
    MISIMOA MOORS JR., a Minor by MISIMOA MOORS, His Guardian Ad Litem, Appellant v. AMERICAN SAMOA GOVERNMENT, Appellee
    High Court of American Samoa Appellate Division
    AP No. 9-91
    March 12, 1992
    Before KRUSE, Chief Justice, RICHMOND, Associate Justice, MALAETASI, Acting Associate Justice, LOGOAI, Associate Judge, and MAILO, Associate Judge.
    Counsel: For Appellant, Gata E. Gurr
    For Appellee, Richard D. Lerner, Assistant Attorney General
    
      
       The Honorable Malaetasi Togafau, District Judge, District Court of American Samoa, serving by designation of the Secretary of the Interior.
    
   The sole issue on appeal is whether the trial court’s award of damages, in the sum of $20,000 for the loss of vision in one eye, is inadequate. Appellant’s principal contention is "that the value of an eye should not be dependent on the cost of living in the place of residence of the injured ... it should be the same for everybody anywhere in the world." Appellant’s Brief at 3-4. Appellant argues that the trial court should have been guided by awards rendered in other American jurisdictions, and he cites a selective number of cases from state jurisdictions.

This is a normative argument. Not only have the damages awards in lost vision cases varied notably from case to case, see e.g. Annotation, Excessiveness or Adequacy of Damages - Awarded for Injuries to. or Conditions Induced in. Sensory or Speech Organs and Symptoms. 16 A.L.R.4th 1127, 1211 (1982), but "factors affecting damages are subject to wide variations between (sic) jurisdictions.” Leoso v. Seumalo, AP No. 37-84, slip op. at 2 (1984). As the Court recently explained in Kim v. Star-Kist Samoa, 8 A.S.R.2d 146, 151 (1988):

The disparity [in damage awards] from place to place is accounted for by many factors, including variations in the amount of goods and services that money can buy and in social attitudes toward pain. That trial judges in American Samoa tend to award lesser sums than those in Texas or California no more suggest that awards in Samoa should be higher than that those in Texas should be lower.

Looking fit the individual circumstances of the case before us, we cannot say that the award for the particular injuries suffered by appellant’s son and [heir effect upon him, was an abuse of the court’s discretion as the trier of fact. We AFFIRM.  