Books: The Long Chance
P >>
Peter B. Kyne >> The Long Chance
Pages:
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
10 | 11 |
12 |
13 |
14 |
15 |
16 |
17 |
18 |
19 |
20 |
21 |
22 |
23
To Bob's surprise, his application for the purchase of lieu lands had
been denied, under a ruling of the State Land Office--a ruling having
absolutely no foundation under any section of legislative procedure--
which stipulated that before the State Land Office could receive or
grant an application for the purchase of lieu lands, the intending
purchaser _must first designate the basis of corresponding loss to
the state of school lands._
"Bless my innocent soul," Mr. McGraw had murmured at the time, "what a
curious rule! I had a notion that that was the surveyor-general's
business, not mine. I had a notion that he was paid for compiling that
information for the people, and not forcing them to compile it for
themselves."
However, in no whit daunted by the prospect of a little research work,
Bob had had recourse to the land maps in the office. To his surprise
and chagrin he discovered that as fast as he brought to light a "basis"
for his selection, he was informed, after some perfunctory
investigation by the employees of the State Land Office that these bases
_had already been used!_ Eventually the light of reason began to
sift through the fog of despair and suddenly Bob had a very brilliant
idea.
"Euchred!" he muttered to himself. "I do not happen to possess the
requisite amount of inside information and I have no means of obtaining
it until I ascertain where it is for sale! The purpose of this
ridiculous rule is to keep the rabble out of the public domain until
some middleman gets a profit out of his information. I'll just give up
for the time being and await results."
Bob did not have long to wait. Within a week he received a letter from
an alleged land attorney, offering to locate him on state lieu lands
worth fifty dollars per acre, in return for the trifling payment of one
dollar and twenty-five cents per acre to the state and the further
trifling payment of ten dollars per acre to the purveyor of information
respecting the necessary basis for the exchange!
At the time this procedure had struck Bob as rather humorous. He was an
ardent admirer of genius wherever lie saw it, and even this exhibition
of evil genius, which so adroitly deprived him of his constitutional
right to the public domain without the payment of a middleman's profit,
rather aroused his admiration. At the time he was not financially
equipped to argue the matter calmly, clearly--and judicially, and he
had no money to pay for "inside information." He only knew that the
rule requiring applicants to designate the basis was an office-made
rule and had no place in Mr. McGraw's copy of the Political Code of the
State of California.
And the star-spangled banner in triumph doth wave,
O'er the land of the free and the home of the knave
caroled Bob, and charged the matter up to experience, not, however,
without first storing the incident away in his nimble brain for future
reference.
Now, while recovering from his wound at the Hat Ranch, Bob had brooded
much over the difficulties which would without doubt assail him in his
attempt to acquire his lands in Owens river valley; also he had figured
out to his own satisfaction the exact method by which the land-grabber
was enabled to grab; or, provided the grabber did not care to retain
his grab, how he could nevertheless derive tremendous profits from his
control of certain officials in the State Land Office. Therefore, after
his day spent in the public law library in San Francisco, Bob's brain
was primed with every detail of the land laws, and had confirmed his
original interpretation of the land-grabbers' clever schemes to
defraud. However, not satisfied with his own opinion, he decided to
seek a little expert advice on the subject, and to that end he went the
following morning to his father's old friend and his own former
employer, Homer Dunstan, the corporation attorney, whom he knew to be
an authority on land law.
He sent in his name by Dunstan's stenographer, and presently Dunstan
appeared in the reception room. He welcomed his old friend's failure of
a son in a manner which bespoke forced heartiness, for old sake's sake,
and a preconceived impression that the ill-dressed, pale Bob McGraw had
come to him to borrow money. They shook hands and stood for a moment
looking at each other.
"Glad to see you again, Bobby, after all these years. You've grown.
Where in the world have you been ranging since I saw you last?" Homer
Dunstan was forcing an interest in Bob McGraw which he was far from
feeling, and Bob was not insensible to this.
He grinned. "Drifting, Mr. Dunstan--just drifting. Mines and mining--
mostly the latter; there's a difference, you know. It's my inheritance,
Mr. Dunstan, despite all poor old dad did to make me follow in your
footsteps. So I've quit bucking the inevitable and turned wanderer. Do
you happen to be engaged with a client just now?"
