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Jitiam v Litabtok [1971] TTLawRp 49; 5 TTR 513 (9 November 1971)

5 TTR 513

MO JITIAM, Plaintiff

v.

LITABTOK, KEJMEN, and Others, Defendants

Civil Action No. 431

Trial Division of the High Court

Marshall Islands District

November 9, 1971

Action to determine iroij lablab rights for certain wato on Nalu Island, Mill Atoll. The Trial Division of the High Court, D. Kelly Turner, Associate Justice, held that where matilineal succession was interrupted by a special arrangement which was for one generation only then matrilineal succession resumes thereafter.

1. Marshalls Custom-Succession to Titles-Generally

The normal pattern of Marshallese succession for any land interest title is by descent through the matrilineal line and when it becomes extinct, a patrilineal succession may occur for one generation and after that the interests pass in the new matrilineal line.

2. Marshalls Custom-Succession to Titles-Special Arrangements

There is no support under the custom for the theory that once there has been an "election" of iroij lablab, then all successors must be elected.

3. Marshalls Custom-Succession to Titles-Special Arrangements

When there is a special arrangement for succession, then matrilineal succession resumes thereafter and it does not follow that if there is one special arrangement, all succession thereafter shall be by special arrangement.
Assessor:
KABUA KABUA, Presiding Judge of the

District Court
Interpreter:
Reporter:
Counsel for Plaintiff:
Counsel for Defendant:
OKTAN DAMON
NANCY K. HATTORI
ERWIN BOLLONG
KEJMEN

TURNER, Associate Justice

RECORD OF HEARING

This action involves plaintiff's right to iroij lablab interests for the following wato located on Nalu Island, Mili Atoll:-

Jabelare

Limonkoko

Tonke

Boken

Maluen

Plaintiff claimed he had not received his iroij lablab share of copra sales from the five wato from the time he became iroij lablab upon the death of Lanjen, his mother and predecessor leroij lablab, in 1970. Defendants insisted plaintiff actually had collected from the copra buyers. Since neither side was prepared to offer evidence on the issue the court declined to either re-open or rule on the point. Trial was held on Nalu Island, Mili Atoll, and this case concluded the special sitting, the court returning by ship the day following this trial to Majuro.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Laninat was iroij lablab over the land in question, together with many other parcels in both Mili and Majuro.
2. At the request of a Japanese administration official that a successor be designated, Laninat named his adopted son, Lobollon, as his successor.
3. Lobollon was a member of Laninat's royal bwij, as were Lanjen and Mo Jitiam.
4. Lobollon died in 1945 and within the year the alabs and dri jerbal met and acknowledged that Lanjen, who was Lobollon's mother, should become the leroij lablab, she being the senior member of the royal bwij.
5. From 1946 until her death in 1970, Lanjen held the title of leroij lablab. Her title was confirmed over some wato on Mili Atoll by this court in its decision in Lanjen v. Namilur and Others, Civil Action No. 113, February 9, 1961, not reported, which superseded and reversed the prior reported holding in Civil Action No. 68, Laibon v. Namilur, 2 T.T.R. 52. Also see, Mo J., Successor to Lanjen, v. Bwijtak and Others, Order in Aid of Judgment, 5 T.T.R. 510. These prior decisions arose out of Jera's challenge to Lanjen's title.
6. The plaintiff, Mo Jitiam, was the younger brother of Lobollon and son of Lanjen. He inherited the title of iroij lablab from his mother upon her death and was acknowledged as the titleholder by the iroij eriks, the alabs and dri jerbal for the lands controlled by Lanjen, except for the present defendants and except for two wato, not here involved, on which Bwijtak was a dri jerbal. (See Order in Aid of Judgment, Civil Action No. 113, 5 T.T.R. 510.)

OPINION

The controversy between plaintiff and defendants turns on succession patterns under Marshallese customary law. Defendants insisted, and enforced that position by refusing to recognize Mo as iroij lablab, that because Lanjen had been "elected" by the alabs and dri jerbal as successor paramount chief to her son, Lobollon, that the successor iroij lablab to Lanjen also should be elected. Mo was not elected but claimed the title by right of inheritance under the custom. Following the death of Lanjen in 1970, defendants have insisted no one holds the title and that there will be no iroij lablab until Lanjen's successor is elected.

