Opinion by
Elmer Abrams and Ethel Abrams, his wife, owned a property at 2512 North 32nd Street in the City of Philadelphia. Eugene Crown and Harold J. Lowenthal, trading as Lowenthal and Company, were real estate brokers, and were also erecting houses under the name of Crown Construction Company. On January 11, 1952, Abrams and his wife entered into a written agreement to purchase a house at 7602 Woodbine Avenue, for the sum of $17,990, and made a total cash deposit of $2,000. Contending that the sale of 2512 North 32nd Street was a condition precedent, and that a provision to that effect had been fraudently omitted from the writing, Abrams and his wife filed a complaint in equity praying that the agreement be can-celled and that Crown and Lowenthal be directed to return the deposit. After taking testimony as Chancellor, Judge Beimel filed an adjudication granting the prayer of the complaint. The Court en banc dismissed exceptions and entered a final decree “that defendants pay plaintiffs the sum of $2,000 with interest”. This appeal followed.
A Chancellor’s findings of fact, supported by adequate evidence and confirmed by the Court en banc, are conclusive on appeal:
Wortex Mills v. Textile Workers Union,
Appellants first contehd that “the Court erred in finding fraud where there was no proof of fraud”. While we agree that fraud must be clearly proved and is never presumed, see
Davis v. Carbon County,
It is argued that there was no misstatement of an existing material fact. See
Devers v. Sollenberger,
*411
Appellants argue “that fraudulent representations are not actionable unless the hearer was justified in relying on them in the exercise of common prudence and diligence”. See
Emery v. Third National Bank of Pittsburgh,
Appellants’ second and final contention is that the “court erred in permitting slight parol evidence to vary a written agreement in the absence of proof of fraud”. But it is well settled that, in a suit to rescind a contract, the parol evidence rule does not prevent proof of the misrepresentation of a material fact:
LaCourse v. Kiesel,
Appellants rely principally on
Bessen Bros., Inc. v. Brooks,
Decree affirmed.
