151 P. 528 | Utah | 1915
On October 11, 1913, the plaintiff, hereinafter called, respondent, commenced this action in equity in the district court of Salt Lake County against W. D. Candland, Wm. J. Lynch, A. G. Giauque, T. H. Merrill, and John F. Chidester, as members of and constituting the State Board of Land Commissioners of Utah, hereinafter styled appellants, to enjoin or restrain said appellants from completing the sale of certain school lands belonging to the State of Utah to one A. Delbert Van Wagoner upon his application until said lands and alleged improvements thereon should be duly appraised by said appellants. Van Wagoner intervened in the action, and he will hereinafter be called intervener. The complaint is quite long, but the gist thereof is to the effect that respondent for many years preceding the alleged attempted sale of the lands in question had been in possession thereof, and had
The law in force, and which controls the questions involved in this proceeding, was adopted in 1899, and constitutes chapter 64, Laws Utah 1899. The material parts of that chapter are as follows: The first four sections of the act merely create the state board of land commissioners and provide for the qualification of the members and salaries, etc. This act, as we shall hereafter see, was merely amendatory of a prior act upon the same subject. Section 5 reads as follows:
"The board of land commissioners shall have the direction, management, and control of all lands heretofore, or which may hereafter, be granted to this state by the United States government, or otherwise, for any purpose whatever, except lands used or set apart for public purposes or occupied by public buildings, and shall have the power to sell or lease the same for the best interests of the state and in accordance with the provisions of this act and the Constitution of the state.”
Section 6 provides:
"A majority of the board shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. A full record of its proceedings shall be kept by the secretary, who shall preserve all papers and documents submitted to the board.”
Section 7 requires all lands to be selected and registered 'and "thereafter sold or leased.” Section 9 reads as follows:
"The board shall cause the state lands and the improvements thereon to be appraised or reappraised at such times
Section-14, so far as material here, provides:
"In all counties where the public lands, or any portion thereof, have been appraised, the board shall, when deemed conducive to the best interest of the state, attend in person or by agent, at such time as the board shall direct, and offer at public auction at the courthouse of the county, and sell to the highest bidder all or any of the appraised and unsold and unleased lands situated in the county where such public auction is held: Provided, that no land shall be sold for less than the appraised value thereof and that not more than one hundred and sixty acres, nor less than a legal subdivision, except as hereinafter provided, shall be sold to any one individual, company, or corporation.”
Section 23 reads as follows:
"Any person purchasing land upon which improvements have been made by any other person, and appraised as provided in section 9 of this act, shall pay to the secretary of the board, in addition to the amount of principal and interest required by law to be paid at the time of sale, the full appraised value of such improvements. The amounts thus paid for improvements shall be paid by the secretary of the board to the owners of such improvements, unless such owners shall elect, within ninety days after such sale, to remove the improvements and remove the same, for which purpose he shall have the right to go upon the land. In case the owner elects to remove the improvements, and remove the same within the said ninety days, the secretary shall return to the person by whom it was paid the amount paid for improvements. ’ ’
Section 25 provides:
‘ ‘ Whenever the board shall have exposed for sale at public auction any lots of the lands of this state pursuant to law, and any of such lots shall remain unsold, the board may, in its discretion, issue certificates for the sale thereof to such per
Section 39 reads thus:'
‘ ‘ The board shall have power to make all needful rules and regulations, not inconsistent with the provisions of this act, for carrying the same into effect, and shall supply all records, books; and papers that may be required for the purposes of this act.”
In our judgment the foregoing sections cover all of the questions that are involved in this appeal.
Appellants attempted to prove, and, as they contend, did prove, that the provisions of the foregoing sections had been complied with by making appraisement of the lands in question and improvements thereon in the manner hereinafter stated, and had offered said lands for sale at public auction, and, not being able to sell the same when so offered, had thereafter sold the same at private sale to the intervener upon his application duly made, all as required by said statute. It was made to appear, however, that respondent entered a protest and for that reason the sale was not fully consummated. The District Court found that there were improvements on the lands in question when the alleged appraisement was made, and that such improvements had not been appraised as required by the statute. The court also ruled that under the statute it was necessary to appraise the improvements on said lands, and that such appraisement was a condition precedent to the right or power of the appellants to sell such lands either at public or private sale. The appellants and the intervener have filed but one brief, and they all join in the errors assigned and argued.
