Opinion of the Court, by
McCully, J.Counsel for the plaintiff moves the Court to hear a re-argument on the bill.
In Kenway vs. Notley, 5 Hawn., 123, on a motion for re-argument, the Court cites and adopts the rule of the N. Y. Court of *307Appeals in Mount vs. Mitchell, 32 N. Y., 702, in these words: “Motions for re-argument should be founded on papers showing clearly that some question decisive of the case, and duly submitted by counsel, has been overlooked by the Court, or that the decision is in conflict with an express statute, or with a controlling decision, to which the attention of the Court was not drawn, through the neglect or inadvertence of counsel.”
The counsel for plaintiff sets out the grounds on which his motion is based, as follows:
1. The plaintiffs, in taking their rice plantation lease from the defendants and others, saw the premises watered from a water-course of which these defendants held a separate lease. Whether the defendants informed the plaintiffs that the watercourse was appurtenant to and passed with the demised premises, as averred in the bill, or not, as averred in the answer, the fact that it was made appurtenant by the act of one of the lessors is enough to make it pass under the lease as one of the appurtenances.
2. The proofs do not suffice to sustain the averment in the answer, that the rental at first demanded for this lease was reduced from $1600 to $1350 upon the plaintiffs’ agreement to take from these defendants the lease of the water-course for $200; on the contrary, it is shown that the lease of the watercourse was taken by one of the plaintiffs at Kauai after he had learned that otherwise Alo would cut off the water, and that the original lease for $1350 was made without any prior or contemporaneous agreement that the later $200 lease should be taken.
3. The lessors’ covenant in the first lease, that they would lease no kuleanas within the leased premises, was not broken by the existence, although unknown to the plaintiffs, of the prior lease from Charman to the defendant Alo, of a kuleana with this water-course within the demised premises.
4. To lease land and all its appurtenances to another by a lease which contains no exception or reservation, authorizes the lessee to infer that all the actual existing appurtenances were meant to pass with the lease, for such is the law. Consequently *308the subsequent lease of an appurtenance, which the first lease had already demised, gave nothing to the lessee, and must be decreed to be void, as without consideration and obtained by actual or constructive fraud. The further relief appropriate for the ease is the repayment of the rentals, $800 in all, which have been made on the lease of the water-course, and a decree that the defendant be trustee of the Charman lease to the use of the plaintiffs.
5. The bill, it is true, especially asks for relief on the averment that the subsequent taking of the Charman lease by Alo was a breach of the covenant above mentioned. This ground is not sustained by the proofs. But the other facts averred in the bill, and above mentioned, entitled the plaintiffs to the same relief.
6. The bill particularly averring that the water-course was necessary for irrigating the demised premises ; that the lessors informed the plaintiffs that it was demised to them as appurtenant ; and that the plaintiffs in ignorance of their rights, and upon ascertaining that otherwise the water would be diverted, took the lease of the water-course which was their own property, there is no occasion to dismiss the bill and leave the plaintiffs to their remedy by a third bill.
By the Court.
The substantial ground claimed is set forth in paragraph 1, where it is stated that the fact that it, the leased kuleana and water-right, was made appurtenant by the act of one of the lessors, is enough to make it pass under the lease as one of the appurtenances; and in paragraph 4, which proceeds upon this postulate and states the relief therein required
It appears to us that the Court* has not “ overlooked ” the question whether the water-right owned by Charman had been made appurtenant by the act of his lessee to the other leased premises. This was the principal controversy in the first bill, and it was held that the evidence of its being an ancient and appurtenant right was insufficient. No appeal was taken from this decision.
A. S. Hartwell, for plaintiffs. Paul Neumann, for defendants.Upon the second bill, which is now sought to be reconsidered, the Court in its decision says: “ There is no allegation in the bill that this Charman kuleana with the water-right was made by defendants parcel of the demised premises, or that the water was appurtenant thereto.”
But if the allegation of appurtenance was not made in the bill, it cannot have been “overlooked” by the Court.
It is certainly stated in the bill that the plaintiffs were informed hy their lessors that the water-course and water-right were demised to them as appurtenant to the demised premises ; but this is very different to the allegation that the leased kuleana and water-right were made appurtenant by the act of the lessors.
We see, therefore, nothing which brings this case within the description of matter for re-argument.
The motion is denied.