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Electronically Filed
Intermediate Court of Appeals
CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX
27-JAN-2023
08:03 AM
Dkt. 306 MO
NO. CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX
IN THE INTERMEDIATE COURT OF APPEALS
OF THE STATE OF HAWAI#I
DAVID COWAN and NATHALIE COWAN; UMANG P. GUPTA and
RUTH M. GUPTA, as Trustees of the Umang and Ruth Gupta
Trust under Trust Agreement dated January 18, 2000; and
PAUOA BEACH 8 LLC, a Hawaii Limited Liability Company,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
and
ROARING LION, LLC, a Montana Limited Liability Company;
ROGER A. GREENWALD and JENNIFER A. HURWITZ,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
vs.
PAUOA BAY PROPERTIES LLC, a Delaware Limited Liability
Company; WHITE SAND BEACH LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, a Delaware
Limited Partnership; EXCLUSIVE RESORTS PBL1, LLC, a
Delaware Limited Liability Company; PAUOA BEACH REALTY LLC,
a Hawaii Limited Liability Company; EXCLUSIVE RESORTS PBL3,
LLC, a Delaware Limited Liability Company; JOHN DOES 1-50,
Defendants-Appellees
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE THIRD CIRCUIT
(CIVIL NO. 04-1-0332)
MEMORANDUM OPINION
(By: Leonard, Presiding Judge, Wadsworth and McCullen, JJ.)
Plaintiffs/Counterclaim-Defendants/Appellants/Cross-
Appellees David Cowan and Nathalie Cowan, Umang P. Gupta and Ruth
M. Gupta, as Trustees of the Umang and Ruth Gupta Trust Under
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Trust Agreement dated January 18, 2000, and Pauoa Beach 8 LLC
(Plaintiffs) appeal from the June 9, 2017 Final Judgment on
Remand (Remand Judgment) entered by the Circuit Court of the
Third Circuit (Circuit Court).1 Defendant/Counterclaimant
/Crossclaimant/Crossclaim-Defendant/Appellee/Cross-Appellant
Exclusive Resorts PBL1, LLC (PBL1) cross-appeals from the Remand
Judgment. Both sides challenge the Circuit Court's Findings of
Fact and Conclusions of Law (FOFs & COLs) entered on March 28,
2017. Plaintiffs also challenge the Circuit Court's Order
Denying Plaintiffs' [Motion for Attorneys' Fees] (Order Denying
Attorneys' Fees) entered on September 15, 2017.
The Circuit Court previously entered judgment after
granting summary judgment in favor of PBL1, finding that PBL1's
development and use of certain property for a "luxury destination
club" did not violate applicable restrictive covenants. On
appeal from the earlier judgment, the Intermediate Court of
Appeals (ICA) remanded the case to the Circuit Court having
concluded that summary judgment should not have been entered
because there was a genuine issue of material fact as to whether
PBL1's rental activities rise to the level of a commercial use.2
No party sought certiorari review of this court's decision in
PBL1 I. After remand and a seven day bench-trial, the Circuit
Court entered the Remand Judgment. This second appeal followed.
1
The Honorable Greg K. Nakamura presided.
2
See Roaring Lion, LLC v. Exclusive Resorts PBL1, LLC, No. CAAP-11-
0001072, 2013 WL 1759002, *1 (Haw. App. Apr. 24, 2013) (mem. op.) ( PBL1 I).
After PBL1, Plaintiff Roaring Lion, LLC was dismissed from the case by
stipulation.
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I. BACKGROUND FACTS
The dispute concerns the Pauoa Beach subdivision within
the Mauna Lani Resort (Resort) master development3 in the County
of Hawai#i. The Resort includes hotels, residences, retail
operations, recreational areas, golf courses, and other uses and
services. All lots in the Pauoa Beach subdivision are subject to
both the Mauna Lani Resort Association Declaration of Covenants
and Restrictions (Resort Declaration) and the Pauoa Beach
Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, Restrictions, and Easements
(Pauoa Beach Declaration) (collectively, Project Documents).
Pauoa Beach consists of two subdivisions with
residential lots: a subdivision of oceanfront lots (Makai
Subdivision) and a subdivision of non-oceanfront lots (Mauka
Subdivision). Plaintiffs own lots in the Makai Subdivision of
Pauoa Beach. In December 2003, non-party Exclusive Resorts, LLC
(ER) — PBL1 and Exclusive Resorts PBL3's (PBL3)4 parent company —
purchased lots in the Mauka Subdivision. The lots were
consolidated and renamed Lot B, and ER received approval from the
Mauna Lani Resort Design Committee to build eight condominium
units in the form of four duplexes on Lot B. ER assigned its
purchase agreement for Lot B to a non-party subsidiary. Upon
completion of construction of the residences at the Pauoa Beach
lots, PBL1 and PBL3 (collectively, Defendants) intended to make
3
A "master development" means "a real estate development that
consists of more than one project, including but not limited to a planned
community association subject to [Hawaii Revised Statutes ( HRS)] chapter 421J
[(2004 Repl.)] with one or more sub-associations." HRS § 514E–1 (2018).
4
Although PBL3 was a defendant, PBL3 sold its lot, and the Circuit
Court granted PBL3's motion for summary judgment. This ruling was not
challenged and PBL3 is no longer a party.
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the residences available to members of a luxury destination club,
the details of which are discussed further below. During the
litigation of the summary judgment proceedings subject to the
previous appeal, construction of the four duplexes on Lot B was
underway, and there was no evidence regarding actual use of Lot
B. However, the record indicated that destination club members
who stayed elsewhere in the Resort received some access to Pauoa
Beach facilities.
The Resort Declaration governs the permitted uses in
all subdivisions within the Resort, including Pauoa Beach, and
states that all properties within the Resort are subject to
certain restrictive covenants running with the land. Article V
lists the restrictive covenants and contains a section providing
general restrictions on land use. Section 1(a)(14) states:
(14) Except in the case of Commercial Lots, no
gainful occupation, profession or trade shall be
maintained on any Lot or in any structure on any Lot
without the prior approval of the [Resort] Board,
except that this provision shall in no way limit or
restrict Declarant or Declarant's Nominees in their
activities prior to the sale, leasing or other
development of Lots within the Mauna Lani Resort nor
prevent Owners from renting their houses, apartment
units or Condominium Units.
(Emphasis added).
