Lawsuit Blames Landowners, Utility For Maui Fire Death
The complaint by the family of a deceased Lahaina resident is the first to name property owners like Kamehameha Schools and Maui County along with the electric company as defendants.
The complaint by the family of a deceased Lahaina resident is the first to name property owners like Kamehameha Schools and Maui County along with the electric company as defendants.
The family of a woman who died in last month鈥檚 lethal Lahaina wildfire has brought a wrongful death suit that includes the state鈥檚 largest private landowner and major benefactor for Native Hawaiian children, alleging its failure to control dry grass on its property was negligent and a cause of the woman鈥檚 death.
The complaint, filed Monday in state court on Maui by the family of Rebecca Rans, names the trustees of the , also known as Kamehameha Schools, as defendants, marking the first time a lawsuit related to the Maui fires has blamed a private landowner for causing a death by failing to control dry vegetation on its property.
The suit alleges Kamehameha Schools owns several large land parcels that facilitated the spread of the fire that destroyed Rans鈥 home at 390 Paeohi St. in Lahaina 鈥渁nd also cut off escape paths or routes, sending Rebecca Rans in flight and ultimately resulting in her death.鈥
The complaint includes similar allegations against the state and Maui County, which the suit calls 鈥淟andowner Defendants鈥 along with the Bishop Estate trustees. The overarching idea is that the defendants knew unmanaged grasses on their land presented a fire hazard and did nothing to mitigate it.
鈥淎s a direct and proximate result of Landowner Defendants鈥 carelessness and negligence, Rebecca Rans suffered death,鈥 the suit asserts.
The defendants provided little substantive response on Tuesday.
The state Attorney General’s Office said it had just received the complaint and was reviewing it.
Rick Fried, a Honolulu attorney representing Maui County in fire-related litigation, said, 鈥淚 think as to the county, it鈥檚 misplaced,鈥 but declined to comment further on the Rans complaint.
on Tuesday issued a statement focusing on its role in the community.
鈥淎t this time, our hearts are with all affected by the Maui fires and their 鈥榦hana,鈥 the statement said. 鈥淜amehameha Schools is an indigenous educational institution. We are committed to restoring our Native Hawaiian people and culture through education, which includes stewarding and uplifting the health and resiliency of our 鈥樐乮na (lands) and Native communities. As many aspects of the fires are still under investigation, we have no further comment at this time.鈥
The Lahaina fires, which destroyed approximately 2,300 structures and killed at least 115 people, have spawned at least 17 lawsuits, mostly focusing on Hawaiian Electric for allegedly causing the fires by failing to properly maintain its electric distribution system and by failing to de-energize its power lines when hurricane-force winds began making the lines fall on Aug. 8. Maui County also has been blamed for failing to sound alarm systems warning the public.
The latest suit, filed by of Honolulu and of Newport Beach, California, also cites those as causes of Rans鈥 death.
But the idea of spreading responsibility to landowners for failing to remove dried grass is new. As the lawsuit notes, the dangers posed dry grasslands to areas including Lahaina have been known for years.
Plaintiffs鈥 attorney Bridget Morgan-Bickerton said the unmanaged dry grasses on the defendants鈥 properties were equivalent to a gasoline tank waiting to ignite, and that the defendants knew this.
鈥淓veryone was on notice,鈥 Morgan-Bickerton said of the landowners. 鈥淭hey should have done something about it years ago.鈥
Civil Beat’s coverage of Maui County is supported in part by grants from the Nuestro Futuro Foundation.
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About the Author
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Stewart Yerton is the senior business writer for 天美视频. You can reach him at syerton@civilbeat.org.