60 Wash. 344 | Wash. | 1910
Lead Opinion
The respondents brought this action to restrain E. W. Ross, commissioner of public lands, from issuing, and the other defendants from receiving, placing of record, transferring or negotiating, certificates on tide land fills upon certain described lands owned by the respondents, for an amount in excess of the actual cost of the work, with fifteen per cent added, and in no event to exceed in amount the number of cubic yards filled on any lot, multiplied by sixteen cents. The trial court issued an injunction pendente lite upon a preliminary showing, and the defendants have appealed from that order.
The complaint in the case alleges, in substance, the execution of the contracts under the act of 1893, between the state and Eugene Semple, for the excavation of certain waterways upon tide lands in Seattle, and the filling of adjacent lands, which contracts have been assigned to the appellant Lake Washington Waterway Company. The complaint also alleges various extensions of the time of completing work under the contracts, and the purchase from the state by plaintiffs of certain tide lands covered by the contracts. The complaint also alleges that, by virtue of the contracts, fills have been made upon certain of the lands now owned by the plaintiffs; that under the law and the contracts, the said land commissioner is authorized to issue certificates representing the cost of such fills, and such certificates, when filed in the office of the county auditor of King county, become liens upon the land for the amount named in the certificates; that the land commissioner has in the past issued certificates against lands of other owners under these same contracts for illegal amounts; that he threatens to, and will, in the future issue certificates in illegal amounts against the lands of the plaintiffs if not restrained by the courts; that when such certificates are issued, they will be delivered to the defendants and placed of record in excessive amounts. Copies of the contracts in question are attached to the complaint and made a part of it.
The statute authorizing the contracts in the case provides that the commissioner of public lands shall issue his certificate to the contracting parties, or their assigns, showing the actual cost of the fill in raising above high tide all the tide and shore lands to be filled in; and also that, upon the filing of the certificates in the office of the county auditor, the holders shall acquire a lien for the cost as specified in such certificate, with fifteen per cent additional thereon, with the proviso “that such lien shall not be operative for an amount exceeding the cost of the work as stated in the contract.” Rem. & Bal. Code, § 8103. In § 8104 it is provided that:
“All persons or corporations purchasing said lands from the state in the meantime shall take the same subject to the ultimate lien upon the same, provided for herein.”
Section 8106 of the act provides that the contracts shall specify the character of bulkheads and other restraining-works, and that the commissioner shall be judge of the sufficiency thereof. Section 8107 provides that:
“In ascertaining the cost of filling in and raising above-high tide of any tide or shore lands, the cost of all bulk
In the contract it is stipulated between the state and the waterway company that, upon compliance by the latter with the contract, the state grants a lien upon the tide lands described therein as provided by the aforesaid act; that it will hold the land described in the contract subject to the operation thereof, and that it will do and perform by. its authorized agents all and singular the acts and things mentioned and set out in such act of the legislature to be done and performed by the state of Washington, said act being made an integral part of the contract. The contract also provides that “the cost of the work shall in no case exceed, for excavation and embankment and for bulkheads and sea walls, the cost specified in the supplement hereto,” which supplement provides that:
“The entire cost of said work, including the cost of bulkheads and sea walls, shall not exceed sixteen cents per cubic yard for each and every yard of earth put upon each tract or parcel of land to which any person or corporation has a pre-emption right of purchase, except as herein otherwise provided.”
