delivered the opinion of the court.
1. The assignments of error are three in number: (1) The overruling of the demurrer to the complaint; (2) disregarding defendants’ objection to the reception of any evidence on the ground that the complaint fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; and (3) denying the defendants’ motion for a *401judgment of nonsuit at the close of the evidence for the plaintiffs on the ground that the testimony offered up to that time failed to prove their cause of action. The substance of their testimony is that they and a man named Bender went in company with John Bjerkvig to look at the land. They arrived there in the night, and the next morning went to view the premises. The defendant pointed out a tract that was grown up with tall ferns and weeds and said :
“No one has been living on this for over two years, ferns grow up mighty quick in this country. ’ ’
The plaintiff J. T. Aitken then proposed to go into the ferns and examine the land, when Bjerkvig assured him there was no use going through the ferns; that the plaintiff could rely upon his word. The ferns were very wet at the time, and, taking defendant’s statement as true, the plaintiffs made no further examination of the land thus covered with the ferns.' It is also in testimony that subsequent examination showed that only about seven acres of the tract had ever been plowed, and that the remainder pointed out by the defendant as land ready for the plow was covered with logs and stumps concealed by the weeds and ferns, and that it was utterly unfitted for plowing, and could not be made arable, except at great expense. In our judgment, the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
2. The question is, then, whether there was any testimony competent to go to the jury on the issues involved. The defendants contend that because the plaintiffs had an opportunity of examining the land, but did not, they have no right to rely upon the representations made by the defendant. It is true, as a *402general rale, that where parties deal at arm’s-length, and have equal opportunity to ascertain the truth as to the quality of the property involved, and no reliance is placed upon the representations made by the seller, the buyer must take the consequences of his own neglect.
The rule is thus tersely stated by Mr. Justice Field in Slaughter’s Admr. v. Gerson, 13 Wall. 379, 385 (20 L. Ed. 627):
“Where the means of information are at hand and equally open to both parties, and no concealment is made or attempted, the language of the cases is that the misrepresentation furnishes no ground for a court of equity to refuse to enforce the contract of the parties. The neglect of the purchaser to avail himself, in all such cases, of the means of information, whether attributable to his indolence or credulity, takes from him all just claims for relief.”
Van Horn v. O’Connor, 42 Wash. 513 (85 Pac. 260), was a case involving an exchange of land. Mr. Chief Justice Mount there said:
“This court has frequently held that, where representations are made as a matter of opinion, there is no liability for misrepresentations, where the parties are dealing at arm’s-length, and the means of knowledge are as open to one party as to the other. * * But where the representations made are of material facts within the knowledge of the vendor, and entirely without the knowledge of the vendee, and where the circumstances are such as reasonably call for a reliance thereon, the rale is that the vendee may rely upon the representations of the vendor.”
Again, Mr. Justice Hadley, writing in Mulholland v. Washington Match Co., 35 Wash. 315, 321 (77 Pac. 497, 499), uses this language:
*403“ It is argued that since no fiduciary relation existed, and since it is not alleged that respondent was overcome by cunning or artifice, by reason of being frail of body, or of weak and imbecile mind, caused by advanced age or disease, he does not show a ground for relief. It cannot be the law that a person of ordinary faculties may never rely upon representations made to him, even though no fiduciary relation may exist. Each case must depend upon its own circumstances.”
Grider v. Clopton, 27 Ark. 244, noted in defendants’ brief, was a case where the purchaser was skilled in land values and made an actual examination of the whole premises unhindered or uninfluenced by the seller.
In the Slaughter-Gerson Case, already referred to, the seller made no representations whatever, but invited a full examination of the property, in that instance a steamboat, and the purchaser himself made a full, complete and independent inspection, having the aid of ship carpenters, whom he employed to determine the draft of the vessel.
In Wimer v. Smith, 22 Or. 469 (30 Pac. 416), the property involved was a mining claim with an appurtenant water right. The defendant resisted foreclosure of a purchase-money mortgage on the ground that the plaintiff had misrepresented the availability of the water for mining that particular ground. The court denied relief to the defendant because the testimony very clearly showed that he had made a full, complete and independent inspection of the property and water right with the aid of a skilled mining man in his employ and had declared that he bought the property on his own judgment without taking the statement of any person.
