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Jetnil v Buonmar [1969] TTLawRp 55; 4 TTR 420 (17 September 1969)

4 TTR 420

BINA JETNIL,
Plaintiff


v.


BUONMAR and
ANJUA,
Defendants


Civil Action No. 274
Trial Division of the High Court
Marshall Islands District


September 17, 1969


Action to determine who should succeed to title of iroij lablab on Island of Takleb, Arno Atoll. The Trial Division of the High Court, Chief Justice, R. K. Shoecraft, held that while plaintiff was entitled to succeed to the title the defendants had authority from plaintiff to act for her as long as they paid her the iroij lablab share from the wetos in question.

1. Marshalls Custom - "Iroij Lablab" - Succession

The position of iroij lablab is primarily one of trust and responsibility, the succession to which depends upon a combination of birth and recognized ability, and it is not a merely personal right which can be given away or abolished at will by one holding it.

2. Marshalls Custom - "Iroij Lablab" - Succession

The expressed wishes of one iroij lablab as to the selection of his or her successor may have great influence with his people, but it cannot bind them in such a way as to relieve them from obligations assumed after his or her death.

3. Marshalls Land Law - Generally

All the different levels of owners have rights which the courts will recognize, but they also have obligations to each other, thus there is a duty of loyalty all the way up the line dri jerbal, to alab, to iroij erik, to iroij lablab, a corresponding duty of protection of the welfare of subordinates running down the line, and a strong obligation of cooperation running both ways.

4. Marshalls Land Law - Generally

As members of the same bwij, plaintiff and defendants had certain obligations with respect to each other, probably the stronger obligation being that of the defendants to look after the welfare of their father's sister, the plaintiff.

5. Civil Procedure - Generally

Where no testimony was introduced regarding two matters mentioned in plaintiff's complaint, plaintiff was deemed to have abandoned them.


SHOECRAFT, Chief Justice

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. That Jiwirak, lroij Lablab of the wetos of Jittaken, Lokloben and Jitoen on the Island of Takleb, Arno Atoll, made a will before his death, naming his sons Buonmar and Anjua, defendants herein, as his successors as lroij Lablab on those wetos.

2. That said sons, Buonmar and Anjua, are, and have been since the death of their father in 1964, exercising lroij Lablab powers over said wetos.

3. That the plaintiff, Bina (also known by the more formal name of Labina), sister of the deceased Iroij Jiwirak, has never exercised Leroij Lablab powers over said wetos.

4. The wetos of Jittaken, Lokloben and Jitoen are kabijuknen land (traditional family land), as contrasted with lands over which Jiwirak was appointed.

OPINION

The plaintiff, Bina, claims in this action that she, as the sister of the former Iroij -Lablab Jiwirak, is entitled to succeed Jiwirak and to receive the iroij lablab shares from copra produced on the lands mentioned in Findings of Fact numbered 1, above, and that the defendants have been withholding said share from her since the death of their father in 1964. Bina claims that the will of Jiwirak naming his sons to succeed him is invalid for the reason that neither she nor her sister, Bolur, approved said will. She further claims that the land in question is kabijuknen land (traditional family land) which came to her father through her mother, that Jiwirak was without power to name his successor by will, and that she, as the eldest sister of Jiwirak, should have automatically succeeded Jiwirak upon his death.

The primary issue in this case is whether or not, under Marshallese custom, the defendants are obligated to pay to the plaintiff the leroij lablab share of the proceeds from the three wetos in question. The court is of the opinion that they are so obligated.

Although there was little or no testimony which will be of assistance to the court, one salient fact stands out uncontroverted, and that is concerning the nature of the three wetos involved here. Bina testified, as did her sister, Bolur, that Takleb Island is kabijuknen land. Bina also testified that when the former iroij lablab before Jiwirak died, she would normally have succeeded him but that she gave way to Jiwirak on Takleb because Jiwirak was a male, and also because the alabs on the other islands on the eastern side of Arno Atoll had elected him as iroij lablab on the other islands. She further testified that Takleb Island came from her mother and father for all of the bwij and not merely for the sons of Jiwirak. This testimony was not rebutted by the defendants, who relied mainly on the will made by their father.

[1, 2] As was said in Lainlij v. Lajoun, 1 TTR 113, at p. 117, "It also seems clear that the position of iroij lablab is primarily one of trust and responsibility, the succession to which depends upon a combination of birth and recognized ability, and that it is not a merely personal right which can be given away or abolished at will by one holding it. The expressed wishes of one iroij lablab as to the selection of his or her successor may have great influence with his people, but it cannot bind them in such a way as to relieve them from obligations assumed after his or her death." From the pleadings and the testimony in this case, it does not appear that Bina wishes to act as leroij lablab over the lands in question but that she is content for her nephews, defendants herein, to so act so long as she is paid the iroij lablab share from the proceeds of the land.

[3,4] The court reminds both parties, however, of the words of Chief Justice Furber in Jatios v. Levi, Appellate Division of the High Court, 1 TTR 578, at p. 587. "All the different levels of owners have rights which the courts will recognize, but they also have obligations to each other which severely limit their control over the land. There is a duty of loyalty all the way up the line dri jerbal, to alab, to iroij erik, to iroij lablab, a corresponding duty of protection of the welfare of subordinates running down the line, and a strong obligation of cooperation running both ways." As members of the same bwij, plaintiff and defendants have certain obligations with respect to each other, probably the stronger obligation being that of the defendants to look after the welfare of their father's sister.

[5] No testimony was introduced by either party as to any amounts which may be due to the plaintiff from the defendants for copra produced in past years, and no testimony was introduced as to use of the sailboat formerly owned by Jiwirak. As to these two matters mentioned in plaintiff's complaint, she is deemed to have abandoned her claim.

JUDGMENT

It is ordered, adjudged, and decreed as follows:-

1. As between the parties and all persons claiming under them, the plaintiff, Bina, holds the iroij lablab rights in the wetos of Lokloben, Jittaken, and Jitoen on Takleb Island, Arno Atoll, and the defendants, Buonmar and Anjua, have the authority to act for her for so long as she permits them to so act and for so long as they pay to her the iroij lablab share from said wetos.
2. This judgment shall not affect any lands other than the wetos named herein, nor shall it affect any rights-of-way there may be over the land in question.
3. Costs are assessed against the defendants.


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