Tuiasosopo v. Afoa

16 Am. Samoa 2d 90
CourtHigh Court of American Samoa
DecidedAugust 20, 1990
DocketLT No. 5-90
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Am. Samoa 2d 90 (Tuiasosopo v. Afoa) 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
Tuiasosopo v. Afoa, 16 Am. Samoa 2d 90 (amsamoa 1990).

Opinion

Afoa submitted for registration a survey of 3.43 acres more or less, comprising land he calls Paepaetele in the village of Taputimu. Representatives of the Asi, Meleisea, Si‘i, and Tulifua families objected on the ground that parts of this tract belong to their respective families.

Another objection appears to have been motivated entirely by the objector’s dissatisfaction with the name given to the land. Although no evidence was given by this objector, several witnesses for the other objectors said that Afoa should not have called the land "Paepaetele" (this being the name of some other land belonging to another family) but should have called it "Pagota." Afoa acknowledges that he has land called Pagota but says this land is not part of it. We make no finding with respect to the traditional name of the land; any party who is held to own part of the tract in dispute is free to call it whatever he likes.

1. The Asi Objection

The most substantial objection in terms of acreage was that of Asi, who claimed about 1.572 of the 3.43 acres claimed by Afoa. Asi submitted a composite map (Exhibit 3) showing the overlap between his claim and that of Afoa. We have used this exhibit as a basis for our own composite map, attached hereto as Appendix A, to illustrate the boundaries to which we refer in our written opinion. There are two principal areas of overlap between the Asi and Afoa claims.

The first area of overlap is a strip about 300 feet long and varying in width between 50 and 100 feet, on the south and west sides of the Taputimu Loop Road and just to the south of a house belonging to an Asi family member. Part of this strip appears to be a small back yard appurtenant to the Asi house; the rest consists of heavy growth not apparently used or cultivated by anyone. Resolving this dispute amounts to an exercise in boundary drawing between the area occupied by Asi to the north and that occupied by Afoa to the south. Asi has drawn the [92]*92boundary along a line of trees in the middle of the underbrush between the two occupied areas. Afoa, on the other hand, has drawn a line that encompasses the whole intervening bush and comes within a few feet of the Asi house. Neither side presented a particularly compelling case, but the preponderance with respect to this disputed strip favors Asi.

The other area in dispute between these two parties is on the opposite (north and east) side of the Taputimu Loop Road. It comprises about an acre and surrounds an abandoned chicken coop operated by Afoa some years ago. Asi’s story is that he gave Afoa permission to build the chicken coop on his land; that Afoa originally wanted to build it on some other piece of Asi land; Asi denied permission to build it there, but instead gave Afoa permission to build it in the area now disputed.

Afoa’s story is similar in some respects. He says he tried to build the chicken coop on another site, but Asi objected, saying the proposed site was on Asi land. Asi told Afoa to go build his chicken coop on his own land, and the two men agreed on an alternate location which Asi acknowledged to be on Afoa land. Afoa built the coop at the alternate location, which is the area now in dispute.

With respect to this portion of the disputed area, Afoa prevails. Although stranger things have happened, it does not impress us as very likely that Asi would have allowed another matai with plenty of his own land to build a chicken coop on Asi land, particularly since it is clear that Asi had already begun to regard Afoa as something of a troublemaker in land matters and had recently denied permission with respect to another site. The Afoa version of this story rings truer. Afoa also presented the testimony of a witness who testified credibly that he had a plantation in this area for some years, after the demise of the chicken coop and under the authority of Afoa, with no objection from Asi people.

II. The Meleisea Objection

The objection of Meleisea principally concerns a portion of the Afoa survey on the far side (west or Leone direction) of the Taputimu-Vailoa paved road. There is evidence of both recent and traditional Meleisea habitation and cultivation in this area, and Meleisea prevails with respect to it.

Meleisea also claims that Afoa’s western boundary does not even extend as far as the paved road, but that the traditional boundary between [93]*93adjoining landowners in this area was an old road a few feet to the east of the present road. This claim is seconded by witnesses for Asi and Si‘i, and is buttressed by a document showing that a right-of-way for the road was granted in 1973 by a number of chiefs including Asi and Si‘i but not Afoa. (The Meleisea and Si‘i families are closely connected, and the present Meleisea was then holding the Si‘i title.)

Neither Meleisea nor Si‘i has submitted a survey, however, from which we might determine exactly where they would draw the line between the Meleisea or Si‘i land to the west and that of Afoa to the east. It also appears that Afoa has been occupying the land up to the edge of the road in the portion of his survey not disputed with Asi (i.e., the area in front of his present house and of a tulaga fale that was formerly the site of another Afoa house) and no evidence was presented of any conflicting occupation during the memory of man. Afoa therefore prevails with respect to this area, as far northwest as the southeastern edge of the government right-of-way and as far north as the southern boundary of the land held to belong to Asi. The land to the west and northwest of this area appears to belong to Meleisea and/or Si‘i.

III. The Si 7 Objection

Si‘i objects to the western boundary claimed by Afoa, and also to the western part of the southern boundary. He has presented no survey, but makes three principal arguments: (1) any land possessed by Afoa in this area is because of a connection to Si‘i and Meleisea and by permission of these families; (2) the boundaries drawn by Afoa encompass a communal graveyard of the three families (Si‘i, Meleisea, and Afoa) which includes the grave of the deceased mother of Si‘i, who was also the mother of Meleisea; (3) the southern boundary drawn by Afoa comes quite close to a Si‘i residence, and actually includes part of the paepae, a small area of gravel immediately surrounding the house.

The evidence does not support either of the first two contentions. Whatever relationship the Afoa title (a very high one) has to Meleisea and Si‘i, it is not one of vassalage. After trial the Court viewed the land, principally in order to examine the claim of Si‘i that his mother’s grave is within the Afoa survey. It is not. The grave of the mother of Si‘i and Meleisea (pointed out by them and also by Afoa) is in a small graveyard separate and distinct from the one inside the Afoa survey, and not even adjoining it. The only specific evidence we have concerning the older graveyard within the Afoa survey is that the last three Afoas are buried there.

[94]*94We also attempted to determine whether the southern boundary drawn by Afoa crosses the paepae of the Si‘i house. Although we cannot be certain, it does appear to encompass a small comer of the Si‘i paepae. This does not, of course, conclusively establish that this small area is not Afoa land; but the best evidence we have of ownership in this area is the pattern of settlement, and the evidence is to the effect that this Si‘i house was built some years ago without objection from Afoa.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Am. Samoa 2d 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tuiasosopo-v-afoa-amsamoa-1990.