"Well--no, not just this minute. Perhaps if you'll call--"
"No, I will not call later. My motto is 'Do it now.' Seeing that you're
regularly in the business of dispensing legal advice, I'd like to take
advantage of the ever-active present." He pulled from his hip pocket a
tattered wallet and produced a hundred-dollar bill. "Mr. Dunstan, how
much expert legal advice can you give me for that?"
Dunstan's manner underwent a swift metamorphosis. "Oh, put back your
money, boy. I have an hour to spare this morning, and for your father's
sake my advice to you will always be given gratis on Mondays and
Fridays."
"Glad I called on Friday, even if it is an unlucky day. Your generosity
knocks that superstition galley-west, so I'll take you at your word.
Also I will gladly retain this century. To tell the truth I have urgent
need of it for other things," and he followed Dunstan into the latter's
private office. Dunstan indicated an easy chair and presented his ex-
assistant with a fifty-cent cigar.
"Well, Bobby, my boy, what's on your soul this morning?"
"A very heavy weight, Mr. Dunstan. Desert land. Acres and acres of it."
"Any water?"
"Not yet."
"Any prospect?!"
"I have it bottled up, and it's all mine. Now I want the land."
"Well?"
"I want to acquire thirty-two thousand acres of state lieu land in
Owens river valley, Mr. Dunstan."
"You cannot do it."
"Well, suppose there was a rule in the State Land Office which forced
prospective purchasers of state lieu lands to first designate the basis
of exchange before their applications would be received and filed.
Suppose also that you wanted to turn crook and steal thirty-two
thousand acres of lieu land, despite this rule. How would you go about
it?"
The lawyer glanced at him keenly. "See here, son, I don't give that
kind of advice to young fellows--or old fellows for that matter--even
for money. I'm an honest corporation attorney, and stealing the public
domain is illegal--and very, very risky."
"Don't worry, sir. When I have your advice, I will not follow it. Tell
me how you would steal this land. It's a hypothetical question."
Dunstan smiled. "That's unfair--attacking a lawyer with a hypothetical
question. It's rather hoisting him on his own petard, as it were.
However, I'll answer it. In the first place, if I planned to go into
the business of looting the public domain I would conspire with some
prominent official of the State Land Office to institute such a rule."
"Good. Somebody conspired with a surveyor-general forty years ago and
had such a rule instituted in the State Land Office. The state
legislature, however, has never been asked to confirm that rule and
spread it in black and white on the statute books."
"Well, having had such a rule instituted" continued Dunstan, "I would
then have the public at a disadvantage. Through my friend in the land
office I would have primary access to the field notes of the chief of
staff in the field, and I would have advance information of where
losses of school lands were soon to occur. In other words I would be in
position to designate every basis of exchange of lost school lands for
lieu lands, and the public would not. I'd give some weak brother say
one hundred dollars to file on some lieu lands and use the basis which
I would designate, and in the meantime I would hustle around, secure in
the knowledge that I had the basis tied up. It would appear of record
as used in the state land office. When I had secured a customer for the
lieu land I had tied up with my dummy applicant, the dummy would
abandon his filing in favor of my client, I would collect the
difference between the statutory cost of the land and the price my
client paid me for it, whack up with my friends in the land office and
consider myself a smart business man."
Bob nodded. "I figured it out that way also. Now, suppose an outsider--
myself, for instance--succeeded in getting his application filed
without designating the basis for the exchange of lands, and the
surveyor-general has issued me a receipt for my preliminary payment of
twenty dollars on account of the purchase of the lieu land--what then?
When he discovered I was an outsider, could he reject my application?"
"Well, he might try, Bob. But with his receipt in your possession, that
would be bona-fide evidence of an implied contract of bargain and sale
between you and the State of California. You could institute a mandamus
suit and force him to make the selection of lieu lands for you."
"I figured it out that way" said Bob musingly. "The only rift in the
surveyor-general's lute is the fact that while he has never yet bumped
up against the right man, he is due to so bump in the very near future.
However, Mr. Dunstan, I do not think our present surveyor-general is
doing business with the land ring. I think the guilty man is one of his
deputies through whom ninety-nine per cent of the office routine is
transacted, and the land-grabbers have him under their thumbs."
"Then why not go direct to the surveyor-general with your troubles?"
queried Dunstan.
