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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NAURU
Land Appeal No. 18 of 1974
ADIEDABWE AND ANOTHER
v
SELINA EIDIE BILL AND OTHERS
28th January,
1975.
Decision
of Nauru Lands Committee - need for prompt
publication.
Field days were held
by the Nauru Lards Committee between '960 and 1962 to identify portions of land
in a certain area. Notices were
published by the Committee inviting persons who
claimed to own lands in that area to attend the field days and identify their
land
and its boundaries. Many people, including one of the two applicants, did
so, but not all on the same days. The applicants allegedly
were unaware of the
respondents' claim that the land belonged to them and were given no opportunity
to dispute their claim. in 1974,
after 12 years of apparent inaction in the
matter, the Nauru Lards Committee published in the Gazette its decision., which
was that
the land was the respondents' . The applicants did not become aware of
the decision or its publication until the time for appealing
against it had
expired. They applied to have it set aside as invalid in that they had not been
given a proper opportunity to be heard
by the Committee before it made its
decision. The Committee's minute book containing a record of the field days was
missing.
Held:
(1) On a balance of probabilities, the applicants have not been given a proper opportunity to be heard.
(2) The delay between the field days and the publication of the Committee's decision was such that the applicants should not be prejudiced on account of their failure to check the Gazette for its publication.
By
Court: Decisions of the Committee should be published without
delay.
Application granted;
decision of the Nauru Lands Committee set
aside.
R. Degoregore for
appellant
B. Dowiyogo for
respondents
Thompson
CJ:
This is an application to set
aside a decision of the Nauru Lands Committee on the ground that the applicants
were not given an opportunity
to present their claims to the Nauru Lands
Committee.
The applicants have
both given evidence. One stated that he was not aware of any field days held to
decide the boundaries and identification
of the land in dispute. The other, Mr.
Degoregore, stated that he showed the Committee the boundaries on one occasion
but was not
informed of any later field days or present when any other person
claimed the lard. The respondents have called as a witness the
Acting Chairman
of the Nauru Lands Committee to give evidence. It is unfortunate that the field
days in which this land was identified
were held 12-14 years ago and a
minute-book in which the minutes of those field days may have been recorded is
now missing. Also,
because of the lapse of time the Acting Chairman cannot
recall the actual identification of the land by the
respondents.
The evidence of the
applicants has, therefore, not been refuted by the witness called by the
respondents. I find as fact that it is
more likely than not that they were not
given notice of the field day on which the respondents identified the land as
theirs and
were awarded it by the Committee and that they had no chance to put
forward their claim in opposition. The application must be
allowed.
Before making a final
order I wish to draw attention to the unsatisfactory consequences of long delays
in the Committee publishing
its decisions about the identification, boundaries
and ownership of land. As we have seen in this case, memories fade and records
become lost over a period of years. When a dispute arises those who made the
decision do not recall and have no record of the circumstances
in which they
made it. Also, with the time for appealing limited by statute to 21 days after
the giving of the decision, delay in
publishing a decision can result in serious
injustice. A person may well have been given the Gazette regularly to find out
what the
Committee decided. But after some years his vigilance may have lapsed,
or he may have become ill or travelled overseas; in any event,
the longer the
delay in publishing a decision the greater must be the risk that it will pass
unnoticed until too late for
appeal.
I suggest, therefore,
first that, unless a long delay in the publication of a decision is unavoidable,
every decision made by the
Nauru Lands Committee should be published without
delay. I suggest second that, where a long delay in unavoidable, the Committee
should send a notice to every person adversely affected by the decision, i.e.
every person who has made a claim which has been rejected
by the decision. The
notice should 1 inform such persons that the decision is about to be
gazetted.
The Nauru Lands
Committee has a duty to decide certain questions in dispute and the experience
of this Court is that generally it
does so very fairly. However, the interests
of justice also require that persons who may be dissatisfied with the
Committee's decisions
should be enabled to become aware of the decisions early
enough for them to be able to appeal within the statutory time-limit. If
the
Committee would either adopt the suggestions which I have made above or find for
itself other satisfactory ways of ensuring that
persons affected by its
decisions do become aware of them in sufficient time to be able to appeal
against them if they wish, it would
obviate the risk of injustice being suffered
by the persons concerned being, in effect, deprived of the right of
appeal.
The application is
allowed. The determination in respect of portion no. 138 published as Gazette
Notice No. 328 of 1974 is set aside
as void. The questions of the identification
of the land and of its ownership must be determined afresh by the Nauru Lands
Committee
and its new determination published in the Gazette. Persons
dissatisfied with that determination will have a right of appeal to this
Court
against it.
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