(after making the foregoing statement) delivered the opinion of the court.
[1] The evidence on the subject of fraud in the procurement of the contract being conflicting, the finding of the jury on that subject is final and conclusive, and even if the case had to be reversed on other grounds, this finding would not be disturbebd under the provisions of section 6365 of the new Code. But that finding is not assigned as error in. the petition for writ of error, and will be accepted as correct in the further consideration of the case. The only errors assigned are the giving to the jury, at the request of the defendant, of instructions 2, 3 and 6, and the refusal of the court to set aside the verdict on the ground of misdirection of the jury. As the same alleged error inheres in all three instructions and in both motions, the case will be fully disposed of by considering the objection to only one of the instructions.
[2-4] Instruction No. 2, given for the defendant, was as follows: “The court instructs the jury that if. they shall *663believe from the evidence that Holloway was led into making his contract with Upton & Walker on the 19th of November by reason of any representation by Walker to the effect that Walker & Upton had been the successful bidders at the bidding of November 15th, and had been awarded a contract to furnish the government with oats and bran, and that such representation was material, they must find for the defendant.” The objection urged against the instruction is that it takes only a partial view of the evidence and directs a verdict for the defendant, if the jury believe that the fraud in the procurement of the contract was proved, and wholly ignores the other contention of the plaintiffs that they were entitled to recover, notwithstanding the fraud, if, with knowledge of the fraud, the defendant ratified the contract. The plaintiffs further contended that if the omission of any reference to ratification produced a conflict between the instructions given for the plaintiffs and the defendant, respectively, they were entitled to a new trial on account of such conflict. A number of decisions of this court were cited for both propositions, but it will not be necessary to cite them. The jury was fully instructed on the subject of ratification in the instructions given at the instance of the plaintiffs.
The defendant, while not conceding the application of either of the above legal propositions to this case, insisted that there was no evidence in the cause upon which to base an instruction on the subject of ratification, and hence there was no error in failing to make any reference to it in the instructions given at the instance of the defendant. The plaintiffs insisted that there was, and to this question much of the argument of counsel, both oral and printed, was addressed.
Since the repudiation in this State of the scintilla doctrine, it is no longer necessary to give an instruction where the evidence to support it is such that a verdict founded *664upon it could not be maintained. Ches. & O. Ry. Co. v. Stock, 104 Va. 97, 51 S. E. 161. In other words, if an instruction is asked which correctly propounds the law, it should be given, if there is sufficient evidence-in the cause to support a verdict found in accordance therewith. If, however, the situation is such that a verdict in accordance with a proposed instruction would have to be set aside, either because without evidence to support it, or plainly contrary to the evidence, then the instruction should be refused. Trotter v. DuPont Co., 124 Va. 680, 98 S. E. 621.
If there was not sufficient evidence in this cause to sustain a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs on the question of ratification, then there was no error in the instruction, and the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed.' Ratification of a voidable contract involves a waiver of objection to that which rendered the contract voidable, but no man will be held bound by a waiver of his rights unless it plainly appears that he had full knowledge of his rights and a distinct intention to waive them. It is said that, “When the original transaction is infected with fraud, the confirmation of it is so inconsistent with justice and so likely to be accompanied with imposition, that the courts watch it with the utmost strictness and do not allow it to stand but on the clearest evidence.” Wilson v. Carpenter, 91 Va. 183, 21 S. E. 243, 50 Am. St. Rep. 824; Montague v. Massey, 76 Va. 307.
The plaintiffs claim that the contract was ratified by the defendant's letter to them of December 18, 1917. They had written to him the day before, specifically referring to the contract of November 19, 1917, requesting delivery of the oats and bran in certain quantities and on certain dates specified in their letter, and on the next day he replied, saying: “Yoúr favor-of December 17th is received. The same shall • have our attention at the proper time.” This is the only ratification relied on by the plaintiffs, and *665it may be conceded, as the defendant did, that it was adequate for the purpose, provided the plaintiffs could show that at that time the defendant had knowledge of the fraud which had been perpetrated upon him in the procurement of the contract. All of the other evidence of the plaintiffs on this subject was directed to the establishment of knowledge on the part of the defendant at the time he wrote that letter.