Bob shook his head. "No hope in that direction. The office records show
all bases used, and the deputy--the surveyor-general, in fact--can find
defense for their arbitrary ruling in the matter of designation of the
basis--by claiming that their office force is not large enough to
permit of such extended search of the records; hence they turn their
records over to the applicant of lieu lands and let him search for
himself. The surveyor-general, being honest, will be hard to convince
that his deputy is not--particularly since the deputy is probably an
old friend."
"It's a peculiar condition" said Dunstan. "The worst that can happen to
the deputy is to lose his job, the dummy entryman can abandon his
filing at any time he may elect, and there is no law making it a felony
to accept money in exchange for information--if you do not state where
you acquired it. How are you going to stop this looting?"
"I'm not quite certain that I want it stopped--right away" said Bob,
and grinned his lazy inscrutable smile. "I want to do a little grabbing
myself, only I want to do it legally. I have a scheme worked out to do
this, but I want you to confirm it. Just now you schemed out a plan to
get public lands illegally, and you ought to be able to scheme a plan
to get them legally, operating on the state lieu land basis. I want
thirty-two thousand acres of desert land and the law only allows me a
selection of six hundred and forty. I want to get this thirty-two
thousand acres without corrupting any weakling in the employ of the
state, without paying money to dummy entrymen, without designating the
basis for the selection of my fifty sections, without antagonizing the
land ring and without disturbing that rule of the State Land Office,
can it be done?"
Dunstan frowned at his visitor. "Of course it cannot be done" he
retorted sharply. "Why do you ask me such fool questions?"
"Because it might be done--with a little luck and some money."
Dunstan shook his head. "There is only one way for you to acquire
desert land, Bob, without disturbing the rule in that land office.
You'll have to file on a half-section only, under the Desert Land Law
of the United States of America, paying twenty-five cents per acre down
at the time of filing your application. Then you must place one-eighth
of it under cultivation and produce a reasonably profitable crop. You
must spend not less than, three dollars per acre in improvements, and
convince the government that the entire tract, if not actually under
irrigation, is at least susceptible to it. That accomplished, you can
pay the balance of one dollar per acre due on the land, prove up and
secure a patent. That's the only way you can secure desert lands
without doing some of the things you wish to avoid doing."
Bob shook his head. "Too slow, too expensive and generally
irritating. Why, I'd have to live on the land until I could prove up!"
"Well, then, Bobby boy, put your scruples behind you and pay somebody
to live on it and prove up for you." "No use" mourned Bob. "I can see
myself at the head of a long procession of desert-land enthusiasts,
bound for McNeill's Island, and I'm too young to waste my youth making
little rocks out of big ones. Even if the attorney-general didn't have
me on the carpet, I'd have to ride herd on one hundred dummy entrymen
with a Gatling gun, or else equip each one with an Oregon boot. My land
lies in a devil's country and I don't think they'd stay. You see, Mr.
Dunstan, were it not for that confounded rule I mentioned, I could
purchase a full section of desert land in the public domain, under the
provisions of the state lieu land law. Under that law the land would
only cost me one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre, while under the
United Slates Desert Land Laws it would cost me not less than four
dollars and a quarter per acre. Too much money for Bob McGraw. Now,
Owens river valley is pure desert, Mr. Dunstan, and it lies, or will
lie, very shortly, in the public domain. It is not agricultural land,
neither is it coal-bearing nor timbered, so I can purchase it by the
full section, which will only require fifty entrymen. Besides, there
have never been any entries made heretofore in the section of the
valley that I have my eye on, and I'd like to get my land in one strip
without having it checker-boarded with adverse holdings."
Dunstan smiled a little wearily. "But we're not getting anywhere, Bob,
my boy. You're simply wasting your breath. Just what nebulous idea for
the acquisition of this desert land have you floating around in that
red head of yours? Now, then, proposition Number One."
"I cannot oppose that rule. I must sneak my applications in and get
them filed and secure a receipt, when I will be in position to force
the attorney-general to make the selections for my clients."
"Oh, they're clients, eh?" said Dunstan. "I thought they were to be
dummy entrymen."
"They are--but they don't know it--and not knowing it, they will not be
committing a crime."
"Ignorance of the law excuses nobody, Robert. But proceed with
proposition Number Two."
"My clients are to be paupers--so I must pay for the land which they
will file upon. Hence I shall need money."
Homer Dunstan figured rapidly on a desk pad.
