'Plaintiffs seek to rescind an executed contract under which they conveyed a stock of hardware to the defendant Harris in exchange for 280 acres of land situate in Deuel county, S. D. For the purposes of this appeal Harris will be treated as the sole defendant and appellant. The action was tried before the court and a jury. The jury answered certain special findings submitted to it. These finding's were all, with the exception of one, incorporated into the court’s findings. Its findings and conclusions were in favor of the plaintiffs, and judgment was entered thereon. From such judgment and an order denying a new trial, this appeal was taken.
[1] Appellant assigns as error the talcing of the final determination of this cause from the jury. As grounds for such assignment he states that the cause was noticed as a jury trial by both parties, and that up -to the time of the submission of the special findings it had been tried out as though it were a jury *11case. This assignment has no support in the record, as appellant interposed no objection to the submission of the special findings or to the court’s action in making and entering findings.
[2] Appellant assigns as error the overruling of his objection to the introduction of any evidence — such objection being based upon the ground that the complaint did not state facts sufficient ■to constitute a cause of action. This assignment also has no' support in the record, as no exception was saved to the ruling of the court thereon.
[3] The only matters left for our consideration, save and except those pertaining to certain things occurring after the entry of judgment herein, are the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the court’s finding’s and the sufficiency of such findings to support its conclusions and judgment. The respondents- alleged, and the court found, that the contract was procured by means of fraud and deceit practiced by appellant and his agents, which fraud and deceit pertained .to four matters. We shall determine this appeal upon ■the sufficiency of the evidence to support the court’s findings as to the alleged fraud and deceit pertaining to but one of these matters, and upon the sufficiency of these particular findings to support the judgment, as it is clear to us that, if the evidence supported these particular findings and such findings cover all the elements of fraud and deceit necessary to a right of rescission, the judgment finally entered should be sustained. The respondents charged: (1) That the land contracted for was represented to' be good tillable land nearly all of which could be broken up- by means of a traction plowing outfit; but that, as- a matter of fact, the land was so rough and hilly and so covered with stone that but very small patches thereof could be broken at all, and these not with traction ■power, and that in all but a small proportion of said land could be tilled. (2) That appellant undertook to show the land to the respondents, whom appellant knew to be entirely unfamiliar therewith, and to that end employed agents who purported -to> show said land to respondents, but who, in fact and in truth, showed' other and different land, knowing that they were showing such other and different land, and knowing that respondents supposed they were examining the land contracted for; and that the surface conditions of the land so> examined answered the representations that had been made, and was land of much greater value than the *12land covered1- by -the contract and which was conveyed to respondents. The court found these charges to be true.
[4, 5] It must be conceded that, no matter what representations were made as to the 'surface conditions of the land offered in trade, if respondents did not make their trade relying on such representations, but went upon the land and had a full and fair opportunity to examine the same, they could not demand rescission on account of any misrepresentations as to such surface conditions. We are thus brought -to’ the -consideration of whether the court rightly found that the second of the above charges was sustained by the evidence. Appellant contends that the equitable relief of rescission, being extraordinary, should never be granted, except where the evidence is clear and convincing. For the .purposes of this appeal we will concede such to be the proper. rule. Was the evidence received so clear and convincing? A complete review thereof could serve no useful purpose. If the court and the jury believed the testimony of the respondents and their witnesses— and from the findings of the court and the jury we must presume they did1 — -they had ample warrant for such findings. If it were the mere weighing of the testimony of the witnesses upon the one side as against that of those upon the -other without any undisputed facts to aid in determining the truth or falsity of such contradictory testimony, there would be some grounds for appellant’s contention that the -evidence was not clear and convincing; but there ar-e many facts revealed by the -evidence herein and which stand undisputed by 'appellant, some of them- established by his own testimony and that of his witnesses, that tend to show a fraudulent purpose on the part of appellant and his agents throughout this whole transaction, and that otherwise tend to corroborate respondents and their witnesses. Appellant sent an agent, one Corkin, to examine the stock -of hardware and to show the land to respondents. There was a loan of $2,450 secured on the land, and respondents advised -Corkin that, if they made the trade, they would hav-e to- borrow some $2,000 more on said land in order to pay their creditors. Corkin took from them an application for a loan, and, if he did not agree that appellant should procure the loan, he at least encouraged them to believe that appellant, through his bank, would procure this additional loan. Appellant knew of this before the deal closed, and yet did not advise *13respondents that such a loan could not be procured, but, in fact, on the very eve of the consummation of the exchange, by letter written to respondents’ agent, encouraged them to believe the loan would be procured. The evidence conclusively shows that the land offered in trade was of such little value that appellant, a banker, must 'have known he could not procure a loan of $4,500 thereon. The court found the land to be worth but $5,600. Appellant was advised that respondents would not make the trade unless the “land is good,” and that respondents “have been prejudiced against some of the land in that part of the state on account of the rough and stony land, but perhaps your 280-acre farm is not of that kind.” He instructed a second agent, whom he employed to take Gorkin and respondents to- examine this land, as fallows:
“Take them out to see the land and show it up the best you can. Keep away from the stone as much as possible and do the best you can.”
