This case has been submitted on the alternative writ and the return.
The statute (Chapter 4048) approved and taking effect ■ J une 9, 1891, regulating the phosphate interests of the 'State, constitutes the Governor, Comptroller and Attorney-General a Board of Phosphate Commissioners, ■and gives them the control and management of such interests of the State in the beds' of her navigable waters, and' of all phosphate rock and phosphatic deposits therein, and authorizes the board to enter into -contracts with all persons desiring to avail themselves •of the provisions of the statute, in conformity therewith, and to take such means as may be necessary to *566collect all sums due or to become due to the State on-account of such rock or deposits dug, mined, or removed from the beds of such navigable waters. By the second section the State “grants the right to persons, natural or corporate, to dig, mine and remove-from the beds of navigable waters any and all such rock and deposits therein, upon the terms and conditions as-follows: ” At stated prices per ton, regulated according to the percentage of bone phosphate of lime ; • an account o [ the quantity dug, mined or removed to be-rendered quarterly to the board, and payment to be-made quarterly to the State treasury; it being provided, however, that no person or persons shall be permitted to dig, mine or remove any such rock or deposits from the bed of any navigable water until he or they shall have first entered into a contract with the-board in conformity with the provisions of the act, and shall file with the board a bond, with good and -sufficient sureties, either personal or by guaranty company, to be approved by the board, in such sum as the-board shall deem proper, conditioned to comply with-the terms of the contract .and the provisions of this-act. The board (Section 3) are “authorized” to “give- or contract” for the exclusive right to dig, mine and remove such rock and deposits from 'the bed of navigable waters “within certain well-defined limits, and. for a period not to exceed five years,” the statute declaring that in granting such rights the board shall require . that the person or persons, company or com*567panies, shall begin mining within six months from the date of the contract, and that such mining shall be-continued for the full term of the contract, unless the phosphate or phosphatic deposits be exhausted; and that ‘‘the board shall give preference to riparian owners ; also to those who have commenced mining or preparing to mine prior to the passage of this act; but riparian owners and persons having commenced mining or preparing in good faith to mine and remove such phosphates shall make application for a contract,, and file his or her or their bond, as herein provided, within sixty days from the date of notice that any application has been made in good faith by others for such contract, which notice shall be given by the board;” it being provided, however, that ‘‘such contracts shall in no case exceed ten miles by the course of said stream,” and that the provisions of the act shall not be construed ‘ ‘as applying in cases of navigable streams or any part thereof that is not meandered, and the ownership of the lands embracing which is vested in a legal purchaser.”
The act (Section 4). also provides for the appointment of an inspector of phosphates by the board, whose duties are prescribed, and who is to act “as the executive officer ’ ’ of the board ; and (Section 5) that any one who digs, mines or removes any such rock or deposits from the bed of any such waters shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and, upon conviction, shall be punished as prescribed ; it being declared, however, that the penal provisions are not to apply to persons *568mining under a bona flcle claim of ownership of such deposits. Authority, is also given the board to sue and employ counsel to protect and enforce the rights of the State, (Section 6); and Section 7 repeals all laws •in conflict with the provisions of the statute.
This statute asserts the State’s absolute right of 'property in the phosphates in the beds of her navigable waters, and her exclusive dominion over the same. State vs. Black River Phosphate Co., 27 Fla., 276, 9 South. Rep., 205. Its theory and policy are inconsistent with a property right or. ownership therein by others, either under the riparian act of 1856 (Sections 454, 455, Rev.-Stat.) or otherwise. The alternative writ recognizes expressly the navigability of the Alafia river; and the relator’s application to the Board of Phosphate Commissioners for a contract, as well as its institution of this judicial proceeding, are admis•sious of the j urisdiction of the board and the property rights of the State over the phosphate interest in dispute. The purpose ol the writ is to have us require the commissioners to perform their statutory duties in the premises. The Attorney-General, relying upon the case of State ex rel. Dixon vs. Trustees I. I. Fund, 20 Fla., 402, contends that mandamus does not obtain, because of the final consummation of the contract between the board and the Tampa Phosphate Company, whereby, it is claimed, the exclusive right to mine, dig and remove the phosphates to be found in the disputed territory has been given to the company, and .has passed from the State to the company for the *569period and on the terms and conditions stated in that •contract. We, however, shall not consider this question of remedy, but, passing it sub silentio, will dispose of the case upon questions affecting the rights of the relator as shown by the pleadings.
