The defendant, the Brooklyn Cooperage Company, appeals from a judgment at Special Term, which has determined that the People of the State were the equitable owners of certain *270Adirondack land, and has enjoined both defendants from cutting wood or timber upon said land or removing any wood or timber therefrom, and has required Cornell University to convey said land to the State. The land in question was conveyed by the Santa Clara Lumber Company to Cornell University pursuant to chapter 122 of the Laws of 1898. To comprehend fully the issues involved in this action it is necessary to understand the exact purport of that act.- In the 1st section it is provided that upon the acceptance by Cornell University of the provisions of the act, the trustees of that university were authorized and empowered to create and establish a department in said university to be known as and called the New York State College of Forestry, for the purpose of education and instruction in the principles and practices of scientific forestry. By the 2d section the university was authorized to purchase nót more than- 30,000 acres of land in the Adirondack' forests. The section then reads: “The University shall have the title, possession, management and control of such land and by its board of trustees through the aforesaid College of Forestry shall conduct upon said land such experiments in forestry as it may deem most advantageous to the interests of the State and the advancement of the science of forestry, and may plant, raise, cut and sell timber at such times, of such species and quantities and in such manner as it may deem best, with a view to obtaining and imparting knowledge concerning-the scientific management and use of forests, their regulation and administration, the production, harvesting and reproduction of wood crops and earning a revenue therefrom, and to that end may constitute and appoint a faculty of such school, consisting of one director or professor, and two instructors, and may employ such forest manager, rangers and superintendents, and incur such other expenses, in-connectidh therewith as may be necessary for the proper management and conduct of said college and the care of said lands and for the purposes of this' act, within the amount hereinafter appropriated” By section 4 of the act it was provided that the deed to be given should contain an express covenant running with the land and binding upon said university, that the same was conveyed for the uses and purposes in the act provided for, and *271also an express covenant on the part of said university to convey said lands to the People of the State as thereinafter provided for. Section 5 provided that said lands should be paid for by the State. By section 6 it was provided as follows: “All moneys received by Cornell University from State appropriations for the said college shall be kept by said University in a separate fund from the moneys of the University, and shall be used exclusively for said college. * * * By section 7 it was provided that all sums received by the university from the sale of timber or otherwise, under the act should be immediately paid to the State Treasurer, and credited to the fund appropriated from time to time for the purposes of the act. This section was amended by chapter 301 of the Laws of 1900 and some fiscal changes were made. By section 9 of the act of 1898 -it was provided that at the expiration of thirty years the university should transfer the said lands to the State, and thereupon said lands should become part of the forest preserve. By section 10 of the act the sum of $10,000 was appropriated for the purposes of the act, exclusive of the purchase of land, to be paid to Cornell University.
The purpose of this act is clearly expressed and unmistakable. The land was to be purchased by the - State. The expenses were to be met by the State by appropriation and by the proceeds of the sales of timber from said land. Cornell University acted merely as the instrument for the accomplishment of this State purpose. It was authorized to act as the agent of the State. Upon demurrer to the complaint the Court of Appeals has held (in 187 N. Y. 142) that Cornell University was acting under a restricted agency. Within the restrictions, however, imposed by the statute this agent was given full discretion as to the expenditure by contract or otherwise of moneys appropriated, and as to the sale of timber from the land, both as to terms and to quantities. Clothed with this power, Cornell University entered into the contract with the defendant cooperage company which is here the subject of review. It was therein first recited:
“ Whereas, the University has the right during the period of thirty years from the 21st day of December, 1898, and desires .to cut, remove and dispose of such wood and timber *272located upon thirty thousand acres of land in Franklin County,. New York (hereinafter called the College Forest), as the'University deems .desirable under proper forestry system, and also has the right during such period to lease the same or any part-thereof for such purposes and upon such terms as to the University shall seem best, and
“Whereas, the company with a view of utilizing such wood and timber and in order to enable the University to dispose of the same, propose to place upon the College Forest two or more plants for the manufacture of staves and headings and. the products of wood distillation.”
Thereupon the defendant cooperage company agreed to erect and maintain upon said college forest two or more factories, at least one for the manufacture of staves and headings, and at least one for the manufacture of the products of wood distillation. The company agreed to operate such plants for .the period of the agreement, or as long as wood supplies were to be .found on the college forest, except as thereinafter provided. The company was given the right, subject to the conditions and exemptions thereinafter contained, to take and use all of the maple, beech and birch wood and timber of merchantable trees then upon the college forest, and also such spruce and other soft woods as under proper forestry management it should become proper to cut. But the university was given a discretion to reserve all and any of the timber standing alongside of rivers, streams, ponds, highways, or fire lines, to the width of not to exceed twenty-five rods, and altogether not comprising more than 1,500 acres in the whole college forest. The contract then provided: “But the University may in its discretion as proper forest management requires, cut trees of smaller size [within ten inches] and deliver the wood in cord wood. Nor shall the University ' he prevented from leaving such trees of larger diameter, as proper forest management shall require.” The third provision, which has been the subject of discussion in the opinions, written upon the demurrer, reads as follows:
“Third. The company agrees to take and the University-agrees to cut and deliver, at its own expense, in each and; every year of the term of the fifteen (15) years of this agreement, such quantities of wood, in logs and cord wood, as *273the company may give written notice that it shall require to be cut during the next following season—such notice to be given not later than the first day of July in each year, provided that the University shall not be obliged to cut in any one year more than one-fifteenth (-}s) of the wood standing on the College Forest. Nor shall it be required in any one year, except as hereinafter provided, to cut less than ten thousand (10,000) cords of fuel wood and retort wood, together with the logs produced in the cutting of such cord wood. At no time shall the University be obliged to cut and deliver a larger amount of logs than can be secured from the trees necessary to be cut in order to supply the quantities of cord wood required or taken by the Cooperage Company. The first installment of cord wood shall not be required to be cut before the fall season of the year 1900; and all logs shall be cut out and delivered during the felling season in which they shall be cut; but cord wood may be cut and delivered throughout the year.” The contract specified the prices which the defendant, -the cooperage company, should pay for such timber as it received -under the contract, and further provides for certain details immaterial to this discussion.