The evidence on the part of respondents tended to show that appellant’s agent willfully directed one of the respondents and one Carlson, who 'accompanied him on the trip to see the land, to the wrong land', representing that a certain line that was, in fact, the east line of a part of the land offered in trade was the west line thereof, thus causing respondent and Carlson to examine land one-half mile east of the land traded for. The undisputed evidence shows this other land to be fairly level, fairly- free from rock, with from 200 to 230 acres thereof subject to breaking by traction power, and further shows that this land was worth about 50 per cent, more than the land actually covered by the contract and actually conveyed. Appellant’§ agents denied that the wrong land was pointed out, but their testimony shows that the respondent and Carlson spent a great, if not the greater, portion of the time given to examination of land on the land which respondents claim was pointed out -to them as the land of appellant. Respondent and Carlson testified that they examined no- part of the land afterwards conveyed to respondents. The party whom appellant employed to show the land, when testifying as a witness for appellant, testified that, when he noticed respondent and Carlson going over onto land other than that belonging to- appellant, he said' to Corkin, “They are getting off the land now,” and that Cork-in answered, “To hell with them; let them go; I am pretty nearly *14frozen.” Common honest)- required these agents to advise respondent of his 'mistake, when such mistake was evident, even if it were true that they had not brought about such mistake through misrepresentation. Deceit can consist in silence when honesty requires speech, as modi as in speech itself. Section 1201, C. C. After Corkin had reported his trip to. appellant, appellant wrote respondents that Corkin’s report ajs to the hardware stock and location were favorable, that “it is just what we want.” Appellant was familiar with the land, and yet, in this letter, he wrote the following, which he must have known was false, and which the court and jury might naturally conclude was written because he knew that respondent had examined land better than his:
“It is rolling just enough, and the few rocks that are on it can be removed at a very small cost. When that farm is fenced and broke up, with some buildings upon it, it will be equal to any in the country.”
The evidence clearly shows that appellant’s land was too stony to make removing stone practicable; that, owing to stone and roughness, not over 40 to 50 acres of the 280 could be broken, and this in very small pieces. It is hard to believe that appellant would have written the above if he knew the right land had been examined by respondents. When respondents discovered that they had been- shown the wrong land, they immediately notified appellant. He admitted upon the witness stand that Carlson advised him that respondents claimed to have been shown the wrong -land, and that he promised to investigate the matter. Without reporting to respondents the result of his investigation, we find the next .move of appellant to. have been the- giving of a bill of sale of the hardware stock to a third party — his coappellant herein. Respondents claimed their stock of goods to have been worth $12,000. The court found it worth $8,ooo. Appellant does not question but that it would invoice, at wholesale prices, $12,-000, but claims, it was, in fact, worth to exceed $4,000. Yet we find appellant naming' $12,000 as- the consideration in a bill of sale which he gave to his coappellant. This is explained upon- the theory that the grantee desired the sum of $12,000 inserted instead of $4,250, the amount claimed to be the 'actual consideration, so that it would aid such grantee in trading the stock. We apprehend the court and jury were inclined to treat with grave sus*15picion the testimony of parties who were confessedly guilty of the above practices. -The evidence, when viewed as a whole, was, to our minds, most clear and convincing in favor of respondents.
