By the Court.
Nisbet, J.,delivering the opinion.
The complainant in this bill alleges, that Hudson and Fountain, who were partners in buying and selling lands, had, in accordance with the requirements of the treaty made by the Federal Government with the Creek Indians, at "Washington, in 1832, purchased the reservation upon which an Indian by the name of Stincharnaliha had been located; that the reservee, Stincharnaliha, was brought before the certifying agent for the purpose of having the contract certified, and that Hudson and Fountain paid to the Indian, for the land, the sum of two hundred dollars; that, upon examination, it was found that the same land had been bought by the agents of the Columbus Land Company, a partnership entered into also for the purpose of buying and selling lands, and had been certified to that company, and the contract forwarded to Washington for the approval of the President, in accordance with the treaty ; that the contract, thus certified, appeared to have been made between the Columbus Land Company and the Indian, Stincharnaliha; and that the ágents of the Columbus Land Company, appearing before the agent of the government, and in the presence of Hudson and Fountain, and of the Indian, Stincharnaliha, confessed that, by mistake, they had bought the land, not of Stincharnaliha, the true owner, but of an Indian called Istencharna, who represented himself to be Stincharnaliha, the true owner and reservee; and that thus the contract had been certified in his name to them — they having paid Istencharna-on® hundred dollars for it. The agent being about to write to the government at Washington, to denounce the contract of the Columbus Land Company as fraudulent, and tq prevent its approval by the President, it was then and there agreed, (the agent of the government approving and consenting thereto,) that, in order to prevent injury *178to the character of the Columbus Land Company, he should not write to Washington and cause the President to withhold his approval to the contract of that company for the land, but should permit it to be approved, and that when it should be approved and sent .back, they, the Columbus Land Company, would convey the land to Hudson and Fountain; that Hudson and Fountain should not insist upon the agent’s certifying and sending on their contract with Stincharnalika, but would waive their right to have, it certified and approved y and further, that Istencharna, the false Indian, should retain the one hundred dollars paid to him, and that his land should be certified to the Columbus Land Company. The bill' proceeds to state further, that in pursuance of this agreement, the contract for Stincharnalika’s land-, with the Columbus Land Company, was returned approved by the President, that one-half of the land had been conveyed by the Columbus Land Company to Mr. Fountain, and that the Company had refused to convey the other half to the complainant, who was the administrator of Jonathan Hudson, deceased, one of the partners of the firm of Hudson and Fountain. The bill is brought by the administrator of Jonathan Hudson, deceased, for the use of Seaborn Jones,, to -enforce; so far as his interest is concerned, the contract thus made between the Columbus Land Company and Hudson and Fountain. X omitted to state in its proper place a fact charged in the bill, which is important to be stated, and that is, that Hudson and Fountain, although buying lands on their own- account, were at the same time members of, and of course interested in, the Columbus Land Company. The bill prays-that the defendants shall account with the complainant for the money arising from the sale of the-land, or rather the- one-half of it, which belonged to him, and be decreed to pay over the same with interest. It was demurred to, in- the Court below, upon several grounds, and among them this, to wit, “ because the contract which the complainant seeks to enforce, was against public policy, illegal, and in violation of the treaty between' the government and the Creek Indians, approved at Washington on the 4th day of April, 1832, and therefore void.”
The demurrer was sustained, and the complainant excepted. The decision we make, on the ground of demurrer above stated, controls this case-; we shall therefore express no opinion upon any other.
[1.] By the second article of the treaty, the United States engaged “ to- allow ninety principal- chiefs .of the Creek tribe, to *179select one section of land each, and every other head of a Creek family to select one-half section each, which tracts shall be reserved from sale for their use, for the term of five years, unless sooner disposed of by them.”
By the third article it is provided that, “ these tracts may be conveyed'by the persons selecting the same, to any other person for a fair consideration, 'in such manner as the President may direct. The contract shall be certifiedhy some person appointed for that purpose by the President, but shall not be valid until the President approves the same.” '{For the treaty see 5 Porter Ala. R. 414.) This treaty is the supreme law of the land, by the Constitution of the Union, and obligatory upon all the departments of the government, State and Federal. This principle has been settled by the Supreme Court, and will be found applicable to this case : to wit, “ Where a treaty is the law of the land, and, as such, affects the rights of parties litigating in court, that treaty as much binds those rights, and is as much to -be regarded by the Court as an act of Congress.” United States vs. The Schooner Peggy, 1 Cranch, 103; 1 Cond. R. 256.