The Pauoa Beach Declaration states: "Developers intend
to develop the Property for residential use comprised of Lots and
the Association Property and, at the election of Developers, one
or more Condominium Projects, and to sell or otherwise convey the
Lots, Units and Association Property." The Pauoa Beach
Declaration provides that if it contains a provision more
restrictive than that in the Resort Declaration, the more
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restrictive provision controls. The Pauoa Beach Declaration
contains the following use restrictions:
§ 15.4.1 Residential Use. All Lots and Units shall
be used only for residential use (whether transient or
permanent) and incidental activities and in compliance with
the Resort Declaration and applicable law (including zoning
ordinances and building codes). As provided in the Resort
Declaration, no gainful occupation, profession or trade
shall be maintained on any Lot or Condominium Common
Elements or within any Unit without the prior approval of
the Board of Directors of the Resort Association[.]
§ 15.4.13 Timeshare Prohibited. No timeshare use or
ownership plan to which Chapter 514–E, [HRS] would be
applicable shall be permitted with respect to all or any
portion of the Property.
(Emphasis added).
Litigation ensued regarding, inter alia, whether
Defendants' development and the operation of a luxury destination
club violated the Project Documents' restrictive covenants, which
allow only residential use. In the earlier phase of the
litigation, the Circuit Court granted partial summary judgment
and concluded that Defendants' project did not violate the
Project Documents' restrictive covenants in that (1) the use did
not violate the covenants regarding residential use in Pauoa
Beach, and (2) the project did not constitute a "time share
plan." That judgment was appealed to this court in PBL1 I.
In PBL1 I, the ICA affirmed the Circuit Court's
decision that the project did not constitute a time share plan.
PBL1 I, 2013 WL 1759002 at *6-*11. Regarding the residential use
covenants, this court reviewed the Project Documents' restrictive
covenants and held that
because the Project Documents contemplate only two types of
lot use, and because the prohibition of "gainful occupation,
profession or trade" is the only use restriction unique to
residential lots, any use rising to the level of maintaining
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a "gainful occupation, profession or trade" constitutes a
commercial use and cannot be deemed "residential" within the
meaning of the Project Documents.
Id. at *5.
We explained that to determine whether a use violates
the restrictive covenants, the nature and character of the
owner's use must be considered. Id. at *6. We noted that to
determine whether rental activities exceed the scope of
"residential use," other jurisdictions have found relevant
"whether the owner provided services or conducted transactions
on-site." Id. We further explained that
[t]he nature and extent of such services (such as any
increase in noise, traffic, or pollution; the hours of
operation; and whether outside employees would be working
on-site) are also relevant to whether Defendants' use
constitute "incidental activities," which are permitted
under the "residential use" provisions.
Id.
We concluded that the Circuit Court erred in granting
summary judgment and we stated:
[I]t is undisputed in this case that Defendants
intended to provide a number of services and amenities to
its renters. Because construction of Defendants' Pauoa Beach
units was ongoing during the summary judgment proceedings,
however, there is little in the record before us that we can
use to accurately determine the impact of Defendants'
intended use of its Lot B units. At oral argument,
Defendants' counsel did not know whether Defendants'
services and amenities would be provided at the units or
off-site, and it is unclear from the record the extent to
which such activities would result in increased noise,
traffic, or usage of the subdivision's common facilities.
Based on the foregoing, we conclude that although the
Project Documents expressly allow "transient" rentals, the
Project Documents on the whole establish the parties' intent
to limit the scale and scope of the unit owners' rental
activity. We further conclude that whether Defendants'
intended use rises to the level of maintaining a "gainful
occupation, profession or trade" remains a genuine issue of
material fact. The circuit court erred in granting partial
summary judgment on the issue of whether Defendants' use
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violated any of the Project Documents' restrictions related to
residential use.
Id.5 (emphasis added).
After remand, the Circuit Court conducted a bench trial
at which evidence regarding PBL1's actual use of the Lot B units
was presented. On September 20, 2016, the Circuit Court entered
a Decision and Order (Order). The Circuit Court determined,
inter alia, that the Lot B units were "commercial apartments" and
PBL1 was a "commercial owner." The court then made findings with
respect to PBL1's actual use of the property, but did not
separately state whether the actual use rose to the level of a
"commercial use." The court stated, "[t]herefore, the ultimate
conclusion is that the [PBL1's] use of the Lot B units is
'commercial' under the terms of the Resort Declaration and,
therefore, violates the use restrictions under the Project
Documents."
On November 15, 2016, the Order was amended upon the
motion of PBL1 with respect to the significance placed upon the
revenue generated by Lot B in determining whether the use of Lot
B was commercial. The Circuit Court determined that "revenue
generated is evidence that the use of the Lot B units is a
'commercial use', but is not sufficient in and of itself to
conclude that the use of the Lot B units is a 'commercial use'".
On March 28, 2017, the Circuit Court entered the FOFs &
COLs wherein the Circuit Court again found that PBL1 was a
5
A separate appeal regarding the existence and enforcement of a
settlement agreement was considered by this court in Roaring Lion, LLC v.
Exclusive Resorts PBL1, LLC, CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX, 2013 WL 1759005 (Haw. App. Apr.
24, 2013) (mem. op.).
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"commercial owner" of "commercial apartments" and therefore, the
use of the Lot B units was commercial and violated the Project
Documents. The Circuit Court also set forth findings as to the
"other factors" to determine whether PBL1's actual use of the
property rose to the level of a "commercial use."
On June 9, 2017, the Circuit Court entered the Remand
Judgment, stating:
1. Final Judgment is hereby entered in favor of
[Plaintiffs] and against PBL1 as follows: PBL1's use of the
Lot B units at Pauoa Beach Subdivision is a "commercial use"
pursuant to Article I, Sections 1(h), 1(i) and 1(l) of the
Mauna Lani Resort Association Declaration of Covenants and
Restrictions, as amended, and therefore, violates the use
restrictions under Article B, Section 1(a)(14) of the Mauna
Lani Resort Association Declaration of Covenants and
Restrictions, as amended, and Article 15, Section 15.4.1 of
the Pauoa Beach Declaration of Covenants, Conditions,
Restrictions & Easements, as amended.
2. However, final judgment is entered in favor of
PBL1 and against Plaintiffs as follows: PBL 1's actual use
of the Lot B units at the Pauoa Beach Subdivision for
destination club purposes as described in the [FOFs & COLs]
does not rise to the level of "commercial use" and,
therefore, Plaintiffs are not entitled to injunctive relief
against PBL1.
