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[1969-1982] NLR (B) 61
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NAURU
Land Appeal No. 5 of 1972
SUSANNAH CAPELLE AND OTHERS
v
MWAREOW DOWAITI
20th June,
1972
Nauruan
customary "trusts" - nature and extent of obligations - enforceable only by
social pressure; not by the Courts.
'
Nauruan
customary "trusts" - governed by custom - English rules of equity not
applicable.
M. is the owner of
certain land jointly with his brother S. Their ownership arose in circumstances
imposing on them customary obligations
towards other members of their family.
Some of the other members sought a declaration that M. and S. were holding the
land on trust
for them as beneficial owners and that the English law of trusts
and rules of equity were to be
applied.
Held:
(1) Nauruan custom imposed a form of trust on M. and S. They were obliged to
provide other members of their family with such help
as was reasonably required
by them, regard being had to the means of those other members. M. and S. had
provided such help and, at
least in part, discharged their
obligation.
(2) Nauruan custom,
not the English law of trusts or rules of equity, governed-the obligations of M.
and S. It was enforceable only
by social pressure, not by the
Courts.
K.R. Adeang for the
appellants
Respondent in
person.
Thompson
CJ.:
This appeal relates to a
number of portions of land originally gazetted in the name of the respondent
alone but now owned jointly
by him and his brother Samson
Dowaiti.
Last year the appellant
brought proceedings in the Nauru Lands Committee with a view to establishing
that the respondent held the
land in trust for them and himself and of phosphate
extracted from it. On appeal from the determination of the Committee, I found
it
proved that the respondent had certain obligations of a customary nature cast
upon him when he received the land. The evidence,
however, was insufficient for
me to ascertain what those obligations were or whether they were intended to be
enforceable. The dispute
was, therefore, referred back to the Committee to hear
evidence on those questions and to determine them. The committee decided that
the obligations were unascertainable and were not enforceable. Against that
decision the present appeal is
brought.
Having heard all the
evidence adduced by the appellants and the respondents - and particularly in
view of the evidence given by Susannah
Capelle - I am satisfied that the
respondent was under no obligation to share the land with anyone else or to
share in any predetermined
manner all or any of the proceeds of the land with
anyone.
It is clear from the old
records that land was frequently inherited in the old days in unequal portions.
At one time it was apparently
usual for the eldest daughter to receive either
all of it or a much larger part of it than her brothers and sisters, on the
basis
that she had certain responsibilities for her younger brothers and
sisters. By the 1930's, some Nauruans were becoming better educated
and it seems
that in some cases the more educated brother was given the land and expected to
undertake responsibilities for his brothers
and sisters. The present case
appears to be one such.
The
responsibilities of the child who received his or her parent's land were never
defined although I have no doubt that Nauruan society
recognised readily whether
he was under taking his responsibilities properly and honouring his obligations
to his brothers and sisters
or whether he was not doing so. Doubtless social
pressure was brought to bear on him if he was not doing so. Those obligations
were,
however, never enforceable by any action other than social
pressure
I am satisfied that the
respondent has obligations of the nature towards the descendants of his father,
Dowaiti. Indeed, not only
does he have such obligations but he had honoured them
in the case of that branch of the family to which the appellants belong by
giving money to two of the members of the family; his brother Samson, from the
royalties for phosphate from those lands, has bought
a car for another
member.
In deciding the extent of
his obligations the respondent can reasonably be expected to have regard for the
extent of the needs of
the members of the family and is clearly entitled to take
into account in assessing those needs the amount of land already owned
by those
members, particularly any derived from the same source as the land received by
the respondent from Dowaiti. The appellants'
mother, Eonemen, although in fact
the eldest sister of the respondent, was brought up by her grandmother,
Dowaiti's mother, and upon
her death inherited, as appears to have been common
practice, directly from the grandmother; that is to say she received some of
the
land, which would otherwise have passed to Dowaiti and his two brothers. The
respondent is entitled therefore, in my view, to
consider that Eonemen's
children, i.e. the appellants, had been provided for already to a considerable
extent out of the lands coming
down from Dowaiti's side of the
family.
Susannah Capelle herself
has been on bad terms with the respondent for over 40 years. She has admitted
that, apart from bringing proceedings
to try to make him give her a share in the
land which he had received from Dowaiti, she did not ask him for anything. As I
have already
observed, he and Samson have given assistance to those members of
Eonemen's branch of the family who asked him for it. I find, therefore,
that he
has, to some extent at least, honoured his
obligations.
Mr. Adeang suggested
that his obligations are in essence those of a trustee and that the rules of
equity should be applied to enforce
those
obligations.
However, certainty as
to beneficiaries is lacking. Furthermore, by virtue, until 1971, of section 9 of
the Laws Report and Adopting
Ordinance 1922-1967 and, since then, of section 3
and 4 of the Custom and Adopted Laws Act 1971, custom prevails over the imported
principles and rules of equity. In this case the custom is that such obligations
are not enforceable
by any process of law, only by social
pressure.
Mr. Adeang also
suggested that there was a custom peculiar to the family that the lands should
be held jointly by all the family.
He instanced the alleged decision of Dowaiti
and his two brothers to give their lands in Uaboe District to three of their
sons jointly
to manage for the family. The evidence of Dibwet Jose, one of the
three sons, who was called as a witness by Mr. Adeang, was that
there was no
such decision. Furthermore, the separate ownership by Eonemen of some lands
derived from Dowaiti's mother is inconsistent
with such a
custom.
The appeal is
dismissed.
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