40 Kan. 211 | Kan. | 1888
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On December 8, 1884, A. E. Beggs, a resident of Graham county, purchased the following school
“Received this notice 23d day of April, 1887, and served the same by going to the land within named, and found the same wholly abandoned. W. Ellsworth, Sheriff.
May 13, 1887. By D. M. Smith, Under-Sheriff.”
On May 13,1887, the county clerk posted the notice in his office in the court house, at the county seat. On the 11th of August, 1887, the plaintiff tendered to the defendant the amount of the unpaid interest and the fees of the officers on the notice, but the defendant refused to receive the same.
This proceeding was commenced November 5,1887; to compel S. G. Wilson, as treasurer of Graham county, to receive the interest and fees tendered on the 11th of August, 1887, and to issue a receipt for the same to the plaintiff. The contention on the part of the defendant is, that the tender of the interest and fees was properly refused by the defendant, upon the ground that the purchaser had forfeited all his right and interest in the land. Section 219, of chapter 92, Comp. Laws of 1885, reads:
■ “If any purchaser of school land shall fail to pay the annual interest when the same becomes due, or the balance of the purchase-money when the same becomes due, it shall be the duty of the county clerk of the county in which such land is situated immediately to issue to the purchaser a notice in writing, notifying such purchaser of such default; and that if such purchaser fail to pay, or cause to be paid, the amount
The sole question in the case as presented is, whether the proceedings to forfeit, after default was made by the purchaser, were in accordance with the provisions of the statute. In brief, was there any forfeiture of the rights and interest of the purchaser to the land in controversy? Under the statute, after the purchaser of school lands makes default, it is the duty of the county clerk of the county in which the land is situated, to immediately issue to the purchaser a notice in writing notifying him of his default. The purchaser then has sixty days from the service of such notice in which to make payment. The statute prescribes that the notice shall be served
Under the statute interpreted in The State v. Emmert, 19 Kas. 546, and Ewing v. Baldwin, 24 id. 82, “if a purchaser of school lands failed to pay either interest or principal of the purchase-money at the time the same became due, such failure ipso facto worked a forfeiture; and the interest of the purchaser in the land instantly and absolutely ceased.” The statute upon which those decisions were made was amended in 1879. (Laws of 1879, ch. 161, §2; Comp. Laws of 1885, ch. 92, §219.) Under the latter statute, there can be no forfeiture until the expiration of sixty days after the service of the notice required to be issued. Forfeitures are not favored by the courts; and therefore before a purchaser of school lands shall forfeit all his rights and interest in such land, under his
The peremptory writ will be granted as prayed for.