Appellant, Delos Arnold, brought suit against
appellee, William Christy, to recover the sum of twenty-five hundred dollars, paid by him to appellee upon a contract for the purchase of certain lands. The following is a copy of the contract:—
“This agreement, between William Christy, of Phcenix, Ariz., and Delos Arnold of Pasadena, Calif., is as follows: Wm. Christy promises to pay all expenses, and patent Sec. 13, T. 2 N., ft. 1 E., Gila & Salt River M.,—said section 13 being located about ten miles from Phoenix, Ariz., in N. W, *22direction-,—and deed the same to said Arnold, for fourteen thousand dollars, on or before ninety days from this date. Said Arnold promises to pay said Christy twenty-five hundred dollars as part payment on this contract; and if said Christy fáils to get final papers, & deed said lands to said Arnold, then said Christy is to return said Arnold the above-mentioned twenty-five hundred dollars. And it is further agreed that when the title to said section 13 is acquired, & conveyed to the said-Arnold, then he, the said Arnold, shall pay to the said Christy the final sum of eleven thousand five hundred dollars; and said Arnold is to be at no expense in procuring above title. William Christy. Delos Arnold. May 21, 1887.
“Eight water-rights in the Arizona Canal Co. go with the above described land, and are to be deeded to the land, &nd become a part of the same. Wat. Christy.”
'The complaint alleged a breach of this contract, and a failure to return the twenty-five hundred dollars advanced by appellant, as provided therein, and prayed judgment for that amount, with interest. The appellee in his answer denied any breach of said contract on his part, but charged a breach on the part of appellant, by reason of which appellee was profited nothing by the receipt of the money sued for. The court below held the contract in question to be illegal and void, as against public policy,—it relating to public lands of the United States, and contemplating by its terms a violation of the laws in relation thereto,—and upon this ground charged the jury to find for the defendant.
It must be conceded that any contract which contemplates some act on the part of either party which is prohibited by the statutes of the United States, or which necessarily implies some fraud upon the government, in the procurement of its lands, must be held void as against public policy; and under the familiar rule that courts will not enforce any part of an illegal contract, known and understood to be such by the parties thereto, money advanced under such an agreement cannot. be recovered. It was shown by the evidence in this case that the contract above set forth had reference to a section of land held under the Desert Land Act of 1877. The first question to be determined is, then, May an agreement be lawfully entered into by one holding a desert land entry to convey title to the same when patent shall have been obtained? The *23Desert Land Act of 1877 contains nothing which in express terms can be construed as directly prohibiting such agreements. Indeed, until 1880 assignments of desert land entries were recognized by the land department of the government, and the assignees of such entries were permitted to make final proofs, and the patents issued were made out in the names of such assignees. On April 15, 1880, Secretary of the Interior Schurz ruled that such entries were not assignable, basing his ruling upon the technical ground that the Desert Land Act provided that the entryman should make oath at the time of entry that he intended to reclaim the land, and that upon such proof the patent should issue to him. This ruling was subsequently modified by Secretary Teller on December 1, 1884, to the extent of permitting assignees of desert lands, when the assignments were made prior to April 15, 1880, the date of Secretary Schurz’s ruling, to make final proof. Again, Secretary Lamar, in passing on this question in 1886, concurring in the ruling of his predecessor, Secretary Teller, stated that an examination of the Desert Land Act itself “develops nothing which.in terms either authorizes or prohibits assignments,” and added further that it was “a matter of construction, or, more correctly speaking, of administration policy, and a question which has been involved in some doubt.” It is to be noted that these rulings had reference to the right to assign desert entries, when the assignees sought the right to make final proof and obtain patents in their own names, and were upheld on the ground that to permit such assignments would open the way to persons to obtain a greater quantity of land than was permitted by said act to any person, which was directly limited to six hundred and forty acres. We know of no ruling of the land department holding that one who has entered desert lands in good faith may not make an an agreement to convey the land after title shall vest in him. On the contrary, the land department has affirmatively recognized such agreements as valid, and as not affecting the rights of the entryman to obtain title. In the case of Lanktree v. Vibrans, decided by Commissioner Sparks, and reported in 13 Copp, Landowner, 220, of January 1, 1887, it was held that such an agreement was not an assignment of the entry, and not prohibited by any ruling of the department. We are unable to see wherein the contract in question by its terms *24contemplated any violation of any of the provisions, of the desert land laws as to the requirement necessary to obtain title, or restricting the quantity of land which may be acquired by any one person under it, nor any violation of any ruling of the land department which has the effect of law. The charge of the court below, that the plaintiff could not recover, for the reason that the contract was illegal and void, was therefore, in our opinion, error; and for this reason the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.