after stating tbe case: We. find not tbe slightest testimony in tbe record tending to show any fraud or deceit on tbe part of tbe defendant. It is not sufficient merely to charge fraud. Yituperative epithets do not prove it, but tbe party who alleges any corruption in tbe making or execution of a contract must establish bis allegation by evidence, not beyond a reasonable doubt, nor even by clear and convincing proof, but by a preponderance of tbe testimony and to tbe satisfaction of tbe jury. There being no fraud shown by tbe plaintiff, tbe case depends for its just decision upon tbe ordinary principles applicable to such contracts. It was placed within tbe power of the plaintiff to inspect tbe building as tbe work progressed and, moreover,' it was given tbe authority to appoint tbe committee of inspection itself. Tbe evidence shows tbat tbe county commissioners bad ample opportunity to make tbe inspection without any interference or obstruction by tbe plaintiff, and if it failed to do so tbe fault must be imputed to tbe county and not to tbe plaintiff.
We do not understand tbat the board of commissioners who made tbe contract and wei’e in office when tbe courthouse was being built, make any complaint against tbe contractors, who, so far as appears in this case, were free from any blame. We must do them tbe justice to say tbat tbe proof acquits them of any charge involving misconduct on their part. On tbe contrary, they seem to have dealt leniently with tbe county, and they endeavored, in all respects, to comply with their contract. At least, there is no evidence sufficient to show tbe contrary. .
*27 We cannot better express our own views of the law in this case than to quote substantially from the opinion of the Court in Pauley Mfg. Co. v. Hemphill County, C. C. A., 608, changing the names or titles of the parties to adapt the ruling to the precise facts of this ease. The Court says: “The case as presented for our judgment shows that the defendants were nonresidents, acting entirely through their agent, and the provision in the contract 'which places it in the power of the plaintiff to select its own committee to act as inspectors during the construction of the building was honestly carried out in accordance with the terms of the agreement, has been of the greatest protection to both the contracting parties, and would appear to be a wise and prudent protection ■ in the plan of said work, the actual performance of which must necessarily be delegated to the representatives of each and could not be scrutinized by the principals of either. Every opportunity, in reason, was given to the plaintiff to secure good material and work, and the defendant was, at the same time, protected from the faults of it and enabled to correct them, and also from any complaints that might be subsequently made too late to determine their truth or falsity. The action of said arbitrator or supervisor, in the absence of any complaint made at the time, and in the manner provided in the contract, is prima facie evidence of compliance with the contract, and should be conclusive except upon clear and distinct proof.”
That case is in point with the one under consideration and clearly sets forth the true principle which the courts apply with respect to such a contract as is now under consideration. This case is also in line with the rulings of the courts in the following cases: Railway Company v. March, 114 U. S., 549; Kihlberg v. U. S., 97 U. S., 398; Railway Company v. Price, 138 U. S., 185.
The plaintiff’s alleged right-to recover on the ground that its building committee and its commissioners were incompetent and ignorant; is of no consequence in determining this case upon its merits, unless it had been shown by affirmative proof that the contractor knowingly and deliberately took advantage of said incompetency and ignorance to deceive and mislead, and thereby did deceive and mislead them. But as no such evidence was offered and no evidence of any kind even tending to show that such advantage was taken by the contractor, it is too late now for the plaintiff to complain of the incompetency of its commissioners or of the committee selected by them. The contract required the plaintiff to select a competent committee, capable, of course, of passing upon the character of the material and workmanship. The commissioners assumed the duties in this *28respect wbicb the contract laid upon them by mutual agreement, and it was their plain duty to know, as they could have known, before they selected such committee, that it would be qualified to discharge the duties which the contract required of it. The commissioners not only owed it to themselves to select nothing but a competent committee, but they owed it to the county and to the contractor; and if they did not perform this duty, the contractor is not to be charged with” a breach of the contract. As it now appears that the contractor exercised no influence over the commissioners in the selection of the committee or in the discharge of its duties, and as it further appears from the evidence that the committee could have seen and known all the defects mentioned in the testimony and alleged in the complaint, if there was any breach of the contract in any particular, it was a failure of duty on the part of the county and not of the contractor, in thus selecting a committee contrary to the provisions of the contract. The county cannot escape the consequences of any ineompetency or neglect of duty on the part of said commissioners or committee, in the absence of fraud, even though it was clearly established that such ineompetency existed.
