The defendants, Thomas Crew and Penninnah Crew, his wife, appeal from the judgment.
The complaint states a cause of action to foreclose a mortgage executed by the two appellants to the plaintiff. The court gave judgment foreclosing the mortgage and providing for a deficiency judgment against the two appellants in case the foreclosure sale did not satisfy the debt. The appellants do not complain of the portion of the judgment foreclosing the mortgage. Their objection is to the provision for the deficiency judgment against them, their claim being that they have been released from personal liability on the debt by an extension of time made by the plaintiff to a subsequent holder of the land under the appellants, after said purchase and without the consent of the appellants.
The mortgage and the note which it was given to secure were executed by the appellants on September 13, 1912. The debt was due three years after date. Afterward Crew and wife sold the property to one Peters, and thereafter by subsequent transfers Clyde E. Cate became the owner thereof and while he was such owner, on October 20, 1915, at his request and without the knowledge or consent of the appellants, the plaintiff, by a written agreement with Cate, extended the time of payment of the mortgage debt for the term of two years from that date. These facts appear from the findings. The appeal is on the judgment-roll alone. The value of the land was not put in issue and does not appear from the findings or elsewhere in the record. It is not alleged or found that the purchaser of the land from the mortgagor, or any subsequent purchaser thereof, assumed or agreed to pay the mortgage debt, or that the same constituted a part of the consideration of either of the respective transfers. Neither does it appear that the conveyance made by Crew and wife to Peters contained any covenant that the land was free from encumbrance, or that Peters, or any subsequent purchaser, took subject to the mortgage, by the contract of transfer. The mortgage, however, was duly re *731 corded and therefore their interest in the land was necessarily subject to such mortgage.
The case is precisely the same as any other contract to pay money executed by two persons, where one is surety for the other and the creditor is aware of that relation.
In
Murray
v.
Marshall,
*734
The judgment is reversed.
Olney, J., and Lawler, J., concurred.
