151 P. 145 | Cal. | 1915
Petitioner successfully sought a writ of mandate to compel the register of the land office of the state of California to issue a patent to certain school land in Kern County. The judgment was affirmed by the district court of appeal of the first appellate district, but on petition was transferred to this court. There is an appeal also from the order denying the motion for a new trial.
The essential facts are as follows: On June 3, 1869, there was issued to Charles A.B. Brackett a certificate of purchase of the tract of land here in litigation upon the payment of a part of the purchase money, — namely, twenty per cent. This was in accordance with the provisions of the law (Stats. 1867-68, p. 521, sec. 51) that twenty per cent should be payable within fifty days from the date of the certificate of location issued to the purchaser by the surveyor general. The statute also provided that "the balance, bearing interest at the rate of ten per cent per annum in advance," should be "due and payable within one year after the passage of any act of the legislature requiring such payment, or before, if desired by the purchaser." This statute further provided (Stats. 1867-68, p. 526, sec. 65) that upon receipt of the list required to be sent to him by the register of the land office, showing the purchasers who had not made the payments due and the amount of their delinquencies, the district attorney of the county in which the land was situated should commence a suit to foreclose the interest of such delinquent purchasers. The statute further provided that: "If the name of the holder of the certificate be not known, he may be sued under a fictitious name, and service of the summons may be had by publication in some newspaper published in the county for four weeks; or if no newspaper be published in the county, then by posting one copy of the summons for four weeks at the courthouse door of the county, and two copies in public *677 places in the township where the land is situated." Brackett made payment of interest due up to January 1, 1873, but no further payments were tendered for more than thirty-seven years. In August, 1874, the district attorney of Kern County commenced an action to annul the certificate which had been issued to Brackett, naming as defendants "A.B. Brackett and John Doe." The summons was published and a default judgment was entered foreclosing all interest of the defendants in the land.
In December, 1886, the register received the first payment on the purchase price of this same land from one Phillips and issued to him a certificate of purchase in due form. In 1911 the full amount due upon the said land as shown by said certificate was paid to the state.
By an act passed in 1889 (Stats. 1889, p. 428) it was provided that whenever an applicant to purchase school lands shall have failed for five years to pay to the state the arrears of principal or of interest due for said land, and the state shall have issued a certificate to another purchaser prior to the passage of the said act of 1889, unless the holder of the prior certificate shall pay the entire residue of the interest remaining unpaid for such purchase within six months from and after the passage of the act, said holder shall be deemed to have lost all title to the land described in said certificate and to have surrendered all right to complete the purchase of said land and all moneys paid by such holder shall be deemed and taken as forfeited to the state.
In October, 1911, the petitioner Aikins became the assignee of all rights of Charles A.B. Brackett under his certificate of purchase, and he tendered payment in full of principal and interest and incidental fees, and demanded that a patent be issued to him. This demand was refused, whereupon he proceeded by petition for mandamus as set forth above.
Appellant contends: 1. That the foreclosure proceeding against "A.B. Brackett and John Doe" was efficient and sufficient to oust Charles A.B. Brackett from all interest in the land; 2. That the act of 1889 did not operate as an impairment of the contract between Brackett and the state and that, therefore, under the provisions of said act Brackett's interest in the land was terminated; 3. That petitioner's rights are barred by laches and by the statute of limitations; and, 4. That mandate will not lie to determine the conflicting *678 claims of petitioner and Michael Phillips, but that such conflict must be settled under an order of reference by the register under sections 3414 and 3415 of the Political Code. At the oral argument, however, we instructed counsel to confine the discussion to two matters: the question of the constitutionality of the act of 1889 and the alleged laches of the petitioner. The conclusion which we have reached makes it unnecessary to consider the other points.
