32 Wash. 610 | Wash. | 1903
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The respondent made application to the commissioner of public lands to purchase the lands involved in this case. The application was rejected by the board of state land commissioners on the theory that the state had no authority to sell or dispose of said lands because they were within the boundaries of the Tulalip Indian reservation. The respondent appealed from the decision of the board to the superior court of Snohomish county, which reversed the ruling of the board of state land
It is conceded that the lands are within the boundaries of the above-named Indian reservation, but it is claimed by the respondent that they are not embraced in said reservation, excepting through executive order of the President. A patent for a portion of these lands was, on the 1st day of April, 1885, issued and delivered to Richard Lawrence, and on the 1st day of July, 1884, a patent for the remainder of the tract was issued and delivered to Jack Wheeler and his wife. It is true that this patent incorrectly stated the name of the wife of said Wheeler, and on account of said error the original patent was, during the year 1902, surrendered to the "United States, and another patent, exactly like the original except as to the date and the name of Wheeler’s wife, issued and delivered in its stead to said Wheeler and his wife, Raney. But in substance the lands were patented lands prior to the formation of the state government. We are satisfied from the record that the lands applied for were strictly within the limits of the Indian reservation, but, even if this were not true, the lawT provides for the executive proclamation which was made in this case, and under such proclamation they are legally within the boundaries of said reservation.
A great deal of discussion has been indulged in upon questions which it seems to us have been settled by the decisions of this court. It may be conceded that at common law the title to lands which were overflowed by the tide was in the king for the benefit of the nation, and that, as a matter of history, upon the settlement of the colonies, the rights which were held for the benefit of the nation
“The people inhabiting said proposed states do agree and declare that they forever disclaim all right and title to the unappropriated public lands lying within the boundaries thereof, and to all lands lying within said limits owned or held by any Indian ór Indian tribes; and that until the title thereto shall have been extinguished by the United States, the same shall be and remain subject to the disposition of the United States, and said Indian lands*613 shall remain under the absolute jurisdiction and control of the Congress of the United States.”
This provision of the enabling act was incorporated verbatim in § 1 of article 26 of the state constitution, and became a part of the compact with the federal government under which the state was admitted to the Union. In addition to this, of their own accord, and for reasons which seemed equitable and just to the framers of the constitution,'it was solemnly proclaimed in § 2 of article 17 of the constitution that the state of Washington disclaimed :
“All title in and claim to all tide, swamp and overflowed lands patented by the United States: provided, the same is not impeached for fraud.”
Under this disclaimer it would seem that no argument is necessary to justify the conclusion that the lands applied for here, which had been patented by the United States, and where there is no charge of fraud involved, cannot now be sold by the state authorities, and that the state authorities have no jurisdiction whatever over them so far as their title is concerned. It was held in Scurry v. Jones, 4 Wash 468 (30 Pac. 726), that the disclaimer by the state (Constitution, art. 17, § 2) of all title in and claim to all tide, swamp, and overflowed lands patented by the United States, while not in terms confirmatory of title so acquired, was substantially a grant to patentees of the interest of the state in such land. In discussing that proposition it was said:
“Under the law, as conceded by both parties, the lands had passed absolutely to the state, subject only to such clouds thereon as were caused by the same having been assumed to have been granted to private individuals by the United States. Under such circumstances, if tire state disclaims all of its title to such lands, where the patents*614 had been obtained without fraud, it certainly was for the benefit of some one, and it clearly could not have been for the benefit of the United States. And as the state, in the section immediately preceding this, had asserted its title to all such lands, whether occupied or unoccupied, which had not been thus patented, it seems clear to us that the evident intent of the disclaimer was to ratify the action of the United States in the issuance of such patents. In our opinion, the interest of the state passed as fully to the grantees in such patents, or to those holding under them, as it would have done had there been express words of grant used in the constitution. Any other interpretation of the language used would deprive it of any beneficial force whatever.”
Under both the letter and spirit of this decision, and of subsequent decisions of this court on the same subject, the judgment is reversed.
Fullebton, G. J., and Hadley, Andebs and Mount, JJ., concur.