[31 ASR2d
2]
FAUTUA L.T.
FAUMUINA, Plaintiff
v.
SAUNOA S. VAOULI, SUAFA`I P. SATELE, UTU SINAGEGE, and A.P. LUTALI, Defendants
High Court of
Land and Titles Division
MT No. 08-90
October 1, 1996
[1] When a matai title decree has been
vacated and the case remanded, the vacation of the judgment inures to the
benefit of all of the losing parties, whether they perfected their appeal or
not, because it vacated the underlying judgment and granted all parties rights
to a new trial on their interest in the title.
Before KRUSE, Chief Justice.
Counsel: For Plaintiff, Tuana`itau F. Tuia, LP [31 ASR2d 3]
For Defendant Vaouli, Gata E. Gurr
For Defendant Satele, Asaua F. Fuimaono
For Defendant Lutali, Tauivi M. Tuinei
Order Denying Motion to Dismiss Party:
This
case originally went to trial in March of 1992. It concluded with the title "Faumuina"
being awarded to defendant A.P. Lutali.
Plaintiff and the other losing defendants filed motions for
reconsideration which were denied.
Plaintiff and the other losing defendants then moved to perfect
appeal. On September 14, plaintiff
moved to dismiss his appeal "[f]or the sake of peace and harmony in the family"
and in reliance on the propriety of the trial court's decision. The Appellate Division honored his
request.
The
case then went up on appeal. The
Appellate Division vacated the decision of the Land and Titles Division and
remanded. The appellate court's
decision was based, in part, on what it deemed was an unperformed duty of
recusal upon the associate judges whom sat at the trial level. The case is now once again before the
Land and Titles Division having being first placed on
calendar for trial for August 26, 1994.
After numerous joint requests by the parties to postpone trial for
further family discussion, the defendants bring this current motion to dismiss
plaintiff as a party in the new trial.
Defendants argue that the lower court's judgment was final
as to plaintiff when his appeal to dismiss was granted. In support of this contention defendants
cite to a footnote in Security Pacific National Bank v. MV Conquest, 4
A.S.R.2d 59, 64 (Trial Div. 1987).
There Chief Justice Rees stated that "a judgement remains final even
though it is later found to be incorrect" to all who failed to perfect their
appeal.
The
Fourth Circuit, however, has addressed this very issue at bar, in Werner v.
Carbo, 731 F.2d 204 (4th Cir. 1984), and we find its reasoning [31 ASR2d 4]
persuasive.1
In Werner, the court held that "when one judgment rests upon a
contemporaneous judgment which has been reversed or otherwise vacated . . . Rule
60(b)(5) should apply," thus allowing relief from the
final judgment.
The first decree was entered in [defendants] favor on the sole ground
that the bond did not guarantee the claims of the materialmen. In this question all materialmen were
interested; and a single decree was entered denying the claims of all of
them. This decree was reversed on
the former appeal; and we think that there can be no question but that this
reversal inured to the benefit of all persons interested under the bond, whether
they appealed or not; for it reversed their right to recover under the
bond.
54 F.2d at 1038-39.
[1]
We find this reasoning persuasive. As in Maryland Casualty, the
parties here all had an interest in the matai title. A single decree was entered denying all,
except Lutali's, right to that title.
This decree was vacated and the case was remanded. In these circumstances, the vacation of
the judgment inured to the benefit of all of the losing parties, whether they
perfected their appeal or not, because it vacated the underlying judgment and
granted them rights to a new trial on their interest in the title
Faumuina.
Moreover, matai title cases warrant equitable consideration
unnecessary in other cases because in matai title disputes it is not merely the
individual claimant(s) who have an interest in the matai title, but also those
family members who support the claimant(s). To truncate these [31 ASR2d 5] interests
on a procedural technicality would hardly seem to be consistent with the
interests of justice. As we have
once before stated, "the Court should interpret the statutes [governing matai
title disputes] so as to minimize the extent to which customary law is modified
or overridden by the imported procedural framework in which it now must be
applied." Ma`ae v. Fuimaono, 6 A.S.R.2d 75, 77 (Land & Titles Div.
1987). See also
A.S.C.A. § 3.0242(b) ("In any
matter . . . where strict
compliance with any rule of practice or procedure maybe inequitable or
inconvenient, the Land and Titles Division may act in each case in such manner
as it considers most consistent with natural justice and
convenience").
Here
plaintiff dismissed his action based upon his reverence to the trial court and
in order to keep peace in the family.
His efforts were, however, ultimately futile because the other parties
went ahead with the appeal. The
appellate court decided that the trial court's decision was in error, and has
remanded the case for a new trial.
To bar the plaintiff from again asserting his rights and the rights of
all the family members who supported his candidacy, would be inequitable and
unfair. Accordingly, we exercise
the discretion given in § 3.0242(b) and allow plaintiff Fautua L.T. Faumuina,
and those Faumuina family members supporting his candidacy, to assert his
succession rights to the matai title Faumuina.
Based
on the foregoing, the motion to dismiss is denied.
It is so ordered.
1 Although Werner was decided under F.R.C.P. 60(b)(5), its discussion and its reliance on Maryland Casualty Co. v. City of South Norfolk, 54 F.2d 1032 (4th Cir. 1932), are directly applicable to the motion at bar.