On June 23, 2017, Plaintiffs filed a Motion for Award
of Attorneys' Fees (Motion for Attorneys' Fees) seeking fees
pursuant to HRS § 607-14 (2016) as the prevailing party under a
contract that provides for an award of attorneys' fees. On
September 15, 2017, the Circuit Court entered the Order Denying
Attorneys' Fees on the ground that Plaintiffs were not the
prevailing party. On November 21, 2017, the Circuit Court
entered separate FOFs and COLs on the Attorneys' Fees Order.
Both parties now appeal.
II. POINTS OF ERROR
PBL1 raises two points of error, contending that the
Circuit Court erred: (1) when it determined commercial use based
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solely on definitions in the Project Documents, thereby exceeding
this Court's mandate on remand, and ignoring the law of the case;
and (2) when it applied the definitions in the Project Documents
to find that Lot B was a Commercial Apartment and PBL1's use of
Lot B was a commercial use.
Plaintiffs raise three points of error, contending that
the Circuit Court erred: (1) when it denied them injunctive
relief; (2) when it held that PBL1's actual use of the Lot B
units did not rise to the level of commercial use; and (3) when
it denied their request for attorneys' fees and costs.
III. APPLICABLE STANDARDS OF REVIEW
A trial court's findings of fact are reviewed under
the clearly erroneous standard and conclusions of law are
reviewed de novo under the right/wrong standard. [Nordic PCL
Const., Inc. v. LPIHGC, 136 Hawai#i 29, 41, 358 P.3d 1, 13
(2015)]. "A finding of fact is clearly erroneous when,
despite evidence to support the finding, the appellate court
is left with the definite and firm conviction in reviewing
the entire evidence that a mistake has been committed" or
"when the record lacks substantial evidence to support the
finding." Id. (quoting Daiichi Hawaii Real Estate Corp. v.
Lichter, 103 Hawai#i 325, 337, 82 P.3d 411, 423 (2003)).
Substantial evidence is defined as "credible evidence which
is of sufficient quality and probative value to enable a
person of reasonable caution to support a conclusion." Id.
(quoting Daiichi, 103 Hawai#i at 337, 82 P.3d at 423). A
conclusion of law that presents a mixed question of law and
fact is reviewed under the clearly erroneous standard.
Estate of Klink ex rel. Klink v. State, 113 Hawai #i 332,
351, 152 P.3d 504, 523 (2007).
Noel Madamba Contracting LLC v. Romero, 137 Hawai#i 1, 8, 364
P.3d 518, 525 (2015).
"Generally, the granting or denying of injunctive
relief rests with the sound discretion of the trial court and the
trial court's decision will be sustained absent a showing of a
manifest abuse of discretion." In re FG, 142 Hawai#i 497, 503,
421 P.3d 1267, 1273 (2018) (quoting Sierra Club v. Dep't of
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Transp. of State of Haw., 120 Hawai#i 181, 197, 202 P.3d 1226,
1242 (2009)).
The relief granted by a court [in] equity is discretionary
and will not be overturned on review unless the [circuit]
court abused its discretion by issuing a decision that
clearly exceeds the bounds of reason or disregarded rules or
principles of law or practice to the substantial detriment
of the appellant.
Id. (citations omitted).
"The trial court's grant or denial of [attorney's] fees
and costs is reviewed under the abuse of discretion standard."
Kamaka v. Goodsill Anderson Quinn & Stifel, 117 Hawai#i 92, 105,
176 P.3d 91, 104 (2008) (citation and original brackets omitted).
IV. DISCUSSION
A. PBL1's Arguments
PBL1 first argues that the Circuit Court erred when it
determined commercial use based solely on the definitions in the
Project Documents. PBL1 submits that the Circuit Court should
have (i) followed this Court's mandate to resolve the issue of
fact as to the impacts of the intended use of the Lot B units;
and (ii) adhered to this Court's holding that "the prohibition of
'gainful occupation, profession or trade' is the only use
restriction unique to residential lots."
In PBL1 I, this court considered the Circuit Court's
grant of partial summary judgment against the Plaintiffs. As
relevant here, the Circuit Court, interpreting the Project
Documents, had concluded that PBL1's proposed use of Lot B would
not violate the Project Documents' restrictive covenants
regarding residential use, reasoning that the Project Documents
allow owners to rent their homes or units and the Project
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Documents still consider such a use to be a residential use.
PBL1 I, 2013 WL 1759002 at *4.
We agreed that the Project Documents and surrounding
circumstances supported the Circuit Court's conclusion that
short-term rentals for a profit may be considered a "residential
use." Id. We stated that "the mere fact an owner rents a unit,
even on a short-term basis and for a profit, does not turn the
unit's use from residential to commercial." Id. In a footnote,
we explained that a majority of jurisdictions agree that short-
term rental of property may be considered a residential use when
the occupants use the property only for residential purposes.
Id. at *4 n.4 (citing Slaby v. Mountain River Estates Residential
Ass'n, Inc., 100 So.3d 569, 578–79, 582 (Ala. Civ. App. 2012),
cert. denied, No. 1110881 (Ala. 2012)); Pinehaven Planning Bd. v.
Brooks, 138 Idaho 826, 830, 70 P.3d 664, 668 (Idaho 2003)
(holding that restrictive covenants disallowing "commercial or
industrial ventures or business of any type" from being
maintained on any lot in the subdivision were not ambiguous and,
"according to their plain meaning, clearly allow the rental of
residential property[,]" whether short-term or long-term, because
the use "does not violate the prohibition on commercial and
business activity as such terms are commonly understood").
However, we recognized that although the Project
Documents "generally permit rentals," they also clearly evince an
intent to prohibit "commercial activity" on the Pauoa Beach lots.
PBL1 I, 2013 WL 1759002 at *5. We explained that
[t]he Resort Declaration contemplates only two types of
lots: residential and commercial. The Resort Declaration
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defines a "Residential Lot" as a lot used for "residential
purposes" by a single family or by more than one family. A
"Commercial Lot" is defined as a lot "designated for
commercial purposes." The Project Documents' two provisions
prohibiting the maintenance of a "gainful occupation,
profession or trade" are the only general use restrictions
in the Project Documents that differentiate between
"commercial" and "residential" lots. Therefore, because the
Project Documents contemplate only two types of lot use, and
because the prohibition of "gainful occupation, profession
or trade" is the only use restriction unique to residential
lots, any use rising to the level of maintaining a "gainful
occupation, profession or trade" constitutes a commercial
use and cannot be deemed "residential" within the meaning of
the Project Documents.
Id. (emphasis added).
