This is аn application for a writ of mandate and prohibition against the judge of the superior court, county clerk, and sheriff of the county of Mendocino to secure the petitioner in the execution of a writ of assistance to place him in possession of certain real property which he claims under a commissioner’s deed in a sale under foreclosure of mortgage.
All of the facts preliminary to a сonsideration of petitioner’s rights in the premises are determined by the decree in foreclosure.
This decree was obtained in proceedings duly had giving the court jurisdiction of the persons of the defendants and subject matter of the action in the case of First Federal Trust Company, a Corporation, as Plaintiff, v. Leslie B. McMurtry, Alice A. MeMurtry, Mortgagors, B. P. Noonan and Standard Livestock Company, holding a leasehold interest in the рremises, subject to plaintiff’s mortgage, and other defendants holding liens against the premises, subsequent to and subject to the plaintiff’s mortgage and to said leasehold interest. It is the rights of the purchaser at foreclosure sale, under the decree, as against the lessees that are here involved. It was adjudged and determined by the decree that the plaintiff was the owner and holder of a first mortgage lien on the lands in question, upon which there was due, owing, and unpaid the sum of $94,516, and that “each and every right, title, interest, and claim of every kind of each and all of the defendants herein and of each and all of the cross-complainants herein” are subsequent and subordinate to the plaintiff’s mortgage.
*136 Also, that the certain lease referred to in said answer of said defendants B. P. Noonan, Standard Livestock Company,, a corporation, et al., “is how in full force and effect as to the unexpired term thereof, and that said Standard Livestock Company is now the owner and holder thereof”; also, that said lease was “and it is hereby adjudged and decreed to be subsequent and subordinate to all said rights, claims, and liens of said plaintiff,” and that said lease is “prior and superior to any and all claims of liens” of the other defendants and cross-complainants, as parties claiming under them, and that all and every right and interest of the other defendants and cross-complainants “are subsequent and subordinate to the rights of said defendant Standard Livestock Company under said lease, as successor in interest of the defendant, B. P. Noonan, the lessee therein named.”
It was then found and decreed that other defendants and cross-complainants, whose names and interest it is not necessary to set out here, were owners and holders of subsequent and subordinate liens on the mortgaged premises in varying amounts aggregating about the sum of sixty-four thousand dollars. The amounts of these subsequent liens were ascertained and determined and all declared subordinate to the lien of plaintiff and to the leasehold of the Standard Livestock Company.
The decree then ordered and adjudged that a sale be made by a commissioner named for that purpose of all the mortgaged premises in one parcel in the manner provided by law “free and clear of any and all liens and claims of each and all of thp defendants herein, and of each and all of the cross-complainants herein, and of any and all other persons and corporations.”
It was next directed that the proceeds of such sale be applied first to the payment of the amounts duе the plaintiff aggregating the sum of $94,546, and that the balance, if any, be applied in the order of their preference to the subsequent lien claims.
No provision was made by this decree to protect the leasehold of the Standard Livestock Company, or for the application of any of the proceeds of the sale to its interest in the premises. The decree, however, directs if there remain any balance after applying the proceeds as therein *137 specifically directed, the same “be returned into court to abide the further order thereof.”
It is finally provided by the decree that the purchaser at said sale be let into possession of the premises, “and that in case such purchaser or purchasers shall be refused such possession, a writ or writs of assistance issue without further notice, requiring the sheriff- of the county in which said lands are situated to place and maintain each of said respective purсhasers in the quiet and peaceable possession of the lands and premises so foreclosed by him and the whole thereof.”
The sale was made pursuant to said decree, at which sale the petitioner, W. H. Sullivan, bid in the entire mortgaged property at the sum of $152,825, and in due course, no redemption having been made, received the commissioner’s deed to the premises. The purchaser was not a party to the foreclosure suit nor in any manner connected therewith. At the time the commissioner’s deed was delivered the said B. P. Noonan and Standard Livestock Company were in possession of the premises, claiming by virtue of their lease. Demand was made upon them and the commissioner’s deed was exhibited to them, but they refused to surrender possession. Petitioner then applied to the superior court in which the decree was given that а writ of assistance be issued in accordance with the terms of the decree of foreclosure and sale. Such writ was thereupon ordered and was issued, directed to the sheriff of Mendocino County, requiring him to put the purchaser in possession. Before the sheriff had executed the writ the lessees, Noonan and Standard Livestock Company, applied to and obtained from the court an order restraining, the sheriff from exеcuting the writ, and served notice of motion to amend the writ by providing that the purchaser be placed in possession of the premises “subject, however, to the lease of Standard Livestock Company, a corporation.”
