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Ale v Fruean [2025] WSSC 56 (14 August 2025)

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SAMOA
Ale v Fruean & Anor; Stowers v Aiafi & Anor [2025] WSSC 56 (14 August 2025)


Case name:
Ale v Fruean & Anor; Stowers v Aiafi & Anor


Citation:


Decision date:
Ruling: 31st July 2025
Reasons: 14th August 2025


Parties:
ALE VENA ALE, a candidate for election for the Constituency of Faleata No. 4 (Applicant) v PEPE CHRISTIAN FRUEAN, a candidate for election for the Constituency of Faleata No. 4 (First Respondent) & THE ELECTORAL COMMISSIONER (Second Respondent);

PALOA LOUIS JAMES STOWERS, a candidate for election for the Constituency of Faleata No. 3 (Applicant) v LEALAILEPULE RIMONI AIAFI, a candidate for election for the Constituency of Faleata No. 3 (First Respondent) & THE ELECTORAL COMMISSIONER (Second Respondent)


Hearing date(s):
30th July 2025


File number(s):
2025-01175
2025-01176


Jurisdiction:
Supreme Court


Place of delivery:
Supreme Court of Samoa, Mulinuu


Judge(s):
Justice Leiataualesā Daryl Clarke
Justice Loau Donald Kerslake


On appeal from:



Order:
As we delivered on the 31st of July, the result is that the motions by the applicants challenging the decision of the electoral commissioner and seeking to disqualify the first respondents as candidates for election in the electoral constituency of Faleata No. 4 and Faleata No.3 respectively, are struck out in their entirety and dismissed.

Consequently, leave for the applicants to amend the motion is denied.

Costs against both applicants in the amount of $2,000 each is to be awarded to the First Respondents.


Representation:
T. Toailoa for the Applicants
F.S Ainuu for the First Respondents
DJ Fong for Second Respondent


Catchwords:
Pre-election challenge – strike out.


Words and phrases:



Legislation cited:
Constitution of the Independent State of Samoa 1960, Arts. 9(1); 45;
Electoral Act 2019, ss. 8(1); 8(1)(e); 8(3)(e); 8(3)(g)(ii); 43(4); 47(3);
Supreme Court (Civil) Procedure Rules 1980, Rule 188.


Cases cited:
Enosa v Samoa Observer [2005] WSSC 6;
Kneubhl v Liugalua [2000] WSSC 27;
McNeely v Lemoasina Corporation Ltd [2019] WSCA 12;
Sio v Patea [2011] WSSC 51;
Woodroffe v Mataia [2017] WSCA 5.


Summary of decision:

2025-01175
2025-01176


IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SAMOA
HELD AT MULINUU


IN THE MATTER:


of the Electoral Act 2019.


A N D:


IN THE MATTER:


Concerning the Electoral Constituency of Faleata No.4


BETWEEN:


ALE VENA ALE, a candidate for election for the Constituency of Faleata No. 4


Applicant


A N D:


PEPE CHRISTIAN FRUEAN, a candidate for election for the Constituency of Faleata No. 4.


First Respondent


THE ELECTORAL COMMISSIONER


Second Respondent


AND IN THE MATTER:


Concerning the Electoral Constituency of Faleata No.3


BETWEEN:


PALOA LOUIS JAMES STOWERS, a candidate for election for the Constituency of Faleata No. 3


Applicant


A N D:


LEALAILEPULE RIMONI AIAFI, a candidate for election for the Constituency of Faleata No. 3.


First Respondent


THE ELECTORAL COMMISSIONER


Second Respondent


Coram: Justice Leiataualesā Daryl Clarke
Justice Loau Donald Kerslake
Counsel: T. Toailoa for the Applicants

F.S Ainuu for the First Respondents

DJ Fong for Second Respondent
Hearing: 30th July 2025
Ruling: 31st July 2025
Reasons: 14th August 2025


REASONS OF THE COURT

Background:

