-This is an equitable proceeding, having for its object the setting aside of a sale made under a deed of trust and for permission to redeem the property ; for an accounting of rents and profits, and that the title be decreed to vest in plaintiffs on payment by them of the balance found to be due Yogel, and for general relief. Hesse was once owner of the property. In 1874 he incumbered the same by a deed of trust to secure a loan of five thousand dollars, having three years to run. Yogel became the owner and holder of the notes •secured by the trust deed. Hesse sold theproperty subject to the deed of trust, and plaintiffs, Pattison for himself and in trust for his co-plaintiffs, became the owner of the equity of redemption in said property in November, 1875. Hesse disappeared.
In February, 1877, the debt matured, and Vogel notified plaintiffs that’he required the same to be paid, but indulged them for over three months in order for them to raise the money. They tried to do so, but.failed, and told Yogel in June, 1877, that they could not pay, and agreed with Yogel to give a quit-claim deed, and have the note surrendered in order to save foreclosure costs. Pattison, without arranging the matter prior to his departure, went east for the summer, remaining until September, and while there sent a quit-claim deed to his agent, which Yogel refused to receive on account of the conditions accompanying it, but what those conditions were does not appear. Thereupon the plaintiffs were notified that the deed of trust' would be foreclosed. The property was duly advertised for sale, and the same sold to Yogel, August 15, 1877, who was the highest bidder, at five hundred dollars. ■ Although Pattison was duly notified of the time of the sale by his agent, Logan, he did not return nor authorize any one to pay attention *244to it. The property consisted of adjoining tenement houses, seven in a row, covering one hundred feet front, each house containing four rooms. Hammel, who made the sale, asked of those present if they would bid on the houses separately, and if so, it would be put for sale in that way, but as no one expressed a wish to bid on it in. that way, it was offered for sale as a whole. The property at that time was in very bad condition, being out of “repair.and hardly fit to live in,” the street in front of it not made, and its value was variously estimated at. from three thousand to ten thousand five hundred dollars.
Yogel, after his purchase, put the houses in repair, paid taxes and insurance on the property. Nearly three years • after the- sale this proceeding was begun. Just after suit was brought Yogel, on March 25, 1880, made offer to plaintiffs that if they would, by April 1, reim- ■ burse him for what he had expended and pay the note-- and interest, rendering them at the same time an account, he would grant them all they ask&d by their suit, but-this offer was declined. He also renewed that offer when. on the witness stand, but it was not accepted. The cir-. cuit court dismissed the petition, and the plaintiffs appealed to the St. Louis Court of Appeals, and being unsuccessful, have appealed here.
I. I attach no importance to the fact that no ten-., der of the money due was made in the petition. On a similar occasion we said: “But it is claimed that the. plaintiff has lost the benefit of his tender by failing to; pay the money into court. No objection on this score was made in the court below, and if made, would hardly have been tenable. The proposition is doubtless a correct one when applied to a formal plea of tender in an action of law brought to recover a debt.” 2 Gfreenl.. Evid. .sec, 600. But it is scarcely applicable to a case of. this kind, where no recovery of money is asked on either, side, but. equitable relief, on. the ground that the sale *245■should not have occurred under the circumstances detailed in the petition and established by the evidence. And this being a proceeding in equity, will be governed by rules and principles prevalent in those courts where relief of that character is prayed. Among those rules, having application here, is one to be presently mentioned. The true meaning of the rule, whose frequency •of invocation would seemingly argue a better knowledge of its import, that “he who seeks equity must do ■equity,” is simply this : that where a complainant comes before a court of conscience invoking its aid, such aid will not be granted except upon equitable terms. These terms will be imposed as the price of the decree it gives him. The rule “ decides nothing in itself,” for you must first inquire what are the equities which the plaintiff must do in order to entitle him to the relief he seeks. Hanson v. Keating, 4 Hare, 1 ; Neesom v. Clarkson, Id. 97; Phillips v. Phillips, 50 Mo. 603; Erwin v. Blake, 8 Pet. 18; Story Eq. Jur., sec. 64, and cases cited. Thus, where a husband comes into a court of equity for relief •as to any property of his wife, which he claims juré mariti, he will be obliged to submit to the terms of the •court by making suitable provision for her, or else .assistance will be denied him. So, also, if a borrower of money on usurious interest seeks the cancellation of the instrument which evidences the debt, equity refuses its nid unless upon the condition that payment be made the lender of what is bona fide due him. The above are only •a few out of a large number of examples which might be ■cited in illustration of the rule referred to, which finds' its application not in questions of pleading nor by what the plaintiff offers to do therein, but in the form and frame of the orders and decrees, both interlocutory and final, whereby equitable terms are imposed as a condition precedent to equitable relief granted. In Quin v. Brittain, 1 Hoff. Chy. 353, the objection was made, that in the bill (which was substantially a bill to redeem j *246there was no offer to pay the amount due. But it was held that this was not essential, and the reasons given were, that on such a bill no decree would go for the payment, of the amount personally; that if the amount found due were not paid there would be a decree for dis-mission of the bill, which would operate as a foreclosure. Bishop of Winchester v. Paine, 11 Vesey, 194.
