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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NAURU
Land Appeal. No. 9 of 1974
DEBEB AGIGO AND OTHERS
v.
ATEGAN BOP AND OTHERS
15th-May,
1975.
Estate
of deceased Nauruan - decision of Administrator as to distribution - not on
appeal from Central Court - no statutory authority
for exercise of jurisdiction
by Administrator - decision
invalid.
According to the German
records of land ownership, certain land belonged to N., a Nauruan chief. After
N.'s death in 1915, F. claimed
that the lard had belonged to her father, not N.,
and had become her property by inheritance from him. The dispute continued until
1929 when the Lands Committee recorded an opinion that the land belonged to E.
However it published no decision in the matter. The
dispute continued and in
1939 the Administrator personally inquired into it and published his 3ecision
that the land did not belong
to E. but belonged to N.'s heir, B. The dispute was
not heard in the Central Court at any time. In 1955 and 1965 parts of the land
were identified and surveyed. In 1955 the Lands Committee, and in 1965 the
Nauruan Lands Committee, did not investigate the ownership
of the land but
simply applied the decision made by the Administrator in 1939. In 1974,
following the death of one of B.'s successors
in title to the land, the other
successors agreed to a re-distribution between themselves of their interests in
the land. That agreement
was ratified by the Nauru Lands Committee and
published. The appellants, who are the grandchildren of E., appealed against the
decision,
alleging that the Administrator's decision in 1939 was invalid and the
decisions of the. Lands Committee and the Nauru Lands Committee
in 1955 and 1965
were void because they were founded on it. They contended also that ownership of
the land had been decided by the
Lands Committee in 1929 and that that decision
was
binding.
Held:
(1) The administrator had no jurisdiction to decide on the ownership of the land, his decision not having been given in the determination of an appeal from the central Government. Although he had power to make laws, by Ordinances, he was himself subject to the rule of law and could not lawfully exercise judicial functions not conferred on him by law.
(2) The Lands Committee did not take a decision in 1929; it only expressed an opinion. That had no binding effect.
(3) The decisions if the Lands Committee and the Nauru Lands Committee in 1955 and 196- were invalid, as the Committee carried out no inquiry of its own but simply applied the invalid decision of Administrator.
(4) The question of the ownership of the land had never been validly decided.
Appeal
allowed; question of ownership of the land to be decided by the Nauru Lands
Committee.
D. Deiye for
appellants
Respondents in
person
Thompson
CJ:
This appeal concerns the
ownership of three portions of phosphate land, nos. 346, 347 and 378 in Meneng
District; all the portions
are called Magenae or
Imagenae.
In the German records
this land was shown as belonging to Chief Nobob. However, after his death in
1915 the appellants' grandmother
Eimwange claimed that it belonged to her father
Bwoin. In 1929 the Lands Committee heard tier claim and recorded its opinion in
her
favour. However, no decision was published in the Gazette and in 1938 the
Administrator, Mr. Garcia, held an inquiry into the lands
which had apparently
belonged to Chief Nobob. He rejected Eimwange's claim and the Land Committee's
opinion (or, as he called it
"recommendation"). He published notice in Gazette
No. 39 of 1938 declaring that the land belonged claimants to appeal or, as it is
expressed in paragraph (4) of the Administration Order No. 3 of 1938, "to
protest".
In 1955 the time arrived
to demarcate two of the portions called Magenae. Neither Eimwange nor any of her
family attended the field
day and Mr. Agoko, the present Vice-Chairman of the
Nauru Lands Committee, has expressed the view, from his examination of the Lands
Committee's minute books, that they were not invited to attend, presumably
because of Mr. Garcia's rejection of Eimwange's claim
to the land. The
determinations relating to the boundaries and ownership of portions nos. 346 and
347 were published in Gazettes
Nos. 39 and 40 of 1955
respectively.
In 1965 the third
portion called Magenae was demarcated. Mr. Agoko has given evidence that again
no member of Eimwange's family was
present at, or invited to attend, the field
day. The determination in respect of the boundaries and ownership portion no.
378 was
published in Gazette No. 29 of
1965.
All three portions were
gazetted as belonging to the respondents and one other person as members of the
family of Bop. The appellants
did not appeal against any of the three
determinations. Last year, apparently following the death of one of those shown
in the Gazettes
as an owner of the land, the three respondents as the surviving
owners agreed between them-selves to a reallocation of their respective
shares.
That was approved and published by the Nauru Lands Committee in Gazette No. 23
of 1974 as its new determination of ownership.
It is against that new
determination in respect of all three portions that the appellants, the only
surviving descendants of Eimwange,
have brought this
appeal.
