We have carefully considered the full and learned brief of counsel for appellant, supplemented, as it was, by an interesting oral argument, but we cannot agree to his conclusions.
Prior to the act of 1812, no equity could be sold under execution, nor can an equity be sold since the statute, “unless the sale of the equity can draw to it the legal estate, which cannot be if the legal estate is hitched to some other equity, because, *486then, equal forces are pulling in opposite directions.” Tally v. Reid, 72 N. C., 339; Love v. Smathers, 82 N. C., 372; Everett v. Ratty, 104 N. C., 480; Gorrell v. Alspaugh, 120 N. C., 367; May v. Getty, 140 N. C., 320.
It follows, therefore, if the trusts created by the will of A. B. Davidson are active trusts, and it is necessary for the trustee to bold the legal title to perform them, that the title or interest of LeBoy Davidson cannot draw to it the legal estate and is not subject to sale under execution.
The line is clearly marked between a devise or conveyance of the rents and profits to a person directly, and the case of such devise or conveyance to a trustee in trust to collect and opt of the rents to pay certain amounts, and then to pay the balance to such person.
The first class is considered by Justice Walker in Perry v. Hackney, 142 N. C., 372, in wbicb be says: “The words, ‘all my rents,’ were held sufficient to pass real estate^; for'it was said to be according to the common phrase, and usual manner of •some men, who name their lands by their rents. 3 Gr. Cruise (2 Ed.), p. 229 (7 Cruise, 176). So a devise of the ‘rents, issues, and income’ of lands was held to pass the land itself. Anderson v. Greble, 1 Ashmead, 136. A person having let several houses and lands for years, rendering several rents, devises as follows: ‘As concerning the disposition of all my lands and tenements, I bequeath the rents of D to my wife for life, remainder over in tail.’ The question being whether, by this devise, the reversions passed with the rents of the lands, it was resolved that they did, as that was clearly the intention, and the will should be construed according to the intent to be gathered from its words. Kerry v. Derrick, Crokes Jac., 104; Allan v. Backhouse, 2 Ves. and B., 74. A devise of the income of land was held to be in effect a devise of the land (Reed v. Reed, 9 Mass., 372); so a devise of the ‘rents, profits, and residue’ of the testator’s estate received a like construction. Den v. Drew, 14 N. J. L., 68. In Parker v. Plummer, Cro. Eliz., 190, a devise in the following words, ‘I will that my wife shall have half the issues and profits of the land during her life,’ the question being whether she had any interest in the premises or was only enti-*487tied to have an account of rents, it was determined that she had an estate, ‘for to have the issues and profits and the land were all one,’ and the same was held with respect to a devise of a ‘moiety of the rents, issues, and profits of my estate,’ the words being equivalent to a devise of the estate in fee. Stewart v. Garnett, 3 Sim., 398.”
As to the second class, it is said in Tiedeman on Real Property, see. 494: “Where a special duty is to be performed by the trustee in respect to the estate, such as to collect the rents and profits, to sell the estate, etc., the trust is called active. It is the duty which prevents the operation of the statute, for the trustee must have the legal estate in order to perform his duties”; and in Lewin on Trusts, vol. 1, p. 210: “Special trusts are not within the purview of the Act of Henry the Eighth, and therefore, if any agency be imposed on the trustee, as by a limitation to A and his heirs, upon trust to pay the rents, or to convey the estate, or if any control is to be exercised or duty is to be performed, as in the case of a trust to apply the rents to a person’s maintenance, or in making repairs, or to preserve contingent remainders, and a fortiori if to raise a sum of money, or to dispose of by sale, in all these cases, as the trust is of a special character, the operation of the statute of uses is effectually excluded,” both of which are cited with approval in Perkins v. Brinkley, 133 N. C., 158.
Many authorities might be quoted in support of this doctrine, but we will do no more than quote the full and accurate statement in Underhill on Wills, sec. 773 : “Active uses are not executed by the statute. All uses and trusts are, irrespective of any statute, either active or passive in their nature. Where the feoffee to use has any active duty to perform, the use is active- and it is not executed by the statute of uses. If the feoffee to use were by the feoffor directed to pay the net income and profits of land to A after paying and deducting taxes, rates, and repairs, or if he were directed to apply the rents and profits to the support or to the maintenance and education of the beneficiary, or if he is'to receive and pay the rents to A, or if he is to pay annuities out of the income, or to lease property and collect and pay over the rents of the same, or to accumulate *488profits and income, or if be is merely to keep tbe property in repair, tbe use, or, in modern language, tbe trust, is an active one, and it will not be executed by tbe statute of uses. In other words, where any control is to be exercised or any duty is to be performed by tbe trustee, however slight it may he, or where tbe trustee is empowered to exercise a discretion in tbe management of tbe fund, either as regards its investment or tbe expenditure of tbe income, tbe trust is active. For, inasmuch as it will be impossible for tbe feoffee or trustee to perform tbe duties imposed upon him unless be is permitted to retain tbe legal estate in him, it will be conclusively jiresumed that tbe feoffor meant that be should bold it. Equity will not permit tbe legal title to be transferred to tbe beneficiary under tbe statute of uses, against tbe plain intention of tbe creator of tbe use or trust that be should have only an equitable interest. And as tbe statute of uses also provided that tbe cestui que yse, as soon as tbe use was executed, should stand seized in tbe same ‘quality, manner, form, and condition’ as be bad in tbe equitable interest, and as be bad only tbe right to receive tbe net income, it is clear that tbe statute bad no application to an active trust or use, for no person can be a trustee for himself.”
Tbe provisions of tbe will before us meet all the requirements of an active trust. Tbe land is devised to a trustee, and be is required to collect tbe rents and profits and pay tbe ratable part of tbe taxes and repairs, subject to tbe rights of tbe mortgagee, and to pay any balance to LeRoy Davidson. Active duties are imposed, in tbe performance of which it is necessary for him to bold tbe legal title.
"We are, therefore, of opinion that tbe plaintiff acquired no title under tbe execution sale.
No error.