From a careful examination of the record in this case, in the light of the able briefs submitted by counsel on both sides, the circuit judge has reached the following conclusions, viz.:
The act of congress approved June 3, 1856, by its express terms, contemplated and provided for the construction of several distinct and independent lines of railway. The grant was made to the state of Michigan, “to aid in the construction of railroads.” The lines of said railroads were designated, and among them wa.s that from Ontonagon to the Wisconsin state lino. The grant embraced “ every alternate section of land designated by odd numbers for six sections in width on each side of each of said roads.” It was further provided “that the lands so to be located shall in no case be further than fifteen miles from the lines of said roads, and selected for and on account of each ol' said roads,” and the lands 1 lius granted for the benefit of each of said roads were to “be exclusively applied in the construction of that road for and on account of which such lands are hereby granted, and shall be disposed of only as the work ] u-ogresses, and the same shall be applied to no other purpose whatsoever.” It is further provided by the third section of the act that the lands thus granted to said state should be subject to the disposal of the legislature thereof, for tlie purpose aforesaid, and no other. The manner of such disposition for each of said roads is prescribed by the fourth section of the act, and “if any of said roads is not completed within 10 years no further sales shall be made, and the lands unsold shall revert to the United Slates.” The legislature of Michigan, in accepting said grant, by the act approved February 14, 1857, clearly recognized the purpose and intent of congress to aid in the construction of separate and distinct lines of railroad. The benefits of the grant intended to aid in the construction of the railroad from Ontonagon to the Wisconsin state line wore vested in or conferred upon the “Ontonagon & State Line Railroad Co.,” organized under laws of the state, in 1856. In like manner the lands to be located along the other lines of road designated in the granting act were conferred upon other companies having a separate corporate existence from that of the “Ontonagon & State Line Railroad Co.,” and by the third section of the act “the lands, franchises, rights,” etc., thus conferred upon and vested in said railroad companies, or either of them, were to be exclusively applied in the construction of their respective line's of railroad as designated, and -were not to be applied to any other purpose whatsoever. Both by the granting act and the act of acceptance, each of said railroads were to be public highways. For each of said lines separate surveys and locations were made, separate maps therefor were filed in the interior department, separate selections of lands within the limits of the grant were made for each of the lines, separate approvals of such selections were made by the secretary of the interior, for each of said railroads, and were separately certified by the department to the state for the benefit of each, respectively. The trusts thus created by the United States as grantor, and accepted by the state as trustee, for specific and defined purposes, and for designated objects, were subject to the single condition subsequent, that if any or either of *822said roads was not completed within 10 years from June 8, 1856, the lands granted and appropriated to such line, and remaining unsold, should revert to the United States. Until the expiration of said period of 10 years and the non-completion of the Ontonagon & State Line road, no action of either state or United States officials, or of both combined, could change, modify, or alter the trust created and accepted for the construction of that, particular line; nor could the lands assigned to that line, and certified to the state for its construction, be lawfully appropriated by such officials to the construction or benefit of any other line whatsoever. The trust declared and accepted required that they should be exclusively applied in the building and completion of that road, and no other. To effect any other application or disposition of these lands would require the consent of the United States, expressed through congress, and of the state, expressed through its legislature, and of the railroad company on which said lands had been conferred, or its successors or assigns in right. It is equally well settled that the United States alone could take advantage of the non-performance of said condition subsequent, and that so long as they failed or neglected to assert their right of forfeiture, even after condition broken, the trust created for the construction of the Ontonagon & Wisconsin State Line road would stand unimpaired, and the title to the lands granted and certified to the state for the benefit of that line would remain out of the United States, and from no part of the public domain. It is also settled that, the grant being a public one, the reserved right of the United States to reclaim these lands, or to declare them forfeited for breach of the condition subsequent, would have to be asserted either by judicial proceedings, authorized by law, or by some legislative assertion of ownership of the property for condition broken, such as an act of congress, directing the possession and appropriation of the land, or that it be offered for sale and settlement. Schulenberg v. Harriman, 21 Wall. 44. In order that an act of congress should work a reversion to the United States for condition broken of lands granted .by them to a state to aid in internal improvements, the legislation must directly, positively, and with freedom from all doubt and ambiguity, manifest the intention of congress to reassert title and resume possession. Railway Co. v. McGee, 115 U. S. 469, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 123. The United States, prior to March 2, 1889, never by judicial proceedings authorized by law, nor by legislative action, asserted ownership .of the lands in question, or exercised its reserved right of forfeiture .for condition broken in failing to complete the road-. By the act of March 2, 1889, congress declared certain lands granted to the state of Michigan, for railroad purposes, by the act of 1856, forfeited. This act confirmed certain rights, titles, and entries, but need not be specially noticed, as it is a matter of construction and grave debate whether its confirmatory provisions are most in favor of plaintiff or defendant. Both sides claim the benefit of its provisions. The act was not, however, passed upon by the trial judge, who directed a verdict for the plaintiff upon other grounds. .
