Lago v. Mageo

4 Am. Samoa 287
CourtHigh Court of American Samoa
DecidedOctober 12, 1962
DocketNo. 25-1962
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Am. Samoa 287 (Lago v. Mageo) 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
Lago v. Mageo, 4 Am. Samoa 287 (amsamoa 1962).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

MORROW, Chief Justice.

Mageo filed his application with the Registrar of Titles to have land described as Fusi in Pago Pago registered as the communal family land of the Mageo Family. The application was accompanied by a survey of the land proposed to be registered.

Lago filed an objection to the proposed registration claiming that Fusi was the communal family land of the Yaivao Family of Pago Pago. Lago was a former holder of the Vaivao title. Fuga Selega likewise filed an objection to the proposed registration claiming that Fusi was the communal family land of the Fuga Family, and Pogai and Faafia also filed an objection claiming that Fusi was the communal family land of the Taito Family. The Government of American Samoa, acting by its Attorney General, filed a petition of intervention in which it was claimed that the title to Fusi was in the Government of American Samoa. We have a case, therefore, in which each of five different parties claims to own the same piece of land in its entirety.

Pogai and Faafia are members of the Taito Family. This family has no matai at the present time, its last matai having died some years ago. His successor in title has not yet been chosen.

At the hearing it appeared that Fusi is a tract of land lying at the headwaters of Pago Pago Bay. The paved [291]*291public highway running around the Bay cuts it in two. Only the part of Fusi lying on the seaside of the highway was included in the survey accompanying Mageo’s application to register, and it is that part only that will be considered for registration.

Hereinafter by Fusi we mean that part of it lying seaward of the highway.

Prior to the hearing the Court viewed Fusi in the presence of all parties including the Attorney General representing the Government of American Samoa.

On September 3, 1900, Commander B. F. Tilley, then Commandant of the U.S. Naval Station, Tutuila, issued “An Ordinance Relating to a Public Highway in Pago Pago” by the terms of which land for a public highway from “Blunt’s Point on the southern side of Pago Pago Harbor extending therefrom towards Observatory Point and around .the Harbor to ‘Breaker’s Point’ on the northern side of said Harbor, along the shore at high-water mark, of a uniform width of fifteen feet distant inland from said shore, and the area of land included in said description is hereby condemned and appropriated for public uses.” This ordinance numbered 15 provided for compensation for the land taken by the Government, claims for compensation to be made within three months from September 3, 1900. On the same day (Sept. 3, 1900) the Commandant issued a “Regulation Concerning the Public Road of Pago Pago as Defined in Ordinance No. 15 of the United States Naval Station, Tutuila,” reading as follows:

“1. It shall be unlawful for any person or persons to erect any fence, wharf, boat house, building’ or other structure whatsoever to seaward of the Public Highway or Road running along high-water mark of the Harbor of Pago Pago as described in Section I of the Ordinance relating to a Public Highway in Pago Pago being number 15 of 1900, without special permission from the Commandant of the United States Naval Station, Tutuila; which permission may or may not be granted upon application of any person [292]*292who must lay before Commandant a written application with plans of any wharf, building or other structure intended to be erected.
“2. Any wharf, fence, building or other structure erected in contravention of this regulation must be removed upon the order of the Commandant at the expense of the person erecting or causing to be erected the same.
“3. Any contravention of this regulation will be punished with a fine not exceeding two hundred dollars exclusive of all costs incurred in the removal of any buildings, wharves or other structures erected contrary to the provisions of this Regulation.
“4. This Regulation shall take effect from and after the date of its publication.
“Published and Exhibited at the Public Office of the Commandant on this third day of September in the year 1900 A.D.
“B. F. TILLEY, Commander, U.S.N. Commandant United States Naval Station, Tutuila.”

This regulation was numbered 15. Section 1291 of the Code of American Samoa, 1949, is derived from Ordinance No. 15 and Regulation No. 16.

It will be noted that by Ordinance 15 the road was to be “of a uniform width of fifteen feet” and it was to be “distant inland from” the shore. It will also be noted that the road was to run “along high-water mark of the Harbor of Pago Pago.”

Black’s Law Dictionary, 4th Ed., defines “along” as “Lengthwise of, implying motion at or near, distinguished from across.” And the Supreme Court of Wisconsin in Misolai v. Wisconsin Power & Light Co., 227 Wis. 83, 277 N.W. 674, 678, said that “Where used in connection with highways along streams, it (the word ‘along’) means within reasonable distance of streams.”

In Stahr v. Carter, 116 Iowa 380, 90 N.W. 64, 65, the Supreme Court of Iowa in construing a statute which authorized the board of supervisors on its own motion to establish a highway along a stream, when it could avoid [293]*293bridging such stream, said, “The word ‘along’ has a somewhat elastic meaning, even when used in its most technical sense, 1 Cent. Die. As used in this statute, it is evidently not to be construed as meaning on the immediate bank of a stream; for such a narrow view of the intent of the legislature would in the majority of cases deprive the statute of all validity and make it a dead and useless part of the law. It should be liberally construed, to carry out its clearly expressed purpose of avoiding expensive bridging; and it is evident that if a highway cannot be established close to the stream and avoid this difficulty, it may be established within a reasonable distance thereof (emphasis ours), if in the vicinity of the stream and still be within the spirit and intent of the statute. Railroad Co. v. Mead, 90 Pa. 454; Pratt v. Railroad Co., 42 No. 505.

We think that “along high-water mark of the Harbor of Pago Pago” in Ordinance No. 15 meant and should be construed to mean within a reasonable distance from the high-water mark, and this particularly in view of the fact that the road was to be “distant inland from” the shore.

Webster’s International Dictionary (2nd Ed.) defines “distant” as meaning “separated; having an intervening-space; at a distance; away. Separated by an interval or by intervals of greater or less regularity.” It is very clear that the road was not to adjoin the shore, but that there was to be land between the road and the shore.

It would be highly impractical to build a highway at an equal distance from the shore at all points. To do so would require the road to follow exactly the windings or curves of the shore. We have indicated that “along the high-water mark” in Ordinance No. 15 meant a reasonable distance from the shore. What would be a reasonable distance at one point might not be a reasonable distance at another point. While the width of the road was set at 15 feet in the [294]

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Bluebook (online)
4 Am. Samoa 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lago-v-mageo-amsamoa-1962.