after stating the case: The verdict, when considered in connection with the allegations and the admissions and testimony, establishes the proposition that, under a contract to convey the pine, poplar and cypress timber on the tract which was situated on the south side of Cooper Swamp, as far as the muck and mire comes, the plaintiff has been induced by fraud and deceit to convey to defendant company the timber described in the deed, as follows: “All the pine, oak, ash, cypress and poplar timber, of and above the size of twelve inches in diameter on the stump when cut, in and upon the following described tracts of land, situated in Jamesville Township, in the aforesaid county of Martin, adjoining the lands of S. L. Wallace, H. M. Modlin and others, and known as the Ilarmon-Modlin tract, containing forty-two acres, more or less, all the pine, poplar and cypress timber on said land on the southern side of Cooper Swamp and in said swamp and ravines.” And the damage fixed at $290.
*222Defendant objected to tbe validity of this recovery, for tbe reason, chiefly, that by correct interpretation tbe deed only conveys to tbe defendant tbe timber specified in tbe contract, and on tbe principle that tbe latter part of the description, “all tbe pine, poplar and cypress timber on said land, on tbe southern side of Cooper Swamp,” being more specific, will control tbe former and more general description, “all tbe pine, oak, ash, cypress and poplar timber on said tract,” and so restrict the timber conveyed to that which was actually embraced within the terms of the contract, citing Peebles v. Graham, 128 N. C., 220. The principle contended for by tbe defendant is well recognized, but we do not think its correct application to tbe terms of the deed will sustain the position of defendant. Conceding that tbe latter part of tbe description is more specific, it would only control tbe former to tbe extent required to reconcile tbe two, and in subordination to the principle that all the clauses of the deed should be given effect as far as they can be harmonized by fair and reasonable interpretation. Jones v. Casually Co., 140 N. C., 265. To apply, therefore, both of these rules of construction, we think it clear that in tbe instrument now before us the former and more general clause conveyed to tbe grantee all tbe pine, oak, ash, cypress and poplar, of tbe dimensions specified, within tbe boundaries of tbe entire ITarmon-Modlin 42-aere tract, except as to that portion of said timber lying on the south side of Cooper Swamp, and as to that, only the pine, poplar and cypress timber was passed, allowing the latter and more specific description to limit the kind of timber conveyed on tbe portion of the tract south of tbe swamp, leaving out tbe oak and ash. This being tbe true significance of the deed, the plaintiff has been wrongfully deprived of all of bis timber in excess of that described in tbe original contract, which was only tbe “pine, cypress and poplar within that portion of the tract on the south side of Cooper Swamp, as far as the muck and mire ran.” It is right, therefore, on tbe issue as to defend*223ant’s responsibility, tbat the verdict be sustained, for it is well established that one who has been induced .to convey his property by fraud and deceit has an election of remedies, and may either bring an action to set aside the conveyance, unless the property has passed into ownership of a purchaser for value and without notice (Summers v. Manufacturing Co., 143 N. C., 102), or he may allow the conveyance to stand, and sue to recover damages for the pecuniary injury inflicted upon him by the fraud. May v. Loomis, 140 N. C., 350. And it is further held that retaining the purchase price is not such a ratification of the contract as prevents the injured party from maintaining his action for damages to recover for the injury over and above the amount already received under the contract. Oye., Vol. XX, p. 91; Andrews v. Jackson, 168 Mass., 266; Shimabarger v. Shelton el al., 41 Mo. App., 147. As said in Oyc., supra, “As indicated above, a return, of an offer to return, what plaintiff has received under the contract, induced by the fraud, is not a condition precedent to his maintaining an action for deceit, since he is entitled to the benefit of his contract, plus the damage caused by the fraud,” and the general principles sustaining plaintiff’s right to recover are well stated in the cases of Sprinkle v. Wellborn, 140 N. C., 163; Griffin v. Lumber Co., 140 N. C., 514.
