You are here:
PacLII >>
Databases >>
Court of Appeal of Vanuatu >>
2025 >>
[2025] VUCA 8
Database Search
| Name Search
| Recent Decisions
| Noteup
| LawCite
| Download
| Help
Download original PDF
Moses v Lus [2025] VUCA 8; Civil Appeal Case 2847 of 2024 (14 February 2025)
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE REPUBLIC OF VANUATU ( Civil Appellate Jurisdiction) | CIVIL APPEAL CASE NO. 24/2847 |
BETWEEN: | CHIEF JEFFREY MOSES AND FAMILY Applicants |
AND: | CHIEF LUS AND FAMILY First Respondents |
AND: | ALEXANDER SAMSON AND FAMILY Second Defendants |
AND: | MALACHI VILE AND FAMILY Third Respondents |
AND: | SILAS BOAZ AND FAMILY Fourth Respondents |
Before: Hon. Chief Justice V. Lunabek
Hon. Justice M. O’Regan
Hon. Justice R. White
Hon. Justice O.A. Saksak
Hon. Justice D. Aru
Hon. Justice V.M. Trief
Hon. Justice M. Mackenzie
Counsel: Dr A.K.L. Thomas (in person) for the Applicants
F. Loughman for the First Respondents
M.G. Nari for the Second and Third Respondents
R. Willie for the Fourth Respondents
Date of Hearing: 6th February 2025
Date of Decision: 14th February 2025
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
Introduction
- The applicants apply to this Court for an extension of time to bring an appeal against a decision made by the Supreme Court in 1992
(the 1992 Decision). That decision is now reported as Moses v Lus [2006] VUSC 111, notwithstanding that the decision was made in 1992. The application for extension of time was styled as an application for leave
to appeal out of time but the correct terminology is an application for an extension of time to appeal. The application was accompanied
by other applications which, for reasons we will explain later, were not addressed at the hearing and this judgment addresses the
application for extension of time only.
1992 Decision
- The 1992 Decision addressed an appeal against the decision of the Santo/Malo Island Court dated 21 October 1988. The Island Court
decision related to land disputes in the area of Big Bay, Espiritu Santo in three areas, Longkar, Longum and Matantas. The 1992
Decision dealt only with the Matantas land.
- The 1992 Decision was signed by the primary Judge but made no mention of the assessors with whom he would have been required to sit
(s 22(2) of the Island Courts Act 1983 [CAP 167] requires a Court hearing an appeal against the decision of an Island Court to appoint
“two or more assessors knowledgeable in custom to sit with the Court”). However, it is common ground between the applicants
and the first respondents that there were, in fact, assessors. The decision is not dated, but it is apparent from other material
in the extensive bundle of documents produced for the Court by the applicants’ representative, Dr Thomas, that it was delivered
prior to 12 August 1992. There is also no case number on the decision.
- The 1992 Decision appears to have been delivered orally in open Court and the signed version appears to be a transcript of the primary
Judge’s remarks in delivering it. In it, the Judge begins with this sentence “The decision in the land appeal from “MATANTAS”
is now ready”. He then continued:
The full reason[s] for the decision are long. I will not read them out now but you each may have a copy of them as soon as they have
been put into typed form.
- Unfortunately, it appears that the full reasons were never provided to any of the parties and there is no record of them in the Court
files (the Court records were lost in a fire and no records of the Supreme Court case remain). It is apparent that the applicants
and their counsel made various efforts after the delivery of the 1992 Decision to obtain a copy of the full reasons but these were
never provided to them. It appears that the primary Judge left Vanuatu not long after the delivery of the 1992 Decision and inquiries
addressed to the then Chief Justice and to Court officials in 1992 and subsequently were to no avail.
- The 1992 Decision itself records that the Supreme Court quashed the decision of the Island Court. The main reason for this was that
the records kept by the Island Court were inadequate. The decision then declared that certain areas of the Matantas land were owned
by the applicants and other areas by the first respondents, but the decision recorded that no land inside the relevant area was owned
by the second, third or fourth respondents. The Court also directed that those people occupying the land within the relevant area
were not custom owners and would need to negotiate leases and directed that the declared custom owners were not to unreasonably withhold
consent for such leases. The Court made an order that no costs would be payable by any party to any other party.
