129 P. 764 | Or. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
“That any state contracting under this section is hereby authorized to make all necessary contracts to cause the said lands to be reclaimed and to induce their settlement and cultivation in accordance with and subject to the provisions of this section, but the state shall
The act also stipulated that as fast as any state might furnish satisfactory proof that the lands are irrigated, reclaimed, and occupied by actual settlers the general government will issue patents to the State or its assigns for such lands; that the State should not sell or dispose of more than 160 acres of land to any one person; and that any surplus of money derived by any one state from the sale of lands above the cost of their reclamation should be held as a trust fund, to be applied to the reclamation of other desert lands in that state. The Act of Congress of June 11, 1896 (29 Stat. at Large, 434, c. 420), making appropriations for sundry civil expenses .of the government for the ensuing year and for other purposes, made a rule, in substance, that under any law enacted by a state providing for the reclamation of arid lands pursuant to and in acceptance of the acts of Congress already mentioned liens were authorized to be created by the State to which such lands were granted, and by no other authority whatever, and when created should be valid against the separate legal subdivisions of land reclaimed for the actual cost and necessary expenses of reclamation and reasonable interest thereon from the date of reclamation until disposed of to actual settlers. The act also specified that when an ample supply of water is actually furnished patents should issue to each state without regard to settlement or cultivation, and further provided that in no event should the United States be responsible for the amount of the liens or liability in whole or in part. This legislation is known in. common parlance as the “Carey Act.”
By an “act to provide for the acceptance by the State of Oregon of certain lands and for the reclamation and
“Said State Land Board is hereby authorized to make and enter into such contracts and agreements and to assume such obligations in relation to and concerning said lands as may be necessary to induce and cause such reclamation thereof as is required by the contract with the Secretary of the Interior and the Acts of Congress, and is authorized and empowered to create a lien or liens which when created shall be valid on and against the separate legal subdivisions of land reclaimed for the actual cost and necessary expense of reclamation and reasonable interest thereon from the date of reclamation until said lien shall have been satisfied; provided, that in no event, in no contingency and under no circumstance shall the State of Oregon be in any manner directly or indirectly liable for any amount of any such lien or liability in whole or in part.”
Section 3 of this act required the person or corporation desiring to enter into a contract to furnish all preliminary maps, plans, and surveys for the approval of the Secretary of the Interior. Section 4 reads thus:
“Upon the receipt of the application, map, plan of irrigation, payment, etc., as provided in Section 3225, the State Land Board shall enter into a contract with the said person, company of persons, association, or incorporated company applying therefor, for the construction of the works substantially according to the plans submitted under said contract. The person, company of persons,
Section 6 said that:
“Immediately upon the execution of the contract, the person, company of persons, association or incorporated company undertaking the reclamation shall be entitled to enter upon the land the reclamation of which has been undertaken and shall have and retain the full possession, control, use and right of occupancy of said land until the lien thereon shall have been satisfied.”
The succeeding section provides for. a forfeiture of the contract in case the contracting party fails to complete the work as specified. By Section 10 it is laid down that:
“Any citizen desiring to purchase any unsold quarter section of desert land on which there is a lien for the
The agreement of September 25, 1907, was made by the defendant, as party of the first part and the State Land Board, acting for the State of Oregon, as party of the second part. In respect to the lien for” reclamation the contract stipulated that:
“The party of the second part hereby declares, fixes, and establishes the sum of $36 per acre for each acre of land embraced in this contract which may be reclaimed as the amount due and payable tó the said party of the first part for the actual cost and necessary expenses for the reclamation of the lands and now hereby creates a lien on and against the lands which shall be valid on and against the separate legal subdivisions of the land reclaimed from the date of reclamation until disposed of or released to settlers, together with interest at 6 per cent per annum on the full amount of the lien from the date of reclamation until paid.”
It was specified in the contract that:
“No agreement for the purchase of water rights and' release of the lien or settlement upon any of said lands shall be entered into between the party of the first part and any settler or any person or persons until after the date of the reclamation and notice thereof given in writing by the party of the second part to the party of the first part.”
It is for an alleged breach of this last-mentioned provision that' this suit is instituted.
“That defendant has caused to be printed, placed on the market, is threatening to sell, offering to sell, has sold, and is selling to citizens of the State of Oregon and of the United States, its so-called ‘assignment of lien,’ a true copy of which is as follows.”
The pleading then sets out a blank form of agreement, in which neither the names of the parties, sums of money, nor description appears. It provides, however, that on payment of sundry sums of money at various periods within the lapse of ten years from the date of reclamation, amounting in all to $36 per acre, the defendant here agrees to assign, sell, and set over unto the supposed purchaser all the defendant’s right, title, and interest in' and to the lands to be described when said subdivision shall have been reclaimed by the defendant. The blank also contains a condition that the proposed purchaser shall settle on the subdivision and obtain his deed thereto within three years from the date of reclamation, or cause the same to be done within that period.
The complaint charges in general terms that the acts of the defendant thus specified are in violation of its contract and amount to a contract to sell water rights and land; that if the defendant is permitted to continue placing on the market such an instrument irreparable damage will be done to the plaintiff and the people of the State; and that if it is not enjoined it will continue the injury of the State and its people aforesaid. We observe in passing that, like the federal government, the State disclaims in the statute all responsibility for the enforcement of the liens mentioned, and that it has no. beneficial interest in the lands, or in the proceeds of the sale thereof; the net proceeds being reserved as a trust fund for the reclamation of other arid lands.
The general scope and purpose of the Carey Act and of the State legislation supplemental thereto was to encourage the reclamation of desert lands, so that the same should become habitable. There is no intimation in any of the legislation noticed that alienation of lands should be hindered or impeded. Both the national legislation and the State law authorized the contracts and agreements that may be necessary to “induce and cause such reclamation.” The Oregon statute itself prescribes this in general terms, and in addition thereto lays down with particularity the conditions which shall be included within the contract with any person or corporation desiring to undertake a reclamation project; but it does not
We have, in effect, a legislative construction of the act in question; for by the terms of the later act of February 24, 1909 (Laws 1909, p. 377), this whole statute of 1901 was repealed, and a revised procedure was established, relating to desert lands. Section 3860 et seq., L. O. L. Section 12 of the repealing act, Section 3871, L. O. L., provided that:
This legislation is an evident recognition that this provision was lacking and could not be enforced under the previous law. The legislature did not attempt to and could not inject into the previous contract here in question any element not authorized by the former statute.
The demurrer was properly sustained, and the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed. Affirmed.