It is claimed for plaintiff that by the joint resolution of congress, *823adopted July 5, 1862, the several trusts, as above indicated, were changed, with the acquiescence of the state and the companies interested, and that under the operation of that resolution the several railroads contemplated and provided for by the act of June 8,1856, were abandoned, and one consolidated system was established upon a new line from Marquette to a point on the Wisconsin state lino, near the mouth of the Me-nomonee river. The joint resolution of congress does not, upon its face, admit of this construction, nor do the facts and circumstances which led to its adoption warrant the court in giving it any such strained interpretation. The language of the resolution relates to, and only mentions, the line of railroad from Marquette to the Wisconsin state line, whose relocation alone was sought and applied for. The Peninsula Railroad Company, which sought the relocation of the line from Marquette to the Wisconsin state line, so as to carry the road to a point near the mouth of the Menomonee river, had no interest in or connection with the line of road from Ontonagon to the Wisconsin state line, nor in the lands selected and certified to the state for the benefit of that line, when said joint resolution of congress was applied for and procured. Said Peninsula Railroad Company had only succeeded to the rights, privileges, and franchises of the Marquette & State Line Railroad Company. A brief reference to the facts will mate this clear.
The Marquette & State Tine Railroad Company first consolidated with the Chicago, St. Paul & Pond du Lac Railroad Company. This consolidated company subsequently, on March 27,1857, consolidated with the Ontonagon & State Line Railroad, under the name of the Chicago, St. Paul & Pond du Lac Railroad Company, and, so far as such rights could be transferred or assigned, succeeded to all property, franchises, rights, and privileges which the Ontonagon & State Line Railroad Company had acquired, or could acquire, under all or any acts of congress. The Chicago, St. Paul & Pond du Lac Company was sold under mortgage, in 1859, and its property, rights, franchises, etc., were purchased by the Chicago & North-Western Railway Company. Having, by this purchase, succeeded to all the rights and interests of both the Marquette & State Line Railroad and of the Ontonagon & State Line Railroad, in and to the granted trust lands, (assuming that they were the subject of transfer and assignment by said two companies,) the Chicago & NorthWestern Railway Company, in February, 1862, requested the Michigan hom'd of control of railroad grants to confer upon the Peninsula Railroad Company all the benefits of the grant oft 856, which had been vested in the Marquette & Stale Line Railroad. Said board of control, in compliance with said request, and upon the application of said Peninsula Railroad Company, under the authority of an act of the Michigan legislature approved March 4, .1861, ordered that all the lands, franchises, rights, powers, and privileges, which were or might bo granted in pursuance of said act of congress approved June 3, 1856, to aid in the construction of a railroad from Marquette to the Wisconsin state line, “be, and the same are hereby, conferred upon the said Peninsula Railroad Company, under the regulations and restrictions of an act approved Feb*824ruary 14, 1857.” The Peninsula Railroad Company was organized for the' purpose of constructing a railroad from Marquette to the Wisconsin state line, at or near the mouth of the Menomonee river, which route necessitated a change in and relocation of the line of the Marquette & State Line Railroad, as surveyed and located under the granting and accepting acts of 1856 and 1857. This change and relocation of said line was recommended to congress by said board of control of railroad grants at the time of conferring upon said Peninsula Railroad Company the benefits of the grant previously vested in the Marquette & State Line Railroad Company. This proposed change and relocation of the Peninsula Railroad Company’s line, after lands had' been selected and certified in December, 1861, for the original line of the Marquette & State Line Railroad, required the assent of both congress and the state, because it involved a clear departure from the exclusive trust granted by the United States and accepted by the state under the acts of 1856 and 1857; hence the application to congress for the joint resolution of July 5,1862, which related alone to the proposed change of the original line from Marquette to the Wisconsin state line, so as to permit a relocation thereof on the line of the Peninsula Railroad Company’s charter route. - The joint resolution of congress authorized this relocation of said line, and as an incident thereto operated as a new grant of lands to the state for the benefit of such new line, upon releasing the lands previously selected and certified for the original line of road, with a certificate from the governor of Michigan that all claim thereto by the state and said Peninsula Railroad Company was surrendered, and that the same had never been pledged, sold, or in any wise incumbered. There had been selected for this original line from Marquette to the Wisconsin state line, and duly