delivered the opinion of the court.
These writs of error are taken in a suit by the State of West Virginia brought in May, 1894, for the sale of so much of a tract of 500,000 acres of land granted to Robert Morris in 1795 as is within the State and liable to be sold for the'benefit of the school fund. See
State
v.
King,
These provisions being in the interest of actual.settlement in the country, the Constitution also provides that all titles of the State to forfeited lands, &c., not redeemed or redeemable, shall be vested in any person, other than the one in default, his heirs or devisees, for so much thereof as he shajl have held for ten years under color of title, having paid taxes on the same for any five of the ten years, with ulterior provisions if there be no such person. The statute further provides for bringing in parties interested and enacts that land already sold under the statute, on which taxes since have been regularly paid, or land transferred by the Constitution, shall be dismissed from the suit, and thus exempts it both from sale in that suit and from the redemption incident to the proceedings for a sale. Section 6. The redemption allowed is only from the title still remaining in the State and docs not affect titles under previous sales or the Constitution; the petitioner acquires no other title than that which was vested in him immediately before forfeiture. Section 17. • By § 20 the bar of the final decree is limited in accord with these provisions of § 17.
After the bill in this case had been filed and several times amended, the plaintiff in error, King, answered, in June, 1896, setting up title to the 500,000 acres, charging that the statute which attempts to work out á forfeiture of land, &c., is contrary to the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution, but asking, “if it would be adjudged that said tract of land is forfeited to the State of West Virginia by reason of the non-assessment thereof,” &c., that a decree be made allowing him to redeem.. The answer also set out a very long list of claims to'parcels of the tract, and charged that the persons making them should be made parties defendant to the bill. There were parties intervening at this stage, but they do not seem to need notice. The case was sent to a commissioner, who found,
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among other things, that about 10,000 acres of the land was not subject to junior claims, and that the taxes and interest were $2,195.65. On this report coming in King paid $3,090.08 for taxes and costs, and thereupon, on September 30, 1897, a decree was entered declaring that King “has the right superior to all others to redeem said land so far as the record in this case shows,” and that the portion of the land lying in West Virginia, “so far as the title thereto is in said State,” which portion is adjudged to be bounded as set forth in the decree, “is hereby, by the said Henry C. King, fully redeemed; and all forfeitures of said land and taxes and interest heretofore charged or chargeable thereon are hereby released and discharged.” “But it is provided that this redemption shall not affect the rights of any person not party to this suit may have, if any, under the provisions of section 3, Article 13, of the constitution of the State of West Virginia, such rights and claims not being in any manner adjudged or determined hereby.” In fact, whatever it said, the decree could not grant a redemption affecting anybody's right but that of the State. The right of purchasers at court sales and transferees under the Constitution are protected by § 17 of the act of 1893, as pointed out by the Supreme Court of Appeals.
The State appealed in October, 1898, to the Supreme Court of Appeals, and on February 7,1900, the decree “in so far as it allows the appellee, Henry C. King, to redeem the land described in this decree by reason of the payment of the sum of $3,090.08, costs, taxes and interest as fixed by the Circuit Court, and in so far as it ascertains such costs, taxes and interest,” was reversed and in all other respects affirmed. The cause was ordered to be remanded with directions to permit King to amend his petition so as to carefully describe and accurately locate the portion of said land he desired to redeem.
State
v.
King,
In many instances the land claimed by the newly joined parties was dismissed without controversy from the suit as subject neither to sale nor to redemption under the Constitution and laws. • In others the land claimed was within the boundaries established by the above-mentioned decree of September 30, 1897, but was alleged to. be outside the true lines of the Morris grant, the correctness of the decree being denied: And again claims inconsistent with- King’s right to redeem, that were not admitted by him, were, set up on-the footing of purchases from the State. On July 5, 1901, the case was referred to a-commissioner to report, among other things, the quantity, description and location of the portions of the Morris grant and other land concerned, to which the title then remained in the State and which was subject to sale. On July 14 King .answered the answers of some of the new parties claiming portions of the land. In September 'he applied for a prohibition against the proceeding in the county court, which was denied on the ground that the court had jurisdiction, and that if it made a mistake it would be only error to be corrected in the usual way.