Counsel for appellants and the intervener in substance contend that the judgment should be reversed for the following reasons: (1) Because the appraisal of the improvements, if any, that are on school lands, is not a condition precedent, and that a failure to appraise such improvements did not affect the power or jurisdiction of the appellants to make, a sale of the lands in question either at public or private sale; (2) because the improvements on the lands in question, if any there were, were in fact duly appraised; (3) because the
For the reasons hereinafter appearing we shall not consider appellants’ third and fourth propositions. While the writer, as at present, advised, is inclined to the opinion that a failure to appraise improvements that may have been placed on the state school lands under chapter 64, supra, where the land has in fact been appraised, is merely an irregularity, and is not jurisdictional, yet if it should be found that the lands in question and the improvements thereon were in fact appraised substantially as required by the statute, then the question of whether such appraisement is jurisdictional or not is immaterial for the purposes of this decision, and for that reason we express no opinion upon that question. The question, therefore, is: Were the improvements on the lands in question appraised in substantial compliance with the statute ? Upon that question the record of the state land board was produced. It was made to appear therefrom that in the year 1901 the membership of the state land board was entirely different from what it was when this action was commenced; that in that year one Thomas D. Rees was a member of said state land board; that said board had provided blank records in which the appraisements were duly recorded when made.
“-, of -, Utah, and -, of --, Utah, being first duly sworn, each for himself, and not for the other, says, that he is a duly appointed and qualified appraiser for - county, Utah, in which capacity he himself, in his own proper person, in the presence of his associate appraiser, herein named, viewed and carefully examined the above described parcels of land, together with improvements thereon, and that the within and foregoing descriptions and values are true and correct according to his best judgment and belief.”
This blank oath was signed by Commissioner Rees as before stated. The minutes or record kept by the state land board also showed that the appraisements made by Commissioner Rees were “received and approved.” Those records also showed that the lands in question were offered at public auc
It is, however, further contended, and some eases are cited in support of the contention, that in view that the blanks contained in the several columns of the record and in the oath were not filled in, therefore the whole record is without force or effect. Here again counsel assume that the statute required a particular record to be kept. The cases referred to by counsel, namely, Hayden v. Westcolt, 11 Conn. 129; Hiss v. McCabe, 45 Md. 77, and a few others, no doubt state the law correctly; but in those cases reference is made to blanks left in verdicts and in acknowledgements and other similar records, where it was absolutely necessary to fill in the blanks to complete the record sought to be made. Not so here. Here there were two blank columns in which values as fixed by the appraisers, if any, were to be written. In one the value of the land itself was to be inserted; in the other, the value of the improvements on the land, if there were any. Now, generally speaking, the state lands were not only wild and uncultivated, but, in most instances, were arid and valueless, without water, except for grazing purposes for cattle or other live stock. Improvements on such lands must of necessity have been rare, and' the general rule, therefore, was that there were no improvements. This was especially true of the state lands which remained unsold after the law of 1899 was adopted. Prior to that law, as we shall see hereafter, the Legislature had passed a law by which all those who had settled on state lands and had made improvements thereon in good faith were given a preference right to purchase the lands by making application as provided in the statute within the time limit therein. The lands with improvements thereon
It is only reasonable to infer, therefore, that where the appraisers found no improvements, or considered them of no value, if any they found, they usually left the improvement column blank, and inserted the value of the land, without improvements, in the land value column, just as the record shows. When, therefore, the statement contained in the blank oath is considered, namely, that the appraisers considered the matter of improvements, the foregoing conclusion is certainly reasonable. It must be remembered that the statement was signed by Commissioner Rees, and it must be presumed that it was signed with full knowledge of what it contained. While the fact that the blanks in which the value of the improvements should have been given were not filled it might detract somewhat from the weight that may be given to the record, yet such fact cannot destroy the record as evidence. We have the record showing that the improvements were considered by the appraiser but were by him found to have no value. This conclusion is strengthened from circumstances which were made apparent at the hearing. The intervener and his witnesses testified that the improvements on the land were valueless, while the respondent and his witnesses testified they were valuable. The appraiser may have viewed the matter as did the intervener and his witnesses. The District Court apparently determined that question for itself, and determined it in favor of respondent. Assuming that the appraisement is jurisdictional, yet the only question before the court was whether the provisions of the statute had substantially been followed in making the appraisement. The court had no power to review the appraisement, although the appraiser may have grossly erred in his judgment as to value or máy have seriously erred in considering certain so-called improvements valueless. If, however, he acted in good faith nad without fraud or collusion, and none is claimed here, his acts are not reviewable by the courts.
But counsel insist that the appraisement, if one was
“The board shall cause the state lands and the improvements thereon to be appraised or reappraised at such times as it may deem for the best interests of the state.”
