delivered the opinion of the court.
1. Defendant insists that the plaintiff cannot now question the ruling on the demurrer to the amended complaint, for the reason that a judgment was rendered at that time dismissing so much of the pleading as related to the matter covered by the demurrer, and that more than six months had elapsed thereafter before the appeal was taken. A demurrer is a part of the proceeding by which a cause is put at issue, and the order sustaining it eliminates from the pleading the matter so demurred to.
*5132. No further order or judgment is required or effective for that purpose; and the ruling thereon may be reviewed upon appeal from the final decree or judgment, regardless of the time that may have.elapsed since the entry thereof: Section 557, B. & C. Comp. This is clearly a proper interpretation of the statute relating thereto; and to hold otherwise would be to establish a •very cumbersome and dilatory practice, as well as one burdensome to the courts.
3. This demurrer is anomalous in the fact that it is not directed to the complaint or a cause of action therein, but to only a part of the relief sought. The order sustaining it did not eliminate a paragraph or even a sentence thereof, but only determined that plaintiff was not entitled to all the relief he asked. Section 69, B. & C. Comp, provides that “it (the demurrer) may be taken- to the whole complaint, or to any of the alleged causes of action stated therein.”
4. It may be that this complaint contains matters that constitute several causes of suit, but it is, in fact, stated as one cause. If defendant desired to take advantage of that fact, it should have done so by motion to strike out the complaint, because it contains several causes of suit not separately stated under Section 106, B. & C. Comp.; but, not having done so, the error is waived, and the complaint must be treated as one cause of suit. The demurrer is not available-to -question any part of the pleading less than a cause of action or defense. Here it only attacks a part of the recovery sought, claiming that the prayer asks too much. This point is quite similar to the one decided in Sunnyside L. Co. v. Bridge Ry. Co. 20 Or. 544, 546 (26 Pac. 835, 836), in which Mr. Justice Bean says:
“If the allegations of the complaint, in which plaintiff seeks to lay down the rule by which the damages are to be estimated, are insufficient or irrelevant, the defect cannot be reached by demurrer, so long as the other parts of the complaint contain a sufficient statement.”
*5145. Section 68, B. & C. Comp, provides that the defendant may demur to the complaint when it appears on the face thereof that the action has not been commenced within the time limited by this code; but the demurrer here does not come within that statute. It is admitted that there is a good cause stated for part of the claim, and the amount of the recovery is to be determined at the trial. However, both plaintiff and defendant, as well as the court below, have treated it as questioning the extent of plaintiff’s right of recovery. And we shall so consider it.
6. The plaintiff insists that the statute of limitations does not apply to any part of the claim sought to be recovered, for the reason that by the act of 1870 (Laws 1870, p. 14) the State reserved a portion of the tolls to itself, to be collected by the company as the agent of the State, and that, when the company received the same, it did so in trust for the State, and that the statute in such a ease does not commence to run until a demand is made or an accounting had; but we think the premise is wrong. The State did not reserve a portion of the tolls, but authorized the company to take the tolls and “pay to the State of Oregon 10 per cent of the net profits arising therefrom”—a per cent of what is left after the- expenses are paid, which is not specific money, but an unknown quantity until the accounting is had and a balance ascertained. This is the holding in the case of Railroad Co. v. Maryland, 21 Wall. (U. S.) 456 (22 L. Ed. 678). There the statute reserved to the state one fifth of the gross receipts for fares on the railway, and the State claimed that even if the act Was in violation of the United States Constitution, yet the money was received, as a trust fund, collected by the company for the state, as its agent, and therefore it must account; but the court holds that “we cannot concur in the position that any part of the passenger money, when received by the *515company, became or was the money of the state. It was the money of the railroad company alone.”
7. Counsel for plaintiff in their argument seek to make a distinction in the application of the statute of limitations to suits brought by the State in its sovereign capacity and to those involving contractual relations. This question is discussed in Schneider v. Hutchinson, 35 Or. 253 (57 Pac. 324: 76 Am. St. Rep. 474), in which the court hold that all suits by the State, whether brought in its sovereign or its proprietary capacity, are alike within the statute. In this case the liability is for a debt —a charge upon the franchise against which the statute may run. Prior to May 21, 1903, the statute of limitations applied to actions brought in the name of the State, the same as to those brought by private parties: Section 13, B. & C. Comp. Therefore we conclude that the State is barred from recovering herein for any amounts accrued prior to May 21, 1897.
