THE SUPREME COURT OF THE
FEDERATED STATES OF MICRONESIA
Cite as Etscheit v. Adams ,
6 FSM Intrm. 365 (Pohnpei
1994)
CAMILLE ETSCHEIT, ESTATE OF ELLA ETSCHEIT JOUBERT, ROBERT ETSCHEIT, SR., ESTATE OF LEO ETSCHEIT and
ROBERT ETSCHEIT, JR., Individually,
and
in his Capacity of
Administrator,
Plaintiffs,
vs.
YVETTE ETSCHEIT ADAMS and
RENEE ETSCHEIT VARNER,
Defendants.
CIVIL ACTION NO. 1992-150
ORDER AND MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
Andon L. Amaraich
Associate Justice
Hearing: February 15, 1994
Decided: April 12, 1994
APPEARANCES:
For the Plaintiffs: Daniel J. Berman, Esq.
Rush, Moore, Craven, Sutton, Morry & Beh
2000 Hawaii Tower
745 Fort Street
Honolulu, HI 96813-3862
For the Defendants: Fredrick L. Ramp, Esq.
P.O. Box 1480
Kolonia, Pohnpei FM 96941
* * * *
HEADNOTES
Civil Procedure ) Summary
Judgment
A motion for summary judgment may be granted only if it is clear that there is no genuine issue of material fact, viewing the facts, and any inferences therefrom, in the light most favorable to the party against whom summary judgment is sought., and that the moving party must prevail as a matter of law. When the only issues to be decided in a case are issues of law, summary judgment is appropriate. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 373 (Pon. 1994).
Civil Procedure ) Summary
Judgment
The issue of whether the rule of primogeniture that appeared on German standard form deeds applied to land not held under one of those deeds is a question of law that may be decided by the court at the summary judgment stage even if the question is seen as a determination of foreign law. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 373 (Pon. 1994).
Civil Procedure ) Summary
Judgment
Where a party has not raised a material issue regarding the one factual question that might bear on the applicability of the rule of primogeniture, it is appropriate for the court to decide the rule's applicability at the summary judgment stage. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 374 (Pon. 1994).
Property
German land reforms instituting the rule of primogeniture and prohibiting sale of land without approval of the Governor and the Nanmwarki and requiring a certain number of days of free labor to the Nanmwarki applied only to the public lands that were taken from the Nanmwarkis and given to the ethnic Pohnpeians actually farming them and not to lands already individually owned. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 374-75 (Pon. 1994).
Property
Japanese land law on Pohnpei disregarded the rule of primogeniture instituted by the Germans and often allowed the division of land and ownership by women. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 376-77 (Pon. 1994).
Property
Under the Trust Territory government the rule of primogeniture was only applied to land held under the standard German form deeds which stated the rule, and even then the courts frequently made exceptions to the restrictions. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 377-80 (Pon. 1994).
Statutes )
Construction
Pronouncements by a later legislature concerning the meaning of actions taken by an earlier legislature are generally unreliable, especially when the later legislative body is a part of an entirely different government. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 381 (Pon. 1994).
Property
Because the customary Pohnpeian title system was primarily matrilineal and the court's decisions should be consistent with local custom, the primogeniture provisions of the standard form German deeds should be given narrow application and not applied more broadly than it was by the German, Japanese, or Trust Territory governments. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 381 (Pon. 1994).
Property
Where the rule of primogeniture was not in effect when the land was individually acquired in 1903, was never fully in effect at any time, was largely ignored by the Japanese when the land was passed by will contrary to primogeniture, and has been repudiated by the state government, and where the person who would have inherited if primogeniture had applied never made that claim, and where primogeniture appears contrary to custom, the court must conclude that primogeniture never applied to the land in question. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 381-82 (Pon. 1994).
Domestic Relations ) Probate;
Property
An assignor must be able to inherit the assigned expectancy from the source in order for his assignment of expectancy to be effective. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 382 (Pon. 1994).
Domestic Relations ) Probate;
Property
Where a person is constitutionally prohibited from inheriting land that person's valid assignment of expectancy to a person who may acquire land will operate only to assign the non-land holdings in the expectancy. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 382-83 (Pon. 1994).
Constitutional Law ) Case or Dispute )
Standing
The FSM will not apply a Trust Territory rule based on Trust Territory Code provisions that only the government had standing to challenge title to land to deny standing to private persons challenging title to land under entirely separate FSM Constitutional provisions on citizenship, especially since the authority for the Trust Territory rule was derived from now-deleted language in an American legal encyclopedia. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 383-84 (Pon. 1994).
Contracts ) Interpretation;
Evidence
The presumption that a written contract that is complete on its face embodies the final and entire agreement between the parties may be rebutted by evidence presented at trial. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 384 (Pon. 1994).
Domestic Relations ) Probate; Property )
Deeds
Where Trust Territory law in 1956 did not allow non-citizens to acquire land except as heirs or devisees, a deed from a landowner to her non-citizen children is invalid because the grantor was still living, and therefore her children were neither heirs or devisees. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 385-86 (Pon. 1994).
Civil Procedure ) Dismissal; Civil Procedure ) Summary
Judgment
A motion to dismiss is not to be granted unless it appears to a certainty that the non-moving party is entitled to no relief under any state of facts which could be proved in support of the claim, and if on the motion to dismiss matters outside the pleading are presented to and not excluded by the court, the motion shall then be treated as one for summary judgment. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 386 (Pon. 1994).
Contracts )
Conditions
Where the parties to a proposed contract have agreed that the contract is not to be effective or binding until certain conditions are performed or occur, no binding contract will arise until the conditions specified have occurred or been performed. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 388 (Pon. 1994).
Contracts
In order for an agreement to be binding an agreement must be definite and certain as to its terms and requirements, and it must identify the subject matter and spell out the essential commitments and agreements with respect thereto. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 388 (Pon. 1994).
Civil Procedure ) Summary Judgment; Property )
Deeds
Where there is an issue of fact regarding the authenticity of a deed, summary judgment will not be granted to the parties claiming under the deed, and both sides will be allowed to present evidence on the issue. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 389 (Pon. 1994).
[6 FSM
Intrm. 368]
Property ) Adverse
Possession
Adverse possession is a doctrine under which one can acquire ownership of land if he, without the owner's permission, uses the land openly, notoriously, exclusively, continuously and under a claim of right, and the owner does not challenge such action until after the statute of limitations has run. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 389 (Pon. 1994).
Property ) Adverse
Possession
Because the Trust Territory statute of limitations did not go into effect until May 28, 1951 the 20-year period of unchallenged possession necessary to make out a claim for title to land under adverse possession cannot be met if possession was challenged before May 28, 1971. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 389 (Pon. 1994).
Property ) Adverse
Possession
It is a general principle that members of a family may not acquire adverse possession against each other in the absence of a clear, positive, and continued disclaimer and disavowal of title, and an assertion of adverse right brought home to the true owner a sufficient length of time to bar him under the statute of limitations from asserting his rights. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 390 (Pon. 1994).
Property ) Adverse
Possession
For adverse possession to be shown the statute of limitations under which a challenge to possession can be made must have expired. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 390 (Pon. 1994).
Civil Procedure ) Injunctions;
Contracts
Where a stipulated preliminary injunction is void because of the judge's disqualification and because of the stipulated dismissal of the court case in which it was issued, factual questions must be resolved before deciding whether it is enforceable as an independent contract. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 391-92 (Pon. 1994).
Contracts; Contracts ) Illegality; Contracts ) Mistake; Remedies )
Quantum Meruit
The doctrine of unjust enrichment generally applies where there is an unenforceable contract due to impossibility, illegality, mistake, fraud, or another reason and requires a party to either return what has been received under the contract or pay the other party for it. The unjust enrichment doctrine is based on the idea one person should not be permitted unjustly to enrich himself at the expense of another. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 392 (Pon. 1994).
Contracts ) Implied Contracts; Remedies )
Restitution
The doctrine of unjust enrichment has been expanded to cover cases where there is an implied contract, but a benefit officiously thrust upon one is not considered an unjust enrichment and restitution is denied in such cases. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 392 (Pon. 1994).
Remedies ) Quantum
Meruit
A claim for unjust enrichment will not lie where a party's efforts to reclaim the family's land were necessary in order for him to preserve any claim he personally had to that land and there is no evidence that he expended additional efforts or expense for the rest of the family beyond what he had to do to protect his own interests. Etscheit v. Adams, 6 FSM Intrm. 365, 392 (Pon. 1994).
* * * *
COURT'S OPINION
ANDON L. AMARAICH, Associate Justice:
This is a complex land partition case involving the claims of two factions of the Etscheit family to land holdings in Pohnpei State.1 Each side advances theories under which they contend they are entitled to all, or nearly all, of the Etscheit family's land in Pohnpei, as well as an array of other theories that they argue entitle them to greater or lesser portions of the land. The plaintiffs and defendants have filed motions for summary judgment and the plaintiffs have also filed a motion to dismiss counterclaims. At the hearing on the motions on February 15, 1994, counsel for both sides presented oral argument and urged the Court to simplify the litigation by disposing of at least some of the issues at this stage. After reviewing the motions thoroughly and considering the arguments of the parties, the Court has concluded that each side is entitled to judgment regarding a number of the claims.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The following facts are not in dispute:
The Land At Issue
The parties are making claims regarding the following land, all in Pohnpei State: parcels 046-A-01, 046-A-02, 046-A-03, and 046-A-04, in Nett Municipality; Sapwetik Island; and fifteen acres on Taketik Island that are described in the settlement agreement between the Etscheits, the State of Pohnpei, and the FSM government. The certificates of title for parcels 01, 02, and 04 are in the name of "The legal heirs of Florentine Etscheit," and the title certificate for parcel 03 is in the name of "Yvette Etscheit Adams and Renee Etscheit Varner." A determination of ownership was issued to "the Etscheit family" for Sapwetik, but no certificate of title has been issued. The settlement agreement regarding the 15 acres on Taketik declares that "[t]itle to the property shall be in the name of Robert Etscheit, Yvette Etscheit Adams, and Renee Etscheit Varner, with their respective interests to be determined by stipulation of the grantees or by judgment by a court of competent jurisdiction." Defs.' Second Motion For Summary Judgment, Ex. F at 4 (Jan. 19, 1994).
The Etscheit Family Land Claim
Dominique Etscheit was the first member of the Etscheit family to own land in what is now the State of Pohnpei and all of the family's claims to the land described above, with the arguable exception of 046-A-01, devolve in one way or another from the land purchase he made in 1903 at a public auction held by the German Government. Dominique and Florentine, his wife, both European born, had five children ) Leo (the oldest), Carlos, Camille, Ella, and, Robert. Only Carlos and Robert had children of their own. Carlos' children are Yvette, Monique, and Renee. Robert's children are Robert Jr., Jost, and Nicole.
In 1925 Dominique died, leaving a written will. That will named his wife Florentine as "sole
heir" to the land and stated that she had the right to "dispose freely and unrestrictedly of [the] entire estate." The will also stated that when Florentine died, "all property then still in existence" was to be distributed among the five children, with Camille getting two shares because he was blind. Previously, in 1919, the Japanese government had confiscated the Etscheit lands. Although the lands were returned to the family, this did not occur until after Dominique's death, when, in 1927, the Japanese government transferred the property to "the bereaved family of `Dominic Etscheit' on behalf of `Flore Etscheit,' Attorney-in-fact Mr. Carlos Etscheit." Pls.' First Motion for Summary Judgment, Ex. K.
