This is an action of ejectment brought by the plaintiffs lo recover certain lands claimed by the defendants, who are in actual possession under color of title. The plaintiffs derived title to the land in controversy hv mesne conveyances from the grantee of the patent issued by the commonwealth of Virginia February 10, 1786. The title to the land continued and remained in the plaintiffs and those under whom they claim, unless it was forfeited under the act of 1835, when it would become vested again in the commonwealth of Vir ginia, as forfeited and delinquent lands, and not as waste and unappropriated lands; the same having been previously granted, whereby the original title to the lands passed out of the commonwealth to the grantee, under the patent *770issued in 1786. By the act of the Virginia legislature passed February 27, 1835, “all lands and lots returned delinquent for the nonpayment of taxes, west of the Alleghany mountains,” became forfeited unless redeemed before the 1st day of November, 1836, when the forfeiture became absolute, and the land so forfeited passed by operation of law, and vested in the commonwealth, for the benefit of the president and directors of the literary fund. Staats v. Board, 10 Grat. 400; Wild’s Lessee v. Serpell, Id. 405; Hale v. Branscum, Id. 418. After the forfeiture became complete the title would remain and continue in the state, unless redeemed or transferred under legislative sanction.
It appears from the evidence in this case that the lands now in controversy were forfeited under the act of 1835, and that the forfeiture became absolute the 1st day of November, 1836, whereby the title to them vested in the commonwealth. During the time the lands were held by the commonwealth, Thomas Coleman and Henry Sherman, two of the defendants, obtained grants from the commonwealth on the 29th of June, 1844, upon entries and surveys made in 1843. Charles Smith, another defendant, obtained his grant for the land he claimed September 20, 1844. But before the defendants obtained their grants, and while their title was in an inchoate condition, the legislature, by a private act passed February 12, 1844, authorized the previous owners to redeem the lands by the payment into the treasury of the commonwealth of all taxes due théreon on or before the 1st day of June, 1845. It is conceded that this act was complied with by the payment of all back taxes into the treasury of the state before that time. There was, however, a saving in the act to any person having legal or equitable title to any of the lands by virtue of subsequent grant or otherwise.
This brings me to the consideration of the legal effect of this act; and the first question that presents itself is, were these lands liable to entry and survey, and subject to grant? As we have before seen, they were granted by the commonwealth of Virginia in 1786, when the title passed out of the state, and so remained until she was reinvested with it under the act of 1835, holding them as forfeited and delinquent lands; and she m held them down to the time she relinquished her right to them by the act of February 12,1844. At no time since the grant of 1786 were they ever held as waste and unappropriated lands, and as such liable to survey, entry, and grant. It is evident that they could not be granted as waste and unappropriated lands; and, if liable to entry, it must be because the state held them as forfeited lands, and, by legislative enactment, made them subject to entry and grant after the forfeiture. But since the lands became forfeited, and during the time the title was in the state, there was no act of the legislature in existence that authorized the entry of forfeited lands. In fact, a grant for land forfeited for nonpayment of taxes was unauthorized by any law prior to the Code of 1849. Atkins v. Lewis, 14 Grat. 30. It is true that forfeited and delinquent lands have been in some, possibly in a number of, instances, surveyed, entered, and carried into grant; but in no instance were these grants ever held valid by the courts except where *771the legislature relinquished ihe right of the slate to ihe land. Such was the effect of the decision of ihe court in the case of Levasser v. Washburn, 11 Grat. 572. If this position be correct, it must follow that the lands granted to the defendants by their patents passed no title to them, in the absence of any law either authorizing them to enter the lands, or confirming their title to them.
But it is claimed that, though ihe patents were void, yet because they were founded upon entries made prior to the act of February 12, 1841, and carried into grant before the 1st day of June, 1845, they conferred an equitable title upon the defendants, which is within the saving clause of the act of 1844, and should avail them to defeat the recovery in this action. I do not think this is now an open question, since the decision of Atkins v. Lewis, before referred to. But, if it was, the plain answer to this position seems to be that, while the title to the lands remained in the commonwealth, her legislature has both the power and legal right to dispose of them as it deemed best for her interest. This was done by the act of 1844, while she was. fully invested with Ihe legal title; and whatever claims the defendants had were mere inchoate rights, which the state might refuse to recognize. No one could question the right of the legislature, after the passage of the act of 1844, and before the 1st day of June, 1845, to pass an act to repeal ihe law creating the land office in the state; and, if it was done, all inchoate rights would cease, unless specially provided for. Tf the state could, by a proper enactment, do this, clearly she would have the right to restore lands to the previous owner upon any terms she chose to impose, even where, under her laws, the rights of third parties began to intervene, which were in an inchoate condition, and before site had divested herself of title to them. In view of what I have said, it is apparent that the state, by the act of 1844, abrogated the forfeiture, and released the lands, upon the payment of all the taxes due her June 1, 1815.
It is, however, insisted, with, some show of plausibility, that the defendants are protected by the act of March 28, 1843. The answer to this position is that by the terms of that act the forfeiture was not complete and absolute before the 1st of January, 1845, and the redemption of the lands in question having been authorized before that time, under the act of 1844, there was no legal title in the state to transfer and vest in any one. If the defendants had obtained their grants before the passage of that act relinquishing the right of the stale to them, the question presented would he far different; and under the decision in the case of Hale v. Branscum, 10 Grat. 418, the defendants might he entitled to hold the land embraced by their patents, if such lands were liable to entry. If, however, the later decision of the same court, in the case of Atkins v. Lewis, is law (before cited in 14 Grat.), which decided that there was no stature of the state that authorized the entry and granting of delinquent and forfeited lands at the time the defendants made their entries upon which they obtained their grants, then, and for this reason, the grants were void, and conferred no title whatever upon the defendants claiming and holding under them.
*772For the reasons assigned, I reach the conclusion that the lands in question were forfeited under the act of 1835, and that the forfeiture became absolute in November, 1836; that after the forfeiture occurred the title to the lands remained' in the state until June 1, 1845; that the entries made, and the grants issued thereon, by the state to the defendants, passed no title, because the grants were secured after the passage of the act of 1844, which authorized the redemption; that the lands were not subject to entry and. grant, and that the act of 1843 does not apply to this case, because the forfeiture could not become absolute after the passage of the act of February 12, 1844, until and after the time fixed for the redemption transpired, for the reason that the prior owners had an equity of redemption in the lands until June 1, 1845, when the taxes were to be paid into the treasury, which being done, reinvested them with the legal title, during which period the rights of the defendants, if any they had, were suspended.