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Supreme Court of Vanuatu |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF Civil Case No. 103 of 2013
THE REPUBLIC OF VANUATU
(Civil Jurisdiction)
BETWEEN : | THERESE TRAVERSO |
| Claimant |
AND: | THE REPUBLIC OF VANUATU Defendant |
Coram: Justice Aru
Counsel: Mr. S. Joel for the Claimant
Mr. L. Huri for the Defendant
___________________________________________________________________________
RESERVED JUDGMENT
___________________________________________________________________________
Background
The 013 lease was registered between the Minister of
Lands as lessor and S.C.H.D. Limited as lessee.
The 013 lease was transferred by S.C.H.D. limited as lessee to Eruiti Islands Village Limited as lessee.
Akau Kaltamat Joel wrote to the Minister of Lands alleging that there is no official lease bearing the 013 lease title. The letter in part states:-
“mi attachem wetem leta ia samfala documents we I gud blo stadi long hem from oli shoem long opinion blo mi olsem custom ona long area serious maladministration we I gohed long department of lands over ol traditional lands blong epuen we I constitiute colonial title 593 mo tu I involvement blong ol law firms blong entertainem land robbery long clear ples.
1. Third Party mortgage
Mortgage ia hemi registered long Lands Records mo karem no 495 of 1992
2. Consent of transfer mo actual transfer of lease no12/1031/013
Tufala documents Land Records I registerem long 1993
Wan samting we I strange se INO GAT any official lease document we I karem title no 12/1031/013 long file ia..”
George Kirby John (Executive Officer, Department of Land Records) advised the Minister of Lands by way of a memorandum that the disputed lease is a registered lease. He said:-
“lease title 12/1031/013 does exist and is a registered interest in the land records office ..”
The claimant was granted a negotiator certificate over the land the subject of the 013 lease including other titles.
The claimant received the valuation certificate prepared by the Valuation office that the land premium was valued at VT 570,460 and the claimant paid for the land premium.
The Minister of lands approved the claimant’s lease for registration however the lease was not registered.
Several lease titles were put on notice for forfeiture including the 013 lease. As such Eruiti Island Village limited being the lessee of the 013 lease paid out its outstanding land rent and thus cancelling the notice of forfeiture against the 013 lease.
An application for registration of a lease bearing title No “12/1031/013” was lodged at the department of lands for registration with the Minister of Lands as lessor and the claimant as lessee.
The Minister of lands wrote to Dominique Dinh informing him not to enter the premises of the 013 lease.
The Minister of lands wrote to the Director General of lands that the claimant paid the required fees in order for the lease bearing title No “12/1031/013” to be registered in her favour.
The Director General to the Ministry of lands wrote a letter to the Director of Land Records as instruction to prepare forfeiture notices for the 013 lease.
The Minister of lands instructed the Principal Registration Officer to formalize the registration process for the lease bearing title No “12/1031/013”.
The Principal Registration Officer advised the Minister of lands that the claimant’s application for registration of lease cannot be registered because lease title No 12/1031 /013 is already an existing registered lease which was registered on 17 June 1993. The advice states:
“Hon Steven Kalsakau
Minister of Lands
Port Vila
Honourable Minister
Re: Urgent request to process registration of special lease title No 12/1031/013
We refer to your letter of 13 September 2011 instructing our officers specifically the Principal Registration Officer to formalise the registration process of the above land title as soon as possible.
On 8 September 2011, the Director of Lands Mr Jean Marc Pierre enquired to madam Traverso’s unregistered lease which was lodged before registration. Office of the registry later confirmed to him that lease title 12/1031/013 is an existing lease registered on 17 June 1993 and was registered in the name ERUITI ISLAND VILLAGE LIMITED as the current lessee.
We also informed to the Director of lands that of our knowledge on a forfeiture notice being served but we are not made aware of when is the forfeiture of the subject lease effected nor have we in our possession a copy of the notice of forfeiture of Eruiti Island Village Limited prior to the finalsization of Mrs Therese Traverso pertaining interest.
