State Ex Rel. Otto v. Field

241 P. 1027, 31 N.M. 120
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 1925
Docket2632
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 241 P. 1027 (State Ex Rel. Otto v. Field) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico 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. Otto v. Field, 241 P. 1027, 31 N.M. 120 (N.M. 1925).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT

BICKLEY, J.

The plantiff, appellee here, filed his petition for an alterative writ of mandamus in the district court of Santa Fe county on the - day of October, 1919, where he demanded that the defendant, appellant here, execute to him a deed ivithout any reservation whatsoever for certain state lands Avhich had been applied for by Louis W. Christoph, Avhose rights, were succeeded to by the appellee. The appellant ansivered, alleging that the said appellee had no right to a deed in the form demanded in the petition for the writ" of mandamus, and denying the right of the appellee to the redress demanded.

On the said pleadings, the matter came to a hearing before the district court, Avhich issued the temporary Avrit, afterwards making it permanent, requiring the appellant to execute the deed in the form demanded in the petition, and entered judgment in accordance Avith said writ. From this judgment this appeal is prosecuted by the appellant to the Supreme Court of the state.

The facts in the main are as follows:

On February 21, 1916, one Louis W. Christoph filed an application in the usual form for the purchase of state lands in Union county, N. M. Thereafter an appraisement was had of the lands, and a written copy of the appraiser’s report was, duly filed in the office of the commissioner of public lands. The application to purchase was duly approved, and the land advertised for sale in accordance with the provisions of the law. The sale was held pursuant to said notice, and at the sale one Thomas Gray, acting for himself as to part of the lands involved, and for the appellee, Christian Otto, as to a portion of said lands, was the highest and best bidder, and said lands were duly struck off to said Thomas Gray, who was acting as the agent of the appellee as to a portion of said lands. The amount of the bid was, $6.05 per acre, or $1,210 for the land purchased by the appellee. Under date of April 25, 1917, the date of the sale, there was executed by the then commissioner of public lands, and the appellee herein a written contract No. 1142. Under date of June 25, 1917, the commissioner issued his receipt No. 23785 to the said appellee for the amounts due for the appraisement, advertisement, and first payment upon said lands. The written contract aforesaid contains a reservation to the state of New Mexico of all minerals contained in the lands sold under the contract; the reservation being in the following language:

“That this land is being purchased for the purpose of g'razing and agriculture only; that, while, the land herein contracted for is believed to be essentially nonmineral land, should minerals be discovered therein, it is expressly understood and agreed that this contract is based upon the express conditions that the minerals therein shall be and are reserved to the fund or institution to which the land belongs, together with the right of way to the commissioner, or any one acting under his authority, to at any and all times enter upon said land and mine and remove the minerals therefrom without let or hindrance.”

On October 12, 1919, the appellee tendered to the appellant, Neis Field, as commissioner of public lands, the sum of $1,054.23, being the unpaid' balance due, including the principal and interest, upon the purchase price of the said lands purchased by the appellee herein, and demanded of the appellant as, said commissioner that he issue and deliver to the said appellee a deed to the said lands without any reservation or condition as to the minerals contained in the lands. The appellant refused to issue and deliver such deed, upon the ground that the appellee was entitled, only to such deed as was contemplated by the contract of sale between the said parties, but agreed to issue and deliver a deed containing a reservation of said minerals as provided for in the said contract of sale. The appellee then filed his suit in mandamus in the district court in the county of Santa Fe to compel the commissioner to issue the said deed without reservation in accordance with his demand therefor. Testimony was submitted, and, after considering the same, the court made certain findings of fact and conclusions of law and rendered judgment, making the alternative writ peremptory, and granting to the appellee the relief prayed for in his petition for the said writ.

It is claimed by the appellant that this proceeding is in effect a suit against the state of New Mexico, and that as such it cannot be maintained. This is a very vital question, and if the appellant is right on this contention, the case is disposed of on the authority of State ex rel. Evans v. Field, Commissioner of Public Lands et al., 27 N. M. 384, 201 P. 1059. It will be necessary to consider more or less the merits of the controversy in order to determine whether or not this is in effect a suit against the state. As was said in State ex rel. Evans v. Field, supra:

“Where the contract is between the individual and the state, any action founded upon it against defendants who are officers of the state, the object of which is to enforce the specific performance by compelling those things to be done by the defendants which, when done, would constitute a performance by the state, or to forbid the doing of those things which, if done, would be simply breeches of the contract of the state, is in substance a suit ag-ainst the state itself, and within the prohibition of the Constitution. * * * On the other hand, where the law directs or commands a state officer to perform an act under given circumstances, which performance is a mere ministerial act, not involving discretion, mandamus will lie to compel the 'action, notwithstanding- performance of the state’s contract may incidentally result. In such a case the action is not really upon the contract, but is a ag-ainst the officer as a wrongdoer. He is, under such-circumstances, not only violating the rights of the relator, but is disobeying the express commands of his principal, the state.”

Supplementing the statement of the foregoing principle, attention is called to other similar expressions by our court. In the case of State v. Marron, 18 N. M. 426, 137 P. 845, 50 L. R. A. (N. S.) 274, in discussing a question of discretionary action on the part of the state treasurer, the court said:

“If the state treasurer has the discretion hereinbefore mentioned, he is not, of course, subject absolutely to mandamus to make any particular form of investment of these funds.”

In the same case, in a concurring opinion, Chief Justice Eoberts said:

“Before mandamus will lie, it must be determined that the investment of school moneys by the state treasurer requires the exercise of no judgment or discretion on his part. ‘The only acts to which the power of the courts by mandamus extends are such as are purely ministerial and with regard to which nothing like judgment or discretion in the performance of his duties is left to the officer but that wherever the right of judgment or decision exists in him it is he and not the courts who can regulate its exercise.”

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Bluebook (online)
241 P. 1027, 31 N.M. 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-otto-v-field-nm-1925.