People v. Hard Land Co.

51 Colo. 260
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 15, 1911
DocketNo. 6194
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 51 Colo. 260 (People v. Hard Land Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Hard Land Co., 51 Colo. 260 (Colo. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Musser

delivered the opinion of the court.

On July 9, 1887, G. H. Hard purchased from the state, at public auction, certain school land in Pueblo County, consisting of five acres, more or less, within certain defined boundaries, for $7,950. A certificate of purchase was issued, entitling the purchaser to a patent for the land upon payment of a. balance of the purchase money with interest. The payment was made, and on February 21, 1899, a patent for the land was issued by the state. The total amount of purchase money and interest paid by the purehaser was $8,673.45. In 1900, the defendant in error became the owner of the land, deraigning title from the patentee. In 1905, an action was commenced by the state to cancel the patent and recover the land. The relief sought was denied, and the matter is before this court on error.

An application for the sale of the land was made to the State Board of Land Commissioners, and, at a meeting of the board, held on May 26, 1887, the sale was ordered at a minimum price of $150.00 an acre. It does not appear that any order was made by the board, while in session, and entered in its minutes that the sale should be made at Pueblo. The Register of the board, at the time of the sale, testified ina deposition taken in 1906, when he was 77 years old, and 19 years after the events concerning which he was testifying had transpired, and stated that he did not recall that a specific order was made at the time the board was in session, indicating either the place of sale or the person to conduct it, but said that to the best of his recollection, after the sale was ordered, one of the members of the board suggested that it would be advantageous to the state to make the sale in Pueblo, and [263]*263that he, the register, thereupon submitted this suggestion to each of the members of the board, and each assented thereto and directed that the sale be made in Pueblo by the County Superintendent of Schools. Thereupon, the register sent an advertisement' of the sale to the County Superintendent, directing him to have it published. The superintendent, for the board, caused the advertisement to be published in a proper paper for a sufficient length of time. In this notice of sale, the land was described as one parcel of about five acres, comprising all the portions of two certain eighty acre tracts, lying within certain defined boundaries. The advertisement was made upon and copied into the newspaper from a printed blank designated for that purpose, and was, in all respects, regular, except that it contained the following clause which obviously should have been, but was not, erased:

“The parcels will be sold in the above order and each tract will be sold as forty acres — be the same more or less.”

This clause is so out of place in the advertisement, and so obviously without meaning, that it could deceive no one and have no effect, and no further mention will be made of it. The notice was signed by the County Superintendent for the board, and, on its face, it purported that he was acting for the board. At the time and place designated in the notice, the County Superintendent, for the board, offered the land for sale at public auction, and struck it off to Hard, who was the highest bidder. It appears that the bidding was spirited among 15 or 20 bidders. Thereafter, the superintendent made report of the sale to the board, and the latter issued a certificate of purchase upon the sale so made and reported. On February 21, 1889, at a meeting of the board, it appeared that all the deferred payments were made, and the patent was ordered issued. The cause of action set forth in the ab[264]*264stract, upon which the plaintiff in error relies, contains no allegation, nor was there any evidence of any fraud or collusion in the sale of this land, or that the state received less than the land was worth, or that the parcel sold contained more than about five acres, or that the state was, in any way, defrauded. Nothing appears in the record to indicate that the patent issued for the land was not good on its face. The state began an action for the cancellation of this patent about 16 years after it was issued, and about 18 years after the sale, and now, without any allegation, proof or claim of fraud or collusion, or that the state was defrauded, or that it did not receive what the land was worth, it is asking this court to reverse the lower court and to say that the patent, the conveyances to the defendant in error, and all the intermediate conveyances be can-celled. The defendant in error claims to be a remote grantee of the patentee, claiming under a patent, good on its face, without notice of any defects in the sale, and that this is a perfect defense. It also claims that even if it is regarded in the same light as the patentee, it is presumed that the public officers properly performed their duties until the contrary is proven; that in order to annul a patent like the one under consideration and destroy the title claimed under it. the facts calling for such action must appear from clear, convincing and unambiguous evidence: that there is not sufficient evidence in this case to overcome the strong presumptions presented by the patent itself, and that owing to this lack of evidence, as well as the want of proper allegations in the complaint, the patent itself affords sufficient reason to sustain the judgment of the court below. These claims of the defendant in error may possess force. They will not be discussed because it is not necessary to discuss them. The reasons, given by plaintiff in error, why the patent should be annulled are not sufficient, and a discussion of these reasons is [265]*265all that is necessary for the disposition of this matter.

Under section 9 of article IX of the constitution, the State Board of Land Commissioners had the direction, control and disposition of public lands of the state, under such regulations as were prescribed'by law, and, by section 10 of article IX is was made the duty of the board to provide for the sale or other disposition of all lands theretofore, or which might thereafter be, granted to the state by the general government, under such regulations as may be prescribed by law. The regulations prescribed by law for the disposition of the lands of the state, at the time this sale was made, were contained in an act of the General Assembly, approved April 2, 1887, and may be found on pp. 328-838 of the session laws of that year. There is no question but that the board had full power and authority to sell the land described in the patent, at a sale made in substantial conformity with the statutory requirements. The plaintiff in error, in its brief, claims that the statutory requirements were disregarded in five different instances in the sale of this land, and, for these reasons, the patent is void and should be set aside. Section 12 of the act provided that all lands granted by Congress to the state for the support of schools were withdrawn from- the market, and the sale thereof prohibited. It was provided, however, in the same section that any parcel of such land might be sold when the board was of the opinion that the best interests of the school fund would be served by offering such parcel for sale, and further provided that the land should be sold only at public auction and at not less than $3.50 per acre, and should be offered for sale, the same as other state lands.

1. The plaintiff in error first argues that because no order was ever made or entered of record by the board while in session, directing the sale of the land to be made at Pueblo, the sale thereof was not legally made.

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Bluebook (online)
51 Colo. 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hard-land-co-colo-1911.