Tuiasosopo v. Taifane

10 Am. Samoa 3d 76
CourtHigh Court of American Samoa
DecidedApril 15, 2005
DocketCA No. 109-04
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Am. Samoa 3d 76 (Tuiasosopo v. Taifane) 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. Taifane, 10 Am. Samoa 3d 76 (amsamoa 2005).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

At a meeting held in the Village of Amanave on December 15, 2004, Plaintiff Pulefa'asisina P. Tuiasosopo (“Pulefa'asisina”) was unanimously selected by attendees to represent Lealataua County in the territorial senate. At a simultaneous December 15th meeting held in the Village of Poloa, Defendant Liua Taifane (“Liua”) was unanimously selected by attendees, including the county chief Defendant Ponemafua Auelua (“Ponemafua”), to serve on the same senate seat. Ponemafua, in his role as county chief, then certified the election of Liua, which was accepted by the Office of Samoan Affairs and forwarded to the Senate. On January 3, 2005, Liua was sworn in as the Senator from Lealataua County.

Pulefa'asisina brought action contesting Liua’s election, praying for declaratory and injunctive relief. Additionally, he seeks a writ of mandamus directing County Chief Ponemafua to certify the election of Pulefa'asisina, instead of Liua.

Discussion

The Revised Constitution of American Samoa provides that, “[sjenators shall be elected in accordance with Samoan custom by the county councils of the counties they are to represent.. .” and that “[t]he decisions of the members of the county councils of the counties concerned shall be certified by the county chiefs of such counties. REV. Const. Am. Samoa, art, II,§ 4. See also A.S.C.A. § 2.0203. While the Senate, under Art. II, Sec. 22, has exclusive jurisdiction to determine the results of a senate election, this court has exclusive jurisdiction to decide whether an election had in fact occurred in accordance with requirements of Art. n, Sec. 4. See Mauga v. Lutu, 10 A.S.R.2d 115, 118 (Trial Div. 1989) (citing Meredith v. Mola, 4 A.S.R. 773, 776-77 (Trial Div. 1973); Eseroma v. Faresa, 31 A.S.R.2d 169, 172 (Trial Div. 1997); Mulitauaopele v. Mata'utia, 31 A.S.R.2d 175, 176 (Trial Div. 1997).

Practice has it that the Lealataua County senate seat has in the recent past been rotated between the two subdivisions of Samatua and Tapua'iga. The Samatua division is said to consist of the villages of Amaluia, Asili, Afao, Nua and Se'etaga, while the Tapua'iga division comprises Agagulu, Fa'ilolo, Amanave, Poloa, Fagali'i, Malota, and Fagamalo. See [78]*78Meredith, 4 A.S.R. at 775 n.2.1 At the initial meeting to address the county’s senate seat held by the two subdivisions in Poloa on December 4, 2004, the Samatua, consistent with the rotation understanding, withdrew from the meeting in favor of the Tapua'iga selecting the next senator from among its ranks.

There was no consensus, however, among the Tapua'iga at its December 4th discussions, with the meeting concluding on a discordant and unhappy note, to say the least. According to Plaintiff and his supporters, their Poloa meeting degenerated into a heated shouting bout after apparent attempts by the Poloa orators to set and steer the course of the meeting by asserting pule (traditional authority) over the proceedings. Subsequently, when Faletogo Taliloa, an orator of Fagamalo with tauto 'oto 'o (high talking chief) status attempted to notice, at the behest of Pulefa'asisina and others, a further meeting of the Tapua'iga, with Amanave as the venue, the Poloa tauto'oto'o were not to be outdone and maneuvered responsively to call a meeting themselves to ensure that venue remained at Poloa. To this end, the Poloa tauto'oto'o were successful in securing Ponemafua’s commitment to attend their meeting at Poloa, scheduled for the exact same date and time as the one already noticed and called for Amanave.

The inconsistent results arrived at by the separate December 15th meetings of the two Tapua'iga factions were never placed before, nor considered by, a joint gathering of the Tapua'iga and Samatua subdivisions, as a deliberative body. Rather, the result of the Poloa meeting alone was certified by the county chief and presented to the Senate without further ado. Following that, Liua assumed the senate seat for the Lealataua.

Quite obviously, the evidence falls hopelessly short of any sort of determination favorable to Liua’s claim that he was duly elected senator for Lealataua County, in accordance with law. The Village Council of Poloa does not, by any stretch of the imagination, translate into the [79]*79multiple village councils of the Tapua'iga subdivision, just as it does not translate into the multiple village councils of the combined Tapua'iga and Samatua assembled. No amount of subjective spin on “Samoan custom” can take away one iota from the substantive requirements of the constitution, that “[sjenators shall be elected ... by the county councils of the, counties they are to represent....” Rev. CONST. Am. SAMOA, art, II,§ 4.

As the evidence before us progressed, it quickly became clear that the controversy between the parties had less to do with electing a senator but more about being in control of the electoral process. Hence the perceived importance of setting the venue, convening the county, and co-opting the county chief. Inevitably, the result was the farcical situation of concurrent electoral meetings in both Poloa and Amanave for the singular senate seat for the Lealataua County.

Despite the fact that a simultaneous meeting of other county council members was taking place in Amanave, and despite the fact that the attendees of the Poloa meeting were, with the exception of Ponemafua2, comprised only of members of the Poloa Village council, Liua nonetheless contends that he was appropriately elected as senator by the entire Lealataua County. The basis for his contention is a version of ‘Samoan custom” largely propounded by his witness and cousin Taifane Falani (“Taifane”), a tauto 'oto 'o, pertaining to Poloa. According to Taifane, Poloa is the customary venue for Lealataua County council meetings, and as such, the orators of Poloa were, therefore, the only appropriate tauto 'oto 'o to convene county meetings in accordance with the custom of the county.3 Extending this argument, defendants reason that because Poloa is the “usual meeting place” for county council gatherings, and that because the Poloa meeting, attended by Ponemafua, resulted in a consensus for Liua, and since Ponemafua certified Liua, Liua was, therefore, elected senator for Lealataua County.

Liua’s claim has no basis whatsoever in fact or law. As this court has noted on numerous occasions in the past, and as the Defendants must also be well aware, Art. II, Sec. 4 requires that “the ultimate election of the senator must come from the county council as a whole deliberative body and not from the council of a subdivision of that county.” Mauga, 10 ASR.2d at 119; see also Meredith, 4 A.S.R. at 780-81. Clearly then, the Villages of Poloa and Fagali'i — if Ponemafua can be regarded as [80]*80constituting the Fagali'i Village council — are not empowered by law, as mere constituents or sub-parts of the Tapua'iga, to elect the Lealataua County’s senator. Rejecting a similar tactic advanced by a faction of the Maoputasi County in the Mauga case, the court there explained:

the contention ... that the customary decision-making process, as spoken of in the Constitution, includes an ability in the county to delegate completely that decision making to a mere sub-division of the county is simply untenable.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Am. Samoa 3d 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tuiasosopo-v-taifane-amsamoa-2005.