He was appointed Chief Justice of Samoa c.1897, where the English, Germans and Americans were sharing political influence under a tripartite agreement. He was soon forced to adjudicate between rival local claimants to the kingship of Samoa, ruling on a legal technicality in favour of Chief Tanu. A civil war ensued, which had to put down by British naval intervention, severely worsening relations between England and Germany, who had favoured the other claimant. Chambers was eventually pressured into resigning his post c.1900.[1]
^"Senate Confirms Appointment of Chambers and Hanger as Mediators". New York Times. July 20, 1913. Retrieved 2009-08-03. President Wilson found to-day that Louis F. Post, Assistant Secretary of Labor, who was appointed a member of the Board of Mediation and Conciliation for the settlement of disputes between railroads and their employes, was ineligible for the place, as his appointment to the Labor Department had not been confirmed by the Senate.