delivered the following opinion:
1. It is urged on behalf of the defendant that, it is necessary for the plaintiff, in order to come into equity, to offer .to do equity by tendering the amount of purchase money paid by defendants. This, however, does not seem to be necessary in the case at bar. The sale in question wás not for $5,500 cash, but for $1,500 in addition to cancelation of an existing mortgage of $4,000 to the same parties. It might very well be *236that tbe most wbicb could be asked would be proper allegations as to tbe $1,500 as in that event tbe deed could be set aside and tbe parties reinstated in tbeir position before tbe sale. Tbe bill does not seek any relief against tbe mortgage. It is not claimed to be fraudulent. Only tbe sale of tbe equity of redemption for $1,500 is attacked, and tbe object of tbe bill, at least, tbe apparent object of tbe bill, is to restore tbe parties to tbe position that they beld as mortgagor and mortgagee. “Tender before suit is ... a necessary element in legal rescission, but is wholly superfluous as a prerequisite to the commencement of a suit in equity for rescission or cancelation; and insistence upon it as such prerequisite often works a complete denial of justice.” 6 Pom. Eq. Jur. § 688; Neblett v. Macfarland, 92 U. S. 101, 23 L. ed. 471.
2. Moreover, in tbe case at bar, if tbe deed is set aside tbe defendants will be liable for rents, and it seems to be tbe fact that tbe rents will at least substantially equal tbe interest on tbe $4,000 loan. In fact, if tbe plaintiff is right, the value of the use and occupation considerably exceeds tbe interest 'on tbe loan. In other words, on tbe allegations of tbe bill this is a case of accounting, and on tbe accounting there would seem to be no balance over for necessary tender.
3. This leaves out of account entirely tbe $1,500 paid by tbe defendants. If that has come to tbe bands of tbe plaintiff, she should tender it, or offer to repay it, before a court of equity would aid her. She could not keep tbe money and have tbe land both. But tbe facts show to tbe satisfaction of tbe court that she never received tbe $1,500. Conceding that it was paid to Gonzalez, it certainly never reached the plaintiff, and, so far as concerns tbe matter of tender, there *237would be no necessity and there would be no justice in requiring her to tender back what she never received.
4. Fraud is very seldom a self-evident fact, ‘and can generally only be established by a series of facts, which oftentimes by themselves would not mean anything. In the case at bar the plaintiff was partially blind, which was known to the defendants or their representatives. The tendency of the evidence is to show that the price of $5,500, even if paid, was inadequate. It is true that parties can contract for purchase at an inadequate price. The inadequacy must either be accompanied by other inequitable incident, or be so gross as to shock the conscience. 2 Pom. Eq. Jur. §§ 926 — 928. Inadequacy alone, therefore, is not a ground for interference of a court of equity, the more especially if the grantor is in needy circumstances and wishes to realize. On the other hand, a common occasion for fraud is that of taking advantage of another’s needs. The defendants were relying upon the plaintiff’s power of attorney, which was given years before and on account of the absence of her husband, who in the meantime returned. The husband’s signature does not appear upon the deed. The representative of Arzuaga, the defendants’ attorney in fact, must have had actual knowledge of the defect in the deed, because he seems to have been present when the notary required that the defect be removed.
These facts would seem to be insufficient to put the purchasers upon inquiry, which would have developed the lack of power of Gonzalez to bind the plaintiff under the circumstances. It would not be necessary to decide that the defendants themselves participated in the fraud, if they were aware of circumstances which would put them on notice, when followed up, *238of tibe existence of fraud. They could take nothing under this state of facts. Michoud v. Girod, 4 How. 503, 11 L. ed. 1076; Sonnentheil v. Christian Moerlein Brewing Co. 172 U. S. 401, 410, 43 L. ed. 492, 496, 19 Sup. Ct. Rep. 233; 2 Pom. Eq. Jur. §§ 874, 928. The law imputes notice when the parties are put upon inquiry.
5. There is another view of the case which would seem to be conclusive. The plaintiff gave a power of attorney to mortgage, but it was not a power of attorney to sell, unless the plaintiff gave an additional authorization in writing. The only authorization shown is one by letter, which plaintiff denies executing. She was partly blind, and the evidence does not satisfactorily show that she knew the contents of the paper. The law, moreover, is that a power of attorney to sell must be executed with the same solemnities as a deed of sale, and under the same principle the authorization for sale, specially required by a power of attorney for another purpose, must be of the same solemnity as the power of attorney. Sec. 1247 of P. It. Civ. Code —• (1) “Acts and contracts the object of which is the creation, modification or extinction of property rights on real property” must appear in a public instrument. What was signed by the plaintiff was not a power of attorney to sell, but at most a contract to execute such a deed or such a power. The purchaser bought under such a paper at his peril. It not only was insufficient in itself to pass title, but it was subject to repudiation under circumstances such as at bar.
P. R. Civil Code: Section 1226. “No one can contract in the name of another without being authorized by him or without having his legal representation according to law.”
*239“Section 1616. An agent cannot exceed tbe scope of bis authority.” 11 kfanresa, 468.
An obligation entered into by an attorney in fact in manifest excess of powers conferred upon him is void and of no value. Section 1228 of the Civil Code provides:
■ “There is no contract unless the following requisites exist:
“1. The consent of the contracting parties.
“2. A definite object which may be the subject of the contract.
“3. The cause for the obligation which may be established.”
Section 1232 says that “consent given by error under violence, by intimidation or deceit shall be void.”
Section 1236 is as follows: “There is deceit when by words or insidious machinations on the part of qne of the contracting parties the other is induced to execute a contract which without them he would not have made.”
6. There is no doubt that an unauthorized act of an attorney in fact can be ratified, and it is urged that the plaintiff did this. She sued her attorney in fact for the money, brought criminal proceeding's against him for embezzlement, and, when he went into voluntary bankruptcy, filed a claim. The fact that these steps were taken by an attorney and not by herself is not material. The only way she could act in such proceedings would be by an attorney, and the fact that she did not tell the attorney to take particular steps would not be material if she gave him authority to take whatever steps appeared necessary.
The question, however, goes deeper than this. The acts set up of ratification were acts between a principal and agent,— in this case between a poor blind woman and an unscrupulous representative, who had obtained money in her name, and did not account for it. Whatever happened between these two could *240not affect a third party. Ratification of sale bas to be some act between tbe plaintiff and the purchaser of the property, whereby she recognizes him as owner. Nothing of the sort is set up, and nothing of the sort is shown in the evidence. Non constat that she was trying to get the money back in order to return it to the alleged purchaser and set aside what she considered a void sale. Ratification consists of a dealing between the parties inconsistent with the intention to rescind, such as receipt of purchase price, or otherwise taking the benefit of the contract. This does not appear in the case at bar. 6 Pom. Eq. Jur. § 687; Shappirio v. Goldberg, 192 U. S. 232, 48 L. ed. 419, 24 Sup. Ct. Rep. 259.
It cannot be said, therefore, that there is any ratification in the case. A person who has been misled must use reasonable diligence to disaffirm the contract, but what might be diligence as between two business men is not necessarily the standard when an ignorant blind woman is concerned. It cannot be said that there is a lack of diligence on the part of the plaintiff, under all the circumstances of the case. 2 Pom. Eq. Jur. § 897.
It follows, therefore, that the plaintiff is entitled to relief, and a decree will be entered setting aside the deed of sale and restoring the parties to their position before that date, and a reference will be ordered to the standing master to detérmine the state of the account between them.
' It is so ordered.