certified to the state by the interior department, in December, 1861, about 161,104 acres. This land the Peninsula Railroad Company, in May. 1863, released and surrendered to the United States under and in pursuance of said joint resolution of congress of July 5, 1862, and in consideration of the relocation of said land grants so as to conform to its new line. The state, by an act supplemental to the act of February 14, 1857, acceded to said joint resolution of congress, and confirmed unto said Peninsula Railroad Company the new grant of lands thereby provided for. Thus by the concurrent action of congress, of the state, and of the Peninsula Railroad Company, as the successor of the Marquette & State Line Railroad, the trust created by the act of 1856, in respect to the line of railroad from Marquette to the Wisconsin state line, was changed and made applicable to the relocated line of the Peninsula Railroad Company. This was the sole object of the resolution of 1862, and the sole change effected or alteration made in the trusts created and defined by the act of June 3, 1856. When said resolution was procured for and accepted by the Peninsula Railroad Company that company had no interest in and connection with the Ontonagon & State Line Railroad, for the benefit of which there had been previously selected and certified to the state of clear lands 142,430-23-100 acres. The joint resolution of congress did not expressly, or by any fair implication, call for or require *825the surrender of those lands with which the Peninsula Railroad Company had no connection, and over which it could exercise no control. The joint resolution of congress is fully satisfied by confining its operation and effect to a change in the original grant and trust merely to the extent of allowing the old line from Marquette to the Wisconsin state line to be abandoned upon the surrender of the lands already certified to that line and permitting a relocation of the same on the route of the Peninsula Railroad Company’s line to be run from Marquette to the Wisconsin state line at or near the mouth of the Menomonee river. That this was the construction which the state of Michigan placed upon said resolution of 1862 is clearly shown by the joint resolution of the legislature of said state, passed in February, 1867, which is entitled “Joint .resolution authorizing the governor to execute the certificate of non-in-cumbrance and surrender of the lands on the original line of the Marquette & Wisconsin State line Railroad.” Said resolution of the state legislature, after reciting that by the act of congress approved June 8, 1856, there was made, among other grants to this state, a grant of lands to aid in the construction of a railroad from Marquette to the Wisconsin state line: that by joint resolution of congress a change in the route of said road was authorized and had been made; and that the company had executed a release of the lands on the original line, — provided “that tin; governor he, and he is hereby, authorized to execute and file the certificate of non-incumbrance and surrender to the United States of the land on the original line of said railroad, [from Marquette to the Wisconsin state line,] required by said joint resolution, [of 1862.]”
A fter the Peninsula Railroad Company consolidated with the Chicago & North-Western Railway Company, in 1864, under the name of the latter, said Chicago & North-Western Railway Company, under date of January 31, 1868, released to the state of Michigan the clear lands on the Marquette & Wisconsin State Line, and the governor of said state, on the 1st of May, 1868, under and in pursuance of the state resolution of 1867, and in compliance with the congressional resolution of 1862, released and surrendered the said' lands to the United States. This release by the governor was a full compliance with the requirements of both of said resolutions, and exhausted the governor’s authority to deal with the subject of the granted lands. The commissioner of the general land-ofliee subsequently, on July 13, 1868, requested the Chicago & North-Western Railway Company to execute a similar release as to the 142,480 23-100 acres of clear lauds previously selected and certified to the state in December, 1861, for and on account of the lino from On-tonagon to the Wisconsin state line.1 This request was unauthorized by any fair construction of the congressional resolution of 1862, and the governor of the state, in attempting to make the surrender of said lands in August, 1870, exceeded his authority, and his act was a nullity, and did not divest the state of its title thereto as trustee, nor in any way defeat or annul the trust created by the act of 1856 in respect to said lands, which were exclusively appropriated by congress to aid in the construction of the line of railroad from Ontonagon to the Michigan state line. *826The commissioner of the land-office certainly had no authority, by virtue of his office or official duties, to deal with the subject of that trust created by congress. He derived no authority from the resolution of 1862 to either disturb or terminate the trust created and declared for that line, or to recall the lands granted by the United States, and certified in 1861 to the state for its construction. The congressional resolution of 1862 