after stating tbe case: At common law no property but tbat to which tbe debtor has a legal title is liable to be taken under execution against him, and where tbis rule has not been changed by statute, an equity of redemption in chattels subject to a mortgage cannot be levied upon and sold by creditors of tbe mortgagor under execution. Tbis is tbe prevailing rule, and is applied rigorously where tbe debt secured by -the mortgage is past due and tbe mortgagee has tbe right of possession, which is tbe case here. 17 Cyc., 961, and Freeman on Executions, secs. 116 and 117, where tbe question is fully discussed and tbe various views collated, but all culminating in tbis statement of tbe law: Tbe mortgagee being entitled to tbe possession as against tbe motgagor, no creditor of tbe latter can acquire any right which bis debtor has not; and no right of possession can be acquired by levying a writ against one wbo is without such right; and, finally, tbat it would very seriously impair tbe rights of tbe mortgagee if tbe property could be taken from bis bands for an indefinite period in order to subject to execution an equity of redemption which might be of no value whatsoever. Freeman on Executions, sec. 117. Several reasons have been assigned for tbe rule. One which applies in tbis State grows out of the common-law principle tbat a mortgage conveys tbe legal title and is not to be regarded as merely a security for tbe debt with tbe right of possession in tbe mortgagor. 17 Cyc., 961. “It was a principle of tbe common law, steadily maintained, tbat an equitable interest in chattels could not be sold under execution.” Yeldell v. Barnes, 15 Mo., 434. An able judge has said: “I do nlot know of any ease in which tbe court has considered an execution at law as binding an equitable interest. Tbe idea is inadmissible.” Hendricks v. Robinson, 2 Johns Ch., 312. And a text-writer says: “If there is no such statutory provision, an officer cannot levy upon personal property which is mortgaged, whether in possession of tbe mortgagor or mortgagee, even if tbe mortgage is not due, unless it contains an express stipulation permitting tbe mortgagor to retain possession for a definite period; nor even then if tbat period has elapsed. Notwithstanding a levy upon the'property in tbe mortgagor’s possession, tbe mortgagee retains bis right of taking possession.” Hermon on Executions, p. 150, sec. *293118. In some of the States tbe common-law rule bas been-abrogated, but even where this has been done it is held that where the debt has not been paid and the right of possession, as here, is in the mortgagee, the levy cannot be made. In a few cases, decided in other jurisdictions, it is held that while a mere equity of redemption is not, of itself, subject to execution, when such equity is joined with the right to remain for a definite time in possession of the property mortgaged, the mortgagor has an interest, which may be seized and sold under an execution at law. Freeman on Executions, p. 482. But the rule seems to be well settled that after default by the mortgagor, no levy can be made, as then the mortgagee’s right to the possession has fully accrued, and it cannot be taken from him under process against the mortgagor.
But however the law may be elsewhere upon this important subject, it has long since been settled in this State, and uniformly to this date, by our decisions, that such an equity of redemption is not subject to levy, and in the classification of the courts upon the question we are assigned to the large class which holds that a levy of an execution upon an equity of redemption under a chattel mortgage cannot be made, and we should, of course, follow our own rulings. The following cases will show the decided trend of our decisions.
“That section (now Eevisal, 629, subsee. 3) subjects equities of redemption in land only to execution sale. The same interest in chattels is left as at common law, and can be subjected to satisfaction of an execution only in a court of equity.” Harrison v. Battle, 16 N. C., 538; Burgin v. Burgin, 23 N. C., 160; Camp v. Coxe, 18 N. C., 52; Allison v. Gregory, 5 N. C., 333.
“The second section of the act of 1812, which authorized the sale of an equity of redemption, is confined to a mortgage of land, and therefore this ease (personal property) is not within that clause.” Thompson v. Ford, 29 N. C., 418.
“The equity of redemption in .a mortgage of slaves is not in law subject to execution. The sheriff had no authority to levy on it; therefore, he could transfer no title or interest to the purchaser under his sale. The equity of redemption in land is liable to an execution by force of the act of Assembly, but the redemption in slaves, as in other personal estate, is not embraced by the act.” Whitesides v. Allen, 22 N. C., 153.
