State Ex Rel. Cross v. Board of Land Commissioners

58 P.2d 423, 50 Wyo. 181, 1936 Wyo. LEXIS 7
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 1936
Docket1953
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 58 P.2d 423 (State Ex Rel. Cross v. Board of Land Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming 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. Cross v. Board of Land Commissioners, 58 P.2d 423, 50 Wyo. 181, 1936 Wyo. LEXIS 7 (Wyo. 1936).

Opinions

*187 Riner, Justice.

This case is an original proceeding in this court instituted by the filing of a petition on behalf of relator, Cross, to obtain a writ of mandamus directed to the Board of Land Commissioners of the State of Wyoming, the defendant herein, requiring it to deliver to him a patent for certain lands located in Converse County, Wyoming. An alternative writ was issued and the defendant, through the Attorney General of this State, has demurred generally to relator’s petition. The sufficiency of that pleading to entitle Cross to the relief he seeks must accordingly be determined.

The material facts contained in the averments thus challenged are these: After setting out that relator was at all the times referred to in the petition duly and legally qualified to receive and succeed to the rights of one J. H. Kennedy, on account of an assignment to relator of an amortization sale certificate of land purchased by Kennedy from the State of Wyoming, through the defendant Board, which Kennedy was properly qualified to acquire, and that the defendant is the duly and legally created Board of Land Commissioners of this State, having the direction, control, leasing, disposing and sale of state lands now or hereafter granted to this commonwealth for the support and benefit of public schools, as prescribed by law, and having also the power to establish rules and regu *188 lations not in conflict with law governing the sale of said lands, it is stated that on October 20, 1917, J. H. Kennedy filed his application with the Board aforesaid to purchase from the State certain described lands, in Converse County, comprising about 160 acres, which were indemnity school lands selected by the State and the title thereof obtained by it from the United States.

It is also alleged that this application was on November 18, 1918, approved by the said Board, the land appraised at thirteen dollars thirty-three and one-third cents per acre and ordered sold, with the condition that the mineral rights thereto should be reconveyed to the state before the purchaser received a patent to said lands; that in due course was had notice of sale, report of said sale to Kennedy, bond of purchase and confirmation of sale to him, he having bid $10.00 per acre and not less than three-fourths of the appraised value; that on May 2, 1919, the certificate of purchase for said lands was issued by said Board to him; that on June 17, 1926, said Board cancelled this certificate of purchase and reissued to John A. Kennedy and Wayne T. Kennedy, by transfer from the estate of J. H. Kennedy, deceased, an amortization sale certificate to said land; that on October 27, 1933, an assignment of said certificate from John A. and Wayne T. Kennedy to relator was recorded in the office of the Commissioner of Public Lands; that on May 6, 1935, relator completed all payments due the State on said lands under said certificate and surrendered it; and that on May 22, 1935, a patent for said lands was issued to relator by said Board.

It is then averred that in response to relator’s request for the delivery to him of this patent, he was refused such delivery unless and until he executed and delivered to the Board or the Commissioner of Public Lands a deed conveying to the State of Wyoming “all the mining and mineral rights in and to said lands, *189 including a right to prospect, mine and remove any and all minerals from said lands,” and that relator refused and refuses to make such conveyance because he is not required to do so by the laws of this State and the defendant is unauthorized by law to demand the same of him; and that as he has performed all acts legally to be exacted of him, he is entitled to a delivery of the patent aforesaid, as a mere ministerial act on the part of the defendant; that the land in question was not when sold, or has been since, known to contain valuable metals, minerals, petroleum or natural gas in paying quantities, but was agricultural or grazing land and was so classified by the said Board and sold as such; that no one other than relator is interested in the subject-matter of this action, and that he has no adequate remedy at law.

By agreement of the parties an order was entered in this cause that “the court may consider facts shown by certified copies of the records of the office of the Commissioner of Public Lands in connection with the matter.” A certified transcript of such records has been supplied and from it the following facts may be noted:

That on May 12, 1917, at a special meeting of the State Board of Land Commissioners, the minutes thereof disclose that: “The Board ordered that all state lands sold after this date be sold- subject and reserving to the State of Wyoming all mineral rights together with the right of the State of Wyoming or any person authorized by it to prospect for, mine and remove the minerals”; that in the application filed by J. H. Kennedy on October 20, 1917, with the Commissioner of Public Lands for the purchase of the lands involved here, and signed by said Kennedy, he stated among other things that, “if I am the successful bidder I will convey to the State of Wyoming all the mining and mineral rights in and to said lands, including the *190 right to prospect for, mine and remove any and all minerals from said land”; that the minutes of a special meeting of said Board held November 18, 1918, recite: “The action of the Commissioner ordering the following lands sold and appraising them at $13.33 1/3 per acre was presented — the mineral rights to be recon-veyed to the State before the purchasers receive patents: (describing the lands)”, and a confirmation by the Board of the Public Land Commissioner’s action in the matter; that the published notice of sale of the lands aforesaid contained among other statements the following: “The said lands will be sold subject to the term and condition that the purchaser, or purchasers, thereof upon receiving title shall reconvey to the State of Wyoming all mining and mineral rights in and to said lands, including the right to prospect for, mine and remove any and all minerals from said lands”; that the report of the sale of said lands, held at Douglas, Wyoming, December 16, 1918, submitted for confirmation by said Board, shows that these lands thus offered for sale were actually sold at that time subject to the “term and condition” last above quoted; that the bond signed by J. H. Kennedy and filed with the Commissioner of Public Lands May 2, 1919, as purchaser of said lands, contained among its recitals the statement that, “a patent will be issued upon the payment of the remainder due on the purchase price and upon the conveyance to the State of Wyoming of all of the mining and mineral rights in and to said lands, including the right to prospect for, mine and remove any and all minerals from said lands; and further that said J. H. Kennedy shall and will faithfully comply with all the terms of the Certificate of Purchase of said lands issued to him by the State Board of School Land Commissioners.”

The transcript aforesaid also shows that the Certificate of Purchase issued by the Board aforesaid May *191 2, 1919, to J. H. Kennedy for said lands states that, “J. H.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 P.2d 423, 50 Wyo. 181, 1936 Wyo. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-cross-v-board-of-land-commissioners-wyo-1936.