delivered the opinion of the court. He stated the facts-in the foregoing language, and continued :
These cases present the same questions, and may be consid
There was no presumption here in favor of the officers which the testimony produced by the complainant did not entirely rebut and overthrow. Numerous witnesses, living in the immediate neighborhood of the land, testified that they were well acquainted with it, had been frequently upon it, that no one resided there, and that no improvements were made as stated in the pre-emption papers. They also testified that they never knew nor heard of persons by the names of the alleged preemptors, nor of the persons whose names were used in the attempted proof of settlement' and cultivation. Neither the register nor the receiver came forward to disprove the conclusions which this testimony justified, that the pretended preemptors and patentees were fictitious persons. The suggestion that real parties may have appeared before the register and the receiver as pre-emptors and witnesses, having the names used,
. The position that, as the frauds charged were committed by officers of the United States, the court erred in not holding' their acts to be binding, and .in not giving to the patents the force of valid conveyances, is certainly a novel one. The government does not guarantee the integrity of its officers nor the. validity of their acts. It prescribes rules for them, requires an oath for the faithful discharge of their duties, and exacts from them a bond with stringent conditions. It also provides penalties for their misconduct or fraud, but there its responsibility ends. They are but the servants of the law, and, if they .depart from its requirements, the government is not bound. There would be a wild license to crime if their acts, in disregard of the law, were to be upheld to protect third parties, as though performed in compliance with it. The language used in the case of Pope’s Lessee against Wendell sanctions no such doctrine. (
• The patents being issued to fictitious parties could not transfer the title, and no one could derive any right under a conveyance. in the name of the supposed patentees. A patent to a fictitious person is, in legal effect, no more than a declaration that the government 'thereby conveys the property to no one. There is, in such case, no room for the application of the doctrine that a subsequent
lona fide
purchaser is protected. A subsequent purchaser is bound to know whether there, was, in fact, a patentee, a person once in being, and not a mere myth, and he will always be presumed to take his conveyance upon the knowledge of the .truth in this respect. To the applica
As to the position that no offer is made in the bills to return the scrip received for the - land, only a word need be said. The pretended patentees, who are supposed' to have- given the scrip, being mere myths,- having no actual. existence, it would be idle to offer to return it-to them; and for the same reason they can have no agents to act in their behalf.
A strenuous effort is made by counsel to bring these cases within the doctrine declared in
United States
v.
Throckmorton,
jDecrees affirmed.
