This was a suit instituted in the circuit court of Butler county by the plaintiffs against the defendants, under section 650, Revised Statutes 1899, to quiet title to a certain quarter section of land situate in said county, and particularly described in the petition. The petition also contained a second count in ejectment for the possession of the land.
A trial was had which resulted in a judgment for the plaintiffs on both counts of the petition; and after moving unsuccessfully for a new trial, the defendants appealed the cause to this court.
Counsel for appellants have made a clear and terse statement of the case, which counsel for respondents say is correct, and for that reason we will adopt that statement as our statement of the case, which is as follows:
“This is an action instituted in the circuit court of Butler county, Missouri, to quiet title and in ejectment. The petition is in two counts, the first count, being an ordinary action to try title under section 650,. Revised Statutes 1899, and the second an action in ejectment. The land involved lies in.Butler county, Missouri, and is described as follows:
“The northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section twenty-eight, township twenty-five, range seven east.
“The answers of the respective defendants denied that plaintiffs had any title, estate or interest in the land involved, and averred that the defendant Justus Gibbs was the sole and absolute owner in fee simple of the premises described, subject only to a deed of' trust given by defendant James V. Webb to his co-defendant, Ernest Bacon, to secure the payment of a *498promissory note for $300. The defendant, Justus Cribhs, admitted that he was in possession of the real estate described in the petition, but both defendants 'Webb and Bacon specifically denied that they were in the possession thereof.
“The cause was tried at the October term, 1909, •of the Butler Circuit Court, and on the 3d day of December, 1909, and during the same term, the court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs on both •counts of their petition. The judgment found plaintiffs to be the owners of the premises described in their petition, and also found defendants guilty of trespass- and ejectment, assessed plaintiffs’ damages at the sum of one dollar and monthly rents and profits .at five dollars per month until plaintiffs be restored to possession.
‘ ‘ On the trial, the testimony showed Butler county to be the "alleged common source of title. Plaintiffs thereupon offered in evidence a commissioner’s deed from Chas. W. Addy, commissioner, to John Bayless, •dated November 15', 1867, and recorded November 27, 1867, in the deed records of Butler county, Missouri. This deed recited a conveyance of one hundred and •sixty acres of land, at fifty cents per acre, consideration eighty dollars. This deed was objected to by de-. fendants for three reasons, viz.: (1) There was no •showing of any authority vested in the commissioner named to make the conveyance for the county; (2). that at the time of the conveyance, Butler county had no title; (3) that the deed on its face was void, in that the land was sold for a less consideration than counties were authorized under the Swamp Land acts to sell for at that time. The court sustained the objection on ..the sole ground that no authority for the commissioner to make the deed was shown. Thereupon plaintiffs offered a record of the county court of But*499ler county, of date January 18, 1866, reading as follows :
“ ‘It is ordered by the court that Charles W. Addy he and is hereby appointed swamp land commissioner, and that he give bond as required by law.’
“This offering was objected to, as being insufficient to authorize Charles W. Addy to make this particular patent, and the objection was overruled by the court, to which defendants excepted. Thereupon the commissioner’s deed was again offered by the plaintiffs, and defendants renewed their objections thereto, which were overruled by the court, and defendants excepted.
“John H. Bayless, one pf the plaintiffs, thereupon testified that John Bay less, to whom this land was patented, was now dead and that plaintiffs were his heirs.
“It was thereupon admitted by defendants that defendant Justus Gibbs was in possession of this land, but expressly denied that the other defendants were.
“This was all the evidence introduced by the plaintiffs, and thereupon defendants offered in evidence county court record of December 8, 1874, directing Charles W. Addy, commissioner of patents, to issue a patent to the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Eailway Company for this land. Defendants next offered a certificate of purchase from Butler county, by Charles W. Addy, commissioner, to the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Eailway Company, dated December 21, 1874, and conveying this land.
