[1982]DLSC2154June 10, 1982Supreme Court

MANSU vs. ABBOYE AND ANOTHER

The plaintiff-appellant claimed title to family land at Yarbiw, Western Region, alleging ancestral cultivation and uninterrupted possession. The defendants, including the Odikro (chief) of Yarbiw, claimed the land was stool land acquired compulsorily by the State Farms Corporation and later reverted to the stool, granting the chief authority over it. The plaintiff's land was never cultivated by the State Farms Corporation. The defendants uprooted 215 palm trees on the plaintiff's land without permission, leading to the trespass claim.

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JUDGMENT OF FRANCOIS J.A. By his writ, the plaintiff-appellant, hereafter called the plaintiff, sought a declaration of title to his family’s land at Yarbiw in the Western Region. He pleaded that his ancestors had reduced the virgin forest into cultivation and had been in uninterrupted occupation of it until the trespass complained of. The half-hearted attempt at a traverse of the plaintiff’s claim was exposed in the complete failure of the defence to challenge the plaintiff’s boundary neighbours who testified in his support and who claimed to be still in possession of their farms. The only witness for the defence dealt the co-defendant a lethal blow when he asserted, “The plaintiff’s land is not included in the land of the second defendant.” The co-defendant’s case was, however, that as the Odikro of Yarbiw, he was the allodial owner of Yarbiw lands. He had also fought for the release of the lands from the State Farms Corporation which had previously acquired them...