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Hawaii Housing Authority v. Midkiff, 467 U.S. 229 (1984), was a case in which the United States Supreme Court held that a state could use eminent domain to take land that was overwhelmingly concentrated in the hands of private landowners and redistribute it to the wider population of private residents.
Registered title to land is guaranteed by the State (and a special trust fund) to be solid ("good against the whole world") and is rarely challenged. Original applications to register new land parcels have become rare in Hawaii in recent years. It is possible, under a Hawaii statute, to take land out of the Land Court system into the Regular ...
Section 101, "Purpose", of the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act explains the aims of the Hawaiian Homelands program as follows: (a) ... to enable native Hawaiians to return to their lands in order to fully support self-sufficiency for native Hawaiians and the self-determination of native Hawaiians in the administration of this Act, and the preservation of the values, traditions, and culture of ...
In 2014, most of its real estate assets were sold for $373 million. [1] The real estate portfolio had consisted of land holdings on the windward side of Oahu, Hawaii, as well as other Oahu and mainland United States properties. Properties had included commercial, retail, office, industrial and residential parcels. [2]
Selling a home requires you to navigate a fluctuating real estate market — and if you happen to sell when supply outpaces demand, you may get much less for your home than you were expecting.
The Facebook founder and billionaire Mark Zuckerberg came under scrutiny in 2017 when he attempted to integrate property titles that had been established by the Kuleana Act into a 700-acre (280 ha) estate, which he intended to assemble in Hawaii by using quiet title lawsuits to establish the ownership of ambiguously-titled parcels of land.
9 Reasons You Should Keep Your Cat Out of the Christmas Tree. Keeping your cat out of the Christmas tree isn’t just a battle of wills; it’s a safety concern too.
Kaʻaʻawa is located at (21.557050, -157.855148 Kaʻaʻawa is north of Kualoa and directly southeast of Kahana Bay. The next place beyond Kahana is Punaluʻu.. According to the United States Census Bureau, the CDP has a total area of 1.3 square miles (3.4 km 2). 0.81 square miles (2.1 km 2) of it is land, and 0.54 square miles (1.4 km 2) of it is water.