An effort is made to support the interpretation of the deed insisted on by defendant by construing the deed and option together, using the option in aid of the description contained in the deed. It is familiar learning, however, that user of the option for such purpose is not permissible. The deed now stands alone as embodying the contract between the parties. It makes no reference to the option for description, or for any other purpose, and, while this last paper is competent evidence on the question of fraud, and to show whether or not the deed complies with the option, the authorities are clear that the paper is not relevant in aid of the description in the deed, and any attempt to use it for such purpose would, there*224fore, be improper. Farthing v. Rochelle, 131 N. C., 563. Again, it is contended, that a great wrong has been done defendant in this trial, and a verdict has been rendered fixing-it with a gross fraud, without any sufficient evidence to support it; but we find nothing either in the record or the testimony to justify this position. It appears that plaintiff gave an option at the price of $60 to sell to the defendant company the pine, cypress and poplar timber in the swamp and ravine, “as far as the muck .and mire comes,” on a tract of land consisting of about seven acres of the land known as the Harmon-Modlin tract, on the eastern side of the Washington and Jamesville Road and the southern side of Cooper Swamp, and agreed that the company should have five years in which to cut and remove the same. By the representation of the defendant’s agent plaintiff was induced to sign and deliver a deed conveying to the defendant all the june, oak, 'ash, cypress and poplar timber upon the entire tract of land known as the Harmon-Modlin tract, containing forty-two acres, more or less, all the pine, poplar and cypress timber on such land on the southern side of Cooper Swamp and in said swamp and ravines, being the land conveyed to said Modlin, as per record in Martin County, by deed dated 18 February, 1898, giving-ten years in which to remove it. Speaking of the transaction by which this result was effected, the plaintiff testified as follows: “The highland part of the Harmon-Modlin tract is covered with pine, oak and poplar timber. It is good timber. There is pine, ash, poplar and cypress timber in the swamp. None of the timber has ever been cut. Mr. Arthur Hardison came to my house to buy my timber for the company. I gave him an option on the swamp timber as far up as the muck and mire goes. I did not sell him any of the highland timber. He was to cut timber down to twelve inches in diameter at the stump in the swamp and ravines. I signed the option — my wife and I. Hardison gave it to Mr. Jordan. I have seen it since. Mr. Jordan read it to me, at his home in Beaufort *225County, some weeks before tbe suit was brought. In 1905 was the last time I saw the option, just before I brought this suit. It was a thirty-day option. Mr. Jordan came with a deed at the end of the thirty days. Mr. Jordan said the deed was exactly like the option — that it was written, word for word, like the option. I asked him to read the deed over to me. lie said: ‘It is no use reading the deed; it is exactly like the option, and is all right.’ I cannot read, and Mr. Jordan knew that I could not read or write. I sold the timber for five years in the option, and Mr. Jordan said the deed was exactly like the option in every respect. On this statement, and relying on it, I signed the deed — my wife and I signed it — and Mr. Jordan took private examination and paid me $59 in check on the company. One dollar had been paid by Hardison when the option was taken. It is admitted that the defendant paid $60. Mr. Jordan acted for the defendant.”
Thus it will be seen that plaintiff, as we interpret the deed, who had given an option at the price of $60 to convey the pine, cypress and poplar timber on seven acres of the Judson Harmon land, lying south of the Cooper Swamp, and “as far as the muck and mire runs,” has, by the false representations of the defendant’s agent, been induced to convey all the pine, cypress, poplar, oak and ash on the entire tract, except that part lying south of Cooper Swamp, and all the pine, cypress and poplar south of Cooper Swamp, without limiting this amount by the restriction “as far as the muck and mire runs,” the timber, so conveyed amounting in value to $350, being $290, the amount of damage found by the verdict, plus $60, amount paid under the contract. On the moral aspects of the question there is here, in our opinion, ample evidence to establish willful misrepresentation on the part of defendant’s agent, and to justify the verdict as rendered. If it be suggested that there is no evidence that the agent, Jordan, was aware of the contents of the option, the answer is, that he *226positively asserted that he knew the contents, and that the deed was in exact compliance with the same; and it is well established that one who intentionally and positively asserts a fact to be true of his own knowledge, when he does not know whether it be true or false, is as culpable, in case another is thereby misled or injured, as one who makes an assertion which he knows to be untrue.
It is further urged, in objection to this recovery, that no timber has yet been cut, and may never be, but the law must deal with facts, and not with possibilities, which rest only in suggestion; and, unfortunately for the defendant, it has so dealt with this contract that its mental attitude toward it has ceased to be o'f importance. It has conveyed the timber bought by it to the Eennis-Simmons Lumber Company by deed containing a description exactly similar to its own. This last company is not ,a party to this record, and we are not informed of its purpose. Certain it is, however, that, if our interpretation of this deed be correct, it has a right'to enter upon the plaintiff’s land and cut and appropriate all the timber of the kind and dimensions specified on the entire Judson Harmon tract, to the value o'f $350, when the plaintiff had only agreed to sell $60 worth of timber on seven acres of the property.
This being true, and the result indicated having been brought about by the fraudulent misrepresentations on the part of defendant’s agent, the plaintiff’s right to recover on the main issue comes clearly within the principle so well stated in Griffin v. Lumber Co., 140 N. C., 514: “Where the parties made a contract for the sale of certain timber, reserving a well-defined class of trees, and defendant undertook to reduce the contract to writing, in accordance with its terms, but knowingly included the reserved timber, and falsely represented to plaintiff that said timber was reserved in the deed, and, by means of this false representation, procured the execution of the deed, the plaintiff has a cause of action for *227deceit, and this'is not dependent upon the remqval of the timber.”
Defendant assigns for error, further, that on the issue as to the statute of limitations the Judge below declined to charge, as requested, that the registration of defendant’s deed was in itself such a notice of the alleged fraud as would put the statute in motion for the defendant’s protection and in bar of plaintiff’s claim; but the point has been resolved against the defendant. The statute applicable (Eevisal, sec. 395, sub-sec. 9) provides that actions of the present kind are barred in three years after the discovery by the aggrieved party of the facts constituting the fraud, and, coüstruing this subsection, the Court has decided that the statute commenced to run when the aggrieved party first discovered the facts, or could have discovered them by the exercise of proper effort and reasonable care, and that the registration of the deed, or knowledge of its existence, by which the fraud was accomplished was not of itself sufficient notice of such facts. Peacock v. Barnes, 142 N. C., 215; Stubbs v. Motz, 113 N. C., 458.
There is no error, and the judgment of the lower'court is
Affirmed.