did not, in terms or by implication, confer upon the land department any jurisdiction whatever over the lands granted to the state to aid in the construction of this Ontonagon & Wisconsin State Line Railroad. Nor did the state resolution of 1867 confer upon the governor any authority, even by the most strained implication, to release and surrender the same. The governor of the state had no more authority under said resolutions of congress and of the state, either or both, to surrender said 142,430 23-100 acres of land than he, as governor, would have had to convey them in defiance of the trust on which they were held by the state to a private individual without consideration. The opinion of the attorney general, on which the governor acted, does not assert the existence of his authority to surrender these lands. The attorney general was manifestly considering the lands relating to the old line from Marquette to the Wisconsin state line. He expressly disclaims any knowledge of the correctness, of description of said lands, and states that “if any of them should prove incorrect, I do not see how it could affect the state. In such case your certificate would be a simple nullity, as being unauthorized bylaw,” — and at the close of his opinion he states that the release to be executed would “only release the interests of the state to such lands as are contemplated by the acts of congress approved June 3,1856, July 5, 1862, and March 3, 1865.” It is perfectly clear that the attorney general did not intend to advise the governor that he had authority to release the lands on the Ontonagon & State Line road; nor did the release submitted for his consideration and opinion on its face purport to surrender the lands on that line of railroad. It appears that, after the Peninsula Railroad Company consolidated with the Chicago & North-Western Railway Company, congress, by an act approved March 3, 1865, granted to the state of Michigan, for the purpose of aiding in the construction of a railroad from Marquette to the Wisconsin state line, at or near the mouth of the Menominee river, for the use and benefit of said Chicago & North-Western Railway Company, four additional alternate sections per mile to that already granted by said act of 1856, and the supplementary joint resolution of 1862. But this in no way affected the grants made for other lines by the act of 1856. Such grants and the trusts raised and declared to aid in the construction of the other railroads or lines designated in the granting act of congress and the accepting act of the state, remained wholly undisturbed and unaffected by either state or congressional action, when the governor of Michigan, 'without authority of law, executed the certificate and surrender of said 142,430 23-100 acres of land. The land-office had no authority of law either to call for or to accept said release for and on behalf of the United States. Congress, having made the grant and created the trust con-*827noctcil therewith, could alone determine when the land should revert and the trust terminate. The state, and not the governor thereof, was the trustee, and the granting act defined how and in what manner the state, as trustee, by and through its legislature, should dispose of said land. Looking to the purpose and object sought to be effected, and to tiie language of the joint resolution of 1862, it is perfectly clear that it was wholly insufficient, under the rule laid down in Railway Co. v. McGee, 115 U. S. 469, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 123, to work a reversion to the United States, even injubwro, of the lands granted by the act of 1856 to aid in the construction of the Ontonagon line of railroad. That resolution neither directly, positively, nor beyond all doubt or ambiguity, manifests the intention of congress to reassert title and resume possession of said lands, either at the time of its passage or at any future day. .Neither did said resolution in any way authorize the land department to assert sucli title for the United States, or to assume any control over said lands. 1 am, therefore, clearly of the opinion that, in the absence of any law, state or federal, calling for or requiring the execution of the certificate and surrender made by the governor on August 14, 1870, his release of said 142,430 23-100 acres of laud was void for want of authority, and that said release did not operate to revest the title to said lands in the United States, or make them again a part of the public domain of tiie general government. The United States did not consider that said release had any such operation or effect, for with all facts before congress the act of March 2, 1889, was passed, declaring a formal forfeiture of said lands for breach of the condition subsequent. If said release had been either valid or only voidable, congress could and would have recognized or ratified it, and thus readily have confirmed all subsequent acts of the land-office in connection therewith. This was not attempted, but a formal forfeiture was declared, and the United States then, and at that date, reasserted ownership of the land. This was clear legislative recognition of the fact that the title of the United States had not previously thereto reattached so as to make said lands the property of the government.
