ROSS, Circuit Judge.
The sole question in this case is whether the lands here in controversy, which constitute a part of section 16, township 3 south, range 6 east of the Willamette meridian, in the state of Oregon, passed to that' state, and through it to its grantees, prior to the attempted withdrawal of the said lands from any disposition by the executive department of the government.
The act of Congress of August 14, 1848 (9 Stat. 323, c. 177,), entitled “An act to establish the territorial government of Oregon,” provided in its twentieth section;
“That when tbe lands in the said territory shall be surveyed under the direction of the government of the United States, preparatory to bringing the same into market, sections numbered sixteen and thirty-six in each township [31]*31in said territory shall be, and the same is hereby, reserved for the purpose of being applied to schools in said territory, and in the states and territories hereafter to be erected out of the same.”
In the act of Congress of September 27, 1850 (9 Stat. 496, c. 76), entitled “An act to create the office of Surveyor General of the Public Lands in Oregon, and to provide for the survey, and to make donations to settlers of the said public lands/' it was provided, among other things:
“Sec. 3. That if, in the opinion of the Secretary of the Interior, it be preferable, the surveys in said territory shall he made after what is known as the goedetic method, under such regulations, and upon such terms, as may be provided by the Secretary of the Interior or other department having charge of the surveys of the public lands, and that said goedetic surveys shall be followed by topographical surveys, as Congress may from time to time authorize and direct;- but if the present mode of survey be adhered to, then it shall be the duty of said surveyor to cause a base line and meridian to be surveyed, marked, and established, in the usual manner, at or near the mouth of the Willamette river; and he shall also cause to be surveyed, in townships and sections, in the usual manner, and in accordance with the laws of the United States, which may be in force, the district of country lying between the summit of the Cascade Mountains and the Pacific Ocean, and south and north of the Columbia river: Provided, however, that none other than township lines shall be run where the land is deemed unfit for cultivation. That no deputy surveyor shall charge for any line except such as-may be actually run and marked, nor for any line not necessary to be run; and that the whole cost of surveying shall not exceed the rate of eight dollars per mile, for every mile and part of mile actually surveyed and marked”
—and after making certain donations of public lands to certain specifically described settlers, declared, in its ninth section, as follows:
“That no claim to a donation right under the provisions of this act, upon sections sixteen or thirty-six, shall be valid or allowed, if the residence and cultivation upon which the same is founded shall have commenced after the survey of the same; nor shall such claim attach to any tract or parcel of land selected for a military post, or within one mile thereof, or to any other land reserved for governmental purposes, unless the residence and cultivation thereof shall have commenced previous to the selection or reservation of the same for such purposes.”
By its act of February 19, 1851 (9 Stat. 568, c. 10), entitled “An act to authorize the legislative assemblies of the territories of Oregon and Minnesota to take charge of the school lands in said territories, and for other purposes,” Congress enacted:
“That the Governors and legislative assemblies of the territories of Oregon and Minnesota be, and they are hereby, authorized to make such laws and needful regulations as. they shall deem most expedient to protect from injury and waste sections numbered sixteen and thirty-six in said territories, reserved in each township for the support of schools therein.”
By its act of February 14, 1859 (11 Stat. 383, c. 33), entitled “An act for the admission of Oregon into the Union,” Congress provided, among other things, as follows :
“Sec. 4. That the following propositions be, and the same are hereby, offered, to the said people of Oregon for their free acceptance or rejection, which, if accepted, shall be obligatory on the United States and upon the said state of Oregon, to wit: First, that sections numbered sixteen and thirty-six in every township of public lands in said state, and where either of said sections, or any part thereof, has been sold or otherwise been disposed of, other lands [32]*32equivalent thereto, and as contiguous as may be, shall be granted to said state for the use of schools. Second, that seventy-two sections of land shall be set apart and reserved for the use and support of a state university, to be selected by the Governor of said state, subject to the approval of the Commissioner of the General Land Office, and to be appropriated and applied in such manner as the Legislature of said state may prescribe for the purpose aforesaid, but for no other purpose. Third. That ten entire sections of land, to be selected by the Governor of said state, in legal subdivisions, shall be .granted to said state for the purpose of completing the public buildings, or for the erection of others at the seat of government, under the direction of the Legislature thereof. Fourth. That all salt springs within said state, not exceeding twelve in number, with six sections of land adjoining, or as contiguous as may be to each, shall be granted to said state for its use, the same to be selected by the Governor thereof within one year after the admission of said state, and when so selected, to be used or disposed of on such terms, conditions and regulatioris as the Legislature shall direct: Provided, that no salt spring or land, the right whereof is now vested in any individual or individuals, or which may be hereafter confirmed or adjudged to any individual or individuals, shall by this article be granted to said state. Fifth. That five per centum of the net proceeds of sales of all public lands lying within said state which shall be sold by Congress after the admission of said state into the Union, after deducting all the expenses incident to the same, shall be paid to said state, for the purpose of making public roads and internal improvements, as the Legislature shall direct: Provided, that the foregoing propositions, hereinbefore offered, are on the condition that the people of Oregon shall provide by an ordinance, irrevocable without the consent of the United States, that said state shall never interfere with the primary disposal of the soil within the same by the United States, or with any regulations Congress may find necessary for securing the title in said soil to bona fide purchasers thereof; and that in no case shall nonresident proprietors be taxed higher than residents. Sixth. And that the said state shall never tax the lands or the property of the United States in said state: Provided, however, that in case any of the lands herein granted to the state of Oregon have heretofore been confirmed to the territory of Oregon for the purposes specified in this act, the amount so confirmed shall be deducted from the quantity specified in this act.”