During World War II the Japanese government once again confiscated the Etscheit land, this time through a "forced sale." After the war, the Trust Territory government determined "that the purported sales of the Etscheit properties to the Japanese Government in 1940-41 were forced sales made under duress and therefore invalid." See Defs.' Opp'n to Pls.' Motion for Summary Judgment, Ex. F (Memorandum of Understanding) (Sept. 14, 1956). A memorandum of understanding entered ("MOU") into between the Trust Territory government and Florentine Etscheit2 on September 14, 1956, stated that the properties of Dominique Etscheit "were left to the widow as sole heir," and therefore "Carlos and Leo were without authority to execute valid sales of the properties to the Japanese." Id. The MOU stated that the lands would be "released" to Carlos on behalf of Florentine, and on February 14, 1957, the Trust Territory government issued deeds stating that "certain lands now owned by the Government, were transferred" to "Florentine Etscheit." Pls.' First Motion for Summary Judgment, Ex. C. The "certain lands" covered by the three deeds were described as "1250 acres more or less3 in Mpomp, Ponape Island," the "Island of Japutik," (now spelled "Sapwetik"), and the "Island of Taketik." Id. On October 1, 1956 (after the MOU was issued, but before the deeds were), Florentine executed a quitclaim deed that purported to transfer all the Etscheit land to "Leo, Carlos, Ella, Camille and Robert." Defs.' Opp'n to the Pls.' First Motion for Summary Judgment, Attach. E. The quitclaim deed did not specify in what proportions the land was to be distributed to the children.
In 1968, over a decade after Florentine executed the quitclaim deed, Carlos brought an action in Trust Territory High Court, seeking partition of the family's lands and, apparently, asking for a larger share than the other children as compensation for his greater efforts regarding reacquisition and development of the land. Pls.' Reply to Opp'n to Pls.' First Motion for Summary Judgment, Ex. A (Answer in Pohnpei State Action No. 343). The answer in the state court action, which was signed by both Leo and Robert Sr., took the position that the partition of the land should be controlled by Dominique's will and Florentine's 1956 quitclaim deed, and that Carlos was therefore entitled to no more than a 1/6 share of the land. Id. In 1970, the Trust Territory court issued a decision stating that parcel 046-A-03 was owned by Carlos in fee simple under the 1935 deed from Florentine of 30 hectares, and that that parcel was therefore not subject to partition.
Florentine died in 1973, leaving no will. Meanwhile, the court action proceeded. Robert Jr. supplemented his efforts in court with other maneuvers designed to gain control over a larger
portion of the Etscheit lands. For example, in January of 1979 he allegedly obtained "transfers" from Camille, Ella, and Robert Sr. in which they stated that all their interests in 046-A-02, 046-A-04, Sapwetik and Taketik were transferred to Robert Jr. Robert Jr. also claims to have obtained, on March 1, 1980, an "assignment of expectancy" from Robert Sr., under which Robert Sr. transferred to Robert Jr. any interests he had in inheritance from Leo. The defendants challenge the authenticity of the assignment document, but on November 14, 1988, the Pohnpei Supreme Court approved the assignment of expectancy in the probate proceedings regarding Leo's will. Counsel for the defendants claims that the defendants were unaware of the hearing on the assignment, but the probate decision states that public notice of the hearing was made for two weeks preceding it.
Negotiations directed at resolving the court action were ongoing, but apparently became particularly productive in March of 1982. Indeed, the defendants, Yvette and Renee, claim that a family settlement of the land dispute was reached between the parties on March 12th, 1982, but the plaintiffs deny this. It is not disputed that a map of the Etscheit land claim in Nett was used at the meeting and that certain marks indicating boundaries were drawn on it, as well as the words "sketch approved subject to survey 3/12/82 6:00 PM." The map was not signed by any of the parties. The defendants characterize this as an agreement regarding boundaries, but according to Robert Jr. it merely represented a proposal made by the Carlos faction.
The parties agree that neither side ever had the requisite survey done and that serious problems developed regarding the previously discussed boundaries shortly after March 12. The plaintiffs have submitted an affidavit in which Robert Jr. states that much of the map is drawn inaccurately and to his disadvantage, and that he required the survey as a condition to further discussion of the division proposed by the defendants out of concern for precisely those sorts of problems. See Pls.' Amended Opp'n to Defs.' Second Motion for Summary Judgment, Ex. 14 (Aff. Robert Etscheit Jr.) paras.14-20 (Apr. 2, 1991). Neither side ever sought to dismiss the pending state court action on the basis of a 1982 "settlement." That action continued pending for ten years until December of 1992 when the parties voluntarily dismissed it, stating that after "23 years" of litigation the state court action had "become so complex and confused and costly to the parties that they have jointly determined that dismissal without prejudice is in their best interest in order to permit a resolution of their disputes to occur with a fresh start." Stipulation of Dismissal of PCA No. 343, para. 4.
On March 13, 1982, both Yvette and Renee signed "acknowledgments" stating that they were waiving any further claims they might have against the estate of Leo Etscheit in exchange for $5000. Those acknowledgments stated:
I hereby acknowledge receipt of the sum of five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) from Robert Etscheit which represents the bequest to me of that amount by Leo Etscheit. In consideration hereof I hereby relinquish all claims against the estate.
Pls.' Reply to Opp'n to Pls.' First Motion for Summary Judgment, Ex. D. Although these releases were executed the day after the alleged family agreement regarding division of the land, no reference is made to another agreement, or to the discussions of March 12th, or to Leo's land.
State Court Proceeding
An in-depth familiarity with the state court proceeding is not necessary to understand the instant litigation, however, some actions taken in the course of the state proceeding do bear on the parties' arguments. The state court ordered a new trial on February 15, 1984. Subsequently, on
March 20, 1990, the appellate division of this Court held that the judge in the state court action, Edwel Santos, had a nondiscretionary duty to step aside because he had previously represented the interests of Robert Etscheit Jr. in litigation involving the same land that was involved in the partition action. See Etscheit v. Santos, 5 FSM Intrm. 35, 44-45 (App. 1991). After the Appellate Division's decision was issued, Judge Santos, on April 11, 1990, remanded the state court action to the Land Commission. Robert Jr. moved to dismiss the Land Commission proceeding on May 2, 1991. Subsequently, on December 4, 1992, the parties stipulated to a dismissal of the state court action, and, that same day, filed the instant action with this Court.
DISCUSSION
I. PLAINTIFFS' SUMMARY JUDGMENT MOTION
The plaintiffs' position in their summary judgment motion, reduced to its essentials, is as follows. The German colonial government undertook massive land reforms on Pohnpei from 1911-14. As part of those reforms standard form German deeds were issued for much of the land on Pohnpei. Those standard form German deeds required that land pass pursuant to the rule of "primogeniture," under which the decedent's oldest male child inherits all of the decedent's land.4 Under the primogeniture rule as stated on the standard form German deeds it does not matter if the decedent purportedly transferred the land during his lifetime or if, like Dominique, he stated in a written will that the land should be divided differently among his surviving family members. The only exception allowed by the German deeds is that the individual may dispose of his property in a different manner if he obtains advance approval from both the Nanmarki and the Governor.5
The plaintiffs argue that when Dominique Etscheit died in 1925 all of his land passed by primogeniture to his oldest son Leo. When Leo died in October of 1980, he left everything to his brother Robert Sr., who had, in March of that year, assigned his expectancy in Leo's estate to his son, Robert Jr. Therefore, they say, all the land belongs to Robert Jr. The plaintiffs argue that the same outcome is reached even if Florentine owned the land after Dominique's death. When Florentine died in 1973 she left no will, and the rule of primogeniture governed distributions in the absence of a will until 1978. Therefore, even if Florentine owned the land it passed from her to Leo by intestacy in 1973 and then to Robert Jr. by way of Robert Sr.'s assignment of expectancy when Leo died in 1980.
The defendants, on the other hand, argue that the rule of primogeniture only applied to land held under the standard form German deeds that recited the rule, not to all lands on Pohnpei. They explain that the Germans instituted the land reforms in order to take land held collectively by ethnic Pohnpeians (primarily through the Nanmarki) and give individual Pohnpeians ownership of it. The defendants claim that this land reform had nothing to do with the Etscheit lands which were already owned individually by Dominique, not collectively by the Nanmarki or a clan.
The defendants also challenge the plaintiffs' claim that any land acquired by Leo passes to Robert Jr. under the "assignment of expectancy" that Robert Sr. executed in March of 1980. They argue that when Leo died in October of 1980 his devise of the land to Robert Sr. was invalid because Robert Sr. was not a citizen, and therefore was barred, under FSM Constitution article XIII, section 4, from acquiring land. As a result they claim that Robert Sr. did not acquire any land from Leo that could then be assigned to Robert Jr. Since the 1980 testamentary gift fails, any land Leo has should pass by the normal inheritance rules (intestate succession) in effect then, under which they contend Leo's land would be divided equally among Robert Jr., Renee, and Yvette.
A motion for summary judgment may be granted only if it is clear that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that the moving party must prevail as a matter of law. Bank of Guam v. Island Hardware, Inc., 2 FSM Intrm. 281, 284 (Pon. 1986). In evaluating whether there is a genuine issue of material fact "[t]he facts, and any inferences therefrom, are to be viewed in the light most favorable to the party against whom summary judgment is sought." Id. When the only issues to be decided in a case are issues of law, summary judgment is appropriate. 10A Charles A. Wright et al., Federal Practice and Procedure § 2725, at 79 (1983); 6 James W. Moore et al., Moore's Federal Practice ¶ 56.17[25] (2d ed. 1990).6
Rule of Primogeniture
The issue of whether the rule of primogeniture that appeared on the German standard form deeds applied to land not held under one of those deeds is a question of law. Under Civil Rule 44.1 this is true even if the question is seen as a determination of "foreign" law. FSM Civ. R. 44.1 ("The court's determination [of foreign law] shall be treated as a ruling on a question of law.") In the past, the Court has resolved issues of custom and tradition, and state law at the motion to dismiss or summary judgment stage. See, e.g., Semens v. Continental Air Lines, Inc., 2 FSM Intrm. 131, 140-41 (Pon. 1985) (in ruling on motions to dismiss and motions for summary judgment the Court concludes that no rules of Micronesian custom or tradition apply).
The only factual issue suggested by the record on summary judgment that bears on the
applicability of the primogeniture rule to the Etscheit land is the question of whether one of the standard form German deeds was ever issued for the land. The defendants argue that one of the standard form German deeds carrying the primogeniture rules was never issued for the Etscheit family's Pohnpei land, and the plaintiffs state that they have no knowledge of whether one of the deeds was issued or not. The record on summary judgment, however, contains no evidence suggesting that such a deed existed and there's no basis for presuming that such a deed existed. Rather than attempt to establish the existence of a standard form German deed, the plaintiffs have relied on the argument that the restrictions stated on those deeds applied to all privately held land in Pohnpei, regardless of whether a deed had been issued. Because the plaintiffs have not raised a material issue regarding the one factual question that might bear on the applicability of the rule of primogeniture, it is appropriate for the Court to decide the rule's applicability at the summary judgment stage.
