Concurring Opinion op
Dole, J.On the question of inheritance there was substantial evidence-for the plaintiffs in the testimony of Nika Paniolo, the father of the plaintiffs, and the jury had the discretion of accepting and acting on it as true, against the greater number of witnesses who testified for the defense on this point. The Court, therefore, would not be justified in ordering a new trial on the ground of there being insufficient evidence to support a verdict on the question of inheritance.
The defendants, on their other defense of adverse possession, introduced evidence showing that in 1868 there were proceedings in probate referring to this land, and that from that time they had been in possession of the land. Their evidence is *258clear, and definite that their possession was adverse so far as the plaintiffs were concerned, and was notorious and uninterrupted.
A. Rosa, for plaintiffs. W. 0. Smith, for defendants.The plaintiffs put Nika Paniolo on the stand in rebuttal of this claim by adverse possession, who testified in substance that after Naehu’s death he cultivated the land and that on account of McBryde’s decision he gave up the land, and that it went to them (presumably the defendants) by Judge McBryde’s decision ; that he left the island with his daughters in 1869 and returned in 1872 and “lived there in grass house near inia tree,” that the inia tree was not on land in dispute; that “ we lived there together. I quit in 1874. After my return I lived with defendants.”
This testimony rather supports the defendants’ theory of adverse possession than attacks it. There is no evidence of an assertion of his claim to the land or an ouster of the defendants or an interruption of their possession in any way after 1868. His statement that after his return he lived with the defendants has, as it stands, no significance or value; it is not evidence upon which an ouster or an interruption to the defendants’ possession can be presumed. The plaintiffs also introduced three other witnesses in rebuttal of the defendants’ claim by adverse possession. The first one, Kaohele, and the third, Puko, said absolutely nothing which tended to rebut this claim; the second, Kahinu, stated that in 1872 the defendants were not living on the land. A bare statement like this is not sufficient to overthrow a prima facie case of title by adverse possession. It is true that an abandonment of the premises by the defendants would have stopped the running of their adverse possession, but a mere absence is not an abandonment, nor would a residence elsewhere, while the premises were used by them or their tenants, have that effect.
The rebuttal has entirely failed to produce any evidence which justifies the verdict, and I agree with the decision of the Court ordering a new trial.