delivered the opinion of the court.
As the appellant, upon an application for a rehearing, has made some points which were not alluded to in the original opinion, it has been thought advisable to remodel the opinion so as to embrace those -points, rather than have a separate opinion upon the motion for a rehearing published.
The case presents a conflict between a title in the state, for the benefit of the inhabitants of township thirty-four, range seven east, and a title set up under a private act of congress, passed on the 24th of May, 1828, confirming to Francois Vallé and others, the Mine la Motte tract of two leagues square. The land in dispute is the sixteenth section, and -is comprehended in the survey of the claim of Vallé and others.
The sixth section of the act of congress of the 6th March, 1820, proposed to the convention which was to assemble for the purpose of forming a constitution for the state of Missouri, the terms of a compact to be entered into between the United States and the state of Missouri, declaring that the propositions, if accepted, should bo’ obligatory upon the United States. The first proposition is in these words : “ that section number sixteen, in every township, and when such section has been sold or otherwise disposed of, other lands equivalent there*600to, and as contiguous as may be, shall be granted to the state, for the use of the inhabitants of such township, for the use of schools.” The condition upon which the government of the United States was to be bound by the .propositions made in the act of congress was, that the convention should provide by an irrevocable ordinance, that land sold by the United States after the-1st January, 1821, should be exempt from taxation for five years after the sale, and that land granted as bounty land, for military services during the war with England, should, while owned by the patentees or their heirs, be exempt from taxation for three years from the date of tho patents.
The propositions thus made were accepted by the state, and an ordinance was passed on the 19th July, 1820, declaring the assent of the state to the condition prescribed in the act of congress. These acts constitute the title relied upon by the state in the present case.
The defendant gave in evidence a transcript from the office of the recorder of land titles, by which it appeared that J. B. Vallé, Francis Vallé and others filed a claim with the recorder for two leagues square of land, and that the claim was founded upon a petition to the lieutenant governor for a concession, a recommendation of the petition by the lieutenant governor to the intendant general, and a provisional permission by the lieutenant governor to cut timber on the land for the use of their mines. There was also filed a survey of the claim, made in the year 1806. This claim was rejected by the board of commissioners in 1811. It was confirmed by private act of the 24th May, 1828, according to the survey made in 1806, but with a proviso in these words: “That this confirmation shall extend only to a relinquishment of title on the part of the United States, nor prejudice the rights of third persons, nor any title heretofore derived from the United States, either by purchase or donation.” It was admitted that the title under this confirmation was in one Fleming, and that the defendant, Ham, claimed and occupied as his tenant.
It appears to have been assumed throughout the trial of the *601case, that the United States survey of the district into townships and sections, had been made before the confirmation to Vallé and others, as no question w'as made in relation to such survey. The land is spoken of through the whole record as the sixteenth section, which, with us, is a designation only applied to land surveyed into sections by the United States, and such survey would not have been made after the confirmation.
Unless this sixteenth section had been “sold or otherwise disposed of,” at the time the state of Missouri acceded to the terms of the compact proposed in the act of 6th March, 1820, the title to it became vested in the state, as soon as it was designated as a sixteenth section, if the language of that act was sufficient to transfer the title. The state, by the compact, became a purchaser of the land, although it was for the benefit of the inhabitants of the township ; and the consideration she paid was the relinquishment of her right to tax lands within her limits, sold by the United States, for five years after such sale, by which the value of the lands of the United States was enhanced. Now, the chief objection made to the title of the state is, not that the United States had sold the land to any person, nor that the title had been, in any other manner, or for any other consideration, passed to any third party, at the date of the compact between the United States and the state of Missouri; hut that, at that period, it had been, under acts of congress, reserved from sale, and was, therefore, “disposed of” within the meaning of the exception in the compact.
