State ex rel. Patterson v. Wenzel

75 N.W. 579, 55 Neb. 210, 1898 Neb. LEXIS 551
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1898
DocketNo. 9959
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 75 N.W. 579 (State ex rel. Patterson v. Wenzel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska 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. Patterson v. Wenzel, 75 N.W. 579, 55 Neb. 210, 1898 Neb. LEXIS 551 (Neb. 1898).

Opinion

Ragan, C.

On May 22, 1875, the state of Nebraska leased to one 5. L. Northrop the west half of the northeast quarter of section 36, in township 2 north and range 9 east of the sixth P. M., for a term of twenty-five years from and after January 1, 1876, in accordance with the provisions of chapter 70, General Statutes 1873. William T. Patter[211]*211son is now tbe state’s lessee of this land by virtue of various assignments of tbe lease from Northrop and those claiming under him. Said land is situate in Pawnee county. On August 10, 1897, Patterson desiring to purchase the same at private sale applied to the county authorities of said county to appraise said lands. The county authorities refused to appraise the lands and Patterson thereupon applied to the district court of said county for a mandamus to compel them to do so. The district court sustained a demurrer interposed by the county authorities to Patterson’s application, dismissed the proceeding, and Patterson has filed a petition in error here to review this judgment of the district court.

1. On June 24, 1867, an act providing for the registry of the school lands of the state and for their control and disposition went into effect. This is chapter 70, G-eneral Statutes 1873. By section 17 of this act the county com-' missioners of the several counties of the state were authorized and directed to lease the common school and university lands within their counties upon certain terms and conditions for a term of twenty-five years from the first day of January after the date of such lease.. It was in pursuance of this section of the statute that the lease to Northrop was made. Without a review or analysis of this statute, it must suffice to say that it contained no provision by which a lessee of the school lands of the state was given the right or option to purchase at private sale the lands leased by him during the continuance of his lease. So that the only right which Northrop acquired to the land in controversy by virtue of his lease was the right to use and occupy it for twenty-five years from and after the first of January, 1876, upon paying the cash rent reserved by the lease. The legislature of 1877 (see Session Laws 1877, p. 174) passed another act, completé in itself, in reference to the registry, sale, leasing, and general management of the school lands of the state. This act made no reference whatever to the act of 1867, just referred to, and while it provided for the leas[212]*212ing of tlie school lands of the state, it made no provision whatsoever for tlie purchase at private sale of the school lands, of the state by a lessee thereof or by any other person. The legislature of 1879 amended section 19 of the act of 1877 so as to authorize any lessee of school lands, upon certain terms and upon compliance with certain requirements, to purchase at private sale the lands of which he was the lessee at an appraisal fixed thereon by or under the direction of the county authorities. (See Session Laws 1879, p. 110.) The legislature of 1883 passed another complete act in reference to the registration, sale, and leasing of the school lands of the state and repealed the acts of 1877 and 1879 just referred to. This act of 1883, however, retained the provision of the act of 1879 permitting a lessee of school lands of the state to purchase them at private sale. (See Session Laws 1883, p. 302.) The legislature of 1885 passed a complete act upon the subject of the registry, sale, and leasing of the school lands of the state and repealed the act of 1883. (See Session Laws 1885, eh. 85, p. 335.) This act of 1885 retained the provision of the acts of 1879 and 1883 authorizing a lessee of. school lands to purchase them at private sale upon complying with the terms of the act, and the act was made chapter 80 in the Compiled Statutes of 1895. The legislature of 1897 passed an act entitled “An act to amend chapter 80, Compiled Statutes 1895, relating to school lands and funds, to prevent the further sale of school lands, and to repeal said.original chapter 80, Compiled Statutes 1895.” (See Session Laws 1897, ch. 71.) This act deals with the whole subject of the leasing and sale of the school lands of the state, and by section 1 of the act it is, among other things, provided that all the educational lands now owned by, or the title to which may hereafter vest in, the state shall be registered and leased, and that none of such lands shall hereafter be sold, except as specifically provided in the act, and that nothing in the act shall be construed to violate existing contracts of sale.

[213]*213Tbe respondents urge two contentions in support of the judgment of the district court. The first is that at ■the time the lease in controversy was executed no statute éxisted which authorized a lessee of the school lands of the state to purchase'the same at private sale. As already stated, we concede the correctness of this contention.

A second contention of the respondents is that the provision of the acts of 1879, 1883, and 1885 which authorizes a lessee of school lands to purchase the same at private sale was an option or a privilege granted without consideration to such lessee by the state, and might be withdrawn by it at any time before its accejrtance by such lessee; and that by the passage of the act of 1897 the state did withdraw this option given the lessee to purchase, and that as Patterson had not availed himself of the privilege granted him to purchase the land at private sale prior to the time the statute withdrew the option in 1897, he is not now entitled to do so. We think the contention of the respondents correct so far as it relates to lessees of school lands whose leases were executed prior to the taking effect of the act of 1879. The case at bar does not require us to decide whether the state could pass a valid law withdrawing the option to purchase from lessees whose leases were executed after the passage of the act of 1879, and we do not, therefore, decide that question. It is not a debatable proposition that Patterson can claim no greater rights under the lease in controversy than could his assignor Northrop, and that Northrop^ rights were fixed and determined by the statutes in force at the time of the execution of his lease in reference to the leasing of school lands. (State v. Commissioners, 4 Wis. 432; State v. Thayer, 46 Neb. 137; State v. McPeak, 31 Neb. 139.) The state did not contract to sell these lands to Northi'op, either by the lease which it issued‘to him or by any statute in force at that time; and if the acts of 1879, 1883, and 1885 had never been passed, then of course he would be in no position to in[214]*214sist that the state should sell him these lands at private sale. By the acts of 1879, 1883, and 1885 the state, without consideration, granted to the prior lessees of its school lands the privilege of purchasing the same at private sale upon certain terms and conditions. We agree with the honorable the attorney general that this was a mere offer which the state might withdraw at any time before its acceptance by a lessee whose lease antedated the option itself.

Counsel for Patterson insist that the state has estopped itself from refusing to sell these lands to him at private sale.

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Bluebook (online)
75 N.W. 579, 55 Neb. 210, 1898 Neb. LEXIS 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-patterson-v-wenzel-neb-1898.