1. Applicability of the German Reforms to the Etscheit Land
Neither party has asserted that when Dominique Etscheit purchased the lands in 1903 any primogeniture restrictions were placed on the transferability of that land. The land register entry recording the sale does not state any restrictions and none of the sources cited by the parties suggest that a rule of primogeniture applied to any land in Pohnpei prior to 1911-14. Thus, in order to apply primogeniture to the Etscheit land, as the plaintiffs ask the Court to do, the Court would have to interpret the German land reforms as drastically and retroactively diminishing the pre-existing property rights of Dominique Etscheit. Whereas he acquired property that he could sell for a profit, develop to the exclusion of all others, or pass freely at his death to whomsoever he chose, the German land reforms, if applicable, left him with property that he was prohibited from selling (without approval of the Nanmarki and the Governor), from which he could not exclude other family members, and which he could not dispose of freely at his death. See supra note 4 and accompanying text. Moreover, if the rules on the German deeds applied to the Etscheit land, then it meant, as well, that new obligations were placed on Dominique because of his ownership of the land ) for example, that he had to provide a certain number of days of free labor to the Nanmarki. Id. There is nothing at all written on the standard form German deeds indicating that the German government meant to take the extreme step of applying those restrictions and obligations retroactively to land already held individually.
Moreover, the historical indicators support the view that the German Government itself viewed the land reforms not as a land code of general application, but as applying only to lands that were taken from the Nanmarkis and distributed to ethnic Pohnpeians under the German deeds on which the primogeniture rule was printed. The report by John L. Fischer ("Fischer"),7 upon which both sides rely,8 states that the land reforms were instituted in order to take public land that were held collectively through the Nanmarkis, and put those lands in the hands of individuals who were farming them. 1951 Fischer, supra note 8, at 8-9; 1958 Fischer, supra note 8, at 92-93. Thus the land reforms would not have applied to the Etscheit property, which the parties agree was already
in the hands of an individual (Dominique Etscheit) and not under the control of the Nanmarki.
If the primogeniture rule was meant to apply to all land then one would expect that the deeds would have declared that the restrictions were laws of general application, especially considering the drastic curtailment of rights that application of the restrictions would have meant for persons who already owned land individually. The silence of the deeds on this question is deafening. Similarly, the Court expects that if the restrictions were meant to apply to land not held under the standard form deeds, the German government would have printed at least one separately bound code, public law, or pronouncement stating those rules. However, there is no evidence that the restrictions stated on the deeds were ever published in any way except on the deeds.
Other features of the German land deeds suggest that they were meant to apply only to land that those deeds took out of the hands of the Nanmarkis and gave to the persons who were farming them. For example, the deeds contain a provision stating that disobedience to the Nanmarki is punishable the first time by five days of forced labor, the second time by ten days of forced labor and the third time by possible exile. Pls.' First Motion For Summary Judgment, Ex. B para. 11. In addition the deeds state that the Nanmarki is entitled to two days of work a year from the landowner, in addition to small services without remuneration, but he is also required to feed the people. Id. paras. 8, 9. The rules on the deed also provide for a feast in the Nanmarki's honor once a year and require contributions of yams, food and drink. Id. para. 7. These provisions suggest to the Court that the rules on the deeds applied to ethnic Pohnpeians only, and were meant to redefine the relationship between the Nanmarki and his subjects. There is no evidence that the Etscheits were considered bound by any of these provisions or that they were considered subjects of the Nanmarki.9
Another indication of the true reach of the restrictions stated on the German deeds is that while the plaintiffs now claim that Leo inherited all the land under the rule of primogeniture, Leo never made that claim for himself. Indeed, the answer in the state court partition action, which was signed by both Leo and Robert Sr., took the position that the partition of the land was controlled by Dominique's will and Florentine's 1956 quitclaim deed. The claim that the rule of primogeniture was consistently applied to all land in Pohnpei, and that Leo inherited all the land under that rule, is further discredited by Leo's contrary understanding.
Even if the deeds or surrounding circumstances provided some basis for believing that the land reforms were meant to apply to the Etscheit land, interpreting the reforms in that fashion ) i.e., as stripping Dominique and his heirs of many of the rights to his land and requiring forced labor ) might well constitute an unconstitutional deprivation of property and liberty without due process. See FSM Const. art. IV, § 3.10 Generally, when other interpretations of a law are possible this
Court will avoid one that brings the law into conflict with the Constitution. Ishizawa v. Pohnpei, 2 FSM Intrm. 67, 76 (Pon. 1985).
2. The Rule of Primogeniture During the Japanese Era
The Germans' efforts at land reform were interrupted only three years after they began when the Japanese took over control of Pohnpei. The Japanese period lasted until 1945, and it was during that era that Dominique Etscheit died (1925) leaving a written will that named his wife Florentine as his sole heir. It was also during that time that the Etscheit lands were returned to the family (1927) after the first Japanese seizure. The plaintiffs claim that during the entire Japanese period the primogeniture rule stated on the standard form German deeds was consistently and uniformly applied. Even if true, however, this would not mean that the Japanese expanded the application of the rule to include lands, such as those at issue here, which were not held under one of the standard form German deeds. Moreover, contrary to the plaintiffs' claims, the scholarly sources are in near agreement that the Japanese did not strictly and consistently apply the German land reform rules. For example the Fischer study, which is relied on by both sides, states that "[a]ccording to two Ponapeans who worked closely with the Japanese . . . there were detailed written land and inheritance laws which the Japanese applied to native land, ignoring the German deeds." 1951 Fischer, supra note 8, at 11; 1958 Fischer, supra note 8, at 98. Fischer also notes that the Japanese were willing to diverge from the rules on the German deeds even for land held under those deeds "when confronted with specific cases." 1951 Fischer, supra note 8, at 11; 1958 Fischer, supra note 8, at 97. Towards the end of the Japanese era, Fischer states, the Japanese "not only permitted but encouraged the Ponapeans to divide their land," in violation of the rule of primogeniture. 1951 Fischer, supra note 8, at 28.11 Indeed, Fischer states that the inheritance code on the German deeds "never has been fully in effect in all respects." 1951 Fischer, supra note 8, at 10; 1958 Fischer, supra note 8, at 95. This suggests that during the Japanese era the primogeniture restrictions were not even the law with respect to those parcels of land to which the Germans applied the rule, and certainly indicates that the Japanese did not expand the operation of the rule of primogeniture to parcels of land, such as those acquired by Dominique Etscheit, for which the Germans never issued a deed stating the rule.
Francisco Castro, former Senior Land Commissioner for
Pohnpei, goes even further, stating that the Japanese "disregarded" the
German land rules "almost totally." In his article, Ponape Land
Tenure and Registration, Castro states:
Following the formal recognition of Japan's mandate in
1920, the Japanese made further changes by disregarding the German Land
Title Code almost totally. Japan even recognized the rights of
females to hold title to land and did not follow closely the inheritance
pattern set by the Germans. Francisco
Castro, Ponape Land Tenure and Registration, in Land Tenure and Rural
Productivity in the Pacific
Islands 184, 191 (Ben Acquaye & Ron Crocombe eds. 1984).
Similarly, in an essay aptly entitled "Too Many Foreign Precedents,"
William A. McGrath, former Director of Land Management in the Trust
Territory of the Pacific Islands, states that "[u]nlike the Germans, who
tried to insist on inheritance by patrilineal primogeniture, the Japanese
allowed landowners to use their own discretion in dividing land among the
various heirs, or in disposing of it as they thought fit." William
A. McGrath & W. Scott Wilson, Too Many Foreign Precedents, in Land
Tenure in the Pacific 190, 200 (Ron Crocombe ed. 1987) (emphasis added);
see also Gene Ashby, Ponape ) An Island Argosy 114 (1st ed. 1983) (the
Japanese "did not strictly enforce the German rule of inheritance through
the patrilineal line, but decided land cases on an individual basis");
Richard G. Emerick, Homesteading on Ponape 50 (1960) (unpublished
dissertation, University of Pennsylvania) ("[a]pparently the Japanese did
not take the German Code very seriously") (Supplemental Authorities In
Support Of Pls.' Motion for Summary Judgment, Ex. 1).12
In 1919 the Japanese confiscated the Etscheit land and
when they returned the land to the family in 1927 it was issued to "the
bereaved family of `Dominic Etscheit' on behalf of `Flore Etscheit',
Attorney-in-fact Mr. Carlos Etscheit." The manner in which the land
was returned to the family further supports the view that the rule of
primogeniture was not expanded to apply to the Etscheit land during the
Japanese era. If the Japanese were strictly applying primogeniture
to all land, as the plaintiffs claim, then one would have expected them to
return the land to Leo Etscheit, the oldest male heir. Certainly,
one would not expect them to release the land in the name of Florentine
Etscheit who, as a woman, would have no right to inherit any part of the
land if the primogeniture rule was widely recognized and
controlling.
Finally, if primogeniture applied to the Etscheit land,
one would expect that Dominique, the second largest landowner on Pohnpei,
would have been sophisticated enough to know this. Under those
circumstances he certainly would have sought the approval necessary to
effect his wish that the land go to his wife at his death. Approval
for such exceptions to primogeniture was apparently given quite freely
during the Japanese era, and although the deeds said that approval by both
the Nanmarki and the Governor was necessary, the fact was that it was
enough to obtain the consent of the Japanese Government surveyors.
See, e.g., Ladore v. Cantero, 1 TTR 343, 343-44 (Pon. 1957).
However, because the land had been wrongfully confiscated from
Dominique by the Japanese, and was not returned until after his death, it
was not possible for him to get the Japanese surveyors to approve the
transfer. Thus to thwart the transfer Dominique attempted in his
last will and testament because he failed to obtain the approval of the
Japanese surveyors, would be to magnify and perpetuate the wrong that the
Japanese committed by seizing the land in 1919.
3. The Rule of Primogeniture During the Trust
Territory Era
There is no reason to believe that during the Trust
Territory era (1944-1978) the application of the land reform rules stated
on the standard form German deeds was expanded to reach the Etscheit
property. Indeed, the indications are to the contrary. In 1956
the Trust Territory returned the land to the Etscheit family, after
finding that the Japanese improperly forced the sale of the lands in
1940-41. The memorandum of understanding returning the land states
that the widow of Dominique Etscheit was the "sole heir" to the lands and
that Leo and Carlos were without authority to sell the land to the
Japanese. When the Trust Territory issued deeds for the land in 1957
they stated that the land belonged to "Florentine Etscheit." Thus it
is clear that the Trust Territory government did not apply the rule of
primogeniture to the Etscheit land because under that rule Florentine
could not have inherited the land because she was a woman, and Leo would
not only have had authority to sell the land (with the necessary
approval), but would have been the only person with that
authority.
The plaintiffs cite a number of cases where the Trust
Territory court refused to allow an individual to dispose of land contrary
to primogeniture. However, in those cases the land was held under
the standard form German deeds which stated the rule. See infra this
section. The plaintiffs do not cite a single case showing that the
Trust Territory court applied the German restrictions to land that was not
held under one of the German deeds stating those restrictions, nor do they
cite a single decision holding that the German restrictions were rules of
general application.13 Indeed where land was held
pursuant to Japanese leases, the Trust Territory court specifically said
that the rules of inheritance stated on those leases controlled
inheritance, and did not apply the German rules on rental14 or inheritance stated on the German
deeds. Aknes v. Weli, 1 TTR 323, 324-25 (Pon. 1957).
Similarly, interests in land existing under Trust Territory
homestead permits were not subject to the restrictions on the German
deeds, and could pass at death to female members of the family. See
Kehler v. Kehler, 1 TTR 398, 402-03 (Pon. 1958). Therefore, if the
plaintiffs believe that the German rules of inheritance apply to the
Etscheit land even though one of the deeds stating those rules was never
issued, then the same reasoning would dictate that the conflicting rules
of inheritance applicable to the Japanese leases (no inheritance allowed)
and the Trust Territory homestead permits (land may pass to female family
members) should apply, even though neither a Japanese lease
nor a homestead permit was ever issued for the Etscheit
land.
