— This action was brought to quiet title, based on the abandonment and surrender by appellants of a bofid for a deed, and on adverse possession, resulting in a decree quieting respondents’ title as prayed for, from which decree the appeal is taken.
There is but little controversy as to the facts. In the year 1903, respondents, who were then the owners of the land-in question, contracted to sell the same to appellants for the sum of $3,507, and gave their bond for a deed conditioned for the conveyance of the title to appellants when the purchase price should be fully paid, taking back notes evidencing the deferred payments, which contract was never recorded. Appellants went into and held possession of the lands under this contract until the fall of 1908, having up to that time paid $807 on the purchase price, and leaving then due and unpaid the principal sum of $2,700, with five years’ *271accumulated interest, making a total of more than the original purchase price. Respondents being dissatisfied with this condition, demanded of appellants'their money or the land; and here the parties differ as to just what took place. But giving the appellants the benefit of the doubt, it appears that the bond for a deed or contract passed into the possession of respondents, who surrendered the notes to the appellants, and at once entered into the possession of the land, and have ever since been in the undisputed possession, claiming full legal and equitable title as against the appellants and all the world, and have paid the taxes since so taking possession.
The appellants now contend that the respondents are nothing more than mortgagees in possession, seek an accounting of the rents and profits, and offer to pay the balance found to be due upon the purchase price after the crediting of the rents and profits.
While it has been said by this court in Taylor v. Interstate Inv. Co., 75 Wash. 490, 135 Pac. 240, that the seller, under a bond for a deed, retains the title to secure the payment of the purchase money, and may be likened to a mortgagee, yet that cannot help the appellants in this case, because the respondents did not take possession as such mortgagees. When the contract was taken up by the respondents under their demand for the money or the land, and the notes were surrendered, the appellants knew that the respondents were asserting rights which were hostile to them, and such fact, coupled with the change of possession, gave them as complete notice of the hostile claim as can well be conceived. That appellants should have acquiesced in the taking up of the contract and the taking possession of the land for all of the succeeding years until the bringing of this action, can be explained only upon *272the theory that, being in default and unable to pay, they willingly surrendered their interest in the land in consideration of the surrender of their notes and the cancellation of their indebtedness.
An executory contract for the sale of land may be rescinded by mutual consent. Such rescission may be oral if there is a sufficient part performance to take it out of the ban of the statute of frauds. Spinning v. Drake, 4 Wash. 285, 30 Pac. 82, 31 Pac. 319; Stoner v. Fryett, 91 Wash. 89, 157 Pac. 213; Woolen v. Sloan, 94 Wash. 551, 162 Pac. 985. In this case, there was full performance, and the oral agreement to rescind was fully executed by the surrender of the contract upon the one hand, and of the notes upon the other, followed by the change of possession. The appellants’ interest in the land wholly ceased upon such surrender and abandonment of their interest in the land.
The judgment of the trial court is abundantly supported by the evidence, and must be affirmed.
Main, C. J., Parker, Mitchell, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.