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Papua New Guinea Law Reports |
[1971-72] PNGLR 483
PAPUA NEW GUINEA
[SUPREME COURT OF
JUSTICE]
DIRECTOR OF NATIVE AFFAIRS
V.
CUSTODIAN OF EXPROPRIATED PROPERTY (RE ADMOSIN ISLAND)
Madang & Port Moresby
Williams J
21 October 1971
2-3 December 1971
REAL PROPERTY - Restoration of title - Insufficient evidence to establish interest in land under ss. 9[dxxv]1 and 10[dxxvi]2 of the New Guinea Land Titles Restoration Ordinance 1951 - Insufficient evidence to establish that certificate under s. 17[dxxvii]3 Lands Registration Ordinance did or could have issued - Proper application of s. 17 (1) (c)[dxxviii]4 of the New Guinea Land Titles Restoration Ordinance.
In order to succeed in a claim based on ss. 9 and 10 of the New Guinea Land Titles Restoration Ordinance, 1951 a claimant must produce evidence directly proving his entitlement to registration of an interest in the land or evidence from which such entitlement may properly be inferred. A claimant cannot succeed merely on the basis that the case put forward by him is to be preferred to that raised by an objector.
Dictum of Clarkson J. in Custodian of Expropriated Property v. Director of District Administration (Re Tonwalik), [1969-70] P. N.G.L.R. 110, approved.
Where, upon the evidence before the Land Titles Commission it cannot be properly concluded that a certificate under s. 17 of the Lands Registration Ordinance did in fact issue or could properly have been issued, and to find otherwise would involve making assumptions or inferences quite unsupported by proper foundation, a claim based on s. 67 (3) of the New Guinea Land Titles Restoration Ordinance breaks down and must fail.
Opinion expressed that it is open to very serious doubt whether there is jurisdiction to make a declaration under s. 17 (1) (c) of the New Guinea Land Titles Restoration Ordinance in cases where it is not established that a person was, at the appointed date, entitled to an interest in land and to be registered and entered in a lost register as the owner of, or person entitled to that interest. A declaration made pursuant to s. 17 (1) (c) (ii) must be a declaration of the nature and extent of “the native customary rights (if any) which, at the appointed date were retained by a native or native community in respect of that land”. The phrase “that land” must, in the context in which it appears, refer to land in respect of which an affirmative declaration has been made under s. 17 (1) (a).
Re Adolfhafen Land, [1971-72] P. & N.G.L.R. 326, distinguished.
Additional case referred to:
Tolain v. The Administration of the Territory of Papua and New Guinea; In re Vulcan Lands, [1965-66] P. & N.G.L.R. 232.
Appeal from the Land Titles Commission.
On 31st October, 1952, the Custodian of Expropriated Property claimed entitlement to be registered in the register book in respect of a fee simple interest in the subject land. On 4th October, 1954, the Commissioner of Titles made a provisional order provisionally restoring the claimed interest to the Custodian subject to certain encumbrances in favour of the Administration. He also provisionally declared that at the appointed date no native rights prevailed over the subject land.
A certificate under s. 36 of the New Guinea Land Titles Restoration Ordinance 1951 was filed by the Director of Native Affairs to the effect that to the best of his knowledge and belief there were no native claims to the subject land. In April 1964 the Director lodged an objection to the making of the final order on the grounds that the land had not been purchased from the owners of the land, namely the Kitapain clan.
The claim and objection were heard before the Land Titles Commission in October and December 1964 and on 30th December, 1964, the Land Titles Commission made a final order declaring that the Custodian had proved his claim and that no native rights prevailed over the land.
The Director on behalf of the native claimants appealed to the Supreme Court and relied upon the following ground of appeal:
“2. Thetfirsunground of appeal is that the Land Titles Commission exceeds jurtion oceeding to invesinvestigattigate heae hear and determine the claim made by the respondent under the provisions of the New Guinea Land Titles Restoration Ordinance when there was no evidence or no sufficient evidence before it that the respondent was entitled to make such a claim.
