It is obvious that this court cannot by its decree require the specific performance of a contract of sale which has been made by a trustee if by the terms of the trust the trustee had no power to do what he contracted to do; in such circumstances a trustee will not be compelled to commit a breach of his trust. Repetto v. Baylor, 61 N. J. Eq. 501, 506. In Repetto v. Baylor, supra, it is also held that a mere power to sell does not include any power to arrange terms of postponed payment of price, or to accept a mortgage or anything else than money in satisfaction of it. If the principles defined in Repetto v. Baylor are here followed, it is clear that no relief can be afforded complainant in this case, for, by the terms of the contract here sought to be enforced, a postponed payment of more than one-half of the purchase price is provided for and a second mortgage on the premises conveyed is contemplated to secure such postponed payment.
With the power of sale here involved there is added the power “to invest-the proceeds,” but this added power cannot be made the basis of a decree herein, for, if the acceptance of a second mortgage on the property sold to secure the payment of a part of the purchase price is regarded as an investment of a part of the proceeds of sale, such an investment is proposed to secure in *69a manner not authorized by our Orphans Court act (3 Comp. Stat. p. 3864 § 137); the trustee cannot be properly required by decree of this court to make such an investment.
It is urged in behalf of complainant that Repetto v. Baylor, supra, is not in harmony with the earlier case of Woodruff v. Lounsberry, 40 N. J. Eq. 545. In that case a will authorized and directed executors to sell and convey real estate and to invest the proceeds thereof upon first bond and mortgage on property worth double the amount or in stocks or bonds of the United States or the State of New Jersey, and pay the income to testator’s widow. The executors sold certain real estate at a good price and accepted in payment forty per cent, cash and purchase-money mortgages — first liens — to secure the sixty per cent, deferred payments. Losses having been sustained on these mortgages, the question before the court was whether the executors should be compelled to make good these losses. It will be observed that*the mortgages accepted by the executors were in amount the percentage of value of the mortgaged premises authorized by the Orphans Court act. In determining that the executors should not be charged the losses, the learned ordinary said: “Although the executors were, by the will, directed to invest the proceeds of the sale of the property upon first bond and mortgage of property worth twice the amount invested, or in stocks or bonds of the United States, or of this state, it would not be just to hold them bound by that provision in taking mortgages for part of the purchase-money of the property. Those mortgages were not taken as an investment of proceeds of sales, but to secure the payment of part of the price at which the property was sold. They were themselves proceeds of sales. In taking the mortgages for which the accountant asks allowance, the executors appear to have acted in good faith and for the best interest of the estate. They, therefore, ought not to be charged with them.”
It is, therefore, insisted in behalf of complainant that Woodruff v. Lounsberry recognizes a power to sell as including a power to postpone payments of the purchase price for a period subsequent to the sale, and also determines that the acceptance of a *70purchase-money mortgage for a part of the purchase price is not to be regarded as an exercise of the power of investment. I am unable to adopt that view. In Woodruff v. Lounsberry the primary inquiry was whether under the special circumstances of that case the executor should be compelled to bear the loss which had arisen from shrinkage of the value of the tracts of land on which he had taken purchase-money mortgages. The learned chancellor points out with clearness and emphasis that the sales had been made at good prices and thát the purchase-money mortgages taken were in amount but sixty per cent, of the values' of the laaid covered by them, and that the executors had acted in good faith and for the best interest of the estate; he accordingly held that although the will limited mortgage investments to fifty per cent, of the value of the land, it would not be just to hold the executors in the circumstances stated. In Wms. Ex. 1630, it is laid down as a general rule adopted by the courts in suits to establish liability of executors-for breach of trust .duties, that while care must be taken to guard against an abuse of their trust, yet, in order' not to deter persons from undertaking these offices, the court is extremely liberal in making every possible allowance, and cautious not to hold'executors and administrators liable upon slight grounds. In Perrine v. Vreeland, 33 N. J. Eq. 102; S. C. affirmed, 33 N. J. Eq. 596, an executor, acting in good faith and under advise of'counsel, retained a'fund after it was payable to one who was entitled to it by the will, and in good faith invested the fund, after the time when it should have been by him paid over, in a mortgage on property then worth more than three times the amount of the loan, but which property so depreciated in value that the executor was compelled to buy it in upon foreclosure. In a suit to charge the executor with the loss, it was held that, notwithstanding his breach of trust duties, he should not be charged, but should be allowed to turn over the land in lieu of the fund. It may well be, as suggested in Woodruff v. Lounsberry, that in a suit in which the primary issue is whether an executor shall be made personally liable for losses sustained a purchase-money mortgage should not be regarded as so clearly an unauthorized investment as to justify an imposition of personal liability based on a breach of trust duties, and in like cir*71cumstances a postponement of payment of purchase price under a mere power of sale may not be deemed adequate to impose personal liability for loss. But in a suit for specific performance of a contract of sale made by an executor the primary inquiry is whether the contract is one which the executor had power to make and which a court of equity should compel him to specifically perform; before that form of relief should be administered both these inquiries must be clearly answered in the affirmative.
As already stated, in Repetto v. Baylor, supra, this court is committed to the view that a mere power of sale does not include any power to arrange terms of postponed payments of price, or to accept a mortgage or anything else than money in satisfaction of it. If the added power to invest proceeds of sale justifies the arrangement of postponed payments secured by a purchase-money mortgage, it is necessarily because the purchase-money mortgage is in the nature of an investment.
The second mortgage, in which the funds of this estate are proposed to be in effect invested, is $24,000 in amount, and is' to be second in lien to a mortgage of $16,000. The total proposed purchase price is $45,000. This makes the combined encumbrances $40,000, or eight-ninths of the entire purchase price. The testimony at the hearing disclosed that $16,000 was the largest amount that could be procured as a loan on first mortgage security. This court is therefore asked to compel this executrix, in effect, to invest $24,000 of trust money in a second mortgage (subject to a prior lien of $16,000) on'a property on which $16,000 was the utmost amount that any moneyed concern was willing to invest on first mortgage security. It is clear that no court would advise such an investment of trust fund, and the cestuis que trust, whose interests in the transaction are paramount, are not made parties to the bill. In such circumstances, specific performance should not be decreed even though the contract of the trustee be deemed within his powers; complainant should be left to his remedy at law. In 1 Lew. Trusts 423, it is said:
“If trustees, or those who act by their authority, fail in reasonable diligence in inviting competition, or in the management of the sale (as if they contract under circumstances of haste or improvidence, or con*72trive to advance the interests of one party at the expense of another) they will be personally responsible for the loss to the suffering party; and the court, however correct the conduct of the purchaser, will refuse at his instance to compel the specific enforcement of the agreement.”
In the cases cited in the foot-note to the text above quoted will be found numerous cases in which courts of equity have refused this form of relief against a trustee out of considerations alone involving the best interests of the cestuis que trust.
I am obliged to advise a decree denying the relief sought by the bill.