But the cutting of the timber, it will be noticed, was all to be done by the college of forestry itself. In order to execute this part of the contract funds were necessary to the university, and to that end application was made to the Legislature for the appropriation of $50,000. Upon this application the Legislature appropriated $30,000 “for the purpose of improving, maintaining and administering the Cornell College experimental forest in the county of Franklin ;” and for the next year appropriated another $30,000 “ for the purpose of improving, maintaining, and administering the experimental forest in the county of Franklin by the State College of Forestry.” (Laws of 1899, chap. 569; Laws of 1900, chap. 419.) In the first year the sum of $10,000 was also appropriated for the college of forestry, and thereafter the sum of $10,000 was annually appropriated “for the State College of Forestry,” until 1903. (See Laws of 1899, chap. 569; Laws of 1900, chap. 418; Laws of 1901, chap. 644; Laws of 1902, chap. 593.) The *274contract with the cooperage company was not executed until the first appropriation of $30,000 was made. Thereupon the contract was executed, and the parties entered upon the performance thereof. In 1903 the State refused to make an appropriation for the college of forestry, and thereupon the college of forestry was abandoned. In that year, however, $5,000 was appropriated for the clearing up of land and the planting of .new trees. (Laws of'1903,.chap. 599.) This was expended under the direction of the trustees of Cornell University. Since that time no other appropriation has been made; no further timber has been cut, although the defendant cooperage company has demanded that the contract be performed, and insists upon its right in this, action to the payment of the damages which it has suffered, and the prospective profits which it has lost, as a condition to the equitable relief which the plaintiff asks. Upon the demurrer, both in the Special Term and in the' Appellate Division (114 App. Div. 723), the contract was condemned as being antagonistic to the purposes of the act under which Cornell University was authorized to make the contract. Ifi the Court of Appeals the learned judge writing the opinion spoke of see-tion 3 of the contract as conferring upon the defendant company “powers hostile to the general, scheme of the act of 1898.” It was distinctly stated, however, in the decision of the Court of Appeals, that the contract must be judged by the circumstances under which it was made, and condemnation of the .contract was withheld until those circumstances should appear upon the trial of .the action. Upon the trial of the action it appeared that in order to reforest this .land it was necessary to strip it of this hard wood; that hard wood cannot be floated down a stream of water, and that the cost of railroad transportation was prohibitive; that it was necessary to bring some consumptive plant to the forest itself. It was shown that upwards of $350,000 was expended in establishing the' two plants that the defendants contracted to establish in order to dispose of the timber which the university should deliver under the contract. Thé evidence justifies the conclusion that such an expenditure was necessary, and that no contract could be made under which such an expenditure should become' necessary unless such contract included substantially the mer*275chantable timber upon the said land. From 15,000 acres of the 30,000 purchased a large part of the timber had already been removed. From that part it was necessary to remove still further timber in order to conduct the experiment of reforestation. And upon the balance it was necessary to remove substantially all of the timber. The record contains much interesting evidence upon the question of the proper method of forestation. The relevancy of this evidence is not apparent to my mind. Cornell University was given discretion to use this land and sell such timber as in its judgment should be proper for the. conducting of this experiment. The university had already secured as the dean of the college of forestry the foremost forestry expert in the land, who himself drew the contract or dictated its terms. There was considerable evidence as to whether the most scientific forestry was the selective system or the clear cutting system. The selective system involved the cutting out of part of the trees only, while the clear cutting system involved the stripping of the land, so that the seeding and replanting might be done upon clear land. For the first two years under this contract the selective system was adopted. Thereafter the clear cutting system was adopted. Nothing in the contract, however, prevented the adoption of either system or of any system which might be found most in accord with scientific forestry. With this power and discretion left in Cornell University under the act of 1898 it is not possible that the defendant cooperage company, in order to maintain its rights under this contract, is bound to establish that the contract is in accord with the most scientific forestry. The company might well have assumed that that question had been determined by Cornell University itself. With its determination only was the defendant company concerned. Nor, in view of the circumstances disclosed by the evidence, can I see anything in the provisions of article 3, which are in antagonism to the spirit of the act. No expert in the case has. questioned that the experiment of reforestation involves of necessity the cutting down of any standing forest, either under the selective system or under the clear cutting system. The State purc^Vacl 30,000 acres for this experiment. It is immaterial *276whether or not this experiment could have been carried on with a smaller acreage. Cornell University had the right' to assume that the experiment was to be upon a larger scale, and commensurate with the quantity of land given therefor. Inasmuch as all of this land was required to be substantially cleared to accomplish the purposes of the experiment thereupon, the fact that the contract called for the clearing of all of the land'was in complete harmony with the purposes of the act, and with the powers given • to the university thereunder, both express and implied. It may not be necessary, however, to decide this question, in view of the construction which seems to me must necessarily be placed upon the contract and the limitations which I find therein.