It is to these proceedings withholding and amending the writ of assistance that the petition before us for writ of mandate and prohibition is directed. It is claimed by petitioner, the purchaser at the foreclosure sale, that the court or judge thereof was without jurisdiction to withdraw or modify the original order and writ of assistance issued in accordance with the terms of the foreclosure decree.
*138
But whatever the power of the court or the rights of the lessees by way of protection of this leasehold, they were not' exercised, and under the dеcree and order of sale the entire estate in the mortgaged premises was offered for sale and bid in by the purchaser, a stranger to the action, and he received under his purchase and the subsequent deed of the commissioner an unqualified and unlimited title to the entire tract.
The court did not exceed its jurisdiction in decreeing this sale, and it is too late now to go behind its judgment because of any errors or irregularities.
It is no answer at this time to the conelusiveness of this decree and the proceedings under it that the trial judge had intended the decree to safeguard the interests of the lessees, and that the failure to do so was one of mistake or inadvertence.
It requires no citation of authorities to show that petitioner’s rights under the judgment and foreclosure sale and conveyance cannot be circumscribed in this way.
We are satisfied that petitioner is entitled, to possession of the premises freed from the claims of this lease.
No judgment of court in ejectment or unlawful detainer could give him any clearer right to possession than he has under this judgment and sale. This is not a ease where the rights of parties in possession who are not bound by the record in the foreclosure action are involved, and where an independent title or right of possession is claimed. Here the rights of the contenders for possession have been fully adjudicated and it оnly remains to put the plain provisions of such adjudication into execution.
It is true that all of these modes of obtaining relief are open to him, but it may well be questioned under the circumstances of this case, if either of them is plain, speedy, or adequate. Where, as here, the judgment has become final, and the only question in controversy is the right to enforce such judgment in accordance with its terms, it certainly is a roundabout and inadequate remedy to compel the party seeking enforcement of his decree to prosecute an independent action, when equity prоvides a direct procedure in the original action for carrying out the decree. Generally, it may be conceded, relief from orders granting or denying *141 writs of assistance is sought by appeal. Such is obviously the proper remedy where issues of fact are involved raising a controversy as to rights acquired subsequent to the judgment. But here the successful prosecution of an appeal would bring the petitioner back to рrecisely where he now is, his right to possession under the same decree, and to obtain it through a writ of assistance. A subsequent order for or against the issuance of such writ would be subject to another appeal, and so on ad infinitum.
The question as to whether
mandamus
will lie in the face of a right of appeal upon orders affecting the issuance of writs of assistance has not been directly before the appellate courts of this state. The most that appears from California decisions cited by respondent is that the aggrieved party has always resorted to his remedy by appeal. It was held in
State ex rel. Biddle
v.
Superior
Court,
In the deсision last cited a writ of mandate to compel issuance of an execution was upheld, notwithstanding an appeal would lie. The court, in the opinion by Chief Justice Beatty, says: “Here it is suggested there is a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy by appeal from the order overruling *142 the motion for execution, hut this remedy, although plain, is neither speedy nor adequate. The appeal, in the ordinary course, would nоt be decided for a long time, and pending the appeal there would be no security for the payment of the judgment. And, besides, nothing would necessarily result from an appeal beyond a reversal of the order, and this would merely confirm the right of the petitioner to execution—a right already complete. So that unless the judgment of reversal was accomplished by a mandatory direction to order the issuance of еxecution, the petitioner would find himself at the end of his appeal precisely where he is now— with a right to demand the issuance of the writ, but with no power to compel it.” The' language quoted seems to us to be exactly applicable to the instant case.
If respondents’ contention could be maintained under the facts pleaded in the answer to the petition, that issues are presented giving rise to equities which have arisen since the decree in foreclosure, there would be force in the objection to a summary disposal of the matter on this hearing, but we do not think any equities that the court could take cognizance of are pleaded.
The only decision cited by respondent which appeals to us as being at all in point on this proposition is that of
Monday
v.
O’Neil,
We recognize the unfortunate situation in which the respondents have been placed under this foreclosure decree and sale, but it is too late to afford them any relief by modifying the effects of the judgment.
Under the facts as they appear on the face of the record it is our conclusion that the writ of assistance was not improvidently or inadvertently issued, and that the court is without power to amend it so as to subject petitioner’s pos *144 session of the premises to the lease of the respondents, or to further withhold its exеcution.
Let a peremptory writ of mandamus issue requiring the issuance and execution of a writ of assistance in accord with the terms of the decree of foreclosure and sale, and providing that the purchaser at the foreclosure sale be placed in absolute possession of the premises as against all of the defendants in said action and all parties claiming under such defendants, or any of them.
Wilbur, J., Olney, J., Shaw, J., Angellotti, C. J., Lawlor, J., and Lennon, J., concurred.
