Prior to June, 1883, this defendant was, and ever since has been, an incorporated cemetery association, organized pursuant to 1878 G-. S. ch. 34, tit. 5. In that month and year it acquired the title to a tract of land of forty acres, ten acres of which has become the subject of this action; the ten acres comprising the northeast quarter of the forty-acre tract. In the year 1886 the corporation had the entire forty-acre tract platted into lots, avenues, and walks, and the plat thereof, showing that the land was thereby dedicated as a cemetery, to be used exclusively for the burial of the dead, was then recorded. It was designated. “Crystal Lake Cemetery.” After that, and in October, 1888, the corporation became indebted to the plaintiff for money loaned to it,, and by it used in paying its debts, and in laying out and improving the cemetery grounds. This indebtedness was evidenced and secured by a promissory note of the corporation, and by a mortgage to the-plaintiff of the ten acres in question, executed pursuant to a resolution of the defendant’s board of trustees. The plaintiff was induced to accept the note and mortgage securing the same by representations of the defendant’s officers to the effect that this-ten-acre tract had not been laid out as a part of the cemetery, or actually devoted to or used for burial purposes. The representations were made in good faith, as the court finds, but were untrue, and the plaintiff was deceived thereby. In fact, not only had the-platting and dedication, as above stated, been made and recorded, but the whole forty-acre tract had been inclosed by a fence, -which on one side, at the entránce, bore the name “Crystal Lake Cemetery.”' Thirty-four burials had been made on this ten acres, but close to the south line thereof; and a temporary vault had been erected partly on the same land. That part of -the forty acres lying south of the ten acres had been laid out and was being used for purposes of burial. The improvements which had been made were almost wholly confined to that part of the grounds. In 1890 the-plaintiff foreclosed his mortgage by the statutory exercise of the power of sale, he being the purchaser at the foreclosure sale. No redemption was ever made. This action involves the issue of’ title as affected by the mortgage and its foreclosure. The real questions are whether the defendant had power to mortgage the *445property, and, if not, whether it is precluded from asserting its want of power. It was decided in the District Court that the mortgage was void. We concur in that view of the case.
The statute contains provisions respecting private cemeteries, but to them it will not be necessary to refer. The purposes for which cemetery corporations may be organized are public, rather than private, and the land acquired by such corporations, and devoted to the purposes of burial, are held in trust for public, rather than private, use. Every community needs, and ordinarily has, one or more places set apart and kept for the general burial of the dead, The providing and maintaining of such cemeteries is a matter of public concern, in the same sense as is the establishing and maintaining of roads or parks. The duty or power of doing this may properly be imposed or conferred upon towns, villages, or other political divisions of the state, as is done by our general laws defining the power of such municipal bodies; or, as has been done in the law above cited, the formation of corporations for that purpose may also be authorized. The purpose is equally public whether the one agency or the other is employed for its accomplishment, and in either case lands once legally devoted to and used for burial become appropriated to a public purpose, in such a sense that the power of the body in which the legal title may rest, to use or alienate the same, is restricted. The public character of such corporations, and of the purposes to be subserved by them, as well as the general inalienability of lands legally dedicated to and used for burials, may be asserted, not merely because of the nature of the subject, but because the statute justifies it. The one purpose for which such corporations may be organized is, as expressed in 1878 G. S. ch. 34, § 239, the “procuring and holding lands to be used exclusively for a cemetery or place for the burial of the dead.” Substantially the same language is used in section 249, in defining the powers of such corporations. The power of eminent domain is conferred upon them, to be exercised, when necessary, to enlarge their cemetery grounds. Their lands are exempt from taxation, in order that the same may be perpetually maintained as places for burial. State v. City of St. Paul, 36 Minn. 529, 531, (32 N. W. Rep. 781.) The law provides for the surveying and platting of the lands, and *446the recording of such plats, after which the trustees are empowered to sell and convey lots as designated on the plat, hut “every conveyance of any such lot shall be expressly for burial purposes, and no other.” The proceeds of sales are to be applied to the payment of any debts incurred .by the association in the purchase of cemetery grounds and property, and in the improving and necessary care and management of the same, “and for no other purpose.” No purpose of private gain or benefit is contemplated by the law, but only the accomplishment, through such corporate agencies, of the same public purposes which, in the absence of such a statute, or in the event of no such corporations being organized, would generally be accomplished by the exercise of powers conferred upon towns, villages, and cities.