The only reasonable conclusion, is that during the Trust
Territory period the restrictions stated in the German deeds, the Japanese
leases, and the homestead permits only applied to land held under one of
those instruments. Indeed, in those cases where the German restrictions
were applied, the Trust Territory court generally made clear that such
application resulted from the fact that the land was held under a German
deed stating those restrictions, not from the existence of a land code.
In Ladore v. Ladore, 1 TTR 22, 23 (Pon. 1952), on which the
plaintiffs rely heavily, the Trust Territory court stated that
"[s]ince the land in question was held under the standard form of
title document issued by the German Government in accordance with its
basic reform of land laws in 1912, its inheritance is controlled by the
provision stated in this form of title document." (emphasis added).
Similarly, in Kehler v. Kehler, 1 TTR at 403-04, the Trust Territory
court held that while land held under Japanese leases was controlled by
those leases, land held "under the standard form of German Land Title
Certificate issued in 1912" was "controlled by the language of this
document." In Likaor v. Iriarte, 1 TTR 53, 55 (Pon. 1953) the Trust
Territory court again implied that the reason the German restrictions
applied to certain land was because the land was held under the German
deeds stating those restrictions: "The land in question was held
under the system of private ownership set forth in the standard form of
German Title document used on Ponape. It was therefore subject to
the land law stated in that standard form." (emphasis added).
The language in all these decisions suggests that the German
restrictions only applied to land held under the German deeds stating
those restrictions.15
Moreover, even in those cases where the land was held
under the German deeds, the Trust Territory court frequently made
exceptions to the restrictions. For example, in Godlieb v. Welten, 1 TTR
175, 179-80 (Pon. 1954), the Trust Territory court gave effect to a family
agreement regarding a transfer of land held under German deed, even though
the transferee failed to show the approval of the Nanmarki and the
Governor, as is required by the German restrictions. See also In re
Estate of Seman, 1 P.S. Ct. R. 26 (Tr. 1984) (the Pohnpei state court gave
effect to a family agreement dividing the land equally among three
daughters, even though the family agreement was contrary to
primogeniture).16 In Ladore v. Cantero, 1 TTR
343, 343-44 (Pon. 1957), the court enforced a land transfer that, prior to the
transferor's death, was only consented to by the Japanese Government
surveyors, even though the standard form German deed required advance
approval of both the Nanmarki and the Governor. Similarly, in Lusama v.
Eunpeseun, 1 TTR 249, 253-54 (Pon. 1955), transfer with the approval of
the Nanmarki was held sufficient as against all parties but the
Government, even though the German deed required the approval of both the
Nanmarki and the Governor. In 1970
the Trust Territory court that was reviewing the partition action filed by
Carlos Etscheit gave effect to a 1935 quitclaim deed in which Florentine
Etscheit, contrary to primogeniture, gave Carlos 30 hectares on Pohnpei.
The state action was later dismissed by agreement of the parties,
and thus there was no opportunity for appeal and the 1970 ruling has no
res judicata effect. However, the state court's decision regarding the 30
hectare parcel does seriously weaken the plaintiffs' claim that
primogeniture was consistently recognized to be the law for all
inheritance of Pohnpei land during the Trust Territory era. Clearly,
if that were the case the Trust Territory court would have easily
concluded that Florentine Etscheit could not give part of the land to
Carlos. Even if
one assumes that the Trust Territory government saw the German
primogeniture rule as applying to land generally, the Trust Territory
government's action in returning the land to Florentine Etscheit (rather
than to the oldest son, Leo) and issuing the deeds in her name, took the
land outside any restrictions on female ownership. In Kilara v.
Alexander, 1 TTR 3, 5 (Pon. 1951) the Trust Territory court stated that
"[t]he land law . . . as stated in the standard form of German title
document issued in Ponape is still in effect outside of any changes that
have been made by the . . . American Authorities since the American
Occupation." (emphasis added). Even if the Court believed that
the primogeniture rule originally applied, the fact that the American
authorities returned the confiscated land to "Florentine Etscheit," can be
seen as a change in the applicability of that rule to the Etscheit
land. The
plaintiffs state that their claim that the primogeniture rule was applied
generally during the Trust Territory era is supported by 1 F.S.M.C. 205.
However, all that provision says is: The law
concerning ownership, use, inheritance, and transfer of land in effect in
any part of the Trust Territory on December 1 1941, shall remain in full
force and effect to the extent that it has been or may hereafter be
changed by express written enactment made under authority of the Trust
Territory.
1 F.S.M.C. 205. That does
not help the plaintiffs because, as discussed above, primogeniture was not
applied to the Etscheit land in 1941, and, indeed, scholarly sources
indicate that in 1941 primogeniture was not being consistently applied by
the Japanese even with respect to land that was covered by the German
deeds. See supra pp. 376-77. The same goes for the plaintiffs
arguments based on 1 TTC 105 and 1 TTC 24 (1966), which were merely the
precursors to 1 F.S.M.C. 205. The
plaintiffs note that when the Ponape district legislature acted in 1978 to
do away with the rule of primogeniture statements were put in the
legislative record that the former law in Pohnpei district had been
primogeniture. The fact that the legislature summarily stated in
1978 that the rule of primogeniture was
the "law of Pohnpei" (and had to be changed) is of little persuasive
weight. As we have seen, the history of land tenure rules in Pohnpei
is quite complex and the district legislature in 1978 would have had only
limited insight into what the German and Japanese officials meant to do in
the past. United States courts have frequently recognized that
pronouncements by a later legislature concerning the meaning of actions
taken by earlier legislatures are unreliable. See, e.g., Williams
Natural Gas Co. v. F.E.R.C., 943 F.2d 1320, 1335 (D.C. Cir. 1991);
Mitzelfelt v. Department of Air Force, 903 F.2d 1293, 1295 (10th Cir.
1990); Colt Indus., Inc. v. United States, 880 F.2d 1311, 1313 (Fed. Cir.
1986). The level of unreliability is even greater when, as here, the
later legislative body is part of an entirely different government.
Cf. Mackenzie v. Tuuth, 5 FSM Intrm. 78, 82 (Pon. 1991) (weight
given to a later Congress' understanding of provision when many of the
same elected representatives are involved). Moreover, it is not
unfair to understand the legislature to be stating the most pervasive
"law" in Pohnpei, and not as addressing those exceptions, such as the
Etscheit land, to which primogeniture did not apply. 4.
Rule of Primogeniture Should Be Given Narrow
Application
The
German rule of primogeniture appears to be inconsistent with the customary
Pohnpeian title system, which not only permitted women to own land, but
which was, according to Fischer, "primarily matrilineal." 1951
Fischer, supra note 8, at 5, 1958 Fischer, supra note 8, at 84.
Fischer notes: "[Primogeniture] appears to have been chosen on some
purely theoretical basis without much study of the social system of the
Ponapeans. According to the older Ponapeans the inheritance
provisions caused much contention while the society was adjusting to
them." 1951 Fischer, supra note 8, at 10; 1958 Fischer, supra note
8, at 95. Given this, the primogeniture provisions on the standard
form German deeds should be given narrow application under FSM
Constitution article XI, section 11, which states that decisions of this
Court should be consistent with local custom. Certainly, this Court
will not apply the primogeniture restrictions more broadly than the
Germans, Japanese, and Trust Territory governments did. See also
supra note 10 and accompanying text. In
addition, the primogeniture provision is discriminatory and inconsistent
with basic fairness, and should, under the Equal Protection Clause of the
FSM Constitution, art. IV, § 4, be interpreted narrowly for that reason.17
See Ishizawa v. Pohnpei, 2 FSM Intrm. at 76 (where possible, courts
should not choose interpretation of provision that brings it into conflict
with the Constitution). Primogeniture discriminated against women by
allowing only men to inherit, and discriminated against younger male
offspring by allowing only the oldest son to inherit. As discussed
above, application of the primogeniture rule in this case would also raise
due process concerns. For these reasons the primogeniture rule
should be given narrow application. 5.
Conclusion: Rule of Primogeniture Not Applicable to Etscheit
Land
The
plaintiffs are asking the Court to decide this partition case based on
German rules of land tenure which were not in effect when the land in
question was acquired in 1903, which were never fully in effect during any
administration, see 1951 Fischer, supra note 8, at 10, 1958, Fischer,
supra note 8, at 95, which were largely ignored by the Japanese Government
at the time Dominique attempted to pass the land to Florentine by will,
see supra, and which have since been repudiated by the local
government, D.L. 4L-155-78 (Pohnpei Intestacy Act of 1978). Even
Leo, who the plaintiffs claim inherited all the land under the rule of
primogeniture, took the position during his lifetime that the land passed
pursuant to his father's will, which provided for the land to be shared.
Moreover, the primogeniture rule appears to be inconsistent with Pohnpeian
custom as well as the concepts of fundamental fairness embodied in the due
process and equal protection clauses of the FSM Constitution. The
Court finds that the rule of primogeniture found on the standard form
German never applied to the land held by the Etscheit family in Pohnpei
State. Therefore, it is appropriate to deny the plaintiffs' motion
for summary judgment on the issue of primogeniture, and grant summary
judgment to the defendants on this issue. The Assignment of Expectancy
When
Leo died on October 12, 1982, he left a will naming Robert Sr. the sole
heir to his lands. Previously, on March 1, 1980, Robert Sr. had
allegedly executed an "assignment of expectancy" transferring any
interests he had in inheritance from Leo to Robert Jr. On November
14, 1988, the Pohnpei Supreme Court approved the assignment of expectancy.
On March 13, 1982, the defendants both executed acknowledgments in
which they waived any claims they had against the estate of Leo Etscheit
in exchange for a payment of $5000 each. The
plaintiffs argue that under the assignment of expectancy all of Leo's
lands now belong to Robert Jr., and that this issue should be disposed of
at the summary judgment stage. The defendants raise questions
regarding the authenticity of the assignment, and also argue that Robert
Sr., a non-citizen, could not inherit any land to "assign" to Robert Jr.
See FSM Const. art. XIII, § 4. With respect to the state court
decision approving the assignment of expectancy, the defendants argue that
they were not properly notified of the proceeding and therefore should not
be bound by it. The defendants contend that the acknowledgment
waiving any claims against Leo's estate in exchange for a payment of $5000
was part of a larger agreement, which included a partition of the land on
March 12th, and that the waivers should not be enforced unless the entire
agreement is enforced. Moreover, they state that if the entire
agreement is not enforced the agreement fails for lack of consideration
because the defendants were entitled to payments of $5000 under Leo's
will, and therefore there was no consideration for the promise not to seek
anything further from Leo's estate. The
Court concludes that Robert Jr. did not inherit lands from Leo under the
assignment of expectancy from Robert Sr. because Robert Sr. himself could
not "expect" to inherit land under Leo's will since the FSM Constitution,
article XIII, section 4, prohibited noncitizens, including Robert Sr.,
from acquiring land when Leo died in 1980. Robert Sr. was a vital
link in the chain by which Robert Jr. claims to be entitled to Leo's
lands, and that vital link is faulty. The plaintiffs argue that,
under the assignment of expectancy, the land passes directly from Leo to
Robert Jr., thereby bypassing the broken link in the chain. However, the
treatise that the plaintiffs themselves rely on to show the viability of
the "assignment of expectancy" ) Thomas E. Atkinson, Law of Wills, (2d ed.