King
v.
Doolittle,
Motions had been made by Egbert Mills to dismiss a tract of 112 acres from the suit, and by the Spruce Coal and Lumber Company to dismiss a tract of 7,000 acres, and by others, on the ground that, as has been stated, by the statute under which the suit was instituted, whenever it should appear to the court that any part of the land in question had been sold by the State in former similar proceedings, &c., or was held under § 3 of Art. 13 of the state constitution, the bill should be dismissed as to such part.
On February 23, 1905, the act of 1893 was amended so as to allow defendant claimants to file deeds or certified copies of deeds made under an order of court in previous proceedings for the sale of school land, or patents from Virginia or West Virginia, purporting to convey any part of the land in suit; and it was enacted that if the State or some other claimant did not, within thirty days, allege and prove by a proper certificate that such part again had become forfeited since the date of the conveyance, the. court should have no jurisdiction to sell such part or to permit redemption of it, but should enter an order dismissing the suit as to such part. (It was left an open question in
State
v.
King,
The dismissals were on two grounds; that the tracts concerned were outside the Morris grant as bounded by the new decree,- and that they were held under grants from the Sjtate, &c., and therefore were within c. 105, § 6, of* the Code as amended and Art. 13,. § 3, of the constitution. On December 3,1907, King appealed to the Supreme Court of Appeals, but on December 22, 1908, the decrees were affirmed. It was held that the above-mentioned tracts claimed by Egbert Mills (No. 446 in this court) and the Spruce Coal and Lumber Company (No. 445 in this court), were outside the Morris grant.
State
v.
King,
To complete the history of the .case, even if not material, it may be added that petitions for rehearing were presented and disallowed, but that on January 21, 1909, it was decreed that the boundary decree-of December 6,1905, should be “so modified and limited in effect as not to affect or impair any right vested in any person by the decree entered herein by the Circuit Court of Wyoming County on the 30th day of September, 1897, as modified and partially affirmed by a decree entered by this court on the 7th day of February, 1900, and to the like extent the decree made and entered herein on the 22nd day of -December, 1908, by this court, in so far as the same affirms said decree of December 6th, 1905, is hereby so modified and limited.” The decrees as tp the defendants in error were not modified, but still stand. Perhaps the meaning-of this last decree is as contended for by some of the defendants in error, that as between the State and King on one side and the defendants brought in after September 30, 1897, on the other, the new boundaries shall prevail., but that as between those who were parties before September 30, 1897, the old boundaries still are to be taken as correct, so that if within the latter bounds there is land to which the State alone has title, King still may redeem., The court has indicated a tendency to believe that the old decree still bound the State,
King
v.
Mason,
The present writs of error are for the purpose of reversing the decrees as to boundary and dismissal that have been mentioned. The defendants in error move to dismiss, and we are of opinion that the motion'should be granted. The only serious question in the case, if we assume that King saved it, "is whether the West Virginia .constitution and statute are consistent with the Fourteenth Amendment. But that question
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was answered in
King
v.
Mullins,
But an attempt is made to maintain that King got vested rights under the first boundary decree, September 30, 1897, and his payment of the sum fixed in that decree, coupled with the partial affirmance of the same.' But the construction and effect of that decree-, how far it bound the State and whether or not it bound parties subsequently coming in, were matters of state procedure alone.' The cases remained within the jurisdiction of the state coürt, and if, by local practice, the lower or higher court had power to change an earlier "decree in the .cause by direct order or indirectly by construction, which latter we by no means intimate was done, it is a matter that cannot be complained of here. See
Patterson
v.
Colorado,
In view of what we have said, it hardly is necessary to consider the amendment of the Code, c. 105 and the act of 1893 by the act of 1905. It is argued that the state court misconstrued the statute, but we have nothing to do with that. Judge Brannon clearly shows,
Writs of error dismissed. .