The propositions specifically stated in section 4 of the act of February 14, 1859, as well as the aforesaid acts respecting the school sections, were, according to the stipulation of facts entered into by and between the respective parties to the present case, accepted by an act ■of the legislative assembly of the state of Oregon of June 3, 1859 •(Laws, 1st Extra Sess. p. 36).
The stipulation shows these further facts: Prior to May 27, 1902, the lands in controversy were unsurveyed. On that day a field survey of their east boundary was made, and on June 2d following the north, west, and south boundaries thereof were surveyed, and the said section 16 subdivided according to the rules of the Land Office for surveying the lands of the government. This field survey was approved by the United States Surveyor General for the state of Oregon June 2,_ 1903, and on the 8th of the same month that officer transmitted copies of the plat of the survey and field notes to the Commissioner •of the General Land Office at Washington, which survey was accepted by the Commissioner January 31, 1906. On November 16, 1907, the Commissioner directed the Surveyor General to place a plat of the survey in the field, in the local land office of the United States at Portland, Or., which was on the same day accordingly filed in that office. Shortly prior to the acceptance by the Commissioner of the survey ■mentioned, to wit, on the l$th day of December, 1905, the Secretary of [33]*33the Interior made an order temporarily withdrawing, for forestry purposes, from all forms of disposition whatsoever except under-the mineral laws of the United States—
“all tlie vacant and unappropriated public lands within the areas specifically described in that certain letter of the Commissioner of the General Land Office, of date December 12,-1905, to the Secretary of the Interior, including all of township three (3) south, range six (6) east of the Willamette meridian.”
In December, 1905, a telegram was sent by the Commissioner of the General Uand Office to the register and receiver of the United States land office at Portland, Or., informing him of said withdrawal, ■ and stating that the land had been withdrawn for forestry purposes, and on December 19, 1905, a letter was sent by the said Commissioner to the register and receiver, giving him the same information. The said withdrawal, so made by the Secretary of the Interior and the Commissioner of the General Uand Office, described said lands according to the rectangular system of government survey. October 10, 1906, the state of Oregon, in pursuance of its laws for the disposal of lands owned by it, executed a certificate of sale to one Robert F. Uouden for the S. E. % of the said section 16, and to Alvina S. Uouden a similar certificate for the S. % of the N. E. and the N. W. 14 of the N. W. 14 of the' said section, who thereafter assigned the said certificates of sale to the appellants Finley and W. J. Morrison, and on January 9, 1907, the state of Oregon, on the surrender of such certificates, executed to the latter purchasers a deed of grant covering the said described lands. On July 9, 1910, the said Morrisons conveyed the same lands to the appellant Slight Furniture Company. January 25, 1907, the President of the United States issued a proclamation enlarging the Cascade Range Forest Reserve, the boundaries of which included the said land, which proclamation, however, provided, among other things, that all lands which at the date of the proclamation were embraced within any withdrawal or reservation for any use or purpose to which the reservation for forest uses was inconsistent, were excepted from its force and effect.
