The land sold by the executor, Massenburg, was divided into two tracts by the purchaser, Stallings, by his selling one hundred and fifty-six acres thereof to A. W. Pearce on the day of sale, and reserving the residue of one hundred and ten acres. And though both tracts ultimately came into the possession of the defendant, they were acquired by him through different chains of title. The title to each *400was derived through a sheriff’s deed, but by sales under different executions and at different.times, and the principles of law which govern the one case have no application to the 'other.
The plaintiffs claim title to the whole of the land sold by the executor. They insist that upon the death of the father, the legal title descended to them and was never divested by the sale to Stallings, because the deed made by Massenburg, the executor, to him was never registered;and a deed though executed and delivered but not registered does not pass the legal estate. This according to recent decisions of this court we must hold to be law, whatever may be our individual opinions in regard to its correctness. The unregistered deed however conveyed an equitable estate to Stallings. But before any lien was acquired upon the one hundred and ten acre tract by virtue of the execution issued upon the judgment obtained by Perry against Stallings, and in fact before the rendition of the judgment, without any allegation of fraud, there was a parol agreement between Stallings and John C. Davis, the surviving executor, to surrender the unregistered deed in consideration that the notes given by him for the purchase money should be delivered up. If this was a valid contract, it had the effect to extinguish the equity of Stallings in the tract of one hundred and ten acres. When a deed has been delivered, but before probate and registration, the vendor and vendee may rescind the contract by returning the consideration and redelivering 'the deed. Love v. Belk, 1 Ired. Eq., 163. But the validity of this contract is denied by the defendant on two grounds; first, that it is a parol contract for the conveyance of an interest in land and is within the statute of frauds and therefore void; and secondly, that Davis having renounced the executorship had no right to make the contract.
The answer to the first ground is that the defendant was not a party to the agreement and had no right to set up the *401statute of frauds for the purpose of invalidating the contract, No person can avail himself of the statute for his own benefit, unless he is a party to the contract and is to be charged thereby. Green v. R. R. Co., 77 N. C., 95; Mizell v. Burnett, 4 Jones, 249. Stallings was the only person to be charged by the contract, and he had the right if he chose to exercise it to waive the protection of the statute; for when such a contract comes in question inter alios, it is generally regarded as a valid contract, and a third party cannot invoke its application for his own benefit. Though Stallings was not legally bound to fulfill his parol contract by surrendering the deed, yet as he was unable to pay the purchase money, there was a moral duty resting upon him to do so j and if he chose to waive his legal right from ásense of moral obligation, the defendant being a stranger to the contract had no right to complain or preclude him from the exercise of his discretion. Browne on Stat. of Frauds, § 130-1-35.
The other ground is not so easily answered, but reasoning by analogy we are led to the conclusion that Davis had the right to make the contract in behalf of the estate of his testator. It is true he had renounced the executorship, and his renunciation had been put on record; but he had the right after the death of his co-executor and before general letters of administration with the will annexed were granted on the estate of his testator, to retract his renunciation and administer. The renunciation was not peremptory. Williams on Executors, 250. And in Wood v. Sparks, 1 Dev. & Bat., 389, Judge GastoN says, if an executor actually renounces, “ it is not to be questioned he may come forward the next day and take the oath of office and enter upon the execution of its functions.” But this principle, we take it, was meant to apply to those cases where the executor was the sole executor and retracts his renunciation before letters of administration granted.
*402An executor may do 'many things before receiving his letters, or even before probate. He may receive or release 'debts, give away or dispose of the goods and effects of his testator, assent to- legacies and bring actions, though he cannot declare. Williams on Executors, 256-260 ; Toller, 45. If an executor may do these- acts before receiving his letters or before probate, we do not see why a surviving executor who had renounced, but may retract his renunciation at any time and administer before letters of administration ■granted, may not do the same acts. His taking possession •of the estate or intermeddling with it in anyway before ■qualifying, would be evidence of the retraction of his renunciation, and would subject him to all the responsibilities of the office. And as Judge Gaston says in Wood v. Sparks, supra, “it might perhaps notwithstanding the impropriety of such conduct constitute him a full executor.” An executor who intermeddles with an estate may be compelled to prove the will and administer. And with respect to what acts will, amount to administering so as to render him compellable to act, it is held that whatever an executor does •with respect to the goods and effects of the testator which shows an intention in'him to take upon him the exeeutor■ship, will regularly amount to administration. Williams supra, 244.