8. Defendant claims that the first company acquired its rights and franchises, by which it owned and operated the canal and locks, by virtue of the general statute of 1862, authorizing the organization of corporations, which is found at page 658 in the code of 1866, known as Deady’s Code - (B. & C. Comp. §§ 5052-5075), and not by virtue of the act of 1870. This is the principal point of contention between plaintiff and defendant; and we shall first consider the effect of the statute of 1862. Section 4 thereof provides what the articles of incorporation shall specify, and Section 5 defines what the powers and authority of a corporation shall be; but neither of these sections grant any franchise other than the right to incorporate. Sections 23 and 24 extend to the corporations therein mentioned, which include those organized for' the construction of canals, the power to exercise the right of eminent domain. This right is available or necessary only when a public interest is to be served, and when the exercise of the right of eminent domain is necessary *516to enable the company to carry out the purpose of its organization: Railroad Co. v. Maryland, 21 Wall. (U. S.) 456 (22 L. Ed. 678). It does not transfer to such a corporation the title to, or the use of, any public property, rights, or easements.
9. It is maintained by defendant that Section 20 of this act, is a grant of the State’s right in the public highway and the right to construct and operate the canal, as well as the right of eminent domain; but the only purpose of the first portion of that section is to enlarge the powers of corporations organized for purposes of navigation so as to authorize the construction of railroads or canals necessary to such navigation, as though that had been originally included in their articles, and nothing more. Its language is: “Any corporation formed for the purpose of navigating any stream or other water, may, by virtue of such incorporation, construct any * * canal * * necessary * * in like manner and with like effect as if such corporation had been specially formed for such purposes.” Therefore no other right, power, or franchise is granted thereby to a corporation organized for such a purpose than is given by Section 23, viz., it confers the right of eminent domain for canal purposes upon a corporation whose charter is otherwise not broad enough to include it, and nothing more. Besides, that section relates only to corporations organized for navigation, and does not apply to the Willamette Falls Canal & Lock Co., as that is a corporation for construction, and is fully provided for by Section 23. But the construction and operation of a canal and locks as part of a navigable river, and the taking of tolls thereon are franchises that cannot be exercised without permission from the State.
10. A corporation may take advantage of the privileges and franchises granted by the general law of incorporation by including in its articles any of these privileges and franchises it may desire to exercise, and to that extent the articles stand as the legislative charter *517of the company, but it cannot exercise powers or privileges not enumerated therein, and can exercise no power not authorized by the statute, even though enumerated in its articles. “A corporation can exercise no power or authority which is not granted to it by the charter under which it exists, or by some other act of the legislature which granted that charter”: Oregon Ry. Co. v. Oregonian Ry. Co. 130 U. S. 1, 21 (9 Sup. Ct. 409: 32 L. Ed. 837). In such a case as this tolls are nowhere authorized by the general statute: Lansing v. Smith, 4 Wend. (N. Y.) 9 (21 Am. Dec. 89) ; 5 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2 ed.) 117; Toll Road Co. v. People ex rel. 22 Colo. 429 (45 Pac. 398: 37 L. R. A. 711) ; Winchester & L. T. R. Co. v. Croxton, 98 Ky. 739 (34 S. W. 518: 33 L. R. A. 177); Perrine v. Chesapeake & D. C. Co. 9 How. (U. S.) 171 (13 L. Ed. 92) ; State v. Olcott, 6 N. H. 74; Olcott v. Banfill, 4 N. H. 537.
11. It is universally held that all grants of franchises are to be strictly construed against the grantee. Nothing passes by implication. Mr. Justice Gray, in Shively v. Bowlby, 152 U. S. 1 (14 Sup. Ct. 548: 38 L. Ed. 331), quotes with approval from Sir William Scott: “All grants of the crown are to be strictly construed against the grantee, contrary to the usual policy of the law in the consideration of'grants; and upon this just ground, that the prerogatives and rights and emoluments of the crown being conferred upon it for great purposes, and for the public use, it shall not be intended that such prerogatives, rights, and emoluments are diminished by any grant beyond what such grant by necessary and unavoidable construction shall take away”: Charles River Bridge v. Warren Bridge, 11 Pet. (U. S.) 420 (9 L. Ed. 733, 938) ; Oregon Ry. Co. v. Oregonian Ry. Co. 130 U. S. 1 (9 Sup. Ct. 409: 32 L. Ed. 837) ; Turnpike Co. v. Illinois, 96 U. S. 63 (24 L. Ed. 651) ; Dubuque & Pac. R. Co. v. Litchfield, 23 How. (U. S.) 66 (16 L. Ed. 500).