“Defendants’ next offering was a general warranty deed from the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Eailway Company to defendant James Y. Webb, -dated October 17, 1902, and conveying the premises in suit. Defendants next offered a general warranty deed from defendants James V. Webb and wife to co-defendant Justus Gibbs, dated December 31, 1904, and conveying the premises in suit. They also offered in *500evidence a deed of trust from defendant James Y. Webb and wife to defendant Ernest Bacon, to secure a promissory note for $300, dated December 30, 1904, and conveying this land.
“Defendants also offered tbe oral testimony of County Clerk M. J. Armstrong’, and tbe records of tbe county court between January 18, 1866, and November 15, 1867, showing- that no bond was ever filed by Charles W. Addy, the commissioner named in plaintiffs’ deed, and that there was no order made at any time directing Charles W. Addy, commissioner, to make a patent to John Bayless, under which plaintiffs claimed title.”
This was all the evidence in the case, and thereupon the court rendered judgment for the plaintiffs on both counts of the petition, as previously stated.
I. Counsel for appellants ask that the judgment be reversed for five reasons assigned.
We will state and consider them in the order stated in their brief. ’
The first is stated in these words:
Swamp Lands: Cnlg iPqh Fifty cents an Acre “The court erred in finding for the plaintiffs and against defendants. The patent under which plaintiffs claim title is void on its face, in that it shows upon its face that the -L land was sold for a less consideration .than the county was authorized under the Swamp Land acts to sell same.”
This land is a portion of the great body of swamp and overflowed lands originally granted by the United States to the State of Missouri, by an act of Congress approved September 28, 1850.
This State by an act of the Legislature approved February 23,1853 (Laws 1852-3, p. 108), donated these lands to Butler county, “upon the terms and provisions” stated in an act of the Legislature approved March 3, 1851 (Laws 1850-1, p. 238).
*501This, as well as the succeeding proposition contended for hy counsel for appellants, calls for a careful consideration of the acts of the Legislature previously mentioned.
As regards this proposition: Section 1 of the Act of 1853, in so far as is here material, reads as follows :
“That all the swamp lands, lying in the counties of Scott, New Madrid, Pemiscot, Mississippi, Cape Girardeau, Stoddard,. Dunklin, Ripley, Butler and Wayne, are hereby donated to the counties in which they lie, upon the terms and provisions of the act entitled ‘An act donating certain swamp and overflowed lands to the counties in which they lie, ’ approved March 3, 1851.”
We must not lose sight of the fact that the act of Congress mentioned granted these lands to the State of Missouri for the benefit of the public schools of the State, also of the fact that the section of the act of the Legislature just quoted donates said lands to the counties named, in which they are situate, “upon the terms and provisions of an act entitled ‘An act donating certain swamp and overflowed lands to the counties in which they lie,’ approved March 3, 1851.” (The italics are ours and the materiality of which will be later -considered.)
The former act, after providing a scheme and the means for the reclamation of said lands, in section 9 thereof provides as follows:
“That either of said counties as shall unite together for the reclamation of their lands, shall have full jpower to issue land scrip and sell the same, in order to raise funds for the prosecution of their works of reclamation,- which said scrip shall entitle the holders thereof to a certificate for the amount of acres after the location of the same, that the same may call for, and a patent shall issue therefor; provided *502that said scrip shall in no instance he sold for a less amount than one dollar per acre.
“This act to,take effect and be in force from and after its passage.”
“Approved February 23, 1853.”
The italics are ours.
The provision of this section is clear, terse and unambiguous, and is not for that reason susceptible of construction. It states what it means and means-what it says, namely: “That said scrip shall in no instance be sold for a less amount than one dollar per acre.”
The clear purpose of this limitation upon the-power of the county courts of the respective counties named was to prevent just what was here attempted to be done, that is, to fritter these lands away and thereby frustrate the twofold object the Legislature had in view at the time of its enactment, namely, the reclamation of the land for agricultural purposes and the procurement of funds for the use and benefit of the public schools of the State.
Now, if this statute .may thus be violated, and these swamp lands of the State be disposed of for fifty cents on the dollar, then by parity of reasoning they may be disposed of for nothing, for there is no difference in principle between selling them for one-half of the price’ fixed by the statute and in disposing of them for nothing ; the latter is simply double the length of the illegal step of the former, differing in degree, but not in principle.