[5] In order to show knowledge on the part of the defendant the plaintiffs introduced several witnesses who testified that at the time of making the contract Mr. Walker, a member of the plaintiffs’ firm, stated to the defendant that the plaintiffs had the lowest bid, though the contract had not been let, and that they would take the supplies mentioned in the contract whether they got the contract or not. These statements all refer to the item of the making of the contract and cannot be evidence of ratification of a contract obtained by fraud. If the facts be in accordance with the statements of these witnesses, then there was no fraud in the contract, and there was nothing to be waived or ratified. All of the cases agree that in order for a misrepresentation to be sufficient to void a contract, it must not only have been false, but must have been believed to be true by the other party. If, in fact, the defendant knew that the plaintiffs did not have the contract, he could not have believed to the contrary, as no one can believe that to be true which he knows to be false. So that the statements of the witnesses as to what occurred at the time of the making of the contract are not evidence of ratification of the contract, which the verdict of the jury ascertained to have been obtained by fraud. This finding of the jury is not excepted to and must be accepted as true. The testimony, therefore, with reference to what took place at the time of the making of the contract may be laid out of consideration on the question of ratification.
*666It is next sought to prove knowledge on the part of the defendant by showing that Vassar knew that the plaintiff’s bid of November 15, 1917, had been rejected, and that he had communicated that fact to the defendant. To establish this fact the plaintiffs relied upon the telegram dated December 4, 1917, which was sent by Vassar to the defendant while he was in Oklahoma on his hunting trip. Vassar was not the general agent of the defendant, nor did he have anything to do with the contract of the plaintiffs except to carry out such specific orders as the defendant might give him. It is not claimed by the plaintiffs that the knowledge of Vassar was imputed to the' defendant, but that he communicated the knowledge which he had on the subject to the defendant in the telegram aforesaid. This telegram was in the following words:
“Walker got the last contract and is after me about the goods you sold him but have done nothing yet. Your last intimation was that you would cancel as he did not furnish contract number. Will wait to hear from you before I deliver him anything. Did not call James about selling, oats as 1 sold Hiden the seventy-five thousand at seventy-seven and wired shippers his contract number before they can-celled and got his check for profit. No oats on inspection track yet. Answer so I will know whether to get government order for cars on Walker’s contract number. Will not do anything until I hear from you.”
The defendant left Virginia for Oklahoma on November 28, 1917. The plaintiffs’ bid of November 15th was not rejected until November 29th, so that it was impossible for the defendant to have known of the rejection of the bid before he left Virginia; and he testifies most positively that he knew nothing of the rejection of that bid. He had been daily expecting, a shipping permit to be furnished him by the plaintiffs, and while at the station starting on his trip, he told P. W. Hiden to inform Vassar- unless this permit *667was furnished by the plaintiffs, that Vassar should sell the oats to him, Hiden. This statement was in exact accord with the testimony of the defendant that he had been urging the plaintiffs to furnish the permit and had been promised it from day to day, and was expecting it from them. The defendant testified that when he received this telegram he supposed that Vassar referred to the contract of November 15th, as that was the last contract, and the only contract of which he had any knowledge; that he knew nothing of the bid of November 30th. This statement accords with other facts shown in the case. While Vassar, in sending the telegram, had in mind the bid of November 30th, there was nothing on the face of the telegram to indicate that fact, and the defendant was in entire ignorance thereof; nor did the defendant obtain any other information on the subject until after his letter of December 18th had been written and delivered. On the morning of December 19th he learned for the first time that there had been a second bidding and that the plaintiffs had been awarded the contract under tnat bid. He then promptly repudiated the contract and refused to furnish any supplies thereunder. It is not deemed necessary to recite the evidence in detail, which is lengthy, but we have been unable to find anything in the language of the telegram and the evidence relating thereto, which would justify the jury in finding that the defendant knew of the plaintiffs’ fraud at the time he wrote the letter of December 18, 1917.