*404In Jackson v. Armstrong, 50 Mich. 65 (14 N. W. 702), the question involved was an alleged fraud in the exchange of farms. The testimony offered tended to show that the seller of one of the farms falsely represented to the purchaser, on a view of the land at which both were present, that the low ground could be drained, most of it made tillable, and the rest fitted for pasturage; that the water was then high, because the season had been late; and that the farm was a very valuable one. The trial judge had excluded this evidence on the ground that, as the defendant had a view of the premises, he was bound to rely on the testimony of his own eyes. The appellate court, however, said that the principle had been misapplied, and that the practicability of draining the land was not necessarily apparent on a mere view, and then used this language:
“Bearing in mind the quality of the facts and the character of the inquiry, it was certainly not a question of law whether the truth was discoverable by the defendant by being on the farm, and the trial judge was not at liberty to rule on the subject as though it was. The facts should have gone to the jury under proper instructions as to whether there was fraud or not. The circumstance that the defendant was on the farm would not be sufficient to cut him off from making proof of any fraudulent representations, which his being there would not enable him to impeach.”
We take these references entirely from precedents cited by the defendants in their brief. They all depend upon the principle that both parties had equal means of knowledge and like opportunities to observe, and that no effort had been made to prevent inspection. In our judgment the litigants in the instant case did not have equal opportunities to know the truth.
*4053-5. The defendants appear to have been familiar with the realty they were offering to sell, or, if not, a statement of fact made by them recklessly without knowledge of its truth or falsity, and with intent to influence the trade, would equally bind them. The plaintiff husband was a carpenter and was ignorant of the quality and values of agricultural land. The statement of the seller of the farm that the buyer could rely upon his word, and that there was no use of his going into wet ferns to examine the land, had a tendency to dissuade him from close inspection. A different case would be presented if in fact the plaintiffs had possessed a general knowledge of such lands, and if the defendants had made no statement calculated to forestall minute inspection. If the defendants spoke at all with a view of influencing the conduct of the plaintiffs, it was their duty to speak the whole truth. The doctrine is aptly stated by Mr. Justice Waterman in Van Velsor v. Seeberger, 59 Ill. App. 322, 326, in this excerpt:
“Any person has a right to rely upon positive statements or warranties of a vendor as to the quality of an article he offers for sale, where the article is not present, or, if present, its appearance does not contradict the representations. A positive statement of quality, the truth or falsity of which is not apparent, has a tendency to dissuade one from making an inspection. * * A vendor may not willfully make false representations as to material facts about the construction or quality of a house and escape liability therefor by showing that the matters of which he spoke were open to the inspection and scrutiny of the defendant, and that, if he believed the lie, it was his own fault. Such is not, in this generation, either the law or a description of common honesty: Benjamin on Sales, 382, 390; Witherwax v. Riddle, 121 Ill. 140 [13 N. E. 545].”
*406As to the weight to he accorded to these representations we make no intimation. That was for the jury. The only question for us to determine, in passing upon the correctness of the decision of the motion for a non-suit, is whether there was any evidence to go to the jury on the issues involved. We are clear that there were representations made by the defendants, through the one speaking for both, calculated to and which must have influenced the conduct of the plaintiffs, and upon which the latter had a right to rely, and hence enough was shown to carry the case to the jury as against a motion for a nonsuit.
6. The defendants further urge that the true measure of damages is the difference between the market values of the properties exchanged, and that, because no evidence was offered on that question, the plaintiffs failed to prove their case in an essential particular. But referring again to a precedent cited by the defendants, namely, Van Velsor v. Seeberger, 59 Ill. App. 322, 326, we find this language:
“It is shown that the representations as set out in the letter were made, and that they were made to influence plaintiff to purchase the house; that he relied upon them; that some of those that were material were untrue. It is plain that there is some damage. The house is not as good as it would be if the representations were true. How much the damage is is not shown, but, under the circumstances, at least nominal damages should have been assessed”; citing authorities.
So in this case, there being evidence tending to show that the plaintiffs were influenced by the untrue statements of the defendants to take the land in question, and that, instead of there being 30 acres of arable land on the premises, there were only 7 or 8, there would *407be enough testimony to go to the jury on the question of damages. If, in fact, the land was not capable of being cultivated without great additional expense, it is a matter within the common sense of the average juror that it would not be as valuable as land already subject to the plow. Evidence of the market values of the properties exchanged would be only cumulative upon that already given about the actual state of the premises. The errors assigned, as before stated, depend upon whether the facts alleged are sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and whether there was any evidence proper to be submitted to the jury on the issues presented. Both these questions must be decided against the defendants.
7. Some complaint was made in the argument about the measure of damages, but it is not assigned as error; neither is the question presented by the bill of exceptions. Hence we cannot attend to the discussion of that point.
So far as the record shows, the case was properly submitted to the jury for its decision, and the judgment must be affirmed.
Affirmed. Rehearing Denied.
Mr. Chief Justice Moore, Mr. Justice Benson and Mr. Justice Harris concur.