  1. Pepe Christian Fruean filed a notice to strike out the motion by Ale Vena Ale which sought to disqualify him as a candidate for election in the electoral constituency of Faleata No. 4. Lealailepule Rimoni Aiafi filed a similar notice to strike out the motion by Paloa Louis James Stowers seeking to disqualify him as a candidate for election in the electoral constituency of Faleata No. 3. The proceedings were heard together, as the grounds for the notice to strike out were identical.
  2. On 31st July 2025, we delivered our ruling striking out the applicants’ motions to disqualify the first respondents as candidate for election in their respective constituency. Although the rulings were delivered separately, the reasons are the same. These are our reasons.
  3. Both applicants and first respondents are candidates for the national general election on Friday 29 August 2025 in their respective constituencies. For the purposes of this decision, “applicants” and “first respondents” will refer to the applicant and first respondent in both separate proceedings. “Constituency” or “constituencies” will refer to the electoral constituency of Faleata No. 4 and/or Faleata No. 3, as applicable to the context.
  4. The grounds for the applicants’ motions to disqualify the first respondents are that:
  5. The applicants did not file an affidavit in support of each of their motion to disqualify the first respondents.
  6. In response, the first respondents Notice of Opposition to the applicants’ motion seeks in the first instance, an order striking out the applicants’ application on the grounds that it is frivolous, vexatious and an abuse of court process. In the alternative, the first respondents seek an order that each first respondent be declared qualified to contest the general election as a candidate for their respective constituency. We are concerned only with the strike out applications. The first respondents seek to strike out the applicants’ motions on the grounds that:
  7. Only Lealailepule Rimoni Aiafi filed an affidavit in response to Paloa Louis James Stowers’s motion for his disqualification. Pepe Christian Fruean did not file an affidavit in response. By consent however, the affidavit of Patea Uili Sio dated 25 July 2025 and the affidavit of Mulitalo Fetogi Vaai dated 26 July 2025 officials for the second respondent were tendered by consent, and marked exhibit A1 and A2 accordingly for the purposes of the strike out proceedings only.

Law:

Statutory Framework

  1. The applicants assert that the first respondents do not satisfy the residency requirements of section 8 of the EA 2019 which relevantly states:

...

(5) In this section: “minimum of 3 years” means a person has been in Samoa for at least 305 days in each year for a consecutive 3 year period ending on the lodgement day;...”
  1. In opposing the strike out applications, the applicants refer the Court to subsection 47(3) and 43(4) of the EA 2019 that relevantly provides:

Strike Out Principles:

  1. The principles governing the exercise of Court’s jurisdiction to strike out are well settled. As these proceedings do not involve an action but a motion, the Supreme Court’s inherent jurisdiction to strike out is invoked. This is on the basis that the pleadings are frivolous, vexatious or an abuse of process. In Enosa v Samoa Observer [2005] WSSC 6, Sapolu CJ referring to Bullen, Leake and Jacobs Pleadings and Precedents (12th edn, 1975), p 145, stated that:
  2. In Kneubhl v Liugalua [2000] WSSC 27, Wilson J referred to Halsbury’s Laws of England:
  3. In Woodroffe v Mataia [2017] WSCA 5 (31 March 2017), the Court of Appeal also said:
  4. In terms of factual pleadings, the Court of Appeal in McNeely v Lemoasina Corporation Ltd [2019] WSCA 12 (19 September 2019) made the point that for the purposes of a strike out motion:

Discussion:

