delivered the opinion of the Court:
It will be observed that the effect of the recitals in the contracts of the Royal Land Company and the Atlantic & Ohio Railroad Company was in issue in the Virginia suit. They form a partial basis for the present action; and, in so far as they do, they are res judicata in the light of the Virginia decree. “A right, question, or fact distinctly put in issue and directly determined by a court of competent jurisdiction, as a ground of recovery, cannot be disputed in a subsequent suit between the same parties or their privies; and even if the sec*254ond suit is for a different cause of action, the right, question or fact once so determined must, as between the same parties or privies, be taken as conclusively established, so long as the judgment in the first suit remains unmodified.” Southern P. R. Co. v. United States, 168 U. S. 1, 42 L. ed. 355, 18 Sup. Ct. Rep. 18. See also New Orleans v. Citizens Bank, 167 U. S. 371, 42 L. ed. 202, 17 Sup. Ct. Rep. 905; Davis v. Brown, 94 U. S. 423, 24 L. ed. 204.
That the effect, of the recitals in the Royal Land Company and the Atlantic & Ohio Railroad Company contracts upon the original contract was considered by the Virginia court is strongly evidenced by the fact that, in the opinion, the effect of the deed from Hollingsworth to Roller conveying a one-fifth interest in the 10,075-acre tract was expressly excluded from its consideration. On this point the court in its opinion said: “It is incidentally mentioned as a matter of evidence in the amended and supplemental bill, and alluded to in the briefs for complainant, that General Roller obtained a deed of conveyance from Miss Hollingsworth for a one-fifth interest in a certain tract of 10,075 acres lying in West Virginia, part of the 52,000 acres; and that this deed was returned to Miss Hollingsworth for certain purposes and never returned to him. I do not understand that this circumstance is brought forward as an independent ground of relief as to the one-fifth interest in the particular land concerned. The pleadings are not framed with a view to relief on that account, and this court would be wanting in territorial jurisdiction.” On reargument (107 Va. 546), the court emphasized its refusal to consider this feature of the case as follows: .“The conveyance at one time by Miss Hollingsworth to General Roller of a one-fifth interest in a certain portion of the lands lying in West Virginia, the deed for which was afterwards returned to her, is urged as a.reason why the court should retain jurisdiction and grant relief as to that portion of the land; but this is a suit to enforce the sale of the land under the Wheelock deed of trust, and this court cannot decree the sale of land lying in West Virginia, even if such relief would be proper under the other facts of the case.”
This conveyance was not^ brought into tire West Virginia *255case. The pleadings were silent as to the whole transaction. Hence, it was not before the court. But it is urged that plaintiff is, nevertheless, estopped to set it up in this action, since the suit in West Virginia was instituted in the county where the land involved in this conveyance is situated, and plaintiff could have asserted his rights in that action; hence, it is now res judicata. The doctrine of election of remedies is also invoked, on the ground that, plaintiff’, instead of asserting his rights under his conveyance in West Virginia, elected to rely upon the original contract, and therefore is estopped to pursue a remedy inconsistent with the one there adopted.
We are not impressed with this contention. The original contract between plaintiff and Hollingsworth, in so far as it related to the 10,075-acre tract, became executed by the conveyance to plaintiff. He became vested in fee with an undivided one-fiftli interest in these lands. Neither Hollingsworth nor Murray, her successor in title, could avoid that conveyance by invoking the illegality of the original contract. As to so much of the contract as related to these lands, the contract no longer remained executory. In other words though a contract be champertous, if money he paid or property conveyed in its discharge, the contract becomes executed, aud the court will treat the joint beneficiaries of the ehampertous contract as standing in pari delicto, refusing aid either by compelling a repayment or by cancelation of the deed. “When the parties are in- pari delicto; and the contract has been fully executed on the part of the plaintiff, by the conveyance of property, or by the payment of money, and has not been repudiated by the defendant, it is now equally well settled that neither a court of law nor a court of equity will assist the plaintiff to recover bade the property conveyed or money paid under the contract. Thomas v. Richmond, 12 Wall. 349, 355, 20 L. ed. 453, 456; Ayerst v. Jenkins, L. R. 16 Eq. 275, 284, 42 L. J. Ch. N. S. 690, 29 L. T. N. S. 126, 21 Week. Rep. 878.” St. Louis, V. & T. H. R. Co. v. Terre Haute & I. R. Co. 145 U. S. 393, 36 L. ed. 748, 12 Sup. Ct. Rep. 953.