And the same theory evidently dictated the decree’ .before us, which requires the payment within thirty days (after the decree or its affirmance) of the two interest notes, and the one which had meanwhile matured, as-well as the costs attending the advertisement and sale of' the premises in question. Now, if it was not necessary to-offer to pay the amount due in the case of Quin v. Brittain, supra, which is analogous to the case at bar, since a decree of dismission here would be attended by similar detrimental results, and as the offer to pay in a plea of tender was as essential as the production of the money in court (2 Greenl. Evid., supra), it would seem to-follow that the production of the money in court in a cause of this sort might as readily be dispensed with and. on the same grounds as the offer referred to. In short, as the offer to pay was unnecessary, so was also its-accompanying incident, the payment itself into the court. The foregoing considerations clearly indicate-■how widely variant equitable is from legal procedure, and induce the belief that whatever the necessity for-bringing money into court in a strictly technical plea of tender, where the action looks alone to a mere pecuniary recovery, such necessity has no existence and consequently furnishes no criterion in an instance like-the present. Whelan v. Reilly, 61 Mo. 565. The same view is taken elsewhere. Thus, in the case of Dwen, Ex'r, v. Blake, Ex’r, 44 Ill. 135, it is said: “It is urged that there is no evidence of a tender. Ye-do not understand that the law requires a mortgageor to-make a tender before he can compel a redemption. All that is necessary is that he pay the sum found by the *247court to be due within the time limited by the decree. A court of equity is not bound by any fixed rules in. relation to the tender of money, but it will not allow the ends of justice to be perverted or defeated by the omission of an unimportant or useless act, which nothing but a mere technicality could require. Webster v. French, 11 Ill. 254; Barnard v. Cushman, 35 Ill. 451. A tender being unnecessary to give the right, the allegation of the tender unproved could not be held to defeat the previously existing right.” To the same effect, see 2 Lead. Cas. Eq. (Hare & W. Notes) 305; Reeves v. Cooper, 1 Beas. Ch. 223; Freeman on Judgments, sec. 515; Parsons v. Parsons, 9 N. H. loc. cit. 309 ; 1 Story Eq. Jur., secs. 64 (e), 693, 707; 2 Bishop M. &H., sec. 721; 1 Pomeroy’s Eq. Jur., secs. 385, 388, 389, 390, 391, 392, and 393.
Yery often the case is so complicated, the equities involved therein so uncertain, that they can by no possibility be ascertained until after the most painstaking investigation by the chancellor. To require, therefore, that a plaintiff, in order to make his pleading good, in order to prevent his being sent out of court on account of a defective pleading, he should be compelled to do what the unascertained and unascertainable equities of Ms case demand, seems altogether unreasonable. The true theory of the maxim, “he who seeks equity must do equity,” is not a question of pleading,, but a question of performance — performance by the complainant of those conditions which a court of equity imposes “as the price of the decree it gives him.”
