101 Cal. 520 | Cal. | 1894
This is an action brought to determine a contest arising in the office of the surveyor general of the state of California as to the right of the respondent Fairbanks, or the appellant Lampkin, to purchase state school lands described as follows: The southeast one-fourth and east one-half of southwest one-fourth of section 16, township 11 north, range 15 west, Mount Diablo meridian. The cause was tried and judgment rendered, which decreed that the plaintiff was entitled to purchase from the state of California the east one-half of southeast one-fourth, the southwest one-fourth of southeast one-fourth, and southeast one-fourth of southwest one-fourth of said section, and that a certificate of purchase issue to him for said land, and that neither party was entitled to purchase from the state the northwest one-fourth of southeast one-fourth, and northeast one-fourth of southwest one-fourth of said section. From this judgment Lampkin appeals to this court.
The provisions of the Political Code require that the affidavit of the applicant should state, among other things, the condition of the land as to whether it is or is not suitable for cultivation. In the affidavit accompanying respondent’s application he stated that this land was suitable for cultivation. At the trial the court found that only one hundred and sixty acres thereof was suitable for cultivation, and gave judgment in his favor to that extent. It is now insisted that respondent’s affidavit, wherein it stated that all the land applied for was suitable for cultivation, being declared untrue by the court to the extent of eighty acres, his affidavit and application are valueless as a basis upon which to assert a claim for any portion of the land, and section 3500 of the Political Code is cited to support such contention. That section provides: “Any false statement contained in the affidavit provided for in section 3495 defeats the right of the applicant to purchase the land, or to receive any evidence of title thereto, and, if willfully false, subjects him also to punishment for perjury.”
As to whether or not a particular tract of land is suit
It is ordered that the judgment be affirmed.
Paterson, J., and Harrison, J., concurred.