Notarial fees on fifty applications @ $ .50 $ 25.00
Filing fees " " " @ 5.00 250.00
First payment " " @ 20.00 1000.00
_______________
Total, $1275.00
"It will take $1275 to start you off, Bob, presuming, for the sake of
argument, that your filings are accepted--which, of course, they will
not be."
"Oh, I have the twelve seventy-five, all right" said Bob confidently.
"Well, after your applications are passed to patent, you will have to
put up $780 more for each section, or $39,000 in all. Have you provided
for this additional sum?"
"Why, no sir. I was going to ask you to lend it to me."
"Indeed! Well, assume that I'm that soft-headed, Bobby, and proceed to
proposition Number Three."
"Well, under the law, my applications must be acted upon within six
months after filing. The surveyor-general must approve or disapprove
them within six months, and if he approves them--"
"Which he will not" promptly interjected Dunstan.
"I'll sue him and make him. Well, when the applications are sent on to
the Commissioner of the General Land Office at Washington for his
ratification of the exchange of the lieu lands, they may be hung up
there a long time--years, perhaps--"
"Certainly. The land ring will see to that."
"Then, don't you see, Mr. Dunstan" said Bob, brightening, "I'll have
lots of time to get that balance of $39,000 together."
"I'm so glad" said Homer Dunstan. "Then I won't have to lend you the
money after all. Well, when you're an old man, Bobby, and that red
head of yours is snowy white, your lands will be passed to patent
and--"
"But the peculiar thing about this operation, Mr. Dunstan, lies in the
fact that the land ring will readily ascertain my financial condition,
and that of my clients--"
"In which event, my dear boy, your lands will be rushed to patent right
away, you will be notified that they are waiting for you to pay the
balance due on them within, thirty days, and if at the end of thirty
days you do not pay that $39,000, your applications lapse automatically
and your initial payment will be forfeited to the state as liquidated
damages."
"I fear that is just what will happen. That is why I want to know if
you are prepared to lend me $39,000 to call their bluff. I will assign
you a half interest in a certain water-right which I possess, as
security for the advance. My water-right is worth millions."
"It will have to be, if I am to consider your suggestion seriously. Get
your fifty applications passed to patent first, however. Then see me,
and I'll lend you the money you require, provided I find upon
investigation that the security is ample. Is your water-right
developed?"
"No, sir. I've just filed on it."
Dunstan permitted himself a very thin smile. "You're your father's son,
Bob. You see visions and you'll die poor. I am firmly convinced that
you're honest, but as firmly convinced that you're chasing a will-o'-
the-wisp--so I hold out very little hope for you in the matter of that
loan."
"But my water-right is good for ten times the amount" pleaded Bob
desperately, and produced T. Morgan Carey's letter to bolster up his
argument. "All I need is money to develop it."
"And in the meantime it's worth ten cents. Bob, you weary me."
"I'm sorry, sir. You're the only human being in this world that I can
come to for help; and I never ask help of any man, unless I can pay him
well for his trouble, And I think I can pay you well--I know I can."
Dunstan eyed him more kindly. "Your father was a visionary, Bob, only
he looked the part. You do not. I have difficulty in convincing myself
that you're insane; but surely, Bob, you must admit that no sane man
would seriously consider your proposition. Tell me how you expect to
induce fifty paupers to apply for land for you, to do it in good faith
and be within the law, and yet hand the land over to you. Dang it, boy,
the thing's impossible. You can't do it."
"I can" replied Bob McGraw doggedly. "I can."
"All right then, you do it. Put that trick over, Bob, and I'll take off
my hat to you."
"You may keep your hat on your head. I want $39,000."
"Do the impossible and I'll give it to you--without security."
"Taken" said Bob McGraw. "I'll hold you to that, Mr. Dunstan. I'll
simply round up fifty paupers, or their equivalent, with a
constitutional right to purchase state lieu land and permit me to pay
for it for them. Then after I have secured the land for them I will buy
it back from them--"
Homer Dunstan roared with laughter. He pointed a bony finger at Bob
McGraw.
"Young man, the right to purchase state lieu land is a strictly
personal one and it is unlawful for one person to purchase for another.
Of course you can buy it back, Bob, but the attorney-general will have
a leg-iron on you before the ink is dry on your check. Transfer of
title under such circumstances would be looked upon as bona-fide
evidence of fraud, unless your clients could prove conclusively that
they had parted with their lands for a valuable consideration--"
Bob McGraw in turn pointed _his_ finger at Dunstan. "Ah, that's
the weak point in the law, Mr. Dunstan" he exulted. "A valuable
consideration. I can beat that. I'll give my clients ten dollars per
acre for lands which cost them one dollar and a quarter, and there
isn't a lawyer in the land--yourself included--who wouldn't consider
that a valuable consideration."