We addressed the term "Commercial Apartment," defined
in the Resort Declaration as "a building or structure containing
apartment units which are owned substantially by a single common
entity and rented or leased for profit." Id. The Circuit Court
had concluded that since the term was only used in the Resort's
bylaws that address voting right classifications of owners, then
the term did not relate to use restrictions on those units. Id.
We agreed, but clarified that "[a]lthough the term may relate
primarily to voting power, the definition is nevertheless
relevant to our determination of the meaning intended by the
parties because we must consider the entire context of the
covenants." Id. (citation omitted). We reaffirmed that it is
the nature and character of the owner's use rather than the
unit's occupants that determines whether a use restriction has
been breached. Id. at *6.
We then recognized that although transient rentals for
profit by an owner can constitute a "residential use" under the
Project Documents, in certain circumstances rental activities can
"exceed the scope of 'residential use'" and become a commercial
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use, i.e., the maintenance of a "gainful occupation, profession
or trade." Id. We identified some potential criteria to discern
whether transient rental activities exceed the scope of
residential use. We explained that
one factor other jurisdictions have found relevant is
whether the owner provided services or conducted
transactions on-site. The nature and extent of such
services (such as any increase in noise, traffic, or
pollution; the hours of operation; and whether outside
employees would be working on-site) are also relevant to
whether Defendants' use constitute "incidental activities,"
which are permitted under the "residential use" provisions.
See Pauoa Beach Declaration § 15.4.1 ("All Lots and Units
shall be used only for residential use (whether transient or
permanent) and incidental activities[.]").
Id. (footnotes omitted).
We concluded that although the Project Documents
allowed owners to conduct transient rentals for a profit as a
"residential use," the actual conduct of that activity could rise
to such a level as to become a commercial use. We further
concluded that
whether Defendants' intended use rises to the level of
maintaining a "gainful occupation, profession or
trade" remains a genuine issue of material fact. The
circuit court erred in granting partial summary
judgment on the issue of whether Defendants' use
violated any of the Project Documents' restrictions
related to residential use.
Id. We vacated the Circuit Court's partial summary judgment
order and remanded the case for further proceedings. Id. at *11.
On remand, the parties presented evidence regarding PBL1's actual
use of Lot B, and the Circuit Court made FOFs & COLs with respect
thereto, which are discussed below.
On remand, the Circuit Court impermissibly disregarded
this court's conclusion that the Project Documents did not on
their face render PBL1's proposed transient rentals of Lot B
units for profit as a "commercial use." The Circuit Court
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pointed to this court's statement in PBL1 I that our construction
of the term "commercial" was informed by the Resort Declaration's
definition of the term "Commercial Apartment." The Circuit Court
found of interest the definition of "Commercial Apartment" as "a
building or structure containing apartment units which are owned
substantially by a single common entity and rented or leased for
profit" because, according to the Circuit Court, "it strongly
suggests that if a building or structure is a 'commercial
apartment' then its use is commercial."
The Circuit Court then looked at the definitions of
"Commercial Owner" and "Commercial Apartment" in the Resort
Declaration. Under the Resort Declaration, a "Commercial Owner"
is an "owner who holds . . . Commercial Apartment(s) . . . within
the Mauna Lani Resort primarily for commercial purposes." A
"Commercial Apartment" is any unit in the resort "designated for
commercial purposes," "provided that the term Commercial
Abatements shall mean a building or structure containing
apartment units which are owned substantially by a single common
entity and rented or leased for profit." The Circuit Court
concluded that pursuant to those definitions PBL1 was a
"Commercial Owner" and the Lot B units were "Commercial
Apartments" and therefore, "PBL1's use of the Lot B units is
'commercial' under the terms of the Resort Declaration, and
therefore, violates the use restrictions under the Project
Documents."
PBL1 argues, inter alia, that the Circuit Court's
reevaluation of the language of the Project Documents violates
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the principle of "law of the case." This argument has merit.
The Hawai#i Supreme Court has explained:
The law of the case doctrine holds that "a
determination of a question of law made by an appellate
court in the course of an action becomes the law of the case
and may not be disputed by a reopening of the question at a
later stage of the litigation." Fought & Co. v. Steel Eng'g
& Erection, Inc., 87 Hawai#i 37, 48–49, 951 P.2d 487, 498–99
(1998) (citation omitted). "This doctrine applies to issues
that have been decided either expressly or by necessary
implication." Id. In other words, "the usual practice of
courts to refuse to disturb all prior rulings in a
particular case" is referred to as the "law of the case"
doctrine. Chun v. Bd. of Trs. of the Emps.' Ret. Sys. of
State of Hawaii, 92 Hawai#i 432, 441, 992 P.2d 127, 136
(2000) (citations omitted). "Unless cogent reasons support
the second court's action, any modification of a prior
ruling of another court of equal and concurrent jurisdiction
will be deemed an abuse of discretion." Wong v. City &
Cnty. of Honolulu, 66 Haw. 389, 396, 665 P.2d 157, 162
(1983) (emphasis omitted). Consequently, the "law of the
case" doctrine "does not preclude modification of a prior
ruling in all instances." Stender v. Vincent, 92 Hawai #i
355, 361, 992 P.2d 50, 56 (2000).
Hussey v. Say, 139 Hawai#i 181, 185, 384 P.3d 1282, 1286 (2016).
The construction of the terms of restrictive covenants,
like the terms of a contract, are questions of law. See
Sandomire v. Brown, 144 Hawai#i 314, 324, 439 P.3d 266, 276 (App.
2019). In PBL1 I, Plaintiffs made the argument to the ICA that
the Circuit Court adopted on remand. In PBL1 I, we considered
the Circuit Court's rejection of the Plaintiffs' claim that the
Project Documents classified PBL1's proposed use of Lot B as an
impermissible "commercial use." 2013 WL 1759002 at *1-*6. In
PBL1 I, the Plaintiffs argued:
The error committed by the circuit court is even more
egregious given that the Resort Declaration clearly defines
one type of use or activity which would be considered
"commercial": a "Commercial Apartment." The Resort
Declaration defines a "Commercial Apartment" as "a building
or structure containing apartment units which are owned
substantially by a single common entity and rented or leased
for profit." The structure containing the Na Hale
condominium units owned by ER3 is "a building or structure
containing apartment units which are owned substantially by
a single common entity," ER3, and whose units are "rented or
leased for profit." If ER3 owns a "Commercial Apartment,"
it is a "Commercial Owner," which is defined by the Resort
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Declaration as "an owner who holds, owns or occupies a
Commercial Lot(s) or Commercial Apartment(s) or other
property within the Mauna Lani Resort primarily for
commercial purposes." Thus ER3 is engaged in commercial
activity in violation of the residential use provisions of
the Resort Declaration and the Pauoa Beach Declaration. At
the very least, the factual issue of whether ER3 is running
a Commercial Apartment in "gainful occupation, profession or
trade" is a genuine issue of material fact that precludes
summary judgment.
