Rogolifoi v. Rogolifoi

CourtSupreme Court of The Commonwealth of The Northern Mariana Islands
DecidedJune 28, 2024
Docket2023-SCC-0004-CIV
StatusPublished

This text of Rogolifoi v. Rogolifoi (Rogolifoi v. Rogolifoi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of The Commonwealth of The Northern Mariana Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rogolifoi v. Rogolifoi, (N.M. 2024).

Opinion

E-FILED CNMI SUPREME COURT E-filed: Jun 28 2024 03:46PM Clerk Review: Jun 28 2024 03:47PM Filing ID: 73510739 Case No.: 2023-SCC-0004-CIV NoraV Borja

IN THE Supreme Court OF THE

Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands

IN THE ESTATE OF RITA ROGOLIFOI, Plaintiff-Counter-Defendant-Appellant,

v.

IN THE ESTATE OF SILVESTRE ROGOLIFOI, Defendant-Counter-Plaintiff-Appellee.

Supreme Court No. 2023-SCC-0004-CIV

SLIP OPINION

Decided June 28, 2024

CHIEF JUSTICE ALEXANDRO C. CASTRO ASSOCIATE JUSTICE JOHN A. MANGLOÑA ASSOCIATE JUSTICE PERRY B. INOS

Superior Court Civil Action No. 18-0210-CV Judge Pro Tempore Arthur R. Barcinas, Presiding Rogolifoi v. Rogolifoi, 2024 MP 4

MANGLOÑA, J.: ¶1 Appellant Estate of Rita Rogolifoi (“Rita Estate”) contests the trial court’s order finding that a 1953 Title Determination erroneously named the Estate of Rita Rogolifoi as the landowner and failed to provide notice to the heirs of her brother Silvestre Rogolifoi (“Silvestre”). For the following reasons, we REVERSE and REMAND to the lower court to enter judgment in favor of Rita Estate. I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY ¶2 In February 2018, Antonio Rogolifoi Rasiang (“Rasiang”) filed an appearance in the probate of the estate of Rita Rogolifoi, stating his intention to quiet title to land located in As Mahetog, Saipan. Rasiang claimed that Rita Rogolifoi (“Rita”) inherited her property through her father as trustee for the family, including Rasiang’s grandfather and Rita’s brother, Silvestre. In June 2018, Rita Estate filed a quiet title action against the Estate of Silvestre Rogolifoi (“Silvestre Estate”), arguing that the statute of limitations, administrative res judicata, and laches all barred Silvestre Estate’s claims. Silvestre Estate counter- claimed ownership of half the property and damages from a related judgment. ¶3 The disputed property in As Mahetog—Lots 616, 629, and 630—is the subject of Title Determination 667, an October 1953 decision issued by the Saipan District Land Office of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands. The Title Determination states that the As Mahetog properties were “determined as the property of the heirs of Rita Rogolifoi, represented by Dolores Saralu as trustee.” Ex. O at 1. The Title Determination specifies that the decision was made “after due public notice and private notice to all parties as of record, and after public hearings at which persons claiming an interest in the land described had the opportunity to be heard.” Id. The Title Determination’s final page is stamped with the number 18W-005300. The parties to this appeal agree that any contemporary supporting documents for the Title Determination have been lost to history. ¶4 The land records file, however, did contain two other written statements. The first was a form Statement of Ownership for the three As Mahetog lots executed by Rita in December 1944. The Statement was written in English and declares that Rita inherited the three lots from her father Pedro Rogolifoi (“Pedro”) in 1886, but does not have title papers for the land. On the signature line is a thumb print, purporting to be Rita’s, with the date December 29, 1944. The Statement was witnessed and the land ownership was verified by Japanese records. The Statement was also sworn to have been read aloud in Chamorro and English before being signed. It is stamped with the number 18W-005314. ¶5 The other document filed with the Title Determination is an undated statement by Dolores Saralu (“Saralu”), Rita’s eldest surviving daughter and the trustee named in the Title Determination. Saralu states that she represents her mother Rita and the “land has been inherited from our mother’s [sic] Rita Rogolifoi.” Ex. N at 1. Saralu continues to state that the land came from the German government, and she acknowledges an exchange of the property falling Rogolifoi v. Rogolifoi, 2024 MP 4