To comply with such requirement the statute also provided:
“The board may appoint one or more suitable assistants to select, locate, or appraise all lands granted to the state: Provided that at least one member of the board shall assist in-making such appraisement.”
Now, because the statute provides for the appointment of assistants, and for the further reason that it is said that “at least one member of the board shall assist in making such appraisement,” it is contended that it required at least two appraisers to make a legal appraisement. We do not so read the statute. The statute did not make it obligatory upon the appellants to appoint either one or more assistants. All the statute did was to confer power upon them to appoint one or more assistants. The plain import of the statute is that, in ease an assistant was appointed and acted as an appraiser, then at least one member of the board shall assist in making the appraisement. It is, therefore, not equivalent to a statutory direction that any particular member of the board, or that more than one member, should be present when an ap-praisement was made. Besides, the record shows that the appraisement in question was considered and approved by the board. While such an appraisement might perhaps still be deemed somewhat irregular, yet it cannot be held to be entirely void and of no force or effect, and clearly not upon what in its nature is a collateral attack, without any claim of fraud or collusion by or between any persons.
Again, courts should consider attacks upon the records of the State Land Board with considerable care and caution. If such records, can be assailed at any time, or reviewed by the courts for any cause, no one is secure where his rights may be based upon such a record. The statute having prescribed no specific method of making or keeping a record, the courts
We think the court ruled correctly. Under a prior statute already referred to all occupying claimants of such lands were given a preferential right to purchase, if they made application to do so within the time fixed by the statute. See Laws of Utah, 1896, pp. 238, 242. Chapter 64 of the Laws of 1899, a part of which we have before quoted, is merely an amendment of the prior law of 1896. That portion of the statute giving preferential rights was omitted from chapter 64. Under the law of 1896 anything which added to the value of the land constituted improvements. It was there provided:
It would seem, therefore, that in view that the time within which preferential rights to purchase had expired when chapter 64 was adopted, the Legislature had a right to assume that all those who had made improvements on state lands, and who desired to avail themselves of the preferential right, had done so, and hence there was no longer any necessity for an enlarged right to recover for improvments. That is, the Legislature could well assume that there were practically no lands remaining upon which occupying claimants had made valuable improvements when the amendatory act of 1899 was passed. The Legislature could, however, still make provision for improvements, if any, as it saw fit. In the act of 1899, therefore, no right was given except for removable improvements, as appears from section 23 of that act, which we have hereinbefore quoted. By the latter act, therefore, if the occupant refused to accept the value of the improvements as fixed, he was given the right to remove the same from the land, if he did so within the time specified in the act. Now, if the appraisers considered any improvements they found upon the land as possessing no value, and the ’Claimant thought otherwise, he still could reprove them. In the nature of things such cases might arise. Then, again, the provision limiting the improvements to such as were removable by the act of 1899 was quite reasonable, in view that ample provision had theretofore been made to protect all kinds of improvements made by occupying claimants of state lands, or of government lands before the same passed to the state. Under all the circumstances it was but natural that the Legislature should restrict the right to make claim for improvements in the act of 1899. If the claimant neglected or refused to avail himself of his preferential rights, or went upon state lands after the time had expired within which preferential rights could be made, the Legislature could well curtail his rights to claim improve
Moreover, the commissioner’s conclusion that the improvements claimed by respondent are of no value is sustained by all of the witnesses produced by the intervener, as well as by his own testimony. All testified that the fences were mere brush fences and of no value. It is true that respondent and his witnesses testified to the contrary; but this merely shows a difference of opinion. This difference of opinion by fair and honest men again meets and destroys the inference contended for by respondent that, because the commissioner making the appraisement allowed nothing for improvements, he therefore did not consider or appraise them. In any view that may be taken, therefore, the judgment should not prevail. In view, -however, that the sale in question is not completed within the purview of section 23, supra, respondent, if he desires to do so, may still remove his movable improvements from the land in question, if he will do so within the time specified in that section. That is all that he could have done in any case, or that any claimant could do, if he thought his movable improvements of greater value than that fixed by the appraisers.
We desire to add, in conclusion, that we have devoted much time and space to this ease, not because of the amount in controversy, but because of the importance of the principles that are involved. This case could have been decided either way without conferring much benefit on the one, or without inflicting any substantial injury upon the other, of the two claimants. To have affirmed the judgment, however, might produce much injury to the state, by destroying the effect to be given to the records of a public board or body, and by perhaps affecting the rights of hundreds of purchasers of the state’s lands. Such results should be obviated, unless the acts complained of were taken without authority of, or contrary to, law. In our opinion such is not the case here.