183 P. 785 | Wyo. | 1919
This is an application to this court by the relator for a writ of mandamus requiring the defendants to issue to him a certificate of purchase for Section r6, Tp. 21 N., R. 66 W., in Platte county. The case was commenced while the predecessors of the above named defendants were in office, and during the pendency of the action the present officers were, duly, by order of court, substituted as defendants. The case has been submitted on a general demurrer to the petition, and presents the single question of law, viz: Is the purchaser of school lands from the state required to pay to the lessee of said lands' the appraised value of irrigation ditches constructed by said lessee, and water rights acquired by him during the period of his lease or leases "for the irrigation of less than one fourth of said land, or must said purchaser pay said appraised value to the state? The relator paid to the proper state officer the first payment required at the time of the sale and purchase of the land, and paid to the lessee or lessees the appraised value of the ditches which had been constructed thereon and the water acquired by them during the terms of their leases, and delivered to the proper officer the receipts of the said lessees for such payments and demanded that a certificate of purchase for said lands be issued to him. This the defendants refused, claiming that the state was entitled, and not the lessees, to the appraised value of said ditches áhd water rights.
The provisions of the statutes which we are required to construe and apply are Sections 616 and 632, Compiled Statutes, 1910, which read as follows:
“Sec. 616. All water rights which shall have 'become appurtenant to the lands leased aforesaid shall, upon the expiration of the leases given to the lessee who made the irrigation and improvements thereon, become the property of the state, and shall not be considered as being improvements, which any subsequent lessee or purchaser thereof shall be obliged to reimburse or pay such original lessee who made such improvements thereon.”
*303 “Sec. 632. If any state lands be sold upon which surface improvements, including irrigation works of any kind, have been made by a lessee, or for which water rights or proportionate interests in irrigation reservoirs, canals or systems, have been acquired, said improvements, irrigation works and water rights shall 'be appraised under the direction of the board. The purchaser of said lands, upon which improvements and irrigation works have been made, or for which water rights have been acquired as herein provided for, shall pay the owner of such improvements, irrigation works or water rights, as the case may be, the appraised value thereof, and take a receipt therefor, and shall deliver the same to the commissioner of public lands before he shall receive a patent or certificate of purchase. All such receipts shall be filed and preserved in the office of the commissioner of public lands.”
If both of those sections of the statute were in force at the time of the transaction in question, which was February, 1917, there is at least an apparent conflict between them. Section 616 was originally Section 24 of Chapter 79, Session Laws of 1890-91, and has remained unamended or directly repealed to the present time. Section 632 was likewise originally section 32 of the same chapter of the laws of 1890-91. That section as originally enacted and as it remained until amended and re-enacted read as follows: “If any state lands 'be sold upon which surface improvements have been made by a lessee (except irrigating ditches and irrigation works), said improvements shall be appraised under the direction of the board. The purchaser of state lands upon which improvements have been made, as herein provided for, shall pay the owner of such improvements the appraised value thereof, shall take a receipt therefor, and shall deliver the same to the register before he shall receive a patent or certificate of purchase. All such receipts shall be filed and preserved in the office of the register.”
Thus the law remained until 1909. By section 2 of Chapter 132, Session Laws of 1909, the last above quoted section was amended so as to read as it now appears as section 632
Writ allozved.