- The same principle of limitation upon the exercise of power by a court, was decided in the case of State ex rel. v. Williams, 221 Mo. 227. That was an original proceeding in prohibition, in Banc, seeking to prohibit Judge Williams of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis from further entertaining jurisdiction of a certain injunction suit then pending therein, *503wherein the State of Missouri at the relation of Seebert G-. Jones, circuit attorney of said city, was plaintiff, and the Missouri Pacific Eailway Company, and many others, were defendants. The facts of that case are not here material. Upon the presentation of the-petition, duly verified by affidavit, said court, without requiring the plaintiff to give the bond required by section 3637, Eevised Statutes 1899, but in plain violation thereof, issued á temporary injunction against the defendants. The material parts of that statute-read as follows:
“No injunction, unless on final hearing or judgment, shall issue in any case, except in suits instituted by the State in its own behalf, until the plaintiff, or some. responsible person for him, shall have executed a bond with sufficient surety or sureties to the other party, in such sum as the court or judge shall deem sufficient. ’ ’
While the court was divided as to whether or not that suit was a “suit instituted by the State in its own behalf” within the meaning of the statute, the majority holding that it was not, however, it was unanimously of the opinion that in all other cases, except those stated in the exception, the court had no power or authority to issue an injunction therein unless the'plaintiff or someone for him should first give the bond required by said statute, and consequently prohibited said court from further entertaining jurisdiction over said cause.
The limitation of the authority of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis to issue injunctions unless the plaintiff first gives the bond required by said section 3637, is no more imperative and mandatory than is the limitation imposed upon the power of the county courts of the counties mentioned in said Act of February 23, 1853, to sell said lands for a sum not less than one dollar an acre.
*504And in the case of Cape Girardeau South Western Railway Co. v. Hatton, 102 Mo. 45, 1. c. 55, this court in regard to these lands said:
“The swamp lands are the absolute property of the counties in which they are situate; but the counties' hold them for purposes designated in the law, and they must be sold for the purposes and in the manner pointed out by the law concerning swamp lands. [Sturgeon v. Hampton, 88 Mo. 211; State ex rel. Robbins v. County Court, 51 Mo. 84.] The county courts may cause the swamp lands to be sold, with or without drainage, at public or private sale; but they must be sold for not less than $1.25 per acre. [R. S. 1879, sec. 6153.] The proceeds are applied to purposes of reclamation, and the surplus, if any, goes to the school fund. [Sec. 6155.]”
These cases are direcetly in point and are controlling in this.
Restricted of county courts. II. Moreover, and independent of the Williams case, if we have not correctly stated the plain meaning of section 3637, Revised Statutes 1899, and sections 1 and 9 of the Act of February 23, 1853, then they have no meaning whatever, because no other construction can be placed upon them, except what they themselves plainly express, namely, that said lands shall not be sold for less than one dollar per acre.
But counsel for respondent cite us to the case of Simpson v. Stoddard County, 173 Mo. 421, and insist that it announces a doctrine contrary to that just stated. While it is true, there is some general language used therein which, read alone, might be construed to announce views different from those here expressed, yet a critical examination of the facts of that case will show that it was decided upon grounds radically different from those involved in this, and we might properly say that the language mentioned was *505more obiter than authoritative, for the reason that it is disclosed by the record in that case that the sale and conveyance of the land therein considered were made after the passage of the Act of March 27, 1868 (Laws 1868, p. 68), and the Act of March 10, 1869 (Laws 1869, p. 66). These were the acts Pox, J., had in mind when he used the following language on page 448, in the Simpson case:
“The whole previous system of the State in regard to these lands was changed, by general law applicable to every county in the State by which a complete title was to be vested in each county by a patent to be issued for the swamp land therein situate, and thenceforth the State delegated to each county the execution of its trust as to the land situate in each county . . . and thereafter the swamp lands in said county were subject to sale and conveyance by the county under the provisions of the general law expressed in those acts.”
