DocketNumber: No. 3,530
Citation Numbers: 47 Cal. 412
Judges: Niles
Filed Date: 7/1/1874
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/2/2024
All the applications to purchase the lands in controversy as swamp and overflowed lands were made after the passage of the Act supplementary to the Act of 1868, to provide for the management and sale of the lands belonging to this State. The supplemental Act was passed and took effect on the fourth of April, 1870 (Statutes 1869-70, p. 878.) The second section of the Act provides that the Surveyor-General of the State shall not approve the survey of any swamp and overflowed land sought to be purchased, “until six months after the same shall have been segregated by authority of the United States, or of the State, by legislative enactment.” The Court found, and the fact is admitted by the pleadings, that the plat of the survey of the township, including the lands in contest, was filed' in the United States Land Office at Marysville on the twenty-third of March, 1871; but it is not found, nor is it even alleged in the pleadings of either of the parties, that the lands in contest had been segregated as swamp and overflowed lands, either by the United States or this State; and there is nothing in the case from which that fact may be inferred. It does not appear that on the plat of the survey the lands in controversy were designated as swamp and overflowed lands. As the lands had not been segregated as swamp and overflo.wed lands, the Surveyor-General had no authority to approve either of the surveys made for the respective applicants by the County Surveyor; and, for the same reason, it was irregular and improper for him to refer the contest between the applicants to the District C.ourt for determination. The judgment rendered in the cause, that neither of the parties is entitled to purchase the lands in contest, or any part thereof, is equivalent in its effects to a dismissal of the action, and that was the proper disposition of the case.
Judgment affirmed.