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Reports of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands |
NGIS EDEYAOCH, Plaintiff
v.
TIMARONG and IDESIAR TECHUR, Palau District Acting Land
Management Officer, successor to JOHN O. NGIRAKED, Defendants
Civil Case No. 494
Trial Division of the High Court
Palau District
July 10, 1974
Dispute over ownership of land. The Trial Division of the High Court, Hefner, Associate Justice, held that land listed to decedent in the Tochi Daicho belonged to his heirs upon his death and that there was no evidence that government owned the land.
1. Palau Land Law-Japanese Survey-Presumptions
Plaintiff claiming that she and her sister, as heirs of their father, were entitled to land listed under the name of the father in the Tochi Daicho was entitled to presumption that the listing in the Tochi Daicho was correct unless there was a clear showing that the determination which resulted in the listing was wrong, and opposing party had the burden of proving the listing wrong.
2. Palau Land Law-Japanese Survey-Particular Cases
Where land was correctly listed to father of plaintiff, heir to her father, in Tochi Daicho, Government of the Trust Territory, which claimed the land through an unproven sale, could not divest plaintiff of ownership on the basis of its land title determinations, surveys and issuance of homestead permits relating to the land.
3. Real Property-Adjudication of Ownership
Where there was no evidence that landowner sold his land to the chief of his municipality or to the Japanese Government and no evidence that the chief owned the land or sold it to the Japanese Government, and the chief did not have the right to sell individual land not belonging to him, Trust Territory's claim it owned the land because of sale to Japanese Government and statute making all lands owned by the Japanese Government public property could not be sustained. (67 TTC § 1)
4. Real Property-Uncontested Claims
The government cannot acquire title to individual land by simply claiming it by public notice and considering the land its own if the owner does not contest the government.
5. Real Property-Adjudication of Ownership-Notice and Hearing
Land Title Determination hearings must provide a measure of due process to the landowner with adequate and reasonable notice of the right to file claims and be heard, and to also be informed of the fact that his land, sufficiently described, is being claimed.
6. Palau Land Law-Individual Ownership-Decedents' Estates
Individually owned land passes to a decedent's heirs, which by custom are his children, and a brother of decedent has no right to claim Oil" administer the land.
7. Palau Land Law-Individual Ownership-Clan or Lineage Rights
Once land becomes individual land, the clan or lineage loses all control over it.
Assessor
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SINGICHI IKESAKES, Associate
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Judge, District Court
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Interpreter:
Reporter:
Counsel for Plaintiff:
Counsel for Defendant
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AMADOR D. NGIRKELAU
SAM K. SASLAW
ROMAN TMETUCHL
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Timarong:
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KAZUMOTO RENGULBAI
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Counsel for Defendant Idesiar
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Techur:
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JOHN F. VOTRUBA, District Attorney
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HEFNER, Associate Justice
This matter concerns a dispute over certain real property located in Dims, Ngiwal Municipality, Palau. Although there was a referral to a Master for further hearing, this referral is rescinded and trial on the merits was held in the High Court.
At the beginning of the trial it was stipulated that the nine lots listed in the plaintiff's complaint were registered in the Japanese Tochi Daicho in the name of Edeyaoch who is now deceased. The plaintiff is his daughter. The plaintiff claims all of said nine lots for herself and her one sister.
It was also stipulated that the exhibit identified as Court's Exhibit No. 1 be admitted into evidence and that the defendant Trust Territory Government claims all land to the West of the red line on said exhibit. This puts in issue the ownership of portions of Tochi Daicho Lots Numbered 129, 130, 172, 176 and 179. The balance of the lots are conceded to be those of the plaintiff.
The red line on the Court's Exhibit 1 was apparently the result of a 1959 survey at which time the Government began issuing homestead permits, one of which was given to co-defendant Timarong in 1960. Any rights of Timarong flow from the Government.
The plaintiff's claim is that the land in question has been used by her father and herself for many years and that the Tochi Daicho recognized the ownership as the individual land of Edeyaoch and that she and her sister, as the heirs of Edeyaoch are entitled to the land.
