103 So. 3 | Miss. | 1925
The history of the pleadings and proceedings had in the cause up to the time of the making of the decree appealed from is rather long and complicated. We do not deem it necessary, however, to set it out, because the turning point in the case may be properly presented without doing so. Unless the patent from the state to appellees to the lot involved of date January 17, 1923, gave appellees title to said lot, they state no ground for relief in their bill. On the other hand, if the patent is valid and includes the lot claimed by appellant, then appellees will be entitled to the relief prayed for.
Appellant attacks this patent from the state on two grounds. One is that under the law the land commissioner had no authority to execute a patent to urban property divided up into lots for business purposes; that his authority under the statute to sell and convey public lands belonging to the state is confined to rural lands used or capable of being used for purposes of agriculture, *247 pasturing or for their timber, such lands as are ordinarily bought and sold by the acre. Another is that the consideration recited in the patent being only one dollar the conveyance was voluntary, and amounted to a donation of public land in violation of section 95 of the Constitution. We agree with appellant as to the first ground, and therefore put our decision upon that ground, and decline to pass upon the constitutional question which is involved in the second ground. As the patent recites on its face, it was executed and delivered to appellees in pursuance of section 2919, Code of 1906 (section 5254, Hemingway's Code). That section defines first what constitutes public lands belonging to the state. It then provides that:
"The land commissioner may sell any of such lands at the same price as the swamp and overflow lands, subject to be fixed in the same manner and under like regulations."
Then follows the provision authorizing the land commissioner in his discretion to rent public lands where improved or tillable. Turning to section 2912, Code of 1906 (Hemingway's Code, section 5247), we find the minimum price at which swamp and overflowed lands belonging to the state are subject to sale, one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre, and the regulations governing the sale of such lands. We know of no other statute under which it can be claimed with any degree of reason that the patent here involved was authorized. We have no statute which applies in terms to urban property divided up into business lots. If there was any authority of law, therefore, for the issuance of this patent, it was section 2919, Code of 1906 (section 5254, Hemingway's Code), which statute is referred to in the patent itself as the authority for its issuance. It must be admitted that the language used in the statute defining what constitutes public lands belonging to the state is broad enough to cover urban business property. But taking its context, and especially construing that section in connection *248 with the other section of the statute mentioned, section 2912, Code of 1906 (section 5247, Hemingway's Code), and also in connection with the entire scheme and purpose of our legislation in reference to public lands, as evidenced by the chapter in the Code on the subject, we are of opinion that it was not the purpose of the legislature to deal with urban business property surveyed and divided into blocks and lots; that it was the purpose of the legislature to deal alone with those public lands which are usually bought and sold by acreage in other words, property commonly known as rural lands, lands valuable for their timber or pasturage or for agriculture. It is true in order to so hold we must go beyond the strict letter of the statute. But that is justified in a proper case, and we think this is a case of that character.
This court has often held that, where the meaning of a statute is ambiguous, resort may be had to the real purpose and intention of the legislature in adopting the statute, which when ascertained the court will give effect thereto even though the letter of the statute is violated. Kennington v. Hemingway,
It is true that this is a collateral and not a direct attack on the patent in question, and it is also true that a patent cannot be attacked unless void. Gastrell v. Phillips,
Reversed and remanded.