delivered the opinion of the court.
This suit was brought by the North American Transportation and Trading Company in the Court of Claims on December 7, 1906. The petitioner seeks to recover the *332 value of a placer mining claim situated on the public land near Nome, Alaska, which is alleged to have been taken by' the Government on December 8,1900, and also compensation for use and occupation thereof after that date. Ownership of the property by the company and the physical taking and continued possession of it by the . Government were not controverted. The lower court found, also, that about July 1, 1900, General Randall, United States Army, commanding the Department of Alaska, took possession, as a site for an army post, of a large tract of public land which included the mining claim. The company yielded possession of the part occupied by it, being unable to withstand his authority;, but at the same time it demanded compensation which General Randall promised would be paid. Use of the site for an army post was thereafter recommended by him to the Secretary of War. Pursuant to this recommendation, the President issued on December 8, 1900, an order by which the tract was reserved from sale and set aside for military purposes; and on December 20, 1900, the'Secretary of War announced it as a public reservation, for the present under the control of the War Department. The tract has been used as an army post continuously since possession was first taken by General Randall. The buildings erected thereon are situated on that portion of the land which had been the company’s placer claim; so that at no time since General Randall took possession of the land has the company been able to operate its claim or do any further mining work thereon.
The Government contended that, if on the facts there was a legal taking or other act entitling petitioner to recover compensation, the cause of action had accrued more than six years prior to the commencement of this suit; and that therefore under § 156 of the Judicial Code the petition should be dismissed. The Court of Claims found that the company’s property was taken within the *333 six years; that is, on December 8, 1900, and that its then reasonable value was $23,800. It entered judgment for that amount (53 Ct. Clms. 424). Both parties appealed; the Government, on the ground that the right of recovery, if any, was barred; the company, on the ground that no compensation was allowed for the use and occupation between the date of the taking and the date of entry of judgment.
First.
When the Government without instituting condemnation proceedings appropriates for a public use under legislative authority private property to which it asserts no title, it impliedly promises to pay therefor.
United States
v.
Great Falls Manufacturing Co.,
The Acts of March 3, 1899, c. 423, 30 Stat.. 1064, 1070, and May 26, 1900, c. 586, 31 Stat. 205, 213, making appropriations for barracks and quarters for troops, furnish sufficient authorization from Congress to take land for such purposes, so that the difficulty encountered by the claimant in
Hooe
v.
United States,
The suggestion is made that, as the President’s order reserved the land “subject to any legal rights which may exist to any land within its limits,” the Secretary’s action thereafter was not a taking of the mining claim. But this clause and the reference to it in the announcement made by the Secretary must, in view of the circumstances, have meant merely that the right to compensation of the company and of any others was preserved. Furthermore, the suggestion if sound would not aid the Government; it would result, at most, in slightly postponing the date of the legal taking. For the continued holding possession of the land after the announcement of the Secretary of War and the erection of buildings thereon by his authority was such an appropriation as would, in any event, give the right of action against the Government.
Second. The company contends that it should receive, in addition to the value of the property at the time of the taking, compensation for the occupation and use *335 thereof from that date to the date of the judgment — a period of nearly twenty years during which the company was deprived of the use of its property. This contention, is based upon the decisions of many state courts that, upon the taking, of private property for public uses, the owner is entitled to recover, besides its value at the time of the taking, interest thereon from the date on which he was deprived of its use to the date of payment. 1 In a number of cases in the lower federal courts also the landowner has been permitted to recover interest from'the time of the taking; but in each such case a statute had provided in some form that the condemnation should be conducted according to the laws of the State in which the land was situated — -and under the law of the State interest was recoverable. United States v. Engeman, 46 Fed. Rep. 898; Town of Hingham v. United States, 161 Fed. Rep. 295, 300; United States v. Sargent, 162 Fed. Rep. 81; United States v. First National Bank, 250 Fed. Rep. 299; United States v. Rogers, 257 Fed. Rep. 397; United States v. Highsmith, 257 Fed. Rep. 401. These conformity provisions which relate only to the laws of States, can have no application to lands in Alaska; nor can they affect proceedings brought in the Court of Claims.
The right to bring this suit against the United States in the Court of Claims is not founded upon the Fifth Amendment,
Schillinger
v.
United States,
The company argues that interest is allowed in condemnation proceedings, not
qua
interest for default or
*337
delay in paying the value, but as the measure of compensation for the use and occupation during the period which precedes the passing of the title (see
Klages
v.
Philadelphia & Reading Terminal Co.,
160 Pa. St. 386); and that collection of an amount, measured by interest, is not prohibited either by the statute limiting the powers of the Court of Claims or by the common-law rule which exempts the sovereign from liability to pay interest.
United States
v.
New York,
Furthermore, if it is not interest which the company seeks, the facts found fail to supply the "basis on which any claim in addition to that for the value of the property should rest. The petition states that the United States is indebted to claimant in addition to the $100,000, alleged to be the value of the property, the further sum of $7,500 per annum for the use and occupancy thereof from December 8,1900. Except for this allegation the company did not, so far as appears, make any request of any kind in the court below in respect to an allowance for use and occupation. The court does not mention the subject in the opinion; and it is not referred to in the application for an appeal.
In
Shoemaker
v.
United States,
The judgment below is
Affirmed.
Notes
See cases collected in 15 Cyc., pp. 930, 931, and in 10 R. C. L., p. 163.
Compare
Moll
v.
Sanitary District,
228 Illinois, 633, 636;
Lake Rom &c. Co.
v.
McLain Co.,
69 Kansas, 334, 341-342;
Kidder
v.
Oxford,
116 Massachusetts, 165;
Hamersley
v.
New York City,
