The judge of the Superior Court, sitting in equity, saw and heard the witnesses, and under the familiar rule his findings of fact will not be reversed unless they are plainly wrong. We are of opinion that he was warranted by the evidence in finding these material facts: The defendant held an overdue note and mortgage made by one Johnston, and in accordance with its business policy wanted to dispose of them without foreclosing. The plaintiff negotiated for their purchase, and in reply to his inquiry by telephone as to the number of feet of land covered by the mortgage, the defendant’s president stated: “Dorchester Avenue, 103.15 feet, Greenmount Street, 108.75 feet, rear, 107.50 feet, side, 125 feet: —12,232 square feet.” The plaintiff then visited and examined the premises. On Dorchester Avenue was a one story building of cement construction, containing six narrow stores. A passageway from Greenmount Street on the north afforded access to the rear of these stores, and apparently to the land behind *501them, on which was a large dwelling house. On Greenmount Street a granolithic walk extended 108.75 feet, from Dorchester Avenue on the east to the line of fence on the westerly side of the entire lot; and there was no mark upon the face of the earth to indicate any actual or contemplated division. The plaintiff paced the sides of the lot and ascertained that they measured approximately the distances given to him over the telephone by the defendant’s president. A conference at the bank followed, the same measurements of the lot were stated by the president, and the plaintiff bought and took an assignment of the mortgage.
Later, after a foreclosure sale of the property, the plaintiff learned that the assignment did not transfer to him as security the whole lot described therein, which was the same as above stated, but only a portion that was less than one half in area and in value. The mortgage when written embraced the entire lot owned by the mortgagor. But in making his application for the loan the mortgagor had made an arbitrary division that separated the front portion including the stores from the rear part on which the dwelling house stood; consequently the bank within a month gave to the mortgagor a release of so much of the lot as was not included in the application for the loan. The president, when he made to the plaintiff the statements herein mentioned, and the bank’s attorney, when he made the assignment, “although well knowing, forgot and overlooked the fact of the release;” and the plaintiff was in absolute ignorance of its existence and relied upon the statements of the bank representative. There was a mutual mistake as to the property embraced by the mortgage, and a substantial failure of consideration, because unless the mistake be corrected, it will subject the plaintiff to a loss of more than $5,000 in an $11,000 transaction.
Upon these findings the plaintiff is entitled to the relief prayed for unless he was so negligent in relying upon the representations of the bank’s president as to deprive him of the right, or the parties cannot, be put in statu quo. Spurr v. Benedict, 99 Mass. 463. Keene v. Demelman, 172 Mass. 17. Livingstone v. Murphy, 187 Mass. 315. Long v. Athol, 196 Mass. 497.
The trial judge found that although an examination of the records at the time of the passing of the mortgage assignment would have disclosed the partial release, yet in view of all the circum*502stances a reasonably prudent man would not have acted otherwise than did this plaintiff. We cannot say as matter of law that the evidence does not justify this finding. Arnold v. Teel, 182 Mass. 1. Long v. Athol, 196 Mass. 497. The plaintiff was dealing with a savings bank, whose officers had no inclination or financial interest to deal with him unfairly, as he knew from experience. He had confidence in the ability of the attorney who had examined the title for the bank and who had written the mortgage; and he reasonably might assume that he was succeeding to the rights given to the bank by that mortgage. It is true that an examination of the records subsequent to the date of the mortgage which he bought would have disclosed the fact that the bank had released a portion of the land; but that fact was peculiarly within the knowledge of the defendant, and we cannot say that he was culpably negligent in relying upon the statements of its president in effect that the mortgage was the same as when it was executed.
It also seems apparent that the defendant can be put in a legal sense in statu quo as to all essential matters by the carrying out of the decree appealed from. Long v. Athol, 196 Mass. 497.
Decree affirmed with costs.