PacLII Home | Databases | WorldLII | Search | Feedback

South Pacific Law Reports

You are here:  PacLII >> Databases >> South Pacific Law Reports >> 1988 >> [1988] SPLawRp 35

Database Search | Name Search | Recent Decisions | Noteup | LawCite | Download | Help

  Download original PDF


Musu v Suapilimai [1988] SPLawRp 35; [1988] SPLR 9 (22 March 1988)

[1988] SPLR 9

IN THE HIGH COURT


LAND AND TITLES DIVISION


FALEAFINE MUSU


v


MALIA SUAPILIMAI


Rees C.J.; Afuola and Tuiafono Associate Judges
22 March 1988

Land law — communal land — title held in accordance with customs application to boundary dispute.

Title to communal land — function of court issue of better right to occupation — actual owner not party to case court will not quiet title or otherwise adjudicate the right of that party.

Nature of evidence — circumstantial — evidence of historic boundary — straight line — coconut trees strong circumstantial evidence of that boundary.

Boundary identification — best evidence — identification — eye witness — withdrawal of dwelling — strong circumstantial evidence of boundary.

Historic licence — continued use undisturbed — cookhouse — no objection by the other side power of court — case grounded in a historic licence.

Title to communal land — accrual by registration — statutory requirement and law — procedure covered under A.S.C.A., ss. 37.0102, 37.0201 et seq.

Procedure for registration — survey of land — role of senior matai — where vacant, family must select senior matai before offer land for registration: A.S.C.A., s. 37,0201. Registration — confers indefeasible title — title protected even though party who might have objected did not discover proposed registration in time to object. A.S.C.A., s. 37.0101 at seq.

This is an action in a boundary dispute of land held communally under customary laws. The plaintiff seeks declaratory judgment to an area slightly less than a fifth of an acre which they occupy jointly with the defendant, but for which the boundary between them is the issue in contest. The land is actually owned by the title Letuligasenoa, whose holder is not a party to the case. The issue, ultimately, is which party has the better right to occupation of the land.

Both parties have occupied the land for a long time, and the relationship between them had been good and friendly — each performing maintenance chores on the area. For at least twenty years prior to 1973, the defendant family built and lived in a small Samoan-style house on their portion of the land together with an umu-Samoan cooking house — which is still there.

The plaintiff family also has a dwelling-house a few feet from this, which it uses and occupies.

At one point a dispute arose between the families as to their boundary.

In 1973, both families met with Chief Letuligasenoa, who walked the boundary line with them and identified it. Coconut trees were eventually planted along this line to show the boundary. Evidence establishes this straight line of trees stretches from the road to the fence at the back of the property. The Court confirmed this on a visit to the property.

The plaintiffs were represented by the husband (now deceased) and one Felili Faleafine, who now occupies the house just to the west of the disputed portion.

The other parties were represented by the defendant and her husband, now also deceased. Shortly after the boundary was marked, the defendant family removed their dwelling-house, but not the umu, which they continued to use without objection from the plaintiffs.

By 1981 the plaintiff's family, who had occupied the house in the area in dispute, were in Hawaii temporarily. Meanwhile, the defendant ordered a survey of the whole area, including the one in dispute. The survey was made under her name: "Malia L. Suapilimai", calling the land Niva, and subsequently offered for registration in the name of "Suapilimai family" and not under any matai family name. Nobody objected to the registration within the statutory time period, and it was accordingly inscribed in the Territorial Registration. (In effect, the defendant sought alienation of communal ownership of the land to her and her family in their own right as free individual owners.)

At trial, however, she testified that the registration under "Suapilimai family" was an error and should have been under "Leituala family". (Evidence, however, 60 suggests both the Suapilimai and Leituala are lesser titles of the Lealaimatafao family.)

When the plaintiff family returned from Hawaii, they found that the defendant and her family had begun to use again the disputed portion of the land they had withdrawn from after 1973.