Petitioner's position is that the act of 1889 impairs the obligation of his contract, because, as he asserts, the statutory provision for foreclosure and redemption existing at the time of Brackett's purchase formed a part of the agreement. Assuming, without deciding, that the attempted foreclosure by the action of the state against "A.B. Brackett and John Doe" was void, let us determine whether or not the petitioner was entitled under his contract to the sort of procedure provided in the then existing act, and no other, in any effort on the part of the state to deprive him of his interest in the lands. It is to be noted that the procedure outlined in sections 65 and 66 of the act of 1868 was not expressly made a part of the contract. We have set out the former section in substance above. The latter gave the holder of a certificate of purchase twenty days after a decree of forfeiture and before copies of such decree had been filed with the register of the land office and the recorder of the county, during which time he might redeem by paying to the sheriff of the county in which the property was situated the amount due to the state. But we do not think the method of terminating the rights of a defaulting purchaser under the act of 1868 was exclusive. It was merely a method of declaring a forfeiture. If the petitioner was in default, he may not complain because the state has established a method of declaring a forfeiture different from the judicial procedure authorized by the statute at the time of his purchase. At the most he may only complain if the later procedure imposes upon him more onerous conditions than the former. It is sometimes difficult to draw the line between legitimate alterations of a remedy and provisions which impair a right(McCauley v. Brooks,
"It is apparent that the purchaser was not deprived by the act of 1897 of the right to be heard in a court of justice as to the fact of payment. His position under that act was quite as favorable as under the prior act of 1879. It is scarcely necessary to say that this court, when asked to revise proceedings in state courts, have always held that due process of law is afforded litigants if they have an opportunity to be heard at any time before final judgment is entered." He also quoted the language of Mr. Chief Justice Marshall in Sturges v.Crowninshield, 4 Wheat. 122, [4 L. Ed. 529]. "The distinction between the obligation of a contract and a remedy given by the legislature to enforce that obligation exists in the nature of things, and without impairing the obligation of the contract, the remedy may certainly be modified as the wisdom of the nation may direct."
In Waggoner v. Flack,
Applying the reasoning of these cases to the one at bar we are convinced that the act of 1889 is not unconstitutional as impairing the obligation of a contract.
It is argued that the act of 1889 sought to take from the holder of a certificate his property, without due process of law. It is true that when the state enters into a contract as a vendor of land it is subject to the same rules that govern private parties to such agreements and the argument is made that the state is not in a position to rescind without restoring the money paid by Brackett during the early years of the existence of the certificate. There are two answers to this. The first is that the act of 1868 gave the state the power to cause the annulment of the contract as against one in default without the restoration of the part payment. The second answer is that the forfeiture, or, more properly speaking, the rescission, is based upon undoubted arrears of interest payment of which was of the essence of the contract of purchase. *682 The state, the vendor, had a right under the act of 1868 to rescind because of failure to pay interest, although no act had been passed prescribing the time when final payment of the principal should be due, and the procedure outlined in that statute did not make a return of money previously paid, either as the purchase price or as interest, a condition precedent to the successful maintenance of an action of foreclosure against one delinquent in the payment of interest. The act of 1889, therefore, deprived the holder of the certificate of no right, possessed by virtue of the earlier statute, to the restitution of moneys previously paid. Our conclusion, therefore, is that the statute of 1889 is not unconstitutional as depriving delinquent purchasers of property without due process of law.
The statute which we have been discussing is also attacked because of alleged want of uniformity of operation. It is said that the law operated alone upon those in default whose lands, or the lands claimed by them, had been subsequently sold. But we fail to see any injustice in the classification. The legislature was held to no uniformity of classification except to treat all of a given class in the same way. The classification adopted is just and was intended to protect persons who had acquired rights in the belief that the earlier certificates had been abandoned. We conclude, therefore, that the act of 1889 was in all respects constitutional.
Appellant contends that the delay on the part of Brackett and his associates, extending over many years, amounted to laches and this, as the learned attorney-general insists, is true whether we consider the foreclosure suit in which judgment was given against "A.B. Brackett and John Doe" in 1874 as being void upon its face or not. Without reference to the validity or infirmity of that judgment these facts are evident: Brackett was in default January 1, 1873. Phillips has possessed since 1886 a certificate which was prima facie evidence of title (Pol. Code, sec. 3514). Since 1889 the statute has declared the effect of the later certificate if uncontested, yet not until 1911 did Brackett's successor seek to make payment of any sort to the state. For more than thirty-eight years no attention was paid to the obligation to pay interest in advance each year to the state. Meanwhile the state had at least attempted foreclosure proceedings and in 1889 had constructively notified all persons interested in the matter of the intention to disregard any asserted rights to the land arising *683
under the Brackett purchase unless the arrears should be paid, yet nothing was done by the holder of the certificate which had been issued to Brackett until after the completion of the sale to Phillips. Under these circumstances the statute of limitations, which was pleaded, clearly applies. (Barnes v. Glide,
The judgment and order denying a new trial are reversed and the superior court directed to enter judgment dismissing the petition for a writ.
Henshaw, J., Lorigan, J., Shaw, J., Sloss, J., Lawlor, J., and Angellotti, C.J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.