Faaafe v. Sioeli
Faaafe v. Sioeli
Opinion of the Court
DECISION
Sioeli of Fagatogo had the land Asiapa in Fagatogo surveyed and pursuant to section 74 of the Codification, made application to the Registrar of Titles to have the land as surveyed registered as his individual property.
Faaafe and Una’i, both of Fagatogo, filed an objection to the proposed registration, claiming that the land was their individual property. Hence this litigation.
It appeared from the statements of the parties at the trial, and from the evidence, that the land was not matai land.
The Court listened with great care to the testimony adduced and has read very carefully a transcript of the testimony.
To establish his claim Sioeli introduced evidence that the land at one time belonged to Mailo; that Mailo about sixty years ago sold it to Taeu Patea, the father of Sioeli; that when Taeu Patea left Tutuila some 45 to 50 years ago for Upolu he left the land in possession of Mataafa and Taeloua, his wife, with a statement to them that it was the property of Sioeli; that Mataafa died when Sioeli was a small boy about eight years of age, and that Taeloua continued in possession for sometime after Mataafa’s death and finally willed it to Sioeli.
Apparently from the record of the testimony Sioeli had no personal knowledge of his father having given possession of the land to Mataafa with a statement that it was Sioeli’s, and no other witness than Sioeli himself testified as to this matter. It appears to us that Sioeli’s testimony is based on hearsay. He testified that his father in later years upon returning from Upolu had told him
According to Sioeli’s testimony, the land was not the property of Taeloua although she may have been in possession. Taking his testimony on this point at its face value any will she may have made .to him of the property, either before, or after the establishment of the government would have no effect. A person cannot will what he doesn’t have.
To establish their claim the objectors, Faaafe and Una’i, introduced evidence that the land at one time was the property of Mataafa and Taeloua, his wife; that Mataafa died leaving his interest to his wife; that she gave it to Taamu Maalona, the adopted son of Mataafa and Taeloua and a nephew by blood of Taeloua, and that Taamu Maalona died leaving the two objectors as his sole heirs.
Aleaga, who is related to neither of the parties to this action, has lived on land adjacent to Asiapa for the last 24 years. He testified .that he had never seen Sioeli taking fruits from the land, and that he had no knowledge of Sioeli having lived on the land. Sioeli himself testified that
Taking the testimony as a whole we are convinced that Taamu Maalona and after him, his heirs, the objectors, have been in actual, open, notorious, continuous, visible, exclusive and hostile possession of the land for more than 20' years under claim of ownership. Under these circumstances the land belongs to the objectors. They have by the acts of their father and by their own acts acquired any outstanding title through adverse possession for 20 years. The possession of the ancestor may be tacked to that of the heirs so as to make up the 20 years required statutory period. McNeely v. Langan, 22 Ohio St. 32; Sawyer v. Kendall, 10 Cush. (Mass.) 241; Fugate v. Pierce, 49 Mo. 441; Rowland v. Williams, 23 Or. 515. Also see Tiffany on Real Property, Section 438.
In view of our ruling to the effect that Faaafe and Una’i have acquired any outstanding title through the operation of the doctrine of adverse possession for 20 years, it is not necessary to discuss the validity of any gifts and wills of the land that may have occurred regardless of who was the beneficiary of any supposed gift or will.
It was laid down in a case just recently decided by the High Court that actual, open, notorious, visible, continuous, exclusive and hostile possession of land for the statutory period of 20 years under a claim of ownership will operate to establish title in the possessor. Salavea L. of Leone v. Ilaoa of Leone, No. 2-1938. See also Talo v. Poi, No. 16-1937.
At the trial Faaafe stated that she and her sister Una’i were claiming the land as the property of both of them.
Costs in the sum of $25.00 are assessed against Sioeli, the same to be paid within 60 days.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.