The rights of the parties litigating before this Court are affected, as-we shall see, by the Creek treaty. We hold that 'it must be regarded by us with the same solemnity, and to the same intents, as if it was an act of Congress.
In reviewing the transactions detailed in this bill, several preliminary remarks become proper. And first, it is certainly true, that the contract between Hudson and Fountain and Stincharnalika was a fair and legal contract. We do not see -that it, in any respect, contravenes thé treaty. It was founded on a valuable consideration, which was paid; the Indian -was brought before the certifying agent, and declared himself satisfied with it; and they were entitled to have it certified and sent on to the President for his approval. Under this treaty, no contract for the sale of the Indian reservations operated as a-valid conveyance,’'until cer.tified by the agent, and approved 'by the President. By the third article, the reservee is authorized -to sell, in such manner as the President may direct. The manner of selling, directed by the President, was for the Indian owner and the purchaser to appear before the agent, and, if the Indian-then assented to the contract, the purchase money was paid to him in the presence of the agent. This was intended, no doubt, to protect the ignorant and improvident savage from fraud and imposition. In this the government *180intended to manifest her parental character towards her children. For it had been the boast of the government, in the face of Christendom, that it stood in relation to the aboriginal tribes within her limits, in loco parentis. Her charities, it must be conceded, have been those of the step-dame.
Further — The treaty itself declares, in the article last referred to, that these contracts shall he certified by some person appointed for that purpose by the President; hut shall not he valid unless the President shall approve them. In Clartilko vs. Elliott these positions have been settled by the Supreme Court of Alabama. 5 Porter, 403.
The second remark preliminary is this — There can be no question at all, but that the contract made by the agents of the Columbus Land Company with Istencharna, who represented himself to be, and closed the contract in the name of Stincharnalilca, was illegal and void, both before and after its approval by the President. Whether the impersonation of the true owner was made with or without the knowledge and approbation of the Columbus Land Company or their agents, or not; whether the contract was entered into by them with Istencharna as Stincharnalika, by mistake, as the bill avers, or fraudulently and corruptly, is quite immaterial. It was a contract in violation of the treaty, and therefore illegal and void ; it was a fraud upon the rights of Stincharnalika ; it was a contravention of public policy; the policy, to wit, of humanity and justice to the Indians; a policy whieh our government has avowed from the beginning ; and therefore void. It was a void contract at common law. If void from the beginning, the certificate of the agent and the approval of the President gave no validity to it. Its apju'oval, under the circumstances detailed in this bill, was a fraud upon the President, and gave to it a deeper and more deadly infusion of invalidity. We are not called upon to adjudge directly the validity of the one, or the invalidity of the other of these contracts'; but we are called upon, in order to determine the character of the contract between Hudson and Fountain, and the Columbus Land Company, which it is the object of this bill to enforce, to fix the character of the contract between that Company and the Indian Istencharna, acting as Stincharnalika; and having fixed it, without reference to a single authority, deeming the question too plain to require such reference, I proceed.
