If a declaration bad been incorporated in tbe deed executed to tbe defendant tbat be held tbe title to the land in trust to secure tbe payment of $6,000 and interest, $3,000 to be paid in three years and $3-,000 thereafter, and then in trust for tbe plaintiffs, it could not be contended tbat tbe defendant has an absolute and indefeasible title, although tbe plaintiffs may not have been ready, willing, and able to pay.
Such a conveyance would have vested in tbe plaintiffs an equitable estate, an equity of redemption, which could not be foreclosed, in tbe absence of a power of sale, without tbe consent of tbe plaintiffs, legally *634ascertained, except by the decree of a court of equity. It would have established substantially the relation of mortgagor and mortgagee. Freeman v. Bell, 150 N. C., 149.
Speaking of a similar contract in Mason v. Hearne, 45 N. C., 90, Pearson, J., says: “The agreement in writing, signed by the defendant, shows upon its face that the real intention of the parties to the transaction was to create merely a security, and for this purpose the legal title was conveyed to the defendant, in trust to secure the repayment of the $30, with interest, and then in trust to convey to the plaintiff. Such being the intention of the parties, time is not of the essence of the contract in this Court; which is the principle upon which the Court allows the equity of redemption, after the estate at law has become absolute, ip all cases where the intention was to create merely a security
The same result follows if, instead of declaring the trust in the deed, it had been absolute in form, and a separate paper had been executed at the same time containing the declaration of trust, upon the familiar principle that writings executed at the same time and relating to the same subject-matter are to be construed together as one paper. Cheek v. B. and L. Assn., 126 N. C., 244; Porter v. White, 128 N. C., 44.
If this is true of a declaration in trust contained in a deed, or in a separate writing executed at the same time, what difference does it make in the relation of the parties if the trust is established by parol and not by some writing ?
The sevepth section of the English Statute of Frauds, providing that declarations of trust shall be in writing, has not been adopted in this State (Shelton v. Shelton, 58 N. C., 292), and in the absence o'f a statute the common-law rule prevails, that a trust may be created by parol agreement entered into before or at the time of the transmission of the legal title, and that when created it attaches to and becomes a part of the title.
It was held in Sykes v. Boone, 132 N. C., 199, that a trust declared by parol at the time the legal title passed, to the effect that the vendee should hold in trust for a third person and convey to her on receiving the purchase money paid by him, was not within the statute of frauds, and was valid and enforcible; and in Taylor v. Wahab, 154 N. C., 223, that it is annexed to thejlegal estate; and in Avery v. Stewart, 136 N. C., 436, the Court says: .“Where one person agrees before a sale to buy the property proposed to be sold for the use and benefit of another, although the former may advance all of the purchase money, it has been held that such a transaction is equivalent to a loan of the money and a taking of the title as security for its repayment, even if there is no suppression of bidding or other equitable element; and the purchaser who has thus acquired the legal title will not be permitted to hold it and repudiate his promise.”
*635If, therefore, no writing is required, and a trust created and established by parol is valid and enforcible and is annexed to the legal title, it follows that when created and established, the same relationship exists between the parties as if established by some writing, the difference between the two being only in the mode and degree of proof.
In Owens v. Williams, 130 N. C., 168, which has been twice affirmed, Furches, O. J., speaking for the Court, says: “As the statute of frauds does not apply to the declaration of trusts in this State, whenever the terms of the parol trust are established they have the same force and binding effect as if they had been in writing. So the facts found in the case going to establish the trust have the same binding effect upon the defendant as if they had been incorporated in the deed from Faison to the defendant. And had this been done, it seems to us there could be no ground upon which the defendant could dispute the trust.”
The same equitable principle was considered in a learned opinion by Justice Walker in Bateman v. Hopkins, 157 N. C., 470, involving the rights of the parties under a contract to convey, where, after discussing the authorities, he concludes that “The general "and clear result of the best considered authorities is that the vendor, especially when he has been and is in default himself, or when he has denied or repudiated the contract, cannot insist upon the failure to tender the money or to bring it into court for the purpose of performance, but will be left to such protection as the court can afford in the decree, which will be shaped so as to carry out the purposes of the contract fairly and equitably, without any great regard for technicalities, the object being to do justice to both parties without unnecessarily sacrificing the rights of either. This is the wisest and safest doctrine.”
If the premises we have laid down are correct, the conclusion follows that the finding upon the second issue does not bar the equity of the plaintiffs.
According to the finding upon the first issue, the defendant has never had any interest in the land in controversy, except to secure the payment to him of $6,000 and interest, and has never been entitled to anything except his money; and when the court requires that to be paid, he must be content.
"We have thus far considered the record in the most favorable light for the defendant, and have assumed that the jury has found, in answer to the second issue, that the plaintiffs have not, at any time, been ready, willing, and able to pay; but this is not a proper construction of the verdict. The second issue includes two facts: (1) Were the plaintiffs ready, willing, and able? (2) Are they how ready, willing, and able?
The jury could not answer the second question in the negative, because it is stated in the case on appeal, as an admission of the parties, that the *636plaintiffs offered to pay $6,000 and interest to tbe court for tbe use of defendants, and tbat actual payment was waived, and tbe answer to tbe first question, when read in tbe light of bis Honor’s charge, tbat tbe jury must answer tbe second issue “No,” unless they found tbat tbe plaintiffs bad $3,000 “of their own earning, raised by reason of their own industry,” does not negative tbe ability of tbe plaintiffs to procure tbe money from some other source, as they bad tbe right to do.
Tbe answer to tbe second issue, thus interpreted in connection with tbe admission in tbe record and with tbe charge, means no more than tbat tbe plaintiffs have not accumulated enough money from their own earnings to pay tbe amount due tbe defendant, and does not affect their right to-equitable relief.
We are, therefore, of opinion a decree ought to have been entered upon tbe verdict in favor of tbe plaintiffs.
■ There is no exception to tbe third issue, which was answered in favor of tbe plaintiffs; but since it was adverted to in tbe argument, we will say it seems to have been answered correctly under tbe authority of Hauser v. Morrison, 146 N. C., 252.
Tbe Superior Court will enter judgment upon tbe verdict in accordance with this opinion.
Reversed.