delivered the opinion of the Court:
This is an appeal from the circuit court of Cook county, to reverse a decree entered in that court in favor of Jerome P. Downing against J. H. L. Tuck and others, cancelling a certain note executed by the complainant to the defendant Tuck, for certain mineral lands in Utah territory, sold and conveyed by the defendant to complainant. The cause was regularly set for hearing on bill, answer, replication, and proofs heard, and a decree passed as prayed. The defendant appeals.
It is unnecessary to consider the point made by appellant, questioning the right of the court to allow an amendment to the bill of complaint on the hearing, for, in our view of the whole case, appellee has no merits.
Appellee, under the second head of his brief, contends there are three elements of fraud in this transaction, or three classes of fraudulent representations; and, first, with regard to the price for which Scribner’s two-thirds interest could be bought; second, the representation made by appellant to appellee that Camp and Scott had paid, each, five thousand dollars for a share, and that Noble had paid for two shares; and, third, the false representations made by appellant as to the character, quality and condition of the mines.
On the first point, there being no fiduciary relation between the parties, such a misrepresentation, if one, is not sufficient cause to rescind a sale. Banta v. Palmer, 47 Ill. 99. If the price alleged to have been paid, in that case, was thousands of dollars instead of units, the principle would be the same— that is not controlled or affected by figures. We also refer to 1 Story’s Eq. Ju., secs. 199, 200; Merryman v. David, 31 Ill. 404.
But what are the real facts on this head ? Scribner, through whom appellant claimed, was, with one Wood, the undisputed owner of the property in question, the legal title being vested in Scribner alone. He was an experienced miner and prospecter, and had sold to Lucian P. Sanger an interest of one-third in these mines, and they, not haying the necessary capital, were desirous of finding those who had and were willing to invest, for the purpose of further developing and working the mines. Scribner was examined as a witness in this cause, and he stated, and it is not contradicted, that the first time appellant went East with Sanger, he (Sanger) had a deed, or some other writing, giving him the control of this two-thirds interest, and he had given his obligation to pay nine thousand dollars therefor, in sixty days, or return the papers. There was no agreement between the parties as to the selling price to other parties. When they went East they were not acting for witness or Wood, but for themselves. No sales were made by Sanger at Erie, and he returned the papers to Scribner, who did, about the 24th of July, 1873, execute a deed to appellant for this interest. Appellant gave his obligation for nine thousand dollars, which recited if they did not get their pay in sixty days, they (Scribner and Wood) were to hold the mines—appellant was to • reconvev to them. At any time, Scribner testifies, their interest could have been purchased for ten thousand dollars. He further testified, when Barr and Camp (the committee) were at Utah, appellant had the sole right to determine the value for which this two-thirds interest should be sold. On the return of appellant to Utah, he paid Scribner for his interest, telling him the property had been sold for fifteen thousand dollars, saying, he and Sanger still' retained an interest, but how much witness did not know—don’t think they ever told him:
Upon this point appellant testified, that Mr. Noble asked him in his bank at Erie, the second time he was there, if he did not think if he (Noble) was to go to Utah, he could buy this property of Scribner for less money than appellant ivas asking for it. Appellant replied, ‘* No, not a cent less,” and this, as appellant testified, for the reason he had the deed for the property in his possession, and showed it to Noble, and said to Noble he had given Scribner his obligation. Appellant repeated this to the other parties, and showed to all of them the deed he had from Scribner, and told them he had given Scribner his obligation, not naming forty thousand dollars he had' given, but that they could not purchase the mines for less than forty thousand dollars of Scribner, for it had ceased to be Scribner’s property.
The pretense these parties were not dealing with appellant himself, but with Scribner through him, is put at rest by this testimony and by the exhibition of Scribner’s deed to appellant for this property, sold and conveyed to him, in consideration of nine thousand dollars. All this occurred after the return of the committee from Utah, and after they had made their report, and shows conclusively they were dealing with appellant as the owner of the property, which he, in fact, was.
Appellee testified, that appellant told him the contract for the sale of the mines had virtually been transferred to him. Appellee, then, before he bought, and executed his note, knew when .he was trading with appellant he was negotiating with the real owner of this two-thirds interest, who made the representations he did make as owner of the property, eager to get the best price he could for it.
