Mulhall v. State

299 N.W. 481, 140 Neb. 341, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 184
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 29, 1941
DocketNo. 31135
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 299 N.W. 481 (Mulhall v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mulhall v. State, 299 N.W. 481, 140 Neb. 341, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 184 (Neb. 1941).

Opinion

Thomsen, District Judge.

This action is brought by the plaintiff, appellee, against the defendant, appellant, to quiet title to lands in Dixon county, Nebraska. Defendant filed cross-petition to quiet title to the accretions to such land. The plaintiff also asked that defendant, and others, be enjoined from selling or offering to sell the land in question. The district court found in favor of the plaintiff; and against the defendant on its cross-petition, and the defendant appeals.

Under authority of chapter 72, art. 2, Comp. St. 1929, [342]*342section 72-201 et seq., the commissioner of public lands and buildings is authorized to lease and sell school lands under certain conditions. July 1, 1914, in compliance with the statutes a certificate of sale to certain school land was issued to Jacob Bottorff after auction at which he was the successful bidder. The consideration was $1,000, one-tenth of the purchase price being then paid, the balance at the end of 20 years. The contract further provided for annual interest payments. The property described was “The Southeast Quarter of the Southwest Quarter (SE *4 SW %) of Section 16, in Township 31, Range 6 East of the 6th Principal Meridian, containing forty acres, more or less, according to the United States survey thereof.”

Two assignments of this contract were made: The first from Bottorff to John Mulhall on February 10, 1920, and the second from John Mulhall to his son, Warren Mulhall (the plaintiff), on April 17, 1923. Both assignments were properly recorded in the office of the land commissioner. Both assignments described the land as above with the addition of the words “and the accretion thereto.”

The events between the immediate parties prior to March 28, 1938, are immaterial to a decision, but on that day the commissioner of public lands and buildings mailed to the plaintiff a letter stating that the time limit for the payment of the purchase price on the foregoing sale contract had expired and that, “unless the balance of this contract is paid in the near future or proper arrangements made for an extension of time, the land covered by this contract will be advertised and offered for sale.” Further correspondence shows that he owed delinquent interest for two years. The plaintiff asked for an extension of time, and hearing before the board on his application was set for May 9, 1938. On that day the board met and by unanimous action canceled plaintiff’s contract, but this action of the board on a hearing on May 23, 1938, and June 9, 1938, was set aside, it being shown that plaintiff had arranged for a continuance of the first hearing before May 9 because of the inability of his counsel then to be present, and [343]*343that the secretary of the board had agreed to such continuance. At the June 9 meeting of the board its action of May 9 was definitely rescinded, Mr. Mulhall was given SO days within which to make payment of principal and interest, and it was decided to offer to Mr. Mulhall a deed to only the 40 acres, specifically excluding accretions. Mr. Mulhall declined the proffered deed, but demanded a deed with land described as in the original contract. The principal and interest have been paid in part to the county treasurer, and in part into court, so that both are available to the state. Proper tenders had theretofore been made, so no question is presented in that respect. The board never again declared the contract canceled or forfeited for failure to pay delinquent interest or principal. To declare a forfeiture for failure to pay interest is mandatory under section 72-219, Comp. St. 1929. Thus, the contract is still in full force and effect. See generally Hile v. Troupe, 77 Neb. 199, 109 N. W. 218; State v. Cowles, 90 Neb. 839, 134 N. W. 959; Stock Yards Nat. Bank v. Wyman, 130 Neb. 113, 264 N. W. 157; Spahr v. Godfrey, 130 Neb. 539, 264 N. W. 560. Richardson v. Pratt, 20 Neb. 196, 29 N. W. 382, and State v. Clark, 39 Neb. 899, 58 N. W. 585, cited by defendant, are not in conflict with this conclusion, although decided under the old law, since superseded by section 72-219.

The plaintiff contends that the board of educational lands and funds, when presented with full payment of principal and interest, was bound to issue a deed in conformity with the sales certificate, and had no power to add restrictions or reservations, first, because the sale certificate controlled by its description the extent of property, with whatever legal implications the wording might bear, which the state had agreed to sell and the purchaser had agreed to buy; and, second, that such board is a creature of law and has no power to dispose of educational lands other than in the manner set forth in the statute; that since the statute, under which it operates, does not authorize the board to sell less than a fee, it has no power to exclude accretions [344]*344from the land offered to be sold, citing State v. McKelvie, 111 Neb. 224, 196 N. W. 110. In that case the sale certificates reserved mineral and other rights, and the court held the board was not authorized to make such reservations. In the instant case it would seem that, if reservations of additional land acquired by accretion were made in the sale certificate, a sale of the fee to the original 40 acres alone might be within the authority granted to the board. Since such reservations were not made in the sale certificate, this second point of the plaintiff’s reasons we need not now decide. On the first point, however, we agree. The board had the right to declare a forfeiture for nonpayment of interest, proceed with a resale of the property as provided by statute, or grant further time for payment, to a certain extent discretionary, or to receive payment, and, if in full, then to issue a deed in accordance with the terms of the sale certificate. The original sale certificate determined the description to be followed, and the area therein agreed to be sold could not be limited or enlarged in the deed. The legal connotations were without the board then to avoid, the state having in the sale certificate bound itself to sell the quarter of the quarter-section as described.

When the sale contract with Bottorff was made in 1914 the Missouri river was probably a city block to the east of the east line of the forty. The original United States survey placed the river partly along the east side of the quarter, and as late as 1886 the river had moved westward through the forty and later only a few feet east from the line on the south and about two-thirds of a block on the north. The original survey showed the tract to contain 48.80 acres — that portion of the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter and the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section 16 which the river had left unplowed —and was known as lot five, when conveyed by the United States of America to the state of Nebraska. From a point directly east of the tract in question to a point directly north, the river turns and describes a wide arc. The line thus made, in determining accretions, is proportionately [345]*345divided among the adjacent landowners, and as a consequence the accretions to this parcel go in á northeasterly direction, not directly easterly.

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Bluebook (online)
299 N.W. 481, 140 Neb. 341, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mulhall-v-state-neb-1941.