Overlay Plan. FAR
refers to the ratio of a buildingâs gross floor area to the size
of the piece of land on which it is built. Maximum-allowable
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FAR may be capped through zoning regulations, with lower maximum
FAR values being associated with reduced allowable residential
density.
Most importantly for this appeal, the final draft TOD
Overlay Plan specifies a maximum allowable FAR much greater than
that allowed under the Master Plan Permit. This increase in FAR
is a significant benefit to Victoria Ward, with HART alleging
that the density increase would allow Victoria Ward to build
millions of additional square feet of floor area. A final TOD
Overlay Plan has not yet been adopted by the legislature despite
HCDA support, and HART largely blames Victoria Ward for the
delay.
In support of its position, HART highlights
representations anticipating a âdensity increase triggered by
mass transitâ in the Master Plan Submittal. HART also points to
communications by Victoria Ward executives implying that they
intentionally left portions of Ward Village underdeveloped in
order to later exploit more generous development rules after the
Master Plan Permit expires in 2024, but that these plans were
scrapped due to the availability of greater development
flexibility and affordances provided by the TOD Overlay Plan.
Specifically, Victoria Ward appears to have anticipated the
potential for eleven new towers totaling millions of additional
square feet as a result of future TOD benefits. HARTâs
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appraiser estimated that the potential future buildable floor
area as a result of the TOD Overlay Plan would add a total $30
million in value to Ward Village. HART seeks to treat this
increase in value as a âspecial benefitâ that can be used to
offset total just compensation.
The circuit court granted Victoria Wardâs MPSJ No. 2,
reasoning that the question of special benefits arising from the
TOD Overlay Plan was too speculative and would lead to jury
confusion. We review the circuit courtâs summary judgment
decision de novo. See Gump v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 93 Hawaiʻi
417, 420, 5 P.3d 407, 410 (2000).
State v. Midkiff involved a similar special benefits
claim. 55 Haw. at 194-97, 516 P.2d at 1254-56. There, the jury heard expert testimony claiming that the remaining parcels would âprobably be rezoned to a higher industrial use[,]â based on their âirregular shape . . . and the unsuitability of the [remaining parcels] for any other use due to their position on the freeway.âId. at 194
,516 P.2d at 1253
(emphasis added). This court upheld the condemneeâs right to present their probabilistic argument to a jury in a partial takings case.Id. at 193
,516 P.2d at 1253
(âSince reasonable possibility of
rezoning is a valid consideration in determining the market
value of land actually taken, we see no reason why the same rule
should not apply to establishing the market value of remnant
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parcels and thus the enhancement value attributable to the
taking.â). Thus, the applicable standard here, where HART
asserts the existence of future special offsetting benefits in a
partial taking case, is a âreasonable probabilityâ test. See
id. (âThe state has urged that when a partial taking enhances
the remainder lands by creating a reasonable probability of
rezoning to a higher use, the remnant parcels may be
specifically benefited by the taking. We agree.â (emphasis
added)). This standard is consistent with that applied supra in
the discussion of the Lost Tower and speculative damages.
Once a âreasonable argument is made for . . . a
probable use,â evidence relating to offsetting special benefits
should be considered by a jury. Market Place, 55 Haw. at 243,517 P.2d at 19-20
; see State v. Martin,54 Haw. 167, 170
,504 P.2d 1223, 1226
(Haw. 1973) (âThis court has taken the position
that in a condemnation case such as this one, âany evidence
which will aid the jury in fixing the fair market value of the
property should be considered by them.ââ).
As set forth below, there is sufficient evidence to
establish a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the TOD
Overlay Plan is reasonably probable.
HART correctly notes that the Honolulu Department of
Planning and Permitting has completed eight different TOD plans
spanning 19 rail station areas outside of Kakaâako. Further, the
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TOD Overlay Plan relevant to this appeal has the support of key
stakeholders like HCDA.