It cannot be doubted that it was competent for the United States to convey the title to the land which had been reserved from sale. This court, in Hammond v. The Public Schools, 8 Mo. Rep. 74, held, that the reservation of the lots mentioned in the second section of the act of congress of 18th June, 1812, for the use of schools in the several towns named in the act, did not prevent the congress of the United States from passing the title to one of such lots to an individual. That reservation, by its terms, was a permanent reservation. The reservation insisted on in the present case, is claimed under *602the proviso to the tenth section of the act of 3d March, 1811, and was only a reservation from sale, of land claimed before the board of commissioners,” until the final action of congress thereon.” It conferred no right; it acknowledged no right. It imposed no obligation upon the government. It was simply a direction to its officers to refrain from selling land covered by claims, which had been filed according to law for adjudication. A sale by the executive officers of the government, contrary to the reservation, would be, if not protected by subsequent legislation, merely void. Stoddard v. Chambers, 2 Howard’s Rep. 318. Mills v. Stoddard, 8 Howard’s Rep. 345. Bissell v. Penrose, ib. 317. But the title to the land being still in the United States, could be passed by the governernment to any person, for any consideration, notwithstanding the reservation.
Wo are brought to the examination of the terms of the compact, to see whether, upon a reasonable construction, they embrace the land in controversy and pass the title thereto to the state.
It has been objected to the title set up by the state, that the words employed in the proposition by congress do not profess to transmit the title by their own force, but look to some act which is to have that effect. They are “section sixteen in •every township shall be granted.” It is to be remembered that the proposition was made in an act passed March 6, and was to be accepted or rejected by the convention which was to assemble in June following, and therefore the proposition could not be otherwise expressed than in language looking to the future. When the state of Missouri subsequently expressed its consent to the terms proposed, and passed the ordinance exempting the land sold by the United States, and that granted for bounties to soldiers, from taxation, the compact was complete between the sovereignties, and no conveyance was needed to pass the title from the United States to the state, for any tract of land that then was or thereafter might be regularly designated as a sixteenth section. Such has been the action of *603the two parties under the contract, as they framed it. No person ever heard of a patent from the United States to the state for a sixteenth section. The titles which have been acquired by individuals to sixteenth sections, sold under laws of the state, need no further grant from the United States to make them complete legal titles.
It is objected that, as this land was reserved from sale on account of the claim of Vallé and others filed with the recorder of land titles, there was no authority for surveying it into sections, and consequently there could be no legal designation of the tract in controversy as a sixteenth section, so as to allow it to be claimed by the state. In support of this position, reference is made to the act of April 29, 1816, (3 U. S. S. 325,) as requiring the surveyor to survey the lands embraced in private claims, thereby distinguishing them from the public lands, which he is required to survey under the direction of the president.
This act provides for the appointment of a surveyor of the lands of the United States in the territories of Illinois and Missouri, and makes it his duty to survey and divide so much of the lands of the United States as the president shall direct, in the manner in which the surveyor general is authorized and directed to do, in relation to the same or the lands lying northwest of the river Ohio ; and also to survey the lands in the said territories, the claims to which have been or may hereafter be confirmed by any act of congress.
The only authority in this act for the survey of a private claim is, after it has been confirmed, and it may as well be stated at once, that no act of congress ever authorized a public survey of any unconfirmed Spanish claim. The act of 28th February, 1806, (2 U. S. S. 352,) authorized the principal deputy surveyor to cause such surveys to be executed as he might be directed to execute, by the commissioners appointed to ascertain the titles and claims to lairds in the territory, but the second proviso to the third section of the act expressly declares *604that all such surveys, and all other surveys, except those of legal and complete titles, should be held and considered as private surveys only. The Supreme Court of the United States, in Mackay v. Dillon, 4 Howard, 447, declared the survey of the St. Louis commons, made in 1806, in the same year in which Valle’s claim was surveyed, to be only a private survey.
There was then no survey of the claim of Vallé and others, which the surveyor in Missouri could recognize ; none which was binding upon thé United States. When he contracted with his deputy for surveying a district in which this and other unconfirmed claims were located, the deputy must either survey the land included in such claims into sections and quarter sections, or he must run the exterior lines o£ the claims, and divide the adjoining lands into fractional sections and fractional quarter sections. No warrant Í3 to be found, either in the laws or the practice of the government, for surveying the lands adjoining an unconfirmed claim into fractions. The lands included within such claims were still the lands of the United States. There are now a great many of such claims still unconfirmed. Many of them have never been bounded even by private surveys, and of those which have, the location of many is, doubtless, unknown to the surveyor by any evidence in his office. The practice of surveying the land covered by such claims into sections, instead of treating it as included in a public survey that would authorize the division of the adjacent land into fractions, was undoubtedly correct under the laws of the United States.
