This case was before this court at a previous term, and a full statement of the case as it then stood will be found in Bentley et al. v. Barnes, 155 Ala. 659, 47 South. 159. In that case the bill was held to be multifarious.
According to the original bill it was alleged that said Bentley, being the owner of certain real estate, agreed with the complainant, to convey the same to him, if complainant Avould take up certain mortgages thereon; that complainant did take up said mortgages, and was placed *526in possession of said property by said Bentley; but that afterward said Bentley excluded complainant from possession and continued to carry on the turpentine business on said land. Subsequent to the former decision of this court, for the purpose of eliminating the multifarious feature of said bid, the same was amended, by striking out all provisions seeking the settlement and accounting of the partnership of W. R. Barnes & Co., and the bill as it now stands seeks only the specific performance of the contract to convey the property, and, as incident thereto, that said Bentltty be held to be a trustee in invitum of the property, while the complainant was kept out of the possession thereof, and that said Bentley and the Ash-Carson Company, to whom said Bentley had conveyed part of the property with full knowledge, of the interest of complainant therein, be required to pay to the complainant the amount due for proceeds of the property sold and converted while plaintiff was kept out of possession by them. The Naval Stores Company is interested with the complainant in the property, and the bill alleges that said company refused to be made a party complainant to this bill, on which refusal the complainant makes said company a party defendant to the bill.
The first insistence of appellee is that said Naval Stores Company is a necessary party complainant, and that the making of it a party defendant does not satisfy that requirement. A party cannot be made a party complainant without his consent, and when he is a necessary party, and refuses to be made a party complainant, the proper course is to make him a party defendant.— 15 Ency. PI. & Pr. 672, 673, 989, 990; 1 Dan. Oh. Pr. 273.
It is next insisted that the bill as amended is an entire departure from the original- bill, because .the main purpose of-.that, bill was to.settle the.partnership of W. *527R. Barnes & Co. There is no force in this contention. When a demurrer is sustained for multifariousness, it is manifestly the right of the complainant to select which of the purposes of the original bill he will insist on.
• It is next insisted that the bill is without equity, because the contract which it seeks to enforce has been executed. This position is not tenable. The contract related to land, and the fact that, in enforcing his contract, the complainant seeks also to require the defendants to account for that part of the property which has been converted into personal property and disposed of, does not change the nature of the contract. While the payment of the purchase money and the delivery of possession of the property relieves the contract of the statute of frauds, yet the contract is not fully executed, and the complainant has a right to have it- completely executed by the conveyance of the legal title. — Brewer v. Brewer & Sagen, 19 Ala. 481, 488; Arrington v. Porter, 47 Ala. 714, 721; Breitling’s Adm’r v. Clarke & Co., 49 Ala. 450, 452.
Without rehearsing the rules with regard to multifariousness, which were stated in this case when it was before this court at a previous term, Ave hold that the bill as it now appears is not multifarious. The Ash-Oarson Company, by taking an interest in the property with Bentley AAdth full notice, occupies the same position as a trustee in invitum as said Bentley, and it is proper to make all persons through whose hands the proceeds of the property has passed parties defendant. — 22 Encyc. Pl. & Pr. 199; Decatur Land Co. v. Cook, 27 South. 559.
The decree of the chancellor is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Dowdell, O. J., and Denson and Mayfield, JJ., concur.