{After stating the facts.)
I. The rulings upon the special demurrer, the motion to strike, and the demurrer to the replication to the second plea, constitute the basis of the first three assignments of error. We shall consider them all together for in disposing of the demurrer and motion we incidentally determine the sufficiency of the replication to the plea. The demurrer and motion present the same identical question, the pleader being uncertain whether his objection ought to be taken by special demurrer or by motion. His objection to the declaration relates to the use of the words “well knew or ought to have known” in the allegation of the scienter. He does not contend that this form of allegation is bad because in the alternative, nor that it renders the declaration uncertain or insufficient. He expressly admits that either form “knew” or “ought to' have known” states an actionable knowledge of falseness; and he confines himself to the argument that defences may be interposed to a count alleging that he “ought to have known” different from those admissible to a count alleging that he “knew” of the existence of the judgment lien at the time he made the alleged representation, and that he was therefore embarrassd in preparing his defence to a count alleging that he “knew or ought to have known.” He argues that under section 1294, Revised Statutes, prescribing a limitation of three years in actions “for relief on the ground of fraud the cause of action in such case not to be deemed to have accrued until the discovery by the aggrieved party of the facts constituting the fraud,” in an action for deceit in which it is charged that defendant *250“knew” his representation to- be false, the cause of action accrues from the “discovery by the aggrieved party of the facts constituting the fraud,” while in a similar action in which it is charged that defendant “ought to have known” the falsity of his representations, the cause of action accrues from the time plaintiff acted upon the false representations, without reference to the time he discovered the facts constituting the fraud. From these premises he concludes that the count, being framed upon the theory that defendant “knew,” as well as upon the theory that he “ought to have known” that his representation was false, was bad' for duplicity, and framed so as to embarrass him in pleading the statute of limitations as a defence.
The defendant in error contends that in actions for deceit it is only necessary to allege the scienter generally, i. e., that defendant “knew” his representation to be false; that under this general allegation it may be proved that the representation was made either, first, with actual knowledge of its falsity; second, without knowledge either of its truth or falsity, or, third, under circumstances in which the person making it ought to have known if he did not know of its falsity; that the allegation in -this declaration that- “defendant well knew or ought to have known” that his representations were false does not charge different causes of action as to which different defences may be interposed, but at most indulg-es in a possible ambiguity of intimation as to the character of evidence intended to be introduced to prove the scienter, and that if the words “ought to have known” had been omitted from the count, the count would still have been provable by evidence that defendant “ought to have known.” He insists that we should either reject those words as surplusage, or hold that the pleading be construed most strongly against him, there*251by confining him to proof that defendant “ought to have known.” To reach a correct conclusion amid these conflicting views it will be necessary for us to ascertain the general nature and characteristics of an action on the case for deceit. In Williams v. McFadden, 23 Fla. 143, 1 South. Rep. 618, the court say “the gist of the action for deceit is that the defendant made false representations, knowing them to be untrue. It naturally follows that if the representations, though false, were believed to be true by the vendor (defendant), that he could not be held responsible in this form of action.” In Wheeler v. Baars, 33 Fla. 696, 15 South. Rep. 584, it is said that “a false representation of a material fact, made with knowledge of its falsity, to a person ignorant thereof, with intention that it shall be acted upon, followed by reliance upon and by action thereon amounting to substantial change of position, is a fraud of which the law will take cognizance.” The very name of the action, “deceit,” implies that it is and must be founded on fraud. For this reason the action for deceit.is not I an appropriate remedy to relieve against negligence, I accident or mistake, or in which to recover for breach I of contract, or upon a warranty, though it seems that 1 an action on