10 Or. 267 | Or. | 1882
By the Court,
The object of this suit is to have decreed the legal title, held by the defendant, J. W. Shively, to block 11 in the
But the object of securing and the essentiality of the legal title of this block to the relators, will become more apparent in the consideration of the next matter for which relief is prayed in this suit, viz: to have the state patent to block 139, which is tide lands, and 'alleged to have been procured by fraudulent representations from the state by
At the outset, let it be noted that the object of the suit at this state of the proceeding is not to annul the patent to reinvest the title in the state of the tide lands in question, in order that thereafter the state may sell it to the adjacent
It seems, in England, in chancery, there are two courts. The ordinary, where the chancellor or keeper proceeds according to the common law — and it was out of that court that the writ of scire facias issued, and in that court all the proceedings were had upon such writs (2 Com. Dig., tit. Chancery C. 1; 1 Daniels’ Chancery Pleading and Practice.) The other was a court of equity, the proceeding in which was by English bill. The false suggestion for which the king might have a scire facias to repeal his own letters patent, must appear upon the face of the patent, otherwise the letters patent must be vacated upon a bill in equity. (Attorney General v. Vernon, 1 Vern., 277, 281, 283.) In this case last cited, the proceeding was upon information of the attorney general to repeal letters patent to crown lands wdiich the defendant had obtained by surprise and false representation, and the object of the suit was to annul the patent that the state might reinvest itself with the title to the lands improperly granted. And the same end was sought in the action brought under the code of procedure in the case of The People v. Clark, 9 N. Y., 364; cited by counsel for relator, in which the court say: “ It is true it is not technically an action to recover the possession of land. It
In England, when the suit immediately concerns the rights and interests of the crown, the public officer sues in his own official name without uniting that of any other person. But when the suit does not immediately concern the rights and interests of the crown, but only those who partake of its prerogative or are under its peculiar protection,, the officer sues at the relation of some person who is styled as relator in the bill, and who becomes thereby responsible for the costs. It sometimes happens that the relator has an interest in the matter in dispute in connection with the crown, of the injury to which he is entitled to complain. In such case, his personal complaint is joined to and incorporated with the information given to the court by the officer of the crown, and then they form together an information and bill, and are so termed. (Story Eq. Pleading, sec. 8; 1 Daniel’s Chancery Practice, 10.) And this is the position now assumed by counsel for the relators in a supplemental brief filed since the argument, in which he insists that the facts make it a bill and information under what he conceives to be the equity of sec. 355, supra. Taken as an information and bill, it is not perceived how the case is to be aided by that view. The first ground of the complaint, upon the successful establishment of which all subsequent matter or claim is based, involves no facts upon which an information can be founded. It is wholly and exclusively a matter of private right in dispute between