- The copy of the 1992 Decision provided to the Court has attached to it a site map of the area to which the decision relates. It is
not clear whether this site map was attached to the 1992 Decision when it was provided to the parties. There is no reference to
it in the text and it does not have markings on it that reference the findings in the decision itself. It is possible it was attached
to the 1992 Decision by a member of the Court staff after delivery of the decision.
Does the Court have jurisdiction?
- The applicants’ appeal from the Santo/Malo Island Court to the Supreme Court was advanced under s 22(1) of the Island Courts
Act. At the relevant time, s 22(1)(a) of that Act provided that a person aggrieved by an order or decision of an Island Court could
appeal to the Supreme Court. However, s 22(4) provided (and still provides) that an appeal made to the Supreme Court against an
order or decision of an Island Court “shall be final and no appeal shall lie therefrom to the Court of Appeal”. Counsel
for the first respondents, Mr Loughman, argued that this was an unambiguous provision that meant that this Court did not have jurisdiction
to entertain an appeal against the 1992 Decision.
- We agree that s 22(4) of the Island Courts Act is decisive. As this Court put it in Matarave v Talivo [2010] VUCA 3:
“Stated bluntly, we consider this statutory provision means exactly what it says: the decision of the Supreme Court is final
and cannot be the subject of an appeal to the Court of Appeal”
- That is not the end of the matter, however. This Court in Matarave v Talivo went on to make the following observation:
“However, the limitation imposed by s 22(4) is in relation to “an appeal made to the Supreme Court”. That requirement
will not be met if any one of those persons is subject to any matter that disqualifies them from exercising their statutory functions.
... It follows that if the Court which purports to exercise the appellate functions under s 22(1)(a) is not properly constituted,
or if the Court properly constituted purports to decide custom ownership of land which is not subject to the dispute submitted to the
Island Court, the Court will not be validly exercising its statutory function. For example, if only by a Judge and one assessor,
the Court would not be validly exercising the statutory function. Nor would it be if it purported to decide ownership of land outside
the area of the disputed land the subject of the appeal.”
- The Court continued:
“Subject to this qualification, the direction in s 22(4) that the appeals to the Supreme Court shall be final and not subject
to appeal to the Court of Appeal, means that the resolution of the dispute as to the ownership of the land is finally ended by the
decision of the Supreme Court regardless of errors that may have been made by the Supreme Court in the exercise of its function,
and whether the errors might be described as errors of law, or errors of fact. Thus, if the Supreme Court misapprehends an aspect
of the evidence, and makes a finding of fact which is wrong, or fails to follow strictly the laws of evidence the error does not
expose the decision of the Supreme Court to review or appeal.”
- This limited exception to the finality of Supreme Court decisions on appeal from the Island Court was further explained by this Court
in Sovrinmal v Nalekon [2022] VUCA 25. This Court noted the finding made in Matarave v Talivo and added (at [15]):
“We would add that this Court may also interfere with a Supreme Court decision as to ownership of land in other instances of jurisdictional
error including where there was such a complete lack of procedural fairness shown in the circumstances of the case then it cannot
be said there has been a valid hearing of the appeal by the Supreme Court.”
- This Court again considered the jurisdiction to set aside a Supreme Court decision on appeal from the Island Court in Kalsakau v Manarewo [2024] VUCA 51.
- We will treat the present application for an extension of time to appeal as an application for an extension of time to seek the setting
aside of the 1992 Decision under the limited jurisdiction described in Matarave v Talivo, Sovrinmal v Nalekon and Kalsakau v Manarewo.
