after making the foregoing statement, delivered the following opinion of the court.
The assignments of error raise but two questions for our consideration, which will be hereinafter stated and decided.
As appears from the above statement this is a case in which the Commonwealth acquired a valid title to the lot in question at a sale of it for delinquent taxes at which it was bought by the Commonwealth. No question arises as between the Commonwealth and the former owner of the lot, or appellee claiming under the latter by mesne conveyances, on that subject. We set out, therefore, upon our considera,tion of the case, with the Commonwealth as the owner of such lot.
The first question for our consideration is:
1. Was the Commonwealth divested of its title to the lot in question by the tax deed to appellant?
There are certain general principles applicable to tax titles which are well settled but which should be borne in mind in approaching the consideration of the first question involved in the instant case.
As stated in 2 Blackwell on Tax Titles, section 845, a tax deed, * * according to the principles of the common law, is simply a link in the chain of the grantee’s title. It does not ipso facto transfer the title of the owner, as in grants from the government, or in deeds between man and man. The operative character of it depends upon the regularity of the anterior proceedings. The deed is not the title itself, nor even evidence of it. Its recitals bind no one. It creates no estoppel upon the former owner. No presumption arises upon the mere production of the deed, that the facts upon which it is based had any existence. When it is shown, however, that the ministerial officers of the law have *467performed every duty which the law imposes upon them— every condition essential in its character—then the deed becomes conclusive evidence of title to the grantee, according to its extent and purport.”
This is true because the officer of the law who executes the tax deed does so in the exercise of a naked power, not coupled with an interest; and, unless made so by statute, the recitals in the deed are not even prima facie evidence of the existence of the conditional facts aforesaid. Flanagan v. Grimmett, 10 Gratt. (51 Va.) 421, 425-6; Sulphur Mines Co. v. Thompson, 93 Va. 293, 316, 25 S. E. 232.
And such rule applies to a tax deed which undertakes to convey the title of the Commonwealth (acquired by it. at a previous sale of the land for delinquent taxes) to a purchaser from the Commonwealth, as well as to such deeds undertaking to convey the title of the original owner of the land to a, purchaser at a treasurer’s sale of the land for delinquent taxes. 2 Blackwell on Tax Titles, section 845; Minor on Tax Titles, page 84. • Equally, in both cases, the officer of the law executing the deed to the third person, who is the purchaser, executes a naked power, and, as stated by Mr. Minor on page 84 of his work last cited * * any steps which the statute requires a third person to take in order to acquire the title of the Commonwealth must be strictly complied with, unless the legislature dispenses with that compliance. The State is not to be divested of its title save in the manner prescribed by the legisláture.”
It is very true, as correctly pointed' out elsewhere in the valuable work last quoted, that touching the power of the legislature to dispense with certain anterior proceedings as prerequisites to a valid tax deed, an entirely different case presents itself when it is one where the Commonwealth has obtained a valid title and the deed is to a, purchaser from It, from that of a case of a deed to a purchaser at a delinquent tax sale by a treasurer. In the latter ease there are certain *468constitutional limitations on the power of the' legislature which protect the rights of the individual land owner. These limitations concern the preliminary steps to a tax sale necessary to afford the land owner “due process of law” and cannot be dispensed with even by express legislative enactment. They are necessary and indispensable to divest the former owner of his title to the land and are also referred to by Minor on Tax Titles, pages 127-155. In the former case,, the original owner having been divested of his title by due-process of law and such title having become vested in the Commonwealth, the latter may do what it may will with its. own. In such case the former owner no longer has any title or right to the land or with respect thereto. The circumstance that the Commonwealth may by statute-give the former owner the right (so called) of redeeming the land by performing certain stipulated acts, so long as the title remains in the State; or may require that any purchaser from the State shall give -a. certain notice to the original owner to redeem before such purchaser can obtain a deed, or that any other right (sic) pertaining to the land is thus given, does not alter .the situation. These are all matters of grace and of privilege and are not in truth matters of right in the former owner. At most they are rights if asserted by the former owner in the way and within the time prescribed by statute. The State may provide by statute that at a certain stage in the proceedings subsequent to the-acquisition of the title by it, such quasi-rights no longer exist. Since the State need not have granted such quasi-rights at all, it may grant them in a limited way or for a limited time, and, so far as the original owner is concerned, he is without- ground of complaint if these are denied to him, by or under legislative enactment, at any time after the State has acquired the title. Hence, where a tax deed conveys a title from the Commonwealth, the statute may provide that, when such a deed to a purchaser from it is *469once made, as prescribed by statute, its validity cannot be questioned by the former owner of the land on any grounds concerning any of the proceedings subsequent to the acquisition of the title by the Commonwealth, or on any grounds concerning the proceedings antecedent to such acquisition of title which do not go to the validity of the title acquired by the Commonwealth, except such as the statute may itself allow to be drawn in question. Idem, pages 84, 147, 151, 155; Thomas v. Jones, 94 Va. 756, 27 S. E. 813; Lacks v. Latham, 116 Va. 424, 82 S. E. 75.
