57 Cal. 70 | Cal. | 1880
This is an application for a writ of mandate to compel the Surveyor-General to approve the petitioner’s application for the purchase of certain lands. The petition avers, that on the 15th of June, 1852, under and by authority of the provisions of the Act of the Legislature, entitled, “ An Act to provide for the disposal of the five hundred thousand acres of land granted to this State by Act of Congress, that the people of the State of California may avail themselves of the benefits of the eighth section of the Act of Congress, approved April 4th, 1841, chapter 16, entitled, ‘ An Act to appropriate the proceeds of the sales of the public lands, and to grant pre-emption rights,’ the following provisions are hereby enacted,” approved May 3rd, 1852, the governor of the State duly signed and issued, among others, two certain land warrants for one hundred and sixty acres each, numbered respectively 434 and 550, and which were countersigned by the controller of the State, and by him deposited in the office of the treasurer of the State for sale; that afterwards, to wit, on the 1st of July, 1852, the said treasurer, under and by authority of the provisions of said act, upon an application to him therefor, sold the said warrants to the petitioner, and petitioner became the purchaser thereof, and paid therefor, into the treasury of the State, the sum of six hundred and fifty dollars in lawful currency of the United States; that on the 13th of July, 1864, the tract of land in question, containing three
In answer to the petition, the Surveyor-General denies that on the 18th of July, 1864, the land in question was subject to location with the land warrants mentioned in the petition, or in any other manner, and denies that at any time after the 21st day of August, 1862, the said land was unappropriated land belonging to the United States, but avers, that at the date last mentioned a portion of the said land was “ claimed to be the property of the State of California, and at said date the State of California, by the Executive thereof, and in pursuance of law, did issue and grant a patent for said land to one Tiery Wright, whereby the title to said last-described tract of land, so far as the State of California then had or should thereafter acquire title thereto, was vested in the said Wright.” This patent is annexed to and made a part of respondent’s answer, and shows affirmatively that it was issued for swamp land.
The respondent also, in his answer, denies that on the 13th of July, 1864, there was no valid claim existing upon the land described in the petition adverse to the claim of the petitioner, but alleges that the title to a portion thereof had been passed by the State to Tiery Wright, by virtue of the patent already mentioned.
Further answering, respondent denies that the copy of the final judgment, filed in his office by petitioner, “ shows that the District Court, * * * or any other Court, decided or found in any cause whatever, that the land in the petition herein de
The only other defense to the application for the writ made by the respondent is, that by affidavits on file in his office the land in controversy is shown to be suitable for cultivation; and that petitioner has not shown that he is an actual settler thereon, which, respondent claims, he must do by reason of § 3 of article xvii of the present Constitution, before respondent is authorized to approve the application of petitioner.
Neither the denials nor the affirmative averments of respondent’s answer, nor both combined, show sufficient cause for withholding the writ asked for.
1. There is nothing in the objection that the Surveyor-General had not the power to make the order of September 18th, 1877, referring the contest between petitioner and Wright to the proper Court for determination. The ground of the objection is, that the State had already issued a patent to Wright for a portion of the land. But that patent was for swamp land, and it is undisputed that all the land in question here formed part of the 500,000-acre grant. The patent therefore conveyed nothing. (People v. Stratton, 25 Cal. 242, and other cases in this Court.)
If, as is now urged by the Surveyor-General, that patent conveyed to Wright the title the State acquired to the land described in it, it is difficult to understand why the latter filed the application of September 17th, 1877, for the purchase of a portion of the same land, and thus brought about the contest which was determined adversely to him by the Courts. It is evident, however, that Wright knew, when he did so, that by the patent he got nothing.
2. The respondent cannot be permitted in this proceeding to call in question the evidence on which the judgment in Wright v. Langenour was based, or the rulings of the Court in that action on matters of law.
The Legislature, in § 3414 of the Political Code, has made provision for the reference, by the Surveyor-General, of such a
“ Section 3416. Upon filing with the Surveyor-General or Register, as the case may be, a copy of the final judgment of the Court, that officer must approve the survey or location, or issue the certificate of purchase, or other evidence of title in accordance with such judgment.”
When, under these provisions of the Political Code, a contest has been transferred to the Court for determination, the Court acquires “ full and complete jurisdiction to hear and determine ” the contest, and as a necessary result, the Surveyor-General has no longer the power to determine any question of law or fact involved in the matter—the very purpose of" the law being, in such cases, to take from the Surveyor-General that power and to vest it in the Court. The-sole duty of the Surveyor-General thereafter is that prescribed by § 3416: “ To approve the survey or location, or issue the certificate of purchase or other evidence of title in accordance with ” the judgment of the Court. It is not necessary, nor does the statute contemplate that the Surveyor-General should be a party to the action instituted to determine the contest. The law specially enjoins on his part action in accordance with such judgment, and his compliance therewith may be compelled by mandamus. (§ 3416, Pol. Code, and § 1085, Code Civ. Proc.)
That the title to the land in question here is in the State is not denied by the answer of the respondent, and that it was acquired by the location of the petitioner’s land warrants, for which the State received the petitioner’s money, is also not denied. The title thus acquired by the State was for the benefit of the petitioner (Bludworth v. Lake, 33 Cal. 262), and the State is estopped from denying it.
3. Section 3 of article xvii of the present Constitution has no application to this case, for the reason that the rights of the
4. The application of Hennagin to intervene in the proceeding must be denied. His petition is based on an alleged application made by him on the 17th day of September, 1880, to purchase the land from the State. There would be no end to cases of this character if, after judgment has been entered in an action to determine the right of contestants to purchase, new parties can come in to prevent the enforcement of such judgment. Section 387 of the Code of Procedure does not authorize an intervention under such circumstances.
5. It having been determined by the Court in the action of "Wright v. Laugenour, that the application of the petitioner for the purchase of the land in dispute was good and valid, and that the application of Wright therefor was invalid, it becomes the duty of the respondent, by virtue of § 3416 of the Political Code, to approve petitioner’s application.
Let the writ issue as prayed for.
Thornton, J., Sharpstein, J., and Myrick, J., concurred.