T'eo v. Fau
This text of 7 Am. Samoa 3d 225 (T'eo v. Fau) 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.
Opinion
OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff Te'o Lauti Tavai offered to register with the Territorial Registrar title to certain land “Pago,” located in the village of Vailoatai, as his own individually-owned land. Te'o’s claim was publicly posted between November 30, 2000, through January 29, 2001,1 and it had in turn attracted the objections of Lopati Fau, now holder of the Fau title of Vailoatai, and Te'o Malouamaua. The objectors both claimed that the land “Pago” was communal land of the Te'o family. Lopati Fau, a member of the Te'o family, so testified. We agree with the objectors and accordingly deny Te'o’s claim for the reasons that follow.
We take judicial notice of this Court’s decision in Te'o v. Fau, LT No. 40-86 (Land & Titles Div. 1987), entered September 8, 1987. The Court there awarded plaintiff, “Te'o Lauti Tavai, for himself and on behalf of the Te'o family of Vailoatai,” certain land located in the village of Vailoatai, known as “Pago.” See id. At the- time of the case, the land Pago was the subject of a lease with the federal government, with Fau Pulemau (objector Fau Lopati’s predecessor in-title) as lessor.
The 1987 judgment held, among other things, that:
1. [T]he land known as Pago in the village of Vailoatai, American Samoa is the communal land of the Te'o family under the control of the senior matai or sa'o of the family, Teo.
2. [] Fau is a talking chief (tulafale) title of the Te'o titleholder in Vailoatai.
Id. (emphasis added); {see also Stipulation to Entry of Judgment & Judgment 1-2). This is a final judgment, conclusive against the parties and Te'o’s present attempt to undo this fmal judgment by attempting to invoke the land title registration process, as set out in A.S.C.A. §§ 37.0101 et seq. (the “Registration Act”), is a futile and hopelessly ineffectual exercise.
[227]*227Te'o’s goal here, quite obviously, is to skirt the statutory restrictions against the alienation of communal lands as contained in A.S.C.A. §§ 37.0201 et seq. (the “Alienation of Communal Land Act”). The process set out in the Alienation of Communal Land Act, regulating the alienation of communal land, requires not only the involvement of the Land Commission, to check against improvident transactions, but gubernatorial approval as well. See generally Pen v. Lavata'i, 30 A.S.R.2d 10, 13-14 (App. Div. 1996). But the Registration Act cannot trump the Alienation of Communal Land Act and it certainly does not provide a vehicle for evading the latter. Otherwise, the constitutionally mandated policy of protective legislation requiring the courts to interpret statutes in a way which is protective of the Samoan custom would be rendered quite meaningless. See AM. SAMOA Rev. CONST, art. I, § 3.2
In view of the foregoing, Te'o’s application to register title in individual ownership to land “Pago” in the village of Vailoatai is denied. The Territorial Registrar shall, accordingly, reject such application.
It is so ordered.
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7 Am. Samoa 3d 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teo-v-fau-amsamoa-2003.