Tansel v. Storm

1913 OK 601, 138 P. 168, 40 Okla. 363, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 32
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 14, 1913
Docket4556
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1913 OK 601 (Tansel v. Storm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tansel v. Storm, 1913 OK 601, 138 P. 168, 40 Okla. 363, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 32 (Okla. 1913).

Opinion

TURNER, J.

From a judgment in the district court of Pawnee county rendered and entered Septembér 11, 1912, sustaining a demurrer to his answer and making perpetual a temporary injunction theretofore obtained against him pursuant to the prayer of the plaintiff’s petition, defendant brings the case here. Plaintiff’s petition substantially states that he is a resident of that county and lives on a certain tract of land; that the same is a part of the public school land of the state, and that plaintiff is in possession under an agricultural lease executed and delivered -to him by the Commissioners of the Land Office on January 1, 1912, which terminates January 1, 1914; that by reason of said lease he has a preference right to purchase said land when the same shall be sold and also a perfect right to its enjoyment in the condition that the same was at the time of the execution of the lease; that said land is partially covered by growing timber, to remove which would greatly impair the use of the land and the value of his leasehold, and that one of the chief benefits to be derived from said land is the use of said timber for shade, etc.; that plaintiff has a vested right in and to said land and all the timber standing thereupon during the life of said lease, and that any removal thereof would greatly reduce the value and destroy the usefulness of said land; that he has located thereupon lasting and valuable improvements and placed a portion of the land in cultivation and has made the same his home on the belief that he will ultimately have his preference right of purchase; that defendant has gone upon the land and by force of arms has taken possession of the same for purpose of removing therefrom the timber growing thereon; that defendant is insolvent; that plaintiff has no adequate remedy at law; and that the acts threatened will constitute an irreparable injury. His lease is made an exhibit to the petition, and the prayer of the petition is that defendant be enjoined, etc., which was done by a temporary restraining order issued by the judge of *365 the county court. Thereafter came defendant and denied that by reason of the lease plaintiff had a vested right in said land and timber standing thereon during the life thereof, and that its removal would greatly reduce the value and destroy the usefulness of said land, and that the price paid for the rental included the use of the timber growing thereon and that the removal of the timber would destroy plaintiff’s preference right of purchase. Further answering, defendant states that the Commissioners of the Land Office have control and management of the leasing and sale of the state school lands; that pursuant to such authority conferred on them by law they advertised the walnut timber upon the land in controversy for public sale on June 27, 1912; that on that day defendant duly filed his bid therefor, and upon the opening thereof he was declared to be the highest bidder therefor, and the same was awarded to him by said commissioners for a certain sum which he thereupon paid in cash, which said bid was approved by the commissioners, who issued to' him a certificate of purchase for said timber and the right to enter upon said land for the purpose of cutting it and taking it away, and which said certificate he filed as a exhibit to his answer; that before the sale plaintiff was notified by the commissioners of his preference right to take said timber at the highest and best bid made, which he declined to do, although present at the sale; that after the sale-, pursuant to the rules and regulations adopted by the board, he entered into a contract with said commissioners agreeing to pay all damages plaintiff might sustain to his growing crop in cutting and hauling away said timber; that upon attempting to enter so to do he was forbidden by plaintiff, whereupon his action was reported to said commissioners, who notified plaintiff that defendant had purchased said timber and had received their permission to enter, and also that in event of further refusal to permit him so to do the Governor, as chairman of said board, was authorized to place a certified copy of said order in the hands of the sheriff of Pawnee county with instructions to enforce the same by placing defendant in possession of that portion of the land upon which the timber grows, with right of ingress and egress; that later *366 the sheriff executed said process, by virtue of which defendant is now in possession.

Both sides agree that whether the court erred in sustaining' a demurrer to this 'answer turns upon the right of the commissioners to sell the timber during the life of the lease. Whether they had this right depends on whether the timber growing on the demised premises at the time it was let was excepted from the operation of the terms of the lease. If it was not excepted, then the use of it passed to plaintiff for the life of the lease along with the land, and the commissioners were without right to sell it and deprive the plaintiff thereof during his tenancy under the lease. This sends us to the lease. Constitution, art. 6, sec. 32, provides:

“The Governor, Secretary of State, State Auditor, Superintendent of Public Instruction and the Pi'esident of the Board of Agriculture, shall constitute the Commissioners of the Land Office, who shall have charge of the sale, rental, disposal, and managing of the school lands and other public lands of the state, and of the funds and proceeds derived therefrom, under rules and regulations prescribed by the Legislature.”

Act approved March 29, 1910 (Laws 1910, c. 118), entitled an act' providing for the manner and procedure of leasing and managing the public land of the state, reads:

“Sec. 1. All the public lands of this state shall be subject to lease in the manner provided herein. The Commissioners of the Land Office shall have charge of the leasing of such land.”

Pursuant thereto this lease was made. The x-ecord sets it forth and discloses that thereby the commissioners leased to plaintiff a part of the school lands from January 1, 1910, to December 31, 1914. It goes without saying that this lease carried the growing timber for the term as well as the land, the timber being part of the leasehold. By carried we mean, of course, unless excepted from the operation of the terms of the lease. But nowhere in the lease is contained an exception or reservation of any kind. Much less does it expx-essly or by implication contain a clause excepting from its operation the growing timber upon the land. The only thing resembling a reservation is a clause reserving to the' state- the right to sell and convey the *367 land therein described at any time, “ * * * and that upon such sale, if any be provided by-law prior to the expiration of this lease, the same shall thereupon expire, and the party of the second part as the lessee of said land shall be entitled to purchase the same at the highest bid, subject to such conditions, limitations, restrictions, and exception as may be provided by law.” It is not contended that this right to sell the land at any time carries with it the right tO' sell the timber at any time, and yet such right is contended for with much less to base it upon. We repeat that it is only when the growing timber itself is excepted by the terms of the lease that the same remains the property of the grantor free from the operation of its terms.

Jenny et al.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1913 OK 601, 138 P. 168, 40 Okla. 363, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tansel-v-storm-okla-1913.