Sturgeon v. Hampton

88 Mo. 203
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 88 Mo. 203 (Sturgeon v. Hampton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sturgeon v. Hampton, 88 Mo. 203 (Mo. 1885).

Opinions

Black, J.

This is an action of ejectment. Both parties claim title from Chariton county. The section of land in dispute is a part of the swamp lands of that county. The plaintiff’s title is as follows :

1. On tenth May, 1860, the county court of that county made an order directing the sheriff to sell on the same day twenty-two thousand and four hundred acres of swamp land to the Chariton & Randolph Railroad Company, in consideration that the company assumed to pay to the county for the school fund three thousand dollars annually forever. On the same day the court made another order, reciting a sale made by the sheriff and report thereof, all of which was approved. The clerk was directed to certify to the governor that the consideration had been discharged and that he issue patents to the company. The governor declined to issue any patents. On July 2, 1860, the court appointed Hammond a commissioner to make a deed to the company, which he did, including therein the land in question. This deed recited a consideration of three thousand dollars, payable annually forever, to the school fund.

2. On November 6, 1862, the court made an order discharging the company from the payment of the three thousand dollars annually, provided it would construct its road within one-half mile of Keytesville, and locate a depot at that place ; and on April 5, 1865, the court directed Cunningham, the presiding justice, to make a quit claim deed to the North Missouri Railroad Company for some thirteen thousand acres, that company having acquired a conveyance thereto from the Chariton & Randolph Railroad Company, which deed he made on the same day, reciting a consideration of one hundred dollars. This deed also includes the land in question.

3. On eighth of February, 1866, the court made an [210]*210■order setting aside the order of sixth of November, 1862, ■ as to the location of the road and depot, and fixed upon ■ another location near Keytesville. This order 'then revertes the Hammond deed, an agreement of the Chariton ■& Randolph Railroad Company 'to sell the land to the -North Missouri Railroad Company, and in order to secure the same to that company and for the consideration of one thousand dollars of paid up stock in the west branch of the North Missouri Railroad Company, and upon the condition that the branch road should be built and a depot located at the - place last designated, Holcombe is appointed a commissioner to convey the land by quit claim deed to the North Missouri Railroad Company, which deed he made.

4. On eleventh of May, 1866, the court made another order accepting the one thousand dollars of paid up stock in the branch road as a full consideration to be paid by the North Missouri Railroad Company for these swamp lands, and discharged that company from the payment 6f any other or further sum, and directed its clerk to join with the company in the execution of deeds to purchasers ; and on December 9, 1867, the clerk and the company executed a deed to the land in question to plaintiff.

The branch road and depot were built at the designated place. Defendant purchased and' paid for the land in question under the provisions of law relating to sale of swamp land in 1880 and took possession thereunder. The act of congress of September 28,1850, vested the title to the swamp lands thereafter to be selected in the state, primarily for the purpose of reclaiming them. The trust, it is held, is a personal trust reposed in the state, and does not follow the land. 23 Mo. 456; 100 U. S. 61. So that we are here only concerned with the state statutes.

By the first section of the act of 1851, as amended and contained in Revised Statutes of 1855, the state donated [211]*211these lands to the counties' in which they were situate, ‘4 for the purpose hereinafter designated. ’ ’ By subsequent sections the county courts are authorized to have them •drained and reclaimed. An actual settler is given the right to pre-empt eighty acres and to pay for the same in two installments. The net proceeds of all the sales, after defraying the expenses of drainage, etc., are required to be paid into the county treasury and become a part of the school fund of the county. The amendatory act of 1857 (Acts 1857, p. 32) provides “that all lands in this state selected” under the act of congress, “be and the same are hereby declared to vest in full title and belong to the counties in which they may- lie.” This act was probably passed because of the fact that the lands were not selected and designated until long after the passage ■of the act of 1851. However that may be, there is nothing in the act which enlarges the powers of the county ■courts over,them. The counties still held them for the uses and with power of disposition under the then existing laws. The lands are not the general property of the counties. It was so held in State ex rel. Robbins v. New Madrid County Court, 51 Mo. 84. Other sections •of the swamp land law (R. S. 1855, 1006) having a more direct bearing upon the questions involved in this case .are as follows:

“Section 3. Whenever in the judgment of said ■county courts it shall be to the interest of said counties so to do, they shall order the sheriff to sell the same, in such quantities at such times, and places, and ■on such terms as they may think proper, with or without draining and reclaiming the same, as in their discretion they may think most conducive to the interests of their respective counties.

‘4 Section 4. Whenever full payment shall be made for any of said lands by the purchasers thereof, 'the county courts shall cause the same to be certified to the [212]*212governor, who shall thereupon grant to the purchaser, his heirs and assigns, a patent for the same,” etc.

Prom these provisions of the law it is clear no deed or patent could be made until full payment of the consideration. The counties by force of these provisions held the title as a security for the payment of the purchase money. The patents were to be issued by the governor. The Hammond deed, made in 1860 was, therefore,, made in plain violation of the law, for the consideration had not only not been paid, but no part of it was yet due.. Besides this, the court had no power to appoint Hammond a commissioner, and-'when appointed he had no authority to make the deed. Reliance for authority so to do is placed upon section 2, page 502, Revised Statutes, 1855. That section does give to the county courts authority to appoint a commissioner to sell real estate belonging to the counties, and to execute deeds, but it has no application to the sale of these swamp lands. It relates • to the general property of the counties. The swamp land laws provide when and how title thereto is to be made, and those statutes are exclusive, and the method there pointed out must be pursued. The special act of March 15, 1861, (Acts 1860-1, 394) gave to the county clerk of Chariton county power to make deeds to purchasers of the swamp lands, but that act, like the general law, gave him' such power only “when the purchase money shall be fully paid off and satisfied, or the terms of the contract complied with.” The terms of the sale, that is, three thous- and dollars, payable annually forever, are certainly unusual, in view of the fact that no legal title could be made until full payment of the purchase price; still treating the terms of the sale as coming within the lawr, we do not see by what authority the county courts Could release the railroad company from the payment of the consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
88 Mo. 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sturgeon-v-hampton-mo-1885.