Again, it is disclosed in the record that, notwithstanding said release by the governor in 1870, the state, through its executive, in 1872 or 1873, disputed the validity of said release, and still assorted title to said lands, not as the beneficial owner thereof, but as trustee under the act of 1856. This claim was not only made by the state, but her board of control of railroad grants acted upon the assumption of its validity in conferring said lands upon another railroad company, which action the legislature of Michigan confirmed. Until congress passed the act of March 2, 1889, reasserting the United States’ ownership of these lands, the claim asserted thereto by the state as trustee remained unsettled or undetermined by any competent authority. The United States did not by any authoritative act or declaration dispute the state’s claim to the lands made after said release had been executed by its governor, nor did congress pass any “act directing the possession and appropriation of the property, or that it be offered for sale or settlement.” Under such cir*828cumstances and conditions it is doubtful, upon the authority of Newhall v. Sanger, 92 U. S. 761, whether said lands were open to appropriation or selection under other grants subsequent to the act of 1856, even assuming that the validity of said release by the governor would be ulti-m'ately sustained by the courts. But, said release being invalid and void for the- want of authority' to execute the same, the lands were not thereby restored to the United States, and, with no title in the United States till forfeiture declared in March, 1889, it is clear that said lands were not open to selection or appropriation under grants subsequent to the act of June 3, 1856.
It is not deemed necessary to notice all the consolidations that were, from time to time, effected between the several railroad companies, or the mortgage executed by the Chicago, St. Paul & Fond'du Lac Railroad Company, or the sale thereunder, and the purchase by the Chicago & North-Western Railway Company. These matters are not material, because it is manifest that the dealings and transactions inter sese of companies designated as the beneficiaries of said grant of 1856 could in no way change or impair the trust created by the United States, and acce}5ted by the state, nor authorize any diversion of the lands appropriated to construction of the several lines of railroad to any other purpose or use. It is claimed on behalf of plaintiff, and was so ruled by the trial judge, that the effect of the state’s act of February 14, 1857, was to vest the legal title to the lands granted to aid in the construction of the line of road from Ontonagon to the Wisconsin state line in the Ontonagon & State Line Railroad Company; that such legal title by consolidation passed to the Chicago, St. Paul & Fond du Lac Railroad Company; thence to the Chicago & North-Western Railway Company, by whom it was surrendered to the state under the release of June 17, 1870, and from the state to the United States by the governor’s certificate and surrender, executed August 14, 1870. We have already seen that said release of the governor did not operate to revest the title to the lands in question in the United States; nor is the position correct that under the operation of the act of February 14, 1857, the legal title to the lands granted for the benefit of the Ontonagon line of railroad was vested in said Ontonagon ■& State Line Railroad Company. The legal- title -was essential to the trust which the state accepted, and the granting act never authorized the legislature of the state to convey or pass the legal title to said lands to said company. The scheme of the trust created by congress clearly contemplated that the state, as trustee, should hold and retain the legal title -to the lands, and the fourth section of the granting act-prescribed the time and manner in which said lands should be disposed of by the state as trustee. The object and purpose of the state act of February 14, 1857, was tó accept the trust and to designate the companies which might, by completing the several railroads, become the beneficiaries of the trust-estate. Said act only conferred upon the respective companies therein named the right to earn the-lands, or the proceeds thereof, appropriated to them, respectively. When the lands were selected for the respective lines, the secretary of the interior, after having approved *829such selection, certified the same to the state, and not to the several raib road companies. The act of .Tune 8, 1856, was a grant in priesenti to the state, and passed the title to the said sections of land along the designated lines of road. Upon the location of said roads, and the selection of the sections, and their certification by the department to the state, the legal title thereto was completely vested in the state as trustee. The disposal thereof, for the purposes specified as the trusts indicated, was left with the legislature, but the maimer, and only manner, of such disposition, was prescribed. That manner did not contemplate or authorize the trustee to grant or convoy the legal title direct to the several railroads whose construction was intended to be aided. While the act of February 14, 1857, employs some language which might purport to grant the lands to the several companies, the clear object and purpose of that act was, after accepting the grant, to confer upon the several companies designated the rights, powers, privileges, and benefits which were intended for their respective lines by the act of congress. They were the designated beneficiaries of the trust, with the legal title retained in the state as the trustee. This is made clear by reference to the act of the legislature, approved March 8, 1865, (page 98, H. R. Grant,) which provided for the issuance of patents for railroad lands whenever the company or companies should become legally entitled to such lands. The patents to he issued were to be prima facie evidence of title; but such patents, conveying the title, were only to be issued as the companies, respectively, finished and put in running order any section or sections of 20 continuous miles of their line of road. If the title had already passed by the act of 1857, this act of 1865 was idle and inoperative; but, aside from this, it is settled by the decision of the supreme court in the case of Schulenberg v. Harriman, 21 Wall. 50, 59, that the state, under the terms of the grant from congress,- had no authority to dispose of land beyond 120 sections, except as the road, in aid of which the grant was made, was constructed. In the present case no portion of the road was built. The legal title to the lands in question did not, therefore, pass to the Ontonagon & Wisconsin State line Railroad Company by the act of February 14, 1857, but remained in the state.
