44 Wash. 246 | Wash. | 1906
This is an application for an original mandamus on the part of the relators to require respondent to deliver to relators a deed to certain tide lands near the city of Tacoma. The relator E. A. Shores made an application for the purchase of these tide lands on the 9th day of January, 1906, making the necessary legal deposit. Said application stated that said lands were not occupied, and that there were no improvements thereon. Thereafter, a certificate of appraisal of the land was made out and filed and the land ordered sold. The usual notice of sale was given, as required by law, and the land sold to the relator E. A. Shores at public auction
In answer to the application for the writ, respondent sets up all of these transactions and maintains that it is his duty, in order to protect the state from fraud and imposition, to decline to deliver said deed, and that, under the circumstances, he or the state board should withhold said deed until an investigation can be made as to the charges of fraud and misrepresentation preferred against the relator who made the application. Relators insist that neither the respondent nor the board of state land commissioners has any jurisdiction to make such an investigation, that their power over the subject-matter ceased when the deed was signed and attested by the governor and secretary of state. They insist that the power of these officials is thus limited by § 2198 of Bal. Code (P. C. § 8236), which reads as follows:
“The board of appraisers or commissions, or commissioner of public lands, shall have the right to review and to recon
Respondent contends that the expression “made, executed and signed” is equivalent to the words “made, executed and delivered” which are commonly found in deeds of conveyance, and urges that the deed is not “made and executed” until it is drafted, signed, acknowledged, and delivered, and that it was not the intention of the legislature to deprive the officers of the state of the power to deal with the subject as long as the deed was not actually delivered. Whether this contention of respondent can be upheld in its entirety we are not now called upon to decide; but we think that his position is tenable to the extent that the land commissioner, or the board of state land commissioners, may at any time refuse to deliver a deed when matters are brought to Iris or their attention which give reason to believe that said deed is being obtained by means of fraud. Fraud vitiates whatever it touches, and relators can insist upon no action by state officials when the grounds of their demand are based upon fraudulent transactions. It is the duty of these state officers to protect the state against imposition. The Laws of 1908, page 118, § 8 (Pierce’s Code, § 8178a), provides:
“Any sale or lease of state lands made by mistake, or not in accordance with law, or obtained by fraud or misrepresentation shall be 'void, and the contract of purchase or lease issued thereon shall be of no effect, but the holder of such contract or lease shall be required to surrender the same to the commissioner of public lands, who shall, except in the case of fraud on the. part of the purchaser, cause the money to be refunded to the holder thereof, . . . ”
If the deed to these tide lands had been delivered after the respondent was reliably informed that the application and bidding were fraudulent, to the detriment of the state, it would be the duty of the respondent, or of some official of
The relators have filed herein an affidavit asserting that there were no improvements, within the meaning of the law, upon these tide lands at the time said application was made, and deny that there was any collusion in the matter of the bidding at the public auction. This raises issues of fact which this court cannot conveniently determine. Respondent, in his answer, prays that the action be dismissed, or that it be referred to some superior court to take evidence and re
It is therefore ordered that the superior court of Pierce county be, and it is hereby, authorized and directed to take evidence upon the questions of misrepresentation, collusion and fraud presented in this proceeding, and to make a return of the evidence and its findings thereupon to this court in due form and time. Either party hereto may call the matter on for hearing before said court, upon ten days notice in writing, duly served on the other side. Costs in this court, and in said superior court, to abide the final decision herein.
Mount, C. J., Dunbar, Crow, Hadley, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.
Rudkin, J., dissents.