“In the absence of statutory regulation, the interest of a mortgagee in personal property while the mortgagor remains in possession, having also an interest therein, is not subject of levy by direct seizure, either under attachment or execution.” Bowen v. King, 146 N. C., 390, citing Freeman on Executions, .sees. 118-184; Am. and Eng. Enc. Law, 974.
*294And 17 Cyc., p. 957, says: “The general rule was well established that in the absence of statute a debtor’s equitable estate in real or personal property, although accompanied with possession, could not be seized and sold under a fieri facias, .and it was necessary for the judgment creditor to go into equity to subject such interest,” citing Sprinkle v. Martin, 66 N. C., 55; McKeithan v. Walker, ibid., 95, among many other eases. See also, Burgin v. Burgin, 23 N. C., 160; Allison v. Gregory, 5 N. C., 333.
Justice Barbour, for the Court, in Van Ness v. Hyatt, 13 Peters, 294 (10 L. Ed., 170), said: “We have already seen that by the common-law an equitable interest, such as an equity of redemption, is not liable-to execution. This would be decisive of the case unless there should be found to be some legislation, or some course of authoritative judicial decision, which had so far modified the common law by engrafting upon it the principles of the court of equity in relation to mortgages as to change the rule in this respect. It is not pretended that any legislative act has produced this effect, nor is there any course of judicial decision which does.”
But the plaintiffs contend that Pate & Co. are estopped because they were present at the sale by their agent, a member of the firm, and made no objection to it, and for this position they rely upon the following authorities: Lentz v. Chambers, 27 N. C., 587; Mason v. Williams, 66 N. C., 564; Rice v. Bunce, 8 Am. Rep. (Mo.), 129; Biggs v. Brickwell, 68 N. C., 239; Fleming v. Barden, 126 N. C., 450; Bird v. Benton, 13 N. C., 179; Governor v. Freeman, 15 N. C., 472. The principle, they say, is thus stated in Rice v. Bunce, supra: “The defendant, who had an equitable interest in one-half of a lot of land, was present when the lot was offered for sale at auction, but gave no notice of his claim, and entered the list of bidders. The court held that he was estopped from afterwards asserting his title against the purchaser.” And again, in 16 Cyc., 764: “If the owner of property, with knowledge of the fact, bids on it at a judicial sale without giving notice of his title, he will be estopped thereafter to assert his title or contest the validity of the sale to the prejudice of one who has acted in reliance on his conduct and in ignorance of the facts.”
We think it obvious that this position cannot be successfully maintained. The cases of Lentz v. Chambers, Mason v. Williams, and Rice v. Bunce, and quotations from Cyc., relate to a very different matter. There the owner of the property, or an interest therein, who was present when the sale was made, was estopped because he did not disclose his ownership and permitted some one else, relying on his silence, and believing, thereforej that there was no adverse or hostile claim, to bid *295in tbe property. He is not permitted to assert bis interest afterwards as against tbe innocent buyer of tbe property and to bis prejudice, because he was silent wben be should have spoken, and now the law will not bear him when he should be silent. He is equitably estopped from being heard .and asserting bis claim to the property. But that is not tbe case here. No third party bought tbe property, blit the mortgagees themselves, who held tbe liens and bad tbe right to tbe possession, were the purchasers. This was not a purchase by a third person, or stranger, who bad bid at tbe sale and been misled by the owner of the property, and, besides, the levy and sale were utterly void and a nullity, while in the cases cited by tbe plaintiffs the sales were valid, one or more made under the exercise of a good power of sale and tbe others by sheriffs under valid executions and levies. Tbe distinction between the two eases is perfectly manifest.
