This was an action in ejectment in the usual form, for eighty acres of land, and was commenced February 20th, 1880. James A. Clark was the common source of title. The plaintiff, Mary E. Stafford, claimed as purchaser at execution sale effected on the 30th of October, 1878. This sale was in pursuance of a judgment in a certain proceeding commenced on the 18th day of June, 1878, by the collector of Saline county, against James A. Clark, J. Y. Stearne, trustee, and Daniel White, guardian of W. E. White, the object of which was to enforce the lien of the State for taxes upon said land for the years 1868 to 1876, inclusive, amounting in the aggregate to $123.25, besides interest and costs.
The defendant, Eizer, had been in possession as tenant of Jas. A. Clark, but it is alleged in the answer that at the commencement of this suit he was tenant of H. Clay Cockerill. The defendants claim title by trustee’s deed to H. Clay Cockerill, dated April, 1879, delivered in execution of the power of sale in a deed of trust made by said Jas. A. Clark in August, 1863, to J. Y. Stearne, as trustee, to *396secure certain notes therein described, one payable to Daniel B. White, guardian of WilliamE. White, in the sum of $8,635 ; one payable to John T. Stearne in the sum of $4,-686.49, and a third payable “ to the executors of the estate of Thomas N. Cockerill” in the sum of $1,300. This deed of trust conveyed a great amount of other real property, as well as much personalty. The trustee was vested with the power of sale upon default of payment of the debts secured. It appeared that Henry Clay Cockerill was executor of Thomas N. Cockerill. These facts were set up by the defendants in their answer by way of equitable defense, and they asked to be allowed to redeem the land by payment of the taxes for which it was sold. The case was tried by the court without a jury; and upon the evidence it found that Eizer was, at the time of the judicial sale, in possession of the premises as tenant of Jas. A. Clark; that the title acquired by Mrs. Stafford at said sale was superior to the title of defendant, Cockerill, acquired at a sale under the deed of trust, and that she was entitled to possession of the land sued for. The defendants have appealed.
The principal question for us to determine is, whetner the deed of a purchaser at execution sale under a proceeding to enforce the State’s lien for taxes, is good against the beneficiary of a deed of trust, antedating the origin of the tax lien, who has not been made a party to the proceedings to enforce it. The record shows that the trustee and another beneficiary in the deed of trust were made parties to the tax lien suit, but that the executor of Cockerill, who held the note for $1,300 was not included in the suit. The deed of trust was duly recorded, and no excuse for the omission is alleged in the petition or contained in the evidence. The learned counsel for the plaintiffs maintain that the complete title to the land passed to the purchaser by virtue of the execution salo, and that the omission of the beneficiary in question could not affect its validity. The precise question here presented has never been passed upon by this court. ' But the principles of law, as well as *397the decisions of this court governing the enforcement of liens on real estate, ought to furnish a sufficient guide for us in determining it. It will be observed that we are dealing with two liens, one created by law in favor of the State whi eh necessarily takes precedence of other pi’ior, as well as subsequent liens, on account of its peculiar character; R. S. 1879, §§ 6831, 6832; Blossom v. VanCourt, 34 Mo. 390; McLaren v. Shieble, 45 Mo. 130; Dunlap v. Gallatin Co., 15 Ill. 7; Almy v. Hunt, 48 Ill. 45; Binkert v. Wabash Co., 98 Ill. 205 ; the other in favor of creditors, created by the act of the debtor. These two liens have been foreclosed and the purchasers stand opposed to each other with deeds under the proceedings respectively employed for enforcing them. The lien of the State is the superior one, although subsequent in time, a superiority invariably accorded to it in absence of some legislative declaration to the contrary. Cadmus v. Jackson, 52 Penn. 295; Doane v. Chittenden, 25 Ga. 103; Hopper v. Malleson, 16 N. J. Eq. 382; Cooper v. Corbin, 105 Ill. 224. No system of jurisprudence would command respect which failed to maintain and enforce the benefits of this priority, by all necessary and reasonable proceedings to that end. "When real estate