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Supreme Court of Vanuatu |
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IN
THE SUPREME COURT OF
THE REPUBLIC OF
VANUATU
(Civil
Jurisdiction)
Civil Case No. 13 of 2005
BETWEEN:
FAMILY
RONGO
First Claimant
AND:
FAMILY
MOLIRANI
Second Claimant
AND:
JOSEPH
LAP, KELEP SERY, TOM RASU,
KAORY
LIVOHOLO, SALE RANI
First Defendants
AND:
SOLOMON
MELELIVU & HALILI VUTINASUPE
Second Defendants
Coram: Mr Justice Oliver A. Saksak
Mrs Anita Vinabit
– Clerk
Counsel: Mr Richard Kalses for the Claimants
Parties:
All of the First Defendants in person unrepresented
All of the Second
Defendants in persons unrepresented.
Date of Hearing: 8th August
2005
Date of Judgment: 18th October 2005
JUDGMENT
Introduction
This
action is brought by Family Rongo and Family Molirani under section 39 of the
Customary Lands Tribunal Act No. 7 of 2001 (the
Act).
Section 39(2) of the
Act
The relevant provision is section 39(2) which states
–
“If a land tribunal fails to follow any of the procedures under this Act, a party to the dispute may apply to the Supreme Court for an order:
(a) to discontinue the proceedings before the tribunal or to cancel its decision; and
(b) to have the dispute determined or re-determined by a differently constituted land tribunal.”
The
Facts
It happened on
30th March 2005 at the
Chief’s nakamal or meeting house in Luganville. The First Defendants
called the parties to the case for a
briefing. It transpired that the Second
Defendants also were aware of this meeting and were present. The First
Defendants were to
brief the parties about their appeal. However it transpired
that the appeal was “thrown” out and fresh proceedings held
when the
First Defendants allowed the Second Defendants to be heard. The Second
Defendants were not parties to the appeal as they
had withdrawn from the
proceedings in the Village Land Tribunal in the first place. The Village Land
Tribunal of South Santo sat
on 14th
July 2003. The Second Defendants were present at the sitting but they specially
withdrew as parties. The Tribunal proceeded without
them and decided in favour
of Avo Varilena, Maile Varisi and Vari Muramura. Family Rongo and Family
Molirani were dissatisfied with
that decision and appealed to the Area Land
Tribunal. This is the appeal that was brought before the First Defendants as
members
of the Supenatuitano Council of the Island Land Tribunal.
The
First and Second Claimants now challenge the actions of the First and Second
Defendants and seek the Courts intervention under
section 39 of the
Act.
Burden and Standard of
Proof
The Claimants have the burden of proof on the balance of probabilities.
Claimants
Evidence
The Claimants filed sworn statements from Chief Atevari,
Torsen Taumaute, Timothy Bani and Chief Levus Tamata who confirmed their
sworn
statements under oath and were available for cross-examined. However the
Defendants being unrepresented did not ask any
questions.
Defendants’
Evidence
The Defendants produced oral evidence from Joseph Lap,
Kelep Seru, Solomon Melelivu and Joe Halili and were cross-examined by Mr
Kalses.
Written
Submissions
At the end of the evidence Counsel for the Claimants
requested 14 days to file and serve written submissions. A further 14 days were
granted to the First and Second Defendants to file and serve their written
submissions in response. The Claimants filed their written
submissions on
26th August 2005. The Defendants
filed their submissions on 8th
September. The First Defendants as at
8th October have not filed any
written submissions.
Mr Kalses has made a very helpful summary of the
facts and evidence both by the Claimants and the Defendants and there is little
need
to restate them. It suffices to say that the Court accepts those summary of
evidence.
Findings:-
The
Issues
1. Does this Court have powers to supervise customary land tribunals?
The answer is in the affirmative. Section 39 of the Act is the empowering provision.
2. Are Sections 7, 8 and 10 of the Act relevant?
The answer is in the affirmative.
Section 7(1)(a) states –
“(1) If a person or group of persons:
(a) is a party to a dispute and the ownership or boundaries of customary land; and
(b) wants the dispute dealt with under this Act; the person or group must give notice of the dispute in accordance with subsections (2) and (3).
(2) The notice must be given:-
(a) if the land is situated wholly within the boundaries of a village – to the principal chief of that village; or
(b) if the land is situated within the boundaries of more that one village – to the principal chief of each of those villages.
(3) The notice must:-
(a) be given orally or in writing in Bislama, French, English or another language if the person or group giving the notice; and
(b) specify clearly the land which is in dispute; and
(c) contain the names of the parties to the dispute.”
Section 8(1) states-
“If the principal chief of a village receives a notice of a dispute about customary land under paragraph 7(2)(a), the principal chief must, within 21 days after receiving notice establish the tribunal to determine the dispute.”
Section 10(1) states-
“(1) If all the parties to a dispute accept the decision of a village land tribunal, the dispute is resolved and no further action needs to be taken under this Act by any of the Parties.
(2) If any of the parties to a dispute do not accept the decision of a village tribunal that party may appeal under part 3 or part 4 against the decision.”
The evidence of
Chief Atevari is that he had passed on the Claimants’ appeal to the First
Defendants within 21 days as required
by section 8(1).
The evidence of
Chief Tom Rasu, secretary to the First Defendants confirmed he sent out notices
calling for a briefing. He does not
say in his statement if the matter or cause
was an appeal. But the Court accepts the evidence of Chief Atevari that it was
an appeal.
The evidence by Torsen Taumaute is confirmed by the evidence
of Timothy Bani that the Second Defendants withdrew from being parties
and
therefore were never parties at the Village Land Tribunal, the Area Land
Tribunal. The Court accepts those evidence. It follows
therefore that they were
never parties to the appeal to the Island Land Tribunal.
3. Whether the Island Tribunal should hear the other Party who withdrew their claims at the Village Land Tribunal?
The answer is in the negative.
The Island Land Tribunal should not have allowed the Second Defendants to be heard on 30th March 2005 as they were not parties to the appeal. When the First Defendant heard fresh evidence from the Second Defendants they had not done so according to the procedures in the Act.
The Court accepts Mr Kalses submissions that the
Civil Appeal Case No. 26 of 2004
Kalran Loparu,
Kalkot Kaltabang & Others v. Thomas Sope & Others is applicable
and binding on the Second
Defendants.
Conclusion
The
Court is satisfied on the evidence by the Claimants that the First Defendants
had failed to follow proper legal procedures when
they allowed the Second
Defendants to be heard in their meeting of
30th March
2005.
Declaration and
Orders
I therefore declare that the decision of the First
Defendants taken on 30th March 2005
is a nullity and therefore void and of no legal effect.
I further Order
that –
(1) The First Defendants be required to deal with the Claimants’ appeal within 21 days from the date of this Judgment, however the Tribunal must be differently constituted.
(2) Any appeal fees not paid by the Claimants must be paid forthwith.
(3) The Defendants be required to pay the Claimants costs of and incidental to this action to be agreed.
DATED at
Luganville this
18th
day of October, 2005.
BY THE COURT
OLIVER A. SAKSAK
Judge
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URL: http://www.paclii.org/vu/cases/VUSC/2005/118.html