The rule of law concerning good faith is the same in respect to
purchases of land and timber as that which obtains in other
commercial transactions, and no one is bound to assume that the
party with whom he deals is a wrongdoer; but, on paying full value
for the property presented, the title to which is apparently valid
and in regard to which there are no suspicious circumstances, he
will acquire the rights of a
bona fide purchaser.
Equity looks at the substance, and not at the mere form in which
a transaction takes place, and constructive fraud in the entries of
land purchased
Page 200 U. S. 322
by one company from another will not be charged to the purchaser
where there is nothing which casts imputation on its conduct, or
tends to show that it was not a purchaser in good faith, because
after the actual purchase and payment therefor, but prior to the
final conveyance, an officer of the vendee company became an
officer of the vendor company for the purpose of closing up its
business.
Although the doctrine of relation is but a fiction of law, it is
resorted to whenever justice requires, and under it, patents for
lands when issued by the United States become operative as of the
dates of the entries -- the inception of the equitable right upon
which the patent is based -- and the doctrine can be applied to
protect a
bona fide purchaser of timber notwithstanding
the wrongful character of the entries of which he is ignorant. But
the doctrine of relation never carries a patent back to the date of
any entry other than that on which it is issued.
The headnotes to the opinions of this Court are not the work of
the Court, but are simply the work of the Reporter, giving his
understanding of the decision, prepared for the convenience of the
profession.
A final receipt is an acknowledgment by the government that it
has received full pay for the land and holds the title in trust for
the entryman and will in due course issue to him a patent, and
thereupon he becomes the equitable owner of the land.
Until the patent which passes the legal title is issued, the
legal title remains in the government, and is subject to
investigation and determination by the Land Department, but this
power will not be exercised arbitrarily or without notice, and if
improperly exercised, the rights of the entryman may be enforced in
the courts after the patent has been issued to other parties.
The principles of equity exist independently of, and anterior
to, all Congressional legislation, and the statutes are either
annunciations of those principles or their applications to
particular cases, and a party dealing with an entryman the
evidences of whose entry are in form good and sufficient is justly
entitled to the consideration of a court of equity, and one who has
in good faith cut and removed timber under contract with such an
entryman whose entry is subsequently cancelled and purchase money
retained by the government cannot be compelled to account to the
government for the timber cut and removed in reliance on such
contract.
These are cross-appeals from a decree of the Circuit Court of
Appeals for the Eighth Circuit affirming in part and reversing in
part a decree of the Circuit Court for the Western District of
Arkansas.
The bill was filed on April 5, 1902, by the United States
against the Detroit Timber & Lumber Company, the
Martin-Alexander
Page 200 U. S. 323
Lumber Company, and a number of individual defendants. The
object of the bill was to set aside patents to forty-four tracts of
land issued to the individual defendants, and all conveyances,
contracts, and leases from them purporting to convey title to or a
right to cut and remove timber from the lands, and also for an
accounting of the timber cut and removed from the lands by the two
companies, and judgment therefor.
The charge was that the lands were entered under the Timber Act
of June 3, 1878, 20 Stat. 89, and in fraud of its provisions, in
that the purchase money was advanced by the Martin-Alexander
Company under contracts with the entrymen that, after the entries,
they should convey to it all the standing timber thereon. The
Martin-Alexander Company denied that there were any such contracts,
and the Detroit Company in addition pleaded that it was a
bona
fide purchaser from the former company. It appeared from the
testimony that for some time prior to January 14, 1901, the
Martin-Alexander Company owned and operated a sawmill plant in the
vicinity of these lands; that most, if not all, of the entrymen
were its employees; that it furnished all the money for the
purchase prices of these lands, as well as for the expenses
connected with the entries, and that, after the entries, the
entrymen, with three exceptions, executed conveyances to it of all
the standing timber. Fifty-eight and one-half percent of the stock
of the Martin-Alexander Company belonged to E. B. Martin, while A.