3. & he; Tconsecond ground of appeal is that
the Land Titles Commission wasg in naw iding: (a)&>(a) #160;ـ that the respondent had established that at
the appointed date he had an int in tie sand in there here was
nwas no
evio
evidence or no sufficient evidence before it to support such a finding; (b) ¦ha; that the respondent had established that as
at theinted he wtitled to be registeredtered on a on a lost lost register
as the
owner of the said land; (c) &; that thetiuestion of radical title was
relevant to the determin of im mader ther the prov provisions of the New
Guiw
Guinea Land Titles Restoration Ordinance; (d) t#16; that the Administration of the Territory of
Papua and New Guineaa radtitlehe said said land land and that such
a
find
finding led to the conclusion that the respondent had established as at the
appointed date an interest in the said land and
entitlement to registration on a
lost register as the owner of that interest. 4. ¦t The third ground of appeal is that the
Land Titles Commission was wrong in law in making the said final ord that
it fait failed to apply the provisions of Section 67 (3) of the New Guinea Land
Titles Restoration Ordinance 1951-1963 to the facts
of this case or
alternatively that it failed properly to apply the provisions of the said
Section 67 (3) to the facts of this case. 5. ҈ ; The fourtfourth ground of appeal is that
the Land Titles Commission was win lar in ting the evidencedence of t
of the
circumstances of the purported sale. 6. t#16; The fifthnground of appeal is that the
Land Titles Commission exceeded itssdictnon ie rejg the evidence ofce of
the
the circumstances of the purported sale. 7. ¦he; The sixth ground of appeal is that the
decision of the Land Titles Commissionagainet thg weifht of the the evidence
in
that the weight of the evidence tended to indicate either that the respondent
had failed to establish an interest in the said
land or alternatively that the
respondent had failed to establish entitlement to registration on a lost
register in respect of that
interest.” The relevant facts and arguments of counsel appear in the reasons for
judgment. Counsel: O’Neill, for the appellant. 3 December 1971 WILLIAMS J: This is ae appeal against a final order by the Chief
Commissioner of the Land Titles Commission made unde New Guiw Guinea Land
Titles Restoration Ordinance 1951-1963 concerning land known as Admosin
Island, District of Madang. [His Honour after referring to the history of the litigation and the grounds
of appeal then continued:] On the claim by the Custodian the task facing the Chief Commissioner was to
determine whether, at the appointed date (i.e. 10th January,
1952), the
Custodian was entitled to an interest in the land, the subject of the claim and
was entitled or deemed to be entitled
to be registered or entered in a lost
register in respect of that interest: ss. 9 and 10 of the Restoration Ordinance.
Alternatively,
it was necessary for the Chief Commissioner to consider whether,
pursuant to s. 67 (3) of the Ordinance, the Custodian was deemed
to have been
entitled, at the appointed date, to an interest in the land and to be entered or
registered in a lost register as the
owner of or person entitled to that
interest. The Chief Commissioner gave reasons for his decision, which I set out
hereunder: “It seems to me the evidence is fairly slender on both sides. We will
have to decide which is the less slender. As far as the
claim by the Custodian
is concerned I would like to state some thing which I think in this instance it
is automatic that the Administration
has a title to all land. There must be some
positive evidence to establish an interest by way of a grant to power,
especially where
it involves interest by the native customary tenure. I will
mention these to give an idea what I consider to be the large plots to
these
particular interests in land throughout the Territory in general. What I mean in
regard to native customary tenure is if a
native says so I would believe him if
he said his father gardened there. In this case there is some evidence that
there was some
sort of sale. Whether it was a sale because of a family row we do
not know and I do not think it is important. Australian families
have been known
to indulge in this expensive method of getting their own back on each other and
it is sometimes in a more refined
way by getting support from the legal
profession. I think in this case there is evidence of a sale by someone to the
Germans and
I do not think I will have to go into the question. It was sold at
some rate. The Custodian’s evidence is extremely slender.
There will be an
order in favour of the Custodian. It will just have to be the whole of the
Island above high-water mark as there
is no survey.” The basis upon which the Chief Commissioner reached his conclusion in favour
of the Custodian is by no means clear. He opened with
the words: “It seems
to me that the evidence is fairly slender on both sides, we will have to decide
which is the less slender.”
