(after stating the case.) The record presents two exceptions, the first to the parol evidence offered to prove the execution and destruction of .the deed from Daniel Jennings to D. S. Jennings, and the second to the refusal of the Court to charge as requested.
As to the first exception : From the very nature of the allegation, if proved at all, it must be by parol evidence; but it is said this cannot be done in an action of ejectment, and the deed, before it can be offered in evidence, must first be established in a direct proceeding for that purpose and registered. It has been frequently held otherwise, and decrees for possession and for title have been made upon parol proof, both in Courts of Equity under the old practice and in actions for the possession of land under the present law. Love v. Belk, 1 Ired. Eq., 163; Plummer v. Baskerville, Ibid, 252; McCain v. Hill, 2 Ired. Eq., 176; McMillan v. Edwards, 75 N. C., 81; Davis v. Enscoe, 84 N. C., 396; Cowles v. Hardin, 91 N. C., 231; Phifer v. Barnhart, 88 N. C., 333, and cases cited therein. It has been held that before probate and registration a vendor and vendee may rescind a contract by a return of the consideration to the vendee by the vendor and a surrender of the deed to the vendor by the vendee (Love v. Belk, supra); but this must be by agreement, and even by agreement, if third parties have acquired any interest or equity in the estate of the vendee, that interest cannot be defeated by such a redelivery and surrender of the deed, and certainly *450the right of the vendee cannot be defeated by any act of the vendor in destroying the deed against or without the vendee’s consent.
In Triplett v. Witherspoon, 74 N. C., 475, cited by counsel for the defendants, the well settled principle that a deed cannot be used to support a title or be read in evidence till proved and registered is settled, but it is there also said; “ one of two things is necessary to be done before the legal title can vest in the plaintiffs : set up the lost deed and register a copy, or declare the defendants trustees for them and compel a conveyance of the legal title.” It will be seen upon an examination of the judgment of his Honor that it decreed a conveyance of the legal title as indicated in the second alternative. In McMillan v. Edwards, 75 N. C., 81, also cited by counsel for defendants, the plaintiff sought to recover possession of the land purchased under execution, the deed for which had been lost or mislaid, and the Court said : “If the action had been ejectment, under the old system, the plaintiff, to recover, must have shown a legal title existing at the commencement of the action. But now both legal and equitable rights are administered in the same action, and no sufficient reason can be assigned why the plaintiff may not, at the same time and in the same action, ask for the execution of another deed, to be made effectual by registration, and also for the possession of the land.”
It is quite clear that under section 267 of The Code, the plaintiff can unite, in the same action, a demand for the execution of a deed and for possession of the land, while under the old system the lost or destroyed deed could only be established in a Court of Equity, where a decree for title and such other relief as might be proper could be made and enforced according to the practice of that Court.
In regard to the exception to the charge of the Court, the same reasons for admitting parol testimony to establish a lost or destroyed deed apply. If the plaintiff had a deed *451which could be registered, and failed to have it registered, undoubtedly the registration act of 1885 would apply, and the objection would avail the defendants, but the allegation is that the deed was destroyed, and the relief sought being equitable, the statute does not apply.
In Phifer v. Barnhart, supra, quoting Walker v. Coltraine, 6 Ired. Eq., 79, Ruffin, Judge, says: “It was declared tobe an error to say that an unregistered deed conveys only an equity, that it is a legal conveyance, which, although it cannot be given in evidence until registered, and is .therefore not a perfect legal title, yet has an operation as a deed fromr its delivery, and it was emphatically said, the ignorance of such a title in one, who might afterwards buy the land, could not impair it,” and it was held that such a' deed could be set up in equity.
It has been held in Cowles v. Hardin, 91 N. C., 231; Mobley v. Watts, 98 N. C., 284, and other cases, that the statutory provisions for restoring burnt and lost records (The Code, chap. 8) do not repeal the “common law rules for establishing lost deeds, such as have been destroyed by time or accident,” and it is equally clear that chapter 147, Acts of 1885, has no application to lost or destroyed deeds, which of course cannot be registered, and which can only be established by a judgment of the Court.
There is no error.
Affirmed.