after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
This case turns upon the question as to what are “ lands of the United States ” within the meaning of Rev. Stat. § 2461, providing for the punishment of persons guilty of cutting timber upon such lands other than for the use of the navy. Obviously the question is not whether such lands are so far withdrawn from sale as to be no longer subject to appropriation by any railroad or other person or corporation to which a land grant has been made, but whether they are still so far the property of the United States that the government may protect itself against an unlawful use of them. Indeed, this court has settled by repeated decisions that the claim of a homestead or preemption entry made at any time before filing a map of definite location of a railway prevents the lands covered by such claim from, passing to such railway under its land grant, even though such entry be subsequently abandoned.
Kansas Pacific Railway
v.
Dunmeyer,
While these cases indicate that lands once appropriated to a certain purpose thereby cease to be available for another purpose, there is nothing in them to show that the United States loses its title to such lands by the first appropriation, or that they cease to be the property of the government. Upon the contrary, it was said by this court, as early as 1839, in
Wilcox
v.
Jackson,
The right which is given to a person or corporation, by a reservation of public lands in his favor, is intended to protect him against the actions of third parties, as to whom his right to the. same may be absolute. But, as to the government, his right is only conditional and inchoate. By the homestead act, Bev. Stat. § 2289, certain classes of persons therein specified are entitled to enter a quarter section of land subject to preemption at a certain price, upon making an 'affidavit of facts, (§ 2290,) before the register or receiver, including in such affidavit'a statement that “his entry is made.for the purpose of actual settlement and cultivation, and not either directly or indirectly for the use and benefit of any other person.” By the act of March 3, 1891, c. 561, § 5, 26 Stat. 1095, 1098, this affidavit is now required to state that the settler “ will faithfully and honestly endeavor to comply with all the requirements of law as to settlement, residence, and cultivation necessary to acquire title to the land applied for; that he or she is not acting as the agent of any person, corporation, or syndicate in making such entry, nor in collusion with any person, corporation, or syndicate to give them the benefit of the land entered, or any part thereof, or the timber thereon.” By § 2291, no patent shall issue until the expiration, of five years from'the date of the entry, the settler being required to prove by two credible witnesses that he has resided upon or cultivated the land for such derm of five years immediately succeeding the time of filing the. affidavit, and that no part of such land has been alienated, except for certain public purposes. By § 2297, if, before the expiration of the five years, the settler changes his residence or abandons the land for more than six months at any time, the la¡nds so entered shall revert to the government ; and by § 2301, the settler may, at any time before the expiration of the five years, obtain a patent for the lands, by paying the minimum- price therefor, and making proof of settlement and cultivation, as provided by law, granting preemption rights.
*497 From this resume of the homestead act, it is evident, first, that the land entered continues to be the property of the United States for five years following the entry, and until a patent is issued; second, that such property is subject to divestiture, upon proof of the continued residence of the settler upon the land for five years; third, that meantime such settler has the right to treat the land as his own, so far, and so far only, as is necessary to carry out the purposes of the act. The object of this legislation is to preserve the right of the actual settler, but not to open the door to manifest abuses of such right. Obviously the privilege of residing on the land for five years would be ineffectual if he had not also the right to'build himself a house, outbuildings, and fences, arid to clear the land for cultivation, and to that extent the act limits and modifies the act of 1831, now embraced in Kev. Stat. § 2461. It is equally clear that he is bound to act in good faith to the government, and that he has no right to pervert the law to dishonest purposes, or to make use of the land for profit or speculation. The law contemplates the possibility of his abandoning it, but he may not in the meantime ruin its value to others, who may wish to purchase or enter it. ■
With respect to the standing timber, his privileges are analogous to those of a tenant for life or years. In this connection, it is said by Washburn in his work upon Heal Property, (1st ed.) vol. 1, p. 108: “ In the United States, whether cutting of any kind of trees in any particular case is waste, seems' to depend upon the question whether the act is such as a prudent farmer would do with his own land, having regard to the land as an inheritance, and whether doing it would diminish the value of the land as an estate.”,
■ “Questions of this kind have frequently arisen in those States where the lands are new and covered with forests, and where they cannot be cultivated until cleared of the timber. In such case, it seems to be, lawful for the tenant to clear the land if it would be in conformity with good husbandry to do so, the question depending upon the custom of farmers, the situation of the country, and the value of the timber. . . . *498 Wood cut by a tenant in clearing the land belongs to him, and he may sell it, though he cannot cut the wood for purposes of sale; it is waste if he does.”
By analogy we think the settler upon a homestead may cut such timber as is necessary to clear the land for cultivation, or to build him a house, outbuildings, and fences, and, perhaps, as indicated in the charge of the court below, to exchange such timber for lumber to be devoted to the same purposes; but not to sell the same for money, except so far as the timber may have been cut for the purpose of cultivation. While, as was claimed in this case, such' money might be used to build, enlarge, or finish a house, the toleration of such practice would open the door to manifest abuses, and be made an excuse for stripping the land of all its valuable timber. One man might be content with a house worth $10.0, while another might, under the guise of using the proceeds of the timber for improvements, erect a house worth several thousands. A reasonable construction of the statute — a construction consonant both with the protection of the property of the government in the land and of the rights of the settler — we think restricts him to the use of the timber actually cut, or to the lumber exchanged for such timber and used for his improvements, and to such as is necessarily cut in clearing the land for cultivation.
While this question never seems to have arisen in this court before, in
United States
v.
Cook,
In the courts of original jurisdiction, it has been uniformly held that a similar rule applied to homestead entries. United States v. McEntee, 23 Internal Revenue Record, 368; United States v. Nelson, 5 Sawyer, 68; The Timber Cases, 11 Fed. Rep. 81; United States v. Smith, 11 Fed. Rep. 487, 493; United States v. Stores, 14 Fed. Rep. 824; United States v. Yoder, 18 Fed. Rep. 372; United States v. Williams, 18 Fed. Rep. 475; United States v. Lane, 19 Fed. Rep. 910; United States v. Freyberg, 32 Fed. Rep. 195; United States v. Murphy, 32 Fed. Rep. 376. This general consensus of opinion is entitled to great weight as authority.
While we hold in this case that, as between the United States and the settler, the land is to be deemed the property of the former, at least so far as is necessary to protect it from waste, we do not wish to be understood as expressing an opinion whether, as between the settler and the State, it may not be deemed the property of the settler, and, therefore, subject to taxation.
Carroll
v.
Safford,
As the land in question continued to be “ the land of the United States,” within the meaning of section 2461,
The first question must be answered in the negative, cmd the second in the affirmative.
