delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a bill to foreclose a mortgage executed by husband and wife upon real estate, embracing their place of residence at the time of its execution. The bill is brought by the administrators of J. P. Sanderson, deceased, the mortgagees,
The mortgage was executed in due. form by the husband and wife, and contained the following-recitals and covenants, all of which the bill sets up, viz: “ It is understood that the money to secure the payment of which this mortgage is given was borrowed by the grantors from the grantees to pay for improvements made on a part of the mortgaged premises, and the grantors hereby waive all benefit of exemption and homestead, and stipulate that the same shall never be claimed to the prejudice of the grantees, their successors or assigns.” In the separate examination and acknowledgment of the wife, she acknowledges that she made herself a party to and executed the deed of mortgage for the purpose of conveying and mortgaging all of her estate in esse and in futuro in the lands therein described, and that she executed the same freely and voluntarily, and without any compulsion, constraint, apprehension or fear from her husband.
The defendant filed a plea and an answer in support thereof.. The plea sets up that a portion of the premises had been occupied by the said Ossian B. Hart, in his life-time, as a
She idleges also that the statement in the said indenture of mortgage to the effect that “it is understood that the money to secure the payment of which this mortgage is given was borrowed by the grantors from the grantees to pay for improvements on a part of the mortgaged premises,” was inserted or caused and procured to be inserted in said indenture of mortgage by the mortgagees, with the intention of investing said mortgage with the superior force of a lien under the exceptions mentioned in the constitution of this State in regard to homestead exemptions, and of defeating the assertion of the homestead right, when in truth and in fact none of said money was intended for or used in paying for improvements made on any part of the said homestead premises.
The complainant set down the plea for argument, and
When there is a plea and an answer in support thereof, and a hearing is had without replication, the rule is that every fact stated in the bill and not denied by the averments in the plea, or by the answer in support oí the plea, must be taken as true. (2 Sell. & Let'., 726; 4 Paige, 195 ; 2 Atk., 241 ; Gilb. Cas. in Equity, 185 ; 1 Simnn & Stewart, .568; Mit. Ohy. Pldg., 299 ; 14 Pet., 257.) The matter of the plea is that the mortgagors had a homestead in the mortgaged premises, and the answer in support of the plea denies the allegations in the bill to the effect that the moneys secured by the mortgage were for the payment, of obligations contracted for the erection of improvements thereon, and a'denial of its voluntary execution. The practice .-adopted here was incorrect.. The hearing first upon the .