It is insisted that, although the reservation of the land included within Valle’s claim, did not divest the government of the title, and was not a “ disposition” of the land, in the general sense of that term, still, the compact ought to be so construed as to give to the state a right to equivalent land, and therefore leave the claim of Vallé and others unaffected. The proposition in the act of 1820 is, to grant the sixteenth section *605in every township, ££ and when such section has been sold or otherwise disposed of,” other lands equivalent thereto. It is hard to find any warrant for such construction of the language here employed, as is insisted upon. It is the agreement of the parties that a particular section in each township shall be devoted to the use of schools, and one party is to take the title to that section for that purpose. It may be the best section in the township ; it may be the worst; but it is chiefly selected because it is central. The individuals to be benefitted by the grant are the inhabitants of the township, whose children are to bo educated there- by means of the grant. It is agreed between the parties that, if the United States had previously sold or otherwise disposed of that section, then the state should take equivalent lands, as contiguous as might be, for the use of the inhabitants of the township. This stipulation was not intended to reserve to the United States a right to sell or dis - pose of the sixteenth section in the future, and then to offer an equivalent in lands, but as there had. been not only sales, but confirmations and donations of land, previously made in Missouri, this clause was to secure an equivalent for sixteenth sections, which might have been so disposed of. It is evident that there was present to the mind of congress, in framing the act of 1820, the idea that there were claims which had been confirmed, and other claims which would probably thereafter be confirmed; for, in the second proposition made to the state and accepted, there is a grant of twelve salt springs, with six sections adjacent to each, to be selected by the legislature, but with the proviso ££ that no salt spring, the right whereof now is, or hereafter shall be, confirmed or adjudged to any individual or individuals, shall, by this section, be granted to the state.” Here is a provision made, not only to secure those who already had confirmations for salt springs, from any interference by the state, but a right is reserved to confirm claims in the future, and if the state chooses to select any salt spring that is claimed by an individual, the title of the state will be *606divested by the confirmation, of such claim. While this protection is afforded to unconfirmed claims to salt springs, no such stipulation is made in relation to any unconfirmed claim to a sixteenth section. No right is reserved to the United States to confirm such claim in the future. As soon as there has been a survey of land, into townships, and a designation of sixteenth sections, the only question of title is the question whether the United States owns the land. If the title is in the government, no subsequent act can affect the right of the state, holding for the use of the inhabitants of the township.
The foregoing, it is believed, would be the law of this case, if there had been an unconditional and unqualified confirmation of the Spanish claim. But, in the present case, it is apparent, on the face of the confirmation to Valló and others, that they can claim no otherwise than the United States could claim this land, if there never had been a confirmation, and the claim of Vallé and others had been annihilated. They hold only a relinquishment of title from the United States, which it is declared, “shall not prejudice any title heretofore derived from the United States by purchase or donation.55 It can scarcely be doubted that the state, holding for the inhabitants of the township, is entitled to this land as against the United States, and that title is older than the confirmation. If the United States had so parted with, or affected the title to this land prior to the confirmation, that it could not be reclaimed by the government, then persons claiming under the confirmation, which is but a mere relinquishment of title on the part of the United States, without prejudice to any previous title by purchase or donation, cannot claim it. In Barry v. Gamble, 3 Howard, 55, the clause in the second section of the act of the 24th May, 1828, (4 U. S. S. 298,) which is just like the proviso in the special act in this case, is declared to have the effect of giving a preference to the titles intended to be protected by that clause, over the titles derived from the confirmations authorized by the act. The title, then, of the state by the act *607of 1820, and the designation of the sixteenth section, is, in our judgment, superior to the title set up under the confirmation to Vallé and others.
We have looked into the objections made to the indictment, on the motion in arrest of judgment, and think the motion properly overruled. The judgment is affirmed.