(after stating the facts as above). The evidence shows that some months prior to the date of the entries, and some time during the years 1901 and 1902, the Lumber Company had the land in controversy cruised; that the company was acquiring lands in the vicinity of these lands during those years; that at that time *425and until 1907, R. A. Booth was the manager of the company; that between January, 1902, and January, 1903, J. H. Booth was secretary of the company and was the receiver of the United States land office at Roseburg, Or.; that John F. Kelly was the vice president of the company, and that he, under the direction of R. A. Booth, attended to the purchase of lands for the company; that George Kelly, a director of the corporation, had charge of its sawmills and was manager to succeed R. A. Booth in 1907; that at the time of the entries in controversy the company had sawmills at Saginaw, Coburg, Wendling, and Springfield, Or., and that they owned and acquired large tracts of land in the vicinity of those mills; that R. A. Booth is the brother-in-law of Stephen, Ethel, and Uucy La Raut, and that Alice Ua Raut is Ste - phen Ua Rant's wife; that at the time when the entries were made Stephen and Ethel Ua Raut and Edward Jordan were in the employment of the Lumber Company, and they “were very poor at that time”; that D. H. Brumbaugh was a cruiser in the employment of the Lumber Company, and that at the request of John F. Kelly he showed the entrymen and entrywomen their respective claims. The records of the land office show that all the entries were filed in February, 1902, that the final proofs were made on May 7 and May 8, 1902, that the patents issued on August 3, 1904, and that upon the request of John E. Kelly the patents were delivered by the officers 'of the Roseburg land office to Frank E. Alley.
As to the main issue in the case, which is whether the lands in controversy were entered pursuant to an understanding or agreement between the applicants and the Lumber Company whereby the latter was to acquire the same, the oral testimony is conflicting. Jordan testified, and the court below' found, that he had such an understanding and agreement, and that he entered the land at the instance of oueof the officers of the Lumber Company, upon the promise of the payment of $100 to him for his service in so doing. Mrs. Applestone,. a daughter of Alice La Raut, testified that her mother told her that she had taken up a claim for R. A. Booth, and was to be paid $100 for her claim, that she was paid that sum, and that Mr. Booth was to pay her expenses, and did so. She testified, also, that her stepfather, Stephen La Raut, took up his claim for the same reason that her mother did, but she was unable to say whether it was he or her mother who told her so, and that her mother told her that R. A. Booth had asked her, her stepfather, and Ethel to take up claims, and that her mother said that her stepfather had received $100 for doing so. She testified, further, that her mother got $50 more eight or nine months before Ihe time when the witness gave her testimony. There was no contradiction of this testimony by either Stephen La Raut or his wife. They were not called as witnesses, nor were their depositions taken. Mrs. Applestone was apparently a disinterested witness, and no reason is suggested why her testimony should not be given full credence. Ethel and Lucy La Raut testified in the main in harmony with the testimony of R. A. Booth to the effect that the four entries of the La Rauts vrere made under an agreement with R. A. Booth, who was *426their relative, and the then manager of the Lumber Company^ by which the Lumber Company was to pay the government price for the land and all the expenses incident to the entries, and keep an account thereof, the repayment of which to the company Mr. Booth guaranteed, and in pursuance of which and as security therefor he took to himself the deeds to the lands which they entered. .And there was testimony that in 1910, when Stephen La Raut and his wife desired to remove to Alberta, Canada, they sold their claims to the defendant company for $50 each in addition to the $100 they had each received, a price which was satisfactory to them, and that the other two claims still belong to Ethel and Lucy La Raut; the company holding the title as security. The court below found that the Lumber Company acquired by purchase the claims of Stephen La Raut and wife, and that it holds the title to the other two claims only as security for advances made to Ethel and Lucy La Raut.
From the conflicting parol testimony which the record presents, we turn to the evidence shown by contemporaneous entries in the books and records of the Lumber Company, and to facts and circumstances established thereby which do not depend upon human memory for support, and which cannot be contradicted. The following facts are undisputed: The La Rauts, together with Jordan, who was in the employment of the Lumber Company, made their applications for timber claims at the same time, and the company paid their traveling expenses to and from Roseburg and all incidental expenses. The company paid for all the publications of notice, and charged the expense thereof to its stumpage account, and made no charge therefor at any time in its books against the individual entrymen. The company paid the purchase price of the lands and all the fees, traveling expenses, and other expenses incidental to final proof. The final proofs were made in May, 1902, and in July following each of the entrymen executed and delivered a deed of the land. Jordan’s deed, and probably all of the deeds, were executed to the company. The deeds from the La Rauts having been subsequently destroyed, the testimony leaves it uncertain whether they were executed to the company or to R. A. Booth. At the time when those deeds were executed, each entryman received the sum of $100. The deed from Jordan was not recorded until September 6, 1907. The La Raut deeds were never recorded, but in the latter part of 1904 or early in 1905, at about the time of the investigation by the government of land frauds in Oregon, those deeds were returned to the makers and destroyed. Ethel and Lucy La Raut made other deeds in 1907, at which time they were each paid $25. On February 3, 1910, Stephen'La Raut and his wife made a" deed of their lands to the company, and were each paid $50. The entrymen of the claims in controversy never saw the lands, excepting at the time when they viewed them prior to making their entries, and it is admitted that they never made any effort to dispose of them, never inquired about the value of them, or the amount of timber thereon, and made no inquiry as to the expenses of the entries or the payment of taxes thereon, or assumed any control or ownership of the lands. The Lumber Com*427pauy on its books charged itself with all expenses in relation to these lands from- and after the time when it caused the same to be cruised; shortly before the entries were made. When the final proofs had been taken, and the lands had been paid for, individual accounts were opened under the name of each of the entrymen, in which were charged the payment of 1lie purchase price of $400 for the land, and a payment of $100 to each entryman, and each account was balanced by a credit of $500 to stumpage, and none of them was ever afterward reopened. Rach account begins with the entry of the payment of the purchase money of $400 on May 8, 1902. The accounts with the Ka Rauts all end on July 31, 1902, with the “charge to stumpage, $500.” The account under the name of Kthel ha Raut may serve as a sample of all.