The contract between Hudson and Fountain, and the Columbus Land Company, grew out of the contract of that Company with, *181Istencharna. That was its basis — without that, it would not, could not have been. When Messrs. Hudson and Fountain appear before the agent to consummate their bargain with Stincharnalika, for his land, and to demand his certificate, they find that the land has been already sold by Stincharnalika to the Columbus Land Company, and certified for them, and the contract remitted to Washington for the President’s approval. Then come the confessions -of that Company. What are they % That they had bought this land from Istencharna, by mistake, believing him to be 'the real owner, and that the contract is illegal and void. Upon ithe revelation of these facts, the parties confer together, (the agent .of the government lending himself to their views, and thus becoming a party to the transaction,) and the result is, that, in order to prevent the developement of this fraud upon the treaty, and a consequent injury to the reputation of the Columbus Land Company, it is agreed,.that the agent will not protest at Washington against the approval of their illegal contract; that the President, trusting to the honesty of his agent, as well as to his vigilance, shall bb permitted to approve their illegal contract; and that, when the .contract returns approved, they (the Columbus Land Company) ■will convey the land to Hudson and Fountain ; they, on their part, agreeing not to have their own contract for the land certified and •approved. Now what is the object of both parties 1 It is to suppress the knowledge of an illegal and void, not to say fraudulent, ■contract, by combining to procure the approval of an illegal and void ■contract. What is the consideration of this contract ‘l the prevention of injury and less of character to the Columbus Land Company. This consideration moved both parties; for, be it remembered, that Hudson and Fountain were also members of the Columbus hand Company, and, as such, as well as otherwise, the agreement enured to their benefit. And how is the object of this contract effected % by procuring the consent of the agent of the government to perpetrate a violation of his official duties. Really to use the language of Mr. Justice Baldwin, in Adam Bartlett vs. William D. Nutt, administrator of Coleman, “ to state sucli a case is to decide it.” Still, our judgment in this case is based upon authority, as we shall proceed to show; that judgment is, that this contract is illegal and void, and that this Court will not lend its aid therefore to enforce it. No court of law, or chancery, can help this complainant — will lend its aid to enforce a contract made in violation of a treaty, immoral, indecent and wicked — and by the aid of an *182officer of the government, acting contrary to his official duties. If this Court should sanction such a contract, it would justly forfeit the confidence of all good men. The rule we lay down is this — So far as such contracts have been executed, the Court will not disturb them, but leave the parties as we find them; and so far as they are not executed, will afford no aid whatever to enforce them. The rule is the same, whether the illegality of the contract appears from the plaintiff’s case, as here, or is set up by way of defence. Courts will sustain such a defence, not for the sake of the defendant, but upon general principles of public policy. In Holman vs. Johnson, Cowp. 343, Lord Mansfield holds the following language upon this subject: “ The objection that a contract is immoral or illegal, as between plaintiff and defendant, sounds, at all times, very ill in the mouth of the defendant. It is not for his sake, however, that the objection is ever allowed, but it is founded in general principles of policy, which the defendant has the advantage of, contrary to real justice, as between him and the plaintiff; by accident, if I may so say. The principle of public policy is this, “ ex dolo malo non oritur actio.” No court will lend its aid to a man upon an illegal or an immoral act. If from the plaintiff’s own statement or otherwise, the cause of action appears to arise ex turpi causa, or the transgression of a positive law of this country, then the Court says he has no right to be assisted. It is upon that ground the Court goes, not for the sake of the defendant, but because it will not lend its aid to such a plaintiff. So if the plaintiff and defendant should change sides, and the defendant were to bring his action against the plaintiff, the latter would then have the advantage of it; for where both are equally in fault, potior est conditio defendeniis.” So that, although there appears in this case to be an /equity in ,favour of the complainant against the defendant, that I cannot avail him; we can help him in no event upon his illegal or immoral contract. We say to this complainant, as Chief Justice \Wilmot said in Collins vs. Blantern, 2 Wils. 341, “ You shall not stipulate for iniquity, for no polluted hand shall touch the pure fountains of justice.”
The distinction relied upon in this case by the counsel for the complainant is this, to wit: admitting the proposition as above stated, that no action can be maintained upon an illegal or immoral contract, yet where the contract was disconnected with the original unlawful act, and was founded on a now and distinct con*183sideration, an action might be maintained upon it, although it could not be maintained upon a contract directly arising out of the illegal act. This distinction is well founded, and we recognise it; The question however arises, is the contract under review disconnected with the original unlawful act 1 Is it founded on a new and distinct consideration ? I have shown, I think, that it is not; on the contrary, it is very clear that it is connected necessarily with the original illegal contract of the Columbus Land Company with Istincharna — ‘that it springs out of it, and could not have been made without it. And moreover, the consideration moving both the parties, to wit, the suppression of the knowledge of an illegal act and the procurement of the approval of an illegal contract, if it be considered distinct and independent, is in itself illegal and iawmoral. The authorities in support of the distinction are numerous ; the same distinction was taken in Armstrong vs. Toler, and recognised by Chief Justice Marshall. And if the’facts of this cause brought it within that distinction, we would unhesitatingly sustain and enforce this contract. See Armstrong vs. Toler, 11 Wheat. 258; Faikney vs. Reynous, 4 Burrow 2069, Petrie vs. Hannay, 3 Term R. 418; Farmer vs. Russell, 1 Bos. & Pul. 295; Tennant vs. Elliott, ib. 3; Lloyd vs. Johnson, ib. 340; Watts vs. Brooks, 3 Vesey Jr. 612; Bird vs. Appleton, 8 Term R. 562; 4 Taunt R, 860; 5 id. 181; 5 ib. 521; 7 id, 246; 1 Marsh. R. 561; 3 Meriv. R. 469; 4 Barn. & Ald. 211; 1 Jac. & Walk. 204; 3 East. 222; 5 Barn. & Ald. 335; 11 East. 180; Gow on Part. 105; 1 Fonbl. Eq. b. 1, c. 4, s, 4, note y; Puffend. 1, 3, c. 7, s. 9, note 2.
