Robson v. Commissioner of State Land Office
Robson v. Commissioner of State Land Office
Opinion of the Court
Section 1, Act No. 239, Laws of 1863, provides “that for the purpose of securing the completion” of a “State road,” therein named and described, “ there shall be and hereby is appropriated to the counties of Houghton * * * 1,280 acres of swamp lands per each mile on said road, to be expended under the authority and by the direction of the board of supervisors, * * * the patents for * * * said lands to be * * * issued to said county on the satisfactory completion of said road, as hereinafter specified.” Section 2 prescribes the powers and duties of the board of supervisors in the premises. Section 3 provides for notice to the commissioner of the State land office of the completion and approval by the board of supervisors of any 10 consecutive miles of said road, and for the issue to said, county of patents for 20 sections of said land, the same to be selected by the board. Section 5 provides thatthe road Shall be completed within four years from the passage of
On June 23, 1863, the board of supervisors made selection of all the lands and filed the lists with the commissioner. Notice of completion was filed January 25,1871. On December 27, 1871, Houghton county withdrew from consideration all lands contained in the lists filed in 1863 for which patents had not issued. Relator’s counsel ascribe this action to the fact that many of such lands had been sold. See People, ex rel. County of Houghton, v. Commissioner of State Land Office, 23 Mich. 270, 277. Counsel agree that there was a large quantity of land to which it was entitled for which patents had not issued, at that time, some of which has been patented to the relator or his assignors since. The relator is the assignee of the county of Houghton, which, having completed and paid for the road with taxes raised in accordance with the act, has sold its right to lands not patented, amounting to 1,883 acres, and, so far as we can discover, the county has made no objection to relator’s claim, even if it is in a situation to do so, which we need not and do not decide. So the case is not different than it would be were Houghton county making this application, and the commissioner refusing to issue patents to it, upon the ground that it had lost its right to them through lapse of time. In short, the case may be stated as follows:
1. The State, for the purpose of internal improvement,*14 “appropriated to the county of Houghton,” upon which it imposed the duty of building and paying for the improvement, certain lands (not designated), in a class known as “State swamp lands,” granted to it for such purposes by the Federal government.
2. The county assigned its right to the land including the right of selection after it accrued and the relator has acquired it.
3. The land commissioner refuses to recognize relator’s right to such land, after its selection by him and declines to issue patents, and we are asked to compel him to issue such patents.
Counsel for respondent concede in their brief that Act No. 339, Laws of 1863, was a grant. They say that it “constituted a floating grant” to the county of Houghton, and they say that “ upon selection the rights of relator’s grantor became fixed, his title perfect, and his right of possession complete.” Selection “was an act required of Houghton county or its assignees, and, when performed, the grant attached itself to particular parcels of land selected, and in this way they became segregated from the great body of similar lands in the Upper Peninsula belonging to the State. * * * The patent is not necessary to vest a title in Houghton county. It was [would be] evidence of title in Houghton county. * * * This being true, and the title already being vested in Houghton county, on making selection after a completion, acceptance, and notification of such acceptance of the road, it follows that the right of said Houghton county or its assignees to bring an action to recover possession of these lands was complete, and, being complete, the statute of limitations commenced to run when such selections could have been made, viz., January 35, 1871,” the date of approval, etc.
The land in controversy was granted to the State for purposes mentioned in the grant. Its appropriation was in furtherance of the purpose, and the county has attempted to apply it to such purpose, in accordance with the duty imposed upon the State by the United States in the statute making the State swamp land grant of 1850.
Obviously, counsel do not deny that the statute was a grant in prsesenti of a right which, when made applicable to particular lands by performance of conditions and selections, would have the effect to vest a complete and perfect title. Their claim seems to be that, until selection is made, title does not vest, and that, if after the right to select
“ The right to acquire land, once vested and attached to a particular tract, is as effective as a grant in segregating the land from the public domain. The tract cannot be disposed of by the government unless the equity is subsequently lost by abandonment, cancellation, or. the like; and on the grant passing it relates back to the initiation of the right, cutting off all intervening claims.”
