delivered the opinion of the court.
A hill was filed in the Circuit Court of Wythe county by John C. Brady, asking the rescission of a deed dated the 25th day of October, 1890, executed by the Max Meadows Land and Improvement Company for a lot of ground set out and described in said deed.
Prom an inspection of the record the following facts appear :
The Max Meadows Land and Improvement Company, having purchased land from Bandall McGavock and others, divided it into lots, which it advertised for sale, representing through its advertisements and by a prospectus extensively distributed, that a 150-ton blast furnace was under construction ; that iron mines were being opened and connected with the furnace by a railroad ; that a brick-yard was in active operation and that certain industries had agreed to locate at its placo, to-wit, a rolling-mill and horseshoe works, a planing-mill, and sash, door and blind factory, and that negotiations were in progress and would probably be concluded within the next few weeks for a machine shop, foundry, boiler and engine works, and that these industries would employ from seven hundred to one thousand men and *73would insure a population of three thousand to four thousand. It, in like manner, represented that it had secured the services of a competent manager, having a large acquaintance among the manufacturers of the North, who would make it his especial business to attract other industries ; that negotiations were in progress with quite a number, and that there was every reason to believe that within the next six months or a year many additional manufactories would be secured and the population would be largely increased.
The plaintiff represents that the statements thus set forth in the prospectus were falsely and fraudulently made to induce him to purchase, and that, relying upon these representations, he, on the 25th day of October, 1890, did purchase a lot of ground, and agreed to pay $1,730 for it, of which sum he paid one-third cash and subsequently paid one-half of the balance, leaving the third and last instalment of $576.66, with interest thereon, still due and unpaid.
It appears that to secure the deferred payment the plaintiff, Brady, executed a deed of trust, of even date with the deed from the Max^Meadows Land and Improvement Company to him, by which he conveyed the lot so purchased to Joseph S. Clark, trustee, upon trust that if the deferred instalment should not be paid at maturity the property conveyed was to be sold to satisfy it.
He charges that the Max Meadows Land and Improvement Company, by its officers and agents, and by its handbills and advertisements, made certain other false and fraudulent representations with reference to the growth of Max Meadows; among them, that a large hotel would be built, and that the Norfolk and Western Bailroad Company proposed to erect a handsome stone passenger station, on ground reserved for that purpose, and that its construction would be commenced within the coming year.' He alleges that the Max Meadows Land and Improvement Com*74pany, by its deed aforesaid, conveyed the lots so purchased^ with covenants of general warranty, and that when he-made the purchase he supposed that he had purchased an unencumbered property ; that Randall McGavoek and others,, from whom the Max Meadows Land and Improvement Company purchased the tract of land, in which is embraced the lot which is the subject of this controversy, prior to their sale to the Max Meadows Land and Improvement Company, executed to S. W. Jamison, as trustee for A. M. and W. M. Fuller, a deed of trust to secure to the Fullers the sum of $20,000, and that said lien or encumbrance still remains unpaid and unsatisfied ; that the tract so conveyed to Jamison, for the benefit of the Fullers, is the same land afterwards conveyed by Randall McGavoek and others to the Max Meadows Land and Improvement Company, and the deed of trust to Jamison for the benefit of the Fullers is referred to and made part of the deed from McGavoek to the Max Meadows Land and Improvement Company. The deed from McGavoek and others to the Max Meadows Land and Improvement Company is filed as an exhibit in the cause.
The plaintiff avers that he would never have entered into the contract, and made the purchase of the lot named, had it not been for the false and fraudulent representations of the company, or if the company had disclosed to him the encumbrance on the lot and the defect of the.title thereto.
He makes the Max Meadows Land and Improvement Company, Joseph S. Clark, trustee, A. M. and W. M. Fuller and S. ~W. Jamison, parties defendant to the bill, and prays for a. .rescission of the contract; that he may have a decree for the-recovery of the money already paid by him; and that the-defendants may be enjoined and restrained from collecting the bond for the last instalment of purchase money, amounting to $576.66.
