By the Court,
Brown, J.In Tallman v. Franklin, (4 Kern. 584,) the question was whether the memorandum in writing produced upon the trial was sufficient to satisfy the requirements of the statute of frauds. And it was there held that when the auctioneer who sold the lands pinned a letter to him from the owner of the lots sold, which stated the terms of the sale, on a page of his sales’ book, and then made the residue of the entries requisite to constitute a memorandum of the contract of sale on the same page of the book and subscribed his name to it, that the letter must be taken as a part of the memorandum subscribed by the auctioneer, and rendered it sufficient within the statute. Judge Johnson, who delivered the leading opinion, says: “If the letter in question had been copied upon this page under the heading, terms of sale, there could have been no difficulty in collecting from its expressions the terms of sale, by legal construction. Nor could any difficulty have arisen if the letter had been made fast to the page by gum, or wax, or wafer, although in each case the papers could have been separated with more or less care. I do not see that the papers fastened together with a pin are in any different position, in legal effect. That sort of annexation is not so difficult to destroy as some others, but the greater or less difficulty of separation is not the question. The point is, whether the two papers were signed as one by the signature of the auctioneer. As they were pinned together, as together they contain the terms necessary to complete the contract, as they plainly relate to the same subject, they ought to be construed together, as forming one agreement, unless some rule of law forbids it. The cases of Hindee v. Whitehouse, (7 East, 558,) and The First Baptist Church v. Bigelow, (16 Wend. 28,) were cases in which the papers sought to be connected *396were not in any way physically joined, together, nor did the paper actually signed refer at all to the other which was sought to he connected with it hy paroi evidence.” -In the present case the sale was also at auction, and made by an auctioneer. Purchasers were invited and induced to attend the sale by an advertisement or notice published in two of the New York papers. The sale was had not upon the premises, where purchasers might have seen what they were buying, but at the Merchants’ Exchange in the city of New York, the premises being in Somerset county, New Jersey. The advertisement stated, amongst other things, the location of the premises, the quantity of land, its condition in respect to growing or standing wood, growing crops and cultivation, streams of water and vicinity to rail road station. These were facts furnished by the vendor as inducements to j>urchasers to bid at the sale. He undertook to sell, and the purchaser intended to acquire, a farm of land of 107 acres in Somerset county, with about thirty acres in heavy wood land, the remainder in rich soil under cultivation with growing crops, with several streams of water running through it, and about four miles from the Bound Brook station and the Delaware and Raritan canal, on the line of the central rail road, in New Jersey. This was an assertion of facts material to the contract, upon the existence of which the purchaser had a right to rely, and not the expression of an opinion upon a subject about which men might differ, and the vendor be mistaken. This advertisement or notice was attached to the terms of sale at the time they were signed by the defendant George Johnson, and in this condition they were produced by the plaintiff and proved at the trial before the referee. Upon the authority of the case from which I have quoted, this paper is to be regarded as a part of the terms of sale, and to have the same force and effect as if incorporated therein. The representations which it contains, and the facts the existence of which it asserts, are material to the -contract. They relate to qualities and conditions of the *397subject sold, which if they existed, as represented, materially > enhanced its value, and which we are bound to presume were some of the inducements which moved the defendant to make the purchase. And if the representations were untrue—if they were fraudulently made—if the vendor was unable to execute the contract and convey to the defendant the'property which by the terms of sale he had purchased, upon what rule of municipal law, or of morals, can the court be called upon to enforce the contract ? If the representations were falsely and fraudulently made, then the execution of the contract could not be enforced, for the presence of these vicious elements would release the defendant from all obligation under it. If they are to be regarded as material and essential parts of the contract, then, unless the plaintiff can convey in conformity with the description of the property therein and the representations made, he cannot recover from the defendant any damages he may have sustained because the latter refused to accept the deed and pay the' purchase money. • So if the description and the representations were material, although founded in a mistake, the law will not compel the execution of the contract. When estates are sold at auction, “the plans and descriptions should be such as will give true information to such persons as ordinarily attend such ■ sales, and if these descriptions are written or printed and circulated among the buyers, or conspicuously posted in their sight, they cannot be controlled by verbal declarations made by the auctioneer at the time of the sale. And even if it be provided in the terms of sale that any error or misstatement in the description shall not avoid the sale but be allowed for in the price, such provision will not cover' any misstatement of a substantial and important character, but the purchaser may on that ground rescind the sale.” (1 Parsons on Contracts, 416.) Dart, in his treatise on the law of Vendor and Purchaser, p. 43, says “that mere expressions of praise or affirmation of value will not, however objectionable they may be in point of morality, *398avoid the contract in equity. But that a false statement of a fact will, if relied on hy the purchaser, avoid the contract, at law and in equity.” In Gillespie v. Moon, (2 John. Ch. 596,) Chancellor Kent says: “It appears- to me to' he established, and on great and essential grounds of justice, that relief can be had against any deed or contract in writing founded in mistake or fraud. The mistake may be shown by paroi proof, and relief granted to the injured party, whether he sets up the mistake affirmatively by bill or as a defense.” In Rosevelt v. Fulton, (2 Cowen, 129,) Fulton was induced to enter into the contract to purchase the lands from Bosevelt, in the state of Indiana, and to" pay $4400 for the title and an annuity of $1000, for a coal mine which the latter represented to be upon the lands contracted to be sold. It turned out that there was no coal mine upon the premises, and that Rosevelt made the representation under a mistake. The contract had been partly executed, and the land described therein conveyed. The chancellor granted a perpetual injunction, restraining the vendor from prosecuting any suit at law for the recovery of the annuity, which was affirmed in the court of errors, on appeal.