*51812. It is maintained by defendant that the locks were constructed on land owned in fee by the first company, and that, by reason thereof, under its common-law right, it had the right to take tolls and also to transfer to whom it pleased; but such right does not apply in relation to franchises intended in a large measure to be exercised for the public service. Such an undertaking is one, the exercise of which belongs exclusively to the State, or to those to whom it may delegate it. It is not one of common right, and is subject in the hands of such delegated agent to any restricions that may be imposed by the State. In Sturgeon Bay H. Co. v. Leatham, 164 Ill. 239, 244 (45 N. E. 422, 424), the court, in discussing the power of corporations to take toll, quote from Perrine v. Canal Co. 9 How. (U. S.) 172 (13 L. Ed. 92), as follows: “A corporation created by statute is a mere creature of the law, and can exercise no powers except those which the law confers upon it, or which are incident to its existence. And as no power is-given to this corporation to demand toll from passengers, or from vessels on account of the passengers on board, it is very clear that no such power can be exercised, and no such toll lawfully taken”—and then says: “Appellant’s counsel insist that the appellant company is the owner of the canal, and has the common-law right of any owner to exact a compensation for the use of what belongs to it. This doctrine is not applicable here. The appellant corporation has no rights of property except those conferred by its' charter, and can only exercise such rights of property as are necessary to effectuate the objects for which the legislature created it. ‘Whether it may lawfully demand compensation from a person whom it permits to pass over its property must depend upon the language of its charter, and not upon the rules of the common law’: Perrine v. Canal Co. 9 How. (U. S.) 172 (13 L. Ed. 92).”
13. In the case of Perrine v. Canal Co. cited in that opinion, in discussing this same question, it is said:
*519“Now it is the well-settled doctrine of this court that a corporation created by statute is a mere creature of the law, and can exercise no powers except those which the law confers upon it, or which are incident to its existence. * * The principle above stated is also an answer to the argument which places the right of the company to demand toll upon the ground that it is the absolute owner of the works and of the land it occupies, and insists that it may therefore, like any other owner, demand compensation from any person passing over its property. The error of this argument consists in regarding the title of the company to the property in question, as derived to them upon common-law principles, and measuring their rights by the rules of the common law. The corporation has no rights of property except those derived from the provisions of the charter, nor can it exercise any powers over the property it holds except those with which the charter has clothed it. It holds the property only for the purposes with which it was permitted to acquire it; that is, to effectuate the objects for which the legislature created it. And whether it may lawfully demand compensation from a person whom it permits to pass over its property must depend upon the language of the charter, and not upon the rules of
the common law.” See, also, Oregon Ry. Co. v. Oregonian Ry. Co. 130 U. S. 1 (9 Sup. Ct. 409: 32 L. Ed. 837) ; 2 Sutherland, Statutory Construction, § 549. Defendant’s claim that the canal was built upon land which the first company owned in fee is not entirely correct. The upland owner bordering upon a navigable stream owns only to the high-water line. The river, and its banks and bed belong to the State: Montgomery v. Shaver, 40 Or. 244 (66 Pac. 923) ; Wilson v. Welch, 12 Or. 353 (7 Pac. 341) ; Bowlby v. Shively, 22 Or. 410 (30 Pac. 154) ; Johnson v. Knott, 13 Or. 308 (10 Pac. 418) ; 4 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2 ed.), 825; 21 Am. & Eng. *520Enc. Law (2 ed.), 436; Railroad Co. v. Schurmeir, 7 Wall. (U. S.) 272 (19 L. Ed. 74) ; Shively v. Bowlby, 152 U. S. 1 (14 Sup. Ct. 548: 38 L. Ed. 331).
14. Although the answer here alleges ownership of the canal and locks in fee, the court will take notice of the fact that the predecessors of defendant could acquire rights in the bed, banks, or water of the river only by an' act of the legislature; and, whether the locks are within the banks of the river or not, the canal at both ends must reach deep water. Thus it would seem to be very necessary for the defendant to claim its franchises through the act of 1870.