It is also provided that the commissioner shall have power to modify the plans and specifications for bulkheads and restraining walls, and that if such modification shall make, the entire cost of the fill exceed sixteen cents per cubic yard, the commissioner shall cause such increased expense to be estimated and, with the approval of the governor, shall specify the sums in addition to said sixteen per cent per cubic yard to which the entire cost of such work shall be limited. The commissioner did require a modified and more expensive form of bulkhead, but this appears not to have been approved by the • governor. These contracts were entered into in the year 1894. The plaintiffs’ first applications to purchase
The appellants contend that the matter of determining the cost of bulkheads and street fills is vested in the state land commissioner, and that, under the law itself, he has been constituted the tribunal to determine when certificates have been earned under the contract, and when and to whom they shall issue, and what items shall be included therein, and to ascertain the total cost to be included in such certificates; that these matters have been by law committed to the commissioner, and he has complete jurisdiction over the subject-matter, and that his duties under the law and the contract require of him the exercise of judgment and discretion in both the ascertainment of facts and the interpretation of the law, and that the courts will not, in advance of any act being taken by a public officer, enjoin such acts, and undertake to guide and control his judgment or discretion in matters committed to his care in the ordinary discharge of his official duties.
It is true that, in the case of Scholpp v. Forrest, 11 Wash. 640, 40 Pac. 133, this court determined that the law vests in the commissioner of public lands the duty of determining when the certificates have been earned and when they shall be issued, and in Mississippi Valley Trust Co. v. Hofius, 20 Wash. 272, 55 Pac. 54, where certificates had been issued prior to the sale of the land by the state and had become a lien thereon, that the subsequent purchasers could not be heard to deny the validity of the lien; and to the same effect in Seattle & Lake Washington Waterway Co. v. Seattle Dock Co., 35 Wash. 503, 77 Pac. 845. But it was not decided in those cases that the commissioner of public lands could issue certificates which would become a valid lien against lands sold by the state in excess of the amount provided by law and by the contract.
It seems clear, from the provisions of the law and the contract above quoted, that the limit of the cost which may
We are of the opinion that, under the contract, the lands were liable only for the maximum of sixteen cents per cubic yard fixed by the contract, and fifteen per cent additional when the certificates become a lien upon the lands filled, except where additional costs of bulkheads are approved by the governor, and that the commissioner of public lands acts outside of his authority when he allows and issues his certificates for more than that sum. It is no doubt true that, when the commissioner of public lands acts within his authority as defined by law and by the contract, and exercises his judgment and discretion in issuing certificates within the sixteen cent limitation, his acts cannot be inquired into except for fraud or abuse of the trust reposed in him. But
It is argued by appellants that the state is a necessary party to this action, but the state has no interest, pecuniary or otherwise, in this litigation. It has sold the land, and is not liable for the price of the fills made upon the lands and has no interest therein. The fact that the waterway is for the benefit of the state is entirely unimportant, because no-relief is sought on account of the waterway, which is a mere incident to the filling of the adjacent lands. The whole controversy here lies between the owner of the land and the-contractors who are seeking to impress a lien upon the lands for an excessive amount. The commissioner of public lands is-a proper party because he is the agent of both parties under the contract and the law authorizing it, and is charged with, certain duties in regard thereto. He is not a party because he represents the state or the interests of the state in the-litigation.
We are of the opinion, therefore, that the injunction was-properly granted, and the order appealed from is therefore-affirmed.
Dunbar, Crow, Parker, and Morris, JJ., concur.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting) — I dissent. This action requires a construction of Rem. & Bal. Code, § 8103. That part of the law which controls the action of the commissioner of pubhc lands is such cases is as follows:
“Upon the completion of the work, provided for by said contract, or any part thereof, capable of separate use for the purposes of navigation, according to the terms and conditions of said contract, and within the time provided therein,.
In my judgment the duty of the commissioner of public lands is controlled entirely by this statute. He has no discretion; certainly none that the court should control. The-duty of certifying the cost of the improvements, whatever it may be, is made mandatory; while the amount of the lien depends upon the contract. There can be no lien or cloud upon the title for an excessive amount, for the legislature was careful to provide against such contingencies. There-was no authority, therefore, in law for the issuance of the injunction pendente lite. The effect of the decision of the majority is to decide the case upon its merits when it is. not properly before us.
Rudkin, C. J., Gose, and Fullerton, JJ., concur with. Chadwick, J.