Now, when this deed to appellant, exhibited freely to appellee and all the other parties before the sale, showed on "its face that the consideration paid or agreed to be paid by appellant was only nine thousand dollars, how could it be material if he did state he was bound to pay forty thousand dollars for it? There was the deed which appellee saw and read, expressing nine thousand dollars as the whole consideration. Can it be believed these parties could have been influenced by this declaration when they were confronted by the fact that nine thousand dollars was the price appellant had paid or was bound to pay Scribner ? It is folly to urge that this statement of appellant influenced the action of appellee in any degree. It could not have been so, appellee being a man of business capacity, and the general Western agent of one of -the most extensive corporations in the Union. Justice Stoky says, if a party knows a representation to be false when made to him, it can not be said to influence his conduct ; and it is his own indiscretion, and not any fraud or surprise, of which he has any just complaint to make, under such circumstances. 1 Story’s Eq. Jur. sec. 202. Courts of equity do not aid parties who will not use their own sense and -discretion upon matters of this sort. Appellant was dealing with his own property, and had a right to “puff” it in the most extravagant terms, the other party being at full liberty to exercise his own judgment about it. There is nothing in the record to contradict appellant in these respects, and it must be taken as true. The deed spoke a language all could understand, and that informed these parties appellant had purchased the property for nine thousand dollars, and common sense should have .taught them he had the right to sell it for as much as he could get for it, he himself occupying no fiduciary relation. Banta v. Palmer, supra.
It is not fair to say, as appellee does in his brief, that he was dealing with appellant as a partner, and between partners the utmost good faith must be observed. The evidence does not show this relation. A partnership is not the theory of the bill. Appellant owned this interest, and desired to divide it into eight parts, and sell as many parts as he could find buyers. When appellee bought one share, he became a tenant in common with appellant, and when the others purchased their shares, they also became tenants in common with appellant. There were no articles of co-partnership, verbal or written, no mutual responsibilities resting on these parties ; the proceeds of the sales of the several shares belonged to appellant as proprietor and not as a partner. Not being a partner in a partnership, appellant was not responsible to any of them, and is not accountable to his co-tenants for his acts of sale. Besides, appellee argues that appellant in this matter was acting as the agent of Scribner, and, as such, practiced the deceitful arts charged in the bill. If so, it is utterly impossible he could be a partner with appellee and the other purchasers, for he could not act for both. The whole case shows there was no relation whatever of trust or confidence between these parties ; but it does show appellant owned the property, and appellee bought one share after it had been thoroughly examined by a committee of gentlemen he aided in appointing, and without the least reliance on the representations of appellant. We think the proofs show appellant was acting for himself alone, in this transaction.
Having disposed of the first element charged as fraud by appellee, the second will be considered—the representations made by appellant to appellee that Camp and Scott had each paid five thousand dollars for a share, and Noble had paid for two shares.
If appellee chose to rely upon s.uch a statement, when these persons were his near neighbors, seeing them, possibly, every day, it was his own folly. But, as we understand appellee’s testimony on this point, he said, before he gave his note, appellant said he had “closed up” with all the other parties, and delivered the deeds. Appellant did not say they had paid him, but that he had closed the matter with them by delivering the deeds. Had appellee desired fuller information on this subject, he could have inquired of the parties. But it is strange that a man of business and experience, such as appellee is, should place any reliance on such statements, and, whether true or false, it is impossible to believe they could have influenced the decision of such a man as appellee is represented to be; and it appears to us it was of no importance how appellant might dispose of this property, it being his own. How he closed up the matter with these persons, was no business of appellee, and concerned him in no possible way.
The third element of fraud, and one most worthy of consideration, is the alleged falsity as to the character, condition and quality of these mines. We have searched the record with great care for proof to sustain the charge of falsehood in this respect. In addition to what we have said in regard to the purchase of a mining interest, we will state the facts as they appear to us in the record.
. It is not denied, when the committee went to the mines to examine them, they were treated with perfect fairness by Scribner, Sanger and appellant, and every aid afforded them to a full and satisfactory examination. The record shows all their acts were in the utmost good faith, and prompted by a sincere desire to furnish all the information they could, before appellee and the others should make the purchase. What do the witnesses say on this point ?