Defendants are the only holders of land interest in lands formerly controlled by Lanjen who have not acknowledged Mo as iroij lablab. Bwijtak, also failed to recognize Mo over two wato for a reason entirely unrelated to the present controversy.

As a result of the order in aid of judgment in Civil Action No. 113, Bwijtak now understands Mo's claim and recognizes him as iroij lablab. Defendant Litabtok is the alab and defendant Kejmen is the senior dri jerbal over the lands in question.

Plaintiff's witnesses stoutly denied Lanjen was elected as her son's successor, but insisted the alabs and dri jerbal "recognized" her entitlement to the office of leroij because of her position in the royal bwij. If succession continues by matrilineal inheritance, which is in accordance with Marshallese custom, there can be no doubt that Mo succeeded his mother as iroij lablab and that Mo's niece and Lanjen's granddaughter (the daughter of Lobollon) Chiaya, holds the title of leroij lablab over the lands in question as well as all the other lands formerly controlled by Lanjen. According to the genealogical chart involved for this royal bwij, the person in line for future succession to Mo and Chiaya is her younger brother.

[1] The normal pattern of Marshallese succession for any land interest title is by descent through the matrilineal line. When it becomes extinct, a patrilineal succession may occur for one generation and after that the interests pass in the new matrilineal line. J. A. Tobin, "Land Tenure Patterns", p. 18.

The break in matrilineal succession in the present case occurred when Laninat designated his adopted son, Lobollon, as his successor. The normal matrilineal succession began when Mo succeeded his older brother, Lobollon. However, because of his mother's position in the bwij, it was reasonable that her right to the title, following her son's death, should be recognized by all who held land interests.

[2] This does not mean that the court agrees with the defendants that Lanjen was elected. In fact, it is unnecessary to decide whether she was elected or not because the pattern of matrilineal succession resumed with Mo as successor to both his brother and his mother, and Chiaya as the next generation successor. The court definitely does not agree with defendants, because it is not in accordance with Marshallese custom, that once there has been an "election" of iroij lablab, then all successors must be elected. There is no support for such a theory under the custom and the citation from Land Tenure Patterns is contrary to this notion.

This court has been vexed in the past with situations in which, for one reason or another, the normal matrilineal succession has been interrupted and controversy has arisen as to the successor to the person who changed the normal pattern.

In Lijbalang Binni, et al. v. Adre Mwedriktok, et al., 5 T.T.R. 451, Judgment on Retrial, held that an "interrupted" succession did not "revert"; to the former line of succession but that succession followed the lineage of the person who interrupted the former line. In this particular, the Binni case is the same as the present case before this court. In Binni it was said:-·.

"Without a clear showing that a special arrangement, such as here, only was intended to be an interest for one lifetime, we hold that such interest does not revert but continues 'in the lineage of the appointee under a special arrangement that 'terminated or upset the normal course of succession."

[3] It is unnecessary to decide defendants' argument that Lanjen was elected to succeed her son as iroij lablab. All we need to say is that her succession to the title after her son was a part of a special arrangement for one generation only and after that the title passed in the "new matrilineal line" of Lanjen, which also was the same lineage established by Laninat by his appointment of Lobollon. When there is a "special arrangement", or as defendants called it, an election, then matrilineal succession resumes thereafter and it does not follow that if there is one special arrangement, all succession thereafter shall be by "special arrangement" or election. Such theory is completely contrary to Marshallese custom.

Whatever claim Mo may have had against defendants for withholding the iroij lablab share either from 1970 or from August, 1971, he waived his right to recovery in his action by failing to present evidence on or enter into a stipulation with the defendants as to the amount withheld.

It is noted that such withholding, because of defendants' refusal to acknowledge Mo as the iroij lablab did not constitute good cause under these special circumstances to justify their removal from the land. Any future failure to pay the iroij lablab share or to otherwise acknowledge Mo as holder of the title and to accordingly perform their obligations to him under the custom would be an entirely different matter and might reasonably justify termination of the defendants' interest in the land in question.

Ordered, adjudged, and decreed:-

That the plaintiff, Mo Jitiam, holds the title of iroij lablab, as successor to his mother, Lanjen, to Jabelare, Limonkoko, Tonke, Boken and Maluen wato, Nalu Island, Mili Atoll, and as rightful holder of such title, he is entitled to have the defendants perform all obligations due that office under the custom to him including the payment of the iroij lablab share of copra sold from the land in question.


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