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Tulop v Joseph [1973] TTLawRp 30; 6 TTR 290 (15 August 1973)

6 TTR 290


GILBERT TULOP, TAKESEI GOTO, MARTIN MEREB, EANG CARLOS, KEICHI NGIRAKED, ASAO TELLEI and EDWARDO SABURO, Plaintiffs


v.

UCHERBELAU K. JOSEPH, Treasurer of the Angaur Special Fund Board and

KULIBERT MASAO, Chairman of the Angaur Special Fund Board, Defendants


Civil Action No. 605


Trial Division of the High Court


Palau District


August 15, 1973


Proceeding by persons for whom loans were properly approved by trust fund authorized to approve business loans. The Trial Division of the High Court, D. Kelly Turner, Associate Justice, held that the treasurer of the board empowered to approve the loans could not refuse to disburse the money for the asserted reasons that no one told him to, the money was needed for another purpose and the board, existence of which his acts had acknowledged, had not yet been formed.

1. Trusts--Powers and Duties of Trustees and Officers

Where trust fund administering board authorized to approve business loans approved a loan and treasurer of the board had performed acts showing he acknowledged that the board, called for by the trust document, had been formed, he could not refuse to withdraw and pay over the money for the loan on the grounds the board did not exist, no one told him to do so and he believed business loans should not be made because the money was needed for another purpose.

2. Trusts-Governing Law

Trust funds and the rules governing their administration are present day concepts and the traditional powers of the High Chief of Angaur Island, which are considerable, though not absolute, are not applicable; the chief, like any other person, is bound by the trust rules and the rules of the board which administers the trust if he becomes a member of the board, and is bound by the board's decisions.
Assessor:
SINGICHI IKESAKES, Associate

Judge, District Court
Interpreter:
Reporter:
Counsel for Plaintiffs:
Counsel for Defendants:
AMADOR D. NGIRKELAU
ELSIE T. CERISIER
FRANCISCO ARMALUUK
JOHN O. NGIRAKED and
BENJAMIN OITERONG

TURNER, Associate Justice

The seven plaintiffs applied for small business loans from the Angaur Special Fund. The loans were approved by the Administering Board. The defacto treasurer of the board, the defendant Ucherbelau K. Joseph, declined to pay the approved loans to the plaintiffs-applicants. Ucherbelau is the title of the principal chief of Angaur Island and Joseph has been a member of the board and one of the treasurers of the fund since 1970. The other cosigner of the special fund bank account is the defendant Kulibert Masao, Chairman of the Board since February 10, 1972, and magistrate of Angaur Island Municipality. All of the plaintiffs are "people of Angaur Island Municipality", within the meaning of the limitation of eligibility for business loans from the special fund. Some of the plaintiffs are not at present, or at the time loan applications were made, residing on Angaur Island but were Angaurese with all rights and privileges of someone actually residing on the island.

July 16, 1950, the Angaur Mining Trust Fund Agreement was executed "to preserve and invest" for the benefit of the people of Angaur the funds received from phosphate mining operations on Angaur Island. This Trust Agreement was revised and amended in 1970, which, among other things, transferred the "Catastrophe and Business Accounts" fund from the High Commissioner as trustee "to a board of seven persons who shall be selected by the eighteen clan chiefs of Angaur and the Magistrate of Angaur Municipality."

The amendment also provided (and this is the issue presented by the present case):-

" . . . the funds shall be used by the Board for municipal projects on the island of Angaur, business loans and for relief in the event of natural disasters as determined by the Board."

The Trust Agreement revision, including the foregoing amendment to Article 3, were approved by this court after formal hearing. Re Angaur Trust Fund, 5 T.T.R. 69 with the quoted amendments at 5 T.T.R. 72.

The amendment also provided that:-

"Upon notification in writing signed by all the eighteen clan chiefs and the Magistrate of Angaur Municipality that the Board has been established, the Trustee shall deliver over to the Board the assets currently held by the Trustee in the Business and Catastrophe accounts . . . ."

The defendants produced, on demand of the plaintiffs, a typewritten instrument dated September 12, 1970 designating the seven-member board. Although the defendants were inclined to dispute that a board existed prior to 1972 when by-laws were adopted and a new board took office, the evidence is convincing that a board did exist and the money was delivered by the High Commissioner in 1970. The defendant, Ucherbelau Joseph, as principal chief of Angaur Island, together with the magistrate, Adelbai Ongina, opened a savings account with the $55,000 plus interest received from the High Commissioner.