The farm was said to contain 107 acres of land, and one of the representations was, that about thirty acres were in heavy wood land, and the remainder in rich soil, under cultivation, with growing crops. This was on the 22d of July, when the crops in that country are in full vigor, and growing rapidly to maturity. The representation was an assurance to the purchaser that the land was under the cultivation of that year with the usual summer crops, at least,'growing upon it.. These might consist of Indian corn, oats and the usual root and grass crops. These crops he was to acquire with the title to the land. And it was for the two combined that he was to pay his money. The proof showed that only five or six acres of the land was under cultivation, and this covered with a crop of oats. Ko Indian corn, no potatoes or other roots; no buckwheat, and neither clover, timothy *399or any other artificial grass. Beyond the wood land and the oat field all else was the stunted, miserable vegetation natural to the poor soils of the country. The representation as to the cultivation and the crops.was wholly untrue, and so the referee found by his report. Its effect at the sale could be no' less than to entrap unwary purchasers into bidding for that which they would otherwise have let alone. The counsel for the plaintiff, however, thinks the referee erred in his construction of the expression “under cultivation,” and insists that it is not fairly inferable from the advertisement that the plaintiff intended to represent that any acre of the farm except the wood land had been plowed during the spring before the sale. I do not think the referee has so construed the expression referred to. He does not intend so to be understood. Good husbandry determines how much, and what parts of a farm should be under cultivation at one time, and it also determines that all parts of it cannot be so used at the same time without injury. Had a reasonable part of the farm been under cultivation with growing crojDS, and the residue been in pasturage and artificial grass, it might have answered the representation given in the terms of sale. But the proof showed that except the field of oats and the wood land, the remaining 70 acres was little better than a desert.
Another representation was, that the premises were about four miles from the Bound Brook station. The proof showed that this also was untrue, and that the distance by actual measurement was over six miles. The case of Hawes v. Lawrence (4 Comst. 345,) is an authority which shows that the qualifying word “ about,” rendered this assertion a mere representation, and not a warranty. In the case referred to, the contract of sale was a certain quantity of lintseed oil to arrive per ship Mercia from London, sailed on or about the . 15th March, ultimo. The court of appeals held the representation did not amount to a warranty. I have already endeavored to show, that if the representation was material to the value of the farm, the defense in this action was made out, *400whether it should he regarded as a warranty founded in mistake, or found tp he false and fraudulent. In either case the law would not enforce the contract.
[Kings General Term, February 11, 1861.Emott, Brown and Scrugham, Justices.]
At folio 226 of the case, the plaintiff, who was being examined as a witness, was by his counsel asked the following question: “From what did you make up the description of the farm which appears in your advertisement?” The counsel for the defendant objected to the question, and the objection was sustained by the referee, and the counsel for the plaintiff excepted. I am not able to see the materiality of this question. The materials out of which the plaintiff framed the advertisement of sale'were certainly of no sort of consequence, in determining the issues before the referee. The counsel for the plaintiff claims that the question was relevant and material, because the answer “might have shown affirmatively, that the witness had just bought the farm and resold it under the same advertisement, and did not know either its distance from the station, or the extent of its cultivation.” I submit that such an answer would not have been responsive to the question. Heither the referee nor the counsel for the defendant could have known that it was designed to elicit such an answer. If such-was the purpose of the plaintiff’s counsel he should have interrogated the witness directly, as to his knowledge of the distance from the Bound Brook station, and the extent and nature of the cultivation upon the farm.
If the referee has committed any error it is in finding but two of the representations in the terms of sale substantially untrue; for after a careful examination of the evidence I am unable to persuade myself that the representations in regard to the heavy wood land and the streams of running water were any more the truth than those in regard to the distance from the rail road station and the cultivation with growing crops.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.