Mr. Deiye, representing
the appellants, has submitted that the determinations of the Lands Committee and
the Nauru Lands- Committee
published in 1955, 1965 and in Gazette No. 23 of 1974
are all void because they are at variance with the "decision" of the Lands
Committee in the matter in 1929." The respondents, on the other hand, have
asserted that those determinations are valid because they
conform with the
decision of Mr. Garcia in 1938. Mr. Deiye has argued, however, that Mr. Garcia's
decision was not capable of overriding
the Lands Committee's decision because
the Administrator had no jurisdiction to decide the
matter.
In 1938 section 8 of the
Laws Repeal and Adopting ordinance 1922 provided that nothing in that Ordinance
should affect the rights,
titles, estates or interests of Nauruans in land.
Section 9 required that the institutions, customs and usages of the Nauruans
should
be permitted to continue in existence, subject to the provisions of
Ordinances of the Island. The Council of Chiefs was a Nauruan
institution and by
Nauruan custom decided questions of inheritance, of owner-ship of land and of
land boundaries. Apparently at some
time in the 1920s it began to exercise that
customary jurisdiction through a Committee consisting of some or all of its
members.
That Committee became known as the Lands
Committee.
In the course of time a
practice grew up of allowing persons dissatisfied with the decisions of the
Lands Committee to appeal to the
Central Court; those dissatisfied with the
decisions of the Central Court were able to appeal further to the Administrator.
The Central
Court had no jurisdiction to entertain appeals against decisions of
the Lands Committee; statutory provision existed for the Administrator
to
entertain appeals generally from the Central Court. After the Second World War
doubts arose about the validity of the decisions
of the Central Court and
consequently also about the validity of the Administrator's decisions in further
appeals from the Central
Court. In 1956, when the Nauru Lands Committee was
established by the Nauru Lands Committee Ordinance 1956, the opportunity was
taken
to validate all those decisions (section 8 of the Ordinance). However, the
validation was limited to "decisions of the Administrator
given on further
appeal" from the Central Court. Mr. Garcia's decision published in Gazette No.
39 of 1938 is, so far as can be ascertained,
not a decision on appeal from the
Central Court. It appears that the parties to the dispute over Chief Nobob's
lands had not been
satisfied with the decisions reached by the Lands Committee
in 1929 and had continued to dispute their ownership and that Mr. Garcia
decided
to resolve the matter himself. There is no record of any prior appeal to the
Central Court; Mr. Garcia's decision refers
to the recommendation of the lands
committee, not to a decision of the Central
Court.
The first issue of this
appeal is, therefore, whether in 1938 Mr. Garcia, by virtue of his office of
Administrator, had jurisdiction
to hear and determine the dispute. If he did,
that is the end of the matter so far as the appellants are concerned. The effect
of
the Laws Repeal and Adopting Ordinance 1922, and particularly section 17 of
that Ordinance, was to establish in Nauru what is commonly
called "the Rule of
Law". This meant that the Administrator was required to act in accordance with
the law. By virtue of the Nauru
Island Agreement between the Governments of the
United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand, to which statutory recognition was
given
by two of those countries, the Administrator had the power to legislate by
Ordinance. But he had no right to act otherwise than in
accordance with the
Agreement and the laws which he
made.
It is necessary, therefore,
to examine the Agreement and the laws of Nauru as they were in September, 1938,
in order to ascertain
whether Mr. Garcia had jurisdiction to hear and determine
disputes relating to the ownership of Nauruan land. Article 1 of the Agreement
vested "the administration of the Island" in the Administrator, that is to say
it gave him executive authority. It then empowered
him to make Ordinances "for
the peace, order and good government of the Island." The Agreement did not
expressly limit his executive
powers, although it contained certain provisions
which the Administrator had no power to alter. However, once he had made a law
to
govern any matter, without reserving independent- executive power for
himself, it seems that, by virtue of the Laws Repeal and Adopting
Ordinance
1922, he was required to exercise his executive power in accordance with that
law.
Section 3 of the Native
Administration Ordinance 1922 empowered the Administrator to make regulations
"affecting, the affairs of native with regard to-
(a) ....
(b) the succession to property in case of intestacy;
(c) ....
(d) the rights to real and personal property."
Regulations to govern the
succession to, and distribution of, the estates of persons dying intestate were
made under that section
by Mr. Garcia. No other regulations were made relating
to the rights to real and personal property. In the absence of statutory
provision
to the contrary, Nauruan custom continued by virtue of section 9 of
the Laws Repeal and Adopting Ordinance 1922, as it does today
by virtue of
section 3 of the Custom and Adopted Laws Act 1971, to govern questions; relating
to Nauruan wills and the devolution of property under the provisions of such
wills. The Lands Committee,
as the appropriate customary Nauruan institution,
continued to have jurisdiction to decide disputes about ownership of land. In
the
case of intestate estates, Administration Order No. 3 of 1938 made on 19th
March, 1938, (the "Order" is in fact a set of regulations
made under the Native
Administration Ordinance 1922) provided that no distribution of an estate was to
be final "unless the ownership of the deceased has been determined previously
by
the Lands Committee or other authority authorised by the Administrator".
