State Ex Rel. Board of University & School Lands v. Hanson

256 N.W. 201, 65 N.D. 1, 1934 N.D. LEXIS 170
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1934
DocketFile No. 6260.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 256 N.W. 201 (State Ex Rel. Board of University & School Lands v. Hanson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Board of University & School Lands v. Hanson, 256 N.W. 201, 65 N.D. 1, 1934 N.D. LEXIS 170 (N.D. 1934).

Opinions

Burr., Ch. J.

This is an- appeal from the judgment of the lower court denying a writ of mandamus requiring the defendant, as commissioner of university and school lands, to satisfy a real estate mortgage upon payment of the money “borrowed from the school funds of this state through the board of university and school lands,” the pay *3 ment tendered being tbe face of tbe loan and the amount of taxes paid by the board, but not including the accrued interest on the loan or on the taxes.

Section 156 of the Constitution says: “The superintendent of public instruction, governor, attorney general, secretary of state and state auditor shall constitute a board of commissioners, which shall be denominated the 'board of university and school lands,’ and subject to the provisions of this article and any law that may be passed by the legislative assembly, said board shall have control of the appraisement, sale, rental and disposal of all school and university lands, and shall direct the investment of the funds arising therefrom in the hands of the state treasurer, under the limitations in § 160 of this article.”

Section 3 of chapter 118 of the Session Laws of 1893 empowers the board to “appoint a competent person to act as the general agent of the board in the performance of all their duties pertaining to the selection, sale, lease, contracting in any manner allowed by law, and the general management and control of all matters relative to the care and disposition of the public lands of the State, all of whose acts at all times shall be subject to the approval and supervision of the board, and whose term of office shall at all times be subject to their immediate control. The title of such agent shall be that of Commissioner of University and School Lands, etc.”

Under § 2 of chapter 106 of the Session Laws of 1909, being section 288 of the Compiled Laws of this state, the governor, as chairman, and the superintendent of public instruction, as secretary of the board were “empowered and required to jointly satisfy real estate mortgages given, to the board of university and school lands whenever the loans secured by such mortgages shall have been fully paid, as certified to these officers by the state treasurer.”

Chapter 203 of the Session Laws of 1917 delegated this power to the governor and the commissioner of university and school lands, and later, by the provisions of chapter 23d of the Session Laws of 1931, “the commissioner of university and school lands, who is also the secretary of the board of university and school lands, is hereby empowered and required to satisfy real estate mortgages given to the board of uni *4 versity and school lands whenever the loans secured by such mortgages shall have been fully paid as certified to him by the state treasurer.”

It is clear from the reading of this provision in chapter 234 of the Session Laws of 1931 that the commissioner has no authority of his own volition to issue a satisfaction of any real estate mortgage given to the board of university and school lands until the loan secured by that mortgage is “fully paid.” The term “fully paid” is not limited to the amount of money secured from the' board as represented by the loan. It must be taken to mean the-loan as described in and secured by the mortgage, otherwise the mortgage would not in fact secure the payment of the interest and the commissioner could issue a satisfaction upon the payment of the principal and leave the collection of the interest to other means or officers. Before the commissioner may issue a satisfaction of the real estate mortgage the total amount due to the state, as certified to him by the state treasurer, must be paid and this includes the interest due.

Section 288 of the Compiled Laws as amended by chapter 234 of the Session Laws of 1931 defines the duties of the commissioner, so far as the issues herein are involved, and confers no power on him to compromise any claim of the state, or exercise any discretion in determining the amount due.

But the appellant says that the board of university and school lands, in the administration of the fund entrusted to the board, has such constitutional control over school funds that in its discretion it may compromise a claim for interest due when in its best judgment such compromise is for the best interests of the state, and when the amount loaned is repaid; that the power to “direct the investment of the funds” gives the board such control over the collection of the amount due as calls for the exercise of its best judgment, within the limitation set by the Constitution, and unless prevented by the Constitution, or some law in harmony therewith, the board may compromise claims when deemed for the best interest of the trust committed to it; that the board, in the exercise of its discretion vested in it, has examined into the condition of the loan and the condition of the security, and under the facts hereinafter stated considers it wise to áccept payment of the “original investment without requiring that the unpaid delinquent interest on the *5 investment be also paid.” The issue therefore involves the right of the board to compromise a claim ag’ainst a specific individual.

The conceded facts, as set forth by .the appellant in its brief, are as follows: “A few years prior to December, 1933, John Birkeland, as owner of a tract of land in Burleigh county mortgaged it to the State of North Dakota for a sum of $1,500.00, being money borrowed from the school funds of this state through the board of university and school lands. He defaulted in the terms of that mortgage by failing to pay interest on the debt secured by the mortgage. In December, 1933 John Birkeland owed on that debt the principal sum in an amount of $1,500.00, accrued delinquent interest for the years 1931, 1932 and 1933 in the sum of $225.00.

“Mr. Birkeland then made application to the Federal Land Bank for a loan to refinance this indebtedness to the state, but that loan to the Federal Land Bank was allowed at a sum less than was necessary to reimburse the state in full for the principal and delinquent interest on the loan aforementioned of Mr. Birkeland, and on the 11th day of December Mr. Birkeland offered the state of North Dakota through the board of university and school lands to pay to the state in full settlement of its loan a sum representing the principal of the mortgage, without accrued interest on the principal sum.
“The board of university and school lands feeling that it was to the best interests of the state to accept the offer of Mr. Birkeland, under which the state was to be repaid the full amount of its original investment, and that thereby there would be no loss to the state on its original investment, accepted the offer of Mr. Birkeland and passed a resolution directing the land commissioner to issue a release of that mortgage upon the payment to the state treasurer of the amount of the offer to Mr. Birkeland.”

The' defendant admits he received such order but is satisfied the board has no authority to agree to such compromise, and so declines to comply with the order by issuing the satisfaction.

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Related

State v. Sheridan County
6 N.W.2d 51 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1942)
State Ex Rel. Sathre v. Board of University & School Lands
262 N.W. 60 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
256 N.W. 201, 65 N.D. 1, 1934 N.D. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-board-of-university-school-lands-v-hanson-nd-1934.