15. When the first company accepted the franchise to construct the canal and locks, and constructed them principally upon land which it owned in fee, such land thereby became a part of the highway to the same extent as it would have done if originally owned by a stranger and the company had acquired it by the exercise of the right of eminent domain. It was equivalent to a dedication to that extent: Olcott v. Banfill et al. 4 N. H. 537; Toll Road Co. v. People ex rel. 22 Colo. 429 (45 Pac. 398: 37 L. R. A. 711); Elliott, Roads & Streets, 54; 29 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2 ed.), 5.
16. And now looking at the special acts of 1870, 1876, 1878, and 1882, we find that by the preamble to the act of 1870 the first company was incorporated for the purpose of constructing a canal and locks, and that the State, by that act,- appropriated to it the sum of $200,000 upon certain conditions; and every requirement imposed upon the company by the act was a condition of the appropriation and other rights granted. The act must be considered as an entirety. ' The corporation was organized only for the purpose of construction. Therefore, by its charter, it could not operate the locks, but by the act of 1870 it was authorized and required to construct and operate them, which enlarged its charter, and, by implication, included the right to appropriate *521the bed and banks of the river, so far as needed, and to divert the water necessary for its purposes. In other words, it extended to the company the State’s power and right to do these things. This act limited the rate of toll, and exacted a payment to the State of 10 per cent of the profits therefrom, thus • impliedly authorizing the collection of tolls. Also it reserved the right, or exacted the condition, that the State, at the expiration of 20 years-, should have the right to appropriate the canal and locks upon paying therefor. The preamble to the act of 1876 refers to the act of 1870 as granting “privileges, rights, and pecuniary aid,” thus construing it as a franchise granting more than pecuniary aid, so that the act of 1870 became a part of the company’s charter.
17. Again, as to the power of the first company to transfer its franchises, the grant was made to the first company with no power to transfer. Without such authority a transfer is void, and does not relieve the franchise of any of the burdens imposed by the act of its creation. These burdens are a charge upon the franchise, not upon the land as such, and may be enforced against the person or corporation exercising it: State v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co. 36 Minn. 207 (30 N. W. 663) ; Railroad Co. v. Maryland, 21 Wall. (U. S.) 456 (22 L. Ed. 678). This is the effect of the decision in Lakin v. Railroad Co. 13 Or. 436 (11 Pac. 68: 57 Am. Rep. 25), in which Mr. Justice Lord says: “A railroad corporation organized under it (the general law) has no authority, without the consent of the legislature, to lease its road, and that, when it has done so, it is responsible to the public for the manner of operating the road. As to the public, those operating it must be regarded as agents of the corporation.” Where a corporation “has granted to it by charter a franchise intended in large measure to be exercised for the public good, the due performance of those functions being' the consideration of the public grant, any contract which disables the corporation from *522performing those functions which undertakes, without the consent of the State, to transfer to others the rights and powers conferred by the charter, and to relieve the grantees of the burden which it imposes, is a violation of the contract with the State, and is void as against public policy”: Thomas v. Railroad Co. 101 U. S. 71, 83 (25 L. Ed. 950). In Railroad Co. v. Winans, 17 How. (U. S.) 30, 39 (15 L. Ed. 27), it is said: “This conclusion [argument] implies that the duties imposed upon the plaintiff by the charter are fulfilled by the construction of the road, and that by alienating its right to use, and its powers of control and supervision, it may avoid further responsibility. But those acts involve an overturn of the relations which the charter has arranged between the corporation and the community. Important franchises were conferred upon the corporation to enable it to provide the facilities to communication and intercourse required for the public convenience. Corporate management and control over these were prescribed, and corporate responsibility for their insufficiency provided, as a remuneration to the community for their grant. The corporation cannot absolve itself from the performance of its obligations without the consent of the legislature.” In Black v. Canal Co. 22 N. J. Eq. 130, 399, the court say: “It may be considered as settled that a corporation cannot lose 'or alien any franchise or any property necessary to perform its obligations and duties to the State without legislative authority.” See, also, Toll Road Co. v. People ex rel. 22 Colo. 429 (45 Pac. 398: 37 L. R. A. 711) ; Penn. Co. v. St. Louis R. 118 U. S. 290 (6 Sup. Ct. 1094: 30 L. Ed. 83) ; Chicago Gaslight Co. v. People’s Gaslight Co. 121 Ill. 530 (13 N. E. 169) ; Stewart’s Appeal, 56 Pa. 413. The right of a corporation to transfer its franchises was the only issue involved in Oregon Ry. Co. v. Oregonian Ry. Co. 130 U. S. 1 (9 Sup. Ct. 409: 32 L. Ed. 837), under the general statute of 1862, the one involved here, *523and, after a thorough examination thereof, holds that it did not authorize a corporation to sell or lease its entire property, franchises, and powers to another company.
