On the 18th day of January, 1868, Milton Holloway filed a bill in the Ashley Circuit Court, on the Chancery side, against Francis Lassiter, Laura and Jones P. Smith, James M. Leach and James Mcrriweather, to subject certain lands, in Ashley count}', to the payment of the purchase money thereof, and to cancel and set aside an outstanding adverse title set up by M’orriweather.
The bill alleged that G. J. Lassiter, in his lifetime, purchased the lands from the complainant, who gave him possession and took his note for $2000. Soon after the sale, Merriweather brought suit, by ejectment, against Lassiter, to recover the lands; claiming title through the Swamp Land office, and a condition was annexed to the note, at the request of Lassiter, and by consent of complainant, that if the.title of the latter should be maintained, the money should be paid; otherwise, if Merriweather’s title prevailed. Merriweather’s suit had been dismissed for want of prosecution, and abandoned by him, and Lassiter had sold the lands to Leach, who had full notice of the non-payment of the purchase money; that C. J. Lassiter has departed this life, and no administration has been had upon his estate; that Francis Lassiter and Laura Smith are his only heirs at law; that Jones P. Smith is the husband of the said Laura, and that all the defendants are non-residents of the State.
Notice was duly had on all the defendants, and at the-term of the Ashley Circuit Court a decree, pro confesso, was taken-against Leach and Mcrriweatlier. The other defendants appeared and demurred to the bill for want of equity and for multifariousness.
At this stage of the proceedings, the records of the court wore destroyed by fire, and on the 2d of August 1869, Iloiloway having departed this life, his administrator, 'William Turner, filed a petition setting out all tlie above facts, and asked that tlie cause be reinstated.- -
The record shows no service on the defendants in the petition, but the written consent of Laura and Iones P. Smith, to reinstate, is filed.
At the March term, 1870, John Sumner and John W. Van Gilder presented their petition to the court to be made defendants, alleging that they were the then owners of the land. The court granted the petition.
At the Eall term, 1871, tlie court sustained the demurrer of Francis Lassiter and the Smiths interposed prior to the'destruction of the record, and gave leave to Turner to amend-his bill.
At the spring term, 1872, the amended bill was filed. From the nature of the amendments, it is evident that the demurrer was sustained on the ground that the bill was multifarious, from the fact that the name of Morriwoathor, as defendant, is stricken out; also the prayer for relief against his title. With these exceptions, the bill alleges the same facts as the original, with somewhat more circumstantial particularity. To the amended bill, Sumner and Van Gilder demurred for want of equity, and because no deed was tendered before the suit was brought.
The court sustained the demurrer and dismissed the bill, and Turner appealed.
The record shows the suit to have been improperly reinstated. No notice- appeal’s to have been given of the petition to reinstate, as required by law: Gould’s Digest, Chap. 143, Sec. 5. The agreement of the Smiths to reinstate could not bind the other defendants and it was necessary, before the court could properly proceed, that all the defendants should been brought in. It is evident, therefore, that for this error, which affects every subsequent step taken, in the cause, the decree of the court must be reversed. But, inasmuch as the appellant may properly reinstate his case, in order that he may have it properly adjudicated, in the court below, without again bringing it here, we will proceed to the examination of the subsequent questions presented in the record.
If the defendants had all been in court, the demurrer to the' original bill might properly be sustained, for the settlement of the dispute between Holloway and Merriwoathor, as to the adverse title of the latter, ivas wholly independent of and unconnected with the cause here at issue. But it was certainly incumbent on the administrator, inasmuch as the legal title to the land ivas in the heirs of Holloway, to bring them before the court to enable it to decree a deed, if such step became necessary to the proper determination of the case.
The.court erred in letting in Sumner and Van Gilder to defend upon the showing made in their petition. They base their right to come in simply upon the ground that they are the present owners of the land. For aught thatappears hi the record, tliei' may claim title through Merriwcather; and to allow them to come in upon this petition, is, in effect, to reinstate the error which was pointed, out by the demurrer to the original bill, and cured by the amendments thereto.
Sumner and Van Gilder demur to the amended bill, because no deed was tendered before suit ivas brought. • If they had been in court as original defendants, or as holders through Lassiter, and no tender of, or offer to make a deed had been made in the bill, this would have been a substantial objection; but it is evident that they were not the owners of the land at the time Holloway filed his bill, and since, there has arisen an emergency which renders a compliance with the contract, according to its literal terms, impossible.
Holloway is dead, and before a deed can be made by Ms heirs, the aid of a court must be invoked. To require a deed to be tendered, iu such a case, before suit was brought, would be to require a manifest impossibility. And so where the vendor desires to subject the land to the payment of the purchase money, but the vendee is a non-resident of the State, or any other substantial reason which would render a tender impossible or fraught with doubt as to whom it should be made.
Where, the holder of a note, given for the purchase money of real estate, desires to subject the land to its payment, and the right to do so depends upon the making and delivery of a deed to the land to' the vendee, he must tender a deed with his bill, or, if the tender is impossible or impracticable, he must offer to make it, when ascertained, by the court, to whom the santo should be made; or if the disability exists upon the part of the vendor to make the deed, when such disability is removed by the court.
There is no appearance, in the record, of any order b" the court, reinstating the cause. The petition to reinstate is a suit, in court, upon which there must be a determination and judgment; until this is done, the court canuot proceed with any question touching the original cause.
The decree of the Circuit Court is reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to allow the appellee, if ho so deems, to reinstate the causo and amend his bill.