Barbree v. Kingsbury

119 P. 107, 17 Cal. App. 178, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 103
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 29, 1911
DocketCiv. No. 869.
StatusPublished

This text of 119 P. 107 (Barbree v. Kingsbury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barbree v. Kingsbury, 119 P. 107, 17 Cal. App. 178, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 103 (Cal. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

This is an appeal from an order denying an application for a writ of mandate to require respondent, pursuant to section 3519 of the Political Code, to issue the usual certificate to the governor for the issuance of a patent for certain school lands. Petitioners claim the right to the patent, as the successors in interest to one Alfred Warren, the original applicant for said lands. On January 6, 1886, Warren filed his application or affidavit to purchase the lands therein described and the controversy here grows out of the following averments in the said affidavit: “That said land is not suitable for cultivation; that he had not entered any portion of any lands mentioned in section three thousand four hundred and ninety-four of the Political Code (to wit, the unsold portion of the five hundred thousand acres granted to the state for school purposes, the sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections, and the lands selected in lieu thereof), which, to *180 gether with that now sought to he purchased, exceeds 642.24 acres. . . . That the township within which said land is situate was and had heen surveyed and sectionized by the United States prior to the date upon which said affidavit was made or filed in said land office, and that said section sixteen lies in one body in the form of a square and contains according to said survey of the United States six hundred forty-two and .24 acres, and that no legal subdivision of said section sixteen contains less than forty acres or more than forty-two acres.”

Section 3495 of the Political Code prescribes the method for the purchase of state school lands and provides that ‘ ‘ any person desiring to purchase any portion not less than the smallest legal subdivision of any of the lands mentioned in section thirty-four hundred and ninety-four, situated in any township which has been surveyed by the United States, must make an affidavit” containing certain averments, among them, “whether the land is or is not suitable for cultivation,” and if the land is not suitable for cultivation, the affidavit must state “That the applicant has not entered any portion of such lands, which together with that now sought to be entered, exceeds six hundred and forty acres.” The section further provides that, “Lands unsuitable for cultivation may be sold in quantities not exceeding six hundred and forty acres to any one person.”

No question is raised that Warren acted in good faith, that his affidavit was true in every respect, and that it was in proper form, except that it called for an excess of 2.24 acres over the quantity of land that the statute provides can be sold to one person. It is the contention of the respondent that only one construction is possible of said section of the Political Code, and that contention places the limit of purchase at 640 acres, which cannot be exceeded in any case. The logical conclusion of the contention would seem to be that Warren’s application was and is nugatory and void, since it did not contain one of the important and essential elements required by the code. It would follow that no patent could be legally issued to him or to his successors for any part of said land.

In Hildebrand, v. Stewart, 41 Cal. 387, it is held that “When the -law, under which public lands are sold, requires *181 certain acts to be performed as a prerequisite to the right to purchase, the courts cannot dispense with the performance of those acts by legalizing an entry made without complying with them.” To the same effect are Woods v. Sawtelle, 46 Cal. 391, Botsford v. Howell, 52 Cal. 158, Millidge v. Hyde, 67 Cal. 5, [6 Pac. 852], and McKenzie v. Brandon, 71 Cal. 209, [12 Pac. 428].

The Hildebrand case involved a contest between two claimants to the same land, arising before the surveyor general and transferred to the district court for adjudication, and it was held by the supreme court that the application to purchase by defendant was invalid and ineffectual to vest in him any right to the land by reason of the absence of the notice to the occupant or claimant of the house and corral then located upon said land, as required by the act under which defendant’s attempted location was made.

In Woods v. Sawtelle, 46 Cal. 391, at the time defendant made his application to purchase the land, plaintiff was in possession thereof and he had been for more than three years. The defendant’s application was approved by the surveyor general and a certificate of purchase was issued to him and plaintiff’s application made subsequently was rejected. The statute provided that if there was an adverse occupant for more than sixty days at the time an application to purchase was made, the applicant must so state. There was an omission in that respect in defendant’s said application and the supreme court held that, by reason of his application being in proper form, plaintiff, who was the prior occupant but the subsequent applicant, had the better right to make the purchase.

The contest in the Botsford case, supra, was decided by the lower court in favor of plaintiff, but it was reversed by the supreme court on the ground that the facts required by the statute must be stated in the application directly and positively, whereas plaintiff had stated them in the alternative form.

In. Millidge v. Hyde it was held that the demurrer to the complaint was properly sustained for the reason that plaintiff’s application failed to state, as required by the statute, that “There is no valid claim to such land other than that of the applicant; that he has not entered any land in part satis *182 faction of the unsold portion of the 500,000 acre grant, or of the grant in lieu of the sixteenth or thirty-sixth sections, which together with that now sought to be purchased exceeds 320 acres.”

In McKenzie v. Brandon, 71 Cal. 209, [12 Pac. 428], it was held that plaintiff stated in his affidavit what was not true, when he declared that there was no actual possession of the lands adverse to him, and it was decided that he had no claim to the title. These cases all involved contesting applicants, and it was rightly determined that the claimant complying with the requirements of the statute should be preferred to the one who was remiss.

It is undoubtedly true, also, as asserted by respondent, that “It has not been the policy of the state to sell large tracts of land but rather, on the other hand, has it been the policy to encourage settlers to live on state lands and to sell lands in small tracts.” It is equally true, however, that the state should not assume the attitude of a wrongdoer nor should the letter of the statute be applied in favor of injustice where it is possible, by a liberal spirit of interpretation, to reach a righteous conclusion. The facts here, it may be said, are peculiar and persuasive in favor of the claim of petitioners.

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Related

United States v. Union Pacific Railroad
91 U.S. 72 (Supreme Court, 1875)
Hildebrand v. Stewart
41 Cal. 387 (California Supreme Court, 1871)
Woods v. Sawtelle
46 Cal. 389 (California Supreme Court, 1873)
Botsford v. Howell
52 Cal. 158 (California Supreme Court, 1877)
Millidge v. Hyde
6 P. 852 (California Supreme Court, 1885)
McKenzie v. Brandon
12 P. 428 (California Supreme Court, 1886)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 P. 107, 17 Cal. App. 178, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barbree-v-kingsbury-calctapp-1911.