Songao v. Commonwealth

4 N. Mar. I. 186, 1994 N. Mar. I. LEXIS 19
CourtSupreme Court of The Commonwealth of The Northern Mariana Islands
DecidedOctober 5, 1994
DocketAppeal No. 93-028; Civil Action No. 90-0165
StatusPublished

This text of 4 N. Mar. I. 186 (Songao v. Commonwealth) 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
Songao v. Commonwealth, 4 N. Mar. I. 186, 1994 N. Mar. I. LEXIS 19 (N.M. 1994).

Opinion

VILLAGOMEZ, Justice:

Diego Songao, Crisencia Burch, Maria Didonato, and Francisco Songao (collectively the “Songaos”), appeal a Superior Court decision remanding a Land Commission determination of ownership issued in favor of the Commonwealth government. The trial court concluded, after review, that: (1) the Land Commission violated the Songaos’ rights to procedural due process, and (2) the Land Commission determination that the Commonwealth government owned the land at issue was not supported by substantial evidence.

The Songaos claim ownership of Lot 3210 in Finagtan, Rota, based on a land exchange between two private individuals. Although the trial court stated that there was "ample testimony that an exchange did occur between Fintano and Francisco,1 whereby the latter received the Finagtan property,” the court decided that “this evidence should not be used to bolster the claims of the [Songaos] in the proceedings before this court.”2 The trial court remanded the matter to the Land Commission for further evidentiary hearings.

ISSUE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW

The Songaos present the substantive issue of whether the trial court erred in failing to find the Songaos owners of Lot 3210. We do not reach this issue, however, because our decision turns on the preliminary procedural question of whether the court erred in remanding the case to the Land Commission.3 Whether the trial court may remand a case to the Land Commission under 2 CMC § 4249 is a question of law which we review de novo.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

During the Japanese occupation of Rota, Francisco Maratita, deceased (“Francisco”), owned a parcel of land in Papa’lada, Rota. At the same time, Fintano Taisacan, deceased (“Fintano”), owned a lot at Finagtan, presently identified as Lot 3210. Based on a purported exchange of these lots, Francisco’s daughter Serafina M. Songao (“Serafina”) filed a claim of ownership of Lot 3210 with the Land Commission.

The Land Commission issued a preliminary determination of ownership to Lot 3210 in favor of Serafina. The Land Commission subsequently reversed that decision and, on October 18, 1989, issued a determination of ownership in favor of the Commonwealth government.

On February 15, 1990, the Songaos, as Serafina’s heirs, filed a complaint to quiet title in Superior Court. The complaint is an appeal from the Land Commission determination pursuant to 2 CMC § 4249, which provides:

Any person who . . . claims an interest. . . and who disagrees with the [Land Commission’s] determination of ownership . . . may file for a review of the determination of ownership by filing a complaint in the [Superior Court] . . . . The complaint shall be in the nature of a quiet title suit.... The complaint shall name as defendants all those persons known to the plaintiff who claim an interest in the land. A determination of ownership shall be upheld if it is supported by substantial evidence found in the record taken as a whole including the record before the Land Commission and such additional evidence as shall be admitted before the [Superior Court].4

The trial court reviewed the evidence upon which the Land Commission based its determination, as well as two affidavits submitted to the court. From this review, the court found “ample” evidence that “an exchange did occur between Fintano and Francisco, whereby the latter [189]*189received the Finagtan property.”5 However, the court ruled that such evidence “should not be used to bolster the claims of the Plaintiffs in the proceedings before [the trial] court.”6 Thus, instead of quieting title in favor of the Songaos, based on the evidence taken as a whole, the trial court vacated the title determination to Lot 3210 and remanded the matter to the Land Commission “with instructions that the Land Commission be required to hold another, public, hearing, consistent with [the court’s decision], for an opportunity to build a substantial documented record.”7

The Songaos timely appealed the decision to remand the case to the Land Commission. They argue that the evidence before the trial court was sufficient to enable entry of judgment in their favor. We hold that the trial court erred by failing to enter judgment in favor of one of the parties, and should not have remanded the case to the Land Commission.

ANALYSIS

Where a statute establishes an administrative adjudicatory scheme, we look to that statute to determine the scope, if any, of judicial review of the agency’s actions.8 Here, the Land Commission Act of 1983 (“Act”)9 creates the Land Commission, charges it with the task of registering all land in the Commonwealth, and provides for judicial review of the Land Commission’s land ownership determinations.

Two CMC § 4249 of the Act governs this appeal. That provision mandates that the Superior Court uphold a determination of ownership which it finds to be supported by substantial evidence “in the record taken as a whole.”10 The record “as a whole” comprises “the record before the Land Commission and such additional evidence as shall be admitted before” the court.11

In the present case, the Superior Court reviewed the evidence on which the Land Commission based its decision, as well as additional evidence consisting of two affidavits. The court found that the Land Commission based its determination of ownership for Lot 3210 on “insufficient” relevant evidence.12

The Act does not expressly preclude the trial court from remanding to the Land Commission where, as here, the record taken as a whole does not support the Land Commission determination. The authority to remand in such instances has been deemed an inherent part of a court’s power under other statutory schemes providing for judicial review of agency action.13 In this case, however, the Act specifically provides that appeals of Land Commission determinations must be brought as quiet title actions, and directs the trial court to review the whole record, including any additional evidence that the court decides to admit. From our analysis of this language and the rest of the Act’s text14 and legislative history which follows, we conclude that the legislature intended: (1) 2 CMC § 4249 of the Act to provide for trial de novo of a Land Commission determination which has been appealed, and (2) where an ownership determination is not supported by substantial evidence, to authorize the court to reverse and enter judgment, based on the “record taken as a whole.”

I. The Text of the Land Commission Act

Two CMC § 4249 of the Act specifies that “[t]he complaint shall be in the nature of a quiet title suit.”15 [190]*190The section requires the plaintiff to name as defendants “all those persons known . . . who claim an interest in the land,”16 not simply the adverse party or parties from the administrative proceeding. Additionally, the section specifies that the trial court should apply the procedures it utilizes “for processing and disposing of civil litigation.”17

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Bluebook (online)
4 N. Mar. I. 186, 1994 N. Mar. I. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/songao-v-commonwealth-nmariana-1994.