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Solomon Islands Terminal Services Ltd v Minister for Lands and Housing [2023] SBHC 158; HCSI-CC 253 of 2021 (8 December 2023)

HIGH COURT OF SOLOMON ISLANDS


Case name:
Solomon Islands Terminal Services Ltd v Minister for Lands and Housing


Citation:



Date of decision:
8 December 2023


Parties:
Solomon Islands Terminal Services Limited v Minister for Lands and Housing, Commissioner of Lands, Registrar of Titles


Date of hearing:
27 April 2023


Court file number(s):
253 of 2021


Jurisdiction:
Civil


Place of delivery:



Judge(s):
Kouhota; PJ


On appeal from:



Order:
The term used in the grant instrument was: “but upon payment to the Grantee(s) of compensation of actual loss sustained in respect of improved land”. The Claimant has suffered loss being the payment of the premium and the cost of making the improvements. Compensation should then be on that basis. If not agreed then to be assessed.


Representation:
Mr B Titiulu for the Claimant
Ms F Fakarii for the First, Second and third Defendant


Catchwords:



Words and phrases:



Legislation cited:
Land and Titles [cap 133] S 71 (1) and (2), S 3, S 132 (1), S 83, S 100, S 114 (c),S 260, S 71Land and Titles (Amendment) Act 2016 S 142 A , S 16 (1), Land and Titles (Amendment) Act 2014 S 8,


Cases cited:
Lever Solomon Ltd v Attorney General [2013] SBCA 11,

IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOLOMON ISLANDS
CIVIL JURISDICTION


Civil Case No. 253 of 2021


BETWEEN


SOLOMON ISLANDS TERMINAL SERVICES LIMITED
Claimant


AND:


MINISTER FOR LANDS AND HOUSING
(Represented by the Attorney General)
First Defendant


AND:


COMMISSIONER OF LANDS
(Represented by the Attorney General)
Second Defendant


AND:


REGISTRAR OF TITLES
(Represented by the Attorney General)
Third Defendant


Date of Hearing: 27 April 2023
Date of Oral Decision: 8 December 2023


Mr B Titiulu for the Claimant
Ms F Fakarii for the First, Second and Third Defendant

RULING

  1. These proceedings concern two parcels of land being the fixed term estate parcel number 192-004-1200 and parcel number 192-004-1201. On 22 August 2022 the parties filed a document headed Agreed Facts and Issues. Paragraphs 1 to 8 of the Agreed Facts are as follows:
  2. The grant instrument for parcel number parcel number 192-004-1200 contains the following at clause 3:
  3. The grant for parcel number 192-004-1201 is in the same terms except the parcel number for 192-004-1201 appears in place parcel number 192-004-1200. Section 132(1) of the Land and Titles Act authorises the Second Defendant to grant fixed term estates for a period not exceeding 99 years. It provides:
    1. 132.- (1) The Commissioner may, subject to the provisions of this Act -
    2. (a) transfer to any person the perpetual estate in any land held by him for such an estate; or
    3. (b) grant to any person a fixed-term estate in any public land for a period not exceeding ninety-nine years:
  4. The prescribed form for the grant of a fixed term estate pursuant to section 132 of the Land and Titles Act is found in Form 2 of the Schedule to the Land and Titles (General) Regulations. Clause 3 of that form provides:
  5. The terms of the grant were therefore in terms of that prescribed by Form 2 in the Schedule to the Land and Titles (General) Regulations. The Second Defendant was the Grantor of the parcels and the Claimant was the Grantee. The Grantee by accepting the grant has accepted the conditions of the grant.
  6. Paragraphs 9 to 12 of the Agreed Facts are as follows:
  7. The parties have agreed on the issues before the Court. These appear in the Agreed Facts and Issues document filed on 19 August 2022 as:
  8. The Claimant first refers to section 100 of the Land and Titles Act. That section provides:
  9. Section 100 therefore is the conversion to a fixed term estate of lands that were privately owned prior to 31 December 1977 by non-Solomon Islanders. It is agreed that the Claimant did not own the land comprised in parcel numbers 192-004-1200 and 192-004-1201 prior to 31 December 1977. The Claimant has referred the Court to the Court of Appeal decision in Lever Solomon Ltd v Attorney General [2013] SBCA 11. That case dealt with the power of the Second Defendant to resume a fixed term estate where the estate was not created by a grant instrument but by the operation of section 100. The Court of Appeal referred to section 114(c) and said that the right of resumption is an overriding interest and need not be noted on the register. The Court then said at paragraph [77]:
  10. Then at paragraph [78] the Court said:
  11. In the Levers case the Court made it plain that the reason why there was no power of resumption in that case was because there was no grant instrument reserving the right to resume. In the present case there was an instrument of grant and that did reserve the right of resumption. There is good reason to differentiate between land that became a fixed term estate by the operation of section 100 and land that was granted on the agreed condition set out in Form 2.
  12. After the Court of Appeal decision in Levers there was a change in the law. The Land and Titles (Amendment) Act 2016 created a new section 142A in the Land and Titles Act. That section provided:

(a) whether the owner of the estate has improved the land and, if so, the value of the improvements;

(b) the remaining period for which the owner would have held the estate if it were not resumed;

(c) the condition of the land subject to the estate at the time of resumption.”

