Foloi v. Tuitasi

13 Am. Samoa 2d 76
CourtHigh Court of American Samoa
DecidedDecember 12, 1989
DocketLT No. 18-88
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Am. Samoa 2d 76 (Foloi v. Tuitasi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering High Court of American Samoa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foloi v. Tuitasi, 13 Am. Samoa 2d 76 (amsamoa 1989).

Opinion

On Motion for New Trial:

We held that a warranty deed signed by plaintiff Vaimaona Foloi conveying land to defendant Fa‘amamafa Tuitasi was valid and that the land in question now belongs to the defendant. 12 A.S.R.2d 68 (1989), Plaintiffs allege fourteen grounds of error in our decision..

One of these grounds may have merit. Our finding that "on August 6, 1987, defendant Tuitasi had offered the dee4 for registration as her individually owned land," while technically an accurate statement of the record, may haye been misleading.

It appears that defendant (and/or,plaintiff Vaimaona) filed a copy of the warranty deed with the Territorial Registrar on August 6- (Sec Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 2. The record reflects that the Registrar treated this filing as a request (1) for approval of the sale by the Land Commission and (2) for registration of the land as individually-owned land of defendant Tuitasi. See id. A notice Was. posted the same day at the Court House and at two places in Lauli’i, stating that any objections could be filed with the Secretary of the Land Commission on or before September 8, 1987. No objections'were fjled, The sale was approved by the Land Commission on September 28 and by the Governor on October 2.

On October 20 the Territorial Registrar issued a "Certificate of Registration." ' It certified that "Warranty Peed, Portion of Land ‘Mulipa’ in the Village of Lauli’i" had been offered for registration by Mrs. Tuitasi "as her individually-owned land" and had been "duly registered." •

The Registrar’s certificate implies that the registration in question was both a registration of the deed as an "instrument . . , effectual to pass title" under A.S.C.A. § 37.0210 and a registration of the land described therein as the individually-owned land of defendant Tuitasi in accordance with A.S.C.A. §§ 37.0101 et seq. Although the statutes in question do not prohibit the registration "of the deed" and "of the land" from being initiated by a single application, the two processes are technically distinct.

[79]*79Chapter 1 of Title 37 of the American Samoa Code Annotated (A.S.C.A. §§ 37.0101 et seq.) deals with "Titles to Land." This chapter provides, inter alia, that the owner of any land not previously registered may register his title with the Territorial Registrar. A.S.C.A. § 37.0101(a). The application for registration of title is done in accordance with the procedures set forth in A.S.C.A. §§ 37.0102-03, whose purpose is to give notice to anyone who might wish to file an objection to the application. Provided that no such objections are filed, the Registrar records a title which is good against the world. A.S.C.A. § 37.0103(c); see Ifopo v. Siatu'u, 12 A.S.R.2d 24 (1989). A procedurally valid registration in accordance with A.S.C.A. §§ 37.0101 et seq. precludes subsequent judicial inquiry into the validity, of the record owner’s title; the statutory scheme gives "anyone who wishes to object op any ground whatever to the registrant’s claim of ownership" a sixty-day period within which to do so, and provides that in the absence of such objection, "the land is registered in the name- of the claimant and all other claims of ownership are forever precluded." Ifopo, supra, at 26.

The immediately succeeding chapter, A.S.C.A. §§ 37.0201 et seq., deals with "Alienation of Land." It provides a number of substantive restrictions on alienation and also sets forth procedures for the lawful alienation of land. The latter, including a requirement that any proposed alienation of comriiunal land be submitted to a Land Commission and to the Governor for approval or rejection, are designed to ensure that land will not be alienated lightly even in the absence of a specific substantive restriction. The final step in the procedure for alienation of land is set forth in A.S.C.A. § 37.0210, providing that ”[n]o instrument shall be effectual to pass the title to any lapd . , . until such instrument has been duly registered with the territorial registrar." When a buyer and seller comply with the provisions of A.S.C.A. §§ 37.0201 et seq., including the recordation provision of A.S.C.A. § 37.0210, the buyer becomes the owner of whatever interest the seller had in the land.

The distinction between registration "of the land" and "of the deed" is best .characterized as a distinction between substance and procedure. The protection afforded a landowner by compliance with A.S.C.A. §§ 37.0101 et seq. is essentially a form of estoppel: having been duly notified to come forward within sixty days, rival claimants are thereafter precluded from attacking the validity of the record owner’s title. The protection afforded by compliance with A-S.C.A. §§ 37.0201 et seq. is substantive: although rival claimants remain procedurally free to object to the record owner’s title, anyone who acquires land in [80]*80conformity with the substantive and procedural provisions of this chapter (and who acquires the land from someone who réally was the owner) thereby becomes the lawful owner of the land. Thus a party who claims to own land, even though he may not have registered the land in accordance with the procedural requirements of A.S.C.A. §§ 37.0101 et seq. and therefore cannot take advantage of the preclusive effect of that chapter, will nevertheless prevail on the merits provided that he bought the land from its lawful owner in compliance with A.S.C.A. § 37.0210 and the other statutes governing the validity of land transfers.

It would be to the advantage of a party who purchases land that has never previously been registered to apply for registration in accordance with both the "Titles" chapter and the "Alienation" chapter. The Certificate of Title issued by the Registrar suggests that defendant’s application was so construed. It does not appear from the evidence before us, however, whether the process of registration met all the statutory requisites for registration of land under A.S.C.A, §§ 37.0101 et seq. Specifically, although it does appear that a notice was ported telling interested persons that they had a right to object to the warranty deed, the last date specified for such objections.was September 8. This was twenty-eight days sooner than the end of the sixty-day period specified by A.S.C.A. § 37.0103 for objections to land registrations.

It may be that the Registrar was relying on the sixty-day notice that had been posted pursuant to Vaimaona’s offer of registration in 1978 — which, together with the subsequent warranty deed from Vaimaona to Tuitasi, would arguably bar any objections to Tuitasi’s title — or it may be thnt a separate notice was posted pursuant to A.S.C.A. § 37.0103 but not introduced into evidence in the present case. Although a number of documents pertaining to registration of the land were introduced by both parties, neither party called the Registrar to testify about whether the documents in evidence constituted his office’s entire file on the land, as is the usual practice in land registration cases. The record does reflect that the Registrar waited until October 20, which was more than sixty days after the application and posting of notices, before registering defendant’s title.

Contrary to another of plaintiffs’ assertions of error, the Registrar’s certificate of title is presumed to be valid and a party asserting its procedural irregularity has the burden of presenting "compelling proof." Ifopo v. Siatu'u, supra, at 28 (1989). "[T]hat a document should be missing from' a file in the Registrar’s Office" — much less from what may have been only the partial contents of such a [81]

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13 Am. Samoa 2d 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foloi-v-tuitasi-amsamoa-1989.