But in the ease at bar, the sale and conveyance were made prior to those enactments, and while an Act of March 1, 1855 (Laws 1854-5, pp. 154-159), entitled, “An Act in relation to swamp lands in the counties of New Madrid, Pemiscot, Mississippi, Scott, Cape Girardeau, Stoddard, Wayne, Ripley, Butler and Dunklin,” was in full force and effect.
It cannot, therefore, be truly said as Judge Pox held in that case, that “the previous system of the State in regard to these lands was changed, by general law applicable to every county in the State.” Nor does this act purport to repeal or amend the Acts-of 1851 and 1853, previously mentioned (without it is done so by implication), although all of them relate to the same lands, their salé, reclamation, etc.
There appears to be some inconsistencies and incongruities existing between these various acts, which would take careful consideration to reconcile. Since, however, they are not specially material to the merits *506•of this case, I will pass them by with the passing remark that I devoted much time and care to the Act of 1855 in the case of Mosher v. Bacon, 229 Mo. 338, and for that reason I will steer clear of everything contained in said acts, except such as bear directly upon the merits of the case at bar.
With these preliminary observations regarding the various acts mentioned, I will return to the sale .and conveyance of the land involved in this suit, which •as stated, were made prior to the passage of the Acts of 1868 and 1869, previously mentioned.
The exception of Butler county and the other nine mentioned in the Acts of 1851, 1853 and 1855, was carried forward, and was incorporated into section 19 of chapter 48 of the General Statutes of 1865. This, •of course, renders said Acts of 1868 and 1869, wholly immaterial to the merits of this case. •
We must, therefore, turn to the Act of 1855, and those of 1851 and 1853, to ascertain the validity of the deeds of conveyance involved in this case.
This court, in numerous cases, has repeatedly held, that the county courts of the respective counties of the State are not the general agents of the counties of the State. They are courts of limited jurisdictions, with powers well defined and limited by the laws of the State; and as has been well said, the statutes of the State constitute their warrant of authority, and when they act outside of and beyond their statutory authority, their acts are null and void.
Consequently, this court has also repeatedly held, that all persons while dealing with said courts or agents are bound to take notice of their powers and authority.
Among the cases so holding are the following: Sturgeon v. Hampton, 88 Mo. 203, 1. c. 213; State ex rel. v. Crumb, 157 Mo. 545; Cape Girardeau South Western Railway Co. v. Hatton, supra; Wheeler v. *507Reynolds Land Co., 193 Mo. 279; Moss v. Kauffman, 131 Mo. 424; Hooke v. Chitwood, 127 Mo. 372.
If we should apply the rule announced in these cases to the undisputed facts in the case at har, which we must do, then the act of the county court of Butler county, acting through its commissioner, in selling the lands in controversy, for fifty cents an acre, was absolutely null and void, and the deed purporting to convey the same to John-Bayless, respondents’ ancestor, was likewise null and void, and conveyed no right, title or interest in or to the same to him, and consequently he- had no interest therein to transmit under the statutes of descent and distribution to respondents, his heirs at law.
Counsel for respondents insist that this conclusion is also in contravention of the rule announced by this court in the case of Simpson v. Stoddard County, supra. This insistence is a misconception of that particular portion of that opinion.
In that case, our late beloved brother who wrote the opinion therein predicated the same upon the theory that because the invalidity of the consideration paid for the land there involved was not apparent upon the face of the deed or patent, the same should be and was held valid until set aside, for that reason, in a direct proceeding instituted by the county, in a court of competent jurisdiction for that purpose.
"While I do not indorse that doctrine, and, if I correctly understand the later decisions of this court, which will be presently noted, neither does it, yet we -are not forced to go to the extent of overruling that case upon this point, in order to hold the patent to John Bayless in this case invalid, for the simple rea-’ son that in this patent to Bayless the invalidity of the consideration paid for the land in controversy appears upon the face thereof, which fact, if the language of Judge Fox used in the Simpson case is followed, must of necessity require us to hold that this *508patent is absolutely null and void upon its face, without the institution of any legal or equitable action or proceeding to have it so declared.
