This action was originally brought in equity for the purpose of rescinding a contract of sale or exchange of real estate. The issue was afterwards changed, making it an action to recover damages sustained by the alleged fraud and deceit of the defendant, and asking to *409have the amount of damages so awarded made a vendor’s lien upon the property conveyed by the plaintiffs to the defendant which still remained in the defendant’s hands. The plaintiffs were owners of two hundred and sixty-five acres of farm land and certain town property in Madison County, Iowa, and the defendant was the owner of one hundred and sixty acres of farm land in Scott County, Iowa. ’ They entered into a written agreement on the 30th of January, 1906, whereby the plaintiffs agreed to exchange the farm land and town property to which we have referred for the defendant’s farm in Scott County,. and the written agreement was in the following language so far as material here: “The parties of the first part have this day sold and agreed to convey to the party of the second part the following described real estate [particularly describing the farm land and town property] at and for the agreed price of $16,500, and to receive in exchange therefor the following described property [describing the defendant’s land] at and for the agreed price of $12,800.” All of the property involved in the exchange was incumbered by mortgages, and the contract was to convey subject to such mortgages, and that the plaintiffs and defendant were to assume payment of the mortgages on the land conveyed to them. The transaction was finally closed, and thereafter this action was commenced by the plaintiffs; they alleging in their petition that false and fraudulent representations had been made to them by the defendant as to the quality and value of the Scott County land. The case was finally heard by the trial court without a jury, and a written finding was filed in the case in substance as follows: That at the time the contract was entered into the Scott County land was of the actual value of $9,600 instead of $12,800; that the defendant Selby made false and fraudulent representations as to the character, quality and rental value of said land, which representations were by him at the time known to be untrue; *410and that the plaintiffs were thereby induced to enter into said 'contract 'of exchange"and "to accept a conveyance of the Scott County land at the value agreed upon in the contract. It was further found that "at the time the contract was made the actual value of the lands conveyed by the plaintiffs to the defendant‘Selby was'$10,600, and the actual value of the town property was $4,000; but it was further found that" no fraud was practiced upon Selby by the plaintiffs to induce him to enter into said' contract.The court decreed that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover "from the 1 defendant Selby the difference' between $12,800, the contract price and represented value of the Scott County land, and $9,600, its value at the time of the exchange, - this difference being $3,200, less-the difference between $16,500, the contract price of the real estate conveyed by plaintiffs to the defendant, and $14,600,. its actual value at the-time'of the exchange, this being $1,900; and, in accordance with' this finding, the trial 'court gave thé' plaintiffs judgment against the defendant' Selby for $1,300'.and -established the same as- a vendor’s lien against the town' property that had been- conveyed to- Selby. Both parties ^ have appealed from the judgment. ■ •
The plaintiffs . say that .they are content with: the finding 'of the trial court except as to that part thereof in which the value of the Scott County land is found to be $9,600, and except' as to the finding reducing'the-value of the property traded by the plaintiffs to the defendant from $16,500 to $14,600. - The defendant’s 'appeal is general; he claiming that no fraud or misrepresentation was made relative to the quality of the Scott County land, and claiming further that the price of the several properties named in the contract 'was not their real value,- -but the value- fixed by the parties-, for purposes'Of exchange. The issues in this-case having been tried at law; the finding off the trial court on-’disputed-questions of fact-has the forcé and effect that the finding of a jury would have, and, from a careful *411examination of the 'transcript of the evidence which is before us on certification, we are satisfied that the fact findings of the' trial court have such support in the evideneé' that they- should be allowed to stand' on both the issue of fraud and as to whether the transaction' between the parties was in fact a sale of their respective properties or an exchange thereof. So that the only' real question involved in the cáse is one of law, and. that being whether the transaction was in effect a sale of the respective properties or simply an exchange thereof. If the former, the valúe fixed by the parties would be controlling, and, if the latter," the prices agreed upon would not necessarily be conclusive.
i. Falser representat'ions: TOiuatíon: damages.The' distinction between a sale and • exchange of properties'is stated in Fagan v. Hook, 134 Iowa, 381, to be as follows: ' “If parties definitely settle' upon and agree to the valúe of their respective properties for - the purpose of salé one to the other, no mquiry concerning actual values is permissible, ag ^]10ge are pUt beyond question by their having determined the worth -thereof for themselves, and thereby fixed the measure of damages* in’event‘-of a breach". If, on the other hand, the agreement is a mere trading contract, ' by the terms of which one party is to exchange certain property belonging to him for that of the' other upon or by the payment of the difference, and to this end, and for the purpose solely of accomplishing this result, but not to ascertain their actual válues, estimates are placed on the respective properties, then neither party is bound by ■the values so estimated, and the measure of damages -to be applied is that of quantum meruit. Iñ othér words, the values designated in the agreement to be binding on the parties must appear to have been specified as such, and not as merely incidental to some other purpose not involving the intention of deciding the true worth.” The same rule has been recognized and applied since the Fagan-Hook *412case was decided in Norton v. Hinecker, 137 Iowa, 750, and Bradley v. Hufford, 138 Iowa, 611.
It will be noticed that the written contract in question does no more than recite that tbe price agreed ujion for the respective properties was so much in each case. This is not conclusive and under such a contract the parties may show what the real transaction was, and, as we have heretofore said, we are satisfied from an examination of the evidence that the trial court was fully justified in the finding that the transaction was in fact an exchange of properties at a value fixed thereon for the purpose of ascertaining the difference, rather than for the purpose of fixing the true value.
2. Evidence of value: weight: competency. The plaintiffs further say that the trial court should not have given weight to the testimony of certain witnesses called by the defendant to testify as to the value of the Scott County land, because they were residents of Madison County and not so situated as to be entirely familiar with values in Scott County or with the quality of the land in question. The objection goes to the weight which should be given their testimony, rather than to the competency of the witnesses. The record shows that they were competent to testify on the subject, and the weight of their testimony was for the determination of the trial court.
It is evident that both parties to this transaction inflated the value of their properties for. trading purposes, and that the trial court undertook, and we think did reach a just conclusion as to their relative rights. We therefore think the judgment should be, and it is, affirmed on both appeals. — Affirmed:
SUPPLEMENTAL OPINION.
Per Curiam.*4133. Appeal: ground for rehearing. *412The original opinion treated the case as- one tried at law, while it was in fact tried as an equit*413The error was occasioned by the appellant’s able action. statement in his brief that, before the conclusion of the trial below, he abandoned his action for a rescission of the contract, and by amendment to his petition made the action one to recover damages sustained on account of fraud and deceit. However, it now appears that the case was tried as in equity, and it should have been so treated in the original opinion. The misstatement as to the nature of the action can not, however, affect the result, and hence it furnishes no ground for granting a rehearing. As the opinion indicates, the evidence is ample to support the' finding of the trial court, and our conclusion on original submission was that the case was rightly decided on the evidence. A careful re-examination of the record confirms this conclusion.
4. Interest: allowance. The plaintiff on the original submission suggested in his brief that he should have been allowed interest on the balance found due him from February 3, 1906, the date the exchange of properties, to the date of the decree. No claims for such interest was. made in his pleadings, but notwithstanding this a court of equity may award interest in the final adjustment of the respective claims of the parties, and we think the plaintiff may properly be allowed interest at six percent on $1,300 from the date of the exchange of properties to the date of the decree below, as suggested by him. The original opinion will therefore be modified in this respect, and the plaintiff may have judgment for such interest in this court.
With the modification thus indicated, the opinion will stand, and the petition for a rehearing is denied.