S The ground upon which we put our decision in this case, is- [,2.] the gen eral principle, that no action can be maintained upon a contract growing out of an immoral or illegal transaction, where the transaction was not subsequent or collateral, but directly connected with the unlavL ful act. Believing that this- contract grew out of an act illegal, because in contravention of a- treaty, and an immoral act, because involving the compromise of a fraud, and also official infidelity, we rest the case on the principle last stated.
And in support of that principle we refer to the following authorities: Collins vs. Blantern, 2 Wils. R. 347; Holman vs. Johnson, Cowp. R. 341; Biggs vs. Lawrence, 3 Term R. 454; Clugas vs. Panaluna, 4 id 466; Steers vs. Lashley, 6 id. 61; Booth vs. Hodgson, 6 id. 405; Waymell vs. Reed, 5 id. 599; Ex parte Mather, 3 Vesey Jr. 373; Ribbans vs. Cricket, 1 Bos. & Pul. 264; Lightfoot vs. Tenant, 1 id. 551; Albert vs. Maze, 2 id. 371; Shirley vs. Shan*184key, 2 id. 130; Thompson vs. Thompson, 7 Vesey 470; Ex parte Daniels, 14 id. 191; Ex parte Bell, 1 Maul. & Selw. 751; Cook vs. Jackson, 6 Vesey 11; Branton vs. Taddy, 1 Taunt. 6; Edgar vs. Fowler, 3 East. 222; Morck vs. Abel, 3 Bos. & Pul. 35; Blackford vs. Preston, 8 Term R. 89; Mitchell vs. Cockburn, 2 H. Bl. R. 378; Cannan vs. Bryce, 3 Barn. & Ald. 179; Duncanson vs. McClure, 4 Dal. 308; Hunt vs. Knickerbocker, 5 Johns. R. 327; Whitaker vs. Cone, 2 Johns. Cas. 58; 2 Johns. Ch. 147; 14 Johns. R. 146; 16 id. 438; 15 Mass. R. 35; Wheeler vs. Russell, 17 id. 281; 16 id. 334; Frales vs. Maybury, 2 Gallis. R. 560; 3 Cranch R. 242; 3 Wheat. 204; 4 Dal. 269; s. c. 1 Binn. R. 110; 4 Dal. 298; 6 Binn R. 321; 4 Yeates 24; Nellis vs. Clarke, 20 Wend. 24; 15 id. 412; 3 Dana 540; 3 Dev. 519; 4 Hill N. Y. 424; 4 Peters 184.
This principle may be said to be a rule of universal law, which has been incorporated into the civil code of every nation. Pothier des Obligations No. 43, 45; Des Assurances No. 58.
I shall Conclude this opinion by an extract from the opinion of Mr. Justice Baldwin, delivered in Bartle vs. Coleman, 4 Peters 184, which seems to me to be strikingly applicable to this case:
“ Public morals, public justice, and the well-established principles of all judicial tribunals, alike forbid the interposition of courts of justice to lend their aid to purposes like this. To enforce a contract which began with the corruption of a public officer, and progressed in the practice of known and wilful deception in its execution, can never be consummated or sanctioned by any court. The law leaves the parties to such a contract where it found them. If either has sustained a loss by the bad faith of a particeps criminis, it is but a just infliction for premeditated and deeply-practiced fraud; which, when detected, deprives him of anticipated profits, or subjects him to unexpected losses. He must not expect that a judicial tribunal will degrade itself by an exertion of its powers, by shifting the loss from one to the other, or to equalize the benefits or burthens which may have resulted by the violation of every principle of morals and of laws.”
Let the judgment of the court below be affirmed.