Later, he said: “I think in this case
there is evidence of a sale by someone to the Germans. I do not think I have to
go into
the question. It was sold at some rate. The custodian’s evidence
is extremely slender. There will be an order in favour of
the
Custodian.” From the words quoted above it seems to me that the Chief Commissioner
reached his conclusion on the basis that there were before
him two competing
claims, that the evidence presented on each side was slender and he was called
upon to decide between two slender
competing claims. He found some evidence of a
sale by someone (unnamed) on behalf of the native objectors to “the
Germans”
which tipped the scales against them in favour of the
Custodian. If, as appears to be the case, this was the approach of the Chief
Commissioner, then it seems to me that it was an incorrect one.
It was for the
Custodian to establish an interest in the land and an entitlement to
registration of that interest under the Restoration
Ordinance. As was said by
Clarkson J. in Re Tonwalik[dxxix]5:
“A claimant under the Restoration Ordinance is not endeavouring to
re-establish ownership, his claim is that, having held
ownership at all material
times and having been registered or entitled to be registered as owner in the
lost register, he seeks recognition
of the fact that he is so registered or
entitled.” It seems to me that a claimant in order to succeed in a claim under the
Restoration Ordinance must produce evidence directly proving
his entitlement or
from which his entitlement may properly be inferred. He cannot, in my view,
succeed merely on the basis that the
case put forward by him is to be preferred
to that raised by an objector. I turn now to the evidence before the Chief Commissioner. In the claim form
the Custodian claimed an estate in freehold, which, he
asserted, was acquired by
him by expropriation on 10th January, 1920. He further stated that the interest
had not been registered,
entered or notified in the register book, the land
register (Grundbuch) or in any other record. Of the documentary evidence
attached
to the claim form the earliest is a sheet of paper containing the text
of several radio messages passing, in 1926, between the Custodian
and his
representative in Rabaul, which are concerned only with the area of Admosin
Island. To the question in the claim form “Can
you give any other
information likely to be of assistance to the Commissioner concerning the land
the subject of the interest, or
the whereabouts of documents or any other matter
or thing affecting this claim, if so give details?” appears the answer
“Advertised
for sale in Rabaul Times No. 175 of 24/8/28, and No. 177 of
7/9/28 present purchaser estate of T. V. Wallace fully paid”. The
next
document in chronological order is annexure “C”, which is a note
bearing the initials “W.C.T.” and bearing
date 2nd June, 1931,
stating that the property is not entered in the groundbook, but that the records
of the Custodian’s office
at Rabaul show that permission to acquire the
island was given by the German fiscus. The note adds that freehold title should
be
issued under s. 17 of the Lands Registration Ordinance 1924 of New
Guinea. The note does not reveal the identity of its author
“W.C.T.”; however, I observe that annexure “D”
purports
to be signed “W. C. Thomas, Custodian of Expropriated Property”, so
that I assume that “W.C.T.”
can be identified as W. C. Thomas,
Custodian of Expropriated Property. Annexure “D” is an inquiry from
the Custodian
of his delegate in Rabaul as to the position concerning the issue
of title to the island, whilst annexure “E” is a report
from the
Delegate to the effect that no progress could be made in the matter as the
relevant file had been mislaid. Annexure “F”
is a copy of a letter,
dated 21st November, 1931, from the Delegate in Rabaul to the Custodian, stating
that the file had been located
and that “it seems fairly certain that a
section 17 certificate will issue in due course”. The latter annexure adds
that
there was a German survey of the area and there was every possibility that
it may be found sufficiently accurate for the purposes
of a s. 17 certificate,
in which case “an early decision as to the title may be
expected”. This is the total of the documentary evidence before the Chief Commissioner.
It is to be noted that there was no entry in the groundbook
in relation to the
subject land, and that the earliest document produced in support of the claim is
dated 16th October, 1926. At the hearing before the Chief Commissioner at Madang on 6th October, 1964,
oral evidence was given by Mr. R. J. Wilson, a cadet
patrol officer. He stated
that he had made an investigation into the history of Admosin Island. From what
he had been told, the people
from the mainland had been driven by tribal
fighting to nearby islands and had occupied Sek and Kitapain Islands. Whilst
living on
Sek Island they gardened on Admosin Island. It is also said that one
Aui destroyed the fruit trees of one Tangis, who then went to
the German
missionaries and said he would sell them the island. The Germans came to live on
the island, and agreed to buy it, but
that was as far as the transaction went.