Grounds on which the application is advanced
- Dr Thomas advanced the applicants’ case on the following grounds:
a. The 1992 Decision was undated and was not numbered, making it incomplete;
b. The detailed reasons were never furnished to the applicants or respondents;
- The site map attached to the decision does not correspond to the boundaries of the disputed land;
d. Errors of law and fact;
e. Inadequate consideration of the evidence tendered by the applicants in the Supreme Court;
f. Alleged bribery of the assessors appointed to sit with the Supreme Court Judge.
- It is clear that grounds (a), (c), (d), and (e) are matters which may have provided grounds supporting an appeal to this Court if
this Court were not prevented by s 22(4) of the Island Courts Act from considering such an appeal. But they are clearly not matters
which could be brought to bear in an application to have a judgment set aside under the limited jurisdiction described in Matarave v Talivo. We therefore put those matters to one side.
- However, we will revert to ground (c) later and make some observations about the delineation of the boundaries of the land subject
to the declarations of ownership in the 1992 Decision.
- That leaves two possible grounds on which the applicants advance their case that the 1992 Decision should be set aside, namely the
absence of full reasons and the bribery allegations.
Lack of, or inadequacy of, reasons
- There is no doubt that the Supreme Court Judge contemplated that a set of reasons would be delivered to explain in greater detail
the 1992 Decision. This is apparent from the second paragraph of the decision, quoted above, at para 4. It is also clear that despite
the efforts of the parties and their counsel (described above at para 5) no reasons were ever provided and it seems they no longer
exist, if they ever did.”
- In 2002, a judgment of the Supreme Court in a case initiated by the applicants and the first respondents referred to the lack of reasons
in the 1992 Decision: Ova v Sampson [2002] VUSC 101 at para 7.2 (the Supreme Court judgment was confirmed on appeal by this Court in Sampson v Moses [2002] VUCA 27). In that case, the second respondent in the present case, Alexander Samson, was the defendant. The Judge rejected his evidence to
the effect that he had requested a handwritten copy of the reasons on the day the 1992 Decision was delivered. But the Judge accepted
that Mr Sampson’s counsel had requested the reasons on 24 June 1998, without success.
- The fact that the full reasons were never delivered raises the question as to whether the 1992 Decision was, in fact, a decision at
all. At one level it can be interpreted as an announcement, obviously given orally and in open Court, that a decision was about
to be delivered. If that were so, then there would be no Supreme Court decision and this Court could remit the matter to the Supreme
Court so that the appeal from the Santo/Malo Island Court could begin again.
- We do not consider that it can be said there was no decision at all, however. It is clear there was. For example, the 1992 Decision
announces that the decision of the Santo/Malo Island Court is quashed and gives the reason for that occurring. It then sets out
the declarations as to the ownership of land by the applicants and the first respondents respectively, and announces that the second,
third and fourth respondents have no rights to land in the relevant area. It also makes directions about the need for leases and
makes an order that there will be no costs awards. In short, we conclude that the 1992 Decision is a decision, albeit one with inadequate
reasons because of the fact that the full reasons were never delivered.
- We have also considered whether the lack of adequate reasons would be a basis on which the Court could set aside the 1992 Decision
under the jurisdiction referred to in Matarave v Talivo. We do not consider that it is. This is a not a case of a decision being given with no reasons at all; rather, it is a decision
given with inadequate reasons. That would undoubtedly be a ground on which to advance an appeal to this Court if this Court had
jurisdiction to consider such an appeal. But we do not consider that it is such as to mean that the 1992 Decision was not “an
appeal made to the Supreme Court” in terms of s 22(4) of the Island Courts Act, that is, such as to lead to a conclusion that
the Supreme Court was not validly exercising its statutory function when it made the 1992 Decision.
- We conclude therefore that the inadequacy of the reasons for the 1992 Decision is not a basis on which this Court can give leave to
the applicants to apply to have the 1992 Decision set aside. It is a matter of great regret that the parties to the present application
have never been given adequate reasons for the findings made in the 1992 Decision. But, as this Court noted in Matarave v Talivo, s 22(4) of the Island Courts Act prevents an appeal to this Court even if there are errors made by the Supreme Court in the exercise
of its functions, whether errors of law or errors of fact.