Was that legal title ever acquired by the plaintiff, or those under or through whom it claims? I am clearly of the opinion that it was not. The acts of March 3, 1865, and July 3, 1866, under which plaintiff derives its rights, whether considered and construed in pari materia or not, did not and could not confer upon it a legal title to the land in controversy. The act of 1866, treated as an independent grant, not controlled by* the act of 1865, as to the location of the lands granted to aid in the construction of the Harbor & Ship Canal at Portage Lake, was the one under which plaintiff asserts its claim to the land in litigation, the same being a part of the 142,430 28-100 acres granted the state in 1856, for the benefit of the Ontonagon & Wisconsin Stale Line Railroad, and certified to the state by the land department, in December, 1861. The act of July 3, 1866, was a grant in prsesenti to the state. It covered and embraced 150,000 acres of land to be selected from alternate odd-num*830bered sections, and 50,000 acres from even-numbered sections, of the lands of the United States. Upon its acceptance of the grant, on March 27, 1867, there passed to the state at that time, if not at the date of the grant, the title to 200,000 acres of the designated sections of public lands, to be afterwards selected- and located, which selection and location, would simply operate to perfect the grant, to identify the lands covei’ed by it and give precision to the title, and by relation have the same effect upon the selected sections as if the grant had specifically described them. It admits of no question that this grant of 1866 was not intended to ■cover or convey to the state lands which had been previously granted by the act of June 3, 1856. It did not, either in express terms or by any .implication, attempt to make any new appropriation of the lands granted by the act'of 1856. The purpose of the act of July 3, 1866, as well as its legal effect'and operation, was to grant to the state, for the benefit.of •the canal company, 200,000 acres of public lands, remaining at the disposal of the United States. That the lands granted to the state by the act of June 3,1856, to aid in the construction of the Ontonagon & State Line road, and which were identified by selection and certification in 1861, did not'and could not again pass to the state by the act of July, 1866, for a different purpose, the United States not having declared any .forfeiture, or reasserted ownership thereof for breach of condition subsequent, is too clear for argument, as it is settled by an unbroken line of authorities. See Wilcox v. Jackson, 13 Pet. 498; Eldred v. Sexton, 19 Wall. 189; Railroad Co. v. U. S., 92 U. S. 733; Newhall v. Sanger, Id. 761; Glasgow v. Baker, 128 U. S. 560, 9 Sup. Ct. Rep. 154; and Johnson v. Ballou, 28 Mich. 379. If the United States had forfeited the grant of 1856, and reasserted their title to these Ontonagon lands before the canal company made its selection of odd sections under the grant of 1866 from or out of said lands, it is probable that such location and appropriation would have been valid under the authority of Ryan v. Railroad Co., 99 U. S. 382. But, the title to the 142,430 23-100 acres of ■clear lands on the Ontonagon line not having been restored to the United States, but remaining in the state, the attempt to select about 15,000 acres from said lands, and appropriate the same to the-grant of 1866, was without any authority of law, and wholly invalid. When the grant of 1866 was accepted, the state occupied the position of trustee under two separate, distinct, and clearly defined trusts. It held the title to 142,430 23-100 acres under the grant of 1856 for one exclusive purpose. It also held the title to ’200,000 acres of other and different lands for another beneficiary. Both trusts were created by a common grantor. Without the consent of the United States, expressed in some authoritative way, and the-consent of the cestui que trust, how or upon what principle of law could the state divert the lands applicable to one trust or object and appropriate them to another and. different object or trust? The mere statement of the question is sufficient to show that such a proceeding would violate every principle of the law of trusts. The state could not possibly, by any action of its officials, or even of its legislature, have conferred the Ontonagon lands, or any portion thereof, upon the *831canal company. Tills is well settled by the authorities. Schulenberg v. Harriman, 21 Wall. 44; Johnson v. Ballou, 28 Mich. 397. But the state never in fact directed or attempted any such breach of trust. Gov. Crapo, in appointing T. J. Avery (then the president of the canal company) the agent of the state to select the 200,000 acres granted by the act of July, 1806, directed said Avery to make said selection from any lands in the Upper Peninsula that were subject to jirivate entry. Under date of May 3, 1876, the commissioner of the land department instructed the register and receiver at Marquette that—
“In satisfying tlie claim under said act of 1866, we are restricted to the region of country contemplated by the act of 1865 and embraced by the withdrawal above mentioned. Consequently the selections from odd sections to make up the 150,000 acres, and from even sections to cover tlie 50,000 acres, are necessarily restricted to that portion of your district.”
