The principal question here presented is, Was the contract entered into between plaintiff and defendant void as against public policy? And that turns on whether it embraces, by its terms or by necessary implication, an agreement to do air illegal act or to resort to secret and improper tampering with official action, either legislative or otherwise, to effect the purposes of the agreement, or that such was its tendenoy. If, by its terms or by necessary implication, the agreement stipulated for corrupt action or personal solicitation in the nature of lobbying, or tended directly to such results, then it is void; and if such facts appear satisfactorily the court should not hesitate to put the seal of condemnation upon it. The rules governing this subject are as old, at least, as the common law, have been long and firmly established in our jurisprudence, and must be rigidly enforced by courts of justice, else purity and integ*397rity in the administration of government will be seriously imperiled. All agreements which tend to introduce personal influence and solicitation as elements in procuring and influencing legislative action, or action by any department of the government, are contrary to sound morals, lead to inefficiency in the public service, and come under the condemnation of the rule here under consideration. The following are a few of the cases that might be cited in support of the foregoing proposition: Tool Co. v. Norris, 2 Wall. 45; Elkhart County Lodge v. Crary, 98 Ind. 288; Lyon v. Mitchell, 36 N. Y. 235; Winpenny v. French, 18 Ohio St. 469; Mills v. Mills, 40 N. Y. 543; Milbank v. Jones, 127 N. Y. 370; Trist v. Child, 21 Wall. 441; Powers v. Skinner, 34 Vt. 274; Bryan v. Reynolds, 5 Wis. 200; Fuller v. Dame, 18 Pick. 472; Chippewa Valley & S. R. Co. v. C., St. P., M. & O. R. Co. 75 Wis. 224. In the last case there is a very exhaustive discussion of the general subject in an opinion by Mr. Justice Cassoday, including numerous citations of authorities, which might be extended to include all reputable courts, in aid of the views above expressed. There is no failure exhibited anywhere to rigidly maintain the high standard of sound morals in public affairs which a correct application of the rule here invoked requires. In Marshall v. B. & O. R. Co. 16 How. 314, the learned judge who wrote the opinion said, in effect, public policy and sound morals imperatively require that courts shall condemn every act, and pronounce void every contract, the elements or probable tendency of which would be to sully the purity or mislead the judgment of those to whom official position has been intrusted; and this court, in Chippewa Valley & S. R. Co. v. C., St. P., M. & O. R. Co., supra, quoting with approval from Clippinger v. Nepbaugh, 5 Watts & S. 315, said, in effect, that ‘it matters not that nothing improper is done or expected to be done. It is enough if such is the tendency of the contract, that it is contrary to sound morality and public policy, leading *398necessarily, in the bands of designing and corrupt persons, to improper tampering with public officers, and the use of an extraneous secret influence over an important branch of the government. It may not corrupt all; but if it corrupts or tends to corrupt some, or if jit deceives or tends to deceive some, that is sufficient to stamp its character with the seal of disapproval before a judicial tribunal.’
As applied to contracts like the one before us, the dangers and mischiefs that may arise from allowing parties to make merchandise of mere personal solicitation and influence are what the law seeks to guard against, by closing the doors of the courts securely against all efforts to enforce, or to secure the fruits of, agreements that involve such elements as a subject of sale, either expressly or by necessary inference.
Does the agreement under consideration come within the condemnation of the salutary rule referred to ? That is the question. Unless it does, clearly, the contract should be upheld. As very truly said by Sir G-eobgke Jessel, M. E., in Printing & N. R. Co. v. Sampson, L. R. 19 Eq. 462: “ It must not be forgotten that you are not to extend arbitrarily those rules which say that a given contract is void as being against public policy, because if there is one thing which more than another public policy requires it is that men of full age and of competent understanding shall have the utmost liberty of contracting, and that their contracts when entered into freely and voluntarily shall be held sacred and shall be enforced by the courts of justice. Therefore you have this paramount public policy to consider — that you are not lightly to interfere with this freedom of contract.” This means no more, we take it, than that it should be made to appear clearly — that is, beyond reasonable controversy — that the contract is void, as contrary to law or sound morals, else it should be sustained.
