In discussing the rights of a person who has been led to enter into a contract by misrepresentation, the learned author of Halsbury’s Laws of England, in vol. 2.0, par. 1750, says: The right which accrues to the representee, on discovery of the real facts, is, in the first instance, a right of choice or election only. Such a right, when once exercised, is exhausted; whence it follows that, if by express notice, or impliedly by conduct, the representee elects to affirm, he can never afterwards claim to avoid. and cites Clough v. L. & N.W. Ry. (1871) L.R. 7 Ex. 26, at p. 34, 41 L.J. Ex. 17, as his authority, which fully substantiates the foregoing statement. And in par. 1766 of the same volume, the learned author says:
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