But all this concerns merely the power of the State to control the subject of the effect of a tax deed where it conveys a title from and which has been previously vested in the State. The question still remains to what extent such power has been exercised, when we come to construe any particular statute on the subject. Save to the extent that they may be dispensed with by statute, the proceedings which may be prescribed by statute as steps to precede the execution of such a tax deed, although they are to be taken after the acquisition of the title by the State, are nevertheless steps which are jurisdictional, and are conditions precedent to the validity of the deed. It becomes then, in every case involving the validity of a' tax deed, purely a question of the construction of the statute which is relied on to give the particular force and effect which may be claimed for such a tax deed.
Some expressions used in the case of Thomas v. Jones, supra, 94 Va. 756, 27 S. E. 813, and in other Virginia cases, did at one time give color to the view that where a tax deed is made to a purchaser from the Commonwealth under section 666 of the Code, as it originally stood or as amended, its validity could not be questioned, except upon the grounds specified in section 661 of the Code, as it originally stood or as amended, since, said section 666 provides that the provisions of said section 661 should apply to deeds *470made under authority of the former section. And such construction was indeed placed upon the holding in said case of Thomas v. Jones, by Mr. Minor in his valuable work above cited. See Minor on Tax Titles, page 147. But it is now well settled that the true construction of said sections 666 and 661 of the Code, as they originally stood and as amended, is, that the proceedings required by said section 666 of the Code are conditions precedent to the validity of a deed thereunder. This holding has been reached by applying the principle that statutes which are penal in their nature and entail forfeitures are to be strictly construed against the imposition of the penalty or the enforcement of the forfeiture. That so construing said section 661, and the language therein, “when the purchaser of any real estate * * * sold in pursuance of section 666 * * * has' obtained a deed therefor * * * the right or title to such real estate shall stand vested in the grantee in such deed as it was vested in the party assessed with the taxes or levies on account whereof the sale was made at the commencement of the year for which the taxes or levies were assessed, or any person claiming under such party, subject to be defeated only by proof * * *” etc. (setting forth certain facts which may be received in evidence to invalidate the deed), its true meaning is that the real estate has not been sold “in pursuance of section 666” unless the requirements of the latter section have been complied with; and, hence, such requirements are as much conditions precedent upon which the validity of a deed thereunder depends as is the non-existence of the facts mentioned in section 661 of the Code as grounds on which the validity of the deed .may be assailed. Zimmerman v. Dey, 121 Va. 709, 93 S. E. 597, and authorities therein cited.
In the last cited case there was a careful consideration of many decisions of this .court touching the subject of the paragraph next above, which, therefore, need not be here *471again reviewed. And, as noted in the opinion of this court delivered by Judge Kelly in the last cited case, the extent to which the case of Thomas v. Jones, supra, 94 Va. 756, 27 S. E. 813, carried the curative force of section 661 of the Code, has subsequently been greatly qualified, if not entirely overruled.
There is a provision in said section 666 that the deed “* * * shall set forth all the circumstances appearing in the clerk’s office in relation to the sale,” and it is settled that the effect of said sections 666 and 661 is to make the recitals in the tax deed made and recorded under section 666 have the force and effect of prima facie evidence of the existence of the jurisdictional steps recited, but not conclusive evidence thereof. Thomas v. Jones, 98 Va. 323, 36 S. E. 382; Zimmerman v. Dey, supra, and authorities therein cited. And such jurisdictional steps, in such case, are the steps required by said section 666 to be taken subsequent to the acquisition of the title by the Commonwealth and preceding the execution of the deed under such section. Lacks v. Latham, supra, 116 Va., at page 427, 82 S. E. 75.