V. Alexander controlled the remainder, which was owned by himself,
his wife, and J. O. Means.
On January 14, 1901, the Detroit Company purchased the entire
property of the Martin-Alexander Company for $60,000 cash and an
assumption of its obligations, amounting to $17,456.79. Prior to
May 9, 1901, patents were issued for all the lands, thirteen having
been issued before January 14, 1901. After the purchase from the
Martin-Alexander Company, the Detroit Company obtained deeds of the
lands from the patentees of twenty-seven of the tracts.
Page 200 U. S. 324
The circuit court found that the transactions between the
entrymen and the Martin-Alexander Company were not in conflict with
the statute, that there were no agreements between them and it
prior to the entries in respect to conveyances of the standing
timber, and that there was only the mere expectation on the part of
the company that it would be able to purchase the timber. Thereupon
it dismissed the bill. 124 F. 393. The court of appeals, reviewing
the testimony, held that there were contracts between the parties
making the entries and the Martin-Alexander Company prior to the
entries, and that therefore those entries were in fraud of the act,
but it also found that the purchase by the Detroit Company was in
good faith, and that therefore that company was entitled to
protection in its purchase. It ordered the bill dismissed as to the
twenty-seven tracts for which patents had been issued and
conveyances made to the Detroit Company. As to the seventeen which
had not been conveyed, it ordered a decree cancelling the patents,
but dismissing the bill so far as respects any relief claimed
against the Detroit Company. 131 F. 668.
Page 200 U. S. 328
MR. JUSTICE BREWER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The able and elaborate opinions of both the circuit court and
the court of appeals relieve us from much labor. There are two
questions of fact: first, whether the parties making the entries
had, prior to acquiring title from the government, made any
agreement with the Martin-Alexander Company for a conveyance of an
interest in the properties, or were seeking to acquire title solely
for their own benefit. Second, whether
Page 200 U. S. 329
the Detroit Company was a purchaser in good faith from the
Martin-Alexander Company. With reference to the first question, the
circuit court was of the opinion that there were no agreements
between the parties. The court of appeals was of a different
opinion, and held that the entries were made in pursuance of such
agreements. This is a case in equity, and while in such a case
questions of fact are always open to consideration by an appellate
court, great respect is paid to the conclusions of the trial court
in respect to them. Certainly if the circuit court and the court of
appeals had agreed, we should be very loath to disturb their
conclusion. Differing as they do in the present case, we have
examined this question, and agree with the court of appeals. The
entire management of these entries was in the hands of an agent of
the Martin-Alexander Company. It furnished the moneys both for the
purchase prices and all expenses, and it is not easy to believe
that it did all this on a mere expectation that, after the entries
had been made, it could purchase the timber. It is a much more
reasonable conclusion that it had an understanding with the parties
making the entries respecting purchases and prices. It is quite
likely that the entrymen were not conscious of wronging the
government, and thought that if it received the full price
demanded, that was enough. The testimony of one witness suggests,
at least, that they may have been advised that there was no
contract unless it was in writing, and that hence they could
conscientiously take the oath required in connection with an entry.
So, without casting any imputation of intentional perjury on those
parties, we agree with the court of appeals that the testimony
points strongly to the fact that the entries were in pursuance of
an understanding or agreement with the Martin-Alexander Company
that, as it was advancing all the money, the entrymen should convey
to it the standing timber at a fixed price.
With reference to the second question of fact, the circuit court
made no finding, having disposed of the case by its conclusion in
respect to the first. The court of appeals found
Page 200 U. S. 330
that the Detroit Company was a purchaser in good faith from the
Martin-Alexander Company. Here too we have examined the testimony
and are satisfied that the conclusion of the court of appeals was
correct. A brief statement of the salient facts may be not
unimportant. The headquarters of the Detroit Company were in St.