[6, 7] Appellant urges that the court failed to' find all the elements of deceit, and that for that reason the findings do not support the conclusions and judgment. Appellant contends the court failed to find: That the representations were known by appellant to be false; that respondents were ignorant of the truth; that the representations were made with intent that they should be acted upon and with a view of deceiving respondents; and that the plaintiffs were injured or damaged. Tire court found: That respondents had no previous knowledge of the land; that they relied upon appellant to show them the land; that appellant did assume to show them the land; that “for the express purpose of' deceiving and defrauding plaintiffs, and to cheat and defraud them out of their property, defendants wrongfully, unlawfully and knowingly took plaintiffs upon and did show them other and different land, and showed them a different tract of a better appearance and quality than the land thereafter conveyed to -them”; “that plaintiffs * * * were obliged' to and did rely upon the defendant Harris and his representatives and agents as to the * * * location and boundaries of said land, and so stated to said defendant Harris, and -said plaintiffs would not have entered into said exchange except for the statements and representations of said defendant Harris and his agents with, relation to said land.” It thus clearly appears that every element constituting such deceit as will warrant rescission of’ a contract was found by the trial court. This being an action seeking rescission and not damages, a finding that respondents were injured or damaged was not essential.
[8] Appellant' complains that it does not appear that respondents have ability to restore what they received. Before action brought, they tendered a deed to1 the land subject to the mortgage against it. They kept this tender good up tO' the trial, and then filed such deed in court. The court has decreed that such deed be delivered to appellant when he pays to respondents the adjudged value of the stock of goods. Appellant, however, contends that there is nothing to> show but what respondents may have incumbered the title they received from appellant. The law creates a presumption, within logical limits, that a fact of a con*16tinuous nature continues to exist at a subsequent time. Yankton Nat. Bk. v. Benson, 33 S. D. 399, 146 N. W. 583. This rule applies to the title to .property, and this presumption, though disputable, if not changed by evidence, becomes indisputable so far as the pending action is concerned, 'and should be so treated by the court. Kidder v. Stevens, 60 Cal. 414. We do not think that from the time respondents received title from appellant sufficient time elapsed to destroy the presumption that the title remained unchanged.
[9] As hereinbefore noted, this was an action seeking a rescission of an executed contract. It was not an action based upon á rescission. In framing its findings of fact and judgment, the trial court would seem to- have considered this action an action for damages based upon a rescission. The court found the tender of a deed of reconveyance, but omitted to find that such deed was deposited in court, though that fact stood uncontradicted. In its judgment the court apparently assumed that title to the land had again vested in appellant because, without decreeing a rescission and providing for the delivery of the deed upon payment of the amount adjudged in favor of respondents, it merely rendered a money judgment for the value of the stock of hardware. Upon the motion for new trial appellant urged the inequity of such judgment — a money judgment for the full value of the stock of goods, and with no. provision by which appellant would become reinvested with the title to the land. Their attention being thus called to this situation, respondents moved the court to* add to its findings a finding, that the deed had' been tendered and deposited in court, and to so change the- wording of the judgment that it would adjudge that, upon payment of the amount found due respondents, appellant should be entitled to a reconveyance of the land and to a delivery of the .deed deposited in court. Such motion was granted, -the findings and judgment were so changed nunc pro tunc, and a new trial denied.
Appellant now- complains of this action of the trial court in thus amending the findings and1 judgment. He concedes the power of a court to change the wording of a judgment to make it conform to the real intent of the court, so1 that it may speak the real judgment of such court; but he claims that this is the making of a new and different judgment from the one actually *17rendered, and- at a time when the .power of the court to amend the judgment had passed. We think the action of the trial court should be sustained upon the ground that the judgment as finally; rendered but speaks the real judgment of the court as evidenced by the whole record: The action was one seeking rescission; in its findings the court found that notice of rescission was given and tender of deed made, and that, to avoid the proposed rescission, appellant had conveyed the stock of hardware to -his co-defendant; in its conclusions of law the court found that “-plaintiffs are entitled to a rescission of said exchange as a matter of law.” If we were to concede appellant’s contention to- be sound, it would be our duty to- remand the cause to the trial court, with, directions to make a finding upon the -question of the deposit of the deed in court; with -the further direction, in case it found such ■d.eed was deposited (a fact absolutely undisputed), to enter the very judgment it has now entered.
There are no other assignments meriting discussion.
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.