70 P. 614 | Or. | 1902
after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
The question presented by this appeal is whether mandamus will lie to compel the members of the State Land Board to cancel a contract for the sale of state land and to declare a forfeiture of the money paid on account thereof. It is contended by plaintiff’s counsel that, the demurrer to the alternative writ having admitted that D. W. and A. C. Huff had been in default more than one year in the payment of the principal and interest, their certificates of sale had become void, and the money paid by them on account of their purchases forfeited, and hence the court erred in sustaining the demurrer, and in not compelling the defendants to perform the mere ministerial duty enjoined upon them by law as a trust resulting from their respective offices. The statute in force at the time these certificates were secured provided, in effect, that the Governor, Secretary of State, and State Treasurer, as a board of commissioners, should sell school lands belonging- to the state, not exceeding 160 acres to any one person, not a settler, at a price not less than $2 per acre: Hill’s Ann. Laws, § 3598. An applicant for such land, upon paying the board one third of the purchase price and executing two promissory notes for the remainder thereof, payable in one and two years, respectively, with interest at 10 per cent per annum, payable annually, was entitled to receive a certificate that he had purchased the land
The action of the court below in dismissing the proceeding was undoubtedly based upon the decision of this court in Corpe v. Brooks, 8 Or. 222, in which it was held that the board of commissioners for the sale of school and university lands is not an inferior court or tribunal, but a co-ordinate department of the state government, and that their decisions are not subject to review by the courts. Mr. Justice Boise, speaking for the court in deciding the case, says: ‘ ‘ This board is created by the state constitution, and by it invested with the power to dispose of these state lands, and its powers and duties are such as are provided by law. It is composed of the Governor, Secretary of State, and State Treasurer, and is a part of the administrative department of the government, and exercises its powers independent of the judiciary department, and its decisions are not subject to be reversed by the courts. It occupies in this state the same relation to the state judiciary as the land department of the United States does to the United States courts, and their decisions have not been the subject of review by the United States courts. It was held in the case of Pin v. Morris, 1 Or. 230, that our late territorial courts could not revise the decisions of the surveyor general, and in that case Williams, C. J., says: ‘Congress has ordained a land department of the government, whose business it is’ made to determine those questions which arise out of the disposal of the public lands, and the courts of the country cannot interfere to
It having been held in that case that the board of commissioners for the sale of school and university lands, now known as the £ £ State Land Board, ’ ’ was analogous to the land department of the general government, an examination of the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States, in relation to the freedom of the latter from interference by the judicial department, is deemed material. In McIntire v. Wood, 11 U. S. (7 Cranch) 504, decided in 1813, it was held that the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Ohio was powerless to compel by mandamus a register of the land office to grant final certificates of purchase to the plaintiff for lands to which he supposed himself entitled 'under the laws of the United States. In Gaines v. Thompson, 74 U. S. (7 Wall.) 347, it was held that there could be no difference in principle which forbids interference with the. duties of the officers of the land department, whether it arose by writ of mandamus or injunction, and that the act of the Secretary of the Interior and the Commissioner of the General Land Office in canceling an entry for land would not be interfered with by the latter method. In Craig v. Leitensdorfer, 123 U. S. 189 (8 Sup. Ct. 85), Mr. Justice Matthews, in speaking of the refusal - of the courts to interfere with the adjustment of questions affepting the public domain by the officers of the land department of the United States, says: “The free course of that administration within the limits of the law cannot be interrupted or interfered with by the judicial power. Undoubtedly, private rights of great
The conclusion reached by this court in Corpe v. Brooks, 8 Or. 222, we consider controlling in the ease at bar; and, being satisfied that the State Land Board is not an inferior tribunal, but a co-ordinate department of the state government, whose discretion and decision the courts cannot control, the judgment must be affirmed. Affirmed.