"McGraw," said Dunstan rising impatiently, "you're a consummate ass!
Where the devil do you expect to get $320,000 to buy their land from
them? I suppose you think I'll help you with that, also. Your stupidity
annoys me, Robert. Damme, sir, you're light in the upper story."
Bob McGraw laughed aloud. "I won't need it. All I shall ever ask of you
is that first $39,000. The water I have bottled up in the Sierra will
make the land worth three hundred dollars an acre. Don't you see where
I can afford to pay ten dollars per acre for it?"
"You can't do business on gab, McGraw. Money makes the mare go, and you
cannot induce fifty men to waste their constitutional right to lieu
land on your bare word that your water-right will make a desert
valuable. You'll have to take 'em down there, at your own expense, and
show 'em--"
"Old maids in New England buy stocks in wild-cat prospect holes in
Nevada. Do the promoters have to bring them out to see the holes?"
"Nobody but a fool or an idiot would listen to your crazy proposition,
and fools and idiots are not qualified under the law to do anything
except just live and try to avoid being run over by automobiles. But
granted that you can do all these things, what are you going to do with
your land when you get it?"
Bob McGraw stood up and leaned both brown hands on the edge of Homer
Dunstan's desk. The genial mocking little smile was gone from his face
now, for Dunstan's query had brought him back from the land of
improbabilities into the realm of his most ardent day-dream. He raised
his hand in unconscious imitation of every zealot that had preceded him
down the ages; the light of the visionary who already sees the
fulfillment of his dreams blazed in his big kind brown eyes.
"I'm going to give it to the lowly of the earth" he said. "I'm going to
subdivide it into ten-acre farms, with a perpetual water-right with
every farm. I'm going to build a town with a business block up each
side of the main street. I'm going to install a hydro-electric plant
that will carry a load of juice sufficient to light a city of a million
inhabitants. I'm going to reclaim the desert and make it beautiful, and
I'm going to have free light and free fuel and free local telephone
service and free water and, by God! free people to live in my free
country. I'm going to gather up a few thousand of the lowly and the
hopeless in the sweat-shops of the big cities and bring them back to
the land! Back to _my_ land and _my_ water that I'm going to
hold in trust for them, the poor devils! Back where there won't be any
poverty--where ten acres of Inyo desert with Inyo water on it will mean
a fortune to every poor family I plant in my desert."
"Why?" demanded Homer Dunstan smiling.
"Why?" Bob McGraw echoed the attorney's query. He gazed at Dunstan
stupidly. "Why, what a damn-fool question for you to ask, Mr. Dunstan!
Isn't it right that we should look to the comfort of our helpless
fellow-man? Isn't it right that we strong men should give of our
strength to the weak? What in blue blazes are we living for in this
enlightened day and generation if it isn't to do something that's worth
while, and to leave behind us at the last something that hasn't got the
American eagle stamped on it with the motto 'In God We Trust.' Ugh! How
the good Lord must hate us for that copyrighted chunk of sophistry I
It's a wonder He doesn't send His angels down to make us tend to
business."
"Well, I'm not going to worry about it" retorted Dunstan crisply. "I'm
too busy, and you're Johnny McGraw's boy Bob, so we won't quarrel about
it. Good luck to you, old man. Get all the fun out of life that you
possibly can--in your own way--and when you get your land and can show
me, I'll take a $39,000 mortgage on it, at eight per cent. Now, good-by
and get out. I'm a busy man."
Bob McGraw took up his big wide hat, shook hands with his father's old
friend, and with heightened color withdrew. Out in the hall he paused
long enough to swear; then, as suddenly, the old mocking cheerful
inscrutable smile came sneaking back to his sun-tanned face, and he was
at peace again. He had suddenly remembered that he was Bob McGraw, and
he had faith in himself. He thought of Donna, waiting for him in lonely
San Pasqual; he raised his hard brown fist, and in unconscious
imitation of Paul Jones he cried aloud:
Pages:
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
10 | 11 |
12 |
13 |
14 |
15 |
16 |
17 |
18 |
19 |
20 |
21 |
22 |
23