It is thus seen that long before Oregon became a state Congress provided that when the lands in the then territory should be surveyed under the direction of the government of the United States preparatory to bringing the same into market, sections numbered 16 and 36 in each township in the territory—
“shall be, and the same hereby is, reserved ior the purpose of being applied "to schools in said territory, and in the states and territories hereafter to be erected out of the same.”
Two years and more later, in passing what is commonly known as the Donation Act, Congress expressly provided that no donation right thereby conferred should affect any sixteenth or thirty-sixth section, if the residence and cultivation upon which such. donation right is founded “shall have commenced after the survey” of such sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections; and by a subsequent act of January 7, 1853 (10 Stat. 150, c. 6), it gave to the territory of Oregon the right to take other lands in lieu of such of th‘e sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections as should be acquired by third parties under the Donation Act.
[34]*34By its Act of February 19, 1851, respecting the territories of Oregon and Minnesota, Congress expressly authorized the Governors and legislative assemblies of those territories—
“to make suck laws and needful regulations as they shall deem most expedient to protect from injury and waste sections sixteen and thirty-six in said territories, reserved in each township for the support of schools therein.”
And finally, by the Enabling Act of February 14, 1859, Congress expressly declared, among other things, that the propositions thereby offered to the people of Oregon for their acceptance or rejection, “if accepted shall be obligatory upon the United States, and upon the state of Oregon.” Those propositions were, we repeat:
“First, that sections numbered sixteen and thirty-six in every township of public lands in said state, and where either of said sections, or any part thereof, has been sold or otherwise been disposed of, other lands equivalent thereto, and as contiguous as may be, shall be granted to said state for the use of schools. Second. That seventy-two sections of land shall be set apart and reserved for the use and support of a state university, to be selected by the Governor of said state, subject to the approval of the Commissioner of the General Land Office, and to be appropriated and applied in such manner as the Legislature of said state 'may prescribe for the purpose aforesaid, but for no other purpose. Third. That ten entire sections of land, to be selected by the Governor of said state, in legal subdivisions, shall be granted to said state for the purpose of completing the public buildings, or for the erection of others at the seat of government, under the direction of the Legislature thereof. Fourth. That all salt springs within said state, not exceeding twelve in number, with six sections of land adjoining, or as contiguous as may be to each, shall be granted to said state for its use, the same to be selected, by the Governor thereof within one year after the admission of said state, and when so selected, to be used or disposed of on such terms, conditions, and regulations as the Legislature shall direct: Provided, that no salt spring or land, the right whereof is now vested in any individual or individuals, or which may be hereafter confirmed or adjudged to any individual or individuals, shall by this article be granted to said state. Fifth. That five per centum of the net proceeds of sales of all public lands lying within said state which shall be sold by Congress after the admission of said state into the Union, after deducting all the expenses incident to the same, shall be paid to said state, for the purpose of making public roads and internal improvements, as the Legislature shall direct: Provided, that the foregoing propositions, hereinbefore offered, are on the condition that the people of Oregon shall provide by an ordinance, irrevocable without the consent of the United States, that said state shall never interfere with the primary disposal of the soil within the same by the United States, or with any regulations Congress may find necessary for securing the title in said soil to bona fide purchasers thereof; and that in no case shall nonresident proprietors be taxed higher than residents. Sixth. And that the said state shall never tax the lands or the property of the United States in said state: Provided, however, that in case any of the lands herein granted to the state of Oregon have heretofore been confirmed to the territory of Oregon for the purposes specified in this act, the amount so confirmed shall be deducted from the quantity specified in this act.”
The propositions so submitted to the people of Oregon having been accepted by them, it cannot be doubted, we think, that the legislation of Congress amounted to a congressional grant to that state of all the sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections for school purposes, to which no right of any .third party attached prior to the proper identification of such sections.