Louis, of the Martin-Alexander Company in southwest Arkansas. They
dealt at arm's length. On December 20, 1900, Alexander, of the
Martin-Alexander Company, applied to U. L. Clark, president of the
Detroit Company at St. Louis, to purchase Martin's interest in the
Martin-Alexander Company. Clark declined, stating that the Detroit
Company would make no purchase of a fractional interest in the
property. Thereupon it was arranged that he should make an
examination with a view to the purchase of the entire property. The
Detroit Company's inspector was sent to Arkansas to examine the
lands. Clark himself went down in the January following, and, after
receiving the report of the inspector, terms of sale were, on
January 14, agreed upon: $60,000 cash and the assumption of the
Martin-Alexander Company's debts. The $60,000, by agreement between
the stockholders of the Martin-Alexander Company, was divided
$34,850 to Martin, $24,850 to Mrs. Alexander, $150 to A. V.
Alexander, and $150 to J. O. Means. Martin and Means were paid at
once; the debts were also promptly paid. Alexander desired to take
stock in the Detroit Lumber Company in lieu of the money coming to
his wife and himself. Clark was not then authorized to make such
arrangement, but subsequently the stock of the Detroit Lumber
Company was increased and the Alexanders were paid in full in that
stock. The entire property of the Martin-Alexander Company,
included in which were the sawmill, tram and logging roads, these
timber contracts and other like contracts, and also all stock on
hand, was at the time of the purchase -- January 14 -- turned over
to the Detroit Lumber Company, which thereafter continued the
business. The Martin-Alexander Company had no deeds of the lands in
controversy, but simply contracts for the timber
Page 200 U. S. 331
thereon, and, in order to be relieved from the necessity of
keeping accounts with respect to the different tracts, the Detroit
Company proceeded to obtain deeds from twenty-seven of the
patentees, paying on an average $25 apiece therefor, which was a
fair price for the lands after the timber had been cut off. It had
no knowledge or intimation that there was anything wrong in the
titles until the last of September or the first of October, 1901 --
more than four months after the government had issued its patents
for all the lands -- when it received a notice to that effect from
a government inspector.
Now we remark that there is no intimation in the testimony that
the purchase price was not paid by the Detroit Company in cash and
stock as agreed upon, no suggestion that the price was an
unreasonable one. There was nothing strange or unnatural in the
contract between the companies; on the contrary, it was one which
might well be entered into by parties situated as these were. But
it is contended by the government that, if the Detroit Company had
examined with care the books of the Martin-Alexander Company and
the papers which it turned over as evidences of its titles, it
would have perceived that the timber contracts were made shortly
after the issue of the final receiver's receipts, that the parties
making the contracts were all or nearly all employees of the
Martin-Alexander Company, to whom moneys had been advanced, and
with each of whom an account was being kept; that it was its duty
to critically examine these matters in order to be sure that the
titles which it was acquiring were good. In their brief, counsel
for the government say:
"We claim that the law as laid down in
Hawley v.
Diller, 178 U. S. 476, that one who
takes title before the issuance of patent cannot claim to be a
bona fide purchaser, made it the duty of the Detroit
Company to make the most searching inquiry at least as to all of
the timber contracts except the thirteen for which patents to the
land had issued."
We do not understand the law to be as stated, or that one who
enters into an ordinary and reasonable contract for the
Page 200 U. S. 332
purchase of property from another is bound to presume that the
vendor is a wrongdoer, and that therefore he must make a searching
inquiry as to the validity of his claim to the property. The rule
of law in respect to purchases of land or timber is the same as
that which obtains in other commercial transactions, and such a
rule as is claimed by counsel would shake the foundations of
commercial business. No one is bound to assume that the party with
whom he deals is a wrongdoer, and if he presents property the title
to which is apparently valid, and there are no circumstances
disclosed which cast suspicion upon the title, he may rightfully
deal with him, and, paying full value for the same, acquire the
rights of a purchaser in good faith.
