State v. Morgan

52 Ark. 150
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 52 Ark. 150 (State v. Morgan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Morgan, 52 Ark. 150 (Ark. 1889).

Opinion

Hemingway, J.

The State of Arkansas brought suit in the Independence Circuit Court to recover of Thomas J. Morgan a section of common school land.

The defendant filed his answer to the complaint, to which a demurrer was interposed. The demurrer was overruled, and the cause tried upon the pleadings and exhibits; there was verdict and judgment for defendant, from which the State prosecutes this appeal.

The court treated the answer as a complete bar to plaintiff’s right to recovery, and we are now called’to decide whether this was error.

The complaint alleges that the plaintiff is the owner of the land, and that the defendant is in the unlawful possession thereof. That the State acquired title by an act of Congress and an ordinance of the General Assembly, each approved in 1836. That the defendant claims title under patent from the State, signed by the Governor'and countersigned by the Secretary of State, bearing date the 27th day of February, 1875. That the patent was procured by the false and fraudulent representations of the defendant in this : That the defendant presented an application to the Board of Common School Commissioners for the purchase of the land, and also an unsigned paper, addressed to the Secretary of State, who was a member of the board, purporting to come from the office of said board, stating that the defendant had paid in full the purchase money for the tract of land, and recommending that a patent be issued to him. It is further alleged that the defendant had not acquired a right to a patent, either by original purchase, or by assignment from the original purchaser; and that the action of the Governor and Secretary of State in issuing the patent was in excess of their authority and without warrant of law There is prayer for the possession of the .land, with damages.

The answer of the defendant alleges that in 1854 the land was sold by the county commissioners to one John W. Bright,, upon a credit. That Bright failed to pay either the principal or interest, and by the provisions of the law regulating the sale, the-land reverted to the State. That on the 18th day of February, 1875 the land was subject to sale by the Board of Commissioners of the common school fund, and he made application to said board to purchase it. Denies that he made any false or-fraudulent representations to the board to procure a patent, but alleges that his application disclosed the sale to Bright, and its. terms. Alleges that the application was duly considered at a meeting of the board, and that the board, being satisfied that the land had been sold to Bright at public auction, that he had. failed to pay for the same; that it had reverted to the State, and that $2 per acre was a fair price for it, ordered that it be sold to him at that price. That he paid into the treasury of the-State the price fixed, and thereupon the patent issued to him, and he thereby acquired title to and became the owner of the land. That the board had adjudged that he had become and was the purchaser of the land, and that the finding was conclusive against the State. That the facts .so found were true. It is-further alleged that the defendant complied with all the conditions of purchase, entered immediately into possession of the land, paid all taxes assessed against it, and had made lasting- and valuable improvements upon it. A copy of the patent is-exhibited with the answer.

The complaint was entitled “at law,” and the court so treated" the case. With this view it overruled the demurrer to the answer. Was this error ?

1. School Lands: Statute regulating sale of. It is contended for the appellee that the State Board had ample authority to sell the land, and that he acquired a perfect, title to it. To support this contention we are referred to sec. 52, chap. 154, Gould's Digest; sec. 14, act of April 12, 1869, and sec. 5564 of Gantt's Digest.

Section 52, of chapter 154 of Gould’s Digest, prescribes the terms upon which school lands should be sold. It provides for sales upon a credit, purchasers to' give bonds and pay interest semi-annually. It contains a provision “that any person may pay the amount in cash for which the said land was sold,” and it is upon the terms of this provision that the appellee relies to sustain his right to purchase. We cannot give it the construction contended for, even if the act was in force when he purchased. Its manifest purpose was to permit purchasers to pay cash instead of giving the bonds provided for. It was not intended to allow other persons than the purchasers to acquire land sold, by paying in cash the amount for which some one else had purchased it.

2. same: Authority to sell. The fourteenth section of the act approved April 12, 1869, provided a mode by which persons who had purchased lands according to law, and complied with the terms of purchase, but who had received no patent, might acquire patent and perfect their legal title. It conferred no anthority to sell.

Sections 5564 and 5565, of Gantt’s Digest, copferred no new authority to sell, but only enlarges the authority elsewhere conferred on the Collector of the county. It is not alleged that the appellee purchased from the County Commissioner under the provisions of Gould’s Digest, or from the County Collector, under the provisions of Gantt’s Digest: as the Board of Commissioners never had authority to sell, it follows that his purchase was made without any warrant of law.

But it was provided by the law in force when the appellee received his patent, that every purchaser of common school lands should be entitled to receive a patent from the State, conveying and assuring title after the purchase money was paid. Gantt’s Dig., sec. 5570.

3. Patents: Collateral attack upon. And it is made the duty Of the Secretary of State to make out patents, to be signed by the Governor, and countersigned by him, with the seal of the State affixed. Gantt's Dig., sec. 5571. The object of the patents so made is to invest the legal title of the lands described in the patentee. Such a patent was executed and delivered to the appellee, and the purchase price of the land received and appropriated by the appellant. What then is the effect of the patent and the status of the parties with reference to the land? It was State land, subject to sale, and the patent was executed by the officers charged with that duty. Patents should issue only to persons who had purchased in the manner provided by law; but whether the particular facts existed or the antecedent acts had been done necessary to the issuance of a patent, was a question for the officers making it, and their determination is conclusive against collateral attack.

Their acts in the line of authority cannot be questioned because they took mistaken views of the law, or of their duty under it.

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Bluebook (online)
52 Ark. 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-morgan-ark-1889.