We therefore hold that John C. Davis in entering into the contract with Stallings for the surrender of the notes of ■the'latter and receiving from him the unregistered deed, was such an act as manifested the intention of assuming tbe'tíurthen of administration, and was evidence of the retraction of his refusal to administer, and when afterwards ■he qualified as executor and took out letters, it made valid by relation the act of agreement, if it was not so before,
-The case of the one hundred- and fifty-six acre tract of land stands upon a different footing. The execution against Pearce who purchased the tract from- StallingSj-was issued *403from the September term, 1867, of the county court of Franklin to its December term ensuing, and at the time it was issued, Stallings had the deed from Massenburg in his hands, but unregistered. The deed not being registered, he had only an. equitable interest in the land, and the sale te Pearce passed only the same interest which he had, the legal title in the meantime remaining in the heirs of Thomas. Davis, which could be divested only by the registration of' the deed to Stallings, for an unregistered deed does not pass-the legal estate. Hare v. Jernigan, 76 N C., 471; Triplett v. Witherspoon, 74 N. C., 475; Ivey v. Granberry, 66 N. C., 223. The interest of Pearce then being equitable, the question is,, was it such an equity as might be sold under execution ? ¡
In the case of Hoke v. Henderson, 3 Dev., 12, Chief Justice. Ruffin said: “ We think it clear that the interest of a ■purchaser at a sheriff’s sale who' has paid his money but not taken a deed, is a trust estate within the act of 1812.. The whole equitable interest is in him, and he has a right to call for a conveyance to himself at any moment.” And the same learned judge in that case said, “ the estate of a cestui que trust may be sold under execution though it may be necessary that the purchaser should come into a court of equity for the discovery, declaration and establishment of the trust'and of permanent evidence of it, on which his legal title depends.” Ours is a purer and more simple-equity than that. There, the money it is true had been paid, and that raised the equity which, could only be enforced by invoking the aid of the court of equity. But here, though the money has not been paid;, the- deed had been delivered, and all that was necessar}7 to draw to it the legal title was’its registration. It required no interposition, of the equitable jurisdiction of the court to perfect the legal title. Such wás the interest of Stallings when he sold to Pearce, and the 'interest of the latter, which was sold by the-sheriff, under the execution against him.' It is the equ'ita-*404ble title derived by the defendant through mesne conveyances from the sheriff that is set up as a defence in the answer against the recovery of the plaintiff of the hundred .and fifty-six acre tract, and it has been held that where the legal and equitable remedies are blended together, as in ■our present system of pleading, the defendant can defeat ¡the action to recover land upon equitable principles, and if upon the application of these principles the plaintiff ought not to be put in possession of the premises, he cannot recover in the ■action. Chase v. Peck, 21 N. Y., 581.
We have considered all the points raised in the argu,ment of this case and hold, for the reasons herein given, .that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover the tract of one •hundred and fifty-six acres, but that he is entitled to recover the one hundred and ten acre tract, and his costs. "There is no error. The judgment of the superior court is .affirmed.
.No error. Affirmed.
iln same case upon plain ti ffs’apjUal :
The questions presented in this case are de- • cideddn.the case between the same parties at this term of ith'e court, on the appeal of the defendant. It is unnecessary to repeat the reasons there stated ; but-, as it was decided the plaintiff could not recover the tract of land sued ffor, consisting of one hundred and fifty-six acres, by reason • of the equitable counter-claim set up by the defence, we ¡hold the defendant is entitled to the possession of that tract • of land; and the legal title being in the plaintiffs, he has the right'to a decree for the conveyance of the legal title .from the plaintiffs and that it be declared in the decree • that the effect thereof shall be to transfer to the defendant the legal title of the said land in fee simple.