18. Counsel for defendant seem to claim something from the amendments of the act construed in that case: Deady’s Gen. Laws, p. 659, c. 8, § 5. Section 5 thereof (B. & C. Comp. § 5056) was amended in 1878 (Laws 1878, p. 90, § 1) by adding to subdivision 4 a clause giving a corporation power to receive and dispose of property donated to it for the purpose of aiding the objects of such corporation, but has no reference to the disposition of its franchises. This section was again amended in 1887 (Laws 1887, p. 14, § 1) by adding subdivision 7, which relates only to railroads, and evidently for the purpose of avoiding the effect of the ruling in Oregon Ry. Co. v. Oregonian Ry. Co. 130 U. S. 1 (9 Sup. Ct. 409: 32 L. Ed. 837), and also in recognition of the fact that at that time a corporation could not transfer its franchise, and neither of these amendments aid defendant here, and the act of 1905, authorizing corporations to transfer their property and franchise, can have no bearing upon this case.
19. As to the legislative act of 1876, the first company transferred its interests to the second company on March 8, 1876, without the consent of the legislature, and on October 19, 1876, that body, evidently knowing of such transfer, and that the second company was a transportation company and would pass its own vessels through the locks, and that it was thus in a position both to discriminate against other boatowners and to defeat the State, provided by the act of that date against such discrimination, and created a board of canal commissioners to supervise these matters. It was provided that the secretary of this board should keep account of the freight and passengers passing through the locks, and that the boatowners, which would include the second company itself, should furnish to the secretary lists of *524the amount of freight and the number of passengers, and also that the company operating the canal should furnish a detailed statement of expenses that the net profits might be ascertained. The provisions of the act of 1870, although not re-enacted in this statute, are not repealed but remain intact, and it is very plain that the purpose of the act of 1876 was to put the State in a position to collect its 10 per cent of the net profits in addition to the other purposes above mentioned. Section 18, p. 19, being the emergency clause, expressly states that, as there is a necessity for accurate records relating to the locks, the interests of the State therein should be represented, and that there is apprehension in the minds of the people as to the situation, making it important that the act take effect immediately. This emergency clause aids us in understanding what was in the mind of the legislators when considering the measure. It would seem from the whole act that language could hardly make it plainer, that its purpose was to aid in the enforcement of the legislative act of 1870, and for no other purpose. It creates no additional burdens, and makes no change in the original liabilities and obligations of the first company. The act studiously avoids recognizing the second company in terms, but refers to “any and every person, corporation, company, or agent for, or employee of, either having authoritative charge or control of, or owning or claiming to own, or having any interest in the Willamette Falls canal and locks,” and “or any party claiming under said corporation by virtue of assignment.” If this may be considered as authorizing or recognizing- the transfer, or consenting thereto, it is on condition that the second company shall stand in the place of the first company and bear the burdens of the act of 1870. At any rate, it cannot be construed as recognizing a transfer free from those obligations. The acts of 1878 and 1882 contain provisions only to lessen expense to the State and to aid it in secur*525ing the fulfillment of the terms of the act of 1870, and do not ignore but emphasize them.
