33 Minn. 519 | Minn. | 1885
Gen. St. 1878, c. 66, § 131, provides that an “intervention shall be by complaint, which must set forth the facts on which the intervention rests, and all the pleadings therein shall be governed by the same principles and rules as obtain in other pleadings.” The words “complaint,” and “all the pleadings therein,” evidently refer, to and allow a course of pleadings analogous to the ordinary pleading in civil actions, including a demurrer to the complaint for its failure to state a cause of action, or ground of intervention, as the ease may be.
James v. Wilder, and Shelley v. Lash, 14 Minn. 373, (498,) followed Williams v. Lash, 8 Minn. 441, (496,) upon the principle of stare decisis, and not upon any approval of the doctrine there announced. That doctrine was that under the then statute, (Pub. St. c. 1, § 251,) which authorized a county “to purchase and hold for the public use of the county lands lying within its own limits,” the county could not acquire title to lands except for public use, — as, for instance, for a site for a court-house or jail, — and that lands bid in by the county at an execution sale upon a judgment in the county’s favor were not acquired for public use within the intent of the statute, and that therefore the conveyance of the same to the county was void. The attempted conveyance to the county involved in both Williams v. Lash and Shelley v. Lash was made while this statute was in force. In 1860 (Laws 1860, c. 15, § 2) the statute was so amended as to authorize a county “to purchase and hold real and personal estate for the use of the county, and lands sold for taxes as provided by law;” The sale and conveyance to the 'county involved in James v. Wilder took place under this -statute, but it was held that the words “for the use of the county” had the same meaning as the words “for the public use of the county,” and that therefore, upon the principle of stare decisis, the doctrine of Williams v. Lash, before mentioned, was applicable to that sale and conveyance also.
- In 1864 (Laws-1864, c. 23) the statute was again changed, and, as finally amended in 1866, in Gen. St. 1866, c. 8, § 75, it authorized a county “to purchase and hold real and personal estate for the use of the county, and lands sold for taxes as provided by law; and to purchase and hold, for the benefit of the county, real estate sold by virtue of judicial proceedings in which the county is plaintiff.” In our opinion the latter clause quoted works a radical change in the law respect
Order reversed.