Jones v. Simpson,
116 U. S. 609,
116 U. S. 615.
He is not bound to make a searching examination of all the account
books of the vendor, nor to hunt for something to cast a suspicion
upon the integrity of the title.
It is further said that the written contract of sale from the
Martin-Alexander Company to the Detroit Company was not executed
till March 1, 1901, and that, on the fourteenth of January, 1901,
Martin resigned his position as president of the Martin-Alexander
Company, and Clark, the president of the Detroit Company, was
elected president of the former company; that, as the chief
executive of that company, he was charged with knowledge of all
that the company knew, and that therefore, before the written
contract was entered into, he and the Detroit Company had
constructive notice of the wrongful character of these timber
contracts. But that is a mere evasive technicality. The bill
charges and the answer admits the sale on January 14, and the
facts, as disclosed by the testimony, are that Martin desired to
leave at once on receipt of his money, and return to his home in
Illinois; that Clark was put in his place as president to enable
the Martin-Alexander Company to close up its outstanding affairs.
The real contract between the parties was entered into before Clark
became president, and all that was afterwards done was simply to
put in writing the terms of the contract which had been
Page 200 U. S. 333
agreed upon. Equity looks at the substance, and not at the mere
form in which a transaction takes place. The rule in respect to
constructive notice was thus stated in
Wilson v.
Wall, 6 Wall. 83,
73
U. S. 91:
"A chancellor will not be astute to charge a constructive trust
upon one who has acted honestly and paid a full and fair
consideration without notice or knowledge. On this point, we need
only refer to Sugden on Vendors, p. 622, where he says:"
"In
Ware v. Lord Egmont, the Lord Chancellor Cranworth
expressed his entire concurrence in what on many occasions of late
years had fallen from judges of great eminence on the subject of
constructive notice, namely -- that it was highly inexpedient for
courts of equity to extend the doctrine. When a person has not
actual notice, he ought not to be treated as if he had notice
unless the circumstances are such as enable the court to say not
only that he might have acquired, but also that he ought to have
acquired it but for his gross negligence in the conduct of the
business in question. The question, then, when it is sought to
affect a purchaser with constructive notice, is not whether he had
the means of obtaining, and might, by prudent caution, have
obtained the knowledge in question, but whether not obtaining was
an act of gross or culpable negligence."
And again, in
Townsend v. Little, 109 U.
S. 504,
109 U. S.
511:
"Constructive notice is defined to be in its nature no more than
evidence of notice, the presumption of which is so violent that the
court will not even allow of its being controverted.
Plumb v.
Fluitt, 2 Anst. 432;
Kennedy v. Green, 3 My. & K.
699. . . . As said by Strong, J., in
Meehan v. Williams,
48 Pa. 238, what makes inquiry a duty is such a visible state of
things as is inconsistent with a perfect right in him who proposes
to sell.
See also Holmes v. Stout, 4 N.J.Eq. 492;
McMechan v. Griffing, 3 Pick. 149;
Harwick v.
Thompson, 9 Ala. 409."
In the light of these authorities, we see nothing which casts
any imputation on the conduct of the Detroit Company or
Page 200 U. S. 334
that tends to show that it was not a purchaser in absolute good
faith.
Now what is the law controlling under these circumstances? Much
reliance is placed by the government on
Hawley v. Diller,
178 U. S. 476,
which, affirming prior cases, holds that an entryman under the
Timber Act acquires only an equity, and that a purchaser from him
cannot be regarded as a
bona fide purchaser within the
meaning of the act. But the Detroit Company purchased twenty-seven
tracts after the issue of the patents therefor. And, in making
these purchases, it dealt not with the Martin-Alexander Company,
but directly with the patentees. While the amounts paid were small,
yet, as counsel for the government admit in their brief that "the
land without the timber is of no value," there can be no suggestion
of inadequacy of price. As also it had no knowledge or suspicion of
wrong in the titles, it is, as to these tracts, strictly and
technically, within the language of the act, a
bona fide
purchaser. If it be contended that, by virtue of the contracts for
the sale of timber, it had acquired some interest in the lands
prior to the issue of patents, it is sufficient to say that, by the
doctrine of relation, the patents, when issued, became operative as
of the dates of the entries. It is true that this doctrine is but a
fiction of law, but it is a fiction resorted to whenever justice
requires. It is that principle by which an act done at one time is
considered to have been done at some antecedent time. It is a
doctrine of frequent application, designed to promote justice.