II. Now in regard to the laches of the plaintiffs : This suit was not brought for nearly three years after the sale. Meanwhile Yog el, the purchaser, had repaired the scarcely habitable premises, paid taxes and effected insurance, and the plaintiffs, cognizant of all that occurred, taking their chances of whether the property would appreciate in value, now come forward to “reap where they had not sown, and to gather where they had not *248strewn.” This cannot be permitted, notwithstanding the statute of limitations had not run between the time "of the sale and the time of suit' brought. ’ Courts of equity, when enforcing legal or analogous rights, as in administering remedial justice they are sometimes called upon incidentally to do, will generally adopt that limit of time which is prescribed by the statute of limitations. Adams Eq. 227. .But when the relief sought is based upon a right purely equitable, where it is cognizable alone in a court of conscience, then that court acts solely upon its own inherent rules, altogether outside of and independent of the statute of limitations. As was said in Landrum v. Union Bank, 63 Mo. 56 : “ Laches is an equitable defence, and there is no artificial, fixed, or determinate rule on this subject, but each case, as it arises, must be decided according to its own particular circumstances.” In Badger v. Badger, 2 Wall. 94, when speaking of the subject of laches, the court says: “ Courts of equity, acting upon their own inherent doctrine of discouraging, for the peace of society, antiquated demands, refuse to interfere where there has been gross laches in prosecuting the claim, or long acquiescence in the operation of adverse rights.” In Sullivan v. Railroad, 94 U. S. 807, Mr. Justice Swayne says: To let in the defence that the claim is stale, and' thb bill cannot, therefore, be supported, it is not necessary that a foundation shall be laid by any averment in the answer of defendants. If the case, as it appears at th.0 hearing, .is liable to the objection by reason of the laches of the complainants, the court will, upon that ground? be passive, and refuse relief. Every case is governed chiefly by its own circumstances ; sometimes the analogy of the statute of limitations is applied ; sometimes a longer period than that prescribed by the statute is required, in some cases a shorter time is sufficient; and sometimes the rule is applied where there is no statutable bar. It is competent for the court to apply.the *249Inherent principles of its own system of jurisprudence, and decide accordingly.” Mr. Justice Miller, when speaking for the court in Twin Lick Oil Co. v. Marbury, 91 U. S. 591, with regard to the time when a party •should exercise his option to have a sale set aside, says: ■“ This has never been held to be any determined number of days or years as applied to every case, like the statute of limitations, but must be decided in each case upon all the elements of it which affect that question.”
We need not discuss this branch of the subject'at greater length, both because its discussion is but that of discussing an elementary, familiar and fundamental principle, and because, also, that subject has been so recently and exhaustively discussed in Bliss v. Prichard, 67 Mo. 181. Judge Henry, in that case, after citing .and quoting from a large number of authorities, showing that laches will constitute a bar to equitable relief, says: † ‘ The distinction between law and equity has not been abolished in this state. The modification is as to the form of action, and the change effected is embraced in section 1, page 999, Wagner’s Statutes, which provides that there ‘shall be in this state but one form of auction, ’ .etc. The principles of equity are as deeply imbedded in our laws as before the adoption of the code, and he would be regarded as a rash legislator who would propose the entire elimination of equity from our system of jurisprudence. It is so interwoven with the common law that nothing but confusion and disaster could result from a change so radical. It has not been made, or attempted, in this state, and any effort in that direction would be resisted by every one who duly appreciates the salutary and conservative influence of equity upon strict, inflexible law.”
III. It is quite clear that as plaintiffs were the mere purchasers of the equity of redemption in the premises, they could, in no circumstances, prevail in the suit without paying off the debt, principal and interest, taxes, *250repairs, etc. This they declined or failed to do, though repeated offers were made to them to that effect, one even on the hearing of the cause. Taking all of the foregoing circumstances into consideration, no doubt is entertained of the equity which dictated the dismissal of the petition, and, therefore, judgment affirmed.
All concur. ’