As far as Mr. Wilson had been able to ascertain no one had received any payment.
Mr. Wilson
went on to relate that he was told that the Germans went away and
that at the present time (that is October 1964) Peter Amam, a mixed
blood, who
works for the Catholic Mission at Sek village, is living on the island. Mr.
Wilson was informed that in 1947 the natives
had gardens on the island and that
Amam’s pigs raided the gardens, causing the natives to leave. Mr. Wilson
stated that he
believed that Mrs. L. F. Carter of Brisbane owned the island,
because she wrote a letter to the mission. He added that the natives
claim that
the coconuts on the island were planted by their forefathers. There was also before the Chief Commissioner, a statement by Panu Galagal,
the head of the Kitapain land-owning group. This statement
was obtained by a Mr.
Chester, when, in 1963, he investigated native claims to the island. Panu
claimed his group was the owner of
a number of islands, including Admosin
Island. After giving an account of the founding of his line, he stated that,
when the Germans
first arrived, his group was living on Sek Island and gardening
on Admosin Island. The Germans acquired some land at Sek Point, on
the mainland,
from another group, and settled there. As to Admosin Island, he claimed that
this was sold to the Germans by a man
named Tangases, who, he said, was not a
real member of the Kitapain land-owning group. He stated that one Aiu had a
garden on Admosin
Island in which were planted some fruit trees. An unknown
person lit a fire which got out of control and destroyed the trees in
Aiu’s
garden. Tangases, who was a relative of Aiu, became very angry and
in revenge, and without telling anyone, sold the island to the
Germans for one
bag of rice, one blanket and an axe, which were not shared amongst the Kitapain
group. Panu said that, when his forefathers
heard about the sale, they were very
angry, but did not complain because of fear of the white men. In effect, Panu
claimed that the
purported sale was invalid because Tangases had no authority to
make a sale. Panu also gave evidence before Commissioner Page, who was requested by the
Chief Commissioner to take this evidence. In his evidence
Panu claimed that his
people owned Admosin Island, he said that his ancestors resided on the nearby
island of Sek and used Admosin
Island for gardening. The first Europeans to come
to the area were Germans. One European man came to the island and
“marked”
land, saying that he would return later and build a
“hospital or something” on this island. He did not return and
Panu’s
people continued to use the island for gardening until the Japanese
war. His people had not used the island since the Japanese war,
and the island
has been used by two mixed bloods from a nearby mission, for raising pigs, and
fowls. His people still use the waters
surrounding the island for fishing and go
ashore “to get the pepper vine and edible greens”. In answer to
questions by
Commissioner Page, Panu stated that the land presently occupied on
the nearby mainland by the mission, was sold to the mission by
Futol, a member
of the Panuadan group. He did not know whether Futol had also sold Admosin
Island to the mission. The Custodian asserts entitlement to an estate in freehold in the land by
expropriation, that is to say that, by force of the Expropriation
Ordinance 1920-1934, there became vested in him property formerly belonging
to a prescribed company, a prescribed national or a prescribed
estate. It was
said by counsel for the Custodian that there was evidence of expropriation in
that the assertion was made by the Custodian
under statutory declaration in the
claim form. However, it seems to me, that before any weight can be attached to
this assertion
it is necessary to examine the surrounding circumstances to see
if there is any basis for it. It was contended for the Custodian that there was evidence of a sale by the
original native inhabitants and that the Chief Commissioner
had so found. This,
coupled with the fact that between the years 1926 to 1931 the Commissioner was
taking some steps to obtain title
gave rise, it is said, to a presumption that
an interest in the subject land had come into existence and had passed to the
Custodian. As to the “sale” it was found by the Chief Commissioner that:
“I think in this case there is evidence of a sale
by someone to the
Germans. I do not think I will have to go into the question. It was sold at some
rate.” Presumably, the Chief
Commissioner is referring to the statement of
Panu to the effect that the island had been sold to the Germans by Tangases, for
one
bag of rice, a blanket and an axe. It was said by Panu that Tangases had no
authority to effect the sale of the island and in fact
the objection of the
respondent in this proceeding was that there was no purchase because there was
no transaction between the German
Administration and the heads of the Kitapain