HART also points to the testimony of Anthony Ching,
the HCDA Executive Director from 2008â2015, who attested that
â[a] TOD Station Planning Area for Kakaá·Ÿako has already been
identified, and substantial work has already been done toward
the creation and adoption of the TOD Overlay Plan.â
Additionally, a âfinal draftâ TOD Overlay Plan already exists.
On the other side of this dispute, Victoria Ward and
its experts note the speculative nature of the TOD Overlay Plan
and question the notion that Victoria Ward would be willing and
able to build additional structures on Ward Village.
The question of whether a future use or benefit is
reasonably probable is a fact-intensive inquiry. A jury should
discern whether the TOD Overlay Plan was reasonably probable,
and if so, the likely value of any special benefits to Victoria
Ward arising from the TOD Overlay Plan.
Finally, HART is correct in asserting that the TOD
Overlay Plan is a special offsetting benefit, as opposed to a
general benefit. See City & Cnty. of Honolulu v. Collins, 42
Haw. 199, 213 (Haw. Terr. 1957) (â[A] general benefit cannot be
considered as an offset to the value of the ownerâs property in
condemnation. Only a special and direct benefit may be offset
against value of property taken.â).
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The TOD Overlay Plan has a âreasonable probabilityâ of
affording Victoria Ward specific upzoning opportunities that are
peculiar to Victoria Wardâs relationship to the neighborhood as
a developer of residential units in the vicinity of the Kakaʻako
Station. Specifically, the TOD Overlay Plan, if enacted, would
function similarly to a rezoning.
Here, the TOD Overlay Plan would increase residential
density, allowing Victoria Ward to expand Ward Village and sell
a greater number of units. This opportunity for greater
residential density is akin to upzoning, in that it constitutes
an allowance for a denser or higher-value use. HARTâs appraisal
expert included the TOD Overlay Plan in his appraisal report for
Ward Village, stating, âI concluded that there is a reasonable
probability of a TOD plan of some kind to be adopted and, more
specifically, a reasonable probability â frankly, a near
certainty â that the potential for a TOD plan would have
impacted the value of the remainder property in the after
condition[.]â (Emphasis omitted). Because the TOD Overlay Plan
results in an outcome similar to rezoning, the existence of a
reasonable probability of a future TOD Overlay Plan could
legitimately be used by a jury to offset Victoria Wardâs claimed
damages.
Victoria Ward characterizes the benefits as âgeneral
benefitsâ because they will be âshared among multiple landowners
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near the City Center [Kakaâako] Station.â However, this court
has clarified that special benefits do not become relegated to
general benefits merely because other properties may be
benefitted. See Territory by Sylva v. Mendonca, 46 Haw. 83, 95- 96,375 P.2d 6, 13
(1962) (â[S]pecial benefits resulting from
the fact that land abuts on a proposed road do not become
general benefits merely because other properties which also
front on the road and receive these same benefits have not been
required to contribute to the road in propertyâ (emphasis
added)).
Because of the specific qualities associated with the
benefits arising out of the TOD Overlay Plan, they are to be
treated as special benefits for the purposes of offsetting any
of Victoria Wardâs damages.
Accordingly, we vacate the order granting Victoria
Wardâs MPSJ No. 2.
F. HART May Not Offset Victoria Wardâs Just Compensation by
the Total Value of Special Benefits to Land Block 3
In a related appeal, HART contests the circuit court
order granting Victoria Wardâs MPSJ No. 3, which precludes HART
from treating potential increases in density on Land Block 3 as
special offsetting benefits to reduce the overall just
compensation owed to Vicotria Ward. This dispute concerns both
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the same July 23, 2020 Joint Stipulation from Section IV(D) and
the same TOD Overlay Plan from Section IV(E).