  1. The crux of the first respondents strike out application is that by the applicants failing to annex an affidavit in support of their motions and not particularizing how they do not meet subsection 8(1)(e) and the exemptions in subsection 8(3)(e) as a “primary caretaker (sic), their right to a fair trial is severely diminished”. It is trite law and a basic tenet enshrined in the Constitution that in the determination of the first respondents civil rights and obligations, they are entitled to a fair and public hearing within a reasonable time. As candidates for election, there can be little doubt this constitutional guarantee extends to the first respondents rights to be candidates in the upcoming national general election and any civil proceeding that questions that right.
  2. For the applicant’s part, it is contended that the onus is on the first respondents to prove that they fall within the exemptions in subsection 8(3)(e) of the EA 2019 to satisfy the 305 days per year residency requirement. All the applicants must do is challenge eligibility by motion and it then falls to the first respondents to meet that onus if they rely on the section 8(3)(e) exemption. In advancing this argument, the applicants place substantial reliance on: (a) subsection 47(4) of the EA 2019 and the requirement for the court, whether pleaded or not, to determine whether the candidates are qualified or disqualified to be a candidate; and (b) a reverse onus of proof that places on a respondent the obligation of establishing that they fall within any of the statutory exemptions in subsection 8(3). As such, there is no requirement for, nor is it intended in these proceedings, for the applicants to give or call any evidence at the trial.
  3. Although section 47(3) and 47(4) of the EA 2019 makes no reference to the motion challenging the second respondent’s decision being supported by affidavit, a supporting affidavit is required unless dispensed with by the court. This is so that a respondent to a motion can understand the nature and factual allegations of a claim brought against the respondent and respond. This is part and parcel of ensuring that a respondent receives a fair trial, guaranteed by article 9(1).
  4. Subsection 47(4) also does not in our respectful view go so far as the applicants seem to contend. Where the Court for example might disqualify a challenged candidate on a ground not pleaded, the Court must in our view adopt a process that accords with the principles of natural justice consistent with article 9(1): by giving notice to the prospective candidate of the potentially disqualifying ground and the relevant evidence; and an opportunity to respond. That same obligation extends to a candidate who is seeking to disqualify another candidate, as in these two cases where the applicants are seeking to disqualify the Pepe Christian Fruean and Lealailepule Rimoni Aiafi.
  5. In Sio v Patea, the Supreme Court accepted at [31] that:
  6. We turn to consider whether or not the reverse onus also applies to the residency exemption in EA 2019. We are of the view it does. Although, worded differently, the purpose of subsection 8(3)(e) of the EA 2019 is similar to subsection 5(8) of the Electoral Act 1963, it allows an exemption to the residential requirement. For the same reasons enunciated in Sio v Patea, the onus to prove entitlement to the exemption falls on the candidate relying on it. The standard of proof is on a balance of probability.
  7. The more relevant question is when does the onus shift? It is our respectful view that the reverse onus does not have the effect contended by the applicants that all the applicants must do is challenge the Commissioner’s decision to accept the candidate’s nomination on the grounds of residency without the need for evidence and it is for the first and/or second respondents to satisfy the court that the first respondents meet the 305-day residency requirement. This view misconstrues the reverse onus. At trial, like any trial, the applicants must first call evidence. The onus is on the applicants through their evidence to establish on a balance of probability that the first respondents do not satisfy the 305 day residency requirement. If the applicants satisfy this onus, it then shifts to the first respondents to establish on balance of probabilities that they satisfy the residency exemption. The onus only shifts once the applicants have provided evidence that the first respondents do not satisfy the 305-day residency requirement.
  8. In this case, the applicants have filed no supporting affidavit nor do they intend to call any evidence. The applicants’ motions are procedurally defective. The applicants case is also doomed to fail. With the applicants having no evidence to rely on, the respondents simply do not need to call any evidence and the applicants case is lost.
  9. On the question of the lack of particulars to the applicants’ motions, the applicants submitted that the lack of particulars can be cured by granting leave to the applicants to file an amended motion to better particularize “how the first respondents do not meet the exception (sic) under section 8(3)(e) ...” We do not agree. First, the granting of leave to better particularize the applicants’ complaints fail to address the evidential burden on the applicants to prove on a balance of probabilities that the first respondents do not meet the 305 days. The grant of leave to amend will not save the applicants case.
  10. Second and equally important, if we were to grant leave to the applicants to amend the motion to better particularize their claim, the first and second respondents would also then need the opportunity to respond, including by filing an amended response to the amended motion and in all likelihood, further affidavits. As the courts have reiterated time and again in pre-election and electoral petition matters, time is of the essence. In this case, the strike out motion was heard on the 30th July and ruling delivered on the 31st July. The granting of leave to amend would leave only two weeks (a) for the applicants to file and serve the amended motions; (b) the first and second respondents to file and serve their response including obtaining further affidavits to respond to the particularized allegations; (c) the court to then hear the motions; and (d) deliver a decision by the 15th August. The public interest in a speedy determination of this proceeding coupled with the impractical and unrealistic expectation to be able to complete a trial in such a timeframe potentially prejudicing the respondent’s rights to a fair trial weigh strongly against the grant of leave to amend. We are not prepared to grant leave in the circumstances. In these pre-election challenges brought in the shadows of a looming general election, applicants and counsel must come to the court with their best case.
  11. In essence, the manner and form in which the applicants have brought these proceedings is without a solid base, incapable of proof and an abuse of the Court’s process.

Result:

  1. As we delivered on the 31st of July, the result is that the motions by the applicants challenging the decision of the electoral commissioner and seeking to disqualify the first respondents as candidates for election in the electoral constituency of Faleata No. 4 and Faleata No.3 respectively, are struck out in their entirety and dismissed.
  2. Consequently, leave for the applicants to amend the motion is denied.
  3. Costs against both applicants in the amount of $2,000 each is to be awarded to the First Respondents.

JUSTICE CLARKE
JUSTICE KERSLAKE


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