The Government and Timarong claim .that although the Tochi Daicho showed the land as registered in the individual name of Edeyaoch, the land was sold to the Japanese Government or a Japanese Company and therefore pursuant to 67 TTC 1, the Trust Territory Government became the owner of the land. Land Determination hearings, Government surveys and the homestead program of the Government are cited as evidence of the claim of the Government and the right of Timarong to his homestead parcel.
At the time of trial, Felix Udui appeared on behalf of his father, Saoremang, asking to intervene. His claim is based on the fact that Saoremang is the oldest living brother of Edeyaoch and is entitled to administer the land pursuant to Palauan custom.
[1] The plaintiff is entitled to the presumption that the listing in the Tochi Daicho is correct and the Court is bound by that listing unless there is a clear showing that the determination is wrong. Elechus v. Kdesau, 4 T.T.R. 444. There is no claim here that the property was clan or lineage land and there is no dispute that Edeyaoch used the land as his individual land for many years, avoiding the complications and limitations of the matrilineal clan and lineage system. Ngiruhelbad v. Merii, et al., 1 T.T.R. 367.
Once the Tochi Daicho Registration is established, the burden is on the opposing party in this case, the Government and Timarong, to rebut and overcome the ownership as listed. This, they have attempted to do by establishing a sale of the property in question and the subsequent actions of the Government relying upon that sale.
[2] The Court cannot find that the Government has sustained its burden and although the Government assumed it had a right to issue homestead permits for the land in question, none of its acts or actions such as holding land title determinations and issuing homestead permits were legally sufficient to divest the plaintiff of the ownership of her land.
[3] The testimony of the purported sale is minimal. According to the former land management officer, sometime during Japanese times the Chief of Ngiwal, known as Uong, allegedly sold a large parcel of land, including the land in question to a Japanese Company for a blanket, machete and some cloth. Thereafter, as proof of said sale, maps were prepared by the Japanese showing the land claimed by the Government. The Government Exhibits A and B purport to be tracings of the original maps which were apparently destroyed. The testimony of the Government witnesses correlate the red line on the Court's Exhibit No. 1 with the boundaries of Government land as shown on defendant's exhibits A, B and C.
The fatal flaw in the claim of the Government and Timarong is that if the original purported sale by Uong was not effective as to the land in question, then all subsequent acts of the Government and Timarong and any reliance of the Government on the Japanese maps cannot divest the plaintiff of ownership in her land. One cannot convey away land which does not belong to him. There is no evidence that Edeyaoch or the plaintiff sold any of the land in question to the Japanese Government or company. On the contrary, the plaintiff testified that neither she nor her father leased or sold the land to the Japanese. The testimony also indicates the plaintiff and her father farmed and used the land since approximately 1913. There is no evidence that the land was ever used by the Japanese. Whenever the Government surveyors came on the land, the plaintiff or her sister told them not to include their land in the claim of the Government.
There is no evidence supporting the proposition that the land was owned by Uong. Although the concept of individually owned land was starting about the time Edeyaoch first acquired his interest, by the middle of the late 1930's, it was a well accepted alternative to the clan and lineage customary land control. Elechus v. Kdesau, supra.
Each municipality in Palau has a traditional chief. If the municipality needs private land for public use, it is the custom in Palau that the Chief and the Council of Chiefs (Klobak), consisting of the other nine clan leaders of the municipality, meet with the owner and all must agree to the acquisition. Even if the owner agrees the municipality only acquires use rights and ownership of the land remains in the individual. There is no precedent in Palauan custom for a Chief of a Municipality to sell land owned by another individual.
The consideration of the purported sale was certainly inadequate as one machete, one blanket and some cloth given to the chief in the late 1930's had little value when these items were fairly common.
The Government argues that Policy Letter P-1, dated December 29, 1947, applies in this case, assuming the Japanese Government took the property in question. However, there is no evidence that Edeyaoch or the plaintiff sold their property or that they received any of the meager consideration obtained by Uong, the chief of the municipality.
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URL: http://www.paclii.org/other/TTLawRp/1974/43.html