But speaking for myself, I am firmly of the opinion that such a sale of s,uch lands is absolutely null and void, for want of authority in the county court to make the same; and that the appearance of or absence of the invalid consideration from the face of the patent is wholly immaterial, for in my opinion it is the want of authority, however proven, on the part of the county court to make such a sale, and not the mode by which that fact appears or is established, that renders, the sale void.
This is true, for the reason, previously stated,, that the county court being a public agent, exercising only statutory powers, all persons dealing with it must take notice of its acts, as well as the authority by which it so acts.
Besides that, in the Simpson cas.e, the Act of 1854-5 (Laws 1854-5, p. 154), was entirely overlooked, for it is there said that prior to the Act of 1868 there was no limitation whatever upon the power of the county courts, as to the price at which these lands could be sold, at either private or public sale. This statement is contradicted by all the acts previously mentioned.
And in this connection we wish to add that there is some language used in the Simpson case, not supported by the acts and statutes mentioned, which is misleading, and creates much confusion therein.
It is there stated that the Act of February 28,. 1855 (Laws 1854-5, p. 160), by which the several county courts of the State were “authorized to sell and dispose of the swamp and overflowed lands within their respective counties, either with or without draining and reclaiming the same, as in their discretion they might think conducive to the interests of said counties,” applied to Stoddard and Butler counties. It is also there stated, that the Act of November 4, 1857 *509(Laws 1857, adj., 32), by which all the swamp lands situate in this State selected by virtue of the Act of •Congress of September 28, 1850, were “declared to vest in full title, and belong to the counties in which they may lie,” applied to Butler and Stoddard counties.
While the language of that act, if read and considered alone, is sufficiently broad and comprehensive to bear the construction there stated, yet when we consider the act, its history and its relation to other acts bearing upon the same subject, enacted about the same time, and some of them prior and others subsequent thereto, then we feel satisfied that the construction placed upon it by the majority of the court in the Simpson case was not the real intention of the Legislature or the real meaning of the act.
• Briefly, there are several reasons for so saying.
In the first place, those acts were carried into the revision of 1865 (G. S. 1865, p: 277, et seq.); and section 19 of chapter 48 thereof provides that “the provisions of this chapter shall not. extend to or be in force in the counties of Wayne, Butler, Stoddard, Dunklin, Pemiscot, New Madrid, Mississippi, Scott, Cape Girardeau and Ripley.”
It is also manifest from the face of the acts themselves, that it was the intention not to amend the laws applicable to these ten counties, but to those counties only to which the original Act of March 3, 1851, was applicable. This is specially shown by reading' the Laws of 1854-5, p. 160, and Laws 1857,adj., p. 32, which .amend the law only in so far as it applied to the original lands embraced in the Act of 1851, Laws 1850-1, p. 238.
Also by inspecting these acts, it will be seen that "the Act of 1854-5, p. 154, prescribing. the mode and maimer for selling the swamp lands in the ten counties named, was enacted subsequent to the two acts found •on page 160 of the same Session Laws, regarding the *510swamp land generally, thereby showing conclusively that the Legislature did not intend that the swamp lands in those counties should be governed by laws applicable to the swamp lands generally of the State.
Judge Pox makes no mention of the Act of 1854-5, p. 154, supra; evidently he overlooked it, and only considered the other acts of the Legislature which are general in terms applying to all swamp lands except these in these counties, and had it not been for the exception stated in that act, his conclusion would have been right; but having overlooked it, his conclusions were erroneous, in my opinion.