Scribner says, the committee examined the mines thoroughly. They took up the ore; they broke off pieces, and witness broke off some from different places in the mines.' They took that ore and returned to Salt Lake City, with the intention of having it assayed, and told him afterwards they had it assayed. Scribner accompanied them to Brigham Canon and Copperopolis, to examine the mines there; were gone two or three days, and whilst in Brigham Canon they examined the Winnimuck mines. On their return they went again to these mines, took other specimens of ore, and examined the ground thoroughly, and told witness, when they got back to town, they got their assay certificates; and then Mr. Barr, in witness’ room in Salt Lake City, said, they intended to take the mines, and that they were better than Sanger and appellant represented, and that he was more than satisfied, and if they “played out” there was no one to blame. Scribner further says, the committee went to examine the mines in the Tintic district, in order to compare them with the mines in controversy—that was what they said. They went away satisfied, when they examined the Tintic mines, that these they were about to purchase would turn out as well, judging from what they could see.
Mr. Camp, one of the committee appointed by appellee and his associates, testified : We examined these mines and their development, and took specimens of the ore therefrom to assay, and, on our return to Salt Lake City, left them with the assayer, John McVickar, for assay by him. We then went to the East Tintic mining district, to visit the mines known as “Mammoth,” “Copperopolis,” and “Chrisman Mammoth,” which we inspected. These were similar in their ores to the mines we were intending to purchase. We then returned to Salt Lake City, and went from that place to visit the Winnimuck mines in Brigham Canon. This last mine is only one and a quarter miles from the mines which were the subject of negotiation. On our return we made a second and further examination of the out-crop of the veins or ores, and of the ore in the openings and cuttings at or near the junction of the “Aqua Frio” and “Black Metallic” mines. We then returned to Salt Lake City, where we obtained the report of the assayers, and made examination of the abstract of title of these mines, at the recorder’s office, and returned to Erie. On our return to Erie, the associates or parties spoken of were called together, and our report made. The report was, that we found the situation, surroundings and development of these mines fully up to the representations made by Sanger and Tuck, and the assay of the ores, on an average assay, three or four per cent better than the assay Sanger and Tuck had shown at Erie, and the title thereto reported we found all right. Then a canvass commenced for getting up the association for the purchase of shares, when appellee took one, etc.
Appellant, in his testimony, states that his object in visiting Erie was to interest capitalists there to such an extent that they would send a committee to examine these mines, and if they found them as good as represented, they could have a two-thirds interest, at the rate of sixty thous- and dollars, or five thousand dollars each one-twelfth. Drew up a subscription list, embodying these facts and conditions of sale.' Among those who signed it was the appellee. Met the committee appointed to examine the mines, at Joliet, and proceeded with them to Utah. Took them to the mines, which they carefully examined, made measurements of the work done and of the amount of the ore inside, and estimated the amount of the ore in the dump, and they said the out-crop and the appearance of the indications of these mines were really superior to that of the outcrop of the “Mammoth’ and “Copperopolis.” While at the mines the committee took a large number of samples of ore from the mine, in different locations, and also from the dump, and brought them to Salt Lake City for assay. He further testifies, that Barr, on the next day, employed Scribner to go .back to these mines and purchase another mine, called an extension of “Aqua Frio,” which he did, Barr paying for the same by draft. The committee remained thereafter at the city one day, to attend to the assays, and went again with witness to the canon to buy a location for a furnace, site. Met Scribner there. The ground was selected, and Barr authorized Scribner to buy it, which he did, taking deed to Barr; next day started for home. Barr left the train at Peru, for a short visit. Witness left at Joliet, promising to meet them at Erie at an early day, to perfect the papers. The committee were more than pleased with the mines. They made a written report from Utah about them, and at Erie a meeting was called and the report considered, and Barr then and there, having before his visit to the mines taken one share, said he would take two shares, and did so. A company was then organized, of which appellee was president. Appellee was to have paid cash for his share, but complaining of hard times, and that he had been purchasing real estate, asked indulgence of six months. Witness had employed nine men at the mines, and commenced taking out ore immediately, and piled on the dumps as much as one hundred and fifty tons, as he thought. It was measured, and amounted to more. Had business East, and left the mines in charge of Joseph Hicks, as foreman. When East, Mr. Barr, in November, about the middle, came out to the mines, which had been worked since August 20. By Barr’s orders work was suspended entirely.
This witness fully sustains the others as to the favorable appearance of the mines.
