Nouata of Nu'uuli v. Pasene of Nu'uuli

1 Am. Samoa 2d 25
CourtHigh Court of American Samoa
DecidedJuly 11, 1980
DocketAP No. 07-79
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Am. Samoa 2d 25 (Nouata of Nu'uuli v. Pasene of Nu'uuli) 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
Nouata of Nu'uuli v. Pasene of Nu'uuli, 1 Am. Samoa 2d 25 (amsamoa 1980).

Opinion

KENNEDY, Acting Associate Justce.

This appeal from the Trial Division requires us to decide whpt pefief, if any, is available to appellants, who seek to set aside a judgment thqt is now nearly fifty years old. We affirm the ruling of the Trial Division* having concluded that the. movants below (appellants here) advance nq tjqpary upon which the court may grant relief from the judgment they seek to attqpk in these proceedings. The factual and procedural history of this complicated case was well stated by Chief Justice Miyamoto in a very thorough opinion rendered in the Trial Division, and in part I pf our [26]*26opinion we, borrow from that recitation. Our reasons for holding that the appellants are not entitled to relief differ somewhat from those adopted by the Trial Division, and we explain those conclusions further below.

FACTS AND PRIOR PROCEEDINGS

Chief Justice Miyamoto accurately described the history of this case as follows:

"On June 12, 1978, [movant] Tavete M. Puailoa, senior matai of the Puailoa family of Nu'uuli, Tutuila, American Samoa, filed a motion for new trial or, in the alternative, to set aside the judgment in the case Nouata of Nu'uuli v. Pasene of Nu'uuli, LT No. 18-1930 (1931). Judgment had been announced June 9, 1931, following a trial on that date. [The movant is the successor in interest of plaintiff, one Nouata, and his motion for post-trial relief is based on] Article I, sections 2 and 3 of the Revised Constitution of American Samoa, 1 ASC 2, 5 ASC 412(b), 11 ASC 801(a), 11 ASC 5122(1), Rule 60(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and Rule 20, Rules of the High Court of American Samoa. The relief requested would not be extraordinary except that 47 years elapsed between the . filing of the judgment and the filing of the motion for new trial or other relief.

"The underlying dispute involves the ownership of approximately 360 acres of land known as Malaeimi in the village of Mapusaga, Tutuila, American Samoa. A portion of Malaeimi was under the control, or pule, of Puailoa Vaiuli, the predecessor in interest of the original and present plaintiffs in this action, at the time of his death in 1929. That Puailoa Vaiuli had an interest in at least part of Malaeimi was established in a series of proceedings including a hearing before the Land Commission in Apia, Western Samoa and several cases heard in the High Court of American Samoa. In Taisi v. Puailoa, 1 ASR 194, 195 (1909), we held that Puailoa's "claim of ownership to land Malaeimi arises from the undisputed overlordship of the name Puailoa over all Malaeimi not controlled by Fanene..."

"Puailoa Vaiuli leased part of Malaeimi to the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints in 1908 for a term of 40 years, and much of the controversy surrounds this lease. Puailoa Vaiuli died in 1929, during the term of the lease, leaving the Puailoa family without a senior matai, or chief. In Samoan custom, it is the matai who controls communal lands of the family. Aumavae v. Moefaauo, 1 ASR 38 (1902). Pasene, original respondent in this action, claimed the matai title Puailoa and registered the title with the Secretary of Native Affairs, as required by law. Nouata, original petitioner herein, filed his objection to [Pasene's] registration. The registration of a matai title and the filing of an objection thereto constituted the pleadings, and an action was brought upon this issue in the High Court of American Samoa in 1930.

"In the meantime, before the matai title case could be brought to trial, the Mormon Church, lessee of land Malaeimi, had asked the Secretary of Native Affairs for advice as to who was entitled to rent payments following the death of Puailoa Vaiuli. Apparently, both Salataima Puailoa, the widow of Vaiuli, and other members of Puailoa Vaiuli's family were claiming’ the right to the payments. The Secretary of Native Affairs advised that the payments be made to the Secretary until such time as the High Court could resolve the question.

"No pleadings concerning the issue of ownership of land Malaeimi or entitlement to payments from the lease of this land were filed, nor was Salataima Puailoa, one of the claimants of the land, joined in the action. Nouata v. Pasene was seemingly a dispute over succession to the matai title Puailoa. However, as Chief Justice Wood later wrote in a memorandum to [27]*27Governor G.S. Lincoln, although it was primarily a matai title case, "it seemed to the court for the best interest of all parties concerned that it be immediately ascertained to whom the rents derived from...Malaeimi should be paid." Plaintiff's Exhibit 19. In the same memorandum, Chief Justice Wood informed the Governor that there had been no pleading directed to the issue of ownership of land Malaeimi. Nonetheless, Judge Wood advanced the case on the calendar ahead of 25 other cases in order to resolve the dispute over lease payments, of which he presumably had been informed by the Secretary of Native Affairs.

"After trial on June 9, 1931, the.court ruled from the bench that the title Puailoa be awarded to plaintiff Nouata. In addition, the court held as follows, thereby engendering the present dispute.

As to the land Malaeimi, it is also the unanimous decision of the court that that part of Malaeimi that is leased to the Mormon Missionaries is the property of the widow of Puailoa and that she should have, during her life time, the rents.
As to the other lands of Puailoa the court decides that they should be held by Puailoa as the matai of the Puailoa family for the benefit of the whole family. Nouata of Nu'uuli v. Pasene of Nu’uulli, LT No. 18-1930 (1931).

"Following the announcement of judgment, according to the allegation of the present plaintiff, Nouata waited some weeks and then made oral protest to Chief Justice Wood, the presiding justice. Purportedly, "the delay was undertaken so as not to offend the court in the custom of fa'a Samoa [the Samoan way]." Memorandum by Puailoa in Response to Objections against his Motion to Reopen [hereinafter Plaintiff's Reply Brief] at 3; Plaintiff's Exhibit 6. Plaintiff later petitioned the governor of American Samoa to reconsider the court's decision, and apparently sent a letter of protest to a Senator Bingham (not further identified), although no copy of the letter to Senator Bingham is in the record. Nouata sent a second petition to the Governor along with a copy of his letter to the Senator. Plaintiff's Exhibit 6,7,8, and 15.

"The petition to the governor charged that Chief Justice Wood was improperly influenced by Soliai, counsel for plaintiff Nouata, and that Soliai was working in cahoots with Salataima against his own client's interests. Soliai allegedly undermined Nouata's case as to ownership of the land Malaeimi by arranging to call only one witness on Nouata's behalf, the widow Salataima Puailoa, who supported Nouata's claim to the Puailoa title but advanced her own claim to Malaeimi at the same time. According to Nouata's letter to Governor Lincoln, Nouata's family had expressed a preference for the appointment of one Tago S. as their attorney, but Judge Wood instead appointed Soliai and also because the court interpreter's wife was related to Soliai. Furthermore, it is charged, Soliai had received valuable gifts from Salataima.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Am. Samoa 2d 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nouata-of-nuuuli-v-pasene-of-nuuuli-amsamoa-1980.