Thus, a sheriff's deed takes effect not of its date, but of the
time when the lien of the judgment attached. The ordinary railroad
land grants have been grants
in praesenti, and under them
the title has been adjudged to pass not at the completion of the
road, but at the date of the grant.
Leavenworth, Lawrence &
Galveston Railroad v. United States, 92 U. S.
733;
St. Paul &c. Railway Co. v. Phelps,
137 U. S. 528;
St. Paul & Pacific v. Northern Pacific, 139 U. S.
1;
United States v. Southern Pacific Railroad,
146 U. S. 570. A
patent from the United States operates to transfer the title not
merely from the date of the
Page 200 U. S. 335
patent, but from the inception of the equitable right upon which
it is based.
Shepley v. Cowan, 91 U. S.
330. Indeed, this is generally true in case of the
merging of an equitable right into a legal title. Although the
patents in this case were not issued until after the sales of the
timber, yet, when issued, they became operative as of the date of
the original entries. This doctrine has frequently been recognized
by this and other courts.
Landes v.
Brant, 10 How. 348;
French v.
Spencer, 21 How. 228;
Stark v.
Starr, 6 Wall. 402;
Lynch v.
Bernal, 9 Wall. 315;
Gibson v.
Chouteau, 13 Wall. 92;
Simmons v. Wagner,
101 U. S. 260;
Jackson v. Ramsay, 3 Cow. 75;
Welch v. Dutton, 79
Ill. 465;
Ormiston v. Trumbo, 77 Mo.App. 310. In the first
of these cases, it was said (p.
51 U. S.
372):
"To protect purchasers, the rule applies 'that, where there are
divers acts concurrent to make a conveyance, estate, or other
thing, the original act shall be preferred, and to this the other
acts shall have relation' -- as stated in Viner's Abr. tit.
Relation, 290. . . ."
"Cruise on Real Property, vol. V, pp. 510-511, lays down the
doctrine with great distinctness. He says:"
"There is no rule better founded in law, reason, and convenience
than this: that all the several parts and ceremonies necessary to
complete a conveyance shall be taken together as one act, and
operate from the substantial part by relation. . . ."
"Applying the doctrine of relation, and taking all the several
parts and ceremonies necessary to complete the title together, 'as
one act,' then the confirmation of 1811 and the patent of 1845 must
be taken to relate to the first act -- that of filing the claim in
1805."
In
Simmons v. Wagner, p.
101 U. S.
261:
"Where the right to a patent has once become vested in a
purchaser of public lands, it is equivalent, so far as the
government is concerned, to a patent actually issued. The execution
and delivery of the patent after the right to it has become
complete are the mere ministerial acts of
Page 200 U. S. 336
the officers charged with that duty.
Barney v. Dolph,
97 U. S.
652."
See also United States v. Freyberg, 32 Fed.195, a case
in the Circuit Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin in which
it was held by Judge Dyer that an action brought by the government
to recover for timber cut from land which had been entered as a
homestead, but the full equitable title of which had not then
passed to the entryman, either by the required occupation of the
premises or by a commuting of the homestead to a preemption entry
-- an action maintainable at the time it was commenced -- was
defeated by the issue of the final receiver's receipt and the
consequent perfection of a full equitable title.