Lucien P. Sanger was familiar with the mines, and corroborates all that has been said as to their flattering appearance. The assays averaged 23t7q copper, $70 in silver, and from five to eighteen dollars in gold, to the ton. He went to Erie to get capital to assist in developing the mine, he owning one-third of the whole; rode with Barr from Joliet to Chicago, on his return from examining the mines, and conversed freely with him; he said he had examined them thoroughly; had been to Tintic and examined the mines there having the same character of ore; that the prospects were better than he and appellant had represented them; his opinion, as a miner, is, that the mines should be worked by all means, the indications being there is there one of the biggest mines in the country. Witness was a large owner in these mines, and had paid all his assessments. On October 20, 1873, the drift was 120 feet; after going through barren ground a number of feet, the rock was becoming very much stained; had it assayed, and it went $403 to the ton in silver; believes these stains indicate the biggest kind of mineral; regrets the work was stopped, for the ground is not proved at all; stopped without his knowledge or consent, without consulting him, while he was absent in the States; it was bad policy to stop.
Experienced miners, well acquainted with these mines, testify the ores are copper, gold and silver producing ores; from out-crop and outside appearance, the mine was very large; such property worth sixty thousand dollars; in buying and selling mines, people buy and pay, or agree to pay, according to the prospect in sight; out-crop very flattering, showing a large amount of mineral in sight in the open cuts and strippings; the work done on them in August and September done with very poor judgment; the tunnel was run according to the stratification, when it should have been run to cut the stratification, so as to cut the vein ; • acquainted with similar mines in that vicinity, but with none with a prospect so flattering as the mines in question; from the out-crop and ore in the dumps, would consider the property worth from seventy-five thousand dollars to one hundred thousand dollars; parties purchase mines on the prospect, without warranty or guaranty, and on the mineral in sight; there is no custom requiring guaranty or warranty; Tuck is an honorable man, and well posted on mining and scientific matters connected therewith ; have a high opinion of the property from its showing; never been in Tuck’s employment.
Another witness says, the finest prospect on the surface he ever saw; the out-crop indicated a very valuable mine; at the time this was sold, no mines were being sold in that vicinity of a similar kind ;■ such a thing as a warranty of a mine on the Pacific coast is unknown; no custom of the kind; buy and sell on the ore in sight; several mines very valuable now there, lately discovered.
Joseph Hicks, an experienced miner, worked these mines two months for Scribner and three months for the Erie Mining and Smelting Company; ordered to quit work by Barr; prospect favorable, when he quit, of striking ore in paying quantities, but impossible to tell how soon; judged it bad policy to quit; impossible to tell the actual value of a mine by the prospect; indications good; met Camp and Barr at the mines; they examined the mine two different days; took samples of ore ; when they visited it in July, 1873, the prospect was favorable for a large mine.
McVickar, the assayer, testifies the out-croppings of these mines are similar to those of the “Mammoth” and “Copperopolis;” no guaranty is given as to the quantity of ores or minerals which will be produced from mines, in selling them; people buy from the prospect in sight; have made a great many assays from these mines, some for Scribner; and in August last made five for Barr and Camp; the average of those assays would be about 24% per cent copper, seventy dollars in silver and eleven dollars in gold per ton of two thous- and pounds ; gave these results to Barr and Camp. >
This proof shows clearly that, at the time the sale was made, and this note executed by appellee, the mines were substantially as represented by appellant and Sanger, and the committee that examined them thought them even better.
Against this mass of testimony as to the appearance of the mines when sold to appellee and others, we have the testimony of Wellington Downing, son of appellee, a young man about twenty-three years of age, who was sent out to the mines in August, 1873, who had no experience, and who, Sanger testifies, acted as cook to the hands, and took charge of the water supply, and sometimes the check roll of the men. He quit in November following, because no encouragement to proceed further—indications then very unsatisfactory.
Barr also figured as a witness for appellee. What he discovered on his second visit to the mines, in October, 1873, or how they appeared, has nothing to do with the decision of this case. The purchase was made on the faith of his report as one of the committee, in July previous. The proof, as we have seen, sustains the representations then made. Just before he made this second visit, the great money panic of September had produced dismay and trouble throughout all departments of business, and these gentlemen, though connected with large moneyed corporations, found it difficult to raise means. Money is the sinew of mining, as of war, and that supply failing, the mines were a fraud, and the whole thing a cheat and a swindle. It matters not how the mines turned out. If the prospect was as represented when appellant sold, the purchasers are bound to stand to the bargain. Who are these purchasers complaining ?
The complainant, Jerome F. Downing, is a man forty-seven years of age, residing in the important borough of Erie, in the State of Pennsylvania, and the general manage* in the West of one of the most known and substantial insurance companies in the United States, known as “The Insurance Company of North America, at Philadelphia.”
