One of the findings of fact of the court below, is that the Revenue Cutter, defendant, was and for some time prior to the commencement of this action had been continuously in the charge and possession of Captain J. W. White and Lieutenant J. Brown, officers of the United States, or of men employed by them, or one of them on behalf of and in *252the service of the United States, and that it was at the time of its seizure by the sheriff, under the warrant issued in this action, in the actual charge and possession of a servant of the United States, acting under the direction and orders of said officers; and that the watchman of the Oregon Iron Works, who remained on board the vessel at night from the second to the fourteenth of November, 1876, was subject to the orders and control of those officers.
We think that these findings of fact are equivalent to finding that at the time of the commencement of this action and the seizure of the vessel the government of the United States was, by its officers and servants, in the possession of the vessel. We are further of the opinion that such possession was sufficient to exempt the property from the process of the courts of this state.
It came clearly within the principle announced in the case of the Davis, 10 Wall. 15. We quote from the opinion in that .case the definition of a possession by the government of the United States, which will exempt property from the process of the courts. “The possession which will do this must be an actual possession, and not that mere constructive possession, which is very often implied by reason of ownership under circumstances favorable to such an implication. We are speaking now of a possession which can only be changed, under the process of the court by bringing the officer of the court into collision with the officer of the government, if the latter should choose to resist. The possession of the government can only exist through some of its officers, using that phrase in the sense of any person charged on behalf of the government with the control of the property coupled with its actual possession. This, we think, is a sufficiently liberal definition of the possession of property by the government to prevent any unseemly conflict between the courts and the other departments of the government, and which is consistent with the principle which exempts the government from suit and its possession from disturbance by judicial process.”
We think that the findings of fact in this case clearly show that the officers of the United States were, at the time *253of the seizure of the revenue cutter, in such an actual and rightful possession of the vessel that, had they chosen to resist, a collision would have resulted between them and the officers of the court.
The United States cannot be sued in the courts, nor can its property be taken from its possession by process issued by the courts without its consent expressed by a law enacted by congress. (Briggs v. Light Boats, 11 Allen, 157.) It is contended by counsel for appellants that the exemption of the government of the United States from suit in the courts is in the nature of a personal privilege, and must be pleaded in abatement, and that the United States having pleaded to the merits cannot thereafter raise the question. . We cannot assent to this doctrine.
The exemption of the government from being sued in the courts without its consent is an attribute of its sovereignty, and its consent to be sued must be shown by some act of congress expressly to that effect. In the ease of United States v. Clarke, 8 Pet. 444, Chief Justice Marshall said: “As the United States are not suable of common right, the party who institutes such suit must bring his case within the authority of some act of congress, or the court cannot exercise jurisdiction over it.”
We are aware that the learned judge of the United States district court for this district has, in a proceeding to enforce a lien under the state law upon the same vessel, defendant in this action, rendered a decision which might at first view seem adverse to the views which we have herein expressed. (The Revenue Cutter, the United States claimant, decided in U. S. Dist. Ct. for Oregon, Jan. 2, 1878.) We have carefully examined the opinion in that case, and find nothing in it adversé to the views of the law which we herein express. The court in that case found the facts in regard to the possession of the United States differently from the findings of the court below. It found that the United States at the time of the seizure was not in the rightful possession of the vessel.
We have repeatedly decided that under our statute, the findings of fact of the court below, like the special verdict *254of a jury, are not reviewable here. It is not for us to express any opinion as to the correctness of the findings of fact of the court below, in regard to the possession of tbe , vessel.
We are governed by those facts as presented by tbe findings. Had tbe United States district judge found tbat the United States was in tbe actual possession of tbe vessel at tbe time of tbe seizure, we are satisfied from tbe reasoning used by him, tbat be would have arrived at tbe same conclusion of law as we herein announce. Tbe notice of appeal contains a number of assignments of error, but we think tbat all of any importance are disposed of by tbe views already announced.
Tbe decision of tbe court below dismissing tbe complaint, was correct, and tbe judgment must be affirmed.