(Record citations omitted).
Plaintiffs further argued that the Circuit Court's
(earlier) conclusion that the definition of "Commercial
Apartments" did not relate to use restrictions but rather
categorized ownership interests to determine voting power and
assessments was strained and ignored the plain meaning of the
terms.
This court did not adopt Plaintiffs' proposed reading
of the terms "Commercial Owner" or "Commercial Apartment" to deem
the use of the subject property to be a commercial use,
regardless of the actual use of the subject property. See PBL1
I, 2013 WL 1759002 at *1-*6. We agreed with the Circuit Court
that the term "Commercial Apartment" related primarily to voting
power, but also considered the term insofar as it was relevant to
determine the meaning of the covenants in their entire context.
See id. at *5. However, we concluded that based on the
construction of the Project Documents with respect to residential
versus commercial use restrictions, "the prohibition of 'gainful
occupation, profession or trade' is the only use restriction
unique to residential lots." Id. We did not conclude that the
status of an owner as a commercial owner of a commercial
apartment was determinative as to whether the use of the property
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is a commercial use or residential use.6 Id. On the contrary,
we concluded that the actual use of the property was
determinative of whether the residential-use-only restriction was
violated.
The Circuit Court's reasoning that PBL1 was a
commercial owner of commercial apartments and therefore, the
transient rental of the Lot B units is a "commercial use" under
the Project Documents was already rejected by this Court in PBL1
I. We remanded the case for development of an evidentiary record
as to the actual use of the Lot B units, not for reargument on
the meaning of the Project Documents. Pursuant to the doctrine
of law of the case, this court's earlier ruling should not have
been disturbed. Hussey, 139 Hawai#i at 185, 384 P.3d at 1286.
Even considering the entirety of the record of proceeding which
followed remand, we see no cogent reason to reconsider this
Court's construction of the restrictive convenants in PBL1 I,
which concluded that the status of an owner as a "commercial
owner" of "commercial apartments" pertained primarily to voting
power and, while a relevant consideration, that status was not
determinative of the "use" of the property. PBL1 I, 2013 WL
1759002 at *5. Again,
[t]he Project Documents' two provisions prohibiting the
maintenance of a "gainful occupation, profession or trade"
are the only general use restrictions in the Project
Documents that differentiate between "commercial" and
"residential" lots. Therefore, because the Project
Documents contemplate only two types of lot use, and because
the prohibition of "gainful occupation, profession or trade"
is the only use restriction unique to residential lots, any
use rising to the level of maintaining a "gainful
occupation, profession or trade" constitutes a commercial
6
On appeal, PBL1 also contests that it is a commercial owner of
commercial apartments.
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use and cannot be deemed "residential" within the meaning of
the Project Documents.
Id.
Thus, the Circuit Court erred when it failed to apply
the law-of-the-case set forth in PBL1 I, and concluded that
PBL1's use of Lot B was a "commercial use" based on the
definitions stated in the Project Documents, without regard to
the actual use of the Lot B units.
As further discussed below in the context of
Plaintiffs' arguments on appeal, on remand, based on the evidence
presented at trial, the Circuit Court determined that PBL1's
actual use of the Lot B units did not rise to the level of
commercial use. However, the Circuit Court nevertheless
determined that PBL1's use of the Lot B units was a commercial
use based on the its application of the definitions in the
Project Documents.
In its second point of error, PBL1 argues, inter alia,
that the Circuit Court erred when it applied the definitions in
the Project Documents to PBL1 and the Lot B units to find that
(1) Lot B was a "Commercial Apartment;" and therefore, (2) PBL1's
use of Lot B was a "commercial use." PBL1 argues that the
Circuit Court should have found that (i) the definition of
"commercial apartments" is not dispositive of whether the use of
Lot B units rises to the level of maintaining a "gainful
occupation, profession or trade;" (ii) the Lot B units are not
"apartment units" and therefore cannot fall within the definition
of "commercial apartments;" and (iii) the Lot B units do not
otherwise fall within the definition of "Commercial Apartment."
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Even assuming arguendo that PBL1 was a "commercial
owner" of "commercial apartments", as explained above, this court
in PBL1 I determined that the status of an owner under the
Project Documents as a "commercial owner" of "commercial
apartments" does not make the use a "commercial use." This court
previously held that "[t]he Project Documents, two provisions
prohibiting the maintenance of a 'gainful occupation, profession
or trade' are the only general use restrictions in the Project
Documents that differentiate between 'commercial' and
'residential' lots." Id. at *5. On that basis, this court ruled
that "the prohibition of 'gainful occupation, profession or
trade' is the only use restriction unique to residential lots[.]"
Id. This court likewise determined that "any use rising to the
level of maintaining a 'gainful occupation, profession or trade'
constitutes a commercial use and cannot be deemed 'residential'
within the meaning of the Project Documents." Id. Whether the
Defendants' use rises to that level and thus constitutes a
commercial use was the genuine issue of material fact to be
determined on remand. Thus, the Circuit Court erred in
concluding that PBL1's use of the Lot B units was a commercial
use in violation of the restrictive covenants contained in the
Project Documents even though the Circuit Court concluded that
the actual use did not rise to the level of commercial use. We
decline to revisit this court's interpretation of the Project
Documents to conclude otherwise.
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B. Plaintiffs' Arguments
We address Plaintiffs' second argument first, as it
informs our decision with respect to Plaintiffs' other
contentions.
Plaintiffs argue that the Circuit Court erred when it
held that PBL1's actual use of the Lot B units at the Pauoa Beach
subdivision for destination club purposes does not rise to the
level of a commercial use because the court failed to examine the
overall "scale and scope" of PBL1's rental activity of the Lot B
units. Plaintiffs argue the court improperly compared PBL1's
actual use of its Lot B units, which was fully supported by the
evidence, to the hypothetical use by an individual resident
homeowner, which Plaintiffs submit was unsupported by any
evidence.
