(after stating the facts). The only question is, shoitld the judgment be reversed because the senior mortgagee an’d 'fumor mortgagees were joined in the complaint for foreclosure? Mr. Pomeroy on Code Remedies says: “It is a rule universally established that all subsequent incumbrancers, who are holders of general or specific liens on the land, whether mortgagees, judgment creditors, or whatever be the nature of the lien, if it can be enforced against the land, are not necessary parties in the sense that their presence is indispensable to the rendition of a decree of sale; but they are necessary parties defendant to the recovery of a judgment which shall give to the purchaser thereunder a title free from their liens and incumbrances. If they are not joined as defendants, their rights are unaffected; their liens remain undisturbed and continue upon the land while in the hands of the purchaser; and they retain the right of redemption from the holder of the mortgage before the sale, and from the purchaser after the sale. It is not, in general, considered that prior incumbrancers are even proper defendants, 'for, as their liens .are paramount to the mortgage, they can not be in any manner affected by the action or decree therein. Section 239, p. 333.
Where a junior mortgagee comes in and joins in a suit to foreclose, it is not necessary to make him a party defendant, because he is then already before the court. The object in making him a party defendant is that he may be brought in, so that his rights may be protected and preserved as far as pos*99sible, and that the purchaser under the decree of foreclosure may get a title free from junior liens. Mr. Jones says: “In one sense every person who has acquired any interest in the property subsequent to the mortgage is a necessary party to the suit for foreclosure, whether that interest be by way of mortgage or judgment lien, an inchoate right of tenancy in dower or curtesy, or an unconditional estate in fee; because, in order to make the foreclosure complete, and to transfer a perfect title by the sale, it is necessary, that the holder of every such right or interest should be brought before the court.” Again he says: “All parties in interest should be joined, inasmuch as it is true that the proper object of a bill in,equity to foreclose a.mortgage is to cut off all rights subsequent to the mortgage.” 2 Jones on Mortgages, § § 1394, 1396. At section 1442 the same author says: “New parties who are found to have an interest in the premises may be joined in the bill by. amendment, or in a supplemental bill, if application be made within a reasonable time; or they may themselves intervene in the original cause by petition, or may maintain a separate bill. A suit may be stayed, even on final hearing, to bring in subsequent 'mortgagees and incumbrancers who are found to be proper parties.” Our own court has held that in a foreclosure suit a senior mortgagee need not be made a party. See White v. Holman, 32 Ark. 753.
“It is a general rule in equitv,” savs Mr. Pingrey, “that all persons materially interested, either legally or beneficially, in the subject-matter of the suit are to be made parties to it, either as plaintiffs or defendants, however numerous they may be, so that there may be a complete decree which shall bind them all.” 2 Pingrey oh Mort, § 1665.' Our statute provides: “All persons having an interest in the subject of an action, and in obtaining the relief demanded, may be joined as plaintiffs except. where it is otherwise provided. Section 6005, Kirby’s Dig. “Subject of an action” is not the cause of the action, nor the object of the action. It rather describes the physical. facts, the things, real or personal, the money, lands, chattels, and .the like, in relation to which the suit is prosecuted. When there is a suit to foreclose a mortgage, all the mortgagees have an interest in “the subject” of the action and “in obtaining the relief demanded.”
*100Therefore, treating the objection to the complaint as for “misjoinder and multifariousness” as properly raised, the judgment of the court is correct, and must be affirmed. It is so ordered.