Orange Noble, another member of this Erie Mining Company, was. fifty-six years of age, and president of the “Keystone National Bank of Erie.”
Matthew B. Barr was fifty-six years of age, and had been, for a long time prior to this transaction, engaged in the iron foundry business. He was one of the committee to visit these mines in person. These persons were the principal witnesses for complainant, and their testimony, at first blush, and without a careful examination, might tend to sustain some of the allegations in the bill of complaint. It is upon proof of these allegations, if they establish fraud, that relief can be had, and upon them only. A party can not make out one case by his bill and another by his proof—they must correspond. The nature of the subject bargained for, and what was sold; the character pf the representations made, whether true or false, and if false, were they material; and how does the evidence preponderate, taking the whole case into consideration ; and care must be observed in order to distinguish mere opinion from facts.
After a careful examination of this record, we are satisfied no false representation of facts is established against appellant, unless it be in respect to the amount he was to pay Scribner for his two-thirds interest in these mines, forty thous- and dollars, and for which he had given his personal obligation. Appellant denies having made this latter statement, but in this he is contradicted by several witnesses, all interested, who testify he did so state. But we hold, admitting he did so state, it was of no importance. It was not a fraud in legal contemplation, there being no relation of trust or confidence between these parties, creating a duty resting on appellant to state the truth. It might be morally wrong, but the law can not lay hold of it. This doctrine was distinctly announced by this court in Banta v. Palmer, 47 Ill. 355. There, the plaintiff had paid defendant eighty-five dollars per acre for the land, on defendant’s representation to him that he himself had paid that.sum for it, when, in truth and in fact, he had paid but seventy-five dollars per acre for it. The court say, if no fiduciary relation existed between the parties, however wrong, morally, it may have been in the defendant to misrepresent the price he had paid for the land, the misrepresentation does not entitle the plaintiff to recover back the difference between what he had paid for the land and what it had cost the defendant.
These gentlemen trading for these mines were old and experienced men of business, mingling and taking active parts in the struggles of life, and it could be of no possible advantage to them, in determining how much they could risk in a speculation like this, what the seller had paid or was bound to pay for it. Besides, this representation could have had no effect when the deed from Scribner to Tuck, conveying his two-thirds interest, expressed a consideration of nine thousand dollars only. These parties purchased on the strength of this deed, as assuring Scribner’s title to be in appellant for the consideration of nine thousand dollars.
If one has a horse, and, proposing to sell, shall assert that he paid one thousand dollars for him, when the bill of sale expresses a consideration of one hundred dollars only, it can hardly be said a purchaser of the horse for two hundred dollars, and that sum greatly above his value, can hope to rescind the contract on the ground of such a misstatement. The truth is, such statements by practical men, as these parties all are, are never regarded, and enter not into the conclusions they may reach as to the value of an article. Practical men, like these, act on their judgments of values. The declarations of appellant, that he had given his personal obligation to Scribner for forty thousand dollars, was to these business men but as the idle wind, the mere vaporing of one whose only object was to get a high price for an article he owned and desired to sell.
This court said, in Miller v. Craig, 36 Ill. 109, upon this question of fraudulent misrepresentation, the appellant, in endeavoring to effect a trade with appellee, used no more <, artifice than is usual and allowable where a party wishes to dispose of property, real or personal. He has a right to exalt the value of his own property to the highest point his antagonist’s credulity may bear, and depreciate that of the other party. This is the daily practice, and no one has ever supposed that such boastful assertions or highly exaggerated description amounted to fraudulent misrepresentation or Qdeceit. The parties were dealing at arm’s length and on equal grounds, and their own judgments were to be their guide in coming to a conclusion. It is proved that complainant had the fullest opportunity, of which he availed, to examine the property, and afterwards moved into it.