The doctrine of equitable estoppel does not apply here. Tbe plaintiffs have not been harmed or prejudiced, for they cannot be said to have lost something which the debtor did not have for the purpose of levy and sale. They can still pursue their remedy against bis property if be has any subject to levy and sale, for there has been no satisfaction of their execution. If defendants bad not bid at the sale, or bad not been present, the sale would still have been void and nothing would have passed to the purchaser or to the plaintiffs, for from nothing it is said that nothing comes (ex nihilo nihil fit). Plaintiffs have not been hurt. “The representation must have been acted upon to the damage of tbe party acting. It is not enough that the representation has been barely acted upon, for if no substantial prejudice would result by admitting tbe party who made it to contradict it, he will not be es-topped.” Bigelow on Estoppel, 27; Boddie v. Bond, 154 N. C., 359: “The law does not favor estoppels, and as to estoppels by matter in pais, it may be said that unless- a person has induced another by representations or declarations to alter his position injuriously to himself, he will not be estopped. The fundamental principle on which the doctrine of estoppel rests is an equitable one — -a principle which is intended .to suppress fraud and to compel just and fair dealings between all. On the principle of fair dealing and equity, can it be held that one should be estopped to protect his rights in a matter because of his conduct in reference thereto and upon which another has acted, but without prejudice to his rights and interests. It cannot be said, with consistency, that a man has taken advantage of his own wrong where his statements have not damaged or injured another.” Rainey v. Hines, 120 N. C., 376; Lovelace v. Carpenter, 115 N. C., 424. Nor is this the case of an irregular execution, where the irregularity can be *296waived by conduct, as was done in one of the cases cited by plaintiffs, because here the levy was void — -the property or interest not being the subject of levy and sale.
Some of the cases hold that the mortgagee of chattels, default of the mortgagor having occurred, is entitled to the possession, and when the sheriff levies on the property he is guilty of ,an unlawful conversion which entitles the mortgagee to sue him in trover for the same if he takes possession. of the property. There can be no doubt that the sheriff levied on the equity of the mortgagor after the latter’s default, as the debt was past due. The officer announced that he would sell subject to the .mortgages, which was nothing, therefore, but a sale of the mortgagor’s interest or equity.
The last position taken by the plaintiffs is that the levy and sale were valid under Revisal, sec. 629, subsec. 4. At common law .an equity of redemption in land was not subject to levy and sale under execution, and was first made so in this State by Acts of 1812, ch. 4, sec. 2, and this was true also as to the trusts mentioned in Acts of 1812, ch. 4, see. 1, which changed the law in this respect. The act refers only to an equity of redemption in realty and not to such equity in personalty. The two provisions will be found in the following order in the successive statutes, trusts being mentioned first and then equities of redemption: Acts of 1812, ch 4, secs. 1 and 2; Rev. Statutes of 1836-7, ch. 45, secs. 4 and 5; Rev. Code, ch. 45, sees. 4 and 5; Code of 1883, ch. 10, sec. 450, subsecs. 3 and 4, and secs. 451 and 452. These sections are all substantially the same, and, as originally passed, they wore in these words:
“1. Where any person shall be seized or possessed of any lands, tenements, rents, and hereditaments, or any goods and chattels in trust for any person against whom any execution or process shall be issued, such estate may be levied on and sold under such execution or process; and the purchaser thereof shall hold and enjoy the same freed and discharged from all encumbrances of the person .so seized, or possessed in trust, as aforesaid.
“2. The equity of redemption, and the legal right of redemption, in lands, tenements, rents, or other hereditaments which shall be pledged or mortgaged shall in like manner be liable to any execution or process sued out on any judgment against the mortgagor or bargainor.”
Section 1, mentioned above, and upon which plaintiff relies, has been construed by this Court in numerous cases as not applying to any trusts in' property, real or personal, except those which are unmixed, or what are called simple trusts, where the trustee holds the legal title alone for the cestui que trust and for no one else and for no other *297purpose. It is a passive instead of an active trust, when be bas nothing to do, or no duty to perform except to bold tbe legal title as already stated. It, therefore, excludes an equity of redemption, and a contract to convey land, where anything remains due upon the debt, because the trust is a mixed one in these cases, as the mortgagee in the one case and the vendor in the other holds in trust for the purpose of securing the money due, but when this is paid he holds nothing but the naked legal title. The section, therefore, refers only to trust estate where the cestui que trust may call for the transfer of the legal title to him at any time without doing more than demanding the same, and if any one other than.the cestui que trust is beneficially interested it is not a. simple one and is not subject to levy under execution.