Thereafter the plaintiff, Tulop, and Lazarus Salii applied for business loans from the fund. The applications were approved by a majority of the board members, Salii's on February 2, 1971 and Tulop's on May 27, 1971. Ucherbelau and Adelbai Ongino, whose signatures were required to withdraw bank funds, withdrew the $5,000 for the Salii loan, February 16, 1971, and paid the money to him. But payment was not made to Tulop.

[1] The several reasons given by Ucherbelau for not making the board-approved loan payment to Tulop were insufficient, as a matter of law, to justify the refusal. The defendant refused to concede the existence of a board prior to 1972, even though he approved a board sanctioned loan in February, 1971. At another time in his testimony, he expressed the belief the business loans should not be made because the Island Municipality needed the money for a boat.

The Ucherbelau's desire to preserve and protect the fund is commendable. However, even though he and the island magistrate received the fund from the High Commissioner and they promptly deposited it in a bank savings account with their signatures necessary for withdrawal, it is not their money. The fund belongs to the people of Angaur, and under the terms of the Trust Agreement, it is to be used for the benefit of the people in three different categories.

The fund is administered by a board of seven members and a majority of the board members are empowered to control the disbursements from the fund. The money on deposit does not belong to the board, nor to any member of the board, including the Ucherbelau, even though he is the High Chief of Angaur.

[2] The court recognizes the chief by tradition, exercises great authority over the clans, the people and the affairs of Angaur Island. His power over traditional matters is not absolute. The Angaur Fund Administering Board is not within scope of a traditional island matter. Trust funds and the rules governing their administration are present day concepts and the traditional powers of a chief are not applicable. When a chief or any other individual becomes a member of the Administering Board, he is bound by the trust rules and by traditional concepts of a chief's power. If the Ucherbelau is to serve his people on the board, he must comply with the applicable rules agreed upon and the democratic principles of majority rule expressed in the by-laws of the board whether or not he approves of the actions of other board members. He is bound by the decisions of a majority of the board.

The Ucherbelau has been a board member since the first board was organized. Until a board was organized, the money could not be delivered by the High Commissioner. Even though the defendant argued there was no board until 1972, nevertheless, he acted as a board member. He received the money payable to the board. He approved and paid a business loan approved by the board. When he refused to pay out the loan approved for the plaintiff Tulop, because according to his testimony at trial, "there was no board to administer the fund," all of his actions prior to that refusal contradicted the reason for his refusal. His reason simply is not acceptable, as a matter of law.

After the first Administering Board, a new board took office in 1972. That board included the Ucherbelau and the successor-magistrate, the defendant Masao, who is related to the chief, as members. The five remaining members met and approved loans for six of the seven plaintiffs.

The new board elected a new treasurer to replace Ucherbelau. The chief declined to relinquish control of the bank account and the duly elected treasurer was there for unable to perform his duties. The Ucherbelau testified "no one" told him to pay the approved loans. The reason was as specious and insufficient as his attempted justification for refusing to pay the Tulop loan.

The by-laws under which the board operated, beginning in 1972 in administration of the fund, specifically provided that, "A majority (2/3) of all members of the board must approve the Loan." Even though this approval was given, the defendants declined to comply with the by-laws. It also is noted, although the point was not raised, that in accordance with the by-laws, the defendant Ucherbelau's term as a board member expired February 10, 1973, together with three other board members. However, it appears Ucherbelau has continued in office.

By the board's own rules of procedure and by the democratic principle of law applicable to the facts in this dispute, all seven of the plaintiffs are clearly entitled to receive the money authorized for their approved loans. Accordingly, it is

Ordered, adjudged and decreed:-

1. That the defendants Ucherbelau K. Joseph and Tulibert Masao, or their successors as treasurer and chairman respectively of the Angaur Special Fund Board, shall pay the loans in the amounts approved for the plaintiffs: Gilbert Tulop, Takeshi Coto, Martin Mereb, Eang Carlos, Keichi Ngiraked, Asao Tellei and Edwardo Saburo.
2. Costs are not allowed.


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