HELD:

The application for declaratory judgment is granted. The defendant and her family are permanently enjoined from interfering with the rights of the plaintiff family to use and occupy the land. They are further enjoined from using the land themselves, except that they may use the umu so long as they do so without disturbing the plaintiff in their peaceful enjoyment of the remainder of the land.

(1) The true boundary between the parties' families is the line of coconut trees along the eastern boundary of the Faleafine survey. The very existence of the straight line of coconut trees between two tracts of land is strong circumstantial evidence of this. This was identified by Chief Letuligasenoa. Both families had recognized that boundary then and now: l. 224.
(2) The continued use of the umu by the defendants even after the boundary was marked and the dwelling-house removed, and without objection by the plaintiff until recently, is not conclusive evidence of title of ownership or the establishment of a new boundary line. At best that use was grounded in a historic licence: l 233.
(3) The registration in 1981 of the disputed portion by the defendant a part of "Niva" was invalid and void. That registration was not done in accordance with statutory procedures: l. 235.
(4) (a) An offer of registration of communal land must be accompanied by a survey requested by the senior matai of the family (A.S.C.A. section 37.1012). Where there is no senior matai in a family, one must be selected before land can be offered for registration (A.S.C.A. section 37.0102 (d)). Here, the defendant had no authority in 1981 to register land, whether on behalf of the Suapilimai family, the Leituala family, or any other family. Accordingly that registration is void and of no effect.
(b) Even if it can be said that that registration constitutes alienation of communally held land into individual ownership, that could not happen here, since such alienation requires approval by the Governor and the Land Commission under A.S.C.A, section 37.0201 et seq. Such approval was not sought and therefore was never granted. In any case, it is significant to note that the land is not virgin bush just cleared by the defendant in her own right, but it is in the centre of the Ili'ili village, long held and occupied communally by some family. It is also noted the defendant first surveyed the land in her own name—"Malia L. Suapilimai family"—and then attempted to sell it as part of "Nina" land: l. 258.

Obiter Dictum

(1) There is no need to decide which authority granted occupation to the defendant and her family of the land in question—whether it was the authority of Letuligasenoa, Leituala, or Suapilimai, or any other family. Neither the Letuligasenoa family nor any other neighbouring landowner is a party to the case. Accordingly the Court will not "quiet title" to the land: page 30.

(2) Registration of land would not be invalidated where an objector is not in American Samoa. The procedure is simply that: if land had been offered for registration in accordance with law, if there are no conflicting registrations, if public notice was given prior to the survey or a meeting of village chiefs and subsequent notices posted on the court-house and two public places in the village, and if there is still no objection within sixty days, then the statute denies any further right to object (A.S.C.A. section 37.0101 et seq.: page 31.)

Legislation referred to in judgment:

A.S.C.A., section 37.0101 et seq.

Editorial Observation:

1. It is interesting to note the similarities between communal land ownership in American Samoa and that of traditional or customary land in Western Samoa, or for that matter in most other Pacific Island countries. Most, if not all, are now governed by constitutions that give fundamental protection to land, whether termed communal, traditional, or customary. However, American Samoa has the further reliance on the United States Constitution for protection (see Leibowitz, "The Application of the American Constitution to American Samoa" (1974) 9 I Int'l Law and Econ. 325).

2 The Court had not elaborated on its finding of not "quieting title" to communal land. It would be helpful to elaborate on the criteria determinable of that, especially in the nature of land law at issue. Similarly, what constitutes "historic licence" is important. Quite apart from a factual determination of the issue, all land in the Pacific Islands prior to constitutions and statutory law were held, owned, and occupied in traditional systems without registration.

Counsel:
Charles Alailima for the plaintiff
Aviata Failevao for the defendant

REES C.J.

Judgment:

This is a boundary dispute. The Court heard hours of testimony, quite fascinating in its own way, on such questions as whether various people were or were not blood members of the Faleafine family and whether there was ever really a Faleafine Lui.

Our task, however, is limited to determining the boundary between the Faleafine communal land called Lupelele and the adjoining land which defendant Leituala Malia Suapilimai registered in 1981 under the name Niua.

