Included in tbe transaction of buying tbe land in question was tbe purchase of considerable personal property on tbe farm, which belonged to tbe plaintiff. No offer of restoration to tbe former status of the property is pleaded or proved. Tbe issue is narrow, and tbe evidence is confined mainly to tbe statement that tbe bay land would not produce one ton per acre, as charged in the answer, and further that tbe realty pointed out did not all belong to tbe plaintiff. There is an irroconcilablé conflict in tbe testimony. The defendant is practically alone in bis statements that tbe representations were made. On bis own evidence it appears that be took too much for granted. He was purchasing tbe land by legal subdivisions, necessarily involving-rectangles, included in boundaries running to tbe cardinal points of tbe compass. He himself admits that the inclosures were in irregular shapes, and that be could see for himself that tbe fences were not on tbe lines, but be thought tbe variation was slight. Tbe plaintiff, bis wife and son, all declare that tbe defendant’s *511attention was called to the fact that the fences were not on the boundary lines. That matter is explained by testimony on the part of the plaintiff that in the settlement of the country in that region fences followed the line of least resistance; that no attention was paid to government lines in the first instance; and that inclosures corresponded to government boundaries only when permanent fences were finally installed. As to the quantity of hay that could be raised on the property, the defendant declares that the plaintiff told him it would raise one ton per acre. This is denied by the plaintiff. ■ The latter admits he told the defendant that some of the land, if it should be improved, would produce one ton per acre.
1, 2. The burden of proof on allegations of fraud rests upon the defendant, who alleges it. The greater number of witnesses in the case on points of dispute are those for the plaintiff, and, although this does not conclude us, yet, all other things being equal, the result naturally would be that the number of witnesses would be an element in determining the truth of the matter in controversy. Considering such a case in Smith v. Griswold, 6 Or. 440, the court held, in substance, that when there is an issue of fact and the plaintiff supports the allegations in his complaint by his deposition and no other testimony, and the defendant in his deposition denies these allegations, there is no preponderance of proof: See, also, Rolston v. Markham, 36 Or. 112 (58 Pac. 1099).
3. We are also influenced, but of course not controlled, by the fact that the trial judge saw the witnesses and had a,far better opportunity to consider the weight of their testimony than we, who have only a paper record before us.
*5124. For the'most part, also, the precedents cited by the defendant in support of his position are not in point, in that they contain elements of concealment and prevention of the aggrieved party from making-inquiry. For instance, in Steen v. Weisten, 51 Or. 473 (94 Pac. 835), the party claiming to be defrauded had made no previous examination for the purpose of determining the quality of the land or the timber thereon, and was dissuaded by the seller from doing so. In Boelk v. Nolan, 56 Or. 229 (107 Pac. 689), the plaintiff had been residing for several years in California and had left his land in Tillamook County in charge of a friend, who, believing him to be dead, suffered the land to be sold for taxes and bought it in, with the avowed purpose of preserving it for the plaintiff or his heirs in case of his death, not having heard from him for several years. Having secretly ascertained the whereabouts of the plaintiff, the defendant went to California and represented that he himself had acquired title to the land and that it had been sold for taxes, and by telling the half truth about the matter and concealing the real state of affairs, induced the plaintiff to give a quitclaim deed for a mere nominal sum. The plaintiff there was induced by the representations of the defendant to forbear from making original investigation. In Davis v. Mitchell, 72 Or. 165 (142 Pac. 794), the property in dispute was an apartment house. The plaintiff, claiming to be defrauded, had opportunity to examine only three or four of the apartments and was prevented by the seller from looking at the others on the ground that the occupants did not wish to be disturbed. In Palmiter v. Hackett, 95 Or. 12 (185 Pac. 1105, 186 Pac. 581), the property involved was a building which had been occupied in the lower story by a garage and *513in the upper part as housekeeping rooms. Unknown to the purchaser, this was contrary to city ordinances. The seller, although informed of this fact, concealed it from the plaintiff and represented the building to be available for botlg purposes. This was held as ground for- rescission. No such elements appear here. The defendant himself says that no effort whatever was made to prevent him from making full investigation of the property and its capabilities for the purpose for which he wished to buy it. The evidence shows that it had been used as a stock ranch, but not so extensively as the defendant undertook afterwards to use it. In this matter, as well as others, the testimony of the defendant is disputed by that of the plaintiff.
In brief, the defendant has asserted fraud, assuming the burden of proving the same. Standing practically alone in his assertion, both as a pleader and as a witness, he is confronted by a greater number of witnesses, apparently of equal credibility, in opposition to his contention. He has not made out his case by a preponderance of the evidence, and hence the decree of the Circuit Court must be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Bean, Harris and McBride, JJ., concur.