(After stating the case.) If a vendor of goods is drawn in to part with his property by fraudulent misrepresentation or concealment of a fact material to the contract and operating an inducement thereto, and such as a man of ordinary sagacity might reasonably rely on and be influenced by, the sale is voidable, and the vendor has the option to affirm the sale and sue for the price, or hold it null and sue for the goods in specie, as against the purchaser or a stranger holding without valuable consideration or with notice of the’ fraud. Benjamin on Sales, 342; Story on Sales, § 165; Bigelow on Fraud, § 2.
■ The plaintiffs urged on the trial that they entered into the contract and forwarded the goods, believing that White was solvent and intended to make payment, and so believed from the representation in words and action of the defend-apt at the time of the contract; whereas in truth and in fact he was entirely insolvent and well knew it, and yet concealed the fact and had bought the goods with the fraud*283ulent intent never to pay for the same, but to appropriate them to his use by going into bankruptcy and having the goods, together with his other property, set apart to him as an exemption under state law and the bankrupt act.
The defendant was not bound to disclose his pecuniary condition at the time of the sale if not inquired into, nor would that alone or in connection with a preconceived purpose never to pay for the goods be sufficient, although very reprehensible in White, of themselves to make the contract voidable at the option of the plaintiffs. But besides these elements of fraud there was evidence that when asked in regard to his financial condition he withheld information and gave plaintiffs to confide in his solvency by agreeing to pay on short time, and by artfully diverting inquiry from the neighborhood to merchants in a foreign place.
The goods arrived at Charlotte the 23d of June, w'ere taken out of the depot on the 24th under defendant’s order by one Black, and stored in a cellar, the key to which defendant kept. Next day he went to Greensboro to go into bankruptcy, and on the 26th he was adjudicated a bankrupt, and these facts with his failure to disclose his condition when inquired of, and a suggestion of references at a distance, constitute strong evidence of the fraudulent intent on which the goods were obtained, and if so found by the jury, warranted the plaintiffs .to .reclaim the property.
The jury under the issue put to them as to the ownership and right of property at the commencement of the action having responded under the evidence adduced and the instructions of the court as to the law'that the property belonged to the plaintiffs, the verdict and judgment must stand, unless there was error in the court below in the admission of evidence against the objection of the defendant or in the refusal of the instructions prayed, and we will now consider them in. their order.
1. The plaintiffs offered in evidence the different judg*284ments obtained in a justice’s court against the defendant, and therein the assignment of the defendant’s property as an exemption covering all he had except a few dollars, and on objection it was admitted: We think it was admissible for the two-fold purpose to show the undisclosed insolvency at the time of the contract, and also as bearing on the fraudulent intent with which the purchase was made.
2. Counsel of plaintiffs began to comment on the failure of defendant to introduce himself as a witness and defendant objected: If there be anything in the objection, it was promptly restrained by His Honor at the time, and the jury were further cautioned in the judge’s charge and there is no ground of complaint on this ground.
3. Plaintiff’s counsel was allowed in his address to the jury to comment on defendant’s going into bankruptcy and defendant objected : It was a proper subject of comment as showing insolvency, and as indicating the intent in the purchase of the goods so recently before, never to pay for them.
The defendant asked two instructions, in substance, that insolvency of defendant alone would not make his title defeasible at the option of the plaintiffs, and that although White was insolvent at the purchase yet if the jury believe the witness, Marsh, the title passed and there was no evidence that plaintiffs had any title at the institution of the suit. His Honor refused to give them in the form in which they were asked and we think he did not err in refusing.
The defendant’s first request was as to the legal effect of insolvency alone to authorize the plaintiffs to hold the sale null and reclaim the property, and His Honor’s duty was not to declare the law on a single selected fact, but to charge the law on the case as it was in reference to the whole facts as the jury might find them, and there was therefore no error in the refusal of this specific request, inasmuch as in his general charge he distinctly directed the jury that insolvency alone would not authorize the finding of a verdict in favor *285of the plaintiffs. As to the second request, to-wit, that the title having passed to White by the delivery. of the goods, there was no evidence to show that the plaintiffs' had any title at the institution of the suit, it was not error to refuse, it, because there was evidence of the fraud alleged fit to be submitted to the jury, and the same if found to be true did authorize plaintiffs to reclaim their property and did revest the title in them.
No Error. Affirmed.