The question presented involves the construction of Chapter 32, Laws of 1920, entitled “An act relating to the use, leasing and sale of gravel, rock and sand in the beds of navigable streams, and under navigable'waters, by the state land board; relating to and providing penalties for the violation of this °act, and declaring an emergency,” and the powers and duties of the state land board thereunder. The material provisions of the enactment are as follows:
“Section 1. The state land board is hereby authorized to lease the beds of navigable portions of navigable streams for the purpose of removing gravel, .rock and sand therefrom. Such lease shall not be made except after notice of competitive bidding. * *
“Section 2. Any person desiring to take gravel, rock or sand from state properties may apply to the state land board for a lease, and such application shall be accompanied by a map showing the premises and the ownership of the abutting property. After *258such, notice as may be prescribed by the state land board, it shall receive sealed bids on the lease and thereafter award the lease to the highest bidder. * *
“Section 3. The state land board may thereafter enter into contract of lease with such stipulations protecting the interest of the state, as the land board may require, and require a bond to be given by the lessee for performance of such stipulations, and providing for forfeiture for nonpayment or failure to operate under said contract. * * ”
Section 4 permits the employment of assistance to carry out the terms of the act, and requires the services of the attorney general and state engineer when needed. It specifies also that after the payment of all incidental expenses the proceeds of sales and leases under the act are to be turned over to the irreducible school fund. Subject to the exceptions therein stated, Section. 5 makes it unlawful for anyone to remove gravel, rock, or sand from the bed of any navigable stream without the consent of the state land board, and specifies a jail sentence or a fine for violation of the act.
The answer states and the demurrer admits that the rules and regulations were adopted by the board “for the purpose of carrying out and making effective the provisions of Chapter 32,” Laws of 1920, and that they specify:
“Leases will be executed in the discretion of the state land board * * for such a period of time as may be determined by the board.”
The demurrer also admits that in the published notice for bids the board reserved “the right to reject any and all bids, whether before or after the award,” and that “all bids shall be made subject to the terms, provisions and conditions of the rules and regulations adopted and promulgated by the state land board.”
*2591-3. The defendants are public officers of the state. The rule in such cases is well stated in High’s Extraordinary Legal Remedies (3 ed.), Section 42, as follows:
“In all matters requiring the exercise of official judgment, or resting in the sound discretion of the person to whom a duty is confided by law, mandamus will not lie, either to control the exercise of that discretion, or to determine upon the decision which: shall be finally given. And whenever public officers are vested with powers of a discretionary nature as to the performance of any official duty, or in reaching a given result of official action they are required to exercise any degree of judgment, while it is proper by mandamus to set them in motion and to require their action upon all matters officially intrusted to their judgment and discretion, the courts will in no manner interfere with the exercise of their discretion, nor attempt by mandamus to control or dictate .the judgment to be given.”
3 McQuillin on Municipal Corporations, Section 1229, says:
“Where discretion is conferred to reject ‘any and all bids,’ it is held that the courts will not interfere with the discretion unless exercised with a fraudulent intent, to the injury of the party complaining, and where the injury is to be a vested right. * *
“Although it is a rule of the board empowered to let certain contracts to award the contract to the lowest and best bidder, yet if it reserves the right to reject any and all bids, no bidder can claim any contractual rights until he has been awarded the contract.”
In Molloy v. City of New Rochelle, 198 N. Y. App. (92 N. E. 94, 30 L. R. A. (N. S.) 126), the opinion Mr. Justice Chase states the rule thus:
“No contractual relation can arise merely from a unless by the terms of the statute and the adver*260tisement a bid in pursuance thereof is, as a matter of law, an acceptance of an offer wholly apart from any action on the part of the municipality or any of its officers. ”
We quote the following from 28 Cyc., page 10.30:
“The right to reject all bids is often expressly secured to the municipality by charter; but, even in the absence of such express grant, it is, very generally held that the proper municipal authorities may, at their discretion, reject all bids, especially if the right to do so has been reserved in the advertisement.”