the case for breach of an express warranty or for false warranty will lie, in which neither allegation nor proof of scienter is required. Shippen v. Bowen, 122 U. S. 575, 7 Sup. Ct. Rep. 1283. ylt is not pretended that this action can be considered as one for damages for a false warranty or for breach of an express warranty. The action being for deceit is necessarily founded in f fraud, and in order to make out a case of fraud, as dis- I tinguished from inadvertence, mistake, negligence, accident and the like, it is necessary to' allege and prove the scienter — the knowledge of defendant that his representations were false'. Binnard v. Spring, 42 Barb. 470; *252Holmes v. Clark, 10 Iowa, 423. This is generally held to be the rule both in England and America, and the distinction between fraud and warranty, between deceit and honest mistake, should not be lost sight of, nor should the action for deceit be confounded with other actions at law or in equity in which no proof of scienter is required. The courts are not entirely harmonious as to the quantity and character of proof necessary to sustain the allegation of scienter in cases of this character. The English doctrine, as announced in the comparatively recent case of Derry v. Peek, L. R. 14 App. Cas. 337, which reviews many previous decisions, is that in order to maintain an action for deceit there must be proof of fraud; that fraud may be proved by showing that a false representation has been made, first, knowingly, second, without belief in its truth, third recklessly careless whether it be true or false; or in other words, in order to prevent a'false- statement being fraudulent there must be an honest belief in its truth. In Alabama, Colorado, Nebraska and some other States the courts do not seem to require proof of scienter in cases where the party making a false representation professes to speak from his own knowledge. Munroe v. Pritchett, 16 Ala. 785, S. C. 50 Am. Dec. 203; Jordan v. Pickett, 78 Ala. 331; Goodale v. Middaugh, 8 Colo. App. 223, 46 Pac. Rep. 11; Johnson v. Gulick, 46 Neb. 817, 65 N. W. Rep. 883. In other States the charge of fraudulent intent in actions for deceit may be maintained by proof of a statement made as of a party’s own knowledge which is false, provided the thing stated is not merely a matter of opinion, estimate or judgment, but is susceptible of actual knowledge, in which case it is deemed that the fraud consists in stating that the party knows the thing to exist when he does not know it to' exist, and in such cases a belief of its existence will not warrant or excuse *253a statement of actual knowledege. Fisher v. Mellen, 103 Mass. 503; Chatham Furnace Co. v. Moffatt, 147 Mass. 403, 18 N. E. Rep. 168; Hadcock v. Osmer, 153 N. Y. 604, 47 N. E. Rep. 923; Bullitt v. Farrar, 42 Minn. 8, 43 N. W. Rep. 566. It is also held in these States that if the representations were not made as of the party’s own knowledge, then the evidence must show that the party knew them to be untrue, and evidence that he had reasonable cause to believe that they were untrue will not constitute sufficient proof of scienter. Pearson v. Howe, 1 Allen, 207; Stone v. Denny, 4 Met. 15; Tryon v. Whitmarsh, 1 Met. 1, S. C. 35 Am. Dec. 339; Marsh v. Falker, 40 N. Y. 562; Marshall v. Fowler, 7 Hun, 237; McKown v. Furgason, 47 Iowa, 636. The question was considered by this court in Wheeler v. Baars, 33 Fla. 696, 15 South. Rep. 584, and the defendant in error relies upon the decision in that case in sup- .. port of the position assumed by him in this one. It is there said that the scienter may be proved by showing, y'. first, actual knowledge of the falsity of the representation by defendant; second, that defendant made the ‘ statement as of his own- knowledge, or in such absolute unqualified and positive terms as to imply his personal knowledge of the fact, when in truth defendant had no knowledge whether the statement was true hr false; or, third, that the party’s special situation or means of knowledge were such as to make it his duty to know as to the truth or falsity of the representation. Under each phase the proof must show that the statement was in fact false, and in addition, under the first, that defendant had actual knowledge that it was false; under the second, that defendant made the statement as of his own knowledge, when in fact he had no knowledge whether it was true or false, which seems to bear a close resemblance to the English rule, “without belief in its *254truth, or recklessly careless whether it be true or false and under the third, that defendant’s special situation or means of knowledge were such as made it his duty to know as to the truth or falsity of the representation. From this statement it is quite evident that proof sufficient to sustain the third phase tends very strongly'to sustain the idea