Alleged bribery
- The applicants adduced evidence of the bribery that is said to have occurred in the course of the Supreme Court’s consideration
leading up to the 1992 Decision. Despite the fact that this evidence recounted events said to involve serious criminality by his
client, Chief Lus, Mr Loughman said nothing about these allegations in his written and oral submissions and did not seek to adduce
evidence to refute them.
- The principal evidence of this is a sworn statement dated 22 November 2024 by Jean-Baptiste Palaud, a former police officer from Luganville
and a relative of Chief Moses, which relates to an encounter he had in December 2008 with a man who was said to be one of the assessors
in the Supreme Court case leading to the 1992 Decision, Chief Langi Pakoro. In his statement, he said while undertaking his duties
as a police officer he found Chief Pakoro “dead drunk” and took him to the police station. He told Chief Pakoro that
he was from the Matantas area, in response to which Chief Pakoro said he would confess something sinister he did for Matantas. The
sworn statement continues:
“I interviewed him and he then told me that Chief Elvir Lus of Sara Village had paid him, Langi Pakoro of Malo Island and Chief
Alvea of West Coast, Espiritu Santo, amongst others who were Adjudicators in the Matantas Land Case the sum of Vatu 40,000 for them
to influence the Matantas Land Case Decision to grant a piece of land in that area to Chief Elvir Lus and his family members.”
- Mr J-B Palaud deposes that he recorded this in a police statement, which he gave to his father, Denis Palaud, for safekeeping. However,
no copy of this statement had been put in evidence before us. Mr J-B Palaud says that he later collected Chief Alvea of West Coast
and asked him to accompany him to meet Denis Palaud. That meeting occurred and Mr J-B Palaud deposes that Chief Alvea confirmed
that Chief Pakoro had bribed Chief Elvir Lus and that he, Chief Alvea, had also received a bribe of Vatu 40,000 to influence the
Matantas Land Case decision.
- Mr J-B Palaud deposes that he then urged family members like Chief Jeffrey Moses and others to file an appeal supported by this fresh
evidence of bribery. Notwithstanding Mr Palaud’s urging, Chief Moses did not attempt to file an appeal and nothing has been
done until the present application made on behalf of the applicants by Dr Thomas and the Na Vuhu Sule Tribe Council in the present
proceedings.
- Mr J-B Palaud’s evidence is supported by other evidence. Exhibited to a sworn statement of Dr Thomas dated 10 September 2024
are:
- A statement by Sandy-Rose Pipite Closhard about interviewing Chief Pakoro in October 2008, during which Chief Pakoro admitted he had
received a bribe of Vatu 40,000 from Chief Elvir Lus. She made a video of the interview on her phone, but the recording is no longer
accessible.
- Similar statements from Eldin-John Pipite and Ramisson Pipite were also exhibited.
- The statement of Ms Pipite Closhard confirms that she accompanied Chief Pakoro to the stationery shop to get a statement typed up
and signed. A copy of the statement signed by Chief Pakoro is also attached. This states that he was given Vatu 40,000 to influence
the outcome of the 1992 Decision. It is not, however, a sworn statement and we have no information on the level of Chief Pakaro’s
literacy.
- The proposed evidence, namely the sworn statement of Mr J-B Palaud, was sworn on 22 November 2024. But it records events that are
said to have occurred in December 2008. Mr Palaud says that he took a police statement from Chief Pakoro, but, as indicated earlier,
no copy of that statement has been produced. Nor is there any evidence that Chief Pakoro was charged with a criminal offence, as
could have been expected in circumstances where he had confessed to a very serious crime. Chief Pakoro is now deceased so there
is no ability to confirm the evidence. We understand that Chief Alvea has also died.
- None of the statements of Ms Pipite Closhard and Messrs Pipite are sworn statements, nor is that of Chief Pakaro himself. And, as
noted in relation to Mr J-B Palaud’s evidence, they are over 16 years old. It is notable that the statement of Ms Closhard
refers to the admission made to her by Chief Pakoro occurring in October 2008, when that of Mr Palaud records an admission, apparently
for the first time, in December 2008.