But the expenses of the entrymen in going to Roseburg, lodging there, and returning, the recording fees, and the publication notices were not entered in these individual accounts, but were entered in the books of the company under the heading “Brumbaugh land claims,” and were carried into the stumpage account under the item “Cruising.” The lands so deeded by the entrymen in 1902 were immediately carried into the general land account of the company. Thereafter the company paid taxes thereon, together with its taxes on other lands, in a sum total. No explanation is made of the fact that the deeds so taken were not recorded. No satisfactory reason is given why the deeds were destroyed. No explanation is given of the fact that for a year and a half after the destruction of the deeds neither Booth nor the Number Company had any conveyance from the ha Rauts.
The theory that R. A. Booth advanced the costs and expenses and purchase price for the entries in order to assist his relatives who were in poor circumstances, and that he thereafter advanced money to them for the same reason and took the deeds as security illy comports with certain significant facts that appear, in the record. One of these is the cotemporaneous payment to Jordan and the four members of the ha Raut family of the identical sum of $100 each at the time when their deeds were taken. Another is that neither Kthel Ka Raut nor Kucy Ka Raut explained why she received the $100. Kucy testified that she did not need it, or use it, and that when she received it she loaned it to her father, who paid her interest on it. Another is that not another payment appears by the books of the company to have been made to any of the Ka Rauts until the time when the company received new deeds from each. When the second deeds were obtained from Kthel and Kucy in 1907, they were each paid $25. When the deeds were obtained from Stephen Ka Raut and his wife in 1910. *428they were each paid $50. None of these payments was charged against the La Rauts personally, nor were the old accounts under their names, which had been balanced and closed, reopened; but these payments were each charged in the stumpage account of the Lumber Company. In short, there is nothing in the books of the company to show that any of the La Rauts owed the Lumber Company or R. A. Booth at any time after their accounts were closed, or that the company paid out any moneys to their account, or that’the company held any of the conveyances as security, or that R. A. Booth guaranteed the repayment to the Lumber Company of the moneys which it had so advanced. Another important fact is that at the time when the second deeds were obtained from Stephen La Raut and his wife, according to the decided weight of the testimony, their claims were each worth at the lowest estimate $4,000, and probably $5,000. A most significant fact, also, is the change which was made in the answer of the defendants when the government began to take its testimony before the examiner. The original answer had then been on file three months. The original answer denied:
“That the entire or any expense attending the making of said entries or purchase, including the payment of said purchase money or the said fees of register or receiver, or all other expenses or disbursements, or any expenses or disbursements, were paid or borne by the said defendant corporation.”
It is not claimed, nor can it be, that the answer was prepared by ■ counsel or sworn to in ignorance of the facts. The complaint had drawn the attention of the defendants sharply to the charges which were made as to the alleged fraud in acquiring the lands in controversy. The answer was complete in every detail, and one of its allegations was that the chax-ges made in the bill had been the subject of investigation by officials of the Interior Depaxtxnent, who had fully investigated them for the purpose of ascertaining the truth or falsity of said charges. Another allegation was that the Lumber Company had purchased the lands relying upon the patents, and had paid Jordan $550, and each of the other patentees $600, therefor. The answer was sworn to by A. C. Dixon, the manager of the Lumber Company. He testified that R. A. Booth had told him the facts in regard to these claixns, and had informed him that he had caused the company’s money to be advanced to pay the expenses and purchase price thereof, and that he had guaranteed the repayment of the money to the company. Dixon testified that he was fully advised of the facts, and that he. had stated the facts to the attorneys who prepared the answer. He admitted that the answer was read to him; but he testified that without paying-attention to the details, or discussing the various points exnbodied in it, he had signed it, supposing it was a mere matter of form. But he could not-explain why the answer was prepared in the way in which it was, nor was any witness called’to explain it.
These facts arid circumstances, while pex-haps they do not amount to a demonstration of the truth of the allegations of the bill, result in a vex-y decided preponderance of the evidence in favor of that conclusion, and they are sufficient in our judgment to overcome all the presump*429tions that attend the issuance of the patents, and are sufficient to meet the requirement of the rule that in a suit to set aside a patent the testimony on which it is done must be clear, unequivocal, and convincing, and must be. more than a hare preponderance of the evidence, which leaves the issue in doubt. The findings in the court below were made upon evidence which had been taken before an examiner, and not in open court, and they are not attended with presumptions in favor of findings which are made upon conflicting testimony, where the trial judge has the opportunity to observe the demeanor of the witnesses.
As to the land patented to Jordan, the decree is affirmed. As to the other lands in controversy, it is reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to enter a decree for the United States in accordance with the prayer of the bill.