1953) (Pls.' Motion To Dismiss Counterclaim, Ex. 16) ) supports the view that
the assignor must himself be able to inherit the assigned expectancy from
the source in order for his assignment to be effective. Atkinson
states that "[t]he assignment has no effect if the assignor predeceases
the source." Id. at 729. If, as the plaintiffs contend, the
assignment of expectancy meant that the testamentary gift bypassed the
assignor and went directly from the source to the assignee at the source's
death, then it would be irrelevant whether the assignor predeceased the
source. However, Atkinson's view appears to be that if the assignor
"link" in the chain is broken, the property does not pass under the
assignment. In the instant case the assignor (Robert Sr.) link is
broken with respect to Leo's land and therefore the land does not pass
from the source (Leo) to the assignee (Robert Jr.).
Similarly, although the plaintiffs claim that the
Pohnpei Supreme Court decision of November 14, 1988 (Pls.' Motion For
Summary Judgment, Ex. M), approved the assignment "of all real properties
of Leo Etscheit to Robert Etscheit, Jr.," that decision actually supports
the view that Robert Jr. only acquired title under the expectancy to that
inheritance that Robert Sr. himself was qualified to take from Leo.
Contrary to the plaintiffs' representation, the Pohnpei Supreme
Court decision never approved the assignment of real property from "Leo
Etscheit to Robert Etscheit, Jr.," but rather stated only that it was
approving the assignment to Robert Jr. of "all claims and expectancy in
and to the estate of Leonard Etscheit, which may be acquired by the
assignor[, Robert Sr.]" Id. (emphasis added). The decision
states, further, that Robert Jr. can exercise the same rights of the
inheritance "as the assignor [,Robert Sr.,] might or could do personally."
Id. This language leads to the conclusion that the Pohnpei
Supreme Court, while approving the assignment of expectancy as a general
matter, did not hold that that assignment allowed the plaintiffs to
circumvent the broken link in the chain. Therefore, Leo's non-land
holdings passed through Robert Sr. to Robert Jr. under the valid
assignment of interest, but Leo's land holdings did not. The
plaintiffs argue that issue of whether Robert Sr. was disqualified from
inheriting land from Leo is not before the Court because only the
government, not private parties, has standing to raise citizenship
objections to land title. The Court is unimpressed with this contention.
The plaintiffs have filed an action alleging that their claim to
certain lands is superior to that of the defendants. In deciding
whether the plaintiffs are correct, the Court is duty bound to consider
the effect of the constitutional provision regarding citizenship that may
determine the nature and limits of the plaintiffs' property right.
Under normal rules of standing, where application of the citizenship
clause would result in title vesting in a private party, then that private
party is the real party in interest empowered to make the claim in court.
See FSM Civ. R. 17(a) ("Every action shall be prosecuted in the name
of the real party in interest."); see also Aisek v. Foreign Investment
Bd., 2 FSM Intrm. 95, 101 (Pon. 1985) (private plaintiffs have standing to
challenge issuance of permit as violative of article IX, section 13, of
the FSM Constitution where they reasonably allege that such issuance will
cause them harm). The Court sees no policy reason, or precedential
justification, for diverging from the normal standing rules in the case of
the citizenship clause in the Constitution. It is
true that in Muller v. Madison, 5 TTR 471 (Mrsh. 1971), and Acfalle v.
Agunon, 2 TTR 133 (Yap 1960), the Trust Territory High Court held that
only the government had standing to challenge title to land based on Trust
Territory Code provisions, see 57 TTC 201; TTC 900 (1952), that limited
the rights of non-citizens to own land. However, no court has ever
held that the rule on standing applicable to those Trust Territory
provisions should be applied to the entirely separate citizenship clause
found in article XIII, section 4 of the FSM Constitution. Moreover,
even if the very same citizenship provision was at issue, the Trust
Territory rule would not be binding on this Court. Alaphonso v. FSM,
1 FSM Intrm. 209, 213 (App. 1982). The Court might be inclined to
give more weight to the Trust Territory rule if the decisions establishing
that rule provided a well-reasoned rationale for prohibiting private
citizens with a claim to land from raising citizenship objections to
another private citizen's claims to the same land. However, Muller
provides no explanation for the decision to adopt the rule it does.
Instead, the decision relies entirely on the earlier Trust Territory
case, Acfalle, which in turn relies on since-deleted language in an
American legal encyclopedia. More specifically, Acfalle relies on 2
Am. Jur. Aliens §§ 29, 49, 58 (1936), which correspond with 3A Am. Jur. 2d
Aliens and Citizens §§ 2007, 2018 (1986). Unlike their predecessors,
sections 2007 and 2018 do not distinguish between the rights of the
government and private parties to raise the question of citizenship under
provisions limiting the rights of non- citizens to own land. 3A
Am. Jur. 2d Aliens and Citizens §§ 2007, 2018 (1986). Indeed, if
anything, section 2007 indicates that when an alien is prohibited from
obtaining a property interest under applicable law, that alien may not sue
to enforce his illegally obtained property interest, even if the other
party is a private citizen. Id. § 2007, at 890. The Court
declines to apply the Trust Territory rule to the constitutional question
at issue here. The
plaintiffs also claim that the defendants have no standing to challenge
the operation of the assignment of expectancy because of the releases both
signed on March 13, 1982, waiving any right to claim further inheritance
from Leo in exchange for payment of a $5000 gift under Leo's will.
It is true that if these waivers are enforceable, the defendants may
not take any of Leo's land in this action, despite the Court's ruling on
the effect of the assignment of expectancy. The Court finds that
there are substantial questions of fact that bear on the enforceability of
the releases signed by the defendants. According to the defendants, the
releases were part of a larger agreement, which included a compromise
regarding the partition of the land reached on March 12, 1982. The
Court is mindful of the fact that generally a written contract that, like
each of the releases here, is complete on its face, is presumed to embody
the final and entire agreement of the parties. 17A Am. Jur. 2d
Contracts § 398, at 425 (1991). However, that is only a presumption,
and the information presented at this stage leads the Court to conclude
that the defendants may be able to present evidence at trial to rebut that
presumption. The Court notes in particular: the proximity in time of
the March 13th releases and the March 12th settlement discussion; Yvette's
statement that the releases were signed "on the basis of the land
settlement which had occurred the preceding day," Aff. Yvette Etscheit
Adams para. 38 (Defs.' Opp'n To Pls.' Motion For Summary Judgment, Attach.
I) (Jan. 17, 1991); and the statement of Martin Mix that he mediated the
March 12th meeting and believed that a land settlement had been reached,
Aff. Martin Mix (Defs.' Opp'n To Pls.' Motion For Summary Judgment,
Attach. I) (Jan. 15, 1991). Thus although the Court holds, as a
matter of law, that the assignment of expectancy failed to transfer any
land to Robert Jr., the Court also concludes that there are substantial
issues of material fact regarding whether the defendants can profit from
that failure notwithstanding the waivers they signed. II. DEFENDANTS' CROSS
MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT18
The
defendants' cross motion for summary judgment, filed May 18, 1993, argues
that the land acquired by Dominique passed to his wife, Florentine, either
by operation of Dominique's written will when he died in 1925, or when the
Japanese returned the land to her as a "representative of the family of
the bereaved Dominic Etscheit" in 1927. The defendants argue
further, that in 1956, after the Trust Territory government recognized
that the Etscheit's sale of the land to the Japanese was forced and
invalid, Florentine validly transferred the land in her possession to her
children, in equal parts, by way of a quitclaim deed. In
opposing the defendants' cross motion for summary judgment the plaintiffs
contend, as they do in their own summary judgment motion, that the rule of
primogeniture was consistently in force from 1911 to 1960 and that
Florentine therefore could not inherit the land in 1925 or 1927. The
plaintiffs also argue that even if Florentine possessed the land in 1956
she could not make a lifetime transfer to her children in 1956 for
essentially three reasons: 1) the rule of primogeniture still prevented
lifetime transfers at that time, although it had been revised to allow
transfers by will; 2) the Trust Territory code in effect in 1956 only
allowed non-citizens, such as Florentine's children, to acquire land as
"heirs or devisees," 57 TTC 201 (1952), and the children were neither; and
3) when Florentine transferred the land, the Trust Territory government,
while it had recognized Florentine's right to the land, had not yet given
her deeds to the land, and therefore she did not possess the land at the
time she executed the quitclaim deed in favor of her
children. Dominique's Will
The
plaintiffs do not dispute the authenticity of Dominique's will.
Indeed, as discussed supra, Leo Robert Sr. took the position in the
answer filed in the state court action that the will controlled the
disposition of the land. The only issue is whether the will is
lawful, and that is a purely legal question that it is appropriate to
resolve at the summary judgment stage. In addition, the Court's
ruling that primogeniture never applied to the Etscheit land eliminates
the plaintiffs' legal argument against the validity of the will.
Therefore, the Court holds that all of the Etscheit lands passed to
Florentine by operation of Dominique's will. Partial summary
judgment will therefore be granted to the defendants on this
issue. Florentine's Quitclaim Deed to Her
Children
The
Court concludes that Florentine did not validly transfer the land to her
children by quitclaim deed in 1956. At that time the Trust Territory
code did not allow non-citizens to acquire title to land except as "heirs
or devisees." 57 TTC 201.19
Florentine's children were not "heirs" because "heir" means "the
person appointed by law to succeed to the estate in case of intestacy."
Black's Law Dictionary 651 (5th ed. 1979). This would not apply to
any of the children in 1956 because Florentine was alive and none of her
children were taking by intestacy. Moreover, the children were not
even presumptive heirs when Florentine executed the quitclaim deed in 1956
because at that time there was no intestacy provision applicable to the
Etscheit land. The provisions of the German deeds controlled
intestacy for land held under one of those deeds, but there appears to
have been no intestacy provision covering other land. Therefore, her
children could not be "heirs" in the legal sense.20
Florentine's children were not "devisees" because a devisee is
someone who takes under the person's will, Black's Law Dictionary 408 (5th
ed. 1979), and Florentine was attempting a lifetime transfer.
Therefore, the Court will deny the defendants' request for summary
judgment regarding the effectiveness of Florentine's 1956 transfer, and
will instead rule that that transfer
was invalid as a matter of law.21 III. PLAINTIFFS' MOTION
TO DISMISS COUNTERCLAIMS
The
plaintiffs' motion to dismiss asks the Court to reject, as a matter of
law, the following eight counterclaims: 1) that this dispute was settled
in 1982 in an enforceable unwritten agreement between all concerned
parties; 2) that in 1935 Florentine conveyed the 30 hectares in Nett
comprising tract no. 046-A-03 to her son Carlos, and that that tract is
not subject to partition; 3) that defendants are entitled to most of the
lands by adverse possession because they were developed solely by Carlos,
from 1938 until the late 1970's; 4) that Leo's land should be divided by
intestate succession among Renee, Yvette, and Robert Jr. in equal parts;
5) that the plaintiffs lost their interests in the land by developing it
in ways that violated the forfeiture provision in a stipulated preliminary
injunction entered in the state court case; 6) that the defendants should
get a larger portion of the land, or be financially compensated, because
of the efforts their father, Carlos, made to preserve and develop the land
subject to partition; 7) that tract no. 046-A-01 belonged solely to
Carlos, and now to Yvette and Renee, because Carlos and the Japanese built
that area out of swampland; and 8) that Yvette, Renee, and Robert Jr.
should share equally in the Etscheit land on Taketik Island because
ownership of that land was established in 1989 through an agreement that
Yvette, Renee, and Robert Jr. entered into with the governments of the FSM
and Pohnpei State. Under
FSM Civil Rule 12(b)(6), a motion to dismiss is not to be granted unless
it appears to a certainty that the non-moving party is entitled to no
relief under any state of facts which could be proved in support of the
claim. Panuelo v. Pohnpei, 2 FSM Intrm. 150, 157 n.4 (Pon. 1986).