The instant case involves a tax deed made under what is commonly designated the resale act (Acts 1906, page 41) approved February 23, 1906. This act is complete in itself and does not refer to said section 661 of the Code; but it contains in section 12 thereof practically the same provisions as the original section 661 of the Code before the latter was amended. Such section 12 of such act so far as material, is as follows:
“12. When the purchaser of any real estate so sold “ * * has obtained a deed therefor * * * the right or title to such real estate shall stand vested in the grantee in such deed, as it was vested in the party assessed with the taxes and levies thereon at the commencement of the year for which the taxes or levies were assessed for which it was sold, or any person claiming under such party, subject to be *472defeated only by proof,” * * * etc. (setting forth certain facts which alone may be received in evidence to invalidate the deed, which are the same as set forth in section 661 of the Code as it was originally enacted and before amendments thereto added certain other grounds on which the validity of the deeds referred to in the latter might be assailed). (Italics supplied.)
We are of opinion that the language “so sold” in the latter act, means “sold in pursuance” of such act. Hence the same construction which this court has given to section 661 of the Code aforesaid, must be given to section 12 of the act now under consideration; and that is that the true construction of such section is that the requirements of the preceding portions of such act are as much conditions precedent to the validity of the deed, as are the non-existence of the facts mentioned in said section 12 as the grounds on which the validity of the deed may be assailed.
There is nothing in the case of Roller v. Cooley, 119 Va. 209, 89 S. E. 136, which is in conflict with the conclusion above reached. The latter case involved said resale act; and it is true that among the recitals in the tax deed made under such act was a recital that the Commonwealth obtained its title to the lot in question under a certain previous sale of it for delinquent taxes under which the Commonwealth did not in fact obtain its title. That title was obtained under another delinquent tax sale. Such recital therefore v/as erroneous. But that error was held to be immaterial because it concerned a proceeding which was prior to and was not embraced in the proceedings under said resale act; that the proceedings required by such act to be set forth in a deed under it are only those transpiring after the Commonwealth had obtained its title and which are mentioned in the act.
In the case last mentioned there was no question but that the proceedings under the resale act touching the steps *473required by such statute subsequent to the acquisition of its title by the Commonwealth and under which the tax deed under such statute was made, were all regular and in accordance with the requirements of the statute (consisting of a proper clerk’s list, treasurer’s notice of sale, sale, and report of sale, properly identifying the land, etc.) ; and hence it was held that the bar of section 12 of the statute applied and that the tax deed to the purchaser thereunder from the Commonwealth could be defeated only by proof of the existence of the facts mentioned in such section as grounds on which the validity of the deed could be assailed, viz: by proof that the taxes or levies for which the lot was sold to the Commonwealth were not properly chargeable thereon, or that the taxes and levies chargeable on such real estate had been paid.
There is a provision in section 10 of said act that the deed “* * * shall set forth all the facts appearing of record in the clerk’s office in relation to the sale,” similar to the provision on that subject in section 666 of the Code, and the effect of that provision and of section 12 aforesaid is to make the recitals in the tax deed, made and recorded under such act, prima\ facie, but not conclusive evidence of the existence of the jurisdictional steps recited.
Now the jurisdictional steps required by the provisions of the act under consideration, other than section 12 thereof, are, so far as material,«in substance as follows:
By section 1 the clerk of the circuit court of each county is required annually to “* * * prepare a. list of all town lots * * * within his county * * * and of all lots which are a part of some plat or subdivision of land, made as provided by acts of eighteen hundred and eighty-seven and eighteen hundred and eighty-eight, chapter four hundred and eighty-six and acts amendatory thereof, whether within the corporate limits of a town * * * of not, which have been purchased by the Commonwealth for delinquent *474taxes for more than four years prior to January first of the year in which such list is made, and which have not been redeemed; and said list shall show the person inwhose name the lot stood at the time of the purchase by the Commonwealth, and the amount required to redeem each of said lots, including the amount of taxes due for the year in which such lot is. sold, and the amount due the State, county and corporation, respectively, shall be stated in separate columns * *
Section 2 provides that said list shall be delivered by the clerk to the treasurer not later than a certain date each year: that the treasurer of the county shall within a certain time thereafter post printed copies of such list at the front •door of the court house and at least five public places in each magisterial district of the county; and that to each copy “the treasurer shall attach a notice that the real estate therein mentioned, or so much of each parcel thereof as may be necessary to satisfy the amount required to redeem the same * * * will be sold * * *” at a certain time and place to be set forth, in the notice “unless the amount required to redeem said lots * * * shall have been previously paid to such treasurer.” (Italics supplied.)