that the defendant had actual knowledge of the falsity of his statement; for!when it is shown that the statement was material and false, and that the defendant’s situation or means of knowledge, were such as to make it incumbent upon him as a matter of duty to know whether the statement was true or false, the conclusion is almost irresistible that he did know that _^which his duty required him to know. For this reason the law conclusively presumes from the existence of these facts that defendant had actual knowledge of the falsity of his statement, or, more properly speaking, proof of these facts is sufficient to sustain a charge of actual knowledge, dispensing with further proof upon that subject, and admitting no proof to rebut the fact of actual knowledge, but only proof to rebut the existence of the facts from which such actual knowledge is inferred. We are therefore of opinion that proof of scienter in the third phase does not give another or different right or ground of action from that given by proof under the first phase, but that it simply establishes the same ultimate fact, vis: knowledge, by a different class of evidence, azid consequently that an allegation that defendant “knew” his representation to be false is provable by evidence embraced in the third phase. In other words, an averment that defendant’s situation or means of knowledge were such as made it his duty to know whether his statement was true or false, and' an averment that defendant well knew his statements to be untrue, are but different methods of stating' the *255same ultimate fact, vis: knowledge. McBeth v. Craddock, 28 Mo. App. 380; DeLay v. Carney Bros., 100 Iowa, 687, 69 N. W. Rep. 1053. Without committing ourselves to the proposition thtt the words “ought to have known” are in pleading a sufficient allegation that the defendant’s special situation or means of knowledge were such as to make it his duty to know as to the truth or falsity of his representation, but treating them as such, because both parties agree that they are, we think that allegation in this declaration is merely an alternative, cumulative and superfluous statement of the same ultimate fact, vis: knowledge, admitting of no other or different defence or evidence than the allegation which it follows, that “defendant well knew,” and that its presence in the declaration did not therefore render the pleading bad for duplicity, or SO' framed as to embarrass the defendant in preparing his defence. A case made out by proof that defendant fraudulently made an untrue material statement where his special situation or means of knowledge made it his duty to know whether that statement was true or false, presents a pure case of fraud and deceit, as much so as if defendant actually knew his statement to be false. In either case the action is one “for relief on the ground of fraud,” and the cause of action accrues from the “discovery by the aggrieved party of the facts constituting the fraud.” These conclusions sustain the rulings of the court below denying the motion to strike and overruling the special demurrer to the declaration embraced in the first and second assignments of error, as well as the ruling upon the demurrer to the plaintiff’s replication to defendant’s second plea embraced in the third assignment of error.
II. The fourth error assigned relates to the ruling admitting in evidence the entries of default and final judgment in the case of L. Bear v. John D. Gray. The *256objection urged was that the entries offered were only parts of the record. The defendant in error contends that the entries offered showed a perfect final judgment, emanating from a courf^of general jurisdiction, that the judgments of all courts of general jurisdiction are presumed to be valid, and to have been, rendered in the exercise of jurisdiction regularly obtained, that the entries offered proved the existence of the judgment as a fact, and that he was not required in this case to prove more than its bare existence. There are authorities which hold, in accordance with the argument of defendant in error, that where a judgment is relied on as an estoppel or as establishing any particular state of facts of which it is the judicial result, it can be proved only by offering in evidence a complete and duly authenticated copy of the entire proceedings in which the judgment was rendered, but that where the only direct object to be subserved is to show the existence and contents of such judgment, a properly authenticated copy of the judgment entry of a court of record possessing general original jurisdiction is admissible without more, and on being admitted all the legal incidents attach which the law annexes to judgments of that class. Gibson v. Robinson, 90 Ga. 756, 16 S. E. Rep. 969; Rainey v. Hines, 121 N. C. 318, 28 S. E. Rep. 410. Unquestionably when the