- We do not have any reason to question the veracity of the statements of Ms Pipite Closhard or Messrs Pipite, but we cannot ignore
that they are not sworn statements and in all cases they have not been subjected to any testing such as by way of cross-examination.
They record events that happened 16 years ago and the admission by Chief Pakoro was said to relate to the receiving of a bribe 16
years earlier than that.
- The applicants also received advice in 2019 from the lawyer who represented them in 1992 to the effect that they should engage a lawyer
to pursue whatever remedies were available in light of the bribery allegations. But again, they did not act on this advice and nothing
was done until the present application was filed in 2024.
- It is not apparent in what manner an assessor appointed to assist a Judge of the Supreme Court could influence a decision to the extent
Chief Pakoro claims he did. The role of an assessor in an appeal to the Supreme Court from a decision of an Island Court is relatively
limited, in that the assessor’s role is to advise the Judge on matters of custom if requested to do so by the Judge. The assessor
is not a Judge. And in the present case we make it clear that there is no allegation of any form of corruption on the part of the
Supreme Court Judge himself.
- In summary, we accept that if the bribery allegations were proven to be true, that would provide a proper basis for this Court to
set aside the 1992 Decision. But there are shortcomings on the evidence, as highlighted earlier, and the 16-year delay in bringing
this evidence to the Court means there is no longer any real possibility of resolving those shortcomings.
Extension of time
- Although we have treated the application for an extension of time to appeal as an application for an extension of time to seek leave
to have the 1992 Decision set aside, we see the criteria for the assessment of the application as the same for both cases.
- This Court outlined the matters to be taken into account in determining whether an extension of time should be granted to file an
appeal in Laho Ltd v QBE Insurance (Vanuatu) Ltd [2003] VUCA 26. The factors to be considered include:
a. The length of the delay;
b. The reasons for the delay;
c. The chances of the appeal being successful if time were extended; and
- The degree of prejudice to the potential respondent if the application were granted (and, we would add, the degree of prejudice to
the potential appellant if the application were refused).
- Ultimately, the Court must be satisfied that it is in the interests of justice to grant the extension.
- Adapting these criteria to the situation where the extension is sought to apply to have a decision of the Supreme Court set aside
under the jurisdiction described in Matarave v Talivo, rather than to appeal to this Court, we assess the present application against the following criteria:
a. The length of the delay;
b. The reason for the delay;
c The chance of the application to have the 1992 Decision set aside succeeding;
d. The prejudice to the applicant if the extension were not granted;
e. The prejudice to the respondent if the extension of time were granted; and
f. The overall justice of the case.
- We will consider the application by reference to those factors.
Delay
- The delay in the present case is nearly 33 years. That is obviously a very extensive delay and one which would, in most cases, be
fatal to an application for an extension of time. We see this as a strong fact counting against the granting of an extension.
Reasons for delay
- The reason for the delay is not entirely apparent to us. Dr Thomas pointed out that she wrote to the then Chief Justice in 1992 seeking
the release of the reasons and clarification of the boundaries but received no response. However, that was not the appropriate way
to pursue the matter albeit it is unfortunate that the then Chief Justice did not respond to that letter. The counsel who appeared
for the applicants in the 1992 Supreme Court hearing did write to the Court seeking the release of the reasons, but this did not
yield any result either.
- Dr Thomas pointed out that the applicants initially accepted the decision and tried to make the best of it. She said it is only recently
when parties associated with the family of Chief Lus have trespassed onto the land and begun logging that it has become necessary
to pursue an outcome that protects the position of the applicants and the preservation of the forests on their land.
- We hesitate to be critical of the applicants because they did make an effort to pursue the matter in 1992 but did not achieve an outcome.
