30 Cal. 596 | Cal. | 1866
Lead Opinion
Mandamus to compel the Governor to execute to the petitioner a patent for a tract of land, alleged to be a part of a thirty-sixth section. ' The petition states the several steps taken by the petitioner, and the proceedings had before the Surveyor-General, of the State and the Register of the State Land Office, and the other officers of the State, for the pur
The defendant in his answer denies some of the material allegations of the petition, and sets up new matter in avoidance of the facts upon which the petitioner relies. He denies that the lands have been surveyed by or on behalf of the United States, or that the United States authorized or were consenting to any survey of the lands, or acknowledged or acquiesced in any survey of the lands; or that the lands were subject or liable to be selected by the State, or that she ever made or authorized any selection to be made of the lands, or that the State has or ever had any right, title or interest therein. He avers that the lands are embraced within the exterior boundaries of the Rancho Laguna de la Merced, a grant made by the Mexican Government in 1835, the claim to which has been finally confirmed by Courts of the United States, but the boundaries of which are unsettled—cross appeals to the Supreme Court of the United States, taken both by the United States and the claimants, from the decree of final confirmation of the survey of the rancho, being now pending. He further avers that the City of San Francisco, which succeeded to the rights of the Pueblo of Yerba Buena, presented to the Board of Land Commissioners a petition for the confirmation of her claim to the four leagues of land to which the pueblo was entitled, that the same is - now pending on appeal to the United States Circuit Court, and that the premises in controversy are included within the four leagues claimed by the city.
The petitioner moved the Court to strike out and disregard the answer as immaterial, but the counsel have treated the motion as equivalent to a general demurrer, and it will be so
The signing of a patent for land, which is required by law to be executed by an officer, to give effect to a sale made by other officers of the Government, and as a means of passing the title of the Government to the purchaser, is purely a ministerial act. In a case where the land sold, was the land of the Government making the sale, and all the acts required to be done prior to the issuing of the patent have been duly performed, and the purchaser is competent to purchase, the duty is imperative upon the officer charged with the execution of the patent to execute it, unless the law has vested him with discretionary powers in that respect. The same rule would apply to the Governor as to an inferior or subordinate officer. It cannot be said that the Governor has the discretion to execute the patent or not, as to him may seem proper, when all the facts appear, showing the legal right of the purchaser to make the purchase, and that he has in fact made the purchase.
“ But,” it is asked by the counsel for the defendant, “ is the issuance or signing of the patent by the Governor as purely a ministerial act as to make him amenable to the process of mandamus?” It is difficult to understand how the alleged duty can be any less ministerial, or can partake any more of the characteristics of a purely executive duty of a political nature, merely because the law requires the act to be performed by the Governor instead of some inferior officer. The constitutional injunction that “he shall see that the laws are faithfully executed,” cannot change the character of a duty which the Legislature has seen fit to impose upon him ; for if the given duty is ministerial when it is required to be performed by any officer, it remains of the same nature though required of the chief executive officer of the State. In Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch, 137, it is said that “It is not by the office of the person to whom the writ is directed, but the
In that case Mr. Chief Justice Marshall, after • speaking of certain important political powers of the President, and of his authority to appoint certain officers, among whom is the Secretary of State, to aid him in the performance of his duty, who acts by his authority and in conformity with his orders, and whose acts are the acts of the President, says: “ He is the mere organ by whom that will (the will of the President) is communicated. The acts of such an officer, as an officer, can never be examined by the Courts. But when the Legislature proceeds to impose on that officer other duties; when he is directed peremptorily to perform certain acts; when the rights of individuals are dependent on the performance of those' acts, he is so far the officer of the law, is amenable to the law for his conduct, and cannot at his discretion sport away the vested rights of others.” In speaking of the commission in question in that case the Court say: “ The commission being signed, the subsequent duty of the Secretary of State is prescribed by law, and not guided by the will of the President. He is to affix the seal of the United States to the commission, and is to record it. This is not a proceeding which may be varied, if the judgment of the Executive shall suggest one more eligible, but is a precise course, accurately marked out by law, and is to be strictly pursued. * * * It is a ministerial act which the law enjoins on a particular officer for a particular purpose.”
