This was an action on a promissory note in which the plaintiff was given a judgment to the effect that the “court finds that the allegations contained in said petition are true; that the defendants are indebted to the plaintiff in their representative capacity as trustees of the Methodist Episcopal Church (colored) of Carthage, Missouri, on the note sued on and executed to the plaintiff by their predecessors in said trust, in the sum of $166.52, debt and damages, and that the plaintiff is entitled to recover that amount from the defendants in their said representative capacity. It is therefore considered and adjudged by the court that the plaintiff have and recover of and from the defendants in their representative capacity as aforesaid the sum of one hundred and sixty-six dollars and fifty-two cents, the debt and damages found and assessed by the court, with interest thereon from this date until paid, at the rate of ten per cent *479per annum, together with the costs of this suit, to be satisfied out of the property of said church association and that execution issue therefor.” And on which an execution was issued ■and levied on certain real property as that of the defendants.
The defendants filed a motion to quash it on the ground that the part of said judgment authorizing a special execution against the property of the society was void, since the court had no jurisdiction of all or any of its members, none of them having been made parties to the suit or served with process. This motion was by the court sustained, and judgment given accordingly, and plaintiff appealed.
The appeal has brought before us for review nothing but the record proper in the case, from which it appears that the judgment is but a general judgment in an action at law. It is true that there is a clause therein ordering the amount of the plaintiff’s debt, damages and costs, to be satisfied out of the property of the said society, and that execution issue therefor, but this is in effect no more than a judgment that plaintiff have and recover against defendants in their representative capacity the debt, damages and costs found by it and have thereof execution. As no particular property is described in the special clause of said execution, nothing was therein commanded to be done that would not be included in the command of a general execution. The judgment itself did not order that the plaintiff’s debt be satisfied out of any particular property, but out of any property of the said society which was held by the defendants in their capacity. The judgment and the execution, which is in conformity to it, were in their effect general and not special.
' There is nothing in the record which tends to show that the issue and levy of the writ was an abuse of the final process of the court. Where it is made to appear that a levy has been made on property not subject to sale, the levy will be quashed. Ryan v. Bradbury, 89 Mo. App. 665; Catron v. Lafayette *480County, 125 Mo. 67. But nothing of this kind is disclosed by the present record.
It is suggested that the owners of property out of which the judgment was ordered to' be satisfied, were not parties to this action, and had not had their day in court, and therefore such judgment was void. The judgment was one in personam and not in rem. It can not be said that the judgment directs that it be satisfied out of any specific property belonging to strangers to it. There is nothing before us to show that the trustees were not the only necessary parties, or that requires us to look beyond them. The discipline of the society is not before us, nor is there anything tending to show that the individual members of the society have any interest in the property of the society, the legal title of which is in the defendants in their quality as trustees, which would pass by reason of any sale under the execution. Nor can we see that it would be an abuse of the final process of the court to permit the enforcement of the execution.
If the members of the society were strangers to the judgment, then an execution sale would not pass their interest in the property of the society, beyond that held in the trustees, but whether or not they have any such interest is a question we need not inquire into in a proceeding of this kind.
It has always been a rule of equity practice where the cesiuis que trustent are numerous and it would be oppressive and inconvenient to compel plaintiff to make them all parties, one or more may be sued as representing the aggregate body. Bushong v. Taylor, 82 Mo. 660. But it is believed that no ease can be found which authorizes this practice in actions at law except where there is a statute authorizing it to be done. Lumber Co. v. Oliver, 65 Mo. App. 435.
No sufficient reason has been seen for quashing the execution, and accordingly the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.
All concur.