Boggs v. Ganeard

84 P. 195, 148 Cal. 711, 1906 Cal. LEXIS 359
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1906
DocketSac. No. 1280.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 84 P. 195 (Boggs v. Ganeard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boggs v. Ganeard, 84 P. 195, 148 Cal. 711, 1906 Cal. LEXIS 359 (Cal. 1906).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

This proceeding, involving the question as to the right of defendant to purchase from the state, as swamp and overflowed land, a tract of land containing 159.98 acres, was instituted in the superior court of San Joaquin County, under an order of reference made by the surveyor-general under the provisions of section 3443 of the Political Code, relative to the purchase of swamp and overflowed land, as amended March 2, 1903. Judgment was given decreeing that defendant was not entitled to purchase the land and canceling his certificate of purchase. Defendant appeals from said judgment and from an order denying his motion to vacate the same and enter judgment for him upon the findings, made under sections 663 and 663% of the Code of Civil Procedure. The appeals come before us on the judgment-roll and a bill of exceptions showing the proceedings on the motion to vacate the judgment.

The question presented is as to whether the facts shown by the pleadings and findings are sufficient to support the judgment. The land in question was segregated as swamp and overflowed land by authority of the United States, prior to December, 1879. No application for the purchase thereof other than that of defendant, has ever been made, plaintiffs not having applied to purchase the same, and not now seeking to purchase. Defendant’s application was made on September 21, 1901. Defendant was not an actual settler on the land, *713 but in all other respects he was qualified to purchase. His affidavit of application was, upon its face, in due form, and sufficient to show his right to purchase this land, being in strict conformity with the requirements of section 3443 of the Political Code. His affidavit was claimed to be false in regard to one matter stated therein,—viz., that he knew of his own knowledge that there were no settlers on the land. The law then required, as it ever since has, that the affidavit should state that he knew “of his own knowledge that there are no settlers” on the land, “or, if there are, that the land has been segregated more than six months by authority of the United States.” The affidavit also showed that the land had been so segregated. The applicant paid to the surveyor-general the required fee, and subsequently, his application having been approved, paid the full purchase price, $159.98, and was given a certificate of purchase, bearing date March 20, 1902. On March 14, 1903, no patent having been issued to defendant, plaintiffs filed in the office of the surveyor-general their affidavit, setting forth that at the time of the filing of defendant’s application, and for more than ten years next prior thereto, they and those under whom they claim, were in the possession and occupancy of said land for farming purposes, such occupancy and possession being open and notorious and evidenced by ditches, embankments, and levees showing the actual extent thereof, and had, at the time of the filing of defendant’s application, actually reclaimed such land and reduced the same to a state of cultivation “by a system of levees and ditches constructed and maintained at great expense by affiants and those under whom they claim,” and had been farming and cultivating the same. The affidavit further stated that dependant’s affidavit of application was false, in that he therein stated that he knew of his own knowledge that there were no settlers on the land, when, in truth and in fact, there were, and for more than ten years next prior thereto there had been, settlers on said land. Upon this affidavit, the surveyor-general made; his order referring the question raised thereby to the superior court of San Joaquin County, and plaintiffs, within thirty days thereafter, commenced this action to determine the same.

According to the findings of the court, all the allegations in plaintiffs’ affidavit as to their use of the land, and the condition at the time of defendant’s application are true, and the *714 court expressly found that at the date of defendant’s application, and for more than ten years prior thereto, the land was “suitable for cultivation,” having been “reclaimed by means of ditches, embankments, and levees by the grantors of plaintiffs,” that “no part of said lands had been reclaimed or reduced to a state of cultivation by any swamp land district,” and that defendant had never been a settler on said land. It further found that defendant’s affidavit was false in the respect stated in plaintiffs’ affidavit, and gave judgment in the manner hereinbefore specified.

Disregarding for the moment all questions as to procedure, and the right of persons not in privity with the state to question the right of defendant to purchase, we are satisfied that it must be held, upon the record before us, that the land was at the date of defendant’s application, “suitable for cultivation,” within the meaning of those words as used in section 3 of article XVII of our constitution, and that by reason of that fact, any sale of the land to defendant was forbidden, he not being an actual settler thereon. It is provided in that section that “lands belonging to this state, which are suitable for cultivation, shall be granted only to actual settlors.” That this land was in fact suitable for cultivation at the time of such application cannot be disputed under the findings of the court. Defendant’s claim that it was not such within the meaning of the constitutional provision is based upon the fact that it was originally unfit for cultivation, and has been reclaimed and made suitable for cultivation not by natural causes, but by the hand of man, the findings showing that it was so changed “by means of ditches, embankments, and levees,” constructed and maintained by plaintiffs and their grantors. If the doctrine of Fulton v. Brannan, 88 Cal. 454, [26 Pac. 506], is to be adhered to in the future as it has been ever since that decision was rendered, it would appear to be immaterial how the land was made suitable for cultivation. That case certainly determined that neither the condition of the land designated as swamp and overflowed at the time of its cession to the state, nor its condition at the time of the adoption of the constitutional provision, as to suitability for cultivation, was controlling. The land there involved was covered with water until several years after the adoption of the constitutional provision, *715 when it became reclaimed by natural causes. When it is settled that the constitution speaks without reference to the condition of the land at either of these times, it must follow that it speaks with reference to the condition at the time of sale, or, rather, the initiation of the proceedings for purchase. And so this court expressly declared in Fulton v. Brannan, 88 Cal. 454, [26 Pac. 506], where, discussing and approving a prior decision involving land of another character (Manley v. Cunningham, 72 Cal. 236, [13 Pac 622], it said: “If this decision is to stand as expressive of the law of this state, all swamp lands which, at the time application was made for their purchase,

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Bluebook (online)
84 P. 195, 148 Cal. 711, 1906 Cal. LEXIS 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boggs-v-ganeard-cal-1906.