On December 18, 1868, Virginia 'Brault and H. K. Burch executed and delivered a deed ■of trust conveying the property in dispute to Barr’s trustee, to secure a note for three hundred dollars, made by them to Barr. Afterwards said note became the ■property of plaintiff, who, in 1870, by an instrument in writing, agreed with Virginia Brault to sell, without any unnecessary delay, the real estate in controversy, under said deed of trust, and purchase it, and to convey it to her, on payment to him of money named in said agreement as having been paid by him for her and Burch, and *22further agreeing that he would not convey or dispose of the property to any one else, within two years from the date of the instrument. This was signed by Siemers alone, but was delivered by him to Virginia Brault. Subsequently, in 1872, the property was advertised for sale under said deed of trust, and Siemers purchased it and received a deed therefor from the trustee, but the-sale was not advertised for such a length of time as the trust deed required, and he acquired no title to the property by that deed.
After that sale he conveyed an undivided half of his interest in the premises to his co-plaintiff, Johnson, and they instituted this suit in ejectment to recover the possession of the premises against Schrader, a tenant of Chambers, who, on his own application, was made a party defendant. Chambers purchased the properly at a sale for taxes in 1882, and in 187G, Virginia Brault and Burch, and Nancy Bonner, to whom said agreement between Siemers and Virginia Brault had been assigned by the latter, conveyed the proiierty to-Chambers by quit-claim deed. Defendant had a judgment in the circuit court which, on appeal to the court of appeals, was affirmed, and plaintiffs have prosecuted an appeal to this court.
Siemers acquired no title by the purchase at the trustee’s sale. The requisite notice of the sale was not given, and it is scarcely necessary to cite authorities for the proposition, that a conveyance under such a sale passes no title. By his written agreement he stipulated that he would acquire the title by a sale under the deed of trust, but his attempt to do so was abortive, and nothing has since occurred, so far as is disclosed by this record, to invest him with the legal title. A mortgagee, in the-absence of an agreement to the contrary, may maintain ejectment for the possession of the mortgaged premises, after breach of the condition. Jones on Mortgage, sec. 702. But plaintiffs, as owners of the debt secured by *23the deed of trust, have only the same equitable interest in the trust property which the payee of the note had. The title was not conveyed to the holder of the note, but to a trustee ; and while a deed of trust to secure a debt is, in legal effect, a mortgage, yet it has not all the legal incidents of a mortgage. There is a marked distinction between them in some respects. In the case of a mortgage, the beneficiary is also the grantee in the deed, having in himself the legal title, whereas, in a deed of trust, the beneficiary is not, but another is, the grantee. The beneficiary has but an equitable title. In some cases the beneficiary in a deed of trust may recover possession, even from his trustee ; but those are cases in which the trustee holds solely for the use and benefit of the beneficiary, and no one else has any interest in the trust property.
But in a deed of trust to secure a debt, the grantor still has an interest in the property, and in the due and proper execution of the trust by the trustee who represents the interests of both parties. He has, in the first instance, a voice in the selection of the person to whom he will convey the property in trust. It has never yet been held in this state, in a case involving that precise question, that even the trustee in such a deed can maintain an action of ejectment to recover the premises. In the case of Johnson v. Houston et al., 47 Mo. 227, the argument and remarks, in the opinion delivered by Judge Bliss, seem to recognize the right of the trustee to recover possession after breach of the condition ; and I cannot see why he may not, since the legal title is conveyed to him, as to the mortgagee in a mortgage. But no case in which the beneficiary in a deed of trust was held to have that right has been cited, nor have I been able to find one. He cannot, in any sense, be regarded as having the legal title. Another person, by the express terms of the deed, has the legal title, and it would be an anomaly if the beneficiary were permitted to main*24tain an action of ejectment. The decisions in the cases of State to use, etc., v. McKellop et al., 40 Mo. 184; Winkelmaier v. Weaver, 28 Mo. 358, and The State to use of Peters v. Koch, 47 Mo. 582, cited by appellants’ counsel, were all controlled by a local act concerning the duties of sheriff and marshal of St. Louis county, authorizing any one having an interest in the property to set up a claim, and the court held that, under that statute, a beneficiary in a deed of trust of personal property, ■could make the claim. This view of the case renders it unnecessary to consider the questions relative to the tax ■deed, and the quit-claim deed, under which Chambers claims title. The judgment is affirmed.
All concur.