Chief Justice Ruffin thus states the legal effect of the statute, in Battle v. Petway, 27 N. C., 576: “The act of 1812 did not mean to change the nature of trusts, the relation between the trustee and cestui que trust, or the rights of the latter against the former. The sole purpose of it was to render the interest of the cestui que trust liable at law, as it was before in equity, for the debts of the cestui que trust in certain cases, by transferring by a sale on execution against the cestui que trust the legal estate of the trustee, as well as the trust estate of the debtor. It is a necessary construction of such a provision that it was not intended to embrace any such cases as those just adverted to, in which the trustee could not voluntarily convey to the debtor without incurring a breach of trust to other persons with whose interests he is also charged. As was said in Gillis v. McKay, 15 N. C., 172: ‘The principle is that the legal estate is not to be divested out of the trustee unless it may be done without affecting any rightful purpose for which it was created; and, therefore, that if others had an equity in the same property, that is, in the debtor’s particular share, the act did not operate on it.’ ” And again the same learned judge said in Forbes v. Smith, 43 N. C., 30: “Although.the act of 1812 makes trusts in personal property liable to execution against the cestui que trust, yet it is settled that the case of a trust of personal chattels for one for life and then in trust for others is not within it, as the trustee’s legal title must be preserved entire for the security of those entitled under the ulterior limitations. Dick v. Pitchford, 21 N. C., 480; Battle v. Petway, 27 N. C., 576. But although an execution will not reach the slaves, yet they and also the money, or rather Shackleford’s beneficial interest in those funds as his equitable property, may and ought to be sold under a decree of this Court.” And also in Frost v. Reynolds, 39 N. C., 494: “The interest of a vendee of land, where the contract rests in articles for a conveyance when the purchase money shall have been paid, is not the *298subject of sale under execution at law, while the purchase money or any part remains unpaid. After the payment of the price, it was held in Henderson v. Hoke, 21 N. C., 119, that it may be sold as a trust estate, within the act of 1812. But until payment there is not a pure trust for the vendee, upon the sale and conveyance of which it was the purpose to displace the legal estate. Neither is it an equity of redemption, properly speaking.”
The point is tersely and clearly stated by Pearson, J., in Williams v. Council, 49 N. C., 206: “It is settled by many cases that the act of 1812 only applies to a pure, unmixed trust, so that the purchaser of the trust can acquire the entire legal estate without prejudice to the rights of third persons.”
Judge Battle states in Turnage v. Greene, 55 N. C., at p. 65, that tho trust must be simple, that is, of a kind where the cestui que trust has an absolute and perfect property, as is known to the law (in the thing), and, can call for the legal estate at his will.”
Chief Justice Pearson, in Hinsdale v. Thornton, 75 N. C., at p. 383, shows clearly the meaning and purpose of the statute by putting the case of a contract or bond for title, when he says: “where one buys land and the contract complies with the statute, and is put in writing, he acquires an estate in equity, and the vendor holds the legal estate in trust for himself to secure payment of the purchase money, and then in trust for the vendee. But although the vendee acquires an estate in equity, it is decided that his equitable estate is not a trust subject to sale under fi. fa. until the trust in favor of the vendor is satisfied by payment of the purchase money in full, when it becomes an unmixed trust estate, to use the words of the cases.”