Counsel for the government deny the application of this
principle in the present case on the ground, first, that it gives
vitality and validity to a wrongful acquisition of title from the
government. They say that equity is never founded on a wrong, and
that, because the original entries were wrongful, the doctrine of
relation will not be applied. But this is a clear misunderstanding
of the purpose and scope of the doctrine of relation. If the
original entries were rightful, there is no need of its
application, for the patents would pass perfect titles. The equity
is founded on the rightful conduct of the purchaser, and not on the
wrongful conduct of the entrymen. It upholds the purchaser in his
honest purchase notwithstanding the wrongful character of the
entries. This is akin to the ordinary rule in respect to a
bona
fide purchaser. Equity sustains the title in spite of the fact
that his grantor may have wrongfully obtained it, and upholds it
because of his rightful conduct.
Counsel also say that the question is settled by the decision in
Hawley v. Diller, supra, relying upon the second paragraph
in the headnotes:
"An entryman under this act acquires only an equity, and a
purchaser from him cannot be regarded as a
bona fide
purchaser within the meaning of the act of Congress unless he
become
Page 200 U. S. 337
such after the government, by issuing a patent, has parted with
the legal title."
There are two or three answers to this contention. In the first
place, the headnote is not the work of the court, nor does it state
its decision, though a different rule, it is true, is prescribed by
statute in some states. It is simply the work of the reporter,
gives his understanding of the decision, and is prepared for the
convenience of the profession in the examination of the reports. In
the second place, if the patent referred to in that headnote is a
patent issued upon a wrongful entry, no such fact appeared in the
case, because no patent was issued upon the entry charged to have
been wrongful, but after that entry had been cancelled, a patent
was issued to Diller on a new entry. If it refers to some other
patent than one issued upon a wrongful entry, it has no pertinency,
for the doctrine of relation never carries a patent back to the
date of any other entry than that, upon which it is issued. And
finally, the headnote is a misinterpretation of the scope of the
decision.
With reference to the other tracts and the denial of any relief,
by accounting or otherwise, against the Detroit Company, it is
contended that, as prior to the issue of a patent, the Land
Department could have set aside the entries on account of the
fraudulent contracts, the courts will now grant the same relief,
and further, that inasmuch as the patents are by this decree
cancelled and the title restored to the government, the Detroit
Company must be regarded as a wrongdoer in respect to the timber
which it took from the lands prior to the decree, and an accounting
should have been ordered. But this ignores the fact that the
Detroit Company acted in good faith, and purchased the timber from
those having an apparently perfect equitable title thereto. It
becomes necessary to inquire what is the significance of a final
receiver's receipt and the effect of a cancellation by the Land
Department of such a receipt. The receipt is an acknowledgment by
the government that it has received full pay for the land, that it
holds the legal title in trust for the entryman, and will in due
course issue to
Page 200 U. S. 338
him a patent. He is the equitable owner of the land. It becomes
subject to state taxation, and under the control of state laws in
respect to conveyances, inheritances, etc.
Carroll v.
Safford, 3 How. 441;
Witherspoon v.
Duncan, 4 Wall. 210;
Simmons v. Wagner, supra;
Winona & St. Peter Land Co. v. Minnesota, 159 U.
S. 526;
Cornelius v. Kessel, 128 U.
S. 456;
Hastings & Dakota R. Co. v.
Whitney, 132 U. S. 357;
Benson Mining Co. v. Alta Mining Co., 145 U.
S. 428.
Indeed, in some of the opinions of this Court, emphasizing the
value of a receiver's receipt, there are expressions which seem to
underestimate the significance of a patent.
Wisconsin Central
R. Co. v. Price County, 133 U. S. 496,
133 U. S. 510;
Deseret Salt Co. v. Tarpey, 142 U.
S. 241,
142 U. S. 251.
For it must be remembered that the latter is the instrument which
passes the legal title, and that, until it is issued, the legal
title remains with the government, and is subject to investigation
and determination by the Land Department.