clans owning the land. But even if it be accepted that a transaction as
described by
Panu took place and that Tangases had authority to enter into the
transaction the question still remains whether it was one sanctioned
by the
German authorities and which resulted in someone obtaining an interest in the
land capable of registration. It appears that,
both in the time of the control
of the area by the New Guinea Company and of the German Imperial Government,
strict rules were laid
down in connexion with the acquisition of land from the
natives. Whether or not the transaction described by Panu was one sanctioned
by
the relevant authority does not appear. It has been said in annexure
“C” to the Custodian’s claim that records
of the
Custodian’s Delegate in Rabaul show that permission to acquire the land
was given by the German fiscus, and this indicates
that the transaction was
approved by the German authorities. The transaction said to have been approved
by the fiscus is not identified,
nor does it appear whether the permission was a
conditional or an unconditional one. In the circumstances which I have detailed above, there does not seem to me
to be any evidence to show that any identifiable person
had acquired an interest
in the subject land nor any evidence of the nature or extent of any interest
which may have been acquired
by and which passed to the Custodian under the
Expropriation Ordinance 1920. In the evidence of Panu concerning the sale
of the land no mention is made of the time of the alleged transaction. It may
have
been in the time of the control of the area by the New Guinea Company or in
the time of the control of the German Imperial Government.
The identity of the
person who entered into the transaction with Tangases is not revealed. He may
have been a representative of the
company, the German Government, or a mission,
or he may have been a private individual. Whoever he was, he could not have
acquired
an estate in fee simple from the native people, as they would have had
no such estate to confer. To obtain an interest cognizable
under the German law
it would have been necessary for the purchaser to have met all the strict
requirements of whatever law was applicable
at the relevant time. The
transaction described by Panu is surrounded by so much uncertainty and obscurity
that no conclusion could
properly be drawn from it. In my view the claim of the Custodian, in so far as it is based upon ss. 9
and 10 of the Restoration Ordinance must fail. It was also contended on behalf of the Custodian that if no entitlement arose
under ss. 9 and 10 of the Ordinance, then an entitlement
arose under s. 67 (3)
of the Ordinance. Whether or not the Chief Commissioner directed his mind to the provisions of
s. 67 (3) does not appear in the reasons for the decision
given by him, although
it does appear that s. 17 of the Lands Registration Ordinance was
canvassed in argument before him. Division 2 of Pt. III of the Lands Registration Ordinance was
concerned with bringing under the provisions of the Ordinance land, or interests
in land, alienated or in process of alienation
before the Ordinance came into
force on 1st June, 1924. In effect it provides machinery for the issue of title
under the Ordinance
to persons who are either registered in the Land Register
(Grundbuch) or entitled before 9th May, 1921, to be registered therein. By s. 67 (1) of the Restoration Ordinance, ss. 16-43 inclusive, contained in
div. 2 of Pt. III of the Lands Registration Ordinance were repealed. At
the same time sub-s. 3 was enacted in the following terms: “(3) r; Fo pthe purposes of this Ordinance, a person
shall be deemed to have been entitled, at the aped daoe, to an i an
interest in
land, and to be entered or registered in a lost register as the owner of, or
person entitled to, that interest if, in
the opinion of the Commissioner he
would have been so entitled if – (a) ـ toviprons ions repealed by this section had
remained in forc>
(c) theeproc pure prescribed by those
provisions had, bethe ated dbeen etelyiedplied in r in relatielation
toon
to that that
land.” Section 67 (3) has received consideration in previous decisions of this
Court. Tolain v. The
Administration[dxxx]6; Re
Tonwalik[dxxxi]7; Adolfhafen Land
Case[dxxxii]8. As was said in the latter
case, it is for the Chief Commissioner, having regard to the evidence then
before him, to apply the repealed
provisions of the Ordinance assuming that they
had remained in force and the proper procedure had been applied and to form an
opinion
as to whether the claimant had proved that he was entitled to be
registered in the lost register as entitled to an interest in the
land. I turn now to the repealed sections. Section 16 plainly has no application to
the present case because, as conceded by the Custodian
in his application, there
had not been any entry in the Land Register (Grundbuch) concerning the subject
land. The starting point
in the procedure to bring the subject land under the