In appraising Land Block 3, HARTâs expert appraiser
applied $15 million of âspecial benefitsâ arising on Land Block
3 to offset damages arising on other blocks of land. The $15
million of special benefits were related to increased
development density allowable under the TOD Overlay Plan. The
dispute here is whether these potential increases in density
from the TOD Overlay can be treated as a special offsetting
benefit, or if the July 23, 2020 Joint Stipulation language
limits appraisers from only considering special benefits
existent at the time of the 2009 Master Plan Permit.
On appeal, Victoria Ward contests the HART appraiserâs
treatment of future TOD-related benefits as a special offsetting
benefit because the Joint Stipulation stated:
6. In evaluating the Land Blocks defined in the Master
Plan, the Parties will use the following assumptions:
. . .
c. As of the valuation date, Land Block 3 is fully
built out to its highest and best use (i.e., the
amount of FAR utilized as of the date of value is the
final FAR allocation for Land block 3), both in the
before and the after condition, and that any
remaining FAR associated with Land Block 3 will be
deemed transferred off Land Block 3.â[ 7]
7 The Stipulationâs statement that Land Block 3 is built out to its
highest and best use in both the before and after conditions does not
necessarily preclude Victoria Wardâs severance damages claims on Land Block
3. This is the case because the Joint Stipulation is specific to âthe amount
of FAR utilizedâ whereas Victoria Wardâs severance damages claims for Land
Block 3 concern loss of parking, loss of ingress and egress, and construction
and noise. Because the Stipulation is specific to FAR, and because Victoria
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(Emphases added.)
Victoria Ward argues the Joint Stipulation means that
future development potential under the TOD Overlay Plan could
not be counted as a special benefit, and that valuation of Land
Block 3 must only account for special benefits existent at the
time of the 2009 Master Plan Permit.
The circuit courtâs order granting Victoria Wardâs
MPSJ No. 3 is brief, largely reiterating the Joint Stipulation
language:
1. As stated in paragraph 6 of the Joint Stipulation filed
July 23, 2020, in evaluating the land blocks defined in the
master plan, the parties will use the assumptions set forth
in paragraph 6 of the Joint Stipulation, including the
assumption set forth in paragraph 6(c) that, as of the
valuation date, Land Block 3 is fully built out to its
highest and best use, both in the before and the after
condition, and any remaining floor area (âFARâ) associated
with Land Block 3 will be deemed transferred off Land Block
3.
2. Although the Court does not understand there to be any
dispute on this point, at the Victoria Ward Defendantsâ
(also referred to as Howard Hughesâ) request, the Court
also reaffirms paragraphs 5 and 5(b) of the Joint
Stipulation, specifically that Plaintiff cannot offset any
special benefits allegedly accruing on Land Block 3 against
damages to any other land block, including Land Block 1 or
Land Block 5.
3. In granting summary judgment, the Court is reaffirming
the language in the Joint Stipulation, which says what it
says.
Wardâs damages claims relating to Land Block 3 do not concern the loss of
developable floor area, the Stipulation does not preclude Victoria Wardâs
severance damages claims for Land Block 3.
However, because the special offsetting benefits to Land Block 3 relate
to the TOD Overlay Plan, and because the Joint Stipulation states that FAR in
the before and after conditions are the same, this discussion concludes that
HART may not use future increased density on Land Block 3 to offset Victoria
Wardâs compensable damages.
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(Emphases added.)
The parties dispute the meaning of not only the Joint
Stipulation, but also the circuit court order granting Victoria
Wardâs MPSJ No. 3. The order does not explicitly state that it
precludes HART from arguing in favor of $15 million of special
benefits arising from future development on Land Block 3
pursuant to the TOD Overlay Plan, though Victoria Ward argues in
favor of such a reading in this appeal.
We affirm the circuit courtâs order granting Victoria
Wardâs MPSJ No. 3. The Joint Stipulationâs text is clear that
âthe amount of FAR utilized as of the date of value is the final
FAR allocation for Land Block 3.â (Emphases added.) This
language indicates that HART is precluded from treating
potential increases in density from the operation of the TOD
Overlay Plan on Land Block 3 â which were non-actualized at the
time of valuation â as special offsetting benefits.
