Moananu v. American Samoa Government

11 Am. Samoa 2d 100
CourtHigh Court of American Samoa
DecidedJune 9, 1989
DocketCA No. 133-85
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Am. Samoa 2d 100 (Moananu v. American Samoa Government) 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
Moananu v. American Samoa Government, 11 Am. Samoa 2d 100 (amsamoa 1989).

Opinion

[101]*101On Motion for Approval of Settlement and Attorney Fees:

The proposed settlement of this case has been submitted to the Court because some of the plaintiffs are minors for whom a guardian ad litem has been appointed.

The material facts are as follows:

1) Ave Moananu (hereinafter decedent) died on December 29, 1983, after having been examined twice at LBJ Tropical Medical Center, a facility owned and operated by defendant American Samoa Government, apparently with no diagnosis of serious illness.

2) Shortly thereafter Mr. Kelemete Moananu, the husband of decedent, retained attorney Asaua Fuimaono to submit a claim against the Government.

3) On March 6, 1984, Attorney Fuimaono wrote a letter to the Attorney General's Office alleging that the hospital had committed "malpractice and negligence" and asking that the letter be "considered] . . . formal notice in submitting [the] claim."

4) On April 13, 1984, the Attorney General's office requested further information regarding the claim, including the identity of the allegedly negligent employees and the amount of the claim.

5) On May 2, 1984, attorney Fuimaono responded with some of the requested information. He said that "[t]he exact amount, of the claim has not yet been finalised. Suffice to say it may run into several millions."

6) On September 13, 1984, the Attorney. General's office denied the claim.

7) On October 2, 1984, attorney Fuimaono responded with a brief letter to the effect that he would "see you in court."

8) On December 4, 1985, a complaint was filed. The named attorneys were Mr. Fuimaono and by one Dennis W. Potts. Each was listed as "Attorney for Plaintiffs." Mr. Fuimaono signed for Mr. Potts.

[102]*1029) The complaint' identifies Mr. Potts is "a law corporation" in Honolulu, Hawaii. Neither at the time of filing the complaint nor at any other time did Mr. Potts seek admission pro hac vice to the American Samoa Bar Association, as is required by High Court Rule 145.

10) An application for the appointment of Mr. Moananu as personal representative of the estates of the decedent and of her minor children was filed along with the complaint. The application was granted.

11) On April 9, 1986, some months after the Government had filed its answer, Mr. Fuimaono filed an ex parte motion to amend the complaint. One object of the proposed amendment was to add Taula Lopeti, the father of the decedent, as a plaintiff.

12) On April 10, 1986, Mr. Fuimaono filed another motion to amend the complaint, this time with notice to the other party. The motion was granted without objection.

13) The government then filed a motion to dismiss and for partial judgment on the pleadings. Among the grounds for this motion were that some parts of plaintiffs' claim had not been made to the Government within the time limit prescribed by the Government Tort Liability Act (GTLA), and that Mr. Potts had not been admitted to practice law in American Samoa. The motion was heard on June 6, 1989, and was taken under advisement. On June 9, as had been instructed by the Court at the June 6 hearing, Mr. Fuimaono filed a memorandum in opposition to"the motion. This memorandum stated,' inter alia, that "Mr. Potts . . . will apply to be admitted on a pro-hac-vice as soon as it is practicable."

14) The Court partly granted and partly denied the Government's motion. Among the parts of the motion that were granted was the demand for dismissal of some of plaintiffs' claims due to failure to comply with the GTLA.

15) Plaintiffs then made a motion for reconsideration of the partial dismissal. The motion was denied.

16) There then ensued a period during which attorney Fuimaono attempted simultaneously to [103]*103pursue an appeal from the partial dismissal and to seek essentially the same relief by means of a second amended complaint in the present action. The trial court took the position that the appeal had divested it of jurisdiction to consider the motion to amend the complaint. Eventually plaintiffs moved to dismiss their appeal and the second amended complaint was filed.

17) The Government then moved again to dismiss, or in the alternative to strike parties. Plaintiffs filed a memorandum in opposition. The motion to dismiss Kelemete Moananu's claims against the Government was granted, "based upon claimant's failure to state a sum certain in his claim" within the applicable time period. Decision and Order at 4 (November 11, 1986) . The Court did not dismiss the claims against the individual employees, but did dismiss Taula Lopeti, who had died, as a party plaintiff. The Court also noted that a tort claim against the Government might still be asserted on behalf of the minor children, since the claims of minors might not be barred by the statute of limitations.

18) Both sides moved for reconsideration. The motions were denied. The Court noted that although claimant had attempted to proceed under the GTLA, he had "botched it up so completely that the Government is now out of the case." Order at 3 (Dec. 19, 1986).

19) In December 1986 or January 1987 attorney Fuimaono sent interrogatories to defendants. These were answered.

20) On November 12, 1987, plaintiff moved to set a trial date. This motion was later withdrawn.

21) On December 14, 1988, the present motion was filed. The motion was heard on January 19, 1989. Counsel for the Government pointed out to the Court that "one or more of the Plaintiffs may have entered into an attorneys fee arrangement with counsel other than their attorney of record and that such arrangement may provide for fees in excess of those [i.e., 20 per cent of any settlement in an action against the Government] prescribed by 43.1213 ASCA. Such fee arrangement may also have provided for a partial assignment of Plaintiffs' cause of action." The attorney in question was Mr. Potts, who, as the Court learned [104]*104at the hearing, had not been given actual notice of the motion to set attorney fees. The Court therefore directed that attorney Fuimaono notify Mr. Potts of the motion.

22)On April 4, 1989, attorney Fuimaono renewed the motion to allocate attorney fees. He proposed the following allocation:

Amount of settlement --- $ 25,000.00
Less costs advanced by Dennis Potts --- 2,128.56
Adjusted amount of recovery --- 22,871.44
Amount due Moananu
(80% X $22,871.44) --- 18,297.15
Attorneys fees due to Dennis Potts and Asaua Fuimaono --- 4,574.29
Distribution of Moananu family be as follows ---
Alofa'atasi Logoialii — 2,300.00
Maiu'u Toilolo --- . 2,200.00
Fa'apopo Moananu --- 2,500.00
Taula Ropeti --- 1,000.00
Kelemete Moananu --- 10,297.03

23) The motion was heard on April 21. Attorney Fuimaono informed the Court that he and Mr. Potts had agreed to a division (55% for Potts, 45% for Fuimaono) of the proposed attorney fee.

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