[30ASR2d163]
FA`ATOAFE, NU`U OFAGALILIO,
PUNA TAUAOLA, and TAUAOLA TUILESU, Plaintiffs
v.
TUIA`ANA MOI, Defendant
High Court of
Land and Titles Division
LT No. 23-91
[1] To
succeed on a claim of adverse possession one must show that the possession was
continuous, open, notorious, and hostile to any claim of ownership, for a
period in excess of time required by the adverse possession statute then in
force.
Before KRUSE, Chief Justice, AFUOLA, Associate
Judge, and ATIULAGI, Associate Judge.
Counsel: For Plaintiffs, Charles V. Ala`ilima
For Defendant, Asaua Fuimaono
Decision and Order:
This dispute concerns a portion of the land "Tafeta."[1] The disputed area, as delineated by
plaintiff's survey, contains approximately 2.37 acres and is situated entirely
within a bend in the main highway as it winds uphill toward Aoloaufou
and A`asufou.
We noted during our visit to the site that much of what is encompassed
in plaintiffs' survey is a rather steep windswept slope that nonetheless bears
evidence of cultivation in the way of scattered coconut trees and some hardy
breadfruit trees. At the same time, this
acreage includes, at the bottom of the cliff, a sizeable flat area which
apparently resulted from past excavation by the American Samoa Government to
station the very large water tank and booster pump that are found there
today. Defendant, although objecting to
all of plaintiffs' claim, [30ASR2d164] has merely surveyed this flat area
(approximately .826 acres), laying claim to the same on his family's behalf.[2]
In 1990, plaintiffs surveyed their claim and offered
the same for registration with the Territorial Registrar as the communal family
land of the Tauaola family of Aoloaufou.3 Defendant Tuia`ana Moi, a Faleniu matai, objected to the plaintiffs' offer of registration on
the basis that plaintiff's claim was within "Tafeta,"
which was appurtenant to the village of Faleniu. Defendant further claimed that this disputed
area had been assigned to his family by the Faleniu
village council.
While the area claimed by plaintiffs may well have
been a part of early Faleniu village clearings, we
are satisfied on the evidence that the disputed area has been in the exclusive
use and occupation of the Tauaola family since the
late 1940s early 1950s following the Second World War. We believe that the Tauaola
family was part of that "postwar migration" of "ambitious and/or
adventurous" Aoloau families that this court
spoke of in Magalei v. Asifoa,
19 A.S.R.2d at 91, as having descended downhill and settled lands on the south
slope side of the mountain; the disputed area abuts these other various Aoloau holdings awarded in Magalei. The evidence shows that the Tauaola family not only maintained crops within the
disputed area over the years but they also maintained residential and work
huts. We found no evidence of any recent
interest asserted by the Tuia`ana people in and to
the disputed area nor any interference with the Tauaola
family's use and occupation until the issue of water-storage rents recently
came into being. Indeed, the extent of
the Tuia`ana survey bespeaks the limited extent of
defendant's interest in the general vicinity, being coincidental only with that
area on lease to the government. It is
apparent therefore that any claims that the Tuia`ana
family might have had in times past have been effectively abandoned for the
many years of use and occupation by the Tauaola.
[1] We are satisfied on the
evidence that the Tauaola family's occupation of the
disputed area has been continuous, open, notorious, and hostile to any
[30ASR2d165] claim of ownership by the Tuia`ana
family, for a period in excess of twenty years required by the adverse
possession statute then in force.
A.S.C.A. § 37.0120 (prior to 1982 amendment).
We accordingly conclude that the land area as
depicted in plaintiffs' survey, has been acquired by the Tauaola
family of Aoloau through adverse possession. The disputed area shall be recorded with the
Territorial Registrar's Office as the communal land of the Tauaola
family of Aoloaufou, subject to reconciliation of
plaintiffs' boundary lines with those boundary lines of the adjacent land
claims as previously established by the decision in Magalei
v. Asifoa, supra.
It is so ordered.
1 Tafeta is a large land area located inland of Faleniu village and south of the mountain plateau that contains the villages Aoloaufou and A`asufou. Tafeta features prominently in recent Faleniu village history as well as on the records of land and titles division. See Magalei v. Asifoa, 19 A.S.R.2d 86, 88 (Land & Titles Div. 1991).
[2] The water tank and booster pump are generating revenue for the owner of the disputed area. An accumulating fund is currently being held on stake by the government pending the outcome of this litigation.
3 In court, however, plaintiffs subsequently attempted to assert a change of theory from that of communal land ownership to individual land ownership. After the close of testimony, plaintiffs reverted on final argument to their original premise of communal ownership.