was encumbered with two mortgage liens, and the owner of the first undertook to enforce it by suit, he could proceed to judgment without making the owner of the second a party defendant. But, in doing so, he accepted the consequences of leaving him unaffected by the proceeding. The second mortgagee was not, perhaps, a necessary party to a decree of foreclosure. He was a proper party, and if he was omitted from the proceedings the decree could not operate as a divesture of his rights, 2 Jones on Mort., § 1394 (3rd Ed.); Valentine v. Havener, 20 Mo. 133; Goodman v. White, 26 Conn. 317. The second mortgagee holds a lien only on the equity of redemption, and a foreclosure of his lien gives to the purchaser under it, only the equity of redemption. As against a purchaser under proceedings foreclosing the prior mortgage, from which he has been omitted as a party, *398he possesses the right to redeem the laud by payment of the debt for which it was foreclosed. In a proper proceeding to enforce this equity of redemption, he may acquire the absolute title. He could not successfully resist an action at law for the possession, because the title under the superior lien is the superior title at law. Valentine v. Havener, 20 Mo. 133. But since law and equity have been blended, he can resist and overcome this title by setting up his equitable defense in the right to redeem, and paying for decree of redemption. If the holders of the deed of trust, which in this case constitutes the second lien, had been made parties to the proceedings to enforce the tax lien the subsequent foreclosure of the deed of trust would fail to vest in the purchaser any right of redemption. He would be concluded by the decree on the tax lien. The name of the beneficiary in the deed of trust was omitted from the tax lien suit. The name of the trustee was not in my judgment an equitable substitute. A trustee in a deed of trust, having no other power or light over the land beyond the mere power of sale, does not, in my judgment, represent the beneficiary in other matters relating to the land-lie has nothing to do with the rents and profits, insurance, taxes or possession of the land. He has no right to hold or manage it in any way for the use of the beneficiary. As a nominal trustee, for the sole, purpose of making a sale under the powers conferred on him, he was not a competent party to foreclose by suit without joining the beneficiary with him. Davis v. Hemingway, 29 Vt. 438; 2 Jones Mort., §§ 1384, 1397 (3rd Ed).
I do not find anything in the revenue act which relieves the collector from the operation of the general rule applying to the enforcement of liens, which requires the holder of the superior lien to make the owner of the junior or inferior incumbrance a party to the proceedings for enforcing the first lien, if he desires to divest him of his rights. Section 6837 provides, that all actions commenced under the provisions of chapter 145 shall be prosecuted in the *399name of the State, at the relation, and to the use of the collector “ and against the owner of the property.” “ And in case of suits against non-resident, unknown parties, or other owners on whom service cannot be had by ordinary summons, the proceedings shall be the same as now provided by law in civil actions, affecting real or personal property. In all suits under this chapter, the general laws of the State, as to practice and proceedings in civil cases shall apply so far as applicable, and not contrary to this chapter.” R. S. 1879, § 6837. I do not see how to escape the conclusion that a cestui que trust, in a deed of trust, is an owner within the meaning of this act, if his interest is to be affected by the proceeding authorized. Any other conclusion would lead to great injustice, and would be such a manifest departure from “ the practice and proceedings in civil cases,” as sanctioned by the general laws of the State, as to forbid our accepting it in the absence of some express declaration to that effect. The difficulty in ascertaining the actual ownership of deeds of trust on account of the absence of recorded assignments, cannot result in any material embarrassment to the collector in bringing suit, since the decisions of Vance v. Corrigan, 78 Mo. 94, and State v. Stultz, justify him in proceeding against the owner as apparent of record, when in ignorance of the actual owner. No such embarrassments could have arisen in this case, the cestui que trust remaining owner, as evidenced by the deed of record.
