McMoore v. Matu'u

7 Am. Samoa 3d 214
CourtHigh Court of American Samoa
DecidedJanuary 22, 2003
DocketLT No. 05-01
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Am. Samoa 3d 214 (McMoore v. Matu'u) 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
McMoore v. Matu'u, 7 Am. Samoa 3d 214 (amsamoa 2003).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

This controversy concerns the validity of an agreement executed by claimant Matu'u Timo (“Matu'u”), on behalf of the Matu'u family of Leone, separating as personal property a residential building to be constructed and owned by claimant Motuiliu Vesi Matu'u (“Motuiliu”) on the family’s underlying communal land, pursuant to A.S.C.A. §§ 37.1501-.1506. The Court holds that the separation agreement is legally valid.

Discussion

A. The Separation Agreement Proceedings

Matu'u and Motuiliu signed the separation agreement on October 30, 2000. It was presented to the Territorial Registrar, who on November 1, 2000, issued the notice of the proposed registration. In accordance with A.S.C.A. § 37.1504, the notice was posted at two public places in the Village of Leone and at the courthouse in the Village of Fagatogo for 30 days. The notice was also published in the Samoa News, a newspaper of general circulation in American Samoa, on November 2 and 16, 2000.

During the notice period, Mataivai McMoore (“Mataivai”), Peao Nu'u Asiata (“Peao”), Maliarosa Hunkin (“Maliarosa”), Simeamamao Tagi (“Simeamamao”), Niu Sale (“Niu”), Anasetasia Iakapopo (“Anasetasia”), and Matalena A. Ilaoa (“Matalena”) (collectively “the objectors”) objected to the registration. On December 6, 2000, the Registrar referred the controversy to the Secretary of Samoan Affairs for dispute resolution proceedings under A.S.C.A. § 43.0302. The Secretary issued the jurisdictional certificate of irreconcilable dispute on May 3, 2001, and the Registrar referred the matter to this Court for judicial resolution on May 30, 2001.

Apparently, the objectors initially focused on their claim to own the land at issue. At trial, however, they conceded that the land was communal land, but they maintained that the land is the communal land of both the Leoso and Matu'u families of Leone, and the holder of the Leoso title, as [216]*216the sa 'o (“senior chief’ or “head chief’) of the extended Leoso family, was the proper person having pule (“power” or “authority”) over the land for purposes of entering the contested separation agreement. They also took the position that even if Matu'u had the pule, he abused his authority by not first consulting with them as family members and making an arbitrary and capricious decision.

B. The Land Occupants and Proposed Structure Location

The land underlying and adjacent to the proposed separated structure (“the land”) is located in Leone. The particular occupants relevant to the issues include Maliarosa, Simeamamao, Niu, and Anasetasia among the objectors. Vaiausia Matu'u (“Vaiausia”), who is Matu'u’s brother and Motuiliu’s father, also lives there. Ben Aigamaua (“Ben”) leases a house on the land.

Matu'u’s and Motuiliu’s plan situates the proposed separated structure within a four-sided plot of the land having three sides of 68.10 feet each and one side of 62.12 feet. Located adjacent to this plot are the houses of Vaiausia on the northerly side, Simeamamao on the easterly side, Anasetasia and Maliarosa, with a vehicle repair shop in between, on the southerly side, and Ben on the westerly side. The distance between the easterly and westerly side houses of Simeamamao and Ben is approximately 79 feet. The distance along a northwesterly/southeasterly line between the northerly side house of Vaiausia and the easterly side house of Simeamamoa’s house is approximately 44 feet. A 10-foot dirt access road to Maliarosa’s house and the repair shop on the southerly side runs in the area between the houses of Vaiausia and Simeamamao. The actual dimensions of the proposed house within the four-sided plot are not in evidence.

C. Pule over the Land

Only the sa 'o of the family owning communal land has the pule to enter an agreement pertaining to ownership of a structure on and separated from such land. A.S.C.A. § 37.1502(a).

In this connection, the parties introduced considerable evidence on the ownership of the land and the cognizant sa 'o, as well as their respective genealogies. The evidence raised factual conflicts. For example, Matu'u’s side maintains the land is the Matu'u family’s communal land subject to Matu'u’s pule, and the objectors maintain that the land is the communal land of both the Leoso and Matu'u families subject to the Leoso titleholder’s superior pule. Further, each side asserts that while its members are true blood members of the Matu'u family, the other side’s members lack this attribute. However, though findings on these and similar facts in dispute may be significant for the resolution of other [217]*217issues, it is unnecessary to resolve them to determine the issues in this action.

The Matu'u family is a branch of the extended Leoso family. The holder of the Leoso title is the sa 'o of the extended family. However, the parties agree, or at least do not dispute, that without a holder of the presently vacant Leoso title, the holder of the Matu'u title has unquestionable pule over the land. The objectors concede that the holder of the Atofau title, another lesser title in the Leoso family, properly authorized Vaiausia to locate on the land. For purposes of this action, we find that the land is the Matu'u family’s communal land and that as the holder of the Matu'u family’s sa "o title, Matu'u had the pule to create the separation agreement at issue.

We further find that regardless of the blood unity issues raised by both sides, both Matu'u and Motuiliu, on one hand, and the objectors, on the other hand, are members of the Matu'u family. The objectors are descendants of a Catholic catechist couple who migrated from (Western) Samoa to American Samoa in the early 1900s. Whether it was under the pule of the holder of the Matu'u title or the Leoso title at the time, they or their daughter Malia Aloisia, after her marriage to Niu Aumoeualogo, permitted them to reside on and develop the land, at least since the 1930s. This customary assignment of communal land has continued, reaffirmed by subsequent holders of the Matu'u title, including Matu'u, to tiie present day for the objectors’ benefit. The objectors are recognized and accepted Matu'u family members.

Matu'u was bom on the land, apparently in Maliarosa’s house. Even if Matu'u Petelo, one of the previous Matu'u titleholders of record, and his wife Emelina Selesitina, another daughter of the catechist couple, adopted Matu'u’s father, Matu'u Timo, Sr., the title successor to Matu'u Petelo, as the objectors’ contend, Matu'u currently holds the Matu'u title. He, along with his brother Vaiausia, who resides on the land, and Motuiliu, Vaisausia’s son, who plans to live in his own house there, are also recognized and accepted Matu'u family members.

Matu'u clearly had pule to enter the separation agreement with Motuiliu.

D. Matu'u’s Decision Was Reasonable

A sa 'o is likened to a trustee of a family’s communal land, and in that capacity, he should ordinarily consult with the family, particularly with those members affected, before making any major decision impacting communal land uses. See Gi v. Temu, 11 A.S.R.2d 137, 141-42 (Land & Titles Div. 1989); Talili v. Satele, 4 A.S.R.2d 23, 27-28 (Land & Titles Div. 1987); Fairholt v. Aulava, 1 A.S.R.2d 73, 78 (Land & Titles Div. 1983).

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Bluebook (online)
7 Am. Samoa 3d 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmoore-v-matuu-amsamoa-2003.