55 P. 532 | Or. | 1899
delivered the opinion.
This is a contest between different purchasers of the same land from the state. The facts are that on Febru
The contention for the plaintiffs is that by sections 3 and 4 the state lands are divided into two classes, and that a qualified purchaser is entitled to purchase the maximum acreage of either class without regard to his previous purchase of lands belonging to the other, and hence the fact that Warren had purchased more than three hundred and twenty acres of other land did not disqualify him from purchasing the maximum, acreage of tide lands as provided in section 4 of the act. But it seems to us the vice of this argument lies in the fact that neither section 3 nor 4 undertakes to define the qualification of a purchaser of state lands. They provide the maximum acreage which may be sold by the board to any one person of the several classes of land, but do not declare to whom it may be sold. They define the rights and powers of the board, but the qualification of a purchaser is found in section 5, which provides, in effect, that he must be over the age of eighteen years, a citizen of the United States or one who has declared his intention to becorde such, a citizen of this state, and one who has not directly or indirectly made any previous purchase of lands from the state which, together with the lands described in his application, exceed, in case of an application for the purchase of the lands specified in section 3, one hundred and sixty acres if a non-settler, and three hundred and twenty acres if a settler ; and, if the application be for the purchase of swamp or tide lands, three hundred and twenty acres. The language of section 5 is clear and unambiguous. It plainly makes any previous purchase of state lands which, together with those described in his application, exceed the maximum acreage, as much of a disqualification as a want of
Affirmed .