The plaintiffs also endeavored to show knowledge on the part of the defendant by proving that Vassar. had ascertained on November 28th that the plaintiffs had not secured the contract, and that he informed the defendant thereof two or three days later. Vassar testified that he learned on the 28th of November that the contract had not been awarded, and on the 29th he learned that it was refused, and he states that two or three days after the 28th *668he wired Mr. Holloway, but he nowhere states that he gave the defendant any other information that the bid of November 15th had been rejected, except what was contained in the telegram. On the contrary he testifies explicitly that the first time that he told the defendant that the plaintiffs did not have the contract of November 15th was about the 18th or 19th of December. He undertakes to give the circumstances under which this information was furnished, and it sufficiently appears from other testimony that this information was conveyed to the defendant on the morning of December 19th. It is true that he states that he thought that the defendant knew that the bid of November 15th had been rejected, but he got this impression or thought from a conversation he had with Hiden with reference to what had taken place between Hiden and the defendant at the station on the morning of November 28th, when the defendant was starting on his trip to Oklahoma. The defendant sought to bring out this conversation in the testimony, but it was excluded.on the motion of the plaintiffs, so that the. entire conversation does not appear. Vassar testifies, however, that Hiden told him that the bids had been thrown out, “and said he saw the chief down at the station and Holloway told him to go back to the office and tell me if I did not get a permit to get the oats shipped to sell them to him.” We do not see how Vassar could have got the impression from this statement that the defendant had notice that the bid of November 15th had -been rejected. Not only was the bid not rejected until November 29th, but the statement that Vassar was to sell the oats to Hiden if Vassar did not get a permit to get the oats shipped, was in entire accord with the statements of the defendant that the plaintiff ■ had been daily promising to furnish the permit and he was daily expecting it, and while he had been threatening to cancel the contract for failure to furnish the permit, still the message to Vassar indicated that *669he was still willing to deliver the supplies if the permit was furnished. Of course, no permit would be furnished if the contract was not let, and defendant’s statement would seem plainly to indicate that he was in ignorance of the fact that the contract of November 15th had not been let to the plaintiffs. The defendant himself testified in the case most explicitly and positively that Walker stated to him that the plaintiffs had the contract with the government of November 15th, and that he had no knowledge of anything to the contrary, and in fact believed that they did have such a contract until informed to the contrary by Vassar on the morning of December 19th; that he then stated to the plaintiffs that he would not furnish one pound under the contract because they had defrauded him and misrepresented the facts to him. In opposition to the explicit and positive testimony on behalf of both the defendant and Vassar, as to the time when the defendant had knowledge of the fraud, there is opposed only the testimony of Vassar that he thought from the conversation he had with Hiden that the defendant knew that the bids of November 15th had been thrown out. This thought of Mr. Vassar, it appears, was unwarranted and unfounded, and was a mere deduction from a conversation had with Hiden, the whole of which the defendant was not permitted to introduce in evidence on account of objections from the plaintiffs.
[6] Looking to all the evidence introduced on behalf of the plaintiffs to show knowledge on the part of the defendant of the fraud committed upon him by the plaintiffs, it Amounts to nothing more than a scintilla of evidence, if so much, and the placing of the unfounded thought of Mr. Vassar against the positive evidence of the defendant. If, under these circumstances, the instructions given for the defendant had been modified to conform to the plaintiffs’ view, and the verdict had been rendered in accordance therewith, holding that there had been ratification by the *670defendant after full knowledge of the fraud perpetrated upon him, it would have been the duty of the trial court to have set it aside as plainly contrary to the evidence.
For the reasons hereinbefore stated we are of opinion that no error was committed by the trial court, and its judgment must, therefore, be affirmed.
Affirmed.