The Max Meadows Land and Improvement Company *75answered the bill. It denies all the allegations of fraud. It admits the purchase by the company of the Max Meadows land from McGavock, and the sale of the lot to the plaintiff upon the terms stated in the bill. It admits the deed of trust in favor of the Fullers. It denies that the defendant ever represented that it would cause a large city to be built at Max Meadows, or that the defendant made any other representations through its officers and agents except such as were made in the advertisements and prospectus, which were in the hands of the public for weeks before the sale took place, and by which the public and the plaintiff were fully informed of all that the defendant company had done and contemplated doing in its effort to build a town at Max Meadows, and avers that the public and the plaintiff were honestly put in possession of all facts known to the defendant. It avers that all of the industries and improvements that were promised have been built, and that those which the defendants stated were being negotiated for were, as the defendants fully believed, secured, as stated in the advertisement. The defendant denies that any representations or false statements were made to induce the'plaintiff to make the purchase; it points out the fact that the sale was made at public auction, in perfect fairness to all, and that the plaintiff exercised his own judgment and discretion in continuing to bid for the lot until he drove off other competitors, and it was knocked down to him as the highest and best bidder.
Without going further into details of the facts, it may be stated that the defendant denies specifically every allegation and charge of fraud and misrepresentation, and especially it denies that the defendant concealed from the plaintiff the fact of the existence of the lien by deed of trust given by McGavock to S. W. Jamison, trustee, for the benefit of the Fullers.
The answer avers that the plaintiff and public were invited *76to examine for themselves the defendant’s title ; that the deed of trust, and also the deed from McGavock to the defendant, were of record in the clerk’s office of Wythe county, where they were open to the inspection of the plaintiff, and no representation whatever was made by the defendant with respect to the title.
Upon the issues thus made in the pleadings, evidence was taken, and the case coming on to he heard before the judge of the Circuit Court of Wythe county, he rendered a decree against the Max Meadows Land and Improvement Company for the. full amount of the cash payment and of the first deferred payment, aggregating the sum of $1,153.34, with interest from the 25th day of October, 1890, until paid, and perpetuated the injunction as to the deferred payment of $576.66 ; and the case is now before ns upon an appeal from that decree.
There is little room for controversy as to the facts. The representations relied upon to sustain the bill and to justify the rescission of the contract are all set out in the prospectus and advertisements filed with the bill. The representations relied upon may be divided into two classes—representations of matters of fact, and representations of matters of opinion.
In so far as the defendant company made statements of facts, it appears by the evidence'that those statements were true; and so far as the statements were matters of opinion, it appears that those opinions were honestly entertained, and would in no event constitute sufficient ground for a rescission of the contract. The 150-ton blast furnace, represented to he under construction, was actually built; the representations as to the iron mines, which were to be connected with the furnace by a railroad, are shown to have been true; and it is in proof that a brick-yard was in active operation. The statement that a rolling-mill and horse-shoe works, and a planing-mill, and sash, dóor and blind factory *77had agreed to locate at Max Meadows, is borne out by the proof, which contains also evidence that at the time of the sale negotiations were in progress with respect to the machine shops, foundry, boiler, and engine works'. That those industries, if secured, would have employed from seven hundred to one thousand men, and that that number of employees would insure a population of from three thousand to four thousand, were obviously but estimates predicated upon the success of the efforts to secure the industries enumerated, and cannot properly be considered as an unconditional assurance upon the part of the company of the existence of those industries as a matter of fact, and still less as a guarantee of the number of men to be employed, or the population to be expected as a result of their establishment.
The distinction between representations of fact and of opinion has been so clearly set out in the recent opinions of this court that we feel it unnecessary to do more than to refer to them. They show7 that the misrepresentations which will sustain an action of deceit, or a plea at law, or a bill for the rescission of a contract, must be positive statements of fact, made for the purpose of procuring the contract; that they must be untrue; that they are material; and that the party to whom they were made relied upon them, and was induced by them to enter into the contract. Grim v. Byrd, 32 Gratt. 293; Wilson v. Carpenter, 91 Va. 183, and Watkins v. West Wytheville Land and Improvement Co., (decided at the present term,) ante p. 1. In Crump v. United States Mining Co., 7 Gratt. 352, it was decided that if, in the written proposals for a sale of stock in a mining company, the representations contained therein are false as to any material fact, by wdiich the purchasers have been misled to their injury, and in which they are presumed to have trusted to the vendors, then the contract, founded upon such representations, is void, whether the vendor knew the representations to be false at *78the time they were- made or not, and whether made with fraudulent intent or not.
