
    STAR-KIST FOODS, Inc., and STAR-KIST SAMOA, Inc., Appellants v. THE M/V CONQUEST, SECURITY PACIFIC GHC REID, Inc., SAN DIEGO HELICOPTER, Inc., and GOLDEN GLOW, Inc., Appellees
    High Court of American Samoa Trial Division
    AP No. 13-85
    October 15, 1987
    Before REES, Chief Justice.
    Counsel: For Appellants, Togiola T.A. Tulafono
    For Appellee Security Pacific National Bank,. Roy J.D. Hall, Daniel Minteer, and Lillick McHose & Charles
   On request to reappoint members of appellate division panel:

The appellate case in which this request was filed was decided over a year ago, in June 1986. The Appellate Division in that case reversed the decision of the trial court and remanded the case for a new decision in accordance with certain instructions.

The trial judge whose decision had been reversed, former Chief Justice Gardner, was no longer a member of the High Court by the time the Appellate Division remanded the case. The case was therefore heard on remand by the new Chief Justice, the author of the present opinion. On remand the trial court reached the same result as had originally been reáched by Chief Justice Gardner,, although for different reasons

Obviously, the trial court, on remand believed its decision was consistent with applicable law including the. instructions of the Appellate Division, which had rejected Chief Justice Gardner’s reasoning but- had not indicated any dissatisfaction with the result he had reached. The appellants disagree, and not only have appealed the decision on remand (AP No. 11-87) but also have filed a "Motion to Vacate and Set Aside the Decision and Order on Remand and Compelling Compliance With Appellate Court Order of 6/25/86." They have styled this motion as a motion in AP No. 13-85, the original appeal .of Chief Justice Gardner’s decision, rather than in AP No. 11-87, their appeal from the decision on remand. Finally, they have written a letter to the present writer (in his administrative capacity as Chief Justice rather than in his judicial capacity as the author of the opinion on remand) requesting the reappointment of the panel that decided the.June 1986 appeal. This would entail the reappointment of two Acting Associate Justices who were appointed, for a session during March of 1986. It would also entail the appointment of former Associate Justice Murphy, who has resigned ,from the High Court, as an Acting Associate Justice for the purpose of hearing the motion.

This request must be denied. It happens frequently in courts throughout the world that appellate courts remand decisions to trial courts and that the decision on remand is appealed. In the process, the original trial judge or one or more of the appellate judges might have left the bench.- There is no right to a new trial or a new appeal before the same judge or judges that heard the original trial or appeal. In this case the administrative inconvenience of reassembling the panel would be substantial. The Chief Justice would have to make a special request to the Secretary of the Interior. Experience has shown that such requests must invariably be followed' by numerous overseas telephone calls to various other Interior Department officials. Successful requests for the appointment of Acting Associate Justices involve the filling out . of many forms and the expenditure of funds charged against the High Court budget, even if the judges would have been, personally willing to waive -any reimbursement. In any event» for reasons unrelated to this case it seems unlikely that a request by the Chief Justice for appointment of the particular panel requested by appellants' would have received favorable consideration from the Department of the Interior.

The "Motion 'to Vacate" will automatically be presented to the i^ext regular appellate session, whose members have now been appointed by the Secretary. (As it happens, one of the members of the appellate panel is Judge Samuel P. King, who was a member of the panel whose reappointment was requested by appellants and who was the author of the opinion with whose instructions the appellants contend the trial court failed to comply.)  