It will be remembered, the evidence shows, that no sale was effected by appellant on his first visit to Erie with Sanger. They went there for the purpose of procuring capitalists to embark in this mining enterprise, all of which are, in their incipiency, hazards which few besides practical men are willing to incur, and men who have money to invest. The world is full of such, no one of whom enters into associations of this nature with a certainty of ultimate success. Appellant, as a practical geologist, had freely and earnestly expressed to these people his convictions of the value of these mines, but he desired, before any investment was made, a committee should proceed to Utah, examine and report. A committee was raised, of which Barr, a man of great experience in the iron foundry business, was one. Mr. Irving Camp, also a prominent business man of Erie, was the other member of the committee, and they, with appellant, proceeded to these mines, examined them critically, went eighty miles further south, to visit the mines of East Tintic, to compare the ores of the mines controlled by appellant with the ores of these rich and productive mines. They returned and again visited these mines, again examined the prospect, broke off fragments of the ores, took them to a noted and competent assayer at Salt Lake City, to be assayed, who pronounced them such ores as had been represented, and as valuable, and the committee were well satisfied with the prospect and with ’the promises of rich returns. So much pleased was Mr. Barr with the appearance, that he purchased, on his own .private account, an adjoining mine, for which he paid several thous- and dollars. .
The committee returned to Erie and made their report, in all respects favorable, though appellee testified it was not satisfactory to him. Yet he did, of his own free will, after the report was made, purchase one-twelfth interest, and executed the note in question therefor. It is idle to say or pretend this report did not influence him, but the false representations of appellant did; that he relied upon them, and not upon¡ the report of the committee. But the truth is, the report of the committee sustained appellant substantially in the declarations he had made. It is not proved he was guilty of stating anything which was not true, save and except as to his personal obligation to pay Scribner forty thousand dollars, and' this, we have shown, was unimportant, and not such a deceit as the law forbids. '
It is in proof that appellant rendered all the assistance in his power to the committee in their examination, and made to them many statements of the richness of the vein, its extent and value, and' spoke of it as the mother vein of all this country; that there never was such a “blow-out” without there being a mammoth vein. This was all matter of opinion on appearances visible to the committee men, and on which they could form their own opinions, and did so, and were satisfied with the prospect; so reported to appellee and their other associates; after which they executed their notes.
It is in proof that, in buying and selling mines, people buy and pay, or agree to pay for them, influenced by the prospect. ISTo man, however scientific he may be, could certainly state how a mine, with a most flattering out-crop or blow-out, will finally turn out. It is to be fully tested and worked by men of skill and judgment. Mines are not purchased and sold on a warranty, but on the prospect. “The sight” determines the purchase. If very flattering, a party is willing to pay largely for the chance. There is no other sensible or known mode of selling this kind of property. It is, in the nature of the thing, utterly speculative, and every one knows the business is of the most fluctuating and hazardous character. How many mines have not sustained the hopes created by their out-crop!
The extravagant declarations of appellant after his return to Erie with the committee of examination, and made in their presence, that a silver mine with copper croppings was an inexhaustible mine of wealth; that the “Aqua Frio” and “Black Metallic” were the biggest things in Utah; that situated at the Fork Hills was greatly to their advantage; that they were well developed mines, with well defined veins; that he had never seen, in all his experience, such a “blow-out that a furnace ought to be erected at once, as the ore could be mined, and all the money put into it could be got out in a few months—was mere gassing, and for the purpose of extolling what these men, through their committee, had seen, and could judge of the prospects and promise for themselves. There was nothing unlawful, or prohibited in law, in all this. It was after this examination and report by Camp and Barr the share was bought by complainant, and the note in question executed and a deed delivered and accepted for the property. It is impossible their statement should be regarded as anything more than opinions, for no man can tell how a discovery like this may result. Appellee could have understood them in no other sense, and the same may be said of the report of the committee. They were opinions founded on facts as they appeared to them.
Suppose, in the oil region, which is in the neighborhood of appellee and his associates, an explorer there had sunk a shaft out of which flowed ten barrels of oil in twenty-four hours, and in the next twenty-four hours twelve barrels, and continued to flow ten or twelve barrels a day, and he should extol it as the best well in all that region—should induce Erie capitalists to visit it, who go and see the flow, and are more than satisfied after a critical examination, and they return with the owner to report, and he again makes the most extravagant representations—asserts it is the mother well of all that country ; that there never was such a flow without there being an abundant supply; that it would flow one hundred barrels in twenty-four hours, and it could be purchased for1 fifty thousand and no less; a company is formed, each taking one share at five thousand dollars ; one of the associates is made president of the company, as this complainant and appellee was of the Erie Mining Company ; should send his son, a young man without experience, to manage the well, and soon after one of the leading associates should visit the well and find it was flowing less than five barrels in twenty-four hours—could, under such circumstances, a court of equity interfere to rescind the contract on the ground of false representations ? Where is the essential difference between the oil well and a mineral discovery? One is a liquid, the other a solid, and that is all the difference. In purchasing the oil well, they would buy from “the prospect,” and no court would hold the extravagant assertions of the seller as anything more than gassing. The court would not hold them as statements of fact, but as opinions, which the fact, as it appeared, justified, or at least presented ground on which to base the statement. So in the sale of a mine. These exaggerated statements are always made, and a man’s own natural judgment must be his counselor and guide. The great “Com-stock” mine of Nevada, which has poured into the country its millions of silver, was bought and sold on the prospect, and for a few dollars. The discoverer could not pry into futurity ; he took his chances for a few dollars, whilst those purchasing have a bonanza of scarcely appreciable value.