The recitals in the Hoyal Land Company and Atlantic & *256Ohio Railroad Company contracts, it must be presumed, were considered by the Virginia court, since it was an issue in the case, and not excluded either' in the opinion or in the decree. These recitals did not constitute a discharge or execution of the original agreement. They merely provided for the payment to plaintiff of the fee stipulated in the contract in case of the sale.of the land and payment in full of the purchase price, an event which never happened. Until the completion of the sale and the payment to plaintiff of his proportion of the proceeds, the contract remained unexecuted and subject to the defense of champerty. A different construction, however, must be placed iipon the deed from Hollingsworth to plaintiff. With its execution and delivery to plaintiff, the contract became completely executed as to the interests of defendant in the lands therein embraced, and Hollingsworth and her successors in interest were thereafter estopped to challenge its validity. The rule is well stated in Sellers v. Knight, 185 Ala. 96, 108, 64 So. 329, as follows: “The charge that the conveyance of May 9, 1904, to Knight was affected with the champerty or maintenance inhering in features of the agreement of which the conveyance was a part cannot be sustained for this reason, if not for others: that the agreement involved was long since fully executed. Parties to unlawful agreements which have become executed are left by the law in the situation they have made. Being in pan delicto, the courts will not relieve against their executed contracts.”
In the case of John v. Larson, 28 Wis. 604, 609, John, the grantee of one Miller, sought to recover possession of premises conveyed by Miller to Larson in execution of a champertous agreement. This is closely analogous to the present case in holding that, in addition to the general rule that a party is es-topped by a deed executed in fulfilment of a champertous agreement, a successor in interest is in such privity with the grantor as to be likewise estopped. Murray, therefore, is in no bettor position than her grantor Hollingsworth. On this point, the Wisconsin court said: “What, then, are those rights under the agreement set up in the answer % We had occasion to consider *257that question in the case of Miller v. Larson, 19 Wis. 163. That was an action brought by Miller against this same defendant to recover possession of the premises in controversy. To defeat a recovery, the defendant set up and relied upon the agreement contained in the third defense in the present answer. And while this agreement was there held to he cliampertous in its character, still it was determined that it had been so far executed that a court of justice would not interfere to deprive the defendant of the possession of the property acquired under it. The contract, though unlawful, yet having been executed, and the parties to it being in pari delicto, the law would leave them as they were, affording a remedy to neither. And the question is, Will the law he any more active in aiding a party to obtain the possession who stands in Miller’s shoes, who has merely succeeded to his rights, and who has no superior equities in the property ? If the corn! will aid a party thus situated, upon what principle does it proceed ? For it is manifest that the plaintiff is a privy in estate to Miller, and is affected with notice of the defect in his title.” With the execution of the deed from Hollingsworth to plaintiff, the original agreement became executed to the extent of the IC^OÍo-aere tract of land, and Murray took with full notice of the conveyance, as well as the purpose for which the subsequent reconveyance was made.
But what effect must be given the reconveyance from plaintiff to Hollingsworth? Clearly this amounted only to the creation of Hollingsworth, a trustee for plaintiff to dispose of the lands and to turn over to plaintiff one fifth of the proceeds. While the reconveyance was made and the trust created in view of a sale to the Royal Land Company, it was made to facilitate the sale of the land, and the trust was never revoked by plaintiff nor renounced in any way by Hollingsworth or her successor Murray. It remained in force through the various transactions looking to a sale of the lands, and remained in full force when sale was finally made to the United States in 1916. It remained an unexecuted trust.—undoubtedly so recognized by the Virginia court, and, therefore', properly excluded from its donsiderntion. Nor was plaintiff required to assert it in the *258suit in West Virginia. The suit there was not instituted to recover land or an interest in land, nor was the title to land involved. Plaintiff was claiming one fifth of the purchase price of the land sold Wheeloclc by Murray, as compensation for services for recovery of the land under his original champertous contract. The suit here, in so far as it relates to the lands involved in this trust, is to subject a portion of the proceeds of the sale in the possession of the government to the satisfaction of plaintiff’s interest. It is for the enforcement of an unexecuted trust, and involves different subject-matter from that in litigation in West Virginia. It, therefore, is in no respect res judicata.
Nor do we think plaintiff is barred relief under .the doctrine of election of remedies. The rule of election is clearly but strongly stated in Thompson v. Howard, 31 Mich. 309, quoted with approval in Robb v. Vos, 155 U. S. 13, 41, 39 L. ed. 52, 62, 15 Sup. Ct. Rep. 4, as follows: “A man may not take contradictory positions; and where he has a right to choose one of two modes of redress, and the two are so inconsistent that the assertion of one involves the negation or repudiation of the other, his deliberate and settled choice of one, with knowledge, or the means of knowledge, of such facts as would authorize a resort to each, will preclude him thereafter from going back and electing again.” . This rule, it will be observed, requires not only that the remedies be inconsistent, but such that the adoption of one will amount to a complete denial or negation of the other. It has no application where the remedies are concurrent and involve distinct matters, either of which may call for independent relief. Qualifying a similar rule to that stated above, in Stark v. Starr, 94 U. S. 477, 485, 24 L. ed. 276, 278, the court said: “But this principle does not require distinct causes of action,—that is to say, distinct matters,—each of which would authorize by its independent relief, to be presented in a single suit, though they exist at the same time and might be considered together.”
In the present case, the suit in West Virginia, seeking to recover one fifth of the proceeds of a sale of the entire 43,000 *259acres of land, was not inconsistent with the outstanding unexecuted trust for a like division of the proceeds to be derived from the sale of 10,075 acres of the same land. The one was to enforce an alleged interest in the proceeds of the sale of land through a champertous contract which as to a portion of the land liad become executed; the other is to enforce a trust by subjecting the funds derived from the sale of the land as to which the contract had become executed to the discharge of plaintiff’s interest therein. At the time of the West Virginia suit, 10,-075 acres of the 43,000 acres of land in litigation was involved in an outstanding unexecuted trust awaiting a completed sale of the land. If plaintiff had prevailed upon his original contract and succeeded in fastening by decree his one-fifth interest in the proceeds to be derived from the sale to Wheelock, it would not have changed or strengthened his position as to the 10,075 acres, for in either instance he would have been compelled to await the event which has happened,—the sale to the government.
While there was nothing in the facts of the West Virginia case to preclude plaintiff from availing himself of this conveyance, he was there suing upon a contract. Had he sought to enforce his interest in the Wheelock fund through, this conveyance, it would necessarily have been by a separate cause of action arising from the existence of an outstanding trust. “On principle, a point not in litigation in one action cannot be received as conclusively settled in any subsequent action upon a different cause, because it might have been determined in the first action. Various considerations, other than the actual merits, may govern a party in bringing forward grounds of recovery or defense in one action, which may not exist in another action upon a different demand. * * * A party acting upon considerations like these ought not to be precluded from contesting in a subsequent action other demands arising out of the same transaction.” Cromwell v. Sac County, 94 U. S. 351, 24 L. ed. 195.
The decree is reversed with costs against the defendant Murray, and the cause is remanded with directions to retain control of the fund and proceed to ascertain the value of the one-fifth *260interest in the 10,075 acres of land on the basis of the sale by Murray to the United States, and decree payment of the amount so found by defendant Houston, or his successor in office, direct to plaintiff, together with proper costs.
Reversed and remanded.
A petition for rehearing was denied April 27, 1917; a petition to modify the opinion and the decree was denied the same day, and a motion for the allowance of an appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States was denied May 17, 1917.