only relevant fact in issue is whether a judgment has in fact been rendered, nothing need be produced but the judgment entry, but where it becomes necessary to prove that a valid judgment has been rendered by which the party offering it has acquired, or his adversary has lost, some title or right, either by the judgment alone or by it and proceedings taken for its enforcement, we think the whole record, so far as it concerns the formal stages, must be produced. Freeman on Judgments, §407. There is much force in the *257remarks of Judge Campbell, in Kenyon v. Baker, 16 Mich. 373, S. C. 97 Am. Dec. 158: “No judgment can be lawfully given by any court until a suit has been commenced, and the defendants have been brought in and a trial or default had. Our practice allows all of these steps to be shown without making up any formal judgment record, as required by the old practice. But no judgment can stand until the jurisdiction of the court appears in some way, and no presumption can arise from an entry which has no previous steps to explain or warrant it.” There certainly is no hardship in requiring the party offering the judgment to produce the entire judgment record proper, or account for its absence in some recognized manner. The whole is as readily accessible as a part, and without the whole the part can only be sustained by indulging in presumptions as to what the whole would show if introduced, or at least presuming that the whole if introduced would not show that the court has no jurisdiction to render the judgment. Presumptions are from necessity and upon grounds of public policy indulged to support judgments of courts of general jurisdiction where the record does not disclose that the court had no jurisdiction, but it would not only be unnecessary, but extremely dangerous to indulge such presumptions where only a part of the whole of an accessible record is offered, and especially where, as ini this case, the parts offered did not affirmatively show jurisdiction. These views find strong support in previous decisions of this court. Thus in Donald v. McKinnon, 17 Fla. 746, and McGehee v. Wilkins, 31 Fla. 83, 12 South. Rep. 228, it was held that copies of the judgment entries alone offered to sustain a sheriff’s sale under execution issued thereon, were inadmissible unless accompanied with transcripts of the record of the judgments. It is true these judgments emanated from courts *258of limited jurisdiction as to- which no presumptions are indulged, but the same rulings were made as to Circuit' Court judgments in Davis v. Shuler, 14 Fla. 438; Simmons v. Spratt, 20 Fla. 495, and Ashmead v. Wilson, 22 Fla. 255. The printed report of the latter case does not disclose fully the circumstances under which the judgment mentioned was offered, but we have referred to the transcript of the record on that appeal, and ascertain that the defendants offered in evidence a sheriff’s deed to Martin Griffin, one of the defendants, purporting to convey the land in controversy, based upon an execution sale under a judgment from the Circuit Court of Duval county in favor of Robt. J. Woods, and against C. P. Deyereaux and Emily R. Wilson, executor and executrix of the estate of C. Parkhurst, deceased, and James Y. Wilson. In connection with the deed defendants offered the default and final judgments entered in said suit by the clerk, but no- other parts of the record. Judge McWhorter delivering the opinion in that case, speaking of the judgment, says: “It was not competent evidence. Tt’was part only of a record.’ The whole record, or an authenticated or sworn copy of the whole, should be produced.’ ” See, also, the remarks of Judge Randall, in Stark v. Billings, 15 Fla. 318, and in Walls v. Endel, 20 Fla. 86. In this case it was necessary for defendant in error to prove a valid judgment, of a certain date and for a definite amount, not only to show that Watson’s alleged representations were untrue, but to fix the amount of special damages claimed in the declaration, and we think the court erred in admitting the isolated entries of the judgment by default and final judgment, without requiring the production of the whole record proper, or requiring its absence to be accounted for.
III. The defendant Watson offered in evidence a *259letter from John D. Gray, dated August 2, 1885, which the court excluded as being irrelevant and immaterial, and upon this ruling the fifth assignment of error is based. This ruling was correct. The letter contained no reference to negotiations for a loan from the plaintiff Jones, but did refer to a loan from a third person, J. S. Leonard, which was not shown to have had any connection with the loan from plaintiff. No evidence was offered connecting this letter in any manner with any issue in the case, and upon its face it was entirely irrelevant and immaterial.
