State ex rel. Heuston v. Callvert

79 P. 791, 37 Wash. 124, 1905 Wash. LEXIS 684
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1905
DocketNo. 5070
StatusPublished

This text of 79 P. 791 (State ex rel. Heuston v. Callvert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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. Heuston v. Callvert, 79 P. 791, 37 Wash. 124, 1905 Wash. LEXIS 684 (Wash. 1905).

Opinion

Mount, C. J.

Petition for writ of mandate. Petitioner presented to- the commissioner of public lands his application to purchase the northwest quarter of section 16, township 21 north, range 1 east, W. M. The application shows that this land contains 1,200,000 feet of merchantable timber, worth $1 per 1,000 feet, and that the applicant desires to purchase the land with the timber, and not the timber without the land. When the application to purchase was presented to the commissioner of public lands, he refused to consider it, upon the ground that he was not authorized to sell land and timber when there was more than 1,000,000 feet of timber on a quarter section of land. This writ is sued out to compel the commissioner to' sell the land with the timber.

The petitioner contends that the commissioner may sell the land notwithstanding the amount of timber there may be thereon. This raises the only question in the case, and depends upon the construction of sections 11, 12, of the act of 1897, pp. 235, 236, with their subsequent amendments. These sections, as they now stand, are as follows:

“§ 11. That any person or company may make written application to the board of appraisers for the appraisement and sale of any lands belonging to the state, and said hoard shall cause to be prepared blank applications containing such instructions as will inform and aid intending purchasers in making application for the appraisement and sale of any lands. Each application must h© accompanied with certificate of deposit or certified check upon any bank of this state, made payable to the state treasurer and equal in amount to ten cents per acre for the land described in such application: Provided, That such deposit may be made in cash or by postoffice money order, but in no ease shall such deposit be less than ten dollars. In case the [126]*126lands described in such application are sold at the time they' are offered for sale, in accordance with such application, the amount of such deposit shall be returned to such applicant If such lands be not sold, through fault of said applicant at such sale, such deposit shall be forfeited to- the state, and shall be so declared by the said board, and the state treasurer shall thereupon place said forfeited money to the credit of the general fund of the state-. That when, in the judgment of the board of appraisers or the commissioner of public lands, a sufficient number of applications have been received for the appraisement and sale of any lands belonging to the state, said commissioner of public lands shall cause any of such lands so applied for to be personally inspected and appraised as to its character, topography, agriculture, timber, coal, mineral, stone or rock quarries, or grazing, its distance from any city, town, railroad, river, irrigation ditch or other waterways, when irrigation is required, and fully report the same to- said board or commissioner of public lands, together with the commissioner’s or appraiser’s judgment as to its present and prospective value, which said report shall be- considered and thereupon a price per acre fixed for each quarter section and subdivision thereof, or lot or block, which shall not-be less than ten dollars per acre for lands granted for educational purposes: Provided, That no more than one hundred and sixty acres (ICO) of any school or granted lands of the state shall be offered for sale in one parcel, and all lands within the limits of any incorpor*ated city or town or within two miles of the boundary of such incorporated city or town, where the valuation of such lands shall be found by appraisement to exceed one hundred dollars per acre, shall, before the same be sold, be platted into- lots and blocks of not more than five acres in a block and not more than one block shall be offered for sale in one parcel, and said board is hereby authorized to plat, such lands into Lots and blocks, and all plats shall be filed in the office of the commissioner of public lands: Provided further, That whenever application is made to purchase less than a section, the said commissioner of public lands may order the inspection of an entire section or sections: Provided [127]*127further, That all school and granted lands for educational purposes may thereafter he sold at not less than the appraised value, when the purchase price realized for the timber thereon added to the áppraised value of the land is ten dollars per acre or in excess thereof.” Laws 1903, p. 103.
“§ 12. That when applications are made for the purchase of timber, stone, fallen timber, hay, or gravel, or other valuable materials situated upon public lands of the state, the same inspection shall be had as for applications to purchase lands: Provided, That no standing timber or stone shall be sold for less than the appraised value thereof, and such timber, stone, hay and gravel may be sold separate from the land, when, in the judgment of the board, it is for the best interest of the state to sell same, except when the estimated amount of timber shall exceed one million feet to the quarter section, in which case the timber shall be sold separate from the land: And provided further, That the full purchase price of such valuable materials shall be paid in cash when sold separate from the lands: Provided. That in all cases when the timber is sold separate from the land, said timber shall revert to the state if it has not been removed from the land within three years from the date of purchase thereof, except that in all cases when the purchasers are acting in good faith and removing the said timber, the land commissioner may extend the time of removal for a period not to exceed two years. That in every appraisement of land granted to this state the board of appraisers shall be and serve as the board of appraisers mentioned in section 2 of article 16 of the state constitution. And in every appraisement under this chapter the said board shall separately appraise all improvements placed upon any land of the state and found on such land at the time of the appraisement ; and shall also appraise all damages and waste done to said land by the cutting and removal of timber or the removal of stone or other materials by the person or persons claiming such improvements, or by his consent, and the damage to the land or materials thereon by reason of the use and occupancy of said land shall be considered in the appraisement, and the balance, after deducting such [128]*128damages and waste appraised as aforesaid, shall be determined as the value of the improvements upon the land so appraised and every such appraisement shall he recorded in the proceedings- of the hoard of appraisers: Provided, That this section shall not be considered to affect the right of the state to the value of such land: Provided further,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 P. 791, 37 Wash. 124, 1905 Wash. LEXIS 684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-heuston-v-callvert-wash-1905.