We have examined the cases cited in support of the text — which at best is a negative statement of the proposition — and we find that most of them had application to disputed, claims arising between private persons, and not one suggests that the land commissioner is justified in treating equitable rights under land warrants, entries, or legislative grants as abandoned because patents are not applied for or surveys or .other locations made within the statutory period fixed for limitation of action for recovery of possession, while we may take judicial notice that a distinctly contrary practice has uniformly prevailed.
In Ross v. Doe, 1 Pet. (U. S.) 655, a right under a donation certificate was recognized long after its date. It has been common to recognize appropriations of land, regardless of lapse of time, even as against subsequent appropriation of the same land. See U. S. v. Fitzgerald, 15 Pet. (U. S.) 407.
In Stark v. Starrs, 6 Wall. (U. S.) 402, it was held:
“ The right to a patent once vested is equivalent, as respects the government dealing with the public lands, to a patent issued. When issued, the patent * * * relates back to the inception of the right of the patentee.”
Simmons v. Wagner, 101 U. S. 260; Cornelius v. Kessel, 128 U. S. 457; Benson Mining & Smelting Co.
To the suggestion that abandonment, cancellation, forfeiture, or the like would justify such action, we may say that here is neither cancellation nor forfeiture. In the case of Lessee of Holtzapple v. Phillibaum, 4 Wash. C. C. (U. S.) 363, it was said:
“We understand an abandonment to be a voluntary relinquishment of a man’s equitable right to land, thereby leaving it vacant and open to future appropriation by others, who should be inclined to take it up.”
There has been no voluntary relinquishment. On the contrary, it is conceded that a former mandamus was asked for and granted-as early as 1872, and that patents were issued upon this claim in 1865, 1894, and 1900. In Hoffman v. Bell, 61 Pa. 444, 454, it was held that a warrant and survey, returned and accepted, on which the purchase money has been paid, confers a perfect title against all the world, but the commonwealth, which has itself the legal title only as security for the patenting fees. See, also, Witherspoon v. Duncan, 4 Wall. (U. S.) 210; Hastings, etc., R. Co. v. Whitney, 132 U. S. 357. There is a close analogy between the right of the State to swamp lands previous to selection and the right of Houghton county after the completion and acceptance of this road and before selection of all lands. The Federal government has always recognized its obligation to admit the State’s inchoate right, and, as already shown, the State has hitherto recognized its obligation to admit the relator’s right to patents upon selection. There is no more apparent reason for the assertion of the statute of limitations, after payment for a floating grant, before selection, than there would be after selection, and no more justification for repudiating a government obligation in either case than in denying selection upon an outstanding bounty warrant, or a patent upon a land entry. The difference between the two cases is at best' a technical one. What
“ All swamp land scrip known as ‘general scrip,5 shall be received in payment of all lands sold under the provisions of this act.”
The State of the credit on account of the grant to Houghton county has been tabulated, and an examination of the reports will show the net amount outstanding from year to year, after deducting the acreage, selected from time to time. This must have been known to the legislature, yet it has taken no action indicating a design to cut off the right of selection, or to terminate the ministerial duty of the commissioner to issue patents as required by law, or to confer upon him a discretion to disregard his statutory duty, when his notions of the interest of the State requires it. In Olds v. Commissioner of State Land Office, 134 Mich. 442, decided in 1903, the validity of “ special or local scrip55 carried in 1867, delocalized in 1887, was recognized, and its acceptance enforced by mandamus. A similar practice has prevailed at Washington. In the “ Public Domain ” issued under the authority of congress, a table appears showing location of warrants in 1884, under acts granting land as early as 1847, and the commissioner of the general land office in the year 1904, gives a similar table, showing the condition at that time of the different grants. The lands in controversy were granted to the State in trust, and, while the Federal government will not inquire concerning the disposition made of the lands, the State is charged with the trust and presumably holds and disposes of the lands in furtherance of the object for which they were granted. Until it, through the legislature, signifies its policy to be that it shall refuse to perform its equitable obligations as to this land incurred in the discharge of its trust, we
Some significance and importance is attached to the argument that the relator has delayed selection for many years, until lands have become valuable, whereby he has avoided the payment of taxes and prevented the taxation of lands which he might have selected. There has been nothing to prevent the sale of these lands during that time from which we may infer that they have not been in demand. There is no evidence that they are especially valuable now, and we are aware of no rule justifying the assumption that the land scrip has not been regularly taxed, but whatever the facts may be, and however,cogent such reflections may be as an argument in support of legislative action in the premises, had any been taken, they are not a sufficient ground for judicial confiscation. Some language in the case of Olds v. Commissioner of State Land Office, 134 Mich. 454, is pertinent in this connection.
