26 Mich. 146 | Mich. | 1872
This is a petition for an order of this court requiring ;tbe commissioner of the state land office to show causé why a mandamus should not be issued commanding him to issue to tbe petitioner a full-paid certificate of purchase for lot number seven, block number ninety-six, in tbe city of Lansing.
Tbe petition (omitting tbe prayer above stated) is in tbe following words:
“Your petitioner, William H. Chapman, of Lansing, Ingham county, Michigan, respectfully represents that, on tbe first day of July, 1850, the state of Michigan was tbe «owner of a certain piece or parcel of land, lying and.being
“Your petitioner further presents that, on the 23d day of December, 1850, as appears from the records of the state land office, a deed was executed by the auditor general, state treasurer, and secretary of state, under the provisions of act numbered 281, laivs of 1848, .and act numbered 337, laws of 1850, purporting to convey said lot to The Central Presbyterian Society of the city of Lansing, for the sum of five dollars.
“And your petitioner represents that he is advised and believes, that the statutes before referred to, and all action taken by the state authorities in attempting to convey the lot in question to said Central Presbyterian Society for this nominal consideration, was, and is, wholly unconstitutional and void.
“And your petitioner further represents, on information and belief, that there was not at that time, nor has thereat any time since been, any organization of professing' Christians known as The Central Presbyterian Society in said city of Lansing.
“And he further represents that no steps to take possession of said lot so conveyed were ever taken by the said Central Presbyterian Society, or by any persons claim
“ Your petitioner further represents that on the 23d day of January, 1872, he applied at the state land office, through his attorney, S. F. Seager, Esq., of Lansing, Michigan, to purchase said lot, and tendered the purchase price thereof, as appraised, to wit, the sum of two hundred and ninety-two dollars, and that his application was refused by the commissioner of the state land office, who assigned, as the reason of such refusal, the deed hereinbefore mentioned.”
To this petition the attorney general, on behalf of the commissioner, orally demurs, thereby admitting, so far ás it was competent for the commissioner to admit, all the facts of the petition well pleaded.
The validity of the conveyance of the 23d of December, 1850, purporting to have been made by the auditor general, state treasurer and secretary of state, to "The Central Presbyterian Society of the city of Lansing,” under the ácts of 1848 and 1850, is disputed by the relator; and the conveyance claimed to be void, on several grounds; and being, as he claims, utterly void, he insists that he has a right to purchase the lot at its appraisal, made prior to July, 1850.
The petition alleges that said lot was, on the first day of July, 1850, subject to entry at the state land office (at the sum of two hundred and ninety-two dollars), and this fact is admitted by the demurrer. But there is no allegation that it was subject to such entry at the time the conveyance referred to was executed, December 23d, 1850, or at any time after the first day of July, 1850; and the demurrer, consequently, can hardly be said to admit that it was. .
It is true, it alleges that, when petitioner applied to
So far as .the petitioner’s right to purchasé depends upon the alleged fact that there was not, at the time, or at any time since, any such organization (or corporation, for such is the effect of the allegation) as that named as granteo in the deed, the petition raises a question which, if the fact were denied, could not be tried upon an application for a mandamus, but only in a proceeding on behalf of the state, by quo warranto or otherwise; and no admission by the commissioner, or the attorney general, of the nonexistence of the corporation, could bind such corporation, if one should happen to exist, or any society claiming to be the corporation named in the conveyance. In viéV of
And after the execution of the deed, we think it exceedingly questionable, though we do not decide, whether any individual seeking to purchase the lot, is competent to raise ■the question of its validity in a proceeding of this kind. It would seem to be a case much more proper for some action to be taken in behalf of the state, either by the •legislature, or some other department of the state government.
But we do not rest our decision in this case, upon any ■of the grounds above suggested, nor do we deem it necessary to determine the questions raised and elaborately argued by the counsel for the relator, whether, first, the conveyance of the lo.t in question, even admitting the existence of a competent grantee, comes within the intention of the acts under which it purports to have been made,•_ or whether, if it does, the acts or the gr-ant under them, would be unconstitutional and void.
We place our decision upon a broader ground, and' hold, that, though the conveyance in question may have been wholly void, and the title of the lot still in the state at the time the petitioner applied for its purchase, this court ■ought not, by mandamus, to compel the sale of the lot to •the 'petitioner, in accordance with the prayer of his petition.
The town of Michigan, now the city of Lansing, was platted while the land was still a wilderness. The state capital was established- there in the year 1847. When the
Giving to the petition the most favorable construction to the petitioner which it will bear; this lot has been kept out of market from the 23d day of December, 1850, in consequence of this deed, and treated at the land office as sold, and no longer open.to sale.
Now, the manifest purpose of the legislature in requiring an appraisal of such lots, when they exceed in value the minimum price of ordinary school land, in authorizing new appraisals to be made, fixing the minimum price at such appraisals, and in requiring all school lands to be first-offered at public sale before allowing them to be sold at private sale, as well as in allowing the commissioner to withhold from sale such portions of school land as, in his opinion, it may not be advantageous to dispose of, for so long a time as, in his -opinion, will be most beneficial to the school fund, was, first, ' to secure to the state, as near as possible, what the lands were really worth, and to pre.vent their sale at a price greatly below what might be ■obtained for them; and second, to secure to all persons who might be disposed to purchase, equal opportunities to make such purchases, without partiality or favoritism. — See Rev. Statutes of 1846, ch. 60, §§ 1, 12, 13, 14, and 15; Comp. Laws, 1857, §§ 2444, 2455, 2456, 2457, and 2458.
Now, these purposes, constituting the main and primary ■objects of the statutes oited, would be clearly and effectually
To construe the statutes as giving him that right, and compelling the commissioner to sacrifice the public interest, which the statute was enacted to secure, would be to make the letter of these statutes (if such is their letter) defeat the plain and primary objects of the legislature in enacting them; it would be to sacrifice the advantages which the statutes were intended to secure, and to make the statutes themselves the sanction of the very evils they were intended to avoid.
But we think the commissioner was authorized, if not required, by the express provisions of section 2458, Comp. Latos of 1857, to refuse to sell these lands to the petitioner, at the time he applied for them; since he must have seen, that, under the circumstances, it was not for the public interest that they should be thus sold; and, so far from seeing any reason to complain of the action of the commissioner in refusing the application of the relator, we think he would have been guilty of a clear violation of official duty, had he accepted the offer and undertaken to make .the sale.
Lands so situated, or so long kept out of market, though by mere accident or mistake, and when there is no doubt that the title remains in the state, should not be sold at all, without an appraisal and offering at public sale.
The application for a mandamus must be denied, with •costs against the relator.