The Joint Stipulation clearly limits the parties: they
must treat Land Block 3 as âfully built out to its highest and
best use . . . both in the before and the after condition.â The
terms âutilizedâ and âfinalâ in the Joint Stipulation are
particularly meaningful, and they indicate an agreement between
the parties that for appraisal purposes, the parties were to
assume that no further development would take place on Land
Block 3. This interpretation is consistent with the surrounding
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phrasing: âLand Block 3 is fully built out to its highest and
best use.â Unrealized, tentative increases in development are
not to be considered by appraisers.
HART repeatedly suggests that Victoria Ward is flip-
flopping on issues related to Land Block 3. The circuit court
even used Victoria Wardâs arguments in favor of Victoria Wardâs
MPSJ No. 3 to help form its ruling against Victoria Ward in the
order granting HARTâS MPSJ No. 10 (at issue in SCAP-22-340):
When the Court refers to how the parties have treated the
stipulation, the Victoria Ward, Ltd. Defendantsâ argument
in support of their Third Motion for Partial Summary
Judgment . . . included the statement that âbecause the
parties have stipulated that Land Block 3 is a separate
larger parcel, all claims as to Land Block 3 including
severance damages and offsetting special benefits must be
assessed separate and apart from all other claims related
to any land blocks in Ward Village.â
Again, the issues in HARTâS MPSJ No. 10 are distinct
from those in Victoria Wardâs MPSJ No. 3, and it therefore
follows that Victoria Wardâs arguments regarding the latter do
not necessarily reflect their position regarding the former.
HARTâS MPSJ No. 10 focused on the effect of Paragraph 5 of the
Joint Stipulation, in which the parties agreed that Land Block 3
is a âdistinct larger parcelâ for the purposes of analyzing
severance damages or special benefits. But the operative
section in Victoria Wardâs MPSJ No. 3 is Paragraph 6 â a
provision that explicitly applies to the dispute at hand.
Further, with regard to any arguments Victoria Ward made in
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support of treating Land Block 3 as a distinct parcel in its
memorandum in support of Victoria Wardâs MPSJ No. 3, those
arguments are not applicable to HARTâS MPSJ No. 10 because the
Joint Stipulation clearly explains how the parties should treat
special benefits: âPlaintiff cannot offset any special benefits
allegedly accruing on Land Block 3 against damages to other Land
Blocks.â
The Joint Stipulation language is silent on damages,
but clear and specific to the question of applying special
benefits from Land Block 3 (where no physical taking was
executed) to Land Blocks 1 and 5 (where takings were executed).
Because of the stark differences between HARTâS MPSJ No. 10 and
Victoria Wardâs MPSJ No. 3, Victoria Wardâs statements in
support of Victoria Wardâs MPSJ No. 3 are not necessarily
contradictory with its position against HARTâS MPSJ No. 10.
Finally, a stipulation binds parties unless there is a
reason to set it aside. Gardner, 149 Hawaiʻi at 300, 488 P.3d at
1279. We discern no reason to set aside the Joint Stipulation
here. See Tax Appeal of Subway Real Estate Corp. v. Director of
Taxation, State of Haw., 110 Hawaiâi 25, 38, 129 P.3d 528, 541
(2006) (â[S]tipulations may be set aside in order to prevent
manifest injustice.â (quotation omitted)). The Stipulation is
clear, affecting the rights of the parties in a manner that is
enforceable and consistent with sound public policy. See
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Provident Funding Assocs., 149 Hawaiʻi at 296, 488 P.3d at 1275
(â[A]ll such stipulations not unreasonable, not against good
morals or sound public policy, have been and will be
enforced[.]â) (quoting Okuhara v. Broida, 51 Haw. 253, 256â57,456 P.2d 228
, 230â31 (1969)). There is no reason to set aside
the Joint Stipulation here.