Barden v. Northern
Pacific R. Co., 154 U. S. 288,
154 U. S. 326;
Michigan Land & Lumber Co. v. Rust, 168 U.
S. 589,
168 U. S. 592;
Guaranty Savings Bank v. Bladow, 176 U.
S. 448. But while, until the issue of the patent, the
land is under the control of the Land Department, which, upon
proper investigation and for sufficient reasons, may set aside the
certificate of entry, yet this power of the Land Department cannot
arbitrarily be exercised without notice to the entryman, and if
improperly exercised, the rights of the entryman may be enforced in
the courts after the patent has issued to other parties.
Guaranty Savings Bank v. Bladow, supra. It is true, as
against the government, and while the title remains in the
government, he may not be able to enforce his equity because no
action can be maintained against the government except upon
contract, express or implied.
United States v. Jones,
131 U. S. 1. But
while he may not sue on his equity, he may protect that equity when
sued by the government. It is sometimes said that a legal title
with an equity is paramount to an equity alone; but this is not
strictly true unless the equities are equal, for sometimes a
superior equity
Page 200 U. S. 339
may be adjudged paramount to a legal title and an inferior
equity.
Garland v. Wynn,
20 How. 8;
Lytle v.
Arkansas, 22 How. 193;
Lindsey v.
Hawes, 2 Black 554;
Wirth v. Branson,
98 U. S. 118; 2
Pomeroy's Eq.Jur. § 678 and following. But we need not stop to
inquire what rights the Detroit Company will have after a patent
has issued. It is enough now to hold that it can defend its
equities against the suit of the government.
It is a mistake to suppose that, for the determination of
equities and equitable rights we must look only to the statutes of
Congress. The principles of equity exist independently of, and
anterior to, all congressional legislation, and the statutes are
either annunciations of those principles or limitations upon their
application in particular cases. In passing upon transactions
between the government and its vendees, we must bear in mind the
general principles of equity, and determine rights upon those
principles except as they are limited by special statutory
provisions. And clearly, upon those principles, a party purchasing
an equitable right is entitled to be protected in his purchase so
far as it can be done without trespassing upon the rights of other
parties. The statute provides that if an entry is wrongfully made,
it may, prior to patent, be set aside by the Land Department, the
entryman forfeiting the money which he has paid. In other words, by
the action of the Department, the equitable title is cancelled and
restored to the government. It then has both the full title to the
land and the money which had been paid for it. And this is the
penalty which is imposed for the wrongful entry. Certainly, when
the government retains the full price which it has placed upon the
land and also recovers the land itself, it is abundantly
compensated for any wrong which has been attempted by the entryman.
And a party who deals with such entryman -- relying upon the
evidences of his entry, which are in all respects in form good and
sufficient, and are an acknowledgment by the government officials
of a rightful entry -- is justly entitled to the consideration of a
court of equity. In this case, finding
Page 200 U. S. 340
the entryman holding apparently valid equitable titles to the
lands, it entered into contracts with them for the purchase of the
timber. It cut and removed the timber, all in good faith. It is
equitable that, having thus acted in good faith, it should not be
held to account for the timber which it has already paid for and
cut and removed in reliance upon these contracts. The government
has every dollar which it would have received in case of a
perfectly valid entry, and has also recovered the land. Surely it
is not just for it to ask further payment, and from a party who
dealt in good faith with the entrymen, relying upon the titles
which it had created. If the Detroit Company has taken some timber
from the land, it has once paid for it, and ought not to be
compelled to pay a second time, and to the government, which has
already received full pay for the land, timber and all. It is
inequitable to give to the government not merely the land and the
price which it charged for the land, but also the value of the
timber obtained by the Detroit Company. It is doubling the penalty
which the statute imposes, or, if not doubling at least, largely
increasing it.
We think the decision of the court of appeals was right, and it
is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN and MR. JUSTICE McKENNA dissent.