In Grim v. Byrd, 32 Gratt., which was a bill in equity for the rescission of a contract, Judge Staples, speaking for the court, at p. 300, declares that “ the doctrine is well settled in the United States that a false representation of a material fact, constituting an inducement to the ooutract, on which the purchaser had the right to rely, is ground for a rescission by a court of equity, although the party making the representation was ignorant as to whether it was true or false; and the real enquiry is not whether the vendor knew the representation to be false, but whether the purchaser believed it to he true, and was misled by it in entering into the contract.” And, at p. 301, he says: “The representations must, as a general rule, be of a fact as distinguished from a mere matter of opinion, unless the parties are dealing upon unequal terms, and one has means of information not equally open to the other.”
It is needless, however, to multiply citation of authorities to show that the law is as stated- in Grim v. Byrd and Wilson v. Carpenter, above referred to. Both the appellant and the appellee rest their several contentions upon it. The effect of the fraud upon the contract is to render it voidable only, and it is the duty of the deceived party to elect, on the discovery of the fraud, to rescind it, or else he will be bound by it. In Fry on Spec. Per., sec. 703, it is stated that “ in the case of a transaction grounded on fraud, the party deceived must, on the discovery of the fraud, elect to rescind or to treat the transaction as a contract.”
In 2 Add. on Con., p. 772 et seq., it is said : “ A party who intends to repudiate a contract'on the ground of fraud, should do so as soon as he discovers the fraud; for if, after the discovery of the fraud, he treats the contract as a subsisting contract, or if, in the interval whilst he is deliberating, an innocent third *79party has acquired an interest in the property, or if, in consequence of his delay, the position even of the wrong-doer is affected, he will be deemed to have waived his right of repudiation, and must then bring an action for damages for the deceit. And whenever a party to a contract has a right to elect whether he will avoid it or treat it as a subsisting contract, his election may be manifested by acts as well as by words, and, when once made, is final, and cannot be retracted.” And, further on, the same author says: “The discovery of the new incident in the fraud, which only strengthens the evidence of the original fraud,' cannot revive a right of repudiation which has once been waived.” These propositions of law are, indeed, elementary, and it is hardly necessary to fortify them by the citation’of authority.
The Max Meadows Company, having purchased land in order to make a profit by selling it in town lots, proceeded in the usual way to lay off streets, to build hotels and waterworks, and to induce manufacturing enterprises employing large numbers of operatives to construct their plants upon its property. To this end it advertised extensively. Every circumstance of climate and of situation was set forth in the most attractive manner, and all this it had a perfect right to do without incurring the imputation of the slightest impropriety. As an evidence of the good faith and of the confidence its managers felt in the value of its properties, and the ultimate success of its efforts to develop it, the record establishes that, before a lot was offered for sale, a very large sum of money was expended; and, finally, it pledged itself in its prospectus that “if for any reason which cannot now' be conceived, the above industries, or other industries to employ an equal number of men, should not be absolutely secured within six months from date of sale, October 25, 1890, the purchasers of lots will be given the option of having the sale cancelled, the cash payments refunded and being released *80from making deferred payments. This option must be exercised within fifteen days from the expiration of said six months.” This should have had the effect of drawing the attention of the bidders sharply to the line of demarcation between those representations which the company intended should be relied upon as matters of fact, and those which were intended as mere expressions of opinion, and is strongly persuasive, if not conclusive, of its good faith.