provisions of the Lands Registration Ordinance must therefore be found in
s. 17. That section provided for the issue of a certificate by the Commissioner
of Lands to a person who
was, before 9th May, 1921, entitled, either immediately
or in the future, and either absolutely or contingently under the law then
in
force to be registered in the Land Register as the owner of any estate or
interest in land. For the Custodian it was submitted that the Chief Commissioner could properly
have found that a s. 17 certificate had issued. This
submission is based on the
contents of annexures “C” and “F” to the claim form. The
former, dated 26th March,
1931, contains a statement over the initials of
W.C.T., who, presumably, was the Custodian, that “freehold title should be
issued under s. 17”. The latter is a copy of a letter dated 21st November,
1931, from the Custodian’s Delegate at Rabaul
to the Custodian wherein it
is stated that a file of papers dealing with the acquisition of Admosin Island
had been located in the
lands department from which “it seems fairly
certain that a s. 17 certificate will issue in due course”. The letter
went
on to say that: “there is a German survey of the property which is
now being checked, although the survey was made with a compass,
there is every
possibility that it may be found to be sufficiently accurate for the purposes of
a s. 17 certificate. In that case
an early decision as to the title may be
expected.” It is said for the Custodian that in the light of these statements that an
inference may properly be drawn that in all probability
a s. 17 certificate did
ultimately issue. There is of course no evidence that a certificate did issue,
but it is said that there
was a presumption arising from the statements of the
public officials to which I have referred that a s. 17 certificate would have
issued, and that the loss or destruction of records in Rabaul precluded the
giving of more positive proof. The purpose of the document annexure “C” is not explained. It is
probably a file note intended to be a direction by the
Custodian to his
subordinate officers to take steps in an endeavour to obtain a s. 17
certificate. The document annexure “F”
contains statements which, in
my view, could be put no higher than the expression by the Rabaul Delegate of
the Custodian of an opinion,
or the expression of a hope or expectation that a
s. 17 certificate would issue. He was not the person charged with the duty of
issuing
a certificate but was, in fact, a person with an interest in obtaining
one. The function of issuing a certificate was conferred by
the statute upon the
Commissioner for Lands. Had the latter expressed the opinion that it was
probable that a certificate would issue,
much more weight could be attached to
the statement. Nearly ten years elapsed between the writing of annexure “F” and
the loss or destruction of records in Rabaul due to enemy
action. If, as has
been suggested, a certificate did eventually issue, then it is surprising that
there is no record of it. While
the loss or destruction of records in Rabaul is
readily explainable, it nevertheless seems to me that, at all material times,
the
office of the Custodian was located in Australia and the documents which are
annexed to the claim form came, presumably, from that
source. If the matter of
the issue of a certificate progressed, as has been suggested, then I find it
difficult to understand why
the Custodian’s records kept in Australia did
not disclose the outcome of the matter. Upon the evidence before the Chief Commissioner I do not see how it could
properly be concluded that a s. 17 certificate did in fact
issue, or indeed
could properly have been issued. To say otherwise would, in my view, involve the
making of assumptions or inferences
quite unsupported by any proper
foundation. On my view of the matter, the claim by the Custodian based on s. 67 (3)
breaks down at this point and must fail also. The question now arises as to the form of the order I should make. Counsel
for the appellant submitted that, in the event that I should
find that the
Custodian’s claim failed, I should declare that native customary rights in
the Kitapain group prevailed. Counsel
for the respondent opposed this
submission. It is to be noted that before the Chief Commissioner there was an objection
to the making of a final order on the ground that “the
land was not
purchased in that there was no transaction between the German Administration and
the heads of the Kitapain clan owning
the land”. There was no reference to
the Chief Commissioner under s. 36 of the Restoration Ordinance of the question
of customary
native rights in the land so that strictly the issue of the
existence or otherwise of customary native rights in the land was not
raised
before the Chief Commissioner. But in any event it seems to me that it is open to very serious doubt whether
there is jurisdiction to make a declaration under s.