Rule 12(b) provides that "[i]f on a motion [to dismiss for failure
to state a claim] matters outside the pleading are presented to and not
excluded by the court, the motion shall be treated as one for summary
judgment and disposed of as provided in Rule 56." In this case the
defendants submitted an affidavit and other matters outside the pleadings
in opposition to the motion to dismiss. Counterclaim Based On Alleged 1982 Family
Agreement
The
plaintiffs seek dismissal of the defendants' counterclaim regarding a
settlement that was allegedly reached by the family on March 12, 1982, but
subsequently repudiated by Robert Jr. The plaintiffs argue that the
claim based on the agreement is barred because it is covered by the 6-year
statute of limitations, 6 F.S.M.C. 805,22 and the
defendants did not raise the claim until 1991, or at the earliest until
the second amended complaint dated July 13, 1988.23
The plaintiffs state that it was only a week after
the March 12, 1982, agreement that they objected to the defendants'
interpretation of one of the boundaries, and that the six-year statute of
limitations therefore ran in March of 1988. The plaintiffs point
out, furthermore, that during the entire period from March 12, 1982, until
1991 there was ongoing litigation regarding the land where the claim could
have been raised. The
plaintiffs also argue that the claim based on the 1982 agreement is
precluded by the 1980 Pohnpei Statue of Frauds, Pon. S.L. No. 2L-38-80 §
3(4), which requires that "any contract for the sale of lands, tenements,
or herediments, or of any interest in or concerning them" be in writing.
Lastly, the plaintiffs argue that evidence of the settlement is
inadmissible under FSM Evidence Rule 408, which prohibits admission of
offers of settlement or compromise. The
defendants reply that the claim based on the 1982 agreement is timely
because the applicable statute of limitations for actions involving land
is 20 years. Under 6 F.S.M.C. 802 "actions for the recovery of land
or any interest therein," are timely if commenced within 20 years.
The defendants also claim that even under the 6-year statute of
limitations the action is timely because, while the agreement was
repudiated in August of 1982, it was not actually breached until 1986,
when one of the plaintiffs took action contrary to the 1982 agreement.
Moreover, the defendants state that breach of the contract was
actually raised in an amended complaint in the state court action in July
of 1988. Therefore, they argue, even if the claim arose when the
contract was repudiated in August of 1982, they still alleged it within
six years. The
defendants contend that the statue of frauds is inapplicable to the land
partition agreement at issue here because the statute only applies to
agreements for the sale of an interest in land and partition is not a
sale. The defendants also argue that the plaintiffs should not be
allowed to assert the statute of frauds because the plaintiffs' oral
agreement regarding division of the land on March 12th induced the
defendants to waive their claims against the estate of Leo Etscheit on
March 13th, and to partially perform the contract. Finally, with respect
to the plaintiffs' argument that evidence of the 1982 settlement is
inadmissible pursuant to FSM Evidence Rule 408, the defendants note that
that rule only bars evidence of offers of compromise and settlement
negotiations, not of a final settlement.
Pursuant to Rule 12(b), the Court will treat the motion
to dismiss the counterclaim based on the alleged partition agreement as a
motion for summary judgment because the defendants have submitted many
matters beyond the pleadings regarding this issue, including: two
affidavits, alleged diary entries, copies of maps, and a copy of a letter
written by an attorney who attended the March 12th meeting. See
Defs.' Opp'n to the Pls.' Motion to Dismiss Counterclaims, Attachs. Tab A.
In addition, the defendants have now filed a second motion for
summary judgment, which seeks judgment on the issue of the alleged
agreement. Although that second motion for summary judgment is not
technically a subject of this decision, the Court will consider all the
evidence submitted with it on the issue of the alleged
agreement. The
Court concludes that even if one takes the facts as alleged by the
defendants to be true, there was, at best, a conditional agreement on
March 12, and that agreement was never finalized. The map which the
defendants claim embodies the agreement states on its face that the
boundaries were approved
"subject to survey." It is undisputed that this survey was never
performed. Therefore, a condition precedent to enforcement of the
contract was never satisfied and the contract is not binding.
"[W]here the parties to a proposed contract have agreed that the
contract is not to be effective or binding until certain conditions are
performed or occur, no binding contract will arise until the conditions
specified have occurred or been performed." 17A Am. Jur. 2d
Contracts § 34, at 62 (1991); see also Semens v. Continental Air Lines,
Inc. (I), 2 FSM Intrm. 131, 142 (Pon. 1985) (common law decisions of the
United States are an appropriate source of guidance for this court for
contract issues unresolved by statutes, decisions of constitutional courts
here, or custom and tradition within the Federated States of
Micronesia).
Furthermore, in order to be binding "an agreement must
be definite and certain as to its terms and requirements; it must identify
the subject matter and spell out the essential commitments and agreements
with respect thereto." 17A Am. Jur. 2d Contracts § 192, at 202 (1991).
The most important element of the alleged partition agreement is the
location of the boundaries. Because the survey was never completed,
those boundaries were never identified with the level of certainty to
which the parties, even under the defendants' version of events, had
agreed was necessary to finalize the agreement. Therefore, the
agreement is insufficiently "definite and certain" as to that essential
element, and is not binding.
Moreover, while the Court does not reach the statute of
frauds question presented, the Court does note that it would have expected
that any final agreement involving partition of such a large land holding
would have been reduced to formal written form. This is doubly true
given that the agreement involved a matter in active litigation and the
settlement meeting was attended by counsel. Similarly, it is
inconceivable that if a final agreement had indeed been reached regarding
partition, one of the parties would not have moved to dismiss the state
partition action on that basis. However, the state court action
continued for ten years. The plaintiffs' are entitled to summary
judgment on the defendants' counterclaim based on the alleged partition
agreement. Counterclaim Based On Allegation That in 1935
Florentine Conveyed 30 Hectares in Nett (Tract 046-A-03) to
Carlos
The
defendants claim that in 1935 Florentine conveyed 30 hectares in Nett
(tract no. 046-A-03) by deed to Carlos and that this land is his alone,
and not subject to partition. Based on the 1935 deed the Trust
Territory court issued an order in 1970 in the partition action awarding
this land to Carlos and Carlos used that order to obtain a certificate of
title from the Land Commission. Later, in 1978, Carlos conveyed the land
to his daughters Yvette and Renee. The plaintiffs raise a number of
arguments in their motion to dismiss this counterclaim. They claim
that the certificate of title is invalid because it was obtained by using
a non-final court order, which was extinguished by the new trial order
issued in the state case. In addition, they state that Florentine
could not convey the land to Carlos because the land belonged to Leo under
primogeniture. Plaintiffs also claim that when the Japanese confiscated
the land in 1941, that invalidated the prior transfer to Carlos.
Plaintiffs claim further that Carlos, by seeking return of the
family lands as a representative of the family, waived the right to claim
any of the lands for himself. Similarly, the plaintiffs claim that
Carlos lost any special claim to the 30 hectares when he "acquiesced" in
Florentine's 1956 deed conveying the entire 1250 acre estate to her
children. The plaintiffs also raise questions regarding the
authenticity of the 1935 quitclaim deed itself. The
Court concludes that it would be improper to decide this issue on
dispositive motion. The fact that there may be procedural problems
with the certificate of title that was issued to Carlos based on the 1970
court action says nothing about whether he was validly conveyed the land
in 1935 by deed. At a
minimum, then, the defendants must be allowed to prove that the 30 hectare
parcel was conveyed to Carlos by quitclaim deed in 1935. With respect to
the forced sale to the Japanese ) given that the sale was found by the Trust
Territory government to be invalid, the Court is not persuaded by the
plaintiffs' argument that such sale extinguished any pre-existing rights.
In addition, the Court rejects the plaintiffs' argument that because
Carlos acted as a representative of the family to obtain the return of the
lands following World War II, he waived any special claims that he might
have to a particular portion of the land. It is clear that the Trust
Territory government gave the land to the family following World War II
based on the family's ownership prior to the seizure, and therefore it
follows that the Trust Territory's action was intended to restore the
pre-existing ownership arrangement. Finally, the Court rejects the
plaintiffs' argument that because Carlos seeks to take a share of the
lands under the 1956 quitclaim in which Florentine conveyed 1250 acres to
all her children, that means that he waived any pre-existing rights to a
particular parcel of land. Rather if Carlos already owned a portion
of the 1250 acres that would simply mean that Florentine's transfer was
invalid to the extent that she attempted to transfer that which she did
not own. Despite
the above, it would not be appropriate for the Court to grant summary
judgment to the defendants on this claim. The plaintiffs have
challenged the authenticity of the documents which purportedly effected
the transfer of the 30 hectare plot from Florentine to Carlos in 1935.
See Pls.' Reply To Opp'n To Pls.' First Motion For Summary Judgment
at 38-39; Pls.' Opp'n To Defs.' Second Motion For Summary Judgment at
20-22. The plaintiffs claim for example that the deed was written in
a language )
English ) that
Florentine did not understand, and that there is evidence of tampering.
Viewing these allegations, and the supporting evidence, in the light most
favorable to the plaintiffs the Court finds that there is a issue of fact
regarding the authenticity of the 1935 deed and that both sides should be
allowed an opportunity to present evidence on this issue. Counterclaim Based On Adverse
Possession
The
defendants claim that they are entitled to fee simple ownership of
Sapwetik and most of the lands subject to partition under a claim of
adverse possession pursuant to 6 TTC 302 because Carlos adversely
possessed the land from 1936 until 1976. Adverse possession is a
doctrine under which one can acquire ownership of land if he, without the
owner's permission, uses the land openly, notoriously, exclusively,
continuously and under claim of right, and the owner does not challenge
such action until after the statute of limitations has run. Iriarte
v. Anton, 2 P.S. Ct. R. 8, 13 (Tr. 1986). In this case the statute
of limitations is 20 years. The plaintiffs state that since the
statute of limitations provision that provides the underpinnings for
adverse possession on Pohnpei, 6 TTC 302, did not go into effect until May
28, 1951, the 20-year period of unchallenged possession necessary to make
out this claim cannot be met unless the plaintiffs did not challenge the
defendants' possession until after May 28, 1971. They cite a number
of Trust Territory court decisions that have reached that conclusion ) Kanser v. Pitor, 2 TTR
481, 487 (Truk 1963), Oneitam v. Suain, 4 TTR 62, 70 (Truk 1968).
Because the plaintiffs challenged the defendants' possession in a
court pleading filed on April 11, 1969 (Pls.' Reply To Defs.' Opp'n To
Motion To Dismiss, Ex. M), the 20-year period cannot be
met.
Plaintiffs also argue that adverse possession is not
fully recognized in Pohnpei and should not be applied here. They
cite a recent Pohnpei Supreme Court decision, Pohnpei Public Lands Board
of Trustees v. Yeneres, PCA No. 31-90, Order (Mar. 3, 1992) (Pls.' Motion
To Dismiss, Attach. 15), in which the court explained that adverse
possession "has not yet really become part of the law" because of the
different rules of ownership existing through the various administrations
and because under Pohnpeian
custom landowners are encouraged to allow others to work on their land.