The ground upon which the relator rests its claim to priority and relief is that it occupies, as to the disputed territory, the status which the State gives to a riparian owner. In this it is mistaken. The statute does not concede to riparian owners any property interests in the phosphate deposits beyond high-water mark, or in the beds of navigable waters. Instead of •of recognizing in riparian owners any property interest which is the subject of sale or transfer in or as to the phosphate itself below high-water mark, or the mining, digging or removal thereof, the statute asserts the State’s exclusive property, control and management in and over the same ;. and the Legislature, in the exercise of its power, unquestioned here, to concede the right to take these phosphates, has made no discrimination between persons, except that it has provided that a “preference” shall be given to riparian owners, and to those who may have commenced mining or preparing to mine prior to the passáge of the act. The nature of this preference is to be ascertained from provisions of the -statute. Assuming itself to be the owner of these deposits, and that no one, whether a riparian owner or other, has the right to *570disturb them without its permission and on such terms-as it may see fit to prescribe, the State has granted -to-all persons, natural or corporate, the right to dig, mine and remove the same. - This concession is not.absolute ; on the contrary, is purely conditional. These conditions are that any one desiring to engage in the-business must, as a precedent to the exercise of such concession or “right,” enter into a contract with the-Board of Phosphate Commissioners, to whom has been given the control and management of the phosphate-interests of the State, and give bond, with surety, in such sum as the board may deem proper, conditioned to comply with the terms of the contract and the provisions of the act. The statute also prescribes the-prices per ton to be paid for the several designated grades of phosphate, and authorizes the-board to give or contract for the exclusive right to dig,, 'mine and remove phosphates in certain defined limits,, not to exceed in any case ten miles by the- course of the stream, and for a period not to exceed five years and in each case the company, person <?r persons contracting are to begin mining within six months from the date of its contract, and such mining is to be continued the full term of the contract, unless the phosphate in the specified. territory shall be exhausted.. The only discrimination which the board is authorized, to make, or which the statute recognizes as allowable, between “.persons, natural or corporate,” who may desire to enter into such contract, is defined as fol*571lows: “The board shall give preference to riparian, owners ; also to those who may have commenced mining or preparing to mine prior to the passage of this, act; but riparian owners and persons having commenced mining or preparing in good faith to mine and remove such phosphates shall make application for a contract, and file his or their bond, as herein provided,, within sixty days from the date of notice that any application has been made in good faith by others for such contract, which notice shall be given by the Board of Phosphate Commissioners.’’ The preference which a riparian owner, or one avIio, prior to the act, had commenced mining or preparing in good faith to mine, is accorded over others, is the rae?e priority of opportunity to engage in the business of digging, mining and removing phosphates under the terms and conditions of the act, if they desire to do so ;' and the purpose of the act in requiring the stated notice is that they shall have the opportunity of entering into a contract with the board under the statute, whenever others make application in good faith to mine, dig or remove phosphates opposite the land of-a riparian owner, or at the place or in the territory where, prior to the statute, such pioneer operators had com menced mining or preparing in good faith to mine. To a riparian owner or pioneer, operator who does not desire to-go into this phosphate business, and does not, upon receiving the stated notice, enter, into a contract and give bond within the time and in the manner contern*572plated by tlie - act, the statute gives no preference or priority over others. A failure to take advantage of the opportunity thus offered forfeits forever the preference which has been accorded to the riparian own■ership or to pioneers. No other priority or preference -can be extracted from the law, nor is any one but a riparian owner, and those whom we have designated ■as “pioneer operators,” within the preferred class.
The relator’s title to the status of a riparian owner has the following basis: On January 10, 1891, one Joseph H. Patterson, who is alleged to have owned all of lot 2, in section 19, township 30 S., range 20 E., .in Hillsborough county, except an undefined portion •owned by one D. C. Walker, said tract having a frontage on the Alafia river of about 40 rods or more, executed a deed which purports to grant, bargain, sell, •and convey to George R. Boaz and William T. Roberts, copartners as the Peruvian Phosphate Company, the perpetual and exclusive right to dig, mine and remove any and all phosphate rocks, phosphatic deposits, and other mineral substances which may lie and be in the beds of streams and bayous included within or bordering on said land ; ‘ ‘ such easement being intended to include rights in all bayous along said water front, and to extend up to the most northerly or main banks of said land.” On June 13, 1891, the grantees in the foregoing deed executed a deed purporting to grant, bargain, sell, and convey to relator the same perpetual rights and easements.
*573The effect which it is here sought to give these instruments is that the former vested in Boaz arid Roberts, copartners aforesaid, the preference which the-statute gives to riparian owners, and that the latter transferred this preferred status to the relator. In our judgment, they have-no such effect. Patterson’s deed may amount to a waiver, as between him and Boaz and Roberts and their assigns, -or generally, of any claim to the preference accorded by the statute to him as a riparian owner, but it had no effect to create any preference in Boaz and Roberts, , or ' their assigns, against any one else, or to limit the discretion of the Board of Phosphate Commissioners in any way. It was not the purpose of the statute to vest a riparian owner with the power of conferring on others a preference or privilege to do what he did not wish to do-himself, and the same observation is true of pioneer operators. The statute has limited the preférence to riparian owners themselves, and the attempt at assignment predicated on these deeds is futile. Whether or not a consummated contract would be assignable if the contract did not contain the provision that the rights granted shall not be sublet without the consent of the Board of Phosphate Commissioners, it is not necessary or proper to decide. As the case stands, the relator was not a riparian owner at any time mentioned in the record, and has never been entitled to the preference which the statute accords to this class of persons; and, as the case made by the alternative-*574writ and urged by counsel for relator is upon the theory of riparian ownership, a peremptory writ must be •denied.
There will be judgment accordingly for defendants.