Therefore we kindly request responsible section by copy of this letter to please provide to the registry a copy of the forfeiture notice confirming that the company Eruiti Island Village Limited has been forfeited by the lessor in the case Minister of lands on behalf of the custom owners.
The registry will then as soon as possible cancel form the lease Register the land lease title 12/1031/013 and the land Survey will be informed as well to issue a new title to Madame Traverso.
Again with respect Hon Minister the office of the registry will not proceed to register Mrs Traverso lease until such time the current company’s lease is properly cancelled from the registry of titles. This is to avoid duplication of titles in the registry.
Yours faithfully
Willie Gordon
Principal Registry Officer”
Claim
Total –VT19, 324,710
Defence
Evidence
Issues
Law
“14. Interest conferred by registration
Subject to the provisions of this Act, the registration of a person as the proprietor of a lease shall vest in that person the leasehold interest described in the lease together with all implied and expressed rights belonging thereto and subject to all implied and expressed agreements, liabilities and incidents of the lease.”
The rights of a proprietor of a registered interest, whether acquired on first registration or subsequently for valuable consideration or by an order of the Court shall be rights not liable to be defeated except as provided in this Act, and shall be held by the proprietor together with all rights, privileges and appurtenances belonging thereto, free from all other interests and claims whatsoever, but subject –
(a) to the encumbrances and to the conditions and restrictions shown in the register;
(b) unless the contrary is expressed in the register, to such of the liabilities, rights and interests as are declared by this Act not to require registration and are subsisting:
Provided that nothing in this section shall be taken to relieve a proprietor from any duty or obligation to which he is subject as trustee.”
“43. Lessor's right of forfeiture
(1) Subject to the provisions of section 45 and to any provision to the contrary in the lease, the lessor shall have the right to forfeit the lease if the lessee commits any breach of, or omits to perform any agreement or condition on his part expressed or implied in the lease.
(2) The right of forfeiture may be –
(a) exercised, where neither the lessee nor any person claiming through or under him is in occupation of the land, by entering upon and remaining in possession of the land; or
(b) enforced by a reference to the Valuer-General.
(3) The right of forfeiture shall be taken to have been waived if –
(a) the lessor accepts rent which has become due since the breach of the agreement or condition which entitled the lessor to forfeit the lease or has by any other positive act shown an intention to treat the lease as subsisting; and
(b) the lessor is, or should by reasonable diligence have become, aware of the commission of the breach:
Provided that the acceptance of rent after the lessor has commenced a reference to the Valuer-General under subsection (2) shall not operate as a waiver."
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in the lease, no lessor shall be entitled to exercise the right of forfeiture for the breach of any agreement or condition in the lease, whether expressed or implied, until the lessor has served on the lessee and every other person shown by the register to have an interest a notice in writing which –
(a) shall specify the particular breach complained of; and
(b) if the breach is capable of remedy, shall require the lessee to remedy the breach within such reasonable period as is specified in the notice; and
(c) in any case other than non-payment of rent may require the lessee to make compensation in money for the breach;
and the lessee has failed to remedy the breach within a reasonable time thereafter, if it is capable of remedy, and to make reasonable compensation in money if so required.”
Discussion
Issue 1 - Whether or not there is an existing lease over the land in dispute?
“For the purpose of this claim I know or learnt in 2006 that the lease title no 12/1031/013 belongs to Eruiti Island Village Limited ...”
Issue 2 - Whether or not (if there is) that disputed lease has been forfeited?
Issue 3 - Whether or not the defendant is right in not registering the disputed lease with the claimant as lessee
Issue 4 - Whether or not the claimant had the right to enter the disputed lease and develop it
Issue 5 - Whether or not the claimant has the right to be ordered interest on monies paid to the defendant in respect of the disputed lease plus related costs of follow ups?
Issue 6 - Whether or not the claimant is entitled to be reimbursed or for reasonable expense for development she has carried out on the disputed lease?
Being for:-
DATED at Port Vila this 3rd day of October 2017
BY THE COURT
.....................
D. Aru
Judge
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URL: http://www.paclii.org/vu/cases/VUSC/2017/149.html