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HONORS AND LANDS

DISPUTES IN SAMOA TWO IMPORTANT CASES ‘i (Per Press Association.) WELLINGTON, this day. A very lengthy sitting of the Land and Titles Commission has just been completed, writes the Samoan correspondent of the United Press Association at Apia. The commission generally holds two sittings every year for the purpose of settling land disputes, and disputes over chiefly titles and names. The Chief Judge, Mr. J. H. Luxford, presided, and Mr. W. McBride, Secretary of Native Affairs, and Mr C. McKay, assistant-Secretary, sat -with the president as assessors. The commission is assisted by eight Samoan chiefs, who sit in an advisory capacity. On the list were two important cases which each occupied tho commission for a number of days. The first concerned the name Fe’epo and the right to confer the name. The original holder of the name was the grandfather of the first Malietoa, and lived nearly 900 years ago. The second case was to determine the ownership of a large area of land taken by the Administration for water supply purposes. The land in dispute formed part of a block oi 14,500 acres acquired in the early seventies by the representative of a German firm. The Treaty of Berlin, in 1889, put the onus on every European owner of land to prove his title. An International Land Commission was set up to enquire into all European claims. The work of the commi«on took nearly five years. There were over 400 separate claims in respect. of the block of 14,500 acres, but the land commissioners recommended a compromise. The recommendation was adopted, and half the land was given back to the Samoans. The present case necessitated an investigation of the proceedings of 40 years ago for the purpose of determining the ownership of the lands that were handed back to the Samoans. There were eight separate claims of ownership, but the Land and litles Commission decided in favor of the Seumanutafa family. The judgment \ of the commission also determined the rights of the several members of tho family consequent upon a mavaega (will) made by Seumanutafa Moepogni, the Samoan hero of the great hurricane in 1889.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PBH19331102.2.62

Bibliographic details

Poverty Bay Herald, Volume LX, Issue 18235, 2 November 1933, Page 7

Word Count
359

HONORS AND LANDS Poverty Bay Herald, Volume LX, Issue 18235, 2 November 1933, Page 7

HONORS AND LANDS Poverty Bay Herald, Volume LX, Issue 18235, 2 November 1933, Page 7

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