The plaintiffs also cite a case, Iriarte v. Anton, 2 P.S. Ct. R. at
13 in which the Pohnpei Supreme Court indicated that it would be
particularly careful about applying adverse possession among members of a
family, stating: It is a
general principle that members of a family may not acquire adverse
possession against each other in the absence of a showing of a clear,
positive, and continued disclaimer and disavowal of title, and an
assertion of adverse right brought home to the true owner a sufficient
length of time to bar him under the statute of limitations from asserting
his rights. The plaintiffs further note that
because Carlos obtained the land from the Trust Territory government in
his mother's name in 1956, his period of adverse possession could not have
begun to run until that time, and the twenty-year period would not be up
until 1976. Lastly, the plaintiffs' argue that Carlos use of the
property allegedly owned by the plaintiffs was with the plaintiffs'
permission and therefore not "adverse." The
defendants acknowledge that under the Trust Territory precedents like
Kanser and Oneitam they cannot show the twenty years of adverse possession
necessary to establish their claim. However, they argue that this
Court should overturn the rule established in those cases. This
Court concludes, however, that the decisions in Kanser and Oneitam are
sound. For adverse possession to be shown the statute of limitations
under which a challenge to possession can be made must have expired.
In Pohnpei State there was no statute of limitations for such
actions until 1951 and, therefore, any period of adverse possession could
only begin to run in 1951. If this Court believed that the Trust
Territory Court's rule caused inequities we might be persuaded to
reconsider that rule. However, the Court believes that, to the
contrary, the defendants' rule is the inequitable one. Under the
defendants' rule landowners who, in keeping with Pohnpeian custom, see
Pohnpei Public Lands Bd. of Trustees v. Yeneres, PCA No. 31-90, Order
(Pon. Sup. Ct. Mar. 3, 1992), did not object to others making use of their
land for living or farming could be penalized by having their land taken
from them, even if during most of the period there was no way of knowing
that such generosity could be used against them. Applying the Trust
Territory rule, which is informed by a reading of Yeneres, the Court
concludes that since the plaintiffs challenged Carlos' possession by April
of 1969 at the latest, it is not possible that the defendants could show
the twenty-year period necessary to a claim of adverse possession.
Therefore, even under the facts alleged by the defendants this claim
fails and dismissal is proper. There
is a second reason for concluding that the adverse possession claim must
fail. Under the Pohnpei Supreme Court's holding in Iriarte v. Anton,
a claim of adverse possession is not made out among family members unless
the party claiming adverse possession shows that the owner made a "clear
disclaimer or disavowal" of right to the land. 2 P.S. Ct. R. at 13.
The defendants have not alleged any facts showing that the
plaintiffs have made a "clear disclaimer or disavowal" of right to the
land. Therefore, the plaintiffs are entitled to judgment on this
issue as a matter of law. Counterclaim Based On Intestate
Succession
In this
claim the defendants allege that they are entitled to a share of Leo's
land by intestate succession. The plaintiffs counter that this claim
should be dismissed because it is precluded by the assignment of
expectancy, which, they say, resulted in the transfer of all of Leo's land
to Robert Jr. As discussed earlier, the Court holds, as a matter of
law, that the assignment of expectancy did not result in the
transfer of any of Leo's land to Robert Jr. Factual issues remain,
however, regarding whether the defendants can claim any of Leo's land, or
are precluded from doing so by the waivers that they executed.
Therefore, the motion to dismiss the counterclaim based on intestate
succession is denied. Counterclaim Based On Breach of Stipulated
Preliminary Injunction
This
claim is based on a stipulated preliminary injunction signed by the
parties on May 26, 1989, as part of the state court action (PCA No. 343).
Under that stipulated preliminary injunction, development of the land was
strictly limited. The penalty stated in the injunction for
"unilateral termination" of the agreement was that the terminating party
"waives forever any and all claims whatsoever to all the land."
Pls.' Motion to Dismiss, Ex. 19 (Stipulated Preliminary Injunction)
para. 11. The injunction stated that it would "remain in full force
and effect until such time as the land is finally divided between the
Parties." Id. para. 8. According to the defendants, the
plaintiffs have engaged in development activities that violate the terms
of the agreement. The
plaintiffs state that the stipulated preliminary injunction has no effect
because it was ordered by Justice Santos in the state court action, and
the appellate division of the FSM Supreme Court subsequently held, in
Etscheit v. Santos, 5 FSM Intrm. 35 (App. 1991), that Justice Santos was
disqualified from presiding. The plaintiffs also argue that the
stipulated preliminary injunction is not enforceable because the parties
later agreed to dismiss the state court action without prejudice.
According to the plaintiffs the preliminary injunction, although
stipulated to, should not be considered a "contract" with force apart from
Justice Santos' order because Justice Santos forced the parties to create
the stipulated preliminary injunction. Lastly, the plaintiffs note
that a different alleged violation of the stipulated preliminary
injunction in this case was already the subject of a decision by Justice
Santos in the state case, and that he held that the forfeiture provision
in the injunction was void because it was against Pohnpeian custom.
See Defs.' Motion To Dismiss Counterclaims, Ex. 19. The
Court agrees that as an order of the state court the preliminary
injunction is void due to Justice Santos' disqualification and the
stipulated dismissal of the state court action. However, it is still
possible that the stipulated preliminary injunction, which was signed by
both parties, can be viewed as a contract that would have force
independent of Justice Santos' authority. There are factual
questions that would have to be answered before the Court could decide
whether to view the stipulated preliminary injunction as an enforceable
contract. For example, does the agreement represent the will of the
parties or did Justice Santos require them to agree to it? Did the
parties believe that they were terminating the stipulated preliminary
injunction when they jointly moved to dismiss the state court action?
Did the plaintiffs breach the stipulated injunction so fundamentally
that such breach constituted a "unilateral termination" of the
contract? The
Court is not persuaded by the plaintiffs' argument that the matter can be
dismissed because Justice Santos already found the forfeiture provision to
be unenforceable. First, this argument flies in the face of the
plaintiffs' own argument that all of Justice Santos' orders are void due
to his disqualification. Moreover, the plaintiffs are reading Justice
Santos' decision on the stipulated preliminary injunction too broadly.
All that that decision said is that the forfeiture provision does
not apply where there's a minor/trivial breach ) in that case a fence was built crooked
rather than straight as agreed. The state court said, however, that
it was "inclined to adopt an approach that draws a line between
fundamental and trivial breaches." Therefore, a more fundamental
breach could still trigger the penalty described in the stipulated
preliminary injunction. In light of the factual questions remaining,
the Court cannot at this time dispose of the defendants' claim based on the stipulated
preliminary injunction. Counterclaim Based On Unjust
Enrichment
In
this counterclaim the defendants state that Carlos' efforts were solely
responsible for the return of the Etscheit lands to the family following
the two Japanese confiscations. The defendants argue that to prevent
"unjust enrichment" Carlos should be compensated for the time and money he
expended to re-claim the land, either by receiving a larger portion of the
land or by being awarded some amount of monetary
compensation. The
doctrine of "unjust enrichment" is widely recognized in the United States,
but the defendants neither cite any FSM cases adopting the doctrine nor
provide any compelling reason why this Court would want to adopt that
doctrine. Assuming this Court wanted to adopt the doctrine of unjust
enrichment, this is not an appropriate case for doing so. Generally,
the doctrine refers to the situation where someone takes part performance
under contract that is void for impossibility, illegality, mistake, fraud,
or some other reason. In those circumstances even though there is no
enforceable contract the doctrine requires the individual to either return
what has been received under the contract or pay the other party for it.
Here there was no contract between Carlos and other family members
suggesting that Carlos would be reimbursed for expenses incurred in
securing the return of the family's land. The
doctrine of unjust enrichment has also been expanded to cover cases where
there is an "implied contract." 66 Am. Jur. 2d Restitution and
Implied Contracts § 3 (1973). In the instant case, however, there is
no allegation that the plaintiffs ever asked Carlos to make any efforts on
their behalf or suggested in any way that they would compensate him for
doing so. "A benefit officiously thrust upon one is not considered
an unjust enrichment and restitution is denied in such cases." 5
Samuel Williston, A Treatise on the Law of Contracts § 1480, at 4133-34
(rev. ed. 1937).
Moreover, the unjust enrichment doctrine is based on the
idea that "one person should not be permitted unjustly to enrich himself
at the expense of another." 66 Am. Jur. 2d Restitution and Implied
Contracts § 3, at 945 (1973) (emphasis added). However, Carlos'
efforts to reclaim the family land were necessary in order for him to
preserve any claim he personally had to that land. There is no evidence
that he expended additional efforts on the plaintiffs' behalf beyond what
he had to do to protect his own interests. In other words, there is
no allegation that the benefit to the plaintiffs came at Carlos' expense,
as is required for application of the unjust enrichment doctrine.
Therefore, even if this Court wished to adopt an expansive version
of the unjust enrichment doctrine that extended as far as cases where
there was no implied or explicit contract, the defendants still have not
alleged facts that would make out a claim of unjust
enrichment. The
Court wishes to express its respect for Carlos' accomplishment in
successfully reclaiming the land that had been wrongfully confiscated.
It took a great deal of courage to persevere and prevail over the
adversities Carlos faced. It comes as no surprise to the Court that
the defendants feel that Carlos' efforts should be somehow compensated.
Unfortunately, the law does not support allowing the claim based on
unjust enrichment to go forward. The plaintiffs will be granted
judgment as a matter of law regarding the defendants' unjust enrichment
claim. Counterclaim That Parcel 046-A-01 Is Not
Subject To Partition
One
small parcel, 046-A-01, which abuts the rest of the Etscheit estate was
formerly submerged land that Carlos
filled with the help of the Japanese Government. The defendants claim that
because Carlos was the only Etscheit "who had anything to do with this
land," it belongs to them and is not subject to partition. The
defendants identify no legal theory, doctrine or precedent entitling one
to attain title to submerged lands by filling them in. On that basis
alone this claim should be dismissed. The only authority that either
side has raised for any claim to 046-A-01 is that the Land Commission
issued a certificate of title in the name of the "Legal Heirs of
Florentine Etscheit." Therefore, at best the defendants can claim a
proportionate share of the land as heirs of Florentine Etscheit. The
defendants' claim to exclusive ownership of 046-A-01 should be
dismissed. Counterclaim That Land on Taketik Island
Should Be Divided In Thirds Between Robert Jr., Yvette, and
Renee
The
defendants state that the claim to 15 acres on Taketik Island was
"inchoate" prior to 1989. In 1989, Robert Jr., Yvette and Renee
settled a claim against the State of Pohnpei which resulted in an
agreement that transferred 15 acres on the island to them. The
defendants argue that because the land was returned at a time when the
other family members, being non-citizens, could not acquire a share, the
land should be divided in thirds, with Robert Jr., Yvette and Renee each
receiving a third. The plaintiffs respond that the land on Taketik
was reclaimed solely through Robert Jr.'s efforts, and that the entire 15
acres should therefore be awarded to the plaintiffs on the basis of
quasi-contract and quantum meruit. The
defendants cite no authority for their view that because the Etscheits'
ownership of the Taketik land was re-established later than the rest of
the land acquired by Dominique, Dominique's or Florentine's disposition
regarding that land is void. Because the defendants have given the
court no legal basis for treating this land differently than the bulk of
the Etscheit land claim, the land on Taketik should pass with the rest of
the land. Therefore, the counterclaim regarding Taketik Island is
dismissed. CONCLUSION
For the
reasons discussed above, it is hereby ordered that: 1. The
plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment is denied to the extent that it
seeks a ruling that the primogeniture rules applied to the Etscheit lands.