Accordingly, we affirm the circuit court order
granting Victoria Wardâs MPSJ No. 3. The Joint Stipulation
prohibits HART from applying, on Land Block 3, the purported
special benefits arising from the TOD Overlay Plan.
G. HART Established a Genuine Dispute of Material Fact as to
the Special Benefits Associated with Utility Grounding
HART sought to offset just compensation owed to
Victoria Ward by $2.7 million on the basis of HARTâs
undergrounding of electrical utilities along Halekauwila Street
and Queen Street adjacent to Land Block 1 and Land Block 5.
HART argues that this undergrounding work constituted a special
offsetting benefit to Victoria Ward. HART clarifies that the
special benefit to Victoria Ward was âdirect cost savingsâ as
opposed to aesthetic, safety, or efficiency benefits, which are
more broadly shared with other landowners in the area and the
general public.
The key questions here are whether (1) Victoria Ward
would have completed the work of undergrounding utilities at its
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own expense but for HARTâs completion of the work and (2) the
undergrounding work constitutes a general benefit or special
benefit.
The circuit court ruled that HART was required to
underground the electrical utilities âfor its own benefit and
not the benefit of any of the surrounding landowners, . . .
[t]he rail project cannot be constructed without this utility
modification.â Second, the circuit court ruled that any
downstream benefits were deemed âgeneral benefitsâ that cannot
offset Victoria Wardâs right to just compensation.
HART should not be allowed to offset total just
compensation owed to Victoria Ward by $2.7 million for
undergrounding work that HART would have completed anyway.
However, given the genuine dispute of material fact as to
whether Victoria Ward or HART would have had to complete the
undergrounding work, we vacate the order granting Victoria
Wardâs MPSJ No. 4 and remand for trial.
HART argues that Victoria Ward was required to bear
the cost of the undergrounding work as part of the 2005 Mauka
Rules and based on Victoria Wardâs representations to HCDA.
This point is disputed. HART relies on the fact that the 2005
Mauka Rules required undergrounding of utilities. However, the
Mauka Rules do not specify which entity should bear the cost.
See HAR § 15-22-76 (repealed 2011) (âPublic utility companies
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shall place utility lines underground within the mauka area.â).
Further, the Master Plan Permit contained no provision
specifying that Victoria Ward would be responsible for
undergrounding utilities.
Victoria Wardâs individual building permit
applications also are ambiguous and do not favor one party over
the other. Building permit applications refer to ânew
underground utility linesâ and state that â[a]ll utilities will
be underground,â without specifying who would be responsible for
the construction work.
HART argues that the Master Plan Submittal implies
that Victoria Ward or its predecessor in interest, GGP, would
complete the undergrounding work. The Master Plan Submittal
states:
While no major additions to the utility infrastructure in
the area are required for development of Ward Neighborhood,
planned undergrounding of the electrical utilities will
help create a community that is safer and more pleasing to
the eye for residents and visitors.
. . .
It is recommended that all overhead utilities be placed
underground within the development boundaries.
. . .
The Master Plan is guided by clearly articulated design
standards. . . . These standards include:
Undergrounding of utilities to remove visual
clutter[.]
(Emphasis added.)
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The references to underground utilities in the
building permit applications and the Master Plan Submittal do
not definitively place the burden of undergrounding on either
party. Drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of HART, the
evidence is sufficient to establish a genuine dispute of
material fact.
As previously noted, a significant question in partial
takings involving benefits to the remaining land is whether the
benefits are âgeneral benefitsâ or âspecial benefits.â Here,
the record does not establish whether cost savings from the
undergrounding work constitutes a general or special benefit.
It is unclear whether other property owners elsewhere along the
HART rail route were required to pay for the construction work.
