State ex rel. Smith v. Forrest

36 P. 686, 8 Wash. 610, 1894 Wash. LEXIS 118
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1894
DocketNo. 1248
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 36 P. 686 (State ex rel. Smith v. Forrest) 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. Smith v. Forrest, 36 P. 686, 8 Wash. 610, 1894 Wash. LEXIS 118 (Wash. 1894).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Stiles, J.

— The petitioner, who shows himself to be a qualified person, asks that the respondent, who is the commissioner of public lands, be required to receive §182.16 in full payment for certain tide lands, and issue a certificate of purchase to him therefor, in accordance with the provisions of the second proviso of Gen. Stat., § 2172.

The petition shows that in 1884 petitioner took possession of two separate tracts of tide land in Totten’s Inlet, Mason county, under the provisions of the territorial law to encourage the cultivation of oysters (Code of 1881, §1189, et seg.), the entire area of the two tracts covering 16.18 acres; that the lands thus taken were not natural oyster beds, nor were there beds of natural oysters thereon, or any oysters at all; that he cleaned and cleared the tracts, prepared them for artificial oyster beds, brought thereon large quantities of seed oysters and so planted, cared for and cultivated them that they have become valuable as a source of oyster supply for the markets; that the tracts are within the third class of tide lands as to location; that on the 20th day of August, 1890, he requested of the state board of equalization' and appeal an estimate of the cost of surveying and platting said tracts; that the estimate was made at §60, which amount he paid to the state treasurer, March 17, 1891, with a request for a survey; whereupon the state board directed the local board of tide land appraisers to survey and appraise the tracts, which [612]*612was done March 24, 1893, and the appraisement was returned at $12 per acre, July 26, 1893, with a map of the suiweys; that the total appraisement was $182.16; that a proper application to purchase the tracts was made by petitioner, and due notice of the same was given by the commissioner by publication, and proof thereof made; that no appeal has been taken from said appraisement; that no contest has been initiated by any person claiming a prior right to any portion of the tracts; that the board of state land commissioners, on the 27th day of February, 1894, certified the absence of any such contests or appeals to the commissioner, and on the' same day petitioner tendered to the commissioner the full sum of $182.16, and demanded a certificate of purchase, which was refused; that the Mason county board of appraisers, in March, 1893, examined the said tracts and ascertained and determined that no natural oyster bed covered them or any part thereof, and that they were not necessary for the preservation or growth of any natural oyster bed; that they made no plat of any natural oyster bed in their county which covered any part of said tracts, nor did they mark or note the same upon any plat of tide lands in said county; that no appeal was taken from the determination made by said .appraisers by any officer or person, and that no part of said tracts was by any public authority withdrawn or reserved from sale for a natural oyster bed, or at all.

The facts above recited would seem to be sufficient, if true, to establish the right of the petitioner to the relief asked; but there is another matter stated which the respondent maintains should defeat the application.

It appears that in December, 1893, three residents of Thurston county and one resident of Mason county filed with the board of state land commissioners a protest against the application of the petitioner to purchase his two tracts, for-the reasons:

[613]*6131. That said applicant had no right or title to said lands or any part thereof, but was a mere trespasser thereon.

2. That such tide lands were not such lands as were contemplated to be sold under the provisions of the act of Mai’ch 26, 1890, providing for the sale of tide lands; but were and always had been natural oyster beds, which under the laws of the state were withdrawn and reserved from sale or lease for the purpose of establishing a natural oyster bed reserve.

These protestants demanded that the application to purchase be denied, and the board, after notice to this petitioner, and over his formal objection, took testimony as to the character of the lands, and found and held them to be ‘ ‘ covered by natural oyster beds, ’ ’ and to be withdrawn and reserved from sale. The respondent’s refusal to accept the tender of the appraised value of the lands, and to issue a certificate of purchase, is based upon this decision of the board.

The point of attack, where the petitioner assails the action of the respondent, is the jurisdiction of the board of state land commissioners to receive and consider the protest and make a decision of the character pronounced, and the consideration of this matter obliges us to review the tide land laws to some extent.

Under the act of March 26, 1890, Gen. Stat., §2165, any person seems to be at liberty to apply for a survey of tide lands of the third class, under the direction of the state board. When an application to purchase has been filed with the commissioner, he must deliver a copy of it to the state board, and the latter must direct the local board of county appraisers to make an appraisement. This appraisement includes an examination, classification and valuation of each parcel applied for, noting improvements, but excluding them from valuation. A plat and a record of their doings must be made in duplicate, one for [614]*614filing in the county auditor’s office, and one for return to the state board. The commissioner must publish a notice of the application to purchase, and, if there are no lawful .contests, it may be presumed that in due course of time he will, in some manner, obtain information of the appraisement and make the sale, though the statute leaves it entirely to the imagination to conjecture how he is to be officially informed. Perhaps now that he is a member of the state board under the act of 1893 (Laws, p. 386), there may be a way to accomplish this evidently necessary step in the proceedings.

The law provides for a “contest” within thirty days after the publication, notice of which must be filed with the state board. This contest we understand as meaning a proceeding to legally ascertain which of two claimants has the better right to purchase, but as not involving an objection to the sufficiency of the appraisement, or a mere protest of some person without interest. An appeal from the appraisement is directly provided for in §2169, but it must be taken through the prosecuting attorney; private persons have nothing to do with the matter. This appeal is to the state board, and relates to the appraisement alone. A further appeal in the matter of the appraisement is provided for from the state board to the superior court of the county where the lands are situated. By some means the authority for this last appeal was detached from §2169, where it properly belonged, and tacked, as a second proviso, to § 2170. As this proviso reads, and in the connection where it occurs, it might be supposed to apply to the matter of contests; but it would be ridiculous to suppose that the prosecuting attorney would be required, upon the demand of private persons, or of any person, to interfere in the dispute between two applicants to purchase, where the state had no possible interest, while there would be some propriety in his appealing from the state board to the court [615]*615in a matter where the appraisement was claimed to be too low.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Williams Fishing Co. v. Savidge
277 P. 459 (Washington Supreme Court, 1929)
State ex rel. Megler v. Forrest
43 P. 51 (Washington Supreme Court, 1895)
State ex rel. Smith v. Forrest
39 P. 450 (Washington Supreme Court, 1895)
Hays v. Merchants Bank
39 P. 98 (Washington Supreme Court, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 P. 686, 8 Wash. 610, 1894 Wash. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-smith-v-forrest-wash-1894.