Possibly this provision should be construed as a regulation
regulating generally
the rights to real and persona]. property, even though it is contained in
regulations expressed to be concerned
with the administration of the estates of
persons who have died intestate. But, even if that were done, the Order goes on
to require
that the decision as to ownership should be "published in the Gazette
with the usual opportunity given for protest". The notice published
by Mr.
Garcia in Gazette No. 39 of 1938 gave no opportunity for protest; on the
contrary it stated that his decision was final. Even,
therefore, if his.
investigation and determination of the disputes as to ownership. was authorised
by the provisions of Administration
Order No. 3 of 1938, it was not published as
required by that Order.
In the
absence of statutory provision empowering the Administration to hear and
determine disputes about land I come, with some reluctance,
to the conclusion
that, while doubt-less Mr. Garcia acted in good faith, he had no jurisdiction to
give a binding decision in respect
of the ownership of the lands alleged to
comprise Chief Nobob's estate (or, if he had the jurisdiction, the decision was
invalid
because no opportunity was given to protest against it) and in
consequence, while his findings may be of value to any tribunal obliged
at this
late stage to adjudicate in the dispute, they are not binding on the parties
nor, if a binding decision was made by the Lands
Committee in 1929, did they
override it.
The second issue in
this appeal is, therefore, whether a binding decision was made by the Lands
Committee in 1929. Examination of
the Gazettes nor the period when the Lands
Committee dealt with the matter indicates that no decision was published in any
issue
of the Gazette. It is significant that Mr. Garcia stated that the Lands
Committee had made a recommendation and the very fact that
he felt obliged to
undertake the inquiry indicates that the parties did not accept that the dispute
had been finally adjudicated
upon by the Lands Committee. Indeed, there is
nothing the minute book (the contents of which are set out in the Nauru Lands
Committee's
written report to the Court in this appeal) to indicate that the
Committee intended to give a decision and not merely to record its
opinion as a
step on the way towards making a decision. In all the circumstances I consider
that, in the absence of publication of
any decision, and of any clear statement
in the minute book that the Lands Committee had reached a final decision, it
would be unsafe
to regard the dispute between Eimwange and Bop as having been
determined by the Committee in that year. That being so, Mr. Deiye's
submission
that the determinations of the Lands Committee made in 1955, 1965 and this year
are void because they conflict with a
binding decision made in 1929 must
fail.
However, the questions
before the Nauru Lands Committee for decision in 1955 and 1965 related to the
identification and demarcation
of portions within an area of land, not to the
ownership of the land called Magenae. Neither Eimwange nor any member of her
family
was invited to attend. They did not attend and were not heard. As Mr.
Agoko has explained, the Committee was simply applying Mr.
Garcia's decision as
to the ownership of the portions called Magenae and deciding where they were
situated in relation to adjacent
portions. In-so far as the determinations
purported to show the ownership of the portions, they were based on an invalid
decision
and the present appellants and their predecessors in title were not
given any hearing. To the extent, therefore, that they show ownership,
the three
determinations published in 1955 and 1965 in respect of portions nos. 346, 347
and 378 are void because of the gross irregularity
constituted by the failure to
give a hearing to the appellants or their predecessors in title in respect of a
question which had
not previously been validly
decided.
Because the
determinations published in Gazette No. 23 of 1974 in respect of the three
portions of land, i.e. the determinations which
are the subject of this appeal,
are based entirely on the determinations published in 1955 and 1965, they also
cannot be allowed
to stand. They must be set aside as void and, as the dispute
between Eimwange and Bop, the predecessor in title of the present respondents,
about the land Magenae has still not been validly determined, the Nauru Lands
Committee must decide it now. It will be a most difficult
task to undertake at
this late stage. It is unfortunate that, when the Nauru Lands Committee
Ordinance was being drafted, account
was not taken of the irregular assumption
of jurisdiction by Mr. Garcia, as it was in respect of irregular assumption of
jurisdiction
by the Central Court, and appropriate provision made. (Doubtless,
like other defects in that Ordinance, this was a result of the
drafting being
done in Canberra by a person with no personal knowledge of Nauru on the basis of
written instructions given by an
Administrator who had no legal training.) But,
difficult as the task will be, the parties are entitled to have it done
properly.
In carrying it out the Committee may properly have regard to any is
not bound to adopt the reasoning o€ either the Committee
or Mr. Garcia.
The Nauru Lands Committee must decide the matter for itself on the basis of all
the evidence presented to it, or which
it is able to gather for itself, in the
matter. The decision of the Committee, when published, will, of course, be
subject to a right
of appeal to this Court.
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