In Thomas v. Railroad Co. 101 U. S. 71 (25 L. Ed. 950), a lease had been made, and thereafter the legislature passed an act in which it referred to the company or its “lessees”; and this was held not to be a ratification of the lease. In Oregon Ry. Co. v. Oregonian Ry. Co. 130 U. S. 1 (9 Sup. Ct. 409: 32 L. Ed. 837), the effect of a special act of the legislature of Oregon, granting certain privileges to a corporation and to its “successors and assigns” (Laws 1880, p. 56) was under consideration, which it was claimed authorized a transfer or lease by the defendant. But it was held that it could not be so construed. Even if this transfer be recognized as effective to pass the title, yet, when the second company purchased the canal and locks, it was the purchase of a franchise—a creation of the. legislature—and must be accepted as created with its privileges, but also subject to its burdens. 2 Borer, Bailroads, ,882, says: “It is merely the purchase of a privilege of being subrogated to and recognized by the State as the corporate entity in lieu of the original corporators, and the terms of the old charter become those of the new by legal enactment without a repetition of the words.” Such was held to be the effect of a transfer in State v. Northern Pac. Ry. 36 Minn. 207 (30 N. W. 663), where the assignee was required to pay the percentage of earnings provided in the charter of the original company. Also in Mayor v. Twenty-Third St. R. Co. 113 N. Y. 311 (21 N. E. 60), a provision of a special act of the legislature modified the liability of the company under the general statute. This provision was held to be an amendment of the charter, and, as in' the case before us, required the company to pay to the city 1 per cent of the gross receipts of the road. By authority of a special act of the legislature, the original company leased the road to the defendant for 99 years. But neither by the lease nor by the terms *526of the statute was it expressly required to pay the 1 per cent of earnings; and the court say it was a charter obligation. “The entity called a corporation, consists of the sum total of all its charter powers and rights, and all its charter obligations and duties; and such powers and rights cannot be effectually'divorced from such obligations and duties. The latter are correlatives to the former, and constitute the consideration for the corporate franchises, and their performance may be exacted as a condition of corporate existence. Hence, when the defendant took the property, rights, privileges, and franchises of the Bleecker Street & Fulton Ferry Railroad Co. it took them burdened with its charter obligations.” See, also, Harmon v. Columbia & G. R. Co. 28 S. C. 401 (5 S. E. 835: 13 Am. Rep. 686).
20. A franchise does not involve an interest- in land. It is not real estate, but a privilege which may be owned without the acquisition of real property at all. The use of a franchise niay require the occupancy or even the ownership of land, but that circumstance does not make the franchise itself an interest in land. A franchise is (1) an incorporeal hereditament; and (2) a privilege or authority vested in certain persons by grant of the State to exercise powers or to do and perform acts which, without such grant, they could not do or perform. A franchise consists in the incorporeal right, The property acquired is not the franchise: Consolidated Gas Co. v. Mayor, etc. 101 Md. 541 (61 Atl. 532: 1 L. R. A. (N. S.) 263: 109 Am. St. Rep. 584). The first company could not transfer its franchise free from its burdens, nor could the transferee company avoid liability, even though in its purchase it did not expressly assume the burdens. The cases cited make it plain, that the burden is upon the franchise, and not dependent on any theory of a lien or covenant running with the land: Chicago, R. I. Ry. Co. v. Zernecke, 183 U. S. 582 (22 Sup. Ct. *527229: 46 L. Ed. 339) ; Railroad Co. v. Maryland, 21 Wall. (U. S.) 456 (22 L. Ed. 678).
21. The second and third defenses of the answer are based largely upon the legislative acts of 1870 and 1876 as viewed from defendant’s standpoint; but our interpretation thereof in this opinion practically disposes of these defenses. The second defense is to the effect that the State is estopped from asserting its claim by reason of the provisions of the act of 1876 in acquiescing in the transfer by the first® company to the second company,' and as equivalent to an abandonment by the State of the provisions of the act of 1870, and also by reason of its acquiescence in defendant’s ownership, and laches in enforcing its claim. As we have seen, the legislature did not by the act of 1876 approve or recognize the assignment by the first company to the second company, or to any extent waive the benefits arising under the act of 1870, but rather made them more secure by that act; and, therefore it constitutes no foundation for estoppel. The only acquiesence by the State in plaintiff’s purchase and improvements of the locks claimed by defendant is the inaction of its ■ officers, principally in that they did not collect the 10 per cent of the profits. But the laches of the officers of the State in collecting installments due cannot operate as a waiver of a continuing liability for a share of the profits or a recognition of defendant’s ownership free from it: United States v. Kirpatrick, 9 Wheat. (U. S.) 720 (6 L. Ed. 199).
22. Neither can it be construed as silence by the State when it ought to speak. Estoppels in pais against the State will not arise from the laches of its officers: 16 Cyc. 780; State ex rel. Lott v. Brewer, 64 Ala. 287. The cases of City of Bradford v. Tel. & Tel. Co. 206 Pa. 582 (56 Atl. 41) ; Commonwealth v. Turnpike Co. 153 Pa. 47 (25 Atl. 1105) ; Penn. R. Co. v. Montgomery Co. Pass Ry. 167 Pa. 62 (31 Atl. 468: 27 L. R. A. 766: 46 Am. Rep. 659), and other cases cited by defendant *528upon this point, relate to acquiescence by the State or municipality in appropriation by a- corporation of streets for railway purposes, and are not in point upon the question here.
