Pen v. Lavata'i

25 Am. Samoa 2d 164
CourtHigh Court of American Samoa
DecidedMarch 21, 1994
DocketLT No. 61-92
StatusPublished

This text of 25 Am. Samoa 2d 164 (Pen v. Lavata'i) 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
Pen v. Lavata'i, 25 Am. Samoa 2d 164 (amsamoa 1994).

Opinion

Opinion and Order:

Plaintiff Ioelu F.C. Pen seeks a permanent injunction against the defendant Faima Lavata'i and his son Malakai, alca Mel, Lavata'i, to enjoin them from interfering with his use and enjoyment of a certain parcel of land leased to him by the late Lavata'i Natia, then senior matai of the Lavata'i family of Nu'uuli. The lease agreement, dated July 6, 1989, stipulates a term of 55 years and relates to an area approximating .389 of an acre of Lavata‘i communal land known as "Lepine." The agreement also provides for an initial monthly rental of $150 during the first year of the lease and $200 per month for the remainder of the lease.1 The lease agreement was presented to and approved by Acting Governor Galea‘1 Poumele on October 3, 1989, pursuant to A.S.C.A. § 37.0221.2

Plaintiff is a not a member of the Lavata'i family; the defendants are. Plaintiff claims that he filed suit after several encounters with defendants’ attempts to interfere with his business activities on the leased site. On the other hand, Faima Lavata'i, a brother of the late senior matai, claims that the area leased to plaintiff constitutes a part of Lepine which has been assigned to him for his use and livelihood in accordance with custom. Defendants also charge that plaintiff’s use of the land for furniture making has been both noxious and noisome and often undertaken without regard to time of day. Malakai Lavatafi complained on the stand about strong fumes emanating from plaintiff’s workshop and his noisy machinery’s being particularly bothersome in the early hours of the morning and even on Sundays.

After hearing the evidence, the court visited the location of the disputed site. Although plaintiff claimed that Faima was not on Lepine when he first went onto the land in 1983, we are satisfied that the leased area had [166]*166already been assigned to Faima, for the following reasons: Faima testified that he first entered this part of Lepine prior to the Second World War and established extensive cultivations with which he served the matai and family. He further testified that he then built a number of houses there. Faima’s claim to extended use and occupation was corroborated by Valasi Gaisoa, his niece and daughter of the late Lavata’i Natia. From our visual inspection of the disputed site, we noted that the area is surrounded by the homes of Faima and his immediate family, together with a garage which, according to the testimony, was located on Lepine at Faima’s instance. Visual inspection also supported Faima’s testimony about his having once bulldozed and enlarged the general area, from the direction of the main highway towards the base of mountain inland. He additionally submitted corroborating government job orders, evidencing his hire of heavy equipment in 1980 for use on a site referred to as "Lepine," together with building permits which related to his subsequent building of a number of "European"-type housing throughout the 1980s on Lepine. At the same time, plaintiff conceded that in the process of his setting up his business yard on Lepine, he had to clear certain subsistence crops that were growing on the site. These were crops that Faima had claimed were his. Finally, the court could not help but notice on its site-visit that Faima’s settled occupation was very distinct from the similarly settled occupation to the west of Tuinei Lavata'i, another of Faima’s brothers, and Lavata'i Natia.

Plaintiff, on the other hand, was recently brought onto the site by Tuinei Lavata'i. He acquired the extended leasehold from the senior matai sometime shortly thereafter. Why the senior matai executed such a lease in favor of a non-family member, in derogation of a family member’s claim, was not made clear on the evidence. Like the senior matai, Tuinei Siaki has also since passed away. All that we could gather from the evidence was that plaintiff, as he had testified, had sought out the lease from the senior matai in order to "secure his future." Faima, on the other hand, testified that the matter of plaintiff’s presence on the land and his dealings with Tuinei Siaki was earlier brought up at a family meeting presided by the senior matai. At this meeting, he expressed his objection with plaintiff’s presence and he pleaded with the matai to relocate plaintiff to Tuinei’s side of the property, since it was the latter who had invited plaintiff onto the land.

Subsequent to that family meeting, a lease was executed and presented for gubernatorial approval, all without Faima’s knowledge or consent. He, as well as other family members, only learned of the existence of a lease when these proceedings arose.

[167]*167The evidence further revealed that certain third parties, who were not before the court, took mortgage interests on the lease as collateral for certain loans made to plaintiff. Amerika Samoa Bank apparently gave plaintiff a secured loan on October 5, 1989, in the amount of $30,000.00, as evidenced by plaintiff’s mortgage instrument filed with the Territorial Registrar on October 10, 1989, and recorded in Native Leases, Volume 4 at pages 167-68. The United States Small Business Administration subsequently loaned plaintiff the sum of $174,400.00, as evidenced by plaintiff’s mortgage instrument dated October 19,1992, and received by the Territorial Registrar’s Office on October 23, 1992.

DISCUSSION

Plaintiff’s principal argument is that he has a valid and enforceable lease. He contends that the lease was within the matai’s exclusive competence, and he cites Vaimaona v. Tuitasi, 13 A.S.R.2d 76 (Land & Titles Div. 1989) (motion for new trial denied), aff’g 12 A.S.R.2d 68 (Land & Titles Div. 1989), aff’d 18 A.S.R.2d 88 (App. Div. 1991), for the proposition that "the Samoan custom that major family decisions [by the sa ‘o (senior matai)] should be made with consultation with the whole family is not among those incorporated into statutory restrictions on the otherwise plenary powers of a ’sa‘o’ over family lands." Plaintiff’s Post Trial Brief, at 2 (emphasis in original). He further argues that "the offer to register the [leasehold] instrument does not require ’Notice’ of any sort • by the statutes of American Samoa." Id. (emphasis in original). As we understand plaintiff’s contention, it is that the Samoan custom requiring a matai to consult with his family before making any major decisions concerning family lands was not a substantive requirement of the law which regulates the leasing of communal lands. Furthermore, it is argued, the lease in question was given favorable recommendation by the Land Commission and then duly approved by the Governor in accordance with applicable statutes; these applicable statutes did not require prior notice of this process to family members.

Defendants, on the other hand, contend that the subject lease is invalid because it was, among other things, entered into without their knowledge and approval. Citing Fairholt v. Aulava, 1 A.S.R.2d 73, 74 (Land & Titles Div. 1983), defendants claim that their right to family lands, as Lavata'i family members, is a property right protected by both the United States and American Samoa Constitutions.

The issue in this case is not simply the question of whether or not a matai can enter into a lease of communal land without family [168]*168consultation. Instead, the issue before us is whether the senior matai can effectively lease family lands to a third party and thereby effectively disseise a family member from use of family land assigned to him. After all, a matai’s authority or pule

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Am. Samoa 2d 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pen-v-lavatai-amsamoa-1994.