Section 4 provides that—“The treasurer on receiving from such purchaser the amount of his purchase, shall give him a receipt for the same in which he shall set forth with reasonable certainty a description erf the lot sold, in whose name it was sold, the price paid and the amount required to redeem the.said lot as aforesaid * * (Italics supplied.) It will be noted that the only source mentioned in the statute from which the treasurer could obtain this data is the clerk’s list aforesaid.
Sections 5 and 6 provide for a report of the treasurer of his sales, for confirmation of same by the court, after correcting them “when there is error,” and for recordation thereof.
*475The further material provisions of the resale act are as follows:
Section 10 provides that after and within a certain time, “if the real estate so sold has not been redeemed * ■ * * the purchaser of any such real estate, his heirs or assigns, shall obtain from the clerk of the circuit court of the county * * * whose officer has sold such real estate, a deed conveying the same, in which shall be set forth all the facts appearing of record in the clerk’s office in relation to the sale. The deed shall describe the lot with reference to the plat of subdivision of which it forms a part and according to which it was sold, or in such other way as will definitely describe it, and such information as may be necessary for such description, not appearing in his office, shall be furnished to the clerk by the purchaser at his own cost.”
Section 11 provides that if a deed is not made within the time prescribed by section 10 the former owner, etc., may thereafter and before such deed is made redeem the lot as provided for in such section. »
Section 14 provides that if there is an excess of purchase money from the sale of a lot above the amount required to redeem same as in ‘the act provided the former owner of the lot shall be entitled thereto if called for within five years after confirmation of report of sale.
The identity of the lot to which the Commonwealth acquired title in the instant case was fixed by the description of it contained in the list returned by the treasurer at the same time that he made his report of the sale of it to the Commonwealth. Sections 662 and 663 of the Code of Virginia (Pollard’s Code, 1904); Minor on Tax Titles, page 148.
To the acquisition by anyone from the Commonwealth of its title to such lot, by purchase under said resale act, it is essential, for many obvious reasons, that the identity of the lot proposed to be purchased as the same lot to which the *476Commonwealth had previously acquired title and proposed to sell, should be made to appear by a sufficient description of it for that purpose in the proceedings required by the act for the resale, as well as in the deed to the purchaser, required by such act.
That such is the requirement of said act is apparent from a reading of it as a whole. Indeed the requirement of the list of lots subject to sale under the act, by necessary implication, is a requirement of a valid list for that purpose. No list would be valid for such purpose unless it contained the sufficient description aforesaid, for that is the chief purpose and object of such a list. That section 1 of the act requires the list to show certain things expressly mentioned, but does not mention such description among them, does not controvert that conclusion, for the obvious reason that the legal import and meaning of the very word “list” aforesaid when used in its context in the statute, rendered it unnecessary for the statute to expressly require that it should contain a description of the lot or lots contained in the list. Without some description of them, indeed, it could not be a list of such lot or lots. Moreover, the language, of sections 2, 4 and 10, italicized in the above quotations therefrom, make it plain, as aforesaid, that the act requires the lists to contain a description of the lot or lots to be sold and conveyed.
That such a description as will identify the subject of the tax sale is absolutely essential to be contained in the proceedings required by statute anterior to the tax deed, In order that the deed may be valid to pass the title from the former owner to a purchaser at a delinquent tax sale by a treasurer, is well settled. Such anterior proceedings, in such case, and .the tax deed, are regarded as -an entirety, and the description of the subject of the tax sale must be consistent throughout. The power of sale, and the power of conveyance depend upon such identification of the subject *477matter thereof. Even a substantial variance between the description in the deed and the description in the anterior proceedings (a fortiori an entire lack of such description in the anterior proceedings), will be fatal to the deed. If the description in the deed contains substantially the same description as is contained in the anterior proceedings, that description may be enlarged, added to (as is authorized by section 10 of said resale act), by information derived from some source other than such proceedings; but the entire absence of any description in such proceedings cannot be supplied by the description contained in the deed, for that would be to base the deed, not upon such proceedings, as the statute requires for its validity, but upon information aliunde, which, whether correct or not, could not empower the officer of the law executing the deed in the exercise of a naked power to make a valid execution of it so as to pass title. 2 Blackwell on Tax Titles, sections 874, 875; Minor on Tax Titles, pages 120-1; Boon v. Simmons, 88 Va. 259, 266, 13 S. E. 439. The same rule must necessarily obtain, with respect to a tax deed passing title from the Commonwealth under said resale act, as well as under section 666 of the Code, since such statutes themselves make the tax deed depend for its validity upon the requirements of those statutes being complied with, as aforesaid.
