In re the Registration of the Matai Title "Fagaima"

4 Am. Samoa 83
CourtHigh Court of American Samoa
DecidedFebruary 2, 1973
DocketNo. 1264-1972
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Am. Samoa 83 (In re the Registration of the Matai Title "Fagaima") 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
In re the Registration of the Matai Title "Fagaima", 4 Am. Samoa 83 (amsamoa 1973).

Opinion

This action concerns the registration of the matai title Fagaima of the village of Tafuna, Tualauta County, Tutuila, American Samoa. Salevai Ah Hing filed her claim with the office of the Territorial Registrar on January 17, 1972. Palepa M. Seui filed her claim on February 25, 1972. Afatia F. Tapu filed his claim on March 16, 1972. Leauma Maluia filed his claim on March 16, 1972. Milovale Solaita filed his claim on March 21, 1972. Vaatofu Tuiaana filed her claim on March 21, 1972. During the Pre-Trial Conference held on May 22, 1972, claimants Vaatofu Tuiaana and Palepa Seui both moved the Court to withdraw their respective claims. The Court granted the motions and both Vaatofu Tuiaana and Palepa Seui ceased to be parties in this case.

Each of the claimants, with exception of Afatia, filed a petition signed by 25 persons purported to be blood members of the Fagaima family supporting his or her claim as required under Section 6.0104 of the Revised Code of American Samoa. Afatia filed a claim with only 17 'signatures. His claim, however, was accompanied by an affidavit indicating that his family does not have a sufficient number of members qualified to support his claim. (Sec. 6^0104 R.C.A.S.)

[85]*85Section 6.0101 of the Revised Code of American Samoa sets out the basic qualifications which a person must have to be eligible to succeed to a matai title. It is clearly established from the evidence that, under this section, each of the four claimants is eligible to be registered as the holder of a matai title.

At the outset of the trial, Ivi S. Pele, counsel for Afatia, and Pita Sunia, counsel for Milovale, moved this Court to disqualify claimant Leauma Maluia on the basis that he does not meet the requirements under Sections 6.0112 and 6.0113 of the Revised Code of American Samoa. After a review of the files and the relevant case law in the area, this Court makes the following ruling:

I

The law requires that a claimant seeking to register for, or object to, a matai title be an actual bona fide resident of American Samoa (see Section 6.0112 R.C.A.S.).1 Thus the issue which this Court must resolve here is the construction of the term “actual bona fide resident” as used in the above mentioned Code Section.

II

The word “residence” is most often defined as “a place of abode; the abiding or dwelling in a place for some continuance of time.” See Cincinnati, H. & D. R. Co. v. Ives et al., 3 NYS 895 (1902). “Residence” like most other words may have different meanings dependent upon the context in which it occurs and the result designed to be accomplished by its use. It is often employed in common speech to express the same idea as to live, dwell, abide, inhabit or possess a domicile. Martin v. Gardener, 134 NE 950, 954 (1902). [86]*86This Court finds the definition of “actual residence” contained in City of Marlborough v. City of Lynn, 176 NE 215 (1931), i.e., “the personal presence in a place ... or a residence existing in truth,” to apply in the case at bar. In other words, the word “residence” imports something of expected performance in way of personal presence, and signifies intended continuance as distinguished from speedy change, and the word “actual”, imports reality as distinguished from form, method, conjecture or surmise, and is the antonym of constructive, speculative or fictitious. Claimant, Leauma Maluia, conceded that he has lived in Los Angeles for the past 15 years; which, we think, negates a finding of actual residence for the prescribed period; therefore, he is, according to statute, ineligible as a claimant to the title.

The argument brought forth by Leauma Maluia, through his counsel, Puleleiite Túfele, is that he should be allowed to contest the title, because he falls within one of the exceptions to Sec. 6.0112 as set out according to R.C.A.S. Sec. 6.0113.2 This Court questions the sincerity and good intentions of the claimant. The records show that claimant Leauma Maluia filed a registration form for the matai title and his residence papers on the very same day, 59 days after the Fagaima title was offered for registration by Salevai Ah Hing. It is the opinion of this Court that in the light of the fact that Leauma Maluia has been living in Los Angeles for the past fifteen years and during that lengthy period of time failed to register in compliance with the registration require[87]*87ments, this Court has much reason to doubt the true intent of the claimant’s motives. “Motives are immaterial except they indicate intention.” See Foote v. Foote, 77 NYS2d 60 (1948). The claimant’s belated move to register for the Fagaima title and to file his residency papers, which unusually coincides with the last possible day, is a transparent effort to qualify for that which he is otherwise ineligible.

IV

It is important that this Court preserve the FaaSamoa and protect the rights of those eligible under Title VI of the Code of American Samoa to apply for, or object to, a matai title.

It is therefore the ruling of this Court, in view of all the evidence and authority presented, to grant the motion to disqualify claimant Leauma Maluia from contesting the Fagaima title.

Section 6.0107 of the Revised Code of American Samoa sets out the considerations which shall guide the Court in determining which of the opposing claimants shall be registered as the holder of the Fagaima title----It reads as follows:

CONSIDERATION GIVEN BY THE COURT: In the trial of matai title cases, the High Court shall be guided by the following considerations, in the priority listed:

First: The best hereditary right in which the male and female descendants shall be equal in families where this has been customary, otherwise the male descendant shall prevail over the female.
Second: The wish of the majority or plurality of those clans of the family as customary in that family.
Third: The forcefulness, character, personality, and knowledge of Samoan customs.
Fourth: The value of the holder of the matai title to the family, the village, and the country.

[88]*88On the issue of hereditary right, each of the three remaining claimants filed a pedigree and testified before the Court as to their respective right to the title Fagaima. Salevai Ah Hing claims that she is the daughter of Aititio the son of Fagaima Tuli, and therefore she has one-fourth Fagaima blood. Afatia claims that he is the son of Aifai, the daughter of Fagaima Tuli, and he has one-fourth Fagaima blood. Milovale claims that he is the son of Fagaima Tulafono who recently resigned from holding the Fagaima title; and he therefore has one-half Fagaima blood. Inasmuch as Milovale has one-half Fagaima blood, it follows then, that he prevails over both Salevai and Afatia. Salevai and Afatia, each having one-fourth Fagaima blood, are on a parity. The evidence also shows that Salevai and Afatia are members of the same clan, and in the absence of any testimony or evidence to indicate that male and female descendants of the Fagaima family are equal in the matter of the selection of a holder for the title (see Section 6.0107), we must conclude that Afatia, being the male descendant, prevails over Salevai, and thus ranks second on this issue, while Salevai, being the female descendant, ranks third.

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Related

Stredelman v. City of Cincinnati
176 N.E. 215 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1931)
Foote v. Foote
192 Misc. 270 (New York Supreme Court, 1948)
Cincinnati, H. & D. R. Co. v. Ives
3 N.Y.S. 895 (New York Supreme Court, 1889)

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4 Am. Samoa 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-registration-of-the-matai-title-fagaima-amsamoa-1973.