Wait v. Commissioner of the State Land-Office

49 N.W. 600, 87 Mich. 353
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 28, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 49 N.W. 600 (Wait v. Commissioner of the State Land-Office) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wait v. Commissioner of the State Land-Office, 49 N.W. 600, 87 Mich. 353 (Mich. 1891).

Opinion

Champlin, 0. J.

'The relator filed his petition in this Court praying for a mandamus to compel the Commissioner of the State Land-office to issue to him a patent for the S. £ of the N W. i of section 24, town 38 N.} range 3 W., situated in Cheboygan county, Mich.; said land being a portion of the land granted to the State of Michigan under the act of Congress approved September 28, 1850, popularly known as the “Swamp-Land Grant.” This particular parcel of land was patented to the State by virtue of said act on October 4, 1875.

He alleges that the .said parcel has not been purchased from the State, and was on the 18th day of November, 1890, and thence hitherto, the property of the State of Michigan; that by Act No. 130, Laws of 1883, the State of Michigan appropriated to the county of Livingston 10,000 acres of swamp lands in the Lower Peninsula, not otherwise appropriated, for the purpose of aiding in straightening the channel of Cedar river, and opening, widening, and deepening the same; that, acting under said act, the county contracted with one Edward W. Sparrow to perform said work, and, upon his fulfilling his part of the contract, said county, in consideration thereof, sold, assigned, transferred, and set over all its claims and rights to said 10,000 acres of land to said Sparrow, and he accepted the same; that upon November 17, 1890, Sparrow sold, assigned, and set over to the relator the right to select and receive 80 acres of said land by a written instrument, in words and figures as follows:

“Eor a valuable consideration, to me in hand paid, I [355]*355hereby sell, assign, and set over to Alexander P. Wait, of Osceola .county, Michigan, the right to select, under provisions of Act No. 130, Laws of 1883, eighty acres of •State swamp land, not otherwise appropriated.
“Edward W. Sparrow.
“ Dated Lansing, Michigan, November 17, 1890.”

That upon the 18th day of November, 1890, the relator, in pursuance of said assignment, and complying in •all respects with the provisions of law governing such applications, did select said above-described parcel, and request Eoscoe D. Dix, State Land Commissioner, to issue to him a patent therefor under Act No. 130, Laws of 1883; but said State Land Commissioner did, without legal excuse, upon the 22d day of November, 1890, absolutely refuse to issue to the relator any patent therefor; •and he prays that a peremptory writ of mandamus may issue out of and under the seal of this Court, commanding the said Eoscoe D. Dix, State Land Commissioner as aforesaid, to issue forthwith to relator a patent for said above-described lands.

The Commissioner of the State Land-office filed his .answer to said petition, admitting the several allegations in the petition, down to and including the request for the issue of a patent, and his refusal to do so; but denies .that his refusal was without any legal excuse, and says, in that behalf,—

“ That said tract of land was offered for sale at public vendue at the office of the Commissioner of the State Land-office on the 1st day of November, 1876, under the provisions of Act No. 97 of the Laws of 1869, the same being Howell’s Statutes, sections 5444 to 5446, inclusive, as set forth in the petition of said petitioner, and hereinbefore admitted; and respondent, further answering, says that on the 24th day of October, 1878, said lot was licensed to Alexander G-ero as a homestead under Act No. 229 of the Laws of 1859 and amendments thereto, the same being Howell’s Statutes, sections 5436 to 5441, inclusive; and respondent, further answering in that behalf, [356]*356says that the title to the said lands revested in the State oí Michigan on the 24th day of October, 1890, for the reason that G-ero had wholly abandoned said lands as a homestead for the space of two years; and respondent, further answering, says, that since the withdrawal of said lands for the benefit of said Gero, and since the reversion of said lands to the State of Michigan, as above set forth, the land has not been restored to the market, as provided by Act No. 21 of the Laws of 1873, the same being* HowelBs Statutes, sections 5249 to 5253, inclusive; and that because said lands have not been restored to market, as provided by said act, they were not subject to private entry or purchase by the said petitioner, or any other person; and that, therefore, the mandamus prayed in said petition ought not to issue.”

Upon the hearing before us, other objections than these set up in the answer were urged as reasons why the relator is not entitled to the patent, based upon the language of Act No. 130, and upon existing laws with reference to the disposition of swamp lands. • We do not consider these objections tenable, and shall confine our views to those set out in the answer.

Before proceeding to the discussion, it is proper that we should define what is meant and understood by the term “scrip.” This term, has been used in the statute respecting the disposition of swamp lands, but no legal definition or signification has been expressed in the statute. It has been the practice in the land-office of this State, where lands have been appropriated or granted for the purpose of aiding in the drainage of swamp lands, whenever the contiaotor doing the work has so performed any portion of it as to obtain its acceptance by the proper officer, and that officer has reported to the land-office, to credit the contractor upon the hooks of the office with the number of acres of swamp land to which such performance entitles him under the contract, and this credit is what is termed “scrip,” although no certificate or other written evidence of the right of the [357]*357party is issued. The lands, not having yet been selected, cannot be described or identified, and, until such selection is made, this credit, called “scrip,” has been considered as assignable, in whole or in part, to other parties, and they have made selections, and; when so made and entered, the lands so selected are charged to the contractor upon the books of the office.

The sections of the statute referred to in the answer ■of the Commissioner read as follows:

“ Sec. 52á9. The People of the State of Michigan enact, That all lands of this State, which have been withdrawn from market for any purpose, or withheld from sale or pre-emption, in consequence of errors in books, or in consequence of marking sales or reservations upon maps, and - all lands which have reverted, or may hereafter revert, to the State, by reason of a failure in any manner to make payment for the same, or by a failure to ■comply with the terms of any State road, railroad, or other grant or contract of this State, to or with any person or corporation, or by reason of a failure to comply with the conditions of any license or homestead act,* shall not be subject to private entry or purchase, either with cash or scrip, until public notice of the restoration of such lands to market shall have been given iii the manner hereinafter prescribed.
“Sec. 5250.

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Related

Gustin v. Commissioner of State Land Office
85 N.W. 730 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 N.W. 600, 87 Mich. 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wait-v-commissioner-of-the-state-land-office-mich-1891.