(After stating the case.) One question for our consideration is — could any appeal be properly taken from the refusal to give the judgment prayed for? An appeal lies only “from an order or determination of a judge upon or involving a matter of law or legal inference, which affects a substantial right claimed in any action or proceeding, or which in effect determines the action and prevents a judgment from which an appeal might be taken, or discontinues the action, or grants or refuses a new trial.” C. C. P., § 299. There was here no order or determination at all. The defendants had no right to be discharged from payment of the purchase money, except in case of inability of the petitioners to make a good title, and they had no right to have the court to act on their motion, until the parties in interest were all before the court, and the refusal to give the judgment prayed for in legal effect left the case to stand in the same condition in which it was before the motions were heard, and no more affected any right of the defendants than a mere continuance of the cause against their will would have done. In this case, therefore, we think upon the words of the Code and the decisions of this court in construction thereof, there was no right of appeal to the defendants, and their appeal should be dismissed. Maxwell v. Caldwell, 72 N. C., 450 ; Childs v. Martin, 68 N. C., 307.
But let us consider the case as applicable within section *93297 of the Code, as it has been argued before us in that aspect, and then the question is, was the refusal of the judge to dismiss the proceedings and order the bond of the purchaser to be surrendered an error in law of which the purchaser, John T. Peebles, had just cause' of complaint?
We learn from the written defence of the purchaser, filed in court in 1875, to the motion for judgment on his bond, that he purchased in 1861, at clerk and master’s sale, under the authority of a decree on the records of the court; that the sale was reported and confirmed by another decree; that nothing further was done until about 1873, when a decree in the cause was entered in the superior court before Albert-son, J., confirming the sale again, and ordering collection, and title on the payment of the money. The purchaser says, in his said written defence, that he took possession and kept it for several years, and when the name of P. T. Capel, husband of one of the parties interested, for the first time appeared in the record,'and he learned his wife was dead, leaving minor children not made parties, and heard that no petition ever was filed, he took the advice of counsel, and being advised no title could be made, he abandoned the possession.
The court had possession of the purchaser’s bond, and the order of confirmation of sale was in legal effect a contract complete, and put the petitioners and the purchaser re-ciprocalty in the position each to have the right to demand specific performance of the other, and to enforce it by orders in the cause. Ex Parte Yates, 6 Jones’ Eq., 306. This being so, the motion for judgment and the defence against it, with the written allegations of each side in support of their positions, may be regarded as the rule of the petitioners for specific performance on the one side, and the rule of the purchaser for discharge from his contract and surrender of his bond on the other side; and so viewing the controversy, His Honor, in the light of these respective averments in *94connection with the record of the exporte petition to sell the land, did nothing of which either party can complain as erroneous. The petitioners cannot complain that he denied them judgment as matters then stood, there being parties in interest not connected with the cause, and all they could ask was to have action on the motions delayed with opportunity to perfect the pending action so that a good title would pass to the purchaser. And the purchaser having purchased and had possession for a number of years ought in conscience to be willing to pay the money and let judgment go against him therefor, if assured of a perfect title.' The refusal of the judge to give the judgment discharging him at once without reasonable time to the petitioners to perfect the papers and bring in necessary parties, was in accordance with the ordinary course of proceedings in courts of equity.
It has been decided in this court that a purchaser complaining of a defect in the proceedings under which he became purchaser, or of a defect of parties, may through the court call upon those before the court to bring in the omitted parties, and the whole of them, to confirm or repudiate the sale; and he should do so before asking to have the contract annulled and himself freed from its obligation. Chambers v. Penland, 78 N. C., 53. His Honor’s action on the respective motions of the parties was in exact conformity to the ruling in the cited case and was legally correct. The defendants have no right to complain. Appeal dismissed. Let this be certified, &c.
Pee Cuexam. Appeal dismissed.