It is in proof the son of appellee, a youth inexperienced in mining operations, was sent out in August, 1873, to oversee these mines, and the operations to be performed there, and in October of that year Mr. Barr again went to the mines and was disappointed—gave it up as abad job—thought they had been swindled ; whilst Hicks, a practical miner in charge of the mines, and Tuck and Sanger, who owned an interest twice as great as any one of their associates, protested against quitting work, being well assured by perseverance their brightest hopes would be realized. In September, 1873, the great money panic occurred, and it is quite probable these gentlemen’s associates found it somewhat difficult to raise the money necessary to develop these mines fully, and because no rich vein was immediately struck they quit the matter in disgust, and now insist upon rescinding the contract on the ground of fraud!
Whilst writing this last paragraph, a newspaper article attracted attention. It was in regard to the recent discovery of a silver mine at Newburyport, in the State of Massachusetts, a locality where it was never supposed silver ore had a home. The statement was this : “Six hundred feet of land on the Boynton lode were sold last week to a Springfield company for one hundred and sixty thousand dollars.” This purchaser has purchased on his judgment from the indications, as complainant did on the report of his committee. Should this six hundred feet turn out to be a bad speculation, could the courts of Massachusetts be successfully invoked to rescind the contract, and have the notes, executed for the purchase money, if that was the fact, given up to be cancelled ? We fail to see any real difference in the cases.
We are familiar with the fact that there is a large class of cases in which courts of equity will grant relief where there has been a misrepresentation, or, as it is called, suggestio falsi. To justify such interposition, it is not only necessary to establish the fact of misrepresentation by clear proof, but it must be about a material matter, or one important to the interests of the party complaining; for, if it was of an immaterial thing, or if the other party did not trust to it, or if it was a matter of opinion or fact equally open to the inquiries of both parties, and in regard to which neither could be presumed to trust the other, there is no reason for equity to interfere to grant relief on the ground of fraud. 1 Story Eq. Jur. sec. 191. The misrepresentation must not only be in something material, but it must be in something in regard to which the one party places a known trust and confidence in the other. It must not be a mere matter of opinion equally open to both parties for examination and inquiry, where neither party is presumed to trust to the other, but to rely on his own judgment. Matters of opinion between parties dealing upon equal terms, though falsely stated, are not relieved against. Thus, a false opinion, expressed intentionally, of the value of the property offered for sale, where there is no special confidence or relation, or influence between the parties, and each meets the other on equal grounds, relying on his own judgment, is not sufficient to avoid a contract of sale. Ib. sec. 197.
Again, it is said, nor is it every wilful misrepresentation of a fact which will avoid a contract upon the ground of fraud, if it be of such a nature that the other party had no right to place reliance on it, and it was his own folly to give credence to it; for courts of equity, like courts of law, do not aid parties who will not use their own sense and discretion upon matters of this sort. Ib. sec. 199. This is illustrated by a case at law, Vernon v. Keys, 12 East, 637, where a party, upon making a purchase for himself and his partners, falsely stated to the seller, to induce him to the sale, that his partners would not give more for the property than a certain price. It was there held, by Lord Ellenbokough, that no action at law would lie for a deceitful representation of this sort.
Story thinks, 1 Story Eq. Jur. sec. 200, a court of equity, under like.circumstances, would probably hold a somewhat more rigorous doctrine, at least if the party appeared to have been materially influenced by the representation, to his disadvantage, and if it did not avoid the contract, it would refuse a specific performance of it. But he says, in all such cases the court will not rescind the contract without the clearest proof of the fraudulent misrepresentations, and that they were made under such circumstances as show the contract was founded upon them. He further says, section 200a :• On the other hand, if the purchaser, choosing to judge for himself, does not avail himself of the knowledge or means of, knowledge open to him or his agents, he can not be heard to say that he was deceived by the vendor’s misrepresentations, for the rule is, caveat emptor, and the knowledge of his agents is as binding on him as his own knowledge. Courts of equity do not sit for the purpose of relieving parties under ordinary circumstances, who refuse to exercise a reasonable diligence or discretion.