Instead the Court rules, as a matter of law, that the primogeniture rules
never applied to the land held by the Etscheit family in Pohnpei.
The plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment is also denied to the
extent that it seeks a ruling that all of Leo's land passed to Robert Jr.
pursuant to the assignment of expectancy executed by Robert Sr.
Instead the Court rules, as a matter of law, that the assignment of
expectancy, although valid, did not transfer any of Leo's land to Robert
Jr. The defendants will be allowed an opportunity to show that the
releases they signed waiving any further claims they had to inheritance
from Leo were part of larger agreement involving partition of the
land. 2.
The defendants' cross-motion for summary judgment (May 5, 1993), is
granted to the extent that it seeks a ruling that all of the Etscheit
lands passed to Florentine by operation of Dominique's will. The
motion is denied to the extent that it seeks a ruling that Florentine
validly transferred the land to her
children by quitclaim deed in 1956. Instead the Court rules that, as
a matter of law, that transfer was invalid. 3.
The plaintiffs' motion to dismiss counterclaims is granted in part.
The defendants' counterclaims based on the alleged 1982 family
agreement, adverse possession, and unjust enrichment are all rejected as a
matter of law. Also rejected, as a matter of law, are the defendants'
counterclaims relating specifically to parcel 046-A-01 and Taketik island.
The plaintiffs' motion to dismiss is denied with respect to the
counterclaim that the defendants own parcel 046-A-03 in fee simple, the
counterclaim based on intestate succession, and the counterclaim based on
the plaintiffs' alleged breach of a stipulated preliminary
injunction. * * *
*
Footnotes:
1. There are numerous other
actions pending with this Court in which individuals challenge the
Etscheit family's claim to land that is involved in this partition action.
The Court's decisions in the instant litigation do not determine,
and should not be construed as determining, the validity of the claims of
those individuals who are not members of the Etscheit
family.
2. Carlos actually signed the
document, but the memorandum of understanding makes clear that Florentine
was the party in interest and that Carlos was merely acting as her
representative under a Power of Attorney.
3. The Court expresses no
opinion in this decision regarding the accuracy of the acreage estimate in
the deed. The Court notes that the deed describes the area as "1250
acres more or less," thus making clear that the figure is an
approximation.
(1) Oldest living
son.
(2) Oldest living
grandson.
(3) Oldest living
brother.
(4) Oldest living
brother's son.
Women could not inherit under
the succession provisions. The
deeds also stated punishments for disobedience to the Nanmarki, Pls.'
First Motion For Summary Judgment, Ex. B para. 11, required individuals to
give two days of free labor to the Nanmarki each year, id. paras. 8, 9,
and provided for contributions to feasts in the Nanmarkis' honor, id.
para. 7. The deeds stated that landowners had to allow other family
members to use the land. Id. para. 3.
5. At oral argument counsel
for the plaintiffs suggested that a "family agreement" was also a
prerequisite to the granting of an exception to the primogeniture rule.
However, the German deeds relied on make no mention of such a
requirement.
6. The Court is not confined
to merely deciding whether primogeniture does apply as a matter of law,
but may also decide whether it is inapplicable as a matter of law.
Although, the defendants have not explicitly made the applicability
of the primogeniture rule an issue in their cross motion for summary
judgment, that question must necessarily be decided in answering the
questions that the defendants did state, i.e., whether Florentine obtained
title to the land in 1925 or 1927, and whether Florentine validly conveyed
the land to her children in 1956. Moreover, even if primogeniture
was only raised by the plaintiffs, the Court still could, after
considering that motion, decide the issue in the defendants' favor on
summary judgment. See 10A Charles A. Wright et al., Federal Practice
and Procedure § 2720, at 29-30 (1983) ("the weight of authority is that
summary judgment may be rendered in favor of the opposing party even
though he has made no formal cross-motion under rule
56").
7. John L. Fischer was
District Anthropologist for Pohnpei during a portion of the Trust
Territory era.
8. The plaintiffs cite to a
1958 version of the Fischer study that was published in Land Tenure
Patterns: Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, a publication of the
Trust Territory Government (hereinafter "1958 Fischer"). The
defendants cite to a 1951 version of the Fischer Study (hereinafter "1951
Fischer"). Most of the relevant portions of the two versions are
identical.
9. Counsel for the plaintiffs
stated at oral argument that members of the Etscheit family have
participated in various traditional feasts and events. This claim
was not supported by citation to any affidavit or other evidence.
Moreover, it was not suggested that the Etscheits gave two days of
labor a year to the Nanmarki, that the Nanmarki provided the Etscheit
family with food, or that the feasts the Etscheits participated in were
the ones required by the German deeds.
10. There is some question
about whether the FSM Constitution is a helpful aid in interpreting
provisions that pre-date the Constitution, such as the German
primogeniture rule. However, since the Court is being asked at this time
to interpret the primogeniture provision, and to do so in a way that will
have present day consequences, the Court believes it is proper to consider
those principles of fundamental fairness that the FSM Constitution charges
the Court with protecting. See Etscheit v. Santos, 5 FSM Intrm. 35,
37 (App. 1991) (the core task of the FSM court is to uphold, among other
constitutional rights of the people, the right not to be deprived of
property without due process of law).
11. This particular quote
comes from a "recommendations" section of the 1951 Fischer article.
The entire recommendations sections was deleted from the 1958
version.
12. The plaintiffs cite J.
David Fine, Legacies of German and Japanese Law and Administration, 12 U.
Haw. L. Rev. 321, 333-34 (1990), which states that "Japanese laws merely
solidified the land law reforms of 1911." However, that article
makes no mention of the primogeniture rule, and appears to be speaking
generally of the reforms that took control of the land from the Nanmarkis
and placed it in individual hands. Moreover, given that the rules
written on the German deeds only applied to land held pursuant to those
deeds, then "solidification" of those reforms would not mean that the
rules applied to the Etscheit land, which was not held under one of the
German deeds containing the restrictions. Finally, the writer of the
article describes his findings as "tentative" and based only on the
published literature. Id. at 327.
13. The plaintiffs argue that
the decision of the Trust Territory Appellate Court in Shoniber v.
Shoniber, 5 TTR 532 (App. 1971), stands for the proposition that the rule
of primogeniture applies regardless of the existence of a German deed for
the land. However, that decision explicitly stated that while the
deed there had been lost, the parties agreed that the land was held "under
the standard form German Land Deed, No. 304/305." Id. at 533.
The situation in Shoniber, then, is entirely different than the
instant one. Here it is not merely a case of the standard form
German deed for the land being lost, but a case were the land was never
held under one of those deeds. The
plaintiffs' citations to Kilement v. Eskalen, 1 TTR 309 (Pon. 1957);
Pelitin v. Lorenso, 1 TTR 307 (Pon. 1957) are also unhelpful. All
those cases hold is that when land held under a standard German deed is
divided, each subdivision is subject to the conditions on the original
German deed from which the ownership flows. Those cases says nothing
about a case where no German deed was ever issued for the land and where
the rights to the land do not devolve from a German deed.
14. The restrictions on the
standard form German deeds state that "rental of property or parts thereof
is allowed only with the consent of the Nanmwarki and Governor."
Pls.' First Motion for Summary Judgment, Attach. B, para. 4
(Translation of Restrictions Written On The German
Deeds).
15. The plaintiffs cite to
three Trust Territory cases in which the court stated that it was applying
the "land law" "set forth" on the German deeds. The plaintiffs argue
that this means the primogeniture law was one of general application and
printing it on the German deeds was merely the means of publishing a law
of general application. See Pls.' Reply to Opp'n to Pls.' First
Motion for Summary Judgment at 6-7 (citing Kehler v. Kehler, 1 TTR 613,
614 (App. 1958); Ladore v. Ladore, 1 TTR 22, 23 (Pon. 1952); Kilara v.
Alexander, 1 TTR 3, 5 (Pon. 1951)). It is not a necessary
implication, however, that because the law was "set forth" on the deeds
that then it must be a law of general application. In the those
cases, cited by the plaintiffs, where the land was held under one of the
German deeds the restrictions were the "law" applicable to the land.
In cases where the land was held under a land registry, a Japanese
lease or a homestead permit, then different rules were the "law"
applicable to the land.
16. At the hearing, counsel
for the plaintiffs argued that three things were needed to make exceptions
to primogeniture )
consent of the Nanmarki, consent of the Governor and a family agreement
) and that of those
three family agreement was probably the most important. This argument,
while it helps the plaintiffs to explain the unfavorable decisions in
Godlieb and Seman, undermines their contention that the rules stated on
the standard form German deeds were strictly enforced. Those deeds
make no mention of a family agreement requirement and certainly do not
state that the approval of exceptions by the Nanmarki and the Governor is
unnecessary when a family agreement is reached.
17. "Equal protection of the
laws may not be denied or impaired on account of sex, race, ancestry,
national origin, language, or social status." FSM Const. art. IV, §
4.
18. On January 19, 1994,
shortly before the hearing on these motions, the defendants filed a second
motion for summary judgment. The plaintiffs did not have an
opportunity to respond to that second motion before the hearing, and it
was not a subject of the hearing or of this decision. Since that time the
plaintiffs have filed their response to the second motion for summary
judgment. Although the defendants' second motion for summary
judgment is not a subject of this hearing, it deals with some of the same
issues involved in this decision. Therefore, the Court while not ruling on
the January 19th motion, will consider the various attachments and
exhibits filed regarding the defendants' second summary judgment motion in
reaching its decision with respect to the motions that are the subject of
this decision.
19. The version of this
provision in the 1952 Trust Territory Code, unlike the version in the 1980
Code, only created an exception for "heirs," not for "devisees." See
TTC 900 (1952). It is conceivable that in 1956 the more limited 1952
version of the exception was still in effect. Even if that is the case, it
would not change the conclusion that the exception does not apply, since
the Court holds that Florentine's children were neither heirs nor devisees
in 1956.
20. Arguably, on January 14,
1957, the Fifth Ponape Congress enacted intestacy laws which adopted a
variation on the German deed rule as the general law for intestate
succession. See Ponape District Order 8-57. See also D.L. 3-17-59, §
12-101 (Nov. 24, 1959).
21. For reasons already
discussed above, the Court rejects the defendants' contention that only
the Government, not parties with a private claim to land, can challenge
another's ownership of that land on the basis of citizenship. See
supra pp. 383-84. The Court also notes that the defendants'
themselves take a different view of this where it suits them, raising the
issue of Robert Sr.'s citizenship in challenging the assignment of
expectancy he executed. See "Assignment of Expectancy" Section in
Defs.' Opp'n To Motion To Dismiss Counterclaims.
22. Under 6 F.S.M.C. 805 the
six-year statute of limitations applies to all actions not covered by a
specific statute of limitations.
23. The second amended
complaint in the state action did not explicitly state a claim based on
the agreement, but did contain a paragraph alleging the existence of the
agreement and a statement alleging that Robert Jr. "ha[d] indicated that
the 1982 agreement [wa]s not acceptable to him." Defs.' Opp'n to the
Pls.' Motion to Dismiss Counterclaims, Attach. B para. 26 (Second Amended
Complaint) (July 13, 1988).
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