These views are in perfect harmony with those expressed by this court in the case of Wheeler v. Reynolds Land Co., 193 Mo. 279, where Valliant, J., in speaking for the court, on page 290, said:
“The plaintiff refers to Simpson v. Stoddard County, 173 Mo. 1. c. 458-9, wherein it is said that a patent to swamp lands from the county, regular on its face and based on orders of the county court, is valid until set aside by appropriate proceedings; that: ‘It is not absolutely void, but may be avoided in an action for that purpose, upon a showing of independent, unauthorized acts upon which the instrument is based.’ And it is contended that that means that the patent is valid until it is set aside in a suit instituted by the county for that purpose. But- that is not what the court said in that case, and is not what was meant. If that were the law, then a party who held a valid patent from the county could have no relief from another patent that may have been issued by the county which, though fair on its face, was founded on a false bottom, until the county itself might see fit to interfere. If the county had conveyed its title by another patent that was valid, it had no further interest in the land and unless the other patent contained some covenant or agreement, express or implied, which would render the county liable for a bre’ach, the county *511would have no such interest as would enable it to maintain a suit to set aside the alleged unauthorized patent. But whether the county could'or could not sue,, the party who held the valid title could sue to defend his own title or to put it at rest. ’ ’
Further in the same case, Yalliant,-J., uses this-language, 1. c. 292:
“But where the common source was a public trustee who was authorized to sell only for a valuable consideration, yet, who, in disregard of the trust, essayed to convey the property as a mere gift, a party holding a deed from the trustee executed in good faith for a valuable consideration is entitled, in a suit in which the respective titles are the subject of adjudication, to show the total want of consideration in the-deed of gift in order to have it adjudged invalid.”
This language of Judge Yalliant is specially applicable to the facts of this case, and for the reason there stated the Bayless patent in this case should beheld void.
We, therefore, hold this patent to he void, and that it was ineffectual to convey any right, title or interest in and to the lands in controversy, to John Bay-less, and, therefore, he had no interest therein, which respondents, his heirs, could have inherited.
swamp T¡tíeSof County, III. Counsel for appellants urge two other objections to the validity of the patent from Butler county by Addy, the commissioner, to Bayless, the ancestor of respondents, and the person. w^om they claim title; first, because the record does not show any authority vested in the commissioner to make the patent; and,, second, that at the time the patent was issued to Bay-less, Butler county had no title to the lands therein described and purported to be conveyed thereby — that, is, in its own right, as was held in the Simpson case, *512but it did hold the title under the Act of 1853 “upon the terms and provisions, as therein stated.”
The decision of the first objection urged is not necessary for a proper determination of the case, but if it were, it seems to me, from the limited light I have upon the question, that if valid, it would cut much deeper than the point suggested by counsel for appellants. In fact, it would penetrate the vitals of appellants’ own case, for as I understand this record, they claim under a patent issued by the same commissioner, and that too, without any additional showing of authority upon his part, to issue the same.
But we will not decide that question, because as previously stated, it is not necessary, and for the further reason that it has not been fully and clearly presented.
Attending the second objection:
If what we have stated and held the law to be in paragraph two of this opinion is correct, then this objection must of necessity be sustained, because, if it is true, as there held, namely, that the Acts of 1854-5, p. 160, and 1857, adj., p. 32, did not apply to the ten counties named in the Act of 1851, Laws 1850-1, pages 238 to 240, Butler county being one of them, then clearly that county had no title of its own to said land, on November 15, 1867, at the date of the patent by Addy to Bayless, and never acquired title thereto until the passage of the Act of March 27, 1868 (Laws 1868, p. 68), supra. .
Following the ruling announced in the previous paragraph, we hold that the patent from Butler county by Addy, commissioner, purporting* to convey this land to Bayless, conveyed no right, title or interest whatever in or to the land described therein to John Bayless, the ancestor of respondents, and through whom they claim title to this land by inheritance; also that respondents have no interest or title in or to said land of any character.
*513IV. The conclusions reached and announced in the previous paragraphs of this opinion fully dispose of all the questions regarding the first count of the petition; and having there held that the respondents have no right, title or interest in or to the lands in controversy, it necessarily follows therefrom that they were not entitled to the possession of the land or to the judgment awarding it to them; and for that and for the other reasons stated, we reverse the judgment of the circuit court as to both counts of the petition.
Lamm, J., concurs, except as to what is said regarding the Simpson case; Bond, J., concurs; Graves, J., concurs in result.