17 (1) (c) of the
Restoration Ordinance in cases where it is not established that a person was, at
the appointed date, entitled to an interest
in land and to be registered or
entered in a lost register as the owner of, or the person entitled to that
interest. A declaration
made pursuant to s. 17 (1) (c) (ii) must be a
declaration of the nature and extent of “the native customary rights (if
any) which, at the appointed date,
were retained by a native or native
community in respect of that land”. The phrase “that
land” must, I think, in the context in which it appears, refer to land in
respect of which
an affirmative declaration has been made under s. 17 (1)
(a). The main purpose of the Restoration Ordinance must also be kept in
mind. This question was considered by Clarkson J. in the Tonwalik Island
Case (supra) who held that, once the Commission concludes that there was no
registration nor entitlement to registration it is not required
to pursue its
inquiries further. Counsel for the appellant referred me to the decision of
Frost S.P.J. in the Adolfhafen Land Case (supra) where the claim of the
Custodian failed and a declaration regarding native customary rights was made.
However it appears,
in that case, the point was not argued and the declaration
was made without objection. In these circumstances I do not think that
assistance can be gained from that case. I order that the decision of the Chief Commissioner be quashed and that in
lieu I order that the Custodian has not established that
he was, at the
appointed date, entitled to an interest in the subject land. I reserve liberty
to apply as to the form of order. Appeal allowed. Final order quashed. Declarations accordingly. Liberty to
apply. Solicitor for the appellant: W. A. Lalor, Public
Solicitor. [dxxv]New Guinea Land Titles Restoration
Ordinance 1951-1968 Section 9 provides: “A person claiming to have been entitled as at the appointed
date— (a) ¦t to an interest in land; and (b)  ; toege registereenter
d in
a losa lost register as the owner of or the person entitled to that interest (whether
or
not he was, before the loss of destruction of that register so registered or
entered), may make a claim in respect of that interest.” “For the purposes of the last preceding section, a person shall be
deemed to have been entitled to be registered or entered
in a lost register as
the owner of or the person entitled to an interest in land if he would have been
so entitled, but for— (a) & tthe; the destruction or loss of agister (including the Land Register), recorrecord, certificate or document; (b) ҈ ; the informnformal nature of a
document, or a mis-description in a document; or
Woods, for the
respondent.
Cur. adv. vult.
Solicitor for the respondent: P. J. Clay, Crown
Solicitor.
)¦n < ; the failurailure of some other
person to execute a document which the first-mentioned person is in equity
entitled to have executed.’
“In a provisional or final order, the Commission shall declare—
(a) #16;& e; wh iher it is established that a person, was at the appointed date, entitled to an interest i landsthe subjecubject of the order and to be registered or entered in a lost register as the owner of or the person entitled to that interest;
(b) ـ #16;& the; the boundaries of the land the subject of the interest;
(i) &; tthe; the interest established in that land; and
(ii) ҈& 160; the nthe native customary right (if any) which, at the appointee, wetainea native or e or nativnative come community in respect of that land; and
(d) ¦t any other matter which the Commission thinks necessary.”
Section 17 provides:
“(1) Wheye ansoperson (including the Fiscus or the Government of the German Empire or the late German Government of the Territory or any officer or organ of either of those Governments or the British Military Administration or any officer thereof) was before the ninth day of May, One thousand nine hundred and twenty-one entitled, either immediately or in the future, and either absolutely or contingently, under the laws then in force, to be registered in the Land Register as the owner of any land or of any estate or interest in land or of any right affecting land, the Commissioner for Lands may at any time certify by writing under his hand that any such person or his successor in title is entitled to be registered in the Land Register as the owner of the land, estate, interest, or right which is described in the certificate.
(2) t#16; Theicertteicate shall be in duplicate, and one copy shall be forward the sommiesion the trar anar and oned one copy copy to the person entitled thereto.
(3) TheiCommnesioner shall at the same time forward to the Registrar for his ition ihe fele kypt b theiCommnssioner reer relating to the land in question.’
[dxxix][1969-70] PNGLR. 110, at p.
120.
[dxxx][1965-66] PNGLR.
232.
[dxxxi][1969-70] PNGLR.
110.
[dxxxii][1971-72] PNGLR. 326.
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URL: http://www.paclii.org/pg/cases/PNGLR/1971/483.html