And we acknowledge Dr Thomas’s submission that many of the applicants are illiterate. We also acknowledge that, as Dr Thomas
pointed out, the evidence of the alleged bribery of the assessors by interests associated with Chief Lus became available only in
2008, 16 years after the 1992 Decision. That in itself may explain the first 16 years of delay, but it does not explain the delay
of 16 years since the bribery evidence became available. If the present application had been made to the Court immediately after
the bribery evidence became available, it would have allowed for a process to appropriately test that evidence, possibly before either
of the assessors died. That would have allowed the Court to make a clear finding about whether or not the bribery occurred. That
is not something the Court can now do, 16 years later.
- Overall, we do not consider that there has been an adequate explanation of the delay since 2008 in pursuing the current application.
Chances of success
- It is hard to assess this criteria. It is clear that, if it were proven that the bribery allegations were true, the decision of
the Supreme Court would be vitiated and would need to be set aside. But, as already indicated, it is hard to see how there could
be such proof on the evidence before us.
Prejudice if extension not granted
- The very extensive and comprehensive evidence filed by Dr Thomas gives a very clear indication of the prejudice that the applicants
consider will occur if the applicants are not given an extension of time to apply to have the 1992 Decision set aside. She said
the applicants are adversely affected by the award of some land in the relevant area to the family of Chief Lus, and the inadequacy
of the description of the boundaries in the 1992 Decision. She said the applicants are subjected to threats and trespass from interests
associated with the first respondents and the felling of trees on the land the applicants claim is theirs. We accept that the potential
prejudice to the applicants is significant.
Prejudice if extension granted
- Mr Loughman said the first respondents would be prejudiced if their property rights at Matantas that they have enjoyed for over 33
years by virtue of the 1992 Decision were called into question. He said this would not only be unjust and prejudicial to the first
respondents but could undermine the principles of judicial finality and integrity which provides certainty to the parties involved
and the public. He argued that the applicants had not adduced any credible evidence or justification as to why they waited 33 years
before seeking to challenge the 1992 Decision.
- Although not advanced by Mr Loughman, it seems to us that a significant prejudice to the first respondents from the delay is the fact
that, were leave to be granted, they would not be able to challenge the bribery allegation as they would have been able to do if
the application to have the 1992 Decision set aside had been made promptly after the allegations came to light.
- Mr Loughman pointed out that the applicants’ own evidence indicated that they initially accepted the 1992 Decision. He said
they had also collaborated with the first respondents with respect to the land at Matantas, as demonstrated by the fact that the
applicants and the first respondents jointly pursued a claim against the second respondents in 2002, as recorded in the judgment
resolving that claim, Ova v Simpson, referred to above, at para 20.
- Mr Loughman also said that the applicants were estopped from challenging the 1992 Decision. He said the applicants and the first
respondents had, in reliance on the 1992 Decision, sought orders from the Supreme Court in 2001 to evict the second respondents from
the relevant land. He said this meant the applicants were estopped from challenging the 1992 Decision now.
- The Supreme Court decision in Ova v Lus referred to earlier was, as Mr Loughman suggested, a case in which the applicants and the first respondents relied on the 1992 Decision
in seeking the eviction of others. But we do not see how that would create an estoppel from challenging the 1992 Decision, if there
were a process to allow such a challenge and proper grounds for challenge. We put to one side, therefore, the argument that an estoppel
arises.
- Mr Loughman also argued that the present application was an abuse of process. We do not agree. However, we accept Mr Loughman’s
point that the 33-year delay means there would be considerable prejudice to the first respondents in allowing the application to
have the 1992 Decision set aside to proceed, after all parties have relied on it during that 33-year period.
Positions of the other respondents
- The second and third respondents supported the applicants’ application for an extension of time. However, their submissions
were based on the proposition that the Supreme Court was not properly constituted in the 1992 Decision because there were no assessors.
While the 1992 Decision does not refer to any assessors, we are satisfied that there were, in fact, two assessors as required by
s 22 of the Island Courts Act. The fourth respondents also supported the application for extension of time. They wish to challenge
the finding in the 1992 Decision that the fourth respondents are not entitled to any rights in respect of the relevant land. They
say the applicants acknowledged that the applicants and the fourth respondents are related from the same family tree and should have
equal rights to share in the land. They are, however, in the same position as the applicants in that they would need an extension
of time to seek leave to have the 1992 Decision, an application that would suffer from the same problems as face the applicants in
this case.