The facts are as follows.

1. The area in dispute is accurately displayed in the plaintiffs' survey. Its area is slightly less than a fifth of an acre, and it is in the shape of a triangle with a narrow panhandle at the south-eastern corner.
2. The Faleafine family has Tong occupied the land immediately to the west of the disputed area.
3. Members of the immediate family of defendant Malia Suapilimai (who since the commencement of this litigation has registered the matai title Leituala) have occupied the land immediately to the east of the disputed area for at least forty years.
4. It is unclear under what title the defendant's family members lived on the adjourning land. According to the testimony of the defendant at trial, this has always been Leituala family land. Plaintiff’s witnesses testified that the Leituala family has no communal land in this part of Ili'ili and that Malia's parents came to live there by permission of the true owner, Letuligasenoa. The latter version is supported by most of the circumstantial evidence: both sides agree that Malia's mother was a member of the Letuligasenoa the land occupied by Malia and her family is adjoined on at least two sides by land belonging to the Letuligasenoa family or members thereof. On at least one occasion (discussed below) Malia's family seems to have recognized the authority of Letuligasenoa over the land.
5. The disputed portion has been occupied or used at various times by both sides in this litigation. For at least twenty years prior to 1973 there was a small Samoan-style fale on the disputed portion occupied by various relatives of the present defendant. Her family still has an umu in the disputed area which has been there for many years. The tract has also been occupied and cultivated, however, by members of the Faleafine family who have long had a dwelling-house within a few feet of it. Both sides testified that for many years the members of the two families were quite friendly and that neither family cared whether a few square feet of its land was being used by the other. Maintenance chores were performed sometimes by one family and sometimes by the other.
6. On at least one occasion, however, there was a dispute between the two families about their boundary. In 1973 the occupants of the two households met with Chief Letuligasenoa, who walked the boundary line with them. Among those present were: the husband, now deceased, of Felili Faleafine who now occupies the house just to the west of the disputed portion; the present defendant; and her husband, now also deceased.
7. Plaintiffs witnesses, including the daughter of the late Letuligasenoa, testified that the line he marked was along a line of coconut trees stretching from the road to a fence at the back of the property. The judges visited the site and saw that these trees do exist and do appear to have been planted deliberately in a straight line many years ago. The trees appear to be along the eastern boundary of the Faleafine survey.
8. Shortly after the boundary was marked, the defendant's family removed the Samoan dwelling-house, which had been on the Faleafine side of the line. They continued, however, to use the umu which was also on the Faleafine side of the line.
9. In 1981, when the occupants of the Faleafine dwelling (Felili and her late husband) were temporarily in Hawaii, Malia ordered a survey. The survey was done in the name of "Malia L. Suapilimai" rather than in the name of any family. It included the land to the east, of which she and her immediate family are the undisputed occupants, as well as the portion under dispute in this case. Malia subsequently offered the surveyed land for registration in the name of the "Suapilimai family". She testified at trial, however, that this was an error and that she meant to have it registered in the name of the "Leituala family". (Her testimony was that Suapilimai is a lesser title of the Leituala family. One of the plaintiff’s witnesses testified that both Suapilimai and Leituala are lesser titles of the Lealaimatafao family.) Nobody objected to the registration within the statutory time period, and it was accordingly inscribed in the records of the Territorial Registrar.
10. When the occupants of the Faleafine dwelling returned from Hawaii they found that Malia and her family had begun to use the disputed portion from which they had temporarily withdrawn after 1973. The two sides then resumed the dispute which has culminated in this case.

From these facts we draw the following conclusions of law.