within the US Retention Area for land in Garapan. The two-page document is handwritten, signed by Saralu, and numbered 18W-005305 and 18W-005306. ¶6 In 2003, Rita Estate filed an action to recover the lots identified in the Title Determination that were taken by the Commonwealth. Two years later, the Marianas Public Land Authority sued Rita Estate to quiet title on those lands being leased to commercial enterprises. Rita Estate successfully defended its claim to the As Mahetog property and was awarded damages of over $2 million. MPLA v. Heirs of Rita Rogolifoi, Civ. Act. No. 05-0197A (NMI Super. Ct. May 7, 2009) (Amended Order Granting Prejudgment Interest Rates for Government Taking of Lots 630-1R/W and 630-2R/W). Partial distribution was made to Rita Estate in 2017 following an unsuccessful challenge by a claimed heir of Pedro through Silvestre’s lineage. ¶7 The trial court in the instant quiet title action held an evidentiary hearing in May–June 2019, including the testimony of 8 witnesses. Relevant to this appeal, Francine Agulto (“Agulto”) was called as a factual witness for her role as the title abstractor for the As Mahetog property. Agulto testified that title determination proceedings would include “a notice given out to all the neighbors to show up to the hearing that a certain person or family is claiming the property to be theirs.” Tr. at 302. She stated that personal notice would be given to neighbors and public notice made by posting in a public place. Id. at 303. Agulto further testified that she was not aware of any notice of a title determination being made personally to “a family member or somebody who might potentially have an interest in the property.” Id. at 331. ¶8 Concepcion Togawa (“Togawa”), who appeared both as a factual witness and as an expert witness in land title research, agreed with Agulto that the land claims process included public and private notice that the claim was made by a certain person, but did not know if that process was actually followed for the Rogolifoi Title Determination. Id. at 586, 595, 621, 681. ¶9 Rasiang and Pedro R. Deleon Guerrero (“Guerrero”), both descendants of Silvestre Rogolifoi, testified independently that they grew up traveling to As Mahetog to farm the land with their cousins and family from both branches. Id. at 498, 770. Rasiang testified that no family member ever told him Saralu was the land trustee, while Guerrero testified that many elderly women in the family would give instructions on the care of the As Mahetog land. Id. at 460, 765–9. Guerrero stated that Saralu never excluded any family members from using the property before it became part of the Retention Area and unusable. Id. at 789. Guerrero also testified that he never saw Saralu participate in Silvestre family gatherings. Id. at 795. ¶ 10 Maria Seman Camacho (“Camacho”), Saralu’s granddaughter, testified about the family history she learned from Saralu as a child. Camacho stated that Saralu told her that the family of Silvestre lived on land separate from the As Mahetog properties. Tr. at 851–2. Camacho also stated that her father told her how he and Rita would walk from Garapan to the property to collect crops. Id. at Rogolifoi v. Rogolifoi, 2024 MP 4

840–41. Camacho explained that her grandmother told her the As Mahetog property belonged to Rita and was given to her as a homestead by the German government. Id. at 846. Camacho would visit Saralu, who was living in As Mahetog, with her cousins from Rita’s lineage only. Id. at 867. She further testified that she did not see any of Silvestre’s family on the land while growing up, nor did she hear that they claimed an interest in the land until recent years. Id. at 881–84. ¶ 11 Following numerous motions from both parties over a period of more than three and a half years, the trial court issued an order granting a Judgment on Partial Findings. Ex. F (“Order”) at 20. The court made numerous findings of fact relating to testimony from the evidentiary hearing.

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

Related

Maria Akiyama Aldan v. Ramon Kaipat
794 F.2d 1371 (Ninth Circuit, 1986)
Castro v. United States
500 F.2d 436 (Court of Claims, 1974)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Rogolifoi v. Rogolifoi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogolifoi-v-rogolifoi-nmariana-2024.