Such identification of the lands here in controversy was first made by the survey in the field June 2, 1902, which survey, it appears, was [35]*35approved on the same day by the United States Surveyor General for the State of Oregon, and by him transmitted to the General Land Office on the 8th of the same month, where it remained unaltered until its express approval by that office on the 31st day of January, 1906, and where in the meantime it met with recognition and was acted upon to identify the lands in question by the Commissioner of the General Land Office on the 12th and 19th days of December, 1905, and by the Secretary of the Interior on the 16th day of December, 1905, in making his order of withdrawal relied upon by the government in the present case. The fact that there was a delay of about 3% years in the express approval of the survey by. the Commissioner of the General Land Office is, in our opinion, wholly unimportant, and by no means unusual. The approval, when' made, under the familiar doctrine of relation adopted by the courts for purposes of justice, related back to the inception of the proceeding, thereby perfecting the grant which was promised by the government when Oregon was a territory, and confirmed when it, as a state, accepted the propositions offered by Congress in its Enabling Act of 1859. It was, as said by the Supreme Court in a similar case—
“an unalterable condition of the admission, obligatory upon the United States, that section 16 in every township of the public lands in the state, which had not been sold or otherwise disposed of, should be granted to the state for the use of schools. It matters not whether the words of the compact be considered as merely promissory on the part of the United States, and constituting only a pledge of a grant in future, or as operating to transfer the title to the state upon her acceptance of the propositions as soon as the sections could be afterwards identified by the public surveys. In either case, the lands which might be embraced within those sections were appropriated to the state. They were withdrawn from any other disposition, and set apart from the public domain, so that no subsequent law authorizing a sale of it could be construed to embrace them, although they were not specially excepted. All that after-wards remained for the United States to do with respect to them, and all that could be legally done under the compact, was to identify the sections by appropriate surveys; or, if any further assurance of title was required, to provide for the execution of proper instruments to transfer the naked fee, or to adopt such further legislation as would accomplish that result. They could not be diverted from their appropriation to the state.” Beecher v. Wetherby, 95 U. S. 517, 24 L. Ed. 440.
In the case cited the court proceeded:
“In Cooper v. Roberts, 18 How. 173 [15 L. Ed. 338], this court gave construction to a similar clause in the compact upon which the state of Michigan was admitted into th^ Union, and held, after full consideration, that by it the state acquired such an interest in every section 16 that her title became perfect so soon as the section in any township was designated by the survey. ‘We agree,’ said the court, ‘that, until the survey of the township and the designation of the specific section, the right of the state rests in compact, binding, it is true, the public faith, and dependent for execution upon the political authorities. Courts of justice have no authority to mark out and define the land which shall be subject to the grant. But, when the political authorities have performed this duty, the compact has an object upon which it can attach, and, if there is no legal impediment, the title of the state becomes a legál title. The jus ad rem, by the performance of that executive act, becomes a jus in re, judicial in its nature, and under the cognizance and protection of the judicial authorities, as well as the others.’ In this case,, the township embracing the land in question was surveyed in October, 1852, and was subdivided into sections in May and June, 1854. With this identification of the section the title of the state, upon the authority cited, became complete, un[36]*36less there had been a sale or other disposition of the property by the United States previous to the compact with the state. No subsequent sale or other disposition, as already stated, could defeat the appropriation.”
We see nothing in the cases of Minnesota v. Hitchcock, 185 U. S. 373, 22 Sup. Ct. 650, 46 L. Ed. 954, or Wisconsin v. Hitchcock, 201 U. S. 202, 26 Sup. Ct. 498, 50 L. Ed. 727, as applied to the facts in the present case, at all inconsistent with what was said in Beecher v. Wetherby, 95 U. S. 517, 24 L. Ed. 440, or in Cooper v. Roberts, 18 How. 173, 15 L. Ed. 338.
In Minnesota v. Hitchcock it appeared that the sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections were not surveyed until after the rights of the Indians had attached thereto, and that therefore the lands there in question were not “public lands” at the time of the grant contained in the act admitting the state. The court in its opinion in Minnesota v. Hitchcock expressly referred to and quoted from the case of Beecher v. Wetherby, as also its previous decisions in the cases of United States v. Thomas, 151 U. S. 577, 14 Sup. Ct. 426, 38 L. Ed. 276, and Cooper v. Roberts, 18 How. 173, 15 L. Ed. 338, and, so far from disapproving of them, pointed out the distinctions existing between them and the case then under consideration.
The case of Wisconsin v. Hitchcock, supra, was expressly based upon the Thomas Case, which in turn referred to the case of Beecher v. Wetherby with approval.
It hardly need be said that, the lands here in controversy being embraced by the grant to the state of Oregon, the withdrawal order made by the Secretary of the Interior on December 16, 1905, which in express terms excluded therefrom all lands previously appropriated, could not defeat or in any way affect such grant. Tubbs v. Wilhoit, 138 U. S. 134, 11 Sup. Ct. 279, 34 L. Ed. 887. And, as has been seen, the proclamation of the President of date January 25, 1907, also expressly excepts from its operation any inconsistent rights.
For the reasons stated, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded to the court below, with directions to dismiss the bill.