Similarly, there is a dispute as to the extent and types of
benefits from undergrounding. HART argues that the benefits of
undergrounding extend specifically to Ward Village, whereas
Victoria Ward cites to an appraiserâs statement specifying that
HARTâs undergrounding work was conducted on utility lines âalong
public streets involv[ing] property owned by others, not just
Victoria Ward.â
HART argues that the benefit is âdirect cost savings,â
rather than aesthetic, safety, or efficiency benefits. In
contrast, Victoria Ward asserts that the âaesthetic, safety, and
efficiency benefits from the undergroundingâ are enjoyed by all
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landowners in the area. The circuit court agreed with Victoria
Ward, ruling that â[i]f there are benefits from HARTâs
undergrounding of the utilities . . . this is not peculiar or
special to Ward Village. All landowners in the area enjoy
aesthetic, safety, and efficiency benefits from the
undergrounding. As such, as a matter of law, these benefits are
general and not specific.â
The circuit court erred in granting summary judgment
on that issue. There are disputes of fact that must be resolved
by a jury to determine whether undergrounding the utilities
constitutes a general benefit or a special benefit in this
specific context. For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the
order granting Victoria Wardâs MPSJ No. 4.
H. This Court Lacks Jurisdiction to Review Appeals of the
Circuit Court Order Granting in Part and Denying in Part
HARTâs Motion to Strike
In addition to appealing four partial summary judgment
orders, HART appeals a circuit court order granting in part and
denying in part HARTâs motion to strike the declarations of
former HCDA Board members Steven J. Scott and Brian Lee. The
circuit court denied HARTâs Motion to Strike in full as it
relates to Scottâs declaration, and granted it in part as to
paragraphs 14 and 16 of Leeâs declaration.
HART moved to dismiss these interlocutory appeals for
lack of jurisdiction because these appeals, they argue, do not
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satisfy HRS § 641-1(b)âs requirement that interlocutory appeals
from the circuit courtâs civil docket be âadvisable for the
speedy termination of litigation[.]â HRS § 641-1 (2004).
We may grant a dismissal motion âon any or all
appropriate grounds disclosed by any or all the papers of record
in the case.â Waterhouse, 44 Haw. at 238, 353 P.2d at 1011
(quotation omitted).
This court lacks jurisdiction to review the circuit
courtâs order granting in part and denying in part HARTâs Motion
to Strike. The circuit courtâs order granting leave to file
interlocutory appeals only provided that HART could âcross-
appeal . . . any of the adverse rulings on the Motions for
Partial Summary Judgment[,]â clarifying in a footnote that
â[t]he adverse rulings on the Motions for Partial Summary
Judgment as to HART are the orders granting the Victoria Ward
Defendantsâ Motions for Partial Summary Judgment Nos. 1, 2, 3,
and 4[.]â (Emphasis added.) We accordingly dismiss HARTâs
appeal.
I. The Circuit Court Did Not Err in Pausing the Accrual of
Blight of Summons Interest During the Length of This Appeal
Victoria Ward appeals the circuit courtâs order
pausing the accrual of blight of summons interest during the
pendency of the interlocutory appeals. We review the circuit
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court decision to stay the accrual of interest for abuse of
discretion.
Under Hawaiʻi law, a condemnor who uses the HRS § 101-
29 âquick-takeâ procedure is required to estimate the amount of
just compensation and damages and deposit that sum with the
court. HRS §§ 101-25, -32, -33 (2012). If the jury awards the
condemnee an amount greater than the deposit, the condemnee is
also awarded interest on the difference, as accrued from the
date of the taking. Id.; Hanalei River Holdings Ltd., 139
HawaiÊ»i at 523-24, 394 P.3d at 753-54(2017). This interest is referred to as blight of summons damages, and blight of summons damages constitute an element of a landownerâs constitutional right to just compensation. See Pioneer Mill,64 Haw. at 184
,637 P.2d at 1142
.
In addition to compensating condemnees, an award of
blight of summons damages incentivizes condemnors to avoid delay
and to more accurately estimate just compensation to be
deposited with the court, so as to reduce the award of blight of
summons damages. See Market Place, Ltd., 55 Haw. at 239â40, 517
P.2d at 18; Mt. San Jacinto Cmty. Coll. Dist. v. Super. Ct.,151 P.3d 1166, 1172
(Cal. 2007).