1. We need not reach the question whether the occupation of the land by Malia and her relatives was under the authority of the Letuligasenoa, Leituala, or Suapilimai family, or of some other family. Neither the Letuligasenoa family nor any other neighbouring landowner is a party to this case. (For this reason, we cannot possibly "quiet title" to the land as requested by the plaintiff. We can only decide which of the parties in this case has proved a better right than the other to occupy the disputed land.)
2. The best evidence is that the historic boundary between the land occupied by the Faleafine family and that occupied by the neighbouring landowner to the east was the line of coconut trees along the eastern boundary of the Faleafine survey. The very existence of a straight line of tall trees between two tracts of land is strong circumstantial evidence; that Letuligasenoa identified this as the boundary and that Malia's family then withdrew (and even dismantled a dwelling in the disputed portion) is even stronger evidence that both sides once recognized this line as the boundary. This is true whether the deference of Malia and her relatives to Letuligasenoa was based: on a belief that their own claim to occupy the land was based on their status as Letuligasenoa family members; on respect for Letuligasenoa as a wise and just man who had long been familiar with the land in the vicinity; or on an independent belief that the coconut trees did in fact mark the boundary.
3. The best cone usion we can draw from the continued use of the umu by Malia and her famil even after the boundary was marked and the dwelling-house demolished, and from the lack of any objection from the Faleafines until quite recently, is that this use was grounded in a historic licence.
4. The registration of the disputed portion by Malia Suapilimai as part of "Niva" in 1981 did not change anything. The registration was not done in accordance with the statutory law of American Samoa, as appears clearly on the face of the registration documents themselves.
Malia Suapilimai had no authority in 1981 to register land on behalf of the Suapilimai family, the Leituala family, or any other family, since an offer of registration for communal land must be accompanied by a survey requested by the senior matai of the family (A.S.C.A. section 37.0102). The statutory language is absolute and admits of no exceptions; a family whose senior matai title is vacant must select a senior matai before it can offer land for registration. This is undoubtedly among the reasons Malia ordered the survey in her own name. (See A.S.C.A. section 37.0101(d).)
On the other hand, the land could not legally have been registered as Mafia's individually owned land since its alienation to an individual was never approved by the Governor and the Land Commission as required by A.S.C.A. section 37.0201 et seq. (This land is in the centre of the village of just off the malae. It is undisputed, and would in any case be beyond dispute, that the land has long been the property of some communal family or families of Ili'ili rather than having been recently cleared from virgin bush by some individual acting on his own account. It could not, therefore, have become individually owned property except in accordance with the statutory procedures for alienation of communal land.) This, we believe, is why Mafia switched characterizations in mid-stream, calling the land that of "Malia L. Suapilimai" when she ordered the survey and of the "Suapilimai family" when she registered it. That Malia subsequently attempted to sell and lease portions of "Niva" (including the whole portion now in dispute) as her individually owned land suggests that she does not really regard it as belonging to the "Suapilimai family" or, as she now contends, the "Leituala family". In any case the registration violated the statutes and was null and void.
5. We stress that we do not rest our holding on the plaintiff’s contention that a registration has no legal effect if it was done at a time when someone who might have objected to it was off the island. Nor would it seem to make any difference that the senior matai of the Faleafine family does not live in and therefore does not always know about village council meetings. If the land had been offered for registration in accordance with law, if there was no conflicting prior registration, if public notice was given prior to the survey at a meeting of village chiefs and subsequent notice posted at the court-house and two public places in Ili'ili, and if the Faleafines never found out about it and did not object for sixty days, the registration statute would seem to deny them any further right to object (A.S.C.A. section 37.0101 et seq.).The even broader contention made by the plaintiff—that a registration is inoperative and can be subsequently invalidated whenever the land registered can be shown to have been the property of some person other than the registrant—would seem to deprive the statute of any force or effect whatever.

Accordingly, Leituala MaIia. Suapilimai and her family are permanently enjoined 260 from interfering with the rights of the Faleafine family to use and occupy any of the land on the Faleafine survey. They are enjoined from using the land themselves except that they may use the umu so long as they do so in a way that does not disturb the Faleafines in their peaceful enjoyment of the remainder of the land.

Declaratory judgment shall also issue that the registration of land Niva by Malia L. Suapilimai and/or the Suapilimai family is of no legal force or effect.

It is so ordered.

Reported by T.M.


PacLII: Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback
URL: http://www.paclii.org/other/SPLawRp/1988/35.html