Withdrawals of public lands in the Upper Peninsula were made to satisfy said grant of 1866. The president of the canal company, acting also as the agent of the state in selecting the lands under said grant, in May, 1871, selected about 15,000 acres out of said grant of 1856 for the On-tonagon & Wisconsin State Line road, and the same were by the land department or commissioner approved to the state of Michigan on May 22, 1871, for the benefit of said canal company. Conceding to this certification the force and effect ol' a patent, it was void, because the lands had been previously granted and appropriated, and were thereby removed or withdrawn from the jurisdiction of the land department, and not subject to its authority or control. No right or title was thereby conferred upon or vested in the canal company to said lands. This is settled by numerous authorities. Stoddard v. Chambers, 2 How. 285; Bissel v. Penrose, 8 How. 317; Muter v. Crommelin, 18 How. 87-89; Easton v. Salisbury, 21 How. 426-432; Reichart v. Felps, 6 Wall. 160; Morton v. Nebraska, 21 Wall. 660; Shepley v. Cowan, 91 U. S. 330; Sherman v. Buick, 93 U. S. 209; Smelting Co. v. Kemp, 104 U. S. 636; Steel v. Refining Co., 106 U. S. 447, 1 Sup. Ct. Rep. 389. These cases, with others that might be cited, establish tlie general principle that a patent issued by the executive department of the government for lands previously granted or disjiosed of, or otherwise appropriated, or reserved from sale by congress, is inoperative to pass any title for want of jurisdiction over the subject and authority of law to execute the conveyance. The rule is especially applicable where the United States have by previous act of congress granted the lands which thereafter, and while such grant is in force, cease to bo public lands of the government, subject to the control or disposing power of the land department. The lands selected and appropriated to the Ontonagon line in 1861, under the grant of 1856, not having been restored to the public domain, as already shown, were not subject to selection and certification for the canal company in 1871, and the act of the department in permitting sucb selection, and in approving the same, was wholly without authority of law, and void, and communicated no title, legal or equitable, to the canal company. But it is urged on behalf of plaintiff that said certification by the department, to*832gether with the action of the governor in certifying to the completion of the canal under the state act of March 8,1865, conferred upon the canal company a prima facie title to said 15,000 acres of land, which cannot be collaterally questioned, disputed, or attacked, by the defendant, because he does not connect himself with the title, or show any interest in the land, but is a meré intruder or trespasser. Cases are' cited which, at first sight, apparently support this position; but, when carefully 'examined, they are not applicable to this case. The decisions relied on establish the general rule that where the land granted or approved for selection or entry is part of the public domain of the United States, over which the executive or land department has jurisdiction, or may lawfully exercise a discretion, or in respect to which the law invests it with “quasi judicial” functions* a patent or certificate issued for such lands, although irregularly and erroneously issued, cannot be collaterally attacked in an action of ejectment by a defendant, who isa mere trespasser or intruder. In such cases the power or authority of law to issue the patent exists, and irregularities or mistakes in its exercise cannot be taken advantage of by a defendant at law who does not connect himself in any way with the title, or show any right to the land. But the present case does not come within that rule. Here the lands attempted to be conveyed or patented were not a part of the public domain of the government, and the land department had no power or authority of law to dispose of them; nor was it vested with any discretion or jurisdiction over them. Its action in certifying the land to or for the canal company was therefore not merely irregular or voidable, but was absolutely void, and wholly inoperative to confer any right or pass any title. In cases of the latter character the defendant in- ejectment may always attack the plaintiff’s title, or show an outstanding title in another. This is settled by the following cases: Polk’s Lessee v. Wendal, 9 Cranch, 87; Patterson v. Winn, 11 Wheat. 381; Minter v. Crommelin, 18 How. 87—89; Reichart v. Felps, 6 Wall. 160; Smelting Co. v. Kemp, 104 U. S. 641, 646; Steel v. Smelting Co., 106 U. S. 447, 1 Sup. Ct. Rep. 389; Reynolds v. Mining Co., 116 U. S. 687, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 601; Doolan v. Carr, 125 U. S. 618, 8 Sup. Ct. Rep. 1228. In the two last cases the chief justice dissented from the opinion and judgment of the court, on the express ground that the defendant, being a mere intruder, could not collaterally question or attack the prima facie title which the patent conferred upon the plaintiff. But the court held otherwise upon the distinction above indicated, -which is founded upon the well-established rule that in the United States courts a recovery in ejectment can be had only upon the strength of the plaintiff’s own title, which must be the strict legal title. Proprietary v. Ralston, 1 Dall. 18; Watts v. Lindsey, 7 Wheat. 