In the case of Railway Company v. Price, 138 U. S., 185, already cited, the Court said: “The mere ineompetency or mere neglect of the engineer does not meet the requirements of the case, unless such engineer or inspector made such gross errors as to imply bad faith. We are of the opinion that the ultimate facts do not authorize the railroad company to go behind the estimates from time to time by its division engineer, which were approved and certified by the assistant engineer and chief engineer. Within a reasonable interpretation of the contract the last monthly estimates of the work assessed, followed by the acceptance by the company of the whole work, was a certificate of complete performance entitling the plaintiff to be paid in full according with ‘the terms of the contract.”
In Coal and Iron Co. v. Gordon, 151 U. S., 285, the Court substantially said: It is difficult to say what effect should be given an acceptance of work by the superintendent of it, if not to foreclose the parties from thereafter claiming that the contract had not been performed according to its terms. It would appear from the report and the recitals in the final decree of the court, that the main contest was over the construction of a certain guaranty in the contract that all the work was to be done in good workmanlike manner and of suitable material, and each part to be adequate, in design, strength, capacity and workmanship, for the purposes for which it was intended; that the superintendent should pass upon the work every two weeks, and *29if to Ms satisfaction, it should be finally accepted by the company, so far as done; but if not in compliance with the contract and to Ms satisfaction, as to the quality of tbe material and character of workmanship, the commissioners agreed to make it so as rapidly as possible.
The evidence in that case showed that the superintendent of the company made an inspection and supervised the work from time to time and approved it when, in his judgment, it was in compliance with the contract. The contractor claimed to have finished the work on 8 August, 1888, and requested its final acceptance. The president of the Sheffield and Birmingham Coal and Iron Railway Company referred the matter of final acceptance to the said superintendent, who on 18 August accepted in writing the work as completed, according to the terms of the contract. The Court held that as the work was inspected by .weekly visits as it progressed, and as the whole was finally accepted on the completion of the contract, such acceptance, in the absence of fraud or mistake on the part of the superintendent, was conclusive.
The same principle is recognized in the case of Sweeny v. U. S., 109 U. S., 618. In the contract which is the foundation of this suit, there is a clause providing for the appointment of a committee to pass upon certain matters of vital interest to the parties. We are, therefore, to presume, from the terms of the contract, that both parties considered the possibilities of dispute arising between them in reference to the execution of the contract, and it is to be presumed that neither thought of the possibility that the committee might err in its determination of such matters. The parties further considered that the interests of neither party should be put in peril by disputes as to any of the matters covered by their agreement, or in reference to the terms of their agreement, or in reference to the quantity of work to be done under it, or the compensation which the plaintiff might be entitled to demand for the work and material furnished by him.
The law does not afford relief to one who suffers by not using the ordinary means of information, whether his neglect be attributed to indifference or credulity; nor will industrious activity in other directions, to the neglect of such means, be of any avail. Andrus v. Smelting and Refining Co., 130 U. S., 643.
If the means of investigation and verification be at hand, and the attention of the party receiving the representations be drawn to them, the circumstances of the case may be such as to make it incumbent on a court of justice to impute to him a knowledge of the result,' which, upon due inquiry, he ought to have ob*30tained, and thus tbe notion of reliance on tbe representations made to bim may be excluded. Farrar v. Churchill, 135 U. S., 616.
Our cases are in perfect accord' witb those decisions and tbe great weight of authority upon tbe important question now before us. ¥0 said in Eagin v. Newsom, 121 N. C., 22: “It is a very reasonable principle that tbe purchaser should not be entitled to an action of deceit if be may readily inform himself as to tbe truth of tbe facts which are misrepresented.” See, also, Cash Register Co. v. Townsend, 137 N. C., 658; Lytle v. Bird, 48 N. C., 225; Saunders v. Hatterman, 24 N. C., 32. The case of Williamson v. Holt, 147 N. C., 524, is directly in point upon the general question.
A person cannot take advantage of his own wrong, is a maxim of the law; but it also enforces that other rule, which is quite as well established, that the court will not constitute itself a. guardian of persons of mature age and ordinary intelligence, protecting them against the result of their own negligence; and that it will not furnish a person a remedy for a wrong where he cannot possibly prove a legal claim for damage without showing that his own negligence intervened between the act of the alleged wrongdoer and the result complained of, and was the real efficient cause of the injury. Bostwick v. Insurance Co., 67 L. R. A., 724. To the same effect are Slaughter v. Gerson, 80 U. S., 379; Development Co. v. Silver, 125 U. S., 259. The recent decision in Burgin v. Smith, 151 N. C., 561, discusses all the questions raised in this case, and the Court ruled adversely to the plaintiff upon every one of them. If anything, this case is much stronger against the plaintiff than was that case. The two cases are, at least, substantially the same, and we do not hesitate to follow our decision in that case.
Affirmed.