The writ should issue as prayed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). The State legislature in 1863 (Act No. 239), appropriated to the counties of Houghton and Keweenaw swamp lands situated in the upper peninsula to the amount of 1,280 acres per mile for the construction of the “ Mineral Range State Road,” so called. This road was to be constructed under the direction of the board of supervisors of these counties respectively. The act provided:
“Sec. 4. There shall be withheld from sale, not exceeding 1280 [acres] of the swamp lands in the Upper Peninsula (not otherwise appropriated) for each mile of said road from and after the time said counties through which said road runs shall notify the commissioner of the State land office of the selection of the same, and said lands shall be so withheld from sale for the period of four years from the passage of this act.”
Counsel for relator contends that the defense of the. statute of limitations is untenable, because:
*21 “(1) In making the grant to Houghton county the State was carrying out the trust created by the act of congress of September 28, 1850, granting swamp lands to the State, which act imposed upon the State the duty of devoting the lands or their proceeds, as far as necessary, to the purpose of reclaiming the swamp lands, and to this extent was a trust sanctioned by the good faith of the State.
“(2) The statutes of limitation have no application to acts of the legislature disposing of the swamp lands granted by the act of congress.
“(3) Statutes of limitations are not applicable to the State unless the legislature has clearly manifested its intention to include the state therein. The general statutes of limitations do not expressly include the State, and that the State is not to be included by inference is shown by the statutory provisions defining the extent to which they shall be applicable to the State, as in sections 9724, 9747, 3 Comp. Laws.
“ (4) The case at bar is not within the terms of the particular statute of limitations invoked by respondent — section 9714, 3 Comp. Laws.”
No selection, however, was made of the lands in question here, and the question arises: Was the uncontrollable right to make a selection sufficient to put the statute of limitations" in operation? Bespondent claims that as the State could not determine what descriptions of the lands should be patented to Houghton county, but the particular tracts to be conveyed must be determined solely by the act of the county in selecting them, when the right of selection became complete, the statute of limitations began to run. In support of their contention, counsel for respondent cite Hintrager v. Traut, 69 Iowa, 746; Baxter v. State, 17 Wis. 588; Prescott v. Gonser, 34 Iowa, 175, and other cases.
In Hintrager v. Traut the action was mandamus to compel the city treasurer to execute a tax deed for a certain lot sold for delinquent city taxes. The city ordinance under which the sale was made provided that at the expiration of two years and nine months after a sale a purchaser may give notice to the landowner of the expiration of the time for redemption, and 90 days after the service of such notice the treasurer is authorized to execute a deed. The court say:
“ (2) The question presented by the demurrer which we shall consider and determine is this: Was the action barred'by the statute of limitations? It will be observed that plaintiff could have given notice of the expiration of the time for redemption, March 12, 1879, which was two years and nine months after the sale. June 12,1879, had the notice been given, plaintiff would have been entitled to a tax deed. This suit was commenced June 16, 1884. Counsel for plaintiff concede that the action of mandamus is barred in three years after the cause thereof accrues. When did plaintiff’s cause of action accrue ? Under the city ordinance he could have been entitled to a deed June 12, 1879. His right thereto at that time depended upon his own action. His right was complete to a deed, so far as all acts and proceedings were concerned, except his own act, over which he had control. The law, as it were, of*24 fered him the deed at the time, but he would not stretch forth his hand to receive it. Under more than one decision of this court his cause of action then accrued, and from that date did the statute of limitations begin to run. See Baker v. County of Johnson, 33 Iowa, 154; Prescott v. Gonser, 34 Iowa, 175: Ball v. Railway Co., 62 Iowa, 751; Hintrager v. Hennesy, 46 Iowa, 600.”
In Freeman v. Ingerson, 143 Mich. 7, we held:
“ Where a demand is necessary to create a cause of action, such demand must be made within a reasonable time, which, by analogy to the statute of limitation, will be deemed to be sis years. ”
But the right of the State to rely upon the ordinary statutes of limitation will not avail the State unless there is some statute which might be pleaded as a defense if the suit were between private parties. If the contract conceded in this suit were between private parties, the remedy of the purchaser would be by bill for specific performance if he wished to obtain a deed of the land, and the statute relied upon by respondent would present no obstacle to such a suit.
