OPINION OP THE COURT BY
HARTWELL, J.The question presented by the exceptions is whether the Territory can discontinue and abandon proceedings to condemn land proposed to be taken for the extension of Kukui street in Honolulu after appraisement by commissioners of the value of the property and appeal by the land owner to the circuit court from the decision of the commissioners awarding her $119.30 «damages.
*361The claimant refused to consent to the discontinuance and abandonment and demanded that the trial proceed, to which the Territory objected.. The court overruled the objection and ordered the trial to proceed at once, to which order the Territory excepted and thereupon withdrew from participation in the trial. The court thereafter empaneled a jury and proceeded with the trial in the absence of any one representing the Territory, the result of the trial being a verdict for the claimant in the sum of $1250.
Chapter 56 of the Revised Laws, relating to extension of certain streets in Honolulu including' Kukui street, provides (Sec. 746) that the streets “shall be extended as in this chapter set forth, at such times as the governor shall decide, according to the respective surveys for such extension thereof in section 750, anything in chapter 52 to the contrary notwithstanding. And whenever the governor shall deem it desirable for the public convenience so to extend the said streets or any of them, as aforesaid, he may cause the same to be done, after requiring the damages and betterments which such extension or extensions will cause in private real estate affected thereby to be appraised according to the provisions of said chapter.”
The claimant contends that she is entitled to compensation for her land as the statute provides that its title vested in the Territory upon delivery to her of the commissioners’ decision (Sec. 700, R. L.), and that the Territory cannot be heard to claim, as it does, that the statute is unconstitutional; also that the Territory had no right to 'discontinue proceedings and that if this could be done, under any circumstances, consent of the court would be required upon a showing of good or equitable reasons.
The Territory claims the absolute right to discontinue on the ground that it is essential to ascertain the cost of the entire improvement before being bound to make it and that there is no liability incurred to pay for the land until it is actually taken.
It is difficult to say what additional meaning is given by the ■ second paragraph of section 746 since by the first paragraph *362the governor has discretion to decide when any of the streets shall be extended, and the general statute concerning public improvements (Chap. 52) prescribes the method of acquiring' land and ascertaining its value. The governor can defer his decision as to the extension of any street until after learning what that expense would be and to do this would be in the public interest. The phraseology of the section is used in the acts providing for Hilo street extension (Chap. 58, R. L.) and for widening certain Honolulu streets (Chap. 55, lb.). Hnder either paragraph of section 746 it is discretionary with the governor whether to have any of the streets extended or not and at what time any shall be extended if it is to be done at all. If it rested with him alone to- say, it is proper to infer that he would not decide to have a street extended at any time unless he considered it “desirable for the public convenience.” The latter part of the second paragraph of section 746 may be regarded,, on the one hand, as expressing a condition precedent to the governor causing a street to be extended, and as requiring him first to obtain an appraisement of the damage resulting to private real estate, or, on the other hand, as expressing the statutory proceeding which regularly precedes the construction of any public highway. If we construe the statute as limiting his authority to cause a street to be extended by his performance of this condition precedent, namely, ascertaining the entire cost, then it would follow that Ehiicui street has not been lawfully extended since the value of the-claimant’s land was not ascertained. This conclusion is obvious since the statute requires the streets to be extended, if at all, “according to the respective surveys for such extension thereof in section 750.” Section 750 is a schedule of the surveys, in each of which the proposed extension is specified to be “fifty feet in width.”’ Hnder this provision no street of less width could lawfully be extended.
Hpon consideration of all the difficulties of construing this provision for ascertaining damages as a condition precedent to causing a street to be extended we are of the opinion that nothing more is intended than to express the method prescribed by statute in all such cases. In this construction the clause may *363appear superfluous, but it may have been regarded as important in order to make the act complete in itself.
M. F. Prosser, Deputy Attorney General, for the Territory. 8. H. Derby, Kinney, McClanahan & Cooper on the brief, for the claimant.While the extension of Kukui street might have been deferred until an appraisement was made of the value of all the land to be used for it, and need not have been begun if the cost had appeared to the governor to be excessive, yet it was decided upon and so far constructed that it cannot be discontinued. The superintendent, after failure to agree with this claimant concerning the value of her land, having caused commissioners to be appointed to decide its value, she has a right to have the value determined in the manner provided by statute. He has no authority to discontinue the new street, which is constructed, nor to leave out the claimant’s land which is required in order to make the extension conform to the statute.
Confining the ruling strictly to the facts in this case we hold that the Territory had no right to discontinue these proceedings at the time it sought to do so since the extension of Kukui street had so far been completed that the Territory could not discontinue its public use and, in fact, had not sought to do so.
This was not a common law action which the Territory, regarded as a plaintiff, could discontinue or nol’ pros at will at any time before going to the jury. Wright v. Bartlett, 49 N. H. 290; Hughes v. Moore, 11 U. S. 189; Commissioners v. Trustees, 107 Ill. 489.
In the view which we have taken of the case it is unnecessary to consider the constitutionality of the statute vesting the title in the Territory upon delivery to the claimant of the decision of the commissioners, nor the right of the Territory to raise the question.
Exceptions overruled.