And while section 10 of the said resale act, if read alone, might be construed to authorize the disregard of the rule next above adverted to, when read in the light of the other provisions of such statute having for their object the identification of the lot conveyed, and in the light of the authorities disclosing the legal principle involved, it is plain that such section does not authorize the disregard of such rule. We think that such section contemplates that the clerk’s list should contain at least the same description of the lot as that contained in the report of the treasurer of its sale to the Commonwealth, or substantially that description, so as *478to identify the lot, as the same as that to which the Commonwealth has title and which is proposed to be sold under the resale act, that such description may be enlarged as aforesaid, by information derived from the purchaser, but its.entire absence cannot be supplied by such, information, as aforesaid.
In the instant case the clerk’s list, the treasurer’s notice of sale and report of sale required by said resale act were alike fatally defective in that they contained no description of the lot in question. Only the name of the original land owner and the amount of the delinquent tax and levy stated, were given in the clerk’s list. And with respect to the identity of the land only that information was given by the treasurer’s notice of sale and report of sale. There was nothing in such proceedings to identify the lot listed and sold, as the lot to which the Commonwealth had title, as aforesaid. To establish a valid sale of the lot to him by the Commonwealth it was necessary for the appellant to show such identity by the record of such proceedings, through which he must derive title.
The circumstance appearing by evidence in pais that the former land owner was not assessed for 1907 with any other land as set forth in the statement of facts above is immaterial because the said resale act does not permit the appellant to derive title by facts in pais, but only by the proceedings of record aforesaid required by the statute. See Nowlin v. Burwell, 28 Graft. (69 Va.) 883-889.
It is true that under a well-settled rule, extraneous testimony is always admissible to apply the description in a tax deed, as in other deeds, to the subject of it, so as to identify the land on the ground; but this is a wholly different proposition from the admission of such testimony to identify the subject of a tax deed as the same which might or should have been described in the proceedings anterior to such deed required by statute to authorize the deed, but *479which description was not contained in such anterior proceedings. For the reasons above stated such omission of description cannot be supplied by including in the deed a description which is extraneous to the record.
Therefore the tax deed.to appellant involved in the instant case, was void and passed no title from the Commonwealth. It left the title to the lot in question still vested in the Commonwealth. In the holding of the decree complained of to this effect there was no error. But,
This brings us to the consideration of the remaining question raised by the assignments of error for our consideration, and that is-^-
2. Could the appellee, who had not, nor had anyone for him, before he instituted this suit, redeemed the lot in question from its sale to the Commonwealth, maintain this suit to cancel and remove the deed aforesaid as a cloud upon his title?
It is well settled that where the Commonwealth has obtained a good title to land as against its original owner; where the latter, or those claiming under him have not redeemed the land, nor any for them; and there has been a tax deed, which is void, purporting to convey the title oí the Commonwealth'.to another; the title still remains in the Commonwealth, and the former owner or those claiming the land under him cannot maintain a suit to cancel and remove the deed as a cloud upon the title to the land. Roller v. Cooley, 119 Va. 209, 89 S. E. 136; Mathews v. Glenn, 100 Va. 352, 41 S. E. 735; Parsons v. Newman, 99 Va. 298, 38 S. E. 186; Baker v. Buckner, 99 Va. 368, 38 S. E. 280.
The certain quasi-rights given to the former owner of the land and to appellee claiming under him by said resale act, notwithstanding the ownership thereof by the Commonwealth, are rights of the same nature as those enjoyed by .the parties occupying the same relationship to the land in the cases last cited, under similar statute law; and yet they *480were held to have no right to maintain a suit such as that before us unless and until they or some one for them, had divested the Commonwealth of its title and vested it in themselves by redemption of the land as provided for by statute.
Such is the instant case and the position of appellee at the time that he instituted this suit. Hence the question under consideration must be answered in the negative.
The suit of appellee, therefore, was prematurely brought. He should have first redeemed the lot in question as the statute provides, by proceedings to that end, as if the tax deed to appellant had never been executed.
The decree complained of must therefore be set aside and annulled, without prejudice, however, to the appellee to redeem the lot in question according to law and to thereafter institute his suit against the appellant should he be so advised, to cancel and remove the deed aforesaid as a cloud upon the title to the lot, unless the need of such suit be obviated by proper voluntary action on the part of appellant, before such suit is instituted by quitclaim deed or otherwise.
Reversed.