Here, HART estimated Victoria Wardâs total just
compensation at $13.67 million, and deposited that amount with
the clerk of court. The question on appeal concerns the circuit
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courtâs order to pause accrual of interest on that value over
the duration of the interlocutory appeals â a request made by
HART.
We hold that the circuit court properly exercised its
discretion to pause the accrual of statutory interest for the
duration of the appeals. Just compensation requires a balancing
between the landownerâs interest and the publicâs interest in
reducing costs associated with takings. See Bonded Inv. Co.,
Ltd., 54 Haw. at 394, 507 P.2d at 1091 (noting that to award
condemnees âless than the value of the property taken would be
unjust to [them]; to award [them] more than its value would be
unjust to the public.â (quotation omitted)).
Victoria Ward argues that the interlocutory appeals
were requested by both parties in order to accelerate the
ultimate termination of the litigation, thereby diminishing the
equitable basis for pausing interest in HARTâs favor. Victoria
Ward is correct that HART appealed several circuit court orders,
but the delay was initially triggered by Victoria Wardâs request
for leave to file an interlocutory appeal, which HART opposed
both in the circuit court and on appeal. Out of ten appeals and
one cross-appeal before this court, nine were brought by
Victoria Ward. HART opposed Victoria Wardâs request for an
interlocutory appeal, arguing that an interlocutory appeal would
not result in speedy termination of litigation because âan
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interlocutory appeal . . . is likely to result in the case
âoscillating between the original and appellate courts,â
including future appeals of other orders, resulting in further
delay and needless waste of time, money, and judicial
resources.â HART filed motions to dismiss every single one of
Victoria Wardâs interlocutory appeals, and even notes that it
filed its singular appeal âonly to preserve its rightsâ and that
HART would not have otherwise filed an interlocutory appeal.
The circuit court chose to disallow the accrual of
statutory interest for the period of the interlocutory appeals,
the overwhelming majority of which were initiated by Victoria
Ward and opposed by HART. Seeing no abuse of discretion, we
affirm the circuit courtâs order.
V. CONCLUSION
To summarize, we affirm the circuit court orders
granting HARTâs MPSJ Nos. 2 and 7, and the orders granting
Victoria Wardâs MPSJ Nos. 1 and 3. We affirm the order granting
HARTâs MPSJ No. 1 as to paragraphs 1(a), 1(c), 1(d), and 2 but
vacate with regard to paragraph 1(b). We also affirm the order
pausing the accrual of blight of summons damages during the
length of this interlocutory appeal.
We vacate the orders granting HARTâs MPSJ Nos. 3, 5,
9, 10, and 11, and the orders granting Victoria Wardâs MPSJ Nos.
2 and 4.
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We dismiss HARTâs cross-appeal regarding the circuit
court order denying HARTâs motion to strike the declaration of
J. Douglas Ing and dismiss HARTâs appeal of the court order
granting in part and denying in part HARTâs motion to strike the
declarations of Brian Lee and Steven J. Scott.
While we appreciate the circuit courtâs efforts to
narrow the issues for trial, genuine issues of material fact
were raised, precluding summary judgment in the instances noted
above. We remand for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
David A. Battaglia,* /s/ Mark E. Recktenwald
Tiaunia N. Henry,*
Courtney M. Johnson,* /s/ Sabrina S. McKenna
Mark M. Murakami,
Gregory W. Kugle, /s/ Todd W. Eddins
Joanna C. Zeigler,
Nicholas K. Ernst, /s/ R. Mark Browning
for appellants
/s/ James S. Kawashima
Terence J. OâToole,
Sharon V. Lovejoy,
Lindsay E. Orman,
Richard E. Rayl,*
Ronald M. Cole,*
Dana M.O. Viola,
Paul S. Aoki,
Rozelle A. Agag,
for appellee
*pro hac vice
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