It is true that in Springfield Milling Company v. Lane County, 5 Or. 265, under the facts there shown to exist, this court held:
“When a public body or officer has been clothed by statute with power to do an act which concerns the public interest, the execution of the power is a duty, and, though the phraseology of the statute be permissive, it is nevertheless to be held peremptory. * *
“When a statute confers upon an inferior tribunal power, and at the same time, prescribes a mode of exercising that power, the mode becomes the measure of the power, and such mode must be substantially, if not strictly, followed.”
But in the same opinion it is said:
“There can be no question but that the County Court had been invested with this power of providing for the construction and repair of bridges, and of appointing a superintendent in such a case, for the public good, and that the construction and repair of bridges concerns the public interest.”
It will be noted that the court there found that the power vested in the County Court was for the public good, and that the repair and construction of county bridges were matters of public interest. In the instant case there is nothing in the statute or the plead*261ings from which this court could hold that it would be for the public good or iu the interest of the state to award the lease to the plaintiff according to its hid. The answer here alleges, and the demurrer, admits the defendants’ claim, that:
“It is not expedient or for the best interests of the State of Oregon, or the irreducible school fund thereof, to enter into a lease or contract for less than such minimum yardage of ten cents per cubic yard or upon the terms applied for by plaintiff.”
The law was enacted for the use and benefit of the state in its sovereign capacity.
In State ex rel. v. Malheur Comity Court, 54 Or. 255 (101 Pac. 907), this court held:
“If the making of an order is a mere ministerial act, involving no exercise of judgment or judicial power, mandamus is the proper remedy to compel it; but where an act is judicial or involves the exercise of judgment or discretion, and such judgment has been exercised, mandamus' will not lie to compel amendment or correction thereof, though the action was erroneous.”
Analyzing Chapter 32, Laws of 1920, we note in Section 1, “the state land board is hereby authorized.” The word “authorized” is synonymous with ‘‘empowered.” In the sense here used it implies discretion. In Armstrong v. Murphy, 65 App. Div. 123, 125 (72 N. Y. Supp. 473, 474), it is said:
“The rule undoubtedly is that where public bodies or officers are empowered to do that which the public interests require to be done, and adequate means are placed at their disposal, the proper execution of the power may be insisted on, though the statute conferring it be only permissive in its terms. * * The word ‘may’ is thus construed at times to mean ‘must.’ But why, it may be asked, should this construction be given to the act under consideration? What public *262interest demands that the mayor should be required,, under all circumstances, to accept the fee and grant the license? It seems to me that it is quite the other way. The public good * * requires that the permissive words in question should he read in their natural and ordinary sense.”
It is true that Section 2 of the act says that upon the receipt of bids the defendant “shall” thereafter award the lease to the highest bidder. Standing alone, this might support the contention of the petitioner, but Section 3 provides that the board shall enter into contracts, “with such stipulations protecting the interests of the state as the land board may require.” 2 Lewis’ Sutherland on Statutory Construction (2 ed.), page 1116, announces the following rule:
“Unless a fair consideration of a statute, directing the mode of proceeding of public officers, shows that the legislature intended compliance with the provision in relation thereto to be essential to the validity of the proceeding, it is to be regarded as directory merely. Those directions which áre not of the essence of the thing to be done, but which are given with a view merely to the proper, orderly, and prompt conduct of the business, and by the failure to obey which the rights of those interested will not be prejudiced, are not commonly to be regarded as mandatory.”
Considering the purpose and language of the act, it was never the intent of the legislature that the defendants should be required to sell or lease sand or gravel belonging to the state, at anything but a fair and reasonable price. When the petitioner submitted its bid, it knew of the existence of the rules and regulations, and that under the terms of the published notice the defendants reserved the right to reject .any and all bids. Its offer to contract was based upon *263and subject to tbe published notice and sncb rules and regulations. If tbe defendants could now be compelled to execute a lease for five years at a stipulated price of three cents per cubic yard, for like reasons and under similar conditions they could be required to execute a lease for twenty-five or fifty years at a price of two cents or even one cent per cubic yard. That was never the intent of the legislature.
The petition is dismissed. Dismissed.
McBride, C. J., and Bean and Bennett, JJ., concur.