23. The purchase by the second company or by this defendant was not inconsistent with, or adverse to, any interest of the State that required the State to act. There was no apparent attempt to transfer any interest of the State. It had a right to assume that the purchaser would 'fulfill the obligations of the first company. To constitute estoppel by conduct there must (1) be a false representation; (2) it must be made with knowledge of the facts; (3) the other party must have been ignorant of the truth; (4) it must have been made with the intention that it should be acted upon by the other party; (5) the other party must have been induced to act upon it: Bigelow, Estoppel (5 ed.), 569, 570.
24. The conduct complained of here is that plaintiff stood by and saw its rights interfered with; that is, was silent when it was its duty to speak: 16 Cyc. 759, 770. There are several answers to this claim: First, the plaintiff’s right as to the share of the profits was not being questioned, no mention was made of it in the transfer, nor was the transfer inconsistent therewith. The officers of the State had no power or authority to hold out to the defendant that the State would consent to the transfer or waive any right. The defendant knew the facts, and gave the State no intimation that it was intending to deny the State’s right to a share of the profits; so that the answer does not allege facts sufficient to constitute an estoppel against the State.
25. The third defense of the answer is that plaintiff seeks to take the property of defendant without due process of law, in violation of Article XIV of the Constitution of the United States, and also is based upon defendant’s alleged fee-simple title to the canal and locks independent of and free from any burdens imposed by *529the act of 1870; but, as we have already shown, the defendant acquired the property subject to these burdens, and therefore the enforcement of them is no violation of the constitutional provision relied on.
26. It is urged by defendant that the title of the act of 1870 is not broad enough to authorize the provision of Section 5 thereof, which provides for payment to the State of 10 per cent of the net profits of the tolls, as a condition upon which the grant is made, within the provisions of Article IV, Section 20, Constitution Oregon, which provides that “every act shall embrace but one subject, and matters properly connected therewith, which subject shall be expressed in the title.” But this condition of Section 5 is clearly a matter “properly connected” with the subject of the act. It is the condition upon which the grant is made, with a view to partial compensation to the State for the grant. It certainly is not foreign to the subject.
27. It is said by Mr. Justice Bean in State v. Shaw, 22 Or. 287 (29 Pac. 1028) : “To be fatal, the departure from the title must be plain and manifest, and all doubts will be resolved in favor of the law. If all the provisions of the law relate directly or indirectly to the same subject, are naturally connected, and are not foreign to the subject expressed in the title, they will not be held unconstitutional as in violation of this clause of the constitution. * * This clause is not violated by any legislative act having various details properly pertinent and germane to one general object.” To the same effect is the opinion of Mr. Chief Justice Lord, in State v. Koshland, 25 Or. 178 (35 Pac. 32), and he says: “If the matters embraced in the act are congruous, and have a proper relation to each other, and are not foreign to the subject expressed in the title, the requirements of the provision are not violated.” See, also, Ex parte Howe, 26 Or. 181 (37 Pac. 536). The title to this act contemplates the construction of the canal and locks, and the *530act may properly embrace provisions for its operation, including compensation to the State, and is not obnoxious to this clause of the constitution within the rules above quoted.
[98 Pac. 160.]28. However, the first company accepted the provisions and benefits of the act of 1870 and acted upon it for several years, and cannot be heard to question its validity: Corey v. Eastman, 166 Mass. 279 (44 N. E. 217: 55 Am. Rep. 401) ; Ashley v. Ryan, 153 U. S. 436 (14 Sup. Ct. 865: 38 L. Ed. 773) ; Daniels v. Tearney, 102 U. S. 415 (26 L. Ed. 187) ; Chicago, R. I. Ry. Co. v. Zernecke, 183 U. S. 582 (22 Sup. Ct. 229: 46 L. Ed. 339) ; De Lamar’s Nev. G. M. Co. v. Nesbitt, 177 U. S. 523 (20 Sup. Ct. 715: 44 L. Ed. 872).
29. Since the defendant has acquired from the first company what rights it now enjoys, and can occupy no better position as against the State than it did, defendant is also estopped from questioning the validity of the act of 1870: Mayor v. M. Ry. Co. 143 N. Y. 1 (37 N. E. 494) ; Mayor v. Twenty-Third St. Ry. Co. 113 N. Y. 311 (21 N. E. 60).
Therefore the decree is reversed and remanded, with instructions to sustain the demurrer as to each defense of the answer, and for such further proceedings as may be proper. Reversed.