158; Foster v. Mora, 98 U. S. 425; Reynolds v. Mining Co., 116 U. S. 687, 688, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 601; Johnson v. Christian, 128 U. S. 374-382, 9 Sup. Ct. Rep. 87. The governor’s certificate as to the completion of the canal, in pursuance of the state act of March 8,1865, did not and could not operate either to confirm or give any validity whatever to the void act of the land department in approving or certifying to the *833state, lor the benefit of the canal company, said 15,000 acres of land previously granted and appropriated to the construction of the Ontona-gon & Wisconsin State Line Railroad. But it is insisted by counsel for the plaintiff, and the trial judge so ruled, that, as the agent appointed by the state selected said lands for the canal company, which selection was approved by the land department and certified to the state for the benefit of said company, and the governor thereafter, under the authority of said act of 1865, certified to the completion of the canal, the state of Michigan is or would be estopped from disputing or denying the title of plaintiff thus acquired, and that this estoppel against the state will preclude the defendant from setting up any such outstanding title to said lands in the state.
It is not deemed necessary to enter upon any review of the authorities upon the question of when or under what circumstances the doctrine of estoppel may be invoked against the sovereign. The government is not ordinarily bound by an estoppel. Johnson v. U. S., 5 Mason, 425; Carr v. U. S., 98 U. S. 433. Individuals may be estopped by unauthorized acts of their agents apparently within the scope of their agency, but the government is rarely, if ever, estopped by the unauthorized acts or declarations of its agents. But if the state can ever be estopped by the unauthorized acts or declarations of its agents or officers, the facts of the present case do not call for or warrant the application of the doctrine. The canal company was not misled to its injury by any act of the state or its officials. Its own officer acted in violation of his instructions from the governor in selecting said lands. The company knew the lands had been previously granted, was affected with full notice of the public acts of congress, of the land department, and of the state in relation thereto, and assumed to act for itself in selecting what it could not legally appropriate. The state was guilty of no deception or fraud in leading the company to select said lands. To make the doctrine of estoppel apply to title to real estate the party invoking its aid must not only be misled to his hurt, but he must also be destitute of knowledge of the true state of title, and .also of the means of acquiring such knowledge. Brant v. Coal, etc., Co., 98 U. S. 326. The canal company does not bring itself within this rule. It was not misled, and it knew the state of the title. But for another and still stronger reason the doctrine of estoppel can have no application to this case. An estoppel can never exist where the party, whether an individual, a corporation, or a government, against whom it is invoked, has no power or legal capacity to lawfully and directly do the act, which is sought to be confirmed by precluding its denial. It is an essential element in the legal principle on which the doctrine of es-toppel rests that the party against whom it is asserted should have possessed the authority or power or legal capacity to have directly done the act in some lawful way. It was not within the power or legal capacity of the state, as trustee, to have appropriated the lands in question to the canal company, or to have vested it with the title thereto; and no act or declaration of the state officials can estop the state from denying what it had no authority to do, directly. Upon the whole case, the conclusions *834of this court are (l)'that the title to said lands was not restored to the United States, nor were said lands made public domain until the passage of the forfeiture act of March 2, 1889; (2) that no title thereto was ever acquired by the canal company by the acts and transactions which preceded said 'forfeiture act of congress; (3) that the defendant, even as a mere intruder, and aside from any right acquired under said act of March 2,1889, may and has successfully disputed plaintiff’s prima facie title arising from the certification thereof for its benefit; and (4) that there is no estoppel either upon the state or the defendant against disputing or denying the validity of such prima facie title. It results in the judgment of this dburt that there should be a new trial in this case, at which the plaintiff will have to claim a confirmation of its title, to the exclusion of defendant’s right, from the act of March 2, 1889, the construction and legal effect of which is not now passed upon.