Fofoagaitotoa v. Faleafine
Fofoagaitotoa v. Faleafine
Opinion of the Court
This action stems from certain attempts by the parties to conclude a land deal, which they never quite managed to get off the ground. As a result, the plaintiff, Titi Fofoagaitotoa, filed suit, claiming restitution and damages, as well as punitive damages, from the defendant, Musu Faleafine.
In the process of plotting the area shown to plaintiff, it was apparently discovered by the defendant that if he only sold to plaintiff the designated area, he would then be effectively left with useless bits and pieces of unsold surrounding areas. Consequently, the defendant proposed to plaintiff that he purchase these additional areas as well. The latter agreed. Again, before the subject matter of the agreement was finalized in the way of a survey, plaintiff began immediately to work and improve the additional areas which he gathered was the extent of the new agreement. Shortly thereafter, the parties had a falling-out. The defendant demanded that plaintiff quit the land, which plaintiff eventually did, but not without making his own demand upon the defendant for the return of monies paid and the recoupment of efforts to improve the land. The matter thus found its way to court.
As we understand the defendant’s position, it is that plaintiff had failed to prove a contract for the sale and purchase of land, since the subject matter of the agreement was never defined; hence, there was no contract from which damages can arise to be breached.
We find that we need not address the issues raised by the defense. At trial, plaintiff advised the Court that the deposit and various installments which he paid towards purchasing the land-totalling $6,600 — had been refunded, and that the extent of his claim was for the value of improvements which he had made to the land. To this end, plaintiff claims the sum of $7,354 as hereinafter set out.
On the evidence, we conclude that plaintiff was a "good-faith" improver whose possession of the improved land was under a claim or
Plaintiff sets out his claim for improvements as follows: 24 loads of fill, $1,080; Backhoe rental, $90; 2 rolls of fencing wire, $136; 5 bags of cement, $23.25; iron posts for fence, $100; labor for setting up posts, $250; labor for clearing land from July, 1990, $1,000; 4500 tiapula (taro tops) at $15 per hundred, $675; and projected income from crops left on the land, $4,000. We find all but the last item of the claim to be reasonable and within the realm of compensable improvements. The last item, projected income, must necessarily be discounted since the "actual cost of improvements," not the amount which they have enhanced the property value, is the applicable measure of compensation on the evidence before us — "the lesser of two amounts." Leapagatele v. Nyel, supra. We hold that plaintiff is accordingly entitled to be compensated for the value of improvements which he has made to the defendant’s land, in the amount of $3,354.25.
Finally, plaintiff also prays for punitive damages. We find that the evidence fails to support and warrant an award of punitive damages.
Accordingly, judgment shall enter in favor of the plaintiff, Titi Fofoagaitotoa, and against the defendant, Musu Faleafine, in the amount of $3,354.25.
It is so ordered.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.