In PBL1 I, the ICA held that "although the Project
Documents expressly allow 'transient' rentals, the Project
Documents on the whole establish the parties' intent to limit the
scale and scope of the unit owners' rental activity." 2013 WL
1759002 at *6 (emphasis added). We further held that there was a
genuine issue of material fact whether PBL1's "intended use rises
to the level of maintaining a 'gainful occupation, profession or
trade.'" Id. Thus, on remand, the Circuit Court was charged
with evaluating the scale and scope of the PBL1's rental activity
to determine whether it rose to the level of maintaining a
gainful occupation, profession, or trade, as opposed to
"incidental activities" appurtenant to residential use and, to
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determine whether PBL1's use of the Lot B units is an
impermissible commercial use under the Project Documents. Id.
In PBL1 I, this court did not set out an exhaustive
list of factors to be considered by the Circuit Court, but we
noted that other jurisdictions found relevant "whether the owner
provided services or conducted transactions on-site." Id.7 In
addition, we also stated that "[t]he nature and extent of such
services (such as any increase in noise, traffic, or pollution;
the hours of operation; and whether outside employees would be
working on-site) are also relevant to whether [PBL 1's] use
constitute[s] 'incidental activities,' which are permitted under
the 'residential use' provisions." Id.
On remand, the Circuit Court weighed the evidence
presented by the parties and evaluated the following factors to
determine whether the scale and scope of PBL1's rental activities
rose to the level of a commercial use: (1) access to the Lot B
units; (2) revenues from the Lot B units; (3) occupancy of the
Lot B units; (4) activities of the resident manager and
concierges; (5) services provided to Lot B units; (6) use of the
7
In PBL1 I, we cited, inter alia, Applegate v. Colucci, 908 N.E.2d
1214 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009), in which the court analyzed restrictive covenants
requiring that subdivision parcels be "used only for residential purposes" and
stating: "No commercial business shall be carried on upon any parcel[.]
Nothing herein contained shall prevent the leasing or renting of property or
structures for residential use[.]" Id. at 1217. The court concluded the
owners' short-term rental of their cabins was allowed, but the maintenance of
a rental office on the property created a question of fact as to whether
covenants were violated. Id. at 1219–21. We also cited Slaby v. Mountain
River Estates Residential Ass'n, Inc., 100 So.3d 569, 580, 582 (Ala. Civ. App.
2012), which noted that owners rented their cabin as a residence but did not
provide any services to their tenants and did not conduct any mercantile or
financial transactions on-site. Finally, we cited Yogman v. Parrott, 325 Or.
358, 361, 937 P.2d 1019, 1021 (Or. 1997), which noted the owners "provide no
goods, staff, or services at the house" and "renters use their own linens, do
their own cleaning, buy and prepare their own food, and take out their own
garbage." See PBL1 I, 2013 WL 1759002 at *6 n.5.
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Pauoa Beach Club; and (7) incidents involving misconduct by ER
Members visiting the Lot B units.
Plaintiffs do not challenge the Circuit Court's
findings as to factors (1), (4), (6), and (7), which are the
following: (1) access to the Lot B units - the Circuit Court
found that use by ER members of the Lot B units and access used
by service providers had a minimal impact upon the use of
property by other owners and does not support a conclusion that
PBL1's use of the Lot B units is commercial in nature; (4)
activities of the resident manager and concierges - the Circuit
Court found that the activities of the resident manager and
concierges were not significant enough to support a conclusion
that PBL1's use was commercial; (6) use of the Pauoa Beach Club -
the Circuit Court found that the use of the beach club by ER
members was not shown to be significant enough to support a
conclusion of commercial use; and (7) incidents involving
misconduct by ER members visiting the Lot B units - the Circuit
Court concluded that the number of incidents of misconduct by ER
members did not support a conclusion that PBL1's use of Lot B was
commercial.
Plaintiffs argue that the Circuit Court's analysis of
factors (2), (3), and (5) above, regarding revenue, occupancy,
and on-site maintenance and housekeeping services, demonstrate
that the court clearly erred in evaluating the nature and scope
of PBL1's actual use of the Lot B units given the evidence at
trial.
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Factor 2. The Circuit Court considered the revenues
generated by PBL1 from its rental of the Lot B units. The court
compared the revenues from the Lot B units to the revenue
generated by David and Nathalie Cowan (the Cowan Plaintiffs) from
the rental of their property in the Pauoa Beach subdivision.
Plaintiffs do not dispute the figures found by the Circuit Court
with respect to PBL1's revenues. Income statements showed that
from 2009 through 2014, PBL1 listed revenues from service income
of at least $8,418,353.93. ER's general excise/use tax forms for
Hawai#i County from 2009 through July 2015 showed state taxable
income in Hawai#i County of at least $8,724,371, although it was
not known how much was attributable to the Lot B units as
compared to other ER-related properties located at Pauoa Beach.
Regarding the Cowan Plaintiffs' rental of their
property at the Pauoa Beach subdivision, the court found:
From January through March 2014, the Cowan Plaintiffs
rented their home for $180,000. Between January and August
2015, they entered into three additional short-term rental
agreements charging a total of $270,778.61 plus tax and
utilities (in the case of one three-month rental), or
$33,847.32 per month. If the Cowan Plaintiffs maintained
that same rate of revenue from 2009 through July 2015, they
would have earned $2,673,938.28 from their one home.
The Circuit Court found that "the level of revenues
generated by the Lot B units is indicative of commercial use of
the Lot B units by PBL1, but is not dispositive of the issue."
Plaintiffs argue that there was no evidence to support
the Circuit Court's use of the Cowan Plaintiffs' rental activity
as representative of the typical resident at Pauoa Beach, and
thus the Circuit Court's extrapolation of the hypothetical
resident owner's rental income was unsupported and clearly
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erroneous. Plaintiffs identify other evidence at trial, a list
showing the rental activity of three residences at Pauoa Beach,
that is significantly less than the Cowan Plaintiffs' rental of
their property. PBL1 counters that (1) revenues are not a factor
identified by this court in PBL1 I as a relevant consideration
and (2) the comparison was useful to show that the revenue
generated by PBL1 was on par with the Cowan Plaintiffs' own
rental activities.
As the Circuit Court found, the dollar amount of
revenue generated, in and of itself, is relevant but not
determinative as to whether the scale and scope of the rental
activities amount to a commercial use. This Court stated in PBL1
I that the Project Documents provide that "the mere fact an owner
rents a unit, even on a short-term basis and for a profit, does
not turn the unit's use from residential to commercial." PBL1 I,
2013 WL 1759002 at *4 (footnote omitted). Rather than the
isolated fact of rental, we explained that it is the impact of
the use of the Lot B units that would determine whether the
rental activities exceed the scope of "residential use," which
was to be determined by an analysis of all of the evidence
concerning the property's use, particularly the nature and extent
of services provided with respect to the properties.