Justice Dillard, in Love v. Smathers, 82 N. C., at p. 372, is equally explicit in the same construction of the statute, when he says: “A trust estate of a debtor in land could not. be levied on and sold under execution until the act of 1812, nor under that act if it was to be raised by construction of a court of equity by reason of fraud, or being an expressed or implied trust in an honest transaction, unless the debtor at the time of the sale was in such situation as to have the legal title decreed to him if he were to sue for it. The debtor, being in a condition to call for the legal title, is regarded as having the absolute beneficial property, as much so as if he had the legal estate; and hence in such case the .act, instead of requiring the creditor to go into equity as formerly, allowed the trust estate to be sold by execution, and gave to the sale and sheriff’s deed the legal operation to take the title out of the trustee and vest it in the purchaser.” See, also, King v. Rhew, 108 N. C., 696. A simple trust is. well defined in McKenzie v. Sumner, 114 *299N. C., 428, 429; Turnage v. Greene, 55 N. C., 63, where it is said that the simple trust is where property is vested in one person upon trust for another, and the nature of the trust not being prescribed, or stated, by the settler, is left to the construction of law, and the cestui que trust then has the right to be put into actual possession of the property, and the right to call upon the trustee to execute a conveyance of the legal estate as the cestui que trust directs, this being a valuable part of the right of alienation (jus disponendi). In such a case the cestui que trust is an absolute equitable owner, and the trustee has nothing but a bare, naked legal estate, unaccompanied with a single specified duty, and there being no ulterior limitation or other beneficial interest to protect. Lewis on Trusts, 18. And so it was said-by this Court of the gift of stock that “A present right to the whole profits, .as well as the absolute, ultimate dominion of the bank stock, are given to the legatees, and they are therefore entitled to have a transfer of the stock made to them. The rule would be different, and the centui qui trust would not be entitled to call for the legal estate if from the nature of the trust their ownership were not immediate and absolute, and it would defeat or put it into their power to defeat or endanger a legitimate, ultimate limitation of the trust property.” Turnage v. Greene, 55 N. C., 63.
We have reviewed the cases upon this question, as there seems to be some misunderstanding as to the true meaning of the statute in regard to levies upon and sales of trust estates under execution, and the importance of a stable and uniform construction is so great as to call for a final settlement of the question, if it has not already been definitely closed. It is true, as argued by counsel, that a mortgagee, in a sense, holds in trust for the mortgagor, but not in the sense of this statute, as it is a mixed trust, and the mortgagor cannot call for the legal estate until he pays his debt, and the trust is simplified. The statute declares, too, that the purchaser of a trust estate at execution sal© “shall hold and enjoy the same- freed and discharged from all encumbrances of the person so seized or possessed in trust.” Surely it did not mean to destroy the rights of the mortgagee by a sale of the mortgagor’s estate. It meant only to merge the naked legal and the trust estate into one. The able and learned argument of Mr. Dickson McLean has been fully considered, but we .are compelled to follow the unanimous opinion of our predecessors, that the interest of the mortgagor of a chattel, the secured debt not being paid, cannot be sold under execution, and, consequently, that the sale in this ease being void, there is no estoppel raised by the purchase of the property by the defendants. “The law only sells estate under its process, and not the chances of an estoppel.” Badham v. Cox, 33 N. C., 456.
*300It may further be said that if the Legislature intended that an equity of redemption in chattels might be sold under execution it would have so declared in plain language, as it did in the case of real estate mortgages. But a long line of decisions in this State has settled the question.
It is suggested that a change of the law was effected in 1868. The Constitution of that year abolished only “the distinctions between actions at law and suits in equity and the forms of all such actions and suits.” Const., Art. IY. It did not abolish the principles of law or equity, which still survive in full vigor, but are enforced by “one form of action denominated a civil action.” Trover, replevin and detinue, as forms of actions, are abolished, but not the torts for which they were the appropriate remedies. It has been held that “The abolition of the distinctions between actions at law and suits in equity, and the forms of all such actions and suits, does not destroy equitable rights and remedies, nor does it merge legal and equitable rights.” Connor and Cheshire on the Constitution, p. 147. Rudisill v. Whitener, 146 N. C., 403; Ely v. Early, 94 N. C., 1; Boles v. Caudle, 133 N. C., 528; Morisey v. Swinson, 104 N. C., 555.
There is a marked distinction, as the authorities show, between abolishing the forms of actions and destroying the principles which they were intended to enforce, and, besides, the abolition of forms of actions does not affect the question as to what can be levied on and sold under an execution.
The common law prohibited the sale of an equity of redemption in a chattel for substantial reasons, and no statute of this State has ever authorized such a sale and thereby changed the common law. This is true according to every decision of this Court upon the question, some of them having been decided upon transactions occurring since 1868. The sale being void, the doctrine of estoppel does not apply. The cases relied on by plaintiff are those where the sales were lawful, but the owner of the legal or equitable estate stood by and permitted his interest to be sold, under a valid power, without disclosing his right or objecting to the sale.
The case was correctly decided by Judge "Winston in all its phases, and we must, therefore, declare that there is mi error in the record.
No error.