The opinion of the Court thereon was by
Shepley J.The plaintiff on the eleventh day of January, .1826, conveyed in mortgage to one of the respondents and to the father of the other the premises, which he now claims to redeem. On the first day of June, following the mortgage was assigned to Lithgow who entered under a judgment for condition broken on the twenty-fourth day of August, 1832; and on the tenth day of March, 1833, conveyed to the respondents. On the seventh of June, 1S28, the plaintiff’s right to redeem the estate was sold to Chadwick, who on the fifteenth of June, 1829, consented to receive his money paid for it and to convey it by a release deed to John Bartlett and Act Plummer. Chadwick, Bartlett and Plummer, have all released their rights to the respondents or to one of them. The plaintiff alleges, that these releases were made and received with a knowledge, that he then had an equitable right to the equity of redemption, and that they cannot therefore be set up against him. And he proposes to prove it as well by Bartlett and Plummer as by other witnesses. And the first objection taken by the respondents is to their competency to testify. It is not perceived, that they are interested in the event of this suit. The decree cannot be evidence in any litigation between the plaintiff and them.If theiy testimony can be said to lighten a burden, it is only one,which the same testimony has first placed upon them. If it should have the effect to enable the plaintiff to obtain his rights so perfectly from the respondents as to leave him less interested to proceed against them, it may also raise a liability to one of the respondents on their covenants of special warranty quite sufficient to counterbalance it. These, being matters not of certain interest in the event, affect their credibility, not their competency.
Another objection is, that they should have been made parties to the bill. The rule is, that all persons are to be made parties, *223who are legally or beneficially interested in the subject matter and result of the suit. That the Court will not proceed to a decree until all parties, whose rights are to be affected, are before it, is also a general rule subject to certain exceptions. But if the want of proper parties be not apparent on the face of the bill and be not presented by plea or answer; and the Court does not perceive that it cannot proceed and by a final decree do justice to all parties before it without affecting the rights of others, it will not regard the objection. Robinson v. Smith, 3 Paige, 222. Bartlett and Plummer have parted with all their rights to the estate, and have no such interest to be affected by a decree, as prevents the Court from doing justice between the parties now before it.
These questions being disposed of the rights of the parties are presented on the merits. Bartlett, and Plummer both state in substance, that they received the deed from Chadwick as security, and agreed upon the plaintiff’s paying the money for which they were liable, that the estate should return to him. This they seem to have erroneously supposed would take place by their delivering to him the deed from Chadwick, or if not by his surrendering it to Chadwick and taking a deed from him. It appears, that the plaintiff paid to Weeks all but a small sun), and that be paid to Bartlett, who paid it to Weeks. And that the deed from Chadwick to Bartlett and Plummer was in fulfilment of that agreement, delivered to the plaintiff in the year 1832; and he thus became equitably entitled to the estate, subject to the mortgage. The legal title remained in Bartlett and Plummer, and there is a full admission in writing signed by them, that they no longer had any beneficial interest in it. Courts of equity have not considered any of the provisions of the statute of frauds as violated by giving effect to a trust not originally created, but afterward proved or admitted to exist by some written document. And they have pro»? tected the rights of a party so proved to be equitably interested. Foster v. Hale, 3 Ves. 696; Steere v. Steere, 5 Johns. Ch. R. 12; Rutledge’s Adm’r v. Smith’s Ex’r, 1 M'Cord’s Ch. R. 119. If the respondent, William Chism, can be regarded as a bona fide purchaser of the equity for a valuable consideration and without notice of the trust, he may set up that title against, any equitable interest, which the plaintiff can establish. He states in his answer *224that “ he was in no way priyy to any obligation, that said Plum-, mer and Bartlett were under to convey the same to said Evans, but he supposed, that said Plummer and Bartlett had the legal and equitable title to said equity of redemption,” He could not acquire any interest by the release of Chadwick, for the deed de-r dared, that he had before conveyed to Bartlett and Plummer, And when he obtained the release from Bartlett on the nineteenth of November, 1833, he was informed by him, that he had no ini terest in the land. About twenty days before the right to redeem would be extinguished by lapse of time, he obtained on the fourth day of August, 1835, a release from Plummer. He had employed an assistant, and had applied a number of times before he obi tained it, and was informed by him, that he had no right, and that he had given up the deed to Evans. And his assistant, Jones, was informed, that he had offered to convey to Evans for ten dollars, ánd that Evans insisted, that four dollars only ought to be paid to him. Plummer says, that Chism insisted on a quitclaim deed, and at last he gave him one and told him he had no right or title, and if he took jt, he must run his own risk. What then in fact was Chism’s knowledge ? He knew, that the plaintiff had owned the estate and mortgaged it to him and his father, that his right to redeem was sold to Chadwick, who had conveyed to Bartlett and Plummer, and that they did not pretend to have at that time any interest in it, and had surrendered their deed to the plaintiff; and that the plaintiff claimed to have a release on the payment of four dollars. And the conclusion must follow, that so far as they were concerned, the right was equitably at least in the plaintiff. And how can his answer be respected, which states, that he supposed that Plummer and Bartlett “had the legal and equitable title?” When he concluded to pay one himdred dollars for it, he did it with a knowledge of all these facts. The testimony of McDaniel and Qlidden, taken in connexion with the other testimony, and with the whole course of conduct on the part of the plaintiff, is not sufficient to satisfy the mind, that he designed to permit Plummer to sell to Chism without his being a party to the sale, and the one to receive the benefit of it. Plummer does not and did not profess to sell under such a license.
The respondents cannot therefore be considered as bona fide *225purchasers of the equity without notice ; and they must be adjudged to hold it subject to the equitable rights of the plaintiff. Daniels v. Davison, 17 Ves. 433; Wadsworth v. Wendell, 5 Johns. Ch. R. 231. They did not acquire any title to it under the sale of John Plummer; for that was made on the sixteenth day of July, 1831, before the plaintiff had obtained even an equitable title by the final payment of the money to Weeks. At that timo the legal as well as the equitable title was in Bartlett and Act Plummer, and nothing passed to John Plummer by the sale -on his execution.
The tender was made in season and was apparently sufficient. A decree is to be entered, that the plaintiff is entitled to redeem, and that the respondents, upon payment of the amount which shall be found due to them on an adjustment of the account for rents, profits, and expenditures, convey all the title which they have ac-r quired to him. A master is to be appointed to take the account and the case is in all other respects reserved for further hearing until his report shall come in.