Order Denying Motion for Summary Judgment:
The issue before us is whether a candidate for a matai title is entitled to the title as a matter of law when the original claimant was found to be ineligible by the Territorial Registrar, and other claimants made their claims only after notice that the remaining candidates claim was reissued.
HISTORY
Petelo Lealiiee (Lealiiee) was the original claimant to the Leniu title, and Isapela Mailo Warren (Warren) was the sole objector to file a counterclaim within 60 days after publication of Lealiiee’s claim, as required by A.S.C.A. § 1.0407(a). The Territorial Registrar subsequently found Lealiiee to be ineligible to hold the title, and Lealiiee has made no attempt, known to this court, to contest the Registrar’s decision. After this finding of ineligibility, the Registrar also refused to register the title in Warren’s name, and instead posted notice of Warren’s claim to the title, pursuant to A.S.C.A. § 1.0406. Counter-claimants Matauaina Afufa Leauanae and Maugaotega Savane T. filed their claims within 60 days following notice of Warrens claim.
Warren now moves for summary judgment, claiming that all counterclaims should have been filed within 60 days of Lealiiees original claim in order to satisfy A.S.C.A. § 1.0407(a). Warren argues that she is the only counter-claimant to file within that period and is consequently the only lawful remaining candidate, and therefore claims that she is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
DISCUSSION
The Territorial Registrars discretion to rule on the legal sufficiency of a claim to a matai title is minimal. The Registrars authority is, essentially, limited to a determination that information in the claimants petition is valid, A.S.C.A. § 1.0405(c); see also Id. at § 1.0407(c), and that the claim, certificate, and petition are in proper form . . . . A.S.C.A. § 1.0406. The Territorial Registrar should make decisions regarding the form or validity of a claimants petition prior to posting notice of the claim, which begins the 60 day notification period, in which others may object to the registration or make counter-claims.
If the territorial registrar is satisfied that the claim, certificate, and petition are in proper form, he must give notice of the filing of the claim....
A.S.C.A. § 1.0406. The foregoing language plainly requires the Registrar to be satisfied that a petition is in order before giving notice of it to the world. The Registrar ignored this procedure in the present case by giving notice of the Lealiiees original claim before deciding that the said claim was not in order. The proper time for the Registrar to give notice of a claim is after he is satisfied that it is in proper form. We hold, therefore, that the 60 day time limit under A.S.C.A. § 1.0407(a) could not properly begin to run until some time after the decision regarding Lealiiees original claim, since notice of that claim should never have been published in the first place. As a matter of law, time began to run on the day that the Registrar gave notice of Warrens claim, thereby indicating that Warrens claim was (at least presumptively) in proper form.
For the foregoing reasons, we find that the counter-claimants filed timely claims, and the motion for summary judgment is therefore DENIED.
It is so ordered.
We need not decide whether notice of Lealiiees original claim represented a binding decision by the Registrar that the claim was in order, because the Registrar later refused the registration and Lealiiee elected not to seek review of that rejection. The Registrar should note, however, for the sake of procedural clarity in future cases, that he should publish notice of a claim only after he is satisfied that the claim is in order. Otherwise, his publication itself may, in some future case, be taken as a binding decision that the claim is in order.