In applying the principles we have considered to the case at bar, it is apparent that Mrs. Stafford has the superior title at law. The resistance of it by the defendants in their answer, setting, up the right of redemption was not supported by the evidence at the trial. The equitable defense was entirely abandoned and is admitted by counsel for defendants to have been abandoned. The defendants neither offered the money for redemption, or asked for time to produce it. Neither was there any ruling of the court prohibiting them from proving the requisite amount of indebtedness *400to enable them to redeem. The equitable defense stands in the pleading and the caso ivas closed without the proof to make it available. Under this state of things the plaintiff -with her deed emanating from the superior lien was entitled to possession, as against the defendants holding under the junior or inferior lieu. I may add here that this conclusion is supported by two decisions of this court on kindred issues. In Olmstead v. Tarsney, 69 Mo. 396, Hough, J., giving the opinion, it was held that in a suit instituted to enforce the lien of a special tax bill which antedated a deed of trust, the rights of the owner of the deed of trust would not be affected by the suit, if he wuis omitted as a-party to it; and that his rights of redemption would remain to him. .In the case of Corrigan v. Bell, 73 Mo. 53, opinion by Norton, J., the plaintiff brought ejectment as purchaser under a special tax lien judgment. One of the defendants, as in this case, defended as purchaser under a deed of trust recorded before suit was commenced on the tax lien. She made the same equitable defense set up as in this case ai d offered to redeem as against the tax lien title! It was held that as the cestui que trust was not made a party to the suit enforcing the tax lien, although the trustee in the deed was included as a party, her rights remained unaffected by the proceeding, and that she could resist an action in ejectment by asking for the enforcement of her equity of redemption. It is true that these two decisions were rendered in carrying out the equity of an act which provided that persons interested in the land sought to be charged, who were not made defendants should not be affected by judgment obtained in any suit on the tax lien created by the act, nor by any sale under such judgment, “ and that if they claimed through or under any parties defendant prior to suit brought they might redeem from the purchaser or otherwise assert their rights according to equity and good conscience.”. This express reservation of their rights to pai’ties interested in the land, who had been omitted in the proceeding to divest their interests is only *401declaratory of the law which has always been recognized in this State as governing the practice of enforcing liens against realty. Valentine v. Havener, 20 Mo. 133; Farwell v. Murphy, 2 Wis. 533; Gower v. Winchester, 33 Iowa 303; Gritchell v. Kreidler, 12 Mo. App. 497. In the absence of the express reservation contained in the act the conclusion reached by the court in the cases cited would have been the same. It could not have been otherwise without approving the repulsive practice of divesting a person of his rights and estates in land by virtue of a proceeding which omits both actual and constructive notice to him of its existence and progress. Whether the legislature has the power under our constitution to authorize a proceeding with such results need not be considered until it has clearly done so. There is nothing in our present revenue act indicating that they intended doing it in respect to tax liens.
In the course of the trial below, the defendants offered in evidence an agreement between the parties to this and other suits in which among other things it is stipulated that the tenant, Eiz-er, who was claimed to be the tenant of' both parties, should remain in possession until March 1, 1880. This suit was commenced February 20, 1880, and it was argued by defendants that it was prematurely brought by about nine days. The object of the agreement was to effect an amicable disposition of the crops and rents of the property while the litigation of the title was in progress, and to secure the terre tenant in possession for the remainder of his year, whichever side succeeded in the controversy. The agreement contained a provision to the effect that it should “ in no way interfere with or prejudice the rights of the said Cockerill or Stafford in regard to the title to said lands.” The instrument was excluded by the court on the ground that it was made with reference to the litigation of the title and could not be invoked for the purpose of prejudicing the rights of the parties in such litigation. This ruling was correct. It is unnecessary to examine the, instructions of the court.
*402Upon the evidence and pleadings the plaintiff was clearly entitled to a judgment. Accordingly it is affirmed.
All concur, except Hough, C. -J.. absent.