It is contended, however, on the part of the respondent that, even though there be no statute of limitations barring the action, the laches of relator has been so great that he ought not to be granted the relief sought. The general rule undoubtedly is, as contended by relator, that mere delay would not defeat the right to have performance of the contract as between private individuals. 3 Pomeroy on Equity Jurisprudence (2d Ed.), § 1408. But, as said by Justice Cooley in rendering the decision of the court in Smith v. Lawrence, 15 Mich. 499:
“The specific performance of contracts must always rest in the sound discretion of the court; to be decreed or not as shall seem just and equitable under the peculiar circumstances of each case. It is frequently ordered in favor of a party who has been for a considerable period in default, if he has never abandoned the contract, and the other party has suffered nothing from the delay for which he cannot be compensated in the decree. If, however, succeeding the default, there has been a considerable*25 change in the value of the property, this may be reason sufficient for denying the specific relief, inasmuch as the contract would thereby become an unequal one, and to enforce it would be to encourage delays by enabling the party to take advantage of changes in his favor, though he might have delayed performance intentionally and not meaning to perform unless favorable changes should occur.”
I think that this court, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, should presume that swamp lands, as well as other lands in the Upper Peninsula, have increased in value in the period between 1872 and 1905. At all events, in my opinion the relator to entitle himself to the discretionary writ of mandamus, has the burden of showing that there has been no material increase in the value of the lands which he now seeks to have patented to him. Furthermore, the State has suffered loss through not receiving taxes upon these lands, as it would have if they had been selected within a reasonable time, as, in my judgment, it was intended that they should be. Act No. 101, Laws of 1869, strongly indicates such intention. Sections 1 and 2 of the act are as follows:
“Section 1. The People of the State of Michigan enact, That whenever any person of [or] persons shall be entitled to State swamp lands, by reason of the performance of any labor, or the fulfillment of any contract, it shall be the duty of the commissioner of the State land office to cause to be issued such patents, and deliver the same to the person or persons entitled thereto, if applied for at the State land office; and in case no such application is made within thirty days from the time such person or persons shall be entitled to such swamp lands (then, in such case), the said commissioner shall file such patent or patents in his office, subject to the order of the person or persons entitled to the same.
“ Sec. 2. It shall be the duty of such commissioner to furnish to the several county treasurers, in each year, and in time for assessment, a list of all such lands so patented, according to the provisions of section one of this act; and such lands so patented, shall be subject to assessment and taxation as other assessable and taxable lands. Lists of all lands now subject to be so patented, shall be furnished*26 by said commissioner to tbe county treasurers, and by the county treasurers to the supervisors of the proper townships, in time for the assessment of the year eighteen hundred and sixty-nine, so far as the same may be practicable.” i
See, also, section 1485, 1 Comp Laws.
The act itself also indicates that the parties contemplated that these lands should be selected within four years, afterwards extended to six years, and during that period the State held the lands in trust for the fulfillment of its grant and could not dispose of them. Lemoine v. Dunklin County, 51 Fed. 487. But, after the expiration of the six-year period of reservation, the trust expired, and the State was at liberty to dispose of these lands as it saw fit. The trust relation having been terminated, laches might be imputed to the respondent for an unreasonable and inequitable delay. Lemoine v. Dunklin County, supra. It was held by this court in People, ex rel. Mabley, v. Judge of Superior Court of Detroit, 41 Mich. 31, that “ the writ of mandamus is not a writ of right, and is not usually allowed to parties who have been culpably dilatory.” The relator and his assignors have waited for 33 years before applying for their patents. The delay is wholly unexplained. The State has been deprived of the revenue which it would have received if the lands had been selected within a reasonable time. Timber which was ignored and treated, as worthless in 1872 is eagerly sought for now, and, presumably, the lands in question are of greater value.
Under such circumstances, I think this court ought to decline to exercise its discretion in favor of relator, and the writ should be denied.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ROBSON v. COMMISSIONER OF STATE LAND OFFICE
- Status
- Published