The appellee had the most abundant opportunity to inform himself of the truth of every representation made, and of every step taken, by the appellant, from the inception to the termination of the enterprise. Everything was done in the light of day ; there was nothing covert or concealed; and, if he made a bad bargain, the explanation is not to be found in the suggestion that his innocence and simplicity have been ensnared by the wiles of an unscrupulous vendor. The Max Meadows Company had made its purchase at a price far in excess of normal values. It sold to the appellee at an advanced price, after expending large sums of money in its improvement, and he in turn purchased, it may be supposed, in the expectation that fortune would so far favor his venture as to enable him to reap a reward for the risk he assumed. The minds of all men were, at that time, inflamed with the mania for speculation, and no doubt the parties to this transaction were not free from the delusions it produced. While it lasted, hopes were cherished and expectations indulged and expressed which, considered in the light of sober reality, seem wild and extravagant in the extreme, but which should not be branded as frauds. Upon this branch of the case we are of opinion that there was no such misrepresentation of fact as, under the influence of the principles of law above adverted to, would entitle the appellee to a rescission of his contract.
It appears, moreover, that after the lapse of a year, with *81full knowledge of all that his vendor had promised, of all that it had performed, of all that it had done, and of all that it had failed to do, the vendee, so far from disaffirming the contract into which he was induced to enter, as he now says, by fraudulent misrepresentation of the appellant, distinctly ratified and confirmed it by voluntarily discharging the first deferred instalment of the purchase money. If, therefore, the contract had in its inception been voidable, this act of ratification would be construed as a waiver of the right to repudiate it.
The other ground relied upon by the appellee is, that he purchased with the expectation that he would get an unencumbered title-, and that, as we have seen in the statement of facts, there rests upon the land purchased by the Max Meadows Land and Improvement Company of Bandall McGavock a deed of trust to S. W. Jamison for the benefit of the Fullers, which constitutes an encumbrance upon this and all other lots embraced in the tract covered by that deed.
If the Max Meadows Land and Improvement Company were here asking the specific performance of the contract of sale upon the part of John C. Brady, the outstanding title in Jamison, trustee, and the encumbrance thereby created, could be relied upon to defeat the recovery; but in the case before us the contract has been executed, and the appellee has received what he contracted for, a deed with a covenant of general warranty of the land purchased by him. He is in possession, and his possession has been undisturbed by any suit begun or threatened. It is not alleged that the Max Meadows Land and Improvement Company, the grantor of the appellee, is insolvent, or that it was making any effort to collect the unpaid instalment of the purchase money by an enforcement of the deed of trust given to secure it, or by suit, or otherwise.
•In the case of Beale v. Seiveley and others, 8 Leigh 658, *82Judge Tucker, in deciding a somewhat similar case, says that the “ vendee has in possession the identical land that' he purchased. He has a deed for it, with general warranty, from a vendor whose solvency he does not venture to question. * * * He has never been evicted, or sued, or threatened with a suit, by any other claimant.” Further on, in the same case, after discussing the effect of taking a deed with special warranty, and showing that in that case the rule of caveat emptor strictly applies, and that the vendee takes the hazard of the title, he points out the distinction where a general warranty is required and given, and continues: “ As in the case of special warranty, he discharges himself of all responsibility, and only sells the chance of a good title, so, where- he enters into a general warranty without other covenants, he makes himself only responsible for eviction. * * * In these cases, therefore, the vendee is confined to the covenant of general warranty. He has chosen, or at least agreed upon, his remedy, and to that remedy he must be tied down. However bad his title, he cannot sue upon his warranty unless he be evicted; and, if he cannot do so at law, upon what principle can equity make the vendor liable beyond the terms of his contract? A contract without other covenants than a warranty is, in effect, an agreement between the vendor and vendee that the vendor is never to be responsible until the vendee is turned out by superior title.” If, however, a defect of title exists, which is known by the vendor and by him concealed from the vendee, or if the vendee had no means of knowing it, “then the purchaser may either maintain an action at law for the deceit or have a rescission of the contract itself by an appeal to a court of equity.” Judge Tucker concedes that in Yirginia there has been upon this ■subject more laxity in practice, but, notwithstanding this relaxation, he declares : “ I am aware of no case in which the rights of the party have been extended in equity beyond his *83covenants. Until the contract is complete indeed by the execution of deeds, it is fully within the power of the court, which will not decree execution where it will be unreasonable, or where the title is essentially defective. But after a deed has been made and accepted, though our courts have given relief in anticipation of an eviction which is pending, accompanied by the danger of insolvency, they have never gone one jot beyond the covenants, except where the fraud of the vendor gives rise to a distinct cause of action independent of the covenants. Although, therefore, we may enjoin a judgment or sale on the ground that the creditor is proceeding under his deed of trust, or that a suit is threatened and the vendor is in declining circumstances, yet we can never interfere unless the seller has made himself, by some covenant, responsible for the defect complained of, or by fraudulent concealment has subjected himself to an action at law for damages, or to relief in equity to rescind the contract for the fraud.”