IY. The sixth assignment of error complains of the instruction given by the court, quoted in the 'preceding statement of facts, and the twelfth complains of the ruling denying defendant’s motion for a new trial which, questioned the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict. It is urged in support of these assignments that the property covered by Jones’ mortgage sold for more than enough to pay the mortgage debt, and that the debt would have been paid in full, but for the wrongful diversion of a portion of the proceeds with plaintiff’s consent to payment of the Bear judgment. It is insisted by defendant in error that this question was not raised or argued in the Circuit Court, and for'that reason we should not consider it. It appears from the record that the instruction complained of was excepted to by incorporating it in the motion for a new trial, and that the motion for new trial was duly made, and the ruling denying it duly excepted to. These exceptions are clearly sufficient to present the question. There is nothing in the record to show that the very point was not raised and discussed in the lower court, and plaintiff in error in his brief insists that “the point was distinctly raised by us below for the purpose of insisting upon it, and is now squarely presented by the record.” It appears from the *260transcript that the mortgaged property was knocked off to Boley, the highest bidder, for an amount more than sufficient to pay the mortgage debt, and that before completing his purchase Boley had the title investigated, and found that the property was encumbered by the lien of a prior judgment in favor of L. Bear. The judgment creditor, although he was not a party to the foreclosure proceedings, demanded that his judgment be paid from the proceeds of the sale, and the plaintiff and the master and the purchaser, without any authority from the court, consented that this be done, which was wholly unauthorized. The judgment creditor was a prior incumbrancer, whose rights were paramount to that of the mortgage plaintiff. The purchaser at the foreclosure sale could only take what title the parties to the suit had, and the prior judgment creditor not being a party to the foreclosure proceedings could enforce his lien by selling the property under his execution, even in the hands of such purchaser. Broward v. Hoeg, 15 Fla. 370. The master’s sale could give nothing but a title subject to the Bear judgment, and the judgment creditor could therefore have no interest in, or right to, any of the proceeds of such sale. Caldwell v. Houser, 108 Ala. 125, 19 South. Rep. 796; Freeman on Executions, §447; Moseley v. Doe, ex dem. Edwards, 2 Fla. 429; Howe v. Robinson, 20 Fla. 352. It is not pretended that the master undertook to sell the property, free from incumbrances, or that the decree authorized him to do so, or that the purchaser was misled in any way to> believe that he was, when he bade for the propert}'- getting a clear title, nor was there any showing of mistake, accident or fraud entitling the purchaser to be relieved from his bid, nor did the purchaser before completing the sale apply to the court for relief from his bid. It is true he did not have actual knowledge of the existence of the *261judgment lien at the time of the sale, but he must be presumed to have known that as the master did not purport to sell dear of liens, he was purchasing subject to any prior lien of record affecting the land offered for sale. The rule caveat emptor applies to sales under mortgage foreclosure as well as other judicial sales, and while it may have been within the power of the court to relieve him from his bid upon prompt application before he accepted a deed and paid over his money, yet he made no application of this kind, but insisted upon his purchase and that the prior lien should be discharged from the proceeds of his purchase. This he clearly had no right to do; nor did the judgment creditor have any right to insist that any portion of the proceeds of the sale be paid to him; nor did the master have authority to clear the title by discharging the lien of a prior incumbrancer not a party from the proceeds of sale, without directions to that effect from the court. Osterberg v. Union Trust Co., 93 U. S. 424; Brooks v. Brooke, 12 Gill & J. (Md.) 306, S. C. 38 Am. Dec. 310; Duvall v. Speed, 1 Md. Chy. 229; Clark & Leonard Investment Co. v. Way, 52 Neb. 204, 71 N. W. Rep. 1021. The plaintiff in the mortgage foreclosure consented to these unauthorized acts, which were never approved by the court, and he is in no situation to claim that a balance is due him upon his mortgage. A case quite similar to the one at bar is that of Bache v. Doscher, 67 N. Y. 429. There it appeared that a judgment of foreclosure was entered for $2,508.94, and a referee was appointed to sell the mortgaged premises. He was directed to make the sale, execute a deed to the purchaser, and from the proceeds of sale to retain his fees and expenses, and the amount of any liens for taxes and assessments, and to pay the costs of attorneys, the amount due upon the mortgage and to' deposit the surplus, if *262any, with the chamberlain of the city of New York. In pursuance of the judgment the property was advertised and sold, the plaintiff mortgagee becoming the purchaser at $9,700. The referee reported that he disposed of the proceeds of sale by allowing the plaintiff $1,-191.95 for taxes and assessments and $6,091.25 for prior mortgages assumed by him; that he deducted his charges and expenses and paid the costs and paid over to plaintiff $1,802.32, leaving a deficiency upon the mortgage debt of $741.55. There was nothing in the complaint or judgment of foreclosure about any prior mortgages, nor were any prior mortgagees made parties to the foreclosure suit. The plaintiff mortgagee sued the defendant for the amount of the deficiency. The court held that no recovery could be had, that from the facts stated “it appears that there was no deficiency and that the plaintiff had in his hands ample money to pay the mortgage and leave a surplus.” We are of the opinion' that the court erred in giving the instruction complained of, and also in refusing the motion for a new trial.