Overall justice of the case
- We are not satisfied that the applicants have made out their case for an extension of time to apply to this Court to have the 1992
Decision set aside. In our view, the overall justice of the case requires the application to be declined. The delay of 33 years
is inordinate and the reason for a delay of that magnitude is not sufficiently explained. We accept that the applicants were not
aware of the bribery allegations until 2008, but the delay since then is itself extremely long, 16 years. That delay means that
the shortcomings on the evidence supporting the bribery allegations cannot be remedied by the normal processes of testing the evidence,
as could have happened if the present application had been brought soon after the allegations came to light. We consider that the
need for certainty and finality, which the Island Courts Act seeks to promote (as evidenced by the provision for finality of Supreme
Court decisions under s 22(4)), outweighs the case for allowing the application to have the 1992 Decisions set aside to proceed after
such a long delay.
Boundaries
- If the 1992 Decision did not adequately delineate the areas of land subject to the declarations in the 1992 Decision, it was open
to the applicants to apply to seek clarification of the 1992 Decision from the Supreme Court Judge soon after the delivery of the
1992 Decision. It may still be open to them to do so, though any such application would also confront the delay since the decision
was made. It is not for this Court to determine how the Supreme Court would approach such an application.
- Dr Thomas said the site map attached to the 1992 Decision did not reflect the decision itself. As we indicated earlier, that may
be because the site map was not, in fact, part of the 1992 Decision but added later.
Other applications
- We also had before us two other applications made on behalf of the applicants. One was an application for summary judgment and the
other was an application for an order for confiscation and return of land said to have been seized by Chief Lus and family for restraining
orders issued against the respondents for entering the land without permission. These were applications that seemed to be directed
to the Supreme Court rather than this Court. If there is a basis for making these applications consistently with the allocations
of land in the 1992 Decision, they should be made to the Supreme Court. We formally dismiss the applications in this Court.
- We also had before us an application by Solomon Tavue for an order that he be added as a party to the present proceeding. This was
said to be on the basis that Dr Thomas and the Na Vuhu Sule Association Tribunal Council did not represent the interests of the applicants.
That application was strongly opposed by the applicants. There was no appearance at the hearing of the appeal on behalf of Solomon
Tavue and in light of the result of the present application the application he made is now of no practical significance. We formally
dismiss it.
Result
- We find that the applicants have not made out a case for an extension of time of nearly 33 years to apply to have the 1992 Decision
set aside. Their application for extension of time is therefore dismissed.
Costs
- Normally costs would follow the event and an award of costs would be made against the applicants as the unsuccessful parties. But
in the present case, counsel for both the first respondents and fourth respondents failed to serve their submissions on the other
parties, which meant that the Court had to ensure that copies of these submissions were provided to Dr Thomas and Ms Nari and they
were given time to read them and respond to them. We see this failure to meet their professional obligation and duty to the Court
as disentitling the first and fourth respondents to any award of costs. It is in stark contrast to the conduct of the applicants
who were not represented by a lawyer but assiduously followed the requirements of Practice Direction 01 of 2020 and promptly served
on the respondents all documents they filed with the Court. Both Mr Loughman and Mr Willie accepted that, in these circumstances,
it was inappropriate that any award of costs be made in favour of the first or fourth respondents.
- As the second and third respondents supported the position of the applicants, there is no basis for an award of costs in favour of
them. We therefore make no award of costs.
Addendum
- We express our appreciation to Dr Thomas for the quality of the material she placed before the Court in the Appeal Books and other
documents, which assisted us in navigating the large volume of material and for her efforts to ensure the material was placed before
the Court and the other parties to give them adequate time to consider it.
DATED this 14th day of February 2025
BY THE COURT
______________________________
Hon. Chief Justice V. Lunabek
PacLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.paclii.org/vu/cases/VUCA/2025/8.html