There is no restriction in the Project Documents on an
owner's rental of their property, long-term or transient, so long
as, looking at all of the evidence related to that activity, the
use does not rise to the level of commercial use. See Resort
Declaration § 1(a)(14); Pauoa Beach Declaration § 15.4.1. The
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Circuit Court heard evidence of both the Cowan and Gupta
Plaintiffs' own rental activity of their respective properties,
as well as the Defendants' activities. The Circuit Court made no
judgment about the Plaintiffs' use of their properties, except as
part of a fact-weighing process to determine the nature of the
Defendants' use of their property, all of which were located in
the same subdivision of this high-end oceanfront resort. The
Circuit Court's consideration of the evidence concerning the
Cowan Plaintiffs' rental activity to assess the weight to be
given to revenue generated from the Defendants' use of the Lot B
units was squarely and reasonably within the court's province as
the fact-finder and will not be disturbed on appeal. See, e.g.,
Porter v. Hu, 116 Hawai#i 42, 59-60, 169 P.3d 994, 1011-12 (App.
2007) ("An appellate court will not pass upon the trial judge's
decisions with respect to the credibility of witnesses and the
weight of the evidence, because this is the province of the trial
judge.") (citing State v. Eastman, 81 Hawai#i 131, 139, 913 P.2d
57, 65 (1996)).
Factor 3. The Circuit Court considered the occupancy
numbers for the Lot B units and compared that occupancy to what
it might be if inhabited by full-time resident owners, in order
to help the court discern whether the use rose to the level of
commercial use, as opposed to residential use. The court made
the following findings:
36. Plaintiffs contend that the degree of
occupancy of ER members supports the conclusion that
the use of Lot B units is commercial. For this
purpose, Ex. P-237A shows that for the period of 2013
and 2014, the number of ER members at Pauoa Beach
totaled 3,580 or 1,790 on average per year.
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37. First, it is not clear that all of these ER
members stayed at the Lot B units rather than at ER's
other Pauoa Beach units. If this number reflects only
ER members who stayed at the Lot B units and assuming
each guest stayed seven days (even if the average is
actually less), then the number of, let us say
"occupancy days," averaged 12,530 (1,790 occupants x 7
days - 12,530 occupancy days) per year.
38. In contrast, if the Lot B units were
occupied by resident owners, and that each unit had
four occupants, then the annual number of occupancy
days would average 11,680 (8 units x 4 occupants x 365
days = 11,680 occupancy days) per year.
Alternatively, since the Lot B units are four-bedroom
units, it may be fairer to assume that if the Lot B
units were occupied by resident owners, then each unit
would have five occupants, two occupants in the master
bedroom and one each in the other bedrooms. Under
this scenario, the annual number of occupancy days
would be 14,600 (8 units x 5 occupants x 365 days =
14,600 occupancy days) per year.
39. The point is that the degree of occupancy
of the Lot B units by ER members is not substantially
greater than the degree of occupancy of the units had
they been occupied by resident owners. It does not
support the conclusion that PBL1's use of the Lot B
units is commercial in nature.
First, Plaintiffs argue that the evidence at trial
showed that all of the ER members reflected in Exhibit P-237A
stayed at the Lot B units, and the statement in paragraph 37 that
it is unclear is clearly erroneous. The record reflects that the
subject occupancy figures included only members and guests of the
Lot B units, as opposed to other Pauoa Beach units. However, the
Circuit Court proceeded with its analysis assuming the figures
represented only guests to the Lot B units. Thus, although that
statement was clearly erroneous, the error was harmless. See,
e.g., Dupree v. Hiraga, 121 Hawai#i 297, 320 n.28, 219 P.3d 1084,
1107 n.28 (2009); Kahawaiolaa v. United Airlines, Inc., No.
30580, 2012 WL 54497, *2 (Haw. App. Jan. 9, 2012) (SDO).
Plaintiffs argue that the comparison made by the
Circuit Court is otherwise erroneous because the exhibit listing
the history of the number of guests at the Lot B units shows that
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the actual density of guests was greater than the court's
hypothetical 4- to 5-person resident owner occupancy. They also
argue that the "occupancy days" analysis lacks legal precedent
and does not measure the true impact of the churn of visitors
staying at the residences as compared to resident owners. While
the number of persons staying at the Lot B units fluctuated, the
court simply utilized "occupancy days" as one of the ways to
weigh the evidence, to reach a determination of whether the use
of the property was residential or commercial. "Occupancy days"
was just one factor considered by the Circuit Court, based on the
evidence presented at trial, and it was a logical and reasonable
way to assess this evidence of PBL1's use. The Circuit Court
used the actual number of ER members visiting over a two-year
period to come up with an average number each day to compare with
a full-time permanent resident. We decline to step into the
province of the trial court as to how it evaluated and weighed
this aspect of the evidence, and we conclude that the Circuit
Court did not clearly err in finding that the degree of occupancy
of the Lot B units does not support the conclusion that PBL1's
use of the Lot B units is commercial in nature.
Finally, Plaintiffs argue there was no admissible
evidence to support a presumption that other resident owners
actually live at Pauoa Beach fifty-two weeks a year. Plaintiffs'
construction of the court's method of weighing the evidence is
flawed. The factual issue the court was tasked with was to
determine whether, based on evidence presented by the parties at
trial, PBLl's use of the Lot B units rose to the level of a
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commercial use. PBL1 I, 2013 WL 1759002 at *6. A comparison by
the court of PBL1's actual use to a hypothetical full-time
residential use, as an aid in assessing PBL1's use, was
permissible.
Factor 5. The Circuit Court compared the service
providers for housekeeping, landscaping, and trash pickup for the
Lot B units to the services offered by the Cowan Plaintiffs.
For example, PBL1 has a maid service that changes linens twice a
week and cleans kitchens and bathrooms in the Lot B units daily.
A company called Café Landscaping provides landscaping services
to the Lot B units twice a week, but also provides landscaping
services to the Pauoa Beach Owners Association for the
subdivision's common areas. In addition, PBL1 has two employees
who provide house and pool maintenance on the units. As a
comparison, the Circuit Court found that:
51. For their part, [the Cowan Plaintiffs] offer
their short-term tenants (1) "[c]omplimentary maid service
(except for Sundays and holidays)" with "additional maid
service available"; (2) "[c]omplimentary arrival grocery
shopping service"; (3) catering; (4) private chef; (5) nanny
services; (6) concierge services; (7) massages; (8) car; and
(9) chauffeur. Additional services advertised by the Cowans
include access to the Beach Club.