It would appear, then, that the fraud, which will entitle the purchaser to ask for the rescission of his contract in equity, is that which consists in misrepresentation of facts or in the concealment of facts - from which the defect of title arises, which facts the vendee had no other means of knowing. 2 Swanst. 287. “ If then,” Judge Tucker says, “ the vendor does not know of the defect, or, knowing it, does not conceal it, or if the vendee does know of it, there is no ground of relief. The vendee must prove three things: first, the defect ; second, knowledge and suppression by the vendor; third, ignorance on the part of the vendee. And as to the second matter, the scienter is essential.”
We have quoted thus fully from the case of Beale v. Seiveley, because the principles of law are there laid down with clearness and precision, and the authority of that ease has, so far as wre are informed, never been called in question.
*84In Peers v. Barnett, 12 Gratt., at page 416, Judge Allen, referring to and, as it were, interpreting the case of Beale v. Seiveley, uses the following language: “It was there decided that where a vendee is in possession of land under a conveyance with general warranty, and the title has not been questioned by any suit prosecuted or threatened, such vendee has no claim to relief in equity against the payment of the purchase money, unless he can show a defect of title respecting which the vendor was guilty of fraudulent concealment or misrepresentation, and which the vendee had at the time no means of discovering.”
A distinction is to be observed between the relief which goes to the extent of the rescission of the contract complained of, and that which merely restrains the sale of the encumbered lands until the title is made clear.
The principle that a court of equity will not sell, or permit a sale of land with a cloud hanging over the title, is affirmed in a great number of cases. We think we may say, after a careful examination, that nearly, if not quite all the cases relied upon by counsel for appellee are cases which either illustrate this principle, or were suits brought for the specific performance of contracts, or were cases in which the insolvency of the[vendor appeared, or in which there had been' a fraudulent concealment of the-defect in title, or, .at the least, an ignorance of the defect upon the part of the vendee, or the vendor was taking active steps, either by suit or under a deed of trust, to collect the unpaid purchase money. We have examined the following cases and authorities cited in the appellee’s brief, and feel warranted in making this statement. Griffin v. Cunningham, 19 Gratt. 571; Pom. on Contracts, 193 and 203 ; Jackson v. Liggon, 3 Leigh 161, 189; Hoover v. Calhoun, 16 Gratt. 109 ; Goddin v. Vaughan, 14 Gratt. 102, 117; Christian v. Cabell, 22 Gratt. 82; Hendricks v. Gillespie, 25 Gratt. 181; Bryan v. Loftus, 1 Rob. 12; and Garnett v. Macon, 6 Call. 308.
*85It appears, then, that the appellee purchased a tract of land, of which he has been put in possession ; that he has received a deed for it, with covenants of general warranty; that his possession has been neither disturbed nor threatened ; that his grantor is not insolvent, and has taken no steps by enforcement of the deed of' trust or otherwise to collect the unpaid purchase money ; that there was no concealment of the encumbrance which rests upon the land, the existence of which was plainly set forth upon the face of the deed under which the appellee derives title to the land purchased, and of which5 therefore, he must be presumed to have liad notice. Upon the case stated the law is with the appellant.
If the objection shall be urged to this conclusion that it leaves the appellee with a cloud resting upon his title, the answer is, that he is in the precise position which he contracted to occupy, and, as long as he is undisturbed, he has no ground of complaint which entitles him to invoke the aid of a court of equity, which, as it has been said, may “ mend the consciences of men, but not their assurances.” "Whenever the appellant seeks to enforce his deed of trust, without having first lifted the paramount lien, a court of chancery will, at the instance of the appellee, be ready to interpose and grant such relief as the nature of his case may then require.
"We are of opinion that the appellee has failed to;make out a case for the rescission of his contract; and is therefore not entitled to the relief given him in the decree complained of, which must be reversed.
Reversed.