The distinction between acts which may be performed by the Executive, as such, in respect to which he may exercise his discretion, uncontrolled by any other department of Government, and those ministerial acts enjoined upon him by law, is very fully considered in the case of The State v. The Governor of Ohio, 5 Ohio, 534. The Court there held that, “in regard to a mere ministerial duty enjoined on him by statute, which might have devolved on another officer of the State, and affecting any specific private right, he may be made amenable to the compulsory process of the Court by man-
It is the duty of the Governor to execute the patent, and-a mandamus will issue to compel him to execute it, in case of his refusal, if the statute regulating the sales of such lands has been complied with by the several officers and the purchaser, and the land was subject to sale by the State.
Whatever title the State holds, or may acquire, to sections sixteen and thirty-six, inures to her under the operation of section six of the Act of Congress to provide for the survey of the public lands in California, the granting of pre-emption rights therein, and for. other purposes, approved March 3d, 1853. The grant from the United States to the State of California is found in this clause of the section : “That all the public lands in the State of California, whether surveyed or unsurveyed, with the exceptions of sections sixteen and thirty-six, which shall be and are hereby gra'nted to the State, for the purposes of common schools in each township, and with the exception of lands appropriated under the authority of this Act, or reserved by competent authority, and excepting also the lands claimed under any foreign grant, or title, and the mineral lands, shall be subject to the pre-emption laws of the fourth of September, one thousand eight hundred and forty-one,” etc. Section seven of the Act contains a limitation of the grant of the several sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections. It is therein provided, “ That when any settlement, by the erection of a dwelling house, or a cultivation of any portion of the land, shall be made upon the sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections, before the same shall be surveyed, or 1 when such sections may be reserved for public uses, or taken by private claims, other land- shall be selected by the proper authorities of the State in lieu thereof,” etc. The lands that may be taken by “ private claims,” mentioned in section seven, we understand to be the same as the lands “ claimed
There is a further matter, that has an important bearing upon the question of title in the State' to the lands in this case. The petitioner avers that the lands were duly surveyed by the United States, and the defendant denies the averment in the fullest terms, and by the demurrer it stands admitted that they have not been surveyed by the United States. We had occasion, in the case of Grogan v. Knight, 27 Cal. 515, to consider the question of a selection of lands in lieu of the sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections, prior to the survey by the United States of the lands selected, and we held 'that the right of selection by the State could not be exercised until after a survey had been made by the United States, and that a selection previous to such survey could not vest the title in the State, or a purchaser from her. The reasons operating to prevent the State or her vendee from acquiring a title by the aid of a selection made, as in that case, before.the congressional survey, are equally cogent to show that title to any particular parcel of the lands granted for the purposes of public schools does not vest in the State until such survey has
An examination of the Act of the Legislature, passed April 27th, 1863, (Statutes 1863, p. 591,) under which the petitioner claims, will show that it was the intention of the Legislature to provide for the disposal of the lands granted to the State, and that they made provision for the sale and conveyance of the land, and not merely of the State’s inchoate title or claim to the lands. We. would not be justified in presuming that the Legislature intended that the State should engage in trafficking in spurious or doubtful land titles, nor does the Act lend countenance to the opprobrious imputation, that the officers of the State were directed to engage in such transactions.
The Act of the Legislature is framed on the theory that the title to any particular parcel of land does not pass until a survey by the United States is made, for in section twenty-two, the only section that provides for the execution and issuance of the patent for the lands sold, the patent is required to be signed by the Governor “ when any final payment shall have been made for any tract sold by the State which is situated upon lands which have been surveyed by the United States, and the selection has been duly accepted by, and all papers required by law duly procured from, the proper officer of the Government, or when the tract so finally paid for shall be swamp or tide landsand when the Register of the State Land Office shall have prepared and forwarded to the Governor the patent and his certificate that the laws relating to the particular case have been complied with.
