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Code · Hawaii · Chapter 673

[CHAPTER 673]

309 words·~1 min read·/hi/chapter-673/673

A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.

[CHAPTER 673]
NATIVE HAWAIIAN TRUSTS JUDICIAL RELIEF ACT
Section
673-1 Waiver of immunity
673-2 Right to sue
673-3 Exhaustion of administrative remedies
673-4 Scope of relief
673-5 Attorney's fees and costs
673-6 Award or judgment as bar
673-7 Limited remedy
673-8 Proof of liability
673-9 Inapplicability to share of office of Hawaiian
affairs
673-10 Limitation on actions; native Hawaiians
Note
Hawaiian home lands trust claims. L 1992, c 316; L 1993, c 352.
Cross References
Lands conveyed for development of housing projects, see §§10-13.6 and 171-18.5.
Law Journals and Reviews
The Native Hawaiian Trusts Judicial Relief Act: The First Step in an Attempt to Provide Relief. 14 UH L. Rev. 889 (1992).
Courts and the Cultural Performance: Native Hawaiians' Uncertain Federal and State Law Rights to Sue. 16 UH L. Rev. 1 (1994).
A Modest Proposal for Determining Class Member Damages: Aggregation and Extrapolation in the Kalima v. State Breach of Homelands Trust Class Action. 34 UH L. Rev. 1 (2012).
Case Notes
Where breach of trust claims were for damages resulting from the State's breach of trust duties and did not require a determination of the office of Hawaiian affairs' proportionate share of revenues under §673-9, this chapter applied to the instant claims. 110 H. 338, 133 P.3d 767 (2006).
Where plaintiffs failed to comply with the sixty-day notice requirement for filing suit under §673-3, this failure precluded the supreme court from reviewing any claims brought under this chapter. 110 H. 338, 133 P.3d 767 (2006).
Defendant State and state officials did not waive their sovereign immunity pursuant to chapter 673 where plaintiffs did not bring their claims under chapter 673 in their first amended complaint and plaintiffs' after-the-fact reliance on chapter 673 for a waiver of the State's sovereign immunity was solely for the purpose of their attorneys' fee request. 130 H. 162, 307 P.3d 142 (2013).
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