  1. Counsel submits that it must have been an oversight by Parliament to restrict the compensations provisions of section 142A to fixed term estates created by section 100 and to not include estates created by section 132. Such an interpretation flies in the face of clear statutory interpretation. The Court must give meaning to the wording of the section. Levers drew a distinction between fixed term estates created by section 100 and those created by a grant instrument pursuant to section 132. The Court concludes that Parliament must have intended to restrict such provisions to grants created by section 100. To conclude otherwise would be to ignore the plain meaning of the section.
  2. Counsel then submitted that there is no written law that confers the right of resumption to the Second Defendant. However, section 114(c) of the Land and Titles Act provides:
  3. Applying section 114(c) the Claimant as the owner of a registered interest holds that interest subject to the right of resumption conferred by the Land and Titles Act or any other written law. As Counsel submits at paragraph 29 of his submissions “A right of resumption is one created and conferred by a written law.” Is there a right of resumption contained within the Land and Titles Act or any other written law?
  4. Counsel for the Respondent has helpfully set out the answer as follows: The Interpretation and General Provisions Act provides at section 16(1):

written law" means an Act, any subsidiary legislation or an imperial enactment;”

subsidiary legislation" means any legislative provision (including a delegation of powers or duties) made in exercise of any power in that behalf conferred by any Act, by way of by-law, notice, order, proclamation, regulation, rule of court or other instrument;

"regulations" includes rules, by-laws, proclamations, orders, schemes, notifications, directions, notices, and forms;”

  1. Section 260 of the Land and Titles Act provides power to the Minister to make Regulations under the Act. The Minister has done so. The Land and Titles (General) Regulations are made pursuant to that section. Regulation 3 of those Regulations provides:

“3. - (1) The Commissioner of Lands may from time to time prescribe the forms required for the purposes of the Act, and may amend, vary and revoke any form so prescribed.”

  1. Form 2 is the Form prescribed for the grant of fixed term estates pursuant to section 132 of the Land and Titles Act. That form sets out the power relied on which was incorporated into the grant instrument as clause 3. It follows that the power of resumption is part of the written law.
  2. Counsel for the Claimant then submits that section 8 of the Land and Titles (Amendment) Act 2014 prohibits the allocation of land within six months from the date of resumption without the direction of the Land Board. No evidence has been put forward to show it was re-allocated within six months. The fact that it is registered in the name of the Second Defendant is not re-allocation by the Second Defendant. He simply holds the land on behalf of the Government.
  3. Counsel then submits that where land is required for a public purpose the process is by compulsory acquisition pursuant to section 71. While section 71 provides a mechanism for acquiring land for a public purpose that process can apply to land that is a perpetual estate or is customary land. It does not mean that it the only way land that is able to be acquired. The legal process previously outlined allows a condition for resumption to be part of the grant. The Claimant has agreed to take acquire the fixed term estate on that basis. The power to resume is clearly recognised in the sections of the Act and its amendments to which the Court has referred.
  4. It follows that there was a power to resume so to answer the first issue is that the First Defendant did not breach the Land and Titles Act when he did not make a declaration pursuant to section 71 as the parcels were resumed as provided for in the grant instrument as prescribed by the form set out in the schedule.
  5. Similarly the Second Defendant did not act ultra vires his powers when he resumed the parcels numbered 192-004-1200 and 192-004-1201 without a gazette declaration by the First Defendant as the resumption was not a compulsory acquisition pursuant to section 71 of the Land and Titles Act.
  6. Regarding the third issue, for the reasons set out the cancellation of the register of the fixed term estate parcel numbers 192-004-1200 and 192-004-1201 by the Third Defendant was not unlawful and void.
  7. Consequently the Claimant is only entitled to the compensation set out in the grant instrument. If not agreed then to be assessed. It appears that the provision of clause 3 was to put a person in the position of the Claimant in a position he would have been had the initial grant not been made. It will still have had the benefit of the use of the land for the 7 years it was registered in the name of the Claimant. The nature of a fixed term estate is that it is similar to a leasehold system which in this case would have reverted to the Second Defendant at the conclusion of the life of the estate. The cost of the improvements made to the land however could be said to include the premium paid to acquire the land. Without paying the premium the Claimant would not have been able to have access and make the improvements that were made.
  8. The term used in the grant instrument was: “but upon payment to the Grantee(s) of compensation of actual loss sustained in respect of improved land”. The Claimant has suffered loss being the payment of the premium and the cost of making the improvements. Compensation should then be on that basis. If not agreed then to be assessed.

By the Court
Hon. Justice Howard Lawry
Puisne Judge


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