In the light of the foregoing, the contract in question *399must be subjected to judicial interpretation in order to determine whether it contains the fatal element or not; for it cannot be seriously contended that by its terms, either as set forth in the complaint or established by the evidenóe, it necessarily required the doing of anything of an improper character or necessarily tended to any such thing. Plaintiff agreed to furnish defendant with minutes of desirable lands on the public domain upon which to locate, and to instruct him in respect to what he should do as a settler on such lands in order to secure priority under the land laws of the "United States, and to do all that was necessary or could be done to bring the land in question into market and enable defendant to acquire title thereto. Wherein does this language contemplate the doing of anything illegal? The intention of the parties must be gathered from the language they used, from the contract actually made, in the light of attending circumstances, the same as in any other case. If, properly construed, it does not, by its terms or by necessary implication, contain anything illegal or tend to any violation of sound morals, the fatal element should not,— through an overzealous desire to fortify against the deplorable effects of lobbying contracts, strictly so called, which all recognize and should unhesitatingly condemn,— be injected into it by mere suspicion and conjecture that the parties intended to do some illegal act or a legal act by illegal means, or that the agreement might have probably led to improper influences upon, or tampering vyith, official conduct, and thereby defeat the contract.
It is sometimes lost sight of that the presumptions in human affairs are in favor of innocence rather than of guilt, and that such rule applies in testing such a contract as the one we have here by the principles of sound morals. McBratney v. Chandler, 22 Kan. 692. In Salinas v. Stillman, 14 C. C. A. 50, 66 Fed. Rep. 677, the agreement between the parties provided that a portion of the moneys eventually *400to be derived from tbe United States, under an act to purchase the Ft. Brown reservation, should be paid to a certain agent, who was to procure the purchase. The court, citing Trist v. Child, 21 Wall. 441, in support of the proposition that contracts to aid in ¡Drocuring legislation are not necessarily unlawful, said, in effect, that, as the bill does not show the character of the services to be rendered, the presumption is that they are lawful rather than unlawful. Bryan v. Reynolds, 5 Wis. 200, decided by this court many years ago, and which has often been cited with approval in other jurisdictions, is to the same effect. There was an agreement ■to prosecute and superintend, in the capacity of agent and attorney, a private claim before the legislature. The court held that, under a proper interpretation of the contract, it contained, by its terms, an agreement to pay money in consideration of influence by way of personal solicitation of members of the legislature in favor of the desired legislation. The following language was used by the learned judge who delivered the opinion: “We have had some difficulty in determining that the contract sued upon in this case was a contract which stipulated for the use of the influence of the plaintiff with the members of the legislature in favor of a law, . . . but upon reflection we think that to be the case. . . . We know of no way by which . . . plaintiff could comply with the contract on his part without resorting to personal solicitation with the members of the legislative body. We therefore think that the contract was, by its terms, an agreement to pay money for a consideration inconsistent with public policy.”
To the same effect is Chippewa Valley & S. R. Co. v. C., St. P., M. & O. R. Co. 75 Wis. 224, where this court, quoting with approval from Tool Co. v. Norris, 2 Wall. 45, and Oscanyan v. Arms Co. 103 U. S. 261, to the effect that agreements to influence the action of the legislative or other branches of the government by personal solicitation or in*401fluence are void as against public policy without reference to the question of whether improper means are contemplated, held that the law looks to the general tendency of such agreements, and closes the doors to temptation by refusing ■their recognition in any of the courts of the country; but, in applying the principle to the case in hand, the court held that the language of the contract was such that the plaintiff, in carrying it out, must necessarily have resorted to methods classed as lobbying; that, though the contract did not, in terms, require anything of an improper character, it did so impliedly, as performance necessarily led to methods that come within the condemnation of the law; thereby recognizing that the test is, Does the contract, by its terms or by necessary implication, require the performance of acts o"f a corrupt character or which have a corrupting tendency? Obviously, when the learned judge in Tool Co. v. Norris, 2 Wall. 45, so often quoted and approved, said that the law looks to the tendency of such agreements, and closes the •doors of the courts to them, and that their invalidity turns, mot on whether improper influences are intended, but upon their corrupting tendency, he referred to agreements to do acts in themselves contrary to public policy, or agreements the performance of which, by necessary inference, required or contemplated the resort to methods having a corrupting ¡tendency; that is all.
