The only question presented by the record is as to the propriety of the ruling of the Court, upon the sufficiency of the answer.
The grounds on which the defendant rested his title to relief, were failure of title, fraud in the plaintiff and the eviction of the defendant from a part of the land purchased. The fraud was alleged to consist in selling lands as property of the estate to which the plaintiff knew he could not make a *527valid title, and in false representations respecting the situation and locality of the land. And the question is whether these grounds are sufficient, as set forth in the answer, to entitle the defendant to the relief sought.
The ground on which it has been held in the Courts of South Carolina, and, perhaps, in some other Courts, that the vendee may resist the payment of the purchase money before eviction, is, that the covenant of seizin is broken by the want of title in the seller ; and damages for this breach are allowed as a discount. An outstanding paramount title is considered per se a breach of the warranty of the seller and as co-effective with eviction. (Van Lew v. Iam, 2 Richardron’s Eq. Rep. 348, 354.) But in an administrator’s sale there is no warranty express or implied. The administrator sells only such title a& the estate had. The maxim, caveat emptor, applies ; and mere-defect of title cannot avail the purchaser, either as a defenceto an action for the purchase money, or as a ground for rescinding the contract. (Lynch et al. v. Baxter et al., 4 Texas R. 431 ; Hart. Dig. Art. 1176.) If the defence in this case-can be maintained, it must be on the ground of the alleged fraud and eviction.
The answer contains no averment of any misrepresentation) in respect to the title. The alleged misrepresentation was in-reference to the locality of the land. If there was any sufficient averment of fraud in respect to the title, it is to be found in the allegation that the defendant made the sale knowing-the title to be defective. Whether this would amount to a fraud in a person contracting in his own right, it is not necessary to determine. The maxim, caveat emptor, is, in general,, a sufficient answer to mere silence, in regard to defects open to observation. The alleged paramount outstanding titles, exhibited by the answer, appear to have been duly recorded,, and, therefore, in addition to the application of the maxim,. caveat emptor, the defendant was chargeable with constructive-notice of the superior title. This, however, would not relieve *528the plaintiff from the consequences of having misrepresented or concealed any material fact. Chancellor Kent lays it down as the general rule, that “ each party is bound in every case to “ communicate to the other his knowledge of material facts, “ provided he knows the other'to be ignorant of them, and “ they be not open and naked, or equally within the reach of “ his observation.” (2 Kent, 4th edit. 482.) But this doctrine is thought by Judge Story to require qualification, by limiting it to cases where one party is under some obligation to communicate the facts, or where there is a peculiar known relation, trust or confidence between them, which authorizes the other party to act upon the presumption that there is no concealment of any material fact. (1 Story’s Eq. Sec. 208.) The true definition of undue concealment (it is said) which amounts to a fraud in the sense of a Court of equity, and for which it will grant relief, is the non-disclosure of those facts and circumstances which one party is under some legal or equitable obligation to communicate, and which the other party has a right, not merely in foro conscientice, but juris et de jure, to know. (Id. Sec. 207.) But if the doctrine, as stated by Chancellor Kent, be applied to the answer in this case, its averments do not bring it within the rule requiring the disclosure of material facts, there being no allegation that the facts in respect to the title were not known to the defendant. And here the rule is applicable that every pleading is to be taken most strongly against the pleader. But whatever may be the general rule, we are of opinion that in the sale of the property of estates, the administrator is not, in general, bound to make known defects of title within his knowledge ; and that his mere silence in respect to the title, though he may have known it to be defective, will not amount to a fraud vitiating the sale. We are of opinion, therefore, that the facts alleged do not amount to fraud in respect to the title.
The original answer was manifestly insufficient in its alligations of fraud respecting the locality of the land. It did not *529state in what particular the map, said to have been exhibited, was false and fraudulent; that it was in the representations respecting the lines of the surveyj or that the lines of the survey of the tract of land conveyed to the defendant, did not, in fact, run as delineated on the alleged fraudulent map, or as described in the conveyance. The allegation is that the defendant was evicted from the land described as fronting on the river. But it does not therefore follow that the lines of the survey were not truly represented, or that they did not embrace the land from which the party was so evicted. The particulars in which the falsity of the map consisted are not averred, but are left to inference. And it is an elementary principle, that the pleader must state the facts of his case by averment direct and positive, and not leave them to be deduced by argument and inference.
The eviction is alleged to have been from a part only of the land conveyed ; and an abatement of the price pro tanto is asked. It is alleged to be the most valuable portion of the tract, but what is its positive or relative value is not alleged. The answer ought to be so certain and specific in its averments as that, if admitted, the Court could give judgment upon it. In this respect it is manifestly defective ; it contains no averment by which the Court can be informed for what amount to give judgment. This objection was specially pointed out by the exceptions. But instead of amending the answer in this particular, the defendant, in his amended answer, appears to have abandoned that part of his defence which1 related to the alleged fraudulent representations respecting the locality of the land, and his eviction therefrom, and to have relied on the sole ground of fraud in making the sale, knowing the title to be defective. And this, as we have seen, was not a sufficient ground for avoiding the contract.
In the view we have taken of the case, it does not become necessary to determine what would have been the effect of the legal eviction of the defendant from a part of the land, or of *530an offer on his part to restore the possession of the residue. It is certain, that, as the plaintiff was not a party to the arbitration, which it is averred resulted in the eviction, the judgment thereupon did not bind him ; and the plaintiff must have averred and proved the facts which authorized the judgment. But it will suffice to dispose of the case, that the answer does not contain averments of matters of fact constituting a defence, with the requisite legal certainty or set forth the facts sought to be pleaded with such certainty as to require the Court to determine upon their legal effect, or sufficiency, if well pleaded.
Whatever may be the personal liability of the plaintiff for an injury sustained by the defendant, in consequence of misrepresentations made by the former, the latter cannot hold him to answer in damages on account of such personal liability-in this action. The demands are not in the same right and cannot be litigated in the same action.
We are of opinion that the Court did not err in adjudging the answer insufficient; and the judgment is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.