As between the State and Cornell University it cannot be doubted that the State at any time had the right to abandon this experiment, and to refuse to make further appropriations therefor. This assumption may be based either upon the nature of the undertaking or upon the limited appropriation with which the project was started. Moreover, the Legislature- could not bind future Legislatures to make further appropriations. With this reserved right the Legislature, by section 2 of the act of 1898, limited the authority of Cornell University to expenditures “within the amount hereinafter appropriated.” It was undoubtedly contemplated by both parties, as found by the learned trial judge, that further appropriations would be made from year to year, at least for the fifteen years during which this contract was to run. The contract of the defendant company made with the agent of the' State, with full knowledge of its limited authority, is not enforcible, at least as against the State, beyond the stipulations therein contained within that known authority. Nor has the defendant company any claim against the State beyond the amount of the appropriations which the Legislature shall make. It is possible that in interpreting the contract, account should be taken of any profits which might accrue from the ,sale of timber upon the land. These were to be devoted to! the purposes of the college of forestry in the same manner as were the appropriations made by the Legislature. Even so, however, the situation is not changed, because of the fact *277that the contract was without profit. As against the State, therefore, the defendant company took its chance on the continuation of the appropriations necessary to enable Cornell University to carry on the experiment. Upon that chance these plants were constructed: Ordinarily a contract made with a known agent in the name of the agent is the agent’s contract, not the principal’s. In this case, however, the State could not buy the land and authorize the cutting of any timber thereon. The State itself could not have made the contract, so that the making of the contract in the name of Cornell University could hardly be deemed within the contemplation of either party to be intended to create the assumption of liability on the part of the agent. It is probably unnecessary, however, to decide this question, as no issue has been framed between the Brooklyn Cooperage Company and Cornell University. ■ The discussion can only be relevant as bearing upon the interpretation of the rights of the State and the defendant company between themselves. Whether or not the defendant company have recourse against Cornell University, having made a contract upon the implied condition that the State shall appropriate moneys necessary to the carrying out of the contract, it cannot complain if future Legislatures should fail to see any profit in further continuing the experiment.
Upon the argument one of the justices suggested that the right of abandonment of this experiment rested with the Legislature only, and that the Attorney-G-éneral could not, acting in behalf of the State, elect to consider the experiment abandoned and insist upon the conveyance by Cornell University of this land to the State. It is unnecessary to consider this question, as the appellant makes no criticism of the judgment upon any such ground.
The defendant company insists, not without force, that the terms of its contract were explicit and were without condition, and that those terms became known to the Legislature through the annual reports of Cornell University, and that, with exact knowledge of the nature of the contract, further appropriations were made to the college of forestry, and no disavowment made of the right of Cornell University thus to contract. From these facts it is insisted that the State has ratified this contract. While undoubtedly a State is held to its contracts as is an indi*278vidual, and is liable for their breach as are individuals, the court will not find a ratification of an unauthorized contract made in its behalf, except upon clear indication that, the Legislature so intended. The discussion of the representative of Cornell University before the finance committee of the Senate and Assembly can hardly be deemed a notification to the Legislature as a body of the exact nature of the contract. The terms of the contract were substantially indicated, however, in later reports of the university to the Governor, which were laid before the Legislature. After such reports became public, the only appropriations that- were made were made “ for the State College of Forestry,” while the two appropriations of $30,000 each, which had been theretofore made for the conduct of the experiment, were specifically stated to be for that purpose. It is a conceded fact that the general, expenses of the college of forestry, including the salary of the professor and the instructors, were about $10,000. So that there cannot be found to have been any appropriations for actual work in the cutting of timber upon the forest land. An appropriation of $10,000 by the Legislature, therefore, for the maintenance of the college itself, which did not contemplate an expenditure for work upon the forest land, ..can hardly be deemed to be a ratification of the contract for the sale of timber, although such contract was at the time known to the Legislature. I cannot find, therefore, any. act of the Legislature from which can be gleaned an intention to assume the unqualified obligations of the contract between the defendant company and Cornell University.
If I am right in these conclusions, the defendant has no claim against the State of New York which can be made either the subject of a counterclaim or the payment of which can be made a condition to the granting of such equitable relief as the State may be entitled to. It follows that the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred, except Kellogg, J., who wrote for modification; Sewell, J., not sitting.