52. The level of services provided by PBL1 for the
maintenance and servicing of the Lot B units is consistent
with maintenance and servicing ordinarily required to
maintain homes and units in the Pauoa Beach Subdivision. It
does not support the conclusion that PBL1's use of the Lot B
units is commercial in nature.
First, Plaintiffs argue that the "reversal" in the
Circuit Court's conclusions between its Decision and Order and
its FOFs is error. In its Decision and Order, the Court stated:
It is expected that the maintenance of the Lot B
units and grounds would entail significant on-site
activities. However, considering the location, it is
not clear that if the Lot B units had resident owners
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that the degree of maintenance would be significantly
less than performed by PBL1.
The degree of housekeeping may be more than
would be expected if Lot B units had resident owners.
Therefore, it is a factor which weighs toward a
conclusion of commercial use, but it is not
dispositive in and of itself.
Plaintiffs cite no authority for the proposition that a
minor discrepancy, refinement, or even reconsideration between an
initial order and subsequent FOFs is reversible error where the
ultimate FOFs & COLs are supported by the evidence at trial, and
we find none.
Plaintiffs again argue that the court erroneously
presumed that other resident owners live at Pauoa Beach full-time
throughout the year. Again, the Circuit Court's consideration of
the services a full-time resident in the same high-end
neighborhood might use was a logical and reasonable way to assess
the evidence of PBL1's use. The question the court was asked to
decide was whether its use of the Lot B units rose to the level
of a commercial use. PBL1 I, 2013 WL 1759002 at *6. A
comparison by the court of PBL1's actual use to full-time
residential use was permissible.
Plaintiffs also argue that PBL1 offered no testimony
from other homeowners at Pauoa Beach as to the services or
transactions that such resident owners actually provided to their
renters. However, evidence of the services advertised by the
Cowan Plaintiffs, who were renting out their own property on a
website VRBO.com, was admitted into evidence, and weighed by the
Circuit Court. Included with the Cowan Plaintiffs' rental was a
(1) complimentary maid service (except for Sundays and holidays),
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with additional services available, (2) complimentary arrival
grocery shopping services, (3) nanny services, (4) catering, (5)
a private chef could be arranged, and (6) available concierge
services. David Cowan testified that at one point he rented out
his property for three months and continued to use the
housekeeping services, gardener, and pool steward previously
employed by him when the property was occupied by a longer-term
tenant. The property management company, however, brought in
another housekeeper whom it preferred to maintain the property.
Cowan testified that the internet listing was created by the
property management company, but neither he nor his wife
requested that it be taken down.
The site manager for the Pauoa Beach Homeowners
Association testified that at the time of trial in November of
2015, approximately seven Pauoa Beach properties were offered for
short-term rental and one additional residence had been so
offered within the previous year. Advertisements for additional
Pauoa Beach rentals in March of 2015 on VRBO.com were offered
into evidence, many of which included information regarding
similar provided services. Thus, the Circuit Court's finding
that the services offered by PBL1 were consistent with the
maintenance and servicing ordinarily required to maintain the
homes in the Pauoa Beach Subdivision was supported by the
evidence before the court.
Finally, Plaintiffs argue that the Circuit Court failed
to take into account the "nature and scope of the destination
club activities on the whole, as compared to that of resident
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homeowners." Plaintiffs cite the testimony of Umang Gupta who
expressed his opinion that the scale and scope of PBL1's use is
qualitatively different from resident owners, citing the revenues
it receives, the number of guests staying in the units at one
time, the frequency of occupancy, and services received. The
Circuit Court considered and weighed the evidence presented by
the Plaintiffs. In essence, Plaintiffs argue that the Circuit
Court did not give this evidence sufficient weight in finding
that the actual use of the Lot B units did not rise to the level
of a commercial use. We will not pass upon the trial judge's
decisions with respect to the credibility of witnesses and the
weight of the evidence because this is the province of the trial
judge.
For these reasons, and based on the entirety of the
record on appeal, we conclude that the Circuit Court did not
clearly err when it found that PBL1's actual use of the Lot B
units at the Pauoa Beach subdivision for destination club
purposes does not rise to the level of a commercial use because
the court failed to examine the overall "scale and scope" of
PBL1's rental activity of the Lot B units. In light of our
conclusion that the Circuit Court erred in concluding that PBL1's
use of the property was a commercial use based on the court's
interpretation of the Project Documents notwithstanding that the
actual use was not commercial, we further conclude that the
Circuit Court's findings that the actual use of the Lot B units
did not rise to the level of commercial use are dispositive of
this dispute.
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Plaintiffs also contend that the Circuit Court erred
when the court denied their requests for injunctive relief and
for attorneys' fees. However, in light of our resolution of the
other issues raised on this appeal, we conclude that these
arguments are without merit.
V. CONCLUSION
Based on the above, the Circuit Court's June 9, 2017
Remand Judgment is reversed insofar as it concluded that PBL1's
use of the Lot B units was a commercial use, in violation of the
restrictive covenants contained in the Project Documents. The
Remand Judgment is otherwise affirmed. The Order Denying
Attorneys' Fees is affirmed.
DATED: Honolulu, Hawai#i, January 27, 2023.
On the briefs: /s/ Katherine G. Leonard
Presiding Judge
Robert G. Klein,
R. John Seibert, /s/ Clyde J. Wadsworth
Lisa W. Cataldo, Associate Judge
Jordon J. Kimura,
(McCorriston Miller Mukai /s/ Sonja M.P. McCullen
MacKinnon LLP), Associate Judge
(and with William C. McCorriston
on the Reply Brief),
for Defendant-Appellee/
Cross-Appellant
EXCLUSIVE RESORTS PBL1, LLC.
Margery S. Bronster,
Rex Y. Fujichaku,
Sasha A. Hamada,
(Bronster Fujichaku Robbins),
for Plaintiffs-Appellants
DAVID COWAN AND NATHALIE
COWAN, UMANG P. GUPTA AND
RUTH M. GUPTA, AS TRUSTEES OF
THE UMANG AND RUTH GUPTA
TRUST UNDER TRUST AGREEMENT
DATED JANUARY 18, 2000, AND
PAUOA BEACH 8 LLC.
32