Of puffing and commendation of commodities this author says: However reprehensible in morals are gross exaggerations or departures from truth, they are, nevertheless, not treated as frauds which will avoid contracts. In such cases, the other party is bound, and, indeed, is understood, to exercise his own judgment, if the matter is equally open to the observation, examination and skill of both. Sec. 201.
These principles have been recognized by this court in several cases. To test this case by them, we have given a full statement of the leading facts.
That the prospect hanging over these mines in July, 1873, when appellee purchased, was as represented, the testimony is conclusive. The seller was not responsible for their condition or for their ultimate value at a future time. There was no warranty—no guaranty, and never is in such sales.
That this was a rich mineral region, we are informed by the report of Mr. Eaymond, United States Commissioner of Mining Statistics, made to the Secretary of the Treasury in March, 1872.
In speaking of the “ West Mountain Mining District,” the situs of the mines in question, he says, among the numerous claims there may be mentioned the Winnimuck,—two thousand feet located—vein varies in width from a foot to 10| feet. The ore is argentiferous galena and carbonates. An English company paid $450,000 for the property. The mines are located at the head of Brigham Canon, and the claims cover several hills by being staked out on imaginary veins running in all conceivable directions. This ore contained only from four to thirty dollars in silver per ton. pp. 314, 315.
Speaking of the Tintio District, he says it is about seventy miles south-east of Salt Labe City. It, as also the Winnimuck, was visited by Barr and Camp, the examining committee, and in the “ Mammoth” there is a remarkable deposit of copper ore in limestone cropping out upon the entire slope of a hill facing the broad and well-wooded valley of the Tintic. Much of the ore is ferruginous and poor in copper, but there are masses of rich, dark colored ore, mixed with green and blue carbonates of copper. Considerable quantities of this ore are shipped to Swansea, (in Wales.) p. 317. The percentage of copper in the ores from these claims varies with the care taken in selecting. From ten to fifty per cent may be regarded as a profitable range for the ore in shipping quantities. A very considerable quantity will not run over eight per cent. The value of silver is reported to be from twenty to one hundred dollars per ton. P. 318.
The proofs show, by the assay of the ores of the mines in question, a greater percentage of copper and silver than these, besides eleven dollars in gold to the ton, so that as a speculation, which all such purchases are, they were worthy the attention of men of capital, eager for sudden and great wealth.
In this region is the celebrated “Emma” mine, one of the most remarkable deposits of argentiferous ore ever opened. Of it he observes, without any well marked croppings, there was nothing on the surface to indicate the presence of such a mass of ore, except a slight discoloration of the limestone, and a few ferruginous streaks visible in the face of a cut made for starting the shaft. P. 321.
Mr. Barr need not have been discouraged when, in October, on his return to the mines, which had been improperly worked, by “the rock stained by carbonate of copper and chloride of silver,” which he observed. Hicks, the experienced foreman, however, was not discouraged, but as Barr and his associates had, by their shares, a controlling influence, the works were injudiciously abandoned. But this does not affect appellant’s claim nor determine his rights, as we think he has maintained, by proof, all material statements made by him, and which were confirmed by the report of the committee on which, we are bound to believe, appellee acted.
These mines, like all others, were sold on the appearance —on the prospects, as they appeared to Camp and Barr when they visited them in July, 1873. Like an oil well flowing ten or more barrels in twenty-four hours, encouraging the hope it would flow one hundred or more in the same time, and so continue, but is exhausted in a few days,. no reason for a cancellation of a contract for its sale can possibly exist. So with a copper mine, or any other mine.
These parties may have made a bad speculation, but as this court said, in Walker v. Hough, 59 Ill. 375, to justify a court in rescinding a contract executed by both parties, on the ground that one of the parties was induced to enter into it through fraud practiced by the other party, the testimony must be of the strongest and most cogent character, and the case a clear one. Appellee may be a loser by engaging in this speculation, but he did so uninfluenced, as we believe, by any misrepresentations of appellant. It is not for every losing bargain a court of equity will interpose to relieve.
The decree of the circuit court is reversed and the cause remanded. Decree reversed.