V. The first and second instructions requested by defendant, embraced in assignments of error Nos. 7 and 8j were properly refused for reasons already stated. Wherever a party makes a false representation of a material fact to a person ignorant thereof, with intention that it shall be acted upon, followed by reliance upon and by action thereon amounting to a substantial change of position, and the special situation or means of knowledge of the party making the statement were such that it was his duty to know as to the truth or falsity of 'the representation, such party is in law guilty of fraud as much so as if he actually knew that his statement was false, and an action for deceit based thereon is not under our statute barred until three years from *263“the discovery by the aggrieved party of the facts constituting the fraud.”
VI. In Wheeler v. Baars, 33 Fla. 696, 15 South. Rep. 584, it is held that the knowledge by the maker of the representation of its falsity, or, in technical phrase, the scienter, can be established by either one of three phases of proof showing, first, that the party made the representation with actual knowledge of its falsity; second, that the party having no knowledge whether the statement was true or false, made the statement as of his own knowledge or in such absolute, unqualified and positive terms as to imply knowledge on the part of the person making it; or, third, that from the party’s special situation or means of knowledge it was his duty to know as to the truth or falsity of the statement made. In that case the first, second and fourth counts of the declaration charged that defendant knew his alleged false representation to be untrue; the third, that he “ought to have known” its falsity, while the other counts (except one common count) appear to have been framed upon a false warranty, without alleging any scienter. Upon the question of scienter the defendant in that case requested several instructions, all embracing the idea that he would be entitled to a verdict unless it was proven that he knew at the time he made the statement that it was untrue. The court below refused these instructions and the ruling was sustained by this court. Judge Taylor, there speaking for the court says: “As an abstract, broad, general proposition of law, it is quite true that no recovery can be had in an action of this kind unless the maker of the representation knew it to be false when made, and that he made it with intention to deceive, but the proof of such knowledge or scienter is sufficient if it establishes a case falling within either of the three phases pointed *264out. * * * It was not enough, therefore, for the court, under the proofs here, to simply say to the jury in the language of the refused instructions 'that the plaintiff could not recover in the absence of satisfactory proof that the defendant made the representation knowing it to be false.’ Had these charges proceeded further after the announcement of the general proposition that scienter must be shown, with an explanation of the rules touching the three phases of proof that the law deems sufficient to establish such scienter, then it would have been proper to have given them, but in the form presented they are too general and calculated to mislead.”
For the same reasons the court below correctly refused instructions Nos. 5 and 6 requested by the defendant in this case, embraced in the ninth and tenth assignments of error. There was evidence on the part of the plaintiff tending to show that defendant made the alleged false statement as of his own knowledge, and in positive unqualified terms, and also tending to show that defendant had actual knowledge that his representation was untrue. There was evidence on the part of defendant tending to show that he did not make the alleged statement; that he did not undertake to investigate the records to ascertain if there were any liens upon the property; that he never made any such investigation, and that he had no knowledge whatever as to whether there were any liens upon the property other than the building and loan mortgage. Upon this state of the evidence it was not proper for the court to direct the jury to find for defendant if they found that he did not know, and that his situation “did not make it his duty to know,” that his representation was false, as requested in the refused instructions. Even if the propositions asserted therein were abstractly correct as applied to *265the first and third phases of proof of scienter, they did not embrace the second phase as to which there was some evidence, and they were therefore properly refused. McBeth v. Craddock, 28 Mo. App. 380; Caldwell v. Henry, 76 Mo. 254.
VII. The eleventh assignment of error is not argued, and we treat it as abandoned.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed, and a new trial granted.