Attorney General ex rel. People v. Ruggles

26 N.W. 419, 59 Mich. 123, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 979
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 26 N.W. 419 (Attorney General ex rel. People v. Ruggles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Attorney General ex rel. People v. Ruggles, 26 N.W. 419, 59 Mich. 123, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 979 (Mich. 1886).

Opinion

Morse, J.

September 7, 1881, Jacob J. Yan Riper, then Attorney General of the State, filed an information in the circuit court for the county of Ingham in chancery, asking to have four part-paid certificates for the purchase of agricultural college lands set aside, canceled, and delivered up, because of fraud in the purchase or entry of the same. The lands embraced in the certificates are described as follows: The south-east quarter of section two, in township 24 north, of range 8 west, certificate issued in the name of Edwin Buckley, March 15, 1871; the north-east quarter of section 34, town 21 north, of range 11 west, certificate issued in the name of Edward McLaughlin; the south-east quarter of section 34, town 21 north, of range 11 west, in the name of John M. Dennitt; and the south half of the south-west quarter of section 28, town 21 north, of range 11 west, in the name of James Rawlins, — the last three certificates being issued March 6, 1872. These certificates were applied for by Daniel D. Ruggles, father of the defendant, and procured by him, in the name of said parties, at the price of three dollars per acre, one-fourth paid down, and the balance at the •option of the purchaser, with interest. The lands were obtained for the benefit and sole use of said Daniel D. Ruggles, he using the names of these parties for the purpose, as he says, of putting his neighbors off the scent of his buying land in that locality. It is claimed that these certificates have been assigned to or are holden by the defendant. These lands belong to the dower of the agricultural college. They •are a part of the donation of the United States, for the benefit of this college, under an act of Congress dated July 2, 1862, and were accepted by the State, February 2, 1863. [127]*127At the session of 1863, the Legislature granted to the agricultural land-grant board the care and disposal of these lands, subject to a limitation that they should not be sold for less than two dollars and fifty cents per acre, one-fourth to be paid at the time of purchase, and the balance at the option of the purchaser, with interest at seven per cent, per annum. This land-grant board was composed, by law, of the Governor, Attorney General, Auditor General, Secretary of State, State Treasurer, and Commissioner of the State Land Office. The lands were selected under their direction, and it was the general purpose to select lands for agricultural use, rather than for the pine growing thereon, as it was supposed farming lands would sell more readily, and the college thereby sooner realize the benefit of the grant. The location of the lands was not completed until 1868, when they were put upon the market. They were first offered at public sale under a resolution of the board; but there being no bidders, were then, by the Commissioner of the Land Office, opened to private sale. Under the act of the Legislature of 1863, the board could enhance but not reduce the price, and they fixed the minimum at five dollars per acre. The first sale of these lands was on the thirtieth day of October, 1868, and they were sold until March 16, 1869, at five dollars per acre; 1,680 acres being so sold. The Legislature of 1869, on that day, amended the act of 1863; the act taking immediate effect, the amendment providing that said lands should not be sold for less than three dollars per acre, one-fourth to be paid at the time of purchase, and the balance at the option of the purchaser, with interest upon said balance at seven per cent, per annum; and providing, further, that all of said lands which are valuable jw'incipally for the timber thereon shall be sold for not less than five dollars per acre, the whole of the purchase money therefor to be paid at the date of purchase.” Whatever may have been the object of this act the effect was to increase the sales and lessen the price. April 8, 1869, the buyers began to rush into the commissioners’ office, and almost everybody got the lands at the lowest price. From that date until March 6, 1872, out [128]*128of some 40,000 acres sold, only 3,540 acres were sold for five-dollars.

By the passage of the act of 1869, amending the law of 1863, these lands were divided into two classes; but, by a strange oversight or a neglect of duty which has cost the agricultural college thousands of dollars, no steps whatever were taken to estimate the value of the timber upon these lands, or to classify them, so thfit the commissioner could know what descriptions were valuable because of the timber growing thereon. Therefore the commissioner, in selling these lands, had to rely upon the statements of the purchaser, or upon affidavits filed, presumably, generally, if not always, in his interest, There is no doubt from the record before us that thousands of acres of these lands, of great value because of the pine and other timber upon them., have been sold as three-dollar lands, one-quarter only paid, stripped of their timber, their only value, and then no further interest or taxes paid by the purchasers. The squandering of so much of this valuable gift to the agricultural college must be laid to the failure of the officers who had the care and disposal of these lands to take proper and necessary measures to so classify and identify them that they would know what they were selling. The defendant in this case is not alone liable to.the charge that he has fraudulently used his own knowledge to impose upon the ignorance of the land commissioner. This fraud, if fraud it can be called, has been going on for years, under the eyes of the officials whose plain duty it was to prevent it. I cannot find from the record that this agricultural land-grant board, composed of State officers, — the Commissioner of the Land Office being one of them, — from April 8, 1869, when the three-dollar sales commenced, up to March 1, 1877, nearly eight years, took any notice of these sales whatever, except to invest the proceeds thereof, at which last date they met and passed the following resolution:

'•'■Resolved, that the Commissioner of the Land Office be requested to submit to the Attorney General the facts within his knowledge in relation to part-paid agricultural lands, [129]*129where the same have been stripped of timber for which the lands were valuablej said lands now being abandoned by the purchasers, and ask his opinion in writing as to the proper action to be taken by this board to secure the State from loss. Also what action is advisable to be taken when said lands have been sold at three dollars per acre, on affidavit of purchaser that the lands were not valuable for timber, when the contrary was the fact, and the said lands sold for five dollars per acre, as provided by law.”

And at a meeting April 25, 1877, Mr. Partridge, then commissioner, vainly endeavored to have an examination and classification of these lands ordered by the board as to the quality of lands, soil, and timber; which it is obvious should have been done at the outset. From 1869 to 1877 it was the practice of the commissioner, by the acquiescence, at least, of the board, to sell these lands upon the statements and affidavits of the purchaser. It is not strange that valuable timbered lands have been sold at the lowest price under such management.

The complainant claims that these certificates, obtained under this course of sale in 1871 and 1872 by Daniel D.

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.W. 419, 59 Mich. 123, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 979, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attorney-general-ex-rel-people-v-ruggles-mich-1886.