It thus appears that the grant to the State has not attached
But it ip urged that the (governor does not possess the discretion to execute, or to refuse to execute the patent, as his judgment may dictate; and it may be properly admitted that he does not, in case all the acts requisite to constitute the sale have been correctly performed, and the lands sold are the lands of the State. It is also claimed that the Begister is required by law to pass upon all questions touching the sale, and that he has determined that all the requisite facts exist in this case, to constitute a complete and valid sale. To this it may be answered that the Begister is not vested with judicial powers, and he has not the capacity to determine the issue whether the title has passed to the State; he cannot create a title; nor can he, by his assertion, determination or certificate that the title has passed from the United States to the State, vest it in the State. He may certify that the prescribed forms of the laws have been complied with by himself, the officers acting in subordination to him, and the purchaser; but the fundamental fact of title in the State must exist, or all his acts are void. That fact is a condition precedent to any action on his part, tending towards a sale, and in its absence, whether certified by him or not, his acts are as powerless and futile as would be an execution issued without a judgment to support it. (See
This is not a case in which it can be said that the Governor refuses to execute the patent, in the exercise of his discretion, as might be said if the refusal was based upon his opinion of the propriety of selling the land, or of the regularity of the several acts required to be performed before the patent is to be signed, or upon similar grounds; but the refusal rests upon the ground that it is his duty to refuse to execute a patent for lands not owned by the State, notwithstanding the Register’s certificate.
These views of the power and jurisdiction of the Register do not conflict with the decision in Tyler v. Houghton, 25 Cal. 26. In that case Granger wished to purchase certain lands of the State, and for that purpose, to have them selected by the State in lieu of the sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections, authorized to be selected under section seven of the Act of Congress of 1853. Under the provisions of the statutes of the State, the proceedings to make the selection by the authorities of the State, and those to effect a purchase from the State move in pari passu. Tyler being interested as a trustee in the lands sought to be selected, objected to their being selected by the State. The contest which he desired to have instituted before the Register, and which this Court ordered him to entertain and dispose of, was for the purpose of determin- . ing whether the Register and the other State officers should proceed with the performance ’of certain ministerial acts which were required in order to constitute a selection of the lands by the State—not to ascertain whether the title was
The Register being an officer belonging to the executive department of the Government, is not permitted by the Constitution to exercise judicial functions, and the Court, in that case, did not decide that he possessed the power, which would necessarily be judicial, to determine an issue as to when the title vested, or that his action in the matter of the contest would be final or conclusive upon the question of title, when the question was brought before another officer or tribunal. His proceedings are still of a ministerial nature, as well in the matter of the contest as in approving a survey or issuing a certificate. In proceedings by him in the selection and location of lands for the State, in lieu of the sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections, whether there is a contest or not, the fact of title in the United States to the land sought to be selected, is a jurisdictional fact; and in its absence, his decision that the land should be selected, as well as his acts in making the selection, would be as void of all legal effect as would be a judgment rendered by a Court having no jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action.
The points we have discussed, relating to the question of title in the State, to the lands sold, have an important bearing upon a principle that is vital to the writ of mandamus, lying at the very foundation of the relator’s right. It is said in Tapping on Mandamus (pp. 9,10) thát the Court, in the exercise of its authority to grant the writ, “will render it, as far as it can, the supplementary means of substantial justice in every case where there is no other specific legal remedy for a
The motion must be denied.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the order.
While I am compelled to dissent from the whole of the argument contained in the opinion delivered by the majority of the Court, I concur in the judgment. I put my concurrence upon the ground that it does not appear by the Register’s certificate that the lands in question have been surveyed on behalf of the United States or by the County Surveyor of the county in which the lands are situate. The powers of the Governor in the matter of issuing the patent are, in my judgment, purely ministerial. But it is in the direct line of his ministerial service to see that the certificate sent to him by the Register covers every point of fact which the law requires it to contain. Though the Governor cannot go behind the certificate, yet he not only may, but is required to look into it; and if on looking into it he finds that it does not include .all the points to be included in it by statute requirement, then it is the same as though no certificate had been attempted.