It is unnecessary to say without qualification that such' corporations have no power to convey or to mortgage any lands which they may have purchased, but which have not been otherwise legally devoted to use as a place for the burial of the dead; nor1 need we undertake to say whether the mere making and recording of a plat for cemetery purposes would constitute such an appropriation or dedication of the platted lands to the purposes of burial as would have the effect to limit the power of disposal which the corporation might otherwise have, although we are inclined to think that such would be the effect of the platting in accordance with the statute. We do hold that when lands have been thus legally platted, the plat recorded, and the platted lands to some extent actually used for burial, the premises are to be deemed to have been effectually and exclusively devoted to such uses, and that the general power of alienation is restricted and suspended, at least while such dedication remains in force. Whether the platting and dedication may be vacated by judicial proceedings instituted for that purpose it is not necessary to consider. The statute contemplates the laying out and dedication of considerable tracts of land for cemetery purposes. It is to be limited to one hundred and sixty acres in extent. The making and recording of plats of the land acquired, “or such portions thereof as may from time to time be required,” is to be done before and in anticipation of actual use. This would, of course, always embrace land for the most part unoccupied by graves, and the *447legal appropriation or dedication to tbe purposes of sepulture is not limited to tbe lots on wbicb burials may bave been made. Tbe “platted tract” is thus dedicated, at least when any part of it bas been actually used for burials. “Every conveyance of any sucb lots shall be expressly for burial purposes, and no other,” is tbe language of tbe statute. It is contrary to tbe policy of tbe law, as indicated in its express language, to allow tbe corporation to convey or alienate, except for sucb purposes, any part of tbe land thus appropriated, in tbe manner prescribed by tbe statute, exclusively for the burial of tbe dead. Nor can tbe association, by its own act of alienation, divest itself of the trust wbicb it bas assumed under tbe law over tbe cemetery once established. Tbe defendant was powerless, when this mortgage was executed, to sell without sucb restriction, or to mortgage a lot, or any number of lots, even-to raise money for tbe payment of its debts, or to carry on its proper work. Upon grounds of public policy, for reasons which' directly and primarily concern tbe public, tbe power of tbe corporation to convey away or to mortgage tbe trust property was expressly restricted; hence tbe mortgage was absolutely void. As it was wholly beyond tbe power of tbe corporation to thus mortgage its cemetery lands, so it could not validate or give legal effect to its void act by ratification, or by acceptance of benefits thereunder. Tbe doctrine of estoppel is not applicable, as it might be if tbe corporation were one created for tbe accomplishment of private, rather than public, purposes, or if tbe defect consisted only of some irregularity in tbe exercise of a power. Tbe principle of estoppel cannot be applied, so as to subject tbe public (not merely tbe corporation) to tbe very consequences wbicb tbe restriction of tbe power of this public agent was intended to prevent. This effect of tbe want of corporate power in respect to transactions of public concern bas heretofore been recognized in this court, and is in accordance with numerous decisions elsewhere. Borough of Henderson v. County of Sibley, 28 Minn. 515, (11 N. W. Rep. 91;) Newbery v. Fox, 87 Minn. 141, (33 N. W. Rep. 333;) and see Stewart v. Erie & W. Transp. Co., 17 Minn. 372, 399, 400, (Gil. 348;) 1 Dill. Mun. Corp. 457; 2 Dill. Mun. Corp. 969, 969a; 1 Beach, Priv. Corp. 217, and cases cited. While, doubtless, tbe plaintiff may avail himself of a *448remedy, tbe foreclosure of tbe mortgage was unavailing. Tbe mortgage was void, and tbe title was not transferred thereby.
(Opinion published 56 N. W. Rep. 56.)Order affirmed.