13 Or. 238 | Or. | 1886
This is a suit in equity to have a certain deed executed by the board of land commissioners of the state of Oregon, adjudged to be fraudulent as to the plaintiffs ; and that the defendant be decreed to hold the tide-lands described in said deed in trust for the plaintiffs. The main facts in the case upon which the decision hinges are undisputed. It is admitted that lot 3' in block 3, now owned by the defendant, does not front or abut on the waters- of the Columbia River, and that at the time the grantor of the defendant procured the title from the state to the tide-lands in controversy, upon the representation that said lot did thus front and abut on said river; that such representation'was false in point of fact, and in derogation of the preferred right given by the statute to the plaintiffs to purchase the same by virtue of their ownership of a certain tract of land which did then and does now front and abut on the waters of the said river. The grantor of the defendant procured his title from the state to said tidelands in 1876. This suit was commenced by the plaintiffs in June, 1883. The preferred right of abutting owners to purchase tide-lands in front of their property expired by limitation of the statute in 1879. Upon this state of facts, while the defendant concedes that, if the plaintiffs had brought the present suit before such preferred rights to purchase had expired under the statute, they must have prevailed, he contends that they are without remedy when such preferred right to purchase expired by limitation of the statute before such suit was brought. This argument is based on the assumption that the preferred right of the plaintiffs, as abutting owners, to purchase the lands in question was, and continued to be, a subsisting right until 1879, and that to enable the plaintiffs to maintain the present suit, their preferred right to purchase must be a subsisting one at
Now, the effect of the repealing act was merely to take away the prior or preferred right to purchase of the abutting owners in whom such right was then extant, and the tide-lands in front of their property unsold; it did not touch any right of suit which then existed for the wrongful deprivation of such right. All of those who had failed or neglected to take the benefit of such preferred right, and secure the tide-lands abutting their property, lost such right by operation of the act. In these, such right, being then extant, and the tide-lands in front of their property unsold, the act extinguished.
, Nor were those who, as such abutting owners, had been deprived of their preferred right to purchase, by fraud, whereby a wrong-doer procured the title from thp state to such tide-lands, affected by the act, because as to these, when such tide-lands were sold. by the state .and the title became invested in such wrong-doer, such right was merged or extinguished in the fraudulent title thus acquired. In these, then, there was no preferred .right extant, or subsisting, after title was acquired to such tide-lands, and consequently, none existing when the act took effect, or which the act could cut off or extinguish. The act was confined in its operation to those in whom there was a live right extant to purchase the tide-lands unsold in front of their property.
It is a mistake to suppose or assume that such preferred right to purchase subsists in the abutting owner after the state has sold such tide-lands, and the title to it passed. Such right was absorbed or extinguished in the sale of the tide-lands to which it owed its origin or vitality, and ceased to be an existing right which such abutting owners could use, or avail themselves of to purchase such tide-lands.- When, therefore, the grantor pf the defendant procured by fraud or false representation, the title of the state to the tide-lands in front of the property of the plaintiffs, he wrongfully invaded and .deprived them of their preferred right to purchase such tide-lands, and such right ceased to be a live subsisting right of which they could avail themselves to purchase such tide-lands. By the sale, the title had passed out of
But although the plaintiffs’ right of purchase was gone, they were not without a remedy to redress the wrong done in depriving them of such right. With the loss of such right came a right of suit against the defendant wrong-doer to redress the wrong and make his wrongful act, whereby their right of purchase became merged in his title, inure to their benefit. The object of the suit is not to enforce such right, but to redress the wrong in depriving them of such right by adjudging the title thus fraudulently acquired to inure to their benefit. Nor is the ground of it predicated on the existence of any right of purchase still subsisting in the plaintiffs which is sought to be upheld or enforced. That we have seen was extinguished after the sale. But it is predicated on the fraud which deprived the plaintiffs of such right to purchase the tide-lands in dispute, and the intervention of equity is sought, not to have decreed that the defendant holds such right in trust, but that he holds the title thus fraudulently acquired in trust for the plaintiffs. The mistake of counsel is in assuming that the right of purchase continued to be a subsisting right after the sale, and that its existence is essential to sustain the suit; and hence, if the suit was not brought before the act took effect, the right was cut off, and with it went the right of suit. But we have seen the case is otherwise, and that such right did not exist after the sale, and could not be affected by the act. The plaintiffs’ right of suit, therefore, is not limited by the act, but by the general statute of limitations.
(contra). Passing other questions in the-case, and granting that at the date of the deed to Russel the plaintiff was the shore-owner with the "right to purchase the land in controversy, the question to be decided is, whether this right can be asserted against a stranger who procured a deed from the state while plaintiffs’ exclusive right to make application for a deed existed, but who had failed to make any such application or to take any steps to assert his right, until after such right had expired by the limitation of the statute.
If the plaintiff were the eqitable owner of the land .deeded to Russel, his title could only be barred by an adverse' holding of ten years. But it seems certain that the plaintiff had no title to the land while in the hands of the state, legal or equitable. Has he any such title to the lands in the hands of the defendant? He is certainly asserting such a title against him. If he have such a title, how has it been acquired? The answer to this question seems to be that the plaintiff has acquired title to such lands by some act of the defendant. But the defendant was not the plaintiffs’ agent. Agency rests on contract. We, as yet, know nothing of an agent de son tort. There is no principle of estoppel that will apply. Hence the mere act of the defendant in
Recurring to the statute, it will be observed that the relation established between the state and the shore owner is not that of parties to a unilateral contract under the statute of frauds, where one party is hound to convey in a given time if another- party, not bound, shall choose to ask performance. The statute is merely a voluntary offer made by the state to the shore-owner, giving him an exclusive privilege to purchase on certain terms within a certain time. He signifies his consent to the proposition made by the state by making application as provided by the statute. The offer is revocable at any time before the deed is made. Were the terms $10,000 a lot, application would, doubtless, be less- frequent, but the case would be the same.
Now, it happens that during the time the plaintiff has the exclusive right to apply for a deed, a stranger applies and gets a deed. It seems illogical to say this act which interfered with the plaintiff’s exclusive right, or rather privilege, invests the plaintiff at once, without more, with an equitable title to the land. Non constat that he had, at any time before or since, even so much as an intention to make application himself. The fact would seem to be that he must assert his privilege, or in other words, must accept the proposition made by the state before anything approaching an equitable title could vest. The lands in the hands of the defendant will he subject to the exercise of the plaintiff’s option as though no conveyance had been made. He can assert that option at any time before .it expires, by calling on the defendant to convey to him. Having made such call, he has performed the condition precedent which