Colorado Fuel & Iron Co. v. State Board of Land Commissioners

14 Colo. App. 84
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1899
DocketNo. 1759
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Colo. App. 84 (Colorado Fuel & Iron Co. v. State Board of Land Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colorado Fuel & Iron Co. v. State Board of Land Commissioners, 14 Colo. App. 84 (Colo. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Bissell, P. J.

I have stated this controversy with extreme particularity [93]*93and great fullness because the facts are absolutely essential to a correct understanding of the issue and essential as a basis whereon to apply the law. The legal questions require much less consideration and a very limited argument because .the vital propositions have been determined by the adjudications of the supreme court and our own antecedent decisions. Under those adjudications as we understand them there is in reality but one open question and this respects only the construction of the act of 1887 as amended by the act of 1895,

The appellees question the propriety of the proceeding by mandamus to enforce the appellant’s rights and insist the only remedy is by bill in equity or by certiorari. Much learning and ingenuity is exhibited in their argument, and it must be conceded very large support for the contention is found in the adjudications of sister states. The whole matter, however, was made the subject of very elaborate discussion and consideration by the supreme court, and the right of parties to proceed against the land board by way of mandamus under certain circumstances analogous though not entirely similar to the present fully sustained in an exhaustive opinion. The circumstances under which this proceeding might be adopted for the purpose of effectuating asserted rights were elaborately considered and fully determined. It was adjudicated that this proceeding might be initiated as against this particular board, to wit, the state land board, and wherever their discretion had already been exercised and there was nothing left to be done but to execute an instrument, this was an act ministerial in its character, the writ could issue, and thereon judgment might be rendered compelling them to perform, a case being otherwise made out by the applicant. Greenwood Cemetery Co. v. Routt et al., 17 Colo. 156. This decision we substantially followed, announcing the same principle in Rhodes v. The Board of Public Works, 10 Colo. App. 99; Bradbury v. Alden, 13 Colo. App. 208.

It would be folly to attempt, even if we might succeed, to fortify what was so well and so accurately stated in those [94]*94opinions. It is enough for the purposes of this opinion to hold that mandamus will lie against the state land board to compel them to execute contracts where the rights of third parties have not intervened, and there is nothing left to be done but to perform a ministerial duty and execute a contract theretofore agreed on with respect to which rights of parties have vested. It only remains then to apply the doctrine to the facts as exhibited by this record, and to determine whether what the board did amounted to the making of a contract which the fuel and iron company have a right to compel them to carry out and wherein also the fuel company have a right to call on the land board for a written evidence of the contract into which they entered.

As preliminary to this question it may be well to dispose of a suggestion made by counsel on the argument, that the board had executed another lease to The Victor Coal & Coke Company which is outstanding, and that therefore they should not be compelled to execute another paper which would be antagonistic and perhaps involve the board and third parties who are not before the court with respect to their rights. We do not believe the position to be well taken. Counsel insist and it is undoubtedly true, and has been many times held that where rights of third parties are involved, mandamus will not ordinarily lie, but parties must proceed by bill in equity, bring those parties in, and in the suit thus initiated have their rights litigated and determined. We are quite of the opinion this case is not at all similar or in its facts analogous to those wherein this principle has been enunciated. As we view it, if we ultimately conclude what the land board did amounted to a contract between them and the fuel and iron company, the subsequent lease executed to The Victor Coal & Coke Company, was wholly invalid, they acquired no rights thereby and they are not prejudiced by these proceedings. Again, it is equally true it is not for the land board, which counsel insist is the only party represented, to contend that The Victor Coal & Coke Company are not before the court, to say that they have executed another lease, nor to [95]*95contest the use of this remedy because of this fact if it be one. It is not enough for a party to insist that it is impossible for him to perform the act where this impossibility has been occasioned by his own doing. Where it is the respondent’s own act which creates the impossibility, he may not plead it as a defense to the writ and the enforcement of the right. This is the general principle asserted by all text writers and is recognized by this court in The First National Bank of Northampton v. Arthur, 12 Colo. App. 90.

A further answer to the contention that a bill in equity is the only proper remedy is to my mind very strongly illustrated by the situation of the parties under existing conditions. It is undoubtedly true The Colorado Fuel & Iron Company may not file a bill against The Victor Coal & Coke Company without averring a lease and rights thereby acquired. It is a matter of grave question in my mind whether setting up the facts as they appear in the statement, a bill could be maintained against The Victor Coal & Coke Company for the cancellation of their lease, or to compel its transfer. The latter remedy of course is not at all effectual or consistent with the rights of The Colorado Fuel & Iron Company. This company is not insisting on an assignment of the lease executed to The Victor Coal & Coke Company which is totally different in its conditions from those expressed in the contract of the state land board. The assignment of the lease would neither be an adequate nor an effectual remedy, nor would it give the fuel and iron company the rights to which they are entitled, if they are entitled to any. It is equally evident they could commence no action at law to recover possession. It requires leasehold rights evidenced by an instrument executed by the proper authorities to entitle them to maintain law actions as well as bills in equity to perfect their claims and establish their rights, and we are quite unable to see how a bill in equity could be framed whereon a decree could be rendered which would give the fuel and iron company that to which it is entitled. Whatever might be the right or the rule under other circum[96]*96stances and other conditions, under the present, we think the one announced in The People v. Fleming, 4 Denio, 137, is entirely applicable and wholly correct. We then have a case wherein the proper remedy was adopted by the appellants subject only to the condition the case shows them to have a right and no other specific means of compelling its performance, which must necessarily be the conclusion providing we determine what the board did was lawfully done and resulted in a contract between the parties capable of enforcement.

We now come to this inquiry, the first branch of it we have already determined, and to our satisfaction at least have demonstrated that the fuel and iron company have no other remedy than the one by mandamus to enforce the right upon which they insist. Whether they had or had not this right, depends on the determination of two propositions: the one, the construction of the statute, the determination of its limitations and conditions; the second must be resolved from a consideration of the acts of the parties.

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Related

Noble v. Union River Logging Railroad
147 U.S. 165 (Supreme Court, 1893)
People ex rel. Post v. Fleming
4 Denio 137 (New York Supreme Court, 1847)
Greenwood Cemetery Land Co. v. Routt
17 Colo. 156 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1892)
In re Leasing of State Lands
18 Colo. 359 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1893)
Post v. Davis
52 P. 903 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 1898)
People v. Tynon
2 Colo. App. 131 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1892)
Rhodes v. Board of Public Works
10 Colo. App. 99 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1897)
First National Bank v. Arthur
12 Colo. App. 90 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1898)
Bradbury v. Alden
13 Colo. App. 208 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1899)

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Bluebook (online)
14 Colo. App. 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colorado-fuel-iron-co-v-state-board-of-land-commissioners-coloctapp-1899.