Barber Lumber Co. v. Gifford

139 P. 557, 25 Idaho 654, 1914 Ida. LEXIS 25
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 139 P. 557 (Barber Lumber Co. v. Gifford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barber Lumber Co. v. Gifford, 139 P. 557, 25 Idaho 654, 1914 Ida. LEXIS 25 (Idaho 1914).

Opinions

SULLIVAN, J.

This is an original proceeding brought in this court for a writ of mandate to Wilfred L. Gifford, as Secretary of State of the state of Idaho, to countersign and' affix the great seal of the state to a deed or contract of sale for certain timber standing on land owned by the state, alleged to have been sold to the plaintiff, the Barber Lumber Company, at public auction.

After formal allegations in said complaint to the effect that the Barber Lumber Company is a corporation, etc., and that Wilfred L. Gifford, the defendant, is the duly elected, qualified and acting Secretary of State of the state of Idaho, it is alleged that the Barber Lumber Company made due and legal application in writing to the register of the state board of land commissioners to cut certain trees standing upon about 12,000 acres of land described in said application, belonging to the state; that the Barber Lumber Company had paid all of the costs estimated by the state board of land commissioners as well as all the costs of all other proceedings directed by law to determine whether such trees could be law[658]*658fully cut; that the register of said state board caused the application of said Barber Lumber Company to be published for thé full period of thirty days in one or more weekly newspapers having such circulation as would fully advise the water users of the irrigation area upon the water-shed upon which said trees are growing of the pendency of the application, and that protests to the granting of the application must be made within twenty days from the date of the last publication of said notice; that upon the expiration of the time for filing such protests as therein provided, no protests having been made, the state board of land commissioners decided that the trees desired in said application might properly be disposed of and sold; that thereafter said board caused to be advertised in three or more newspapers designated by said board, one of which was published in the county in which such timber is located, for a period of more than four weeks, that said trees would be publicly sold at the State Capitol in the city of Boise on October 25, 1913, to the highest bidder for cash, and that if the highest bidder was some other person than the applicant, he should pay the costs and disbursements incurred by said applicant in the matter of said appli"cation; that on. said 25th of October, 1913, the said Barber Lumber Company did bid for said trees the sum of $100,000 in cash; that said board took the said bid under advisement and consideration, and on the 25th day of November, 1913, did by unanimous vote of the members of said board decide and declare that said bid of the Barber Lumber Company was the highest and best bid for said trees and did accept the bid of said Barber Lumber Company therefor; that on the 29th of November, 1913, the Barber Lumber Company presented to said defendant, Gifford, as Secretary of State, a deed or contract conveying from said state of Idaho to the said Barber Lumber Company the trees growing upon the said described tracts of land, which said deed or agreement was signed by John M. Haines as governor of the state of Idaho, and requested the said defendant Gifford to attest the same and affix thereto the seal of the state of Idaho, and that said defendant then and there refused so to do and will con[659]*659tinue to refuse to attest the same or attach the seal of the state thereto unless ordered to do so by this court; that the Barber Lumber Company is now ready, willing and anxious to pay to said board the sum of $100,000 in cash, the amount to be paid for said trees, and to comply with all the rules, regulations and orders of said board in relation thereto.

It is also alleged that sec. 16 of art. 4 of the state constitution provides that “All grants and permissions shall be in the name and by the authority of the state of Idaho, sealed with the great seal of the state, signed by the governor and countersigned by the Secretary of State,” and that in order to procure a good and sufficient title to said trees so purchased it is necessary for the grant, deed or contract conveying the same to be countersigned by the said Gifford as Secretary of State of the state of' Idaho, and that the plaintiff has no adequate or any remedy at law except-such relief as may be obtained in this proceeding.

As a reason for presenting this application, it is alleged that if the Barber Lumber Company becomes the purchaser of said trees and procures a good and sufficient title thereto, it expects and intends to construct or have constructed a line of railway from the mouth of Moore’s creek up and into the vicinity and neighborhood of the lands upon which said trees are now standing, for the purpose of hauling and conveying the timber upon said lands to the Barber Lumber Company’s mill located near Boise, and that to accomplish this purpose it has procured subscriptions from divers and different persons in sums sufficient to enable it to construct said line of railway; that said subscriptions were entered into and made upon condition that said Barber Lumber Company become the owner of and obtain the good and sufficient title to the trees growing upon said tracts of land, and that said subscriptions would expire by limitation of time on January 1, 1914; and it is alleged that the Barber Lumber Company is unable to say under the present state of the financial market whether or not it could procure these subscriptions to be renewed; and for the further reason that the sum of $100,000 paid as aforesaid for said trees belongs to the school fund [660]*660of the state of Idaho and that the same can be readily placed at interest immediately at the rate of seven per cent per annum, and that the act of the defendant in refusing to countersign the deed or contract is depriving the school fund of the interest it would obtain during said period of time on said sum of money, and plaintiff prays for a writ of mahdate as above stated.

Upon presenting said complaint or petition to this court, the court ordered an alternative writ of mandate to issue, which was done and served upon the Secretary of State, who thereupon made his return to said writ and set forth in said return the entire proceedings of said board of land commissioners, and admitted the facts in regard to the application of the Barber Lumber Company to purchase said trees and the proceedings of the board thereunder substantially as set forth above. Due notice was given of the sale of said trees as required by law, and said board reserved to itself the right to reject any and all bids for said trees and timber growing upon said lands. On October 25, 1913, the date fixed for receiving the bids for the purchase of said trees, the board met and the following is a part of the proceedings of said board:

“This being the date set for receiving bids on the timber on approximately 12,000 acres of land in the Boise Basin, the Board, through its State Land Commissioner, George A. Day, offered the said timber at public sale. There were but two bids, one by Lyon Cobb, acting for the Barber Lumber Com* pany for $100,000, and one by Edwin Snow for parties unknown for $101,000. There being no further bids, it was moved and carried that the Board take the bids under advisement until two o’clock P. M. of this day.
“Board convened at two o’clock P. M. for further consideration of the bids on timber. There was presented at this time an objection on the part of the Barber Lumber Company to the bid of Edwin Snow. Said objection reading as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
139 P. 557, 25 Idaho 654, 1914 Ida. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barber-lumber-co-v-gifford-idaho-1914.