In Trist v. Child, 21 Wall. 441, the agreement was for the influence of a lobbying agent to bring about the passage of a law for the payment of a private claim, without reference to it merits, by means of personal influence and solicitation. The court held the contract void, and there ■ clearly pointed out the distinction between agreements for services that may, and such as may not, properly be entered into to obtain legislative or executive action, and, in effect, said that the preparation of petitions, taking of testimony, •collecting of facts, preparing of arguments, and submitting *402them, orally or in writing, to committees or other proper-authority, and services of like character, which are intended to reach only the reason of those to be influenced, are legitimate. They are not to be classed with contracts for personal solicitation or the means customarily resorted to by the lobbyist. It is upon the latter that the law puts the-seal of condemnation; not upon the former. To the same-effect are Spaulding v. Swing, 149 Pa. St. 375; Powers v. Skinner, 34 Vt. 275, and Chippewa Valley & S. R. Co. v. C., St. P., M. & O. R. Co. 75 Wis. 224. In Powers v. Skinnerr supra, the court held that a contract to labor faithfully before the legislature to effect a desired end was not by its terms illegal; but the trial court found, in addition, that it contained an agreement that the plaintiff should solicit members in an individual way, as opportunity therefor was presented, and, because of such element, that the contract was, void.
A contract somewhat similar to the one under consideration, in Houlton v. Dunn, 60 Minn. 26, was held void as-against public policy; but the court appears to have rested the decision, not so much on the contract, as on what was. done under it and done before it was entered into. The evidence showed that plaintiff attended sessions of Congress, appeared before its committees, and employed counsel to urge the passage of a bill forfeiting lands to the government, and to open them to settlement in such a way as to-secure priority of settlers, thereto. So far as we can gather from the reported case, all acts done in regard to obtaining-legislation were prior to the making of the agreement.
There was really nothing in the language or purposes of the contract, viewed in the light of attending circum: stances and what was actually done, showing that improper influence was contemplated, or that there was any tendency to that end. There was no personal soliciting of members of Congress or the officers of the Interior Depart*403ment. The carrying out of the contract did not require or lead to any such thing, for it was, so far as relates to any official action, a mere agreement to promote the enforcement and application of existing laws and established regulations of the Interior Department to existing conditions, to the end that persons having a right to select and acquire lands on the public domain might exercise such right. This required only the collecting of facts, and presenting them to the proper officers, and making arguments thereon in respect to the legal status of the lands under the circumstances, and the rights of parties, under such existing laws and regulations, to acquire such lands. The fact that plaintiff was not a member of the legal profession makes no difference with the legitimate character of his services, in the face cff the undisputed facts that such services required special knowledge and training, and that plaintiff, by years of study and experience, had qualified himself to render valuable services to his employers. Under these circumstances, to infer that the services contracted for Avere other than such as are sanctioned by Trist v. Child, 21 Wall. 441,— the collecting of facts, making of arguments, and promoting action by appeals to reason,— is rather to reverse the rule which presumes innocence rather than guilt in the affairs of life. So far as Houlton v. Dunn, supra, is inconsistent with the decision in this case, we are not disposed to folioav it, but to hold that, unless the contract was for the performance of some act illegal jper so, or to do something of itself, of a corrupting tendency, or by its terms or by necessary implication it contemplated a resort to improper means, such as personal solicitation or influence, something other than án appeal to the reason of the department officers whose action was sought, or to obtain their action as a favor instead of as a right, it should be upheld.
So far as appears from the evidence in this case, plaintiff had acquired all his information in respect to the legal status *404of the lands in question, their location and value, before the contract was made with the defendant. No legislation was had, solicited, or required. The only thing plaintiff did after making such contract, and the only thing contemplated, was to make such presentation before the Secretary of the Interior as to satisfy such officer of the legal status of the lands and that they should be thrown open to settlement under existing laws, which would secure to the first settler thereon priority thereto; and there is no element in the agreement, the performance of which, by necessary or reasonable inference, tended to any other result. It appears that plaintiff did not go before such department and make such presentation and urge such action as a favor to his principals, but as a right to which they, and all other persons similarly situated, were entitled. Looking at the contract and its tendency, as above stated, the elements requisite to warrant the court in condemning it as contrary to public policy are absent; hence it must be sustained as a binding agreement between the parties.
As to the validity of lobby contracts and contracts of a similar character, see note to Houlton v. Dunn (60 Minn. 26), in 30 L. R. A. 737.-Rep.The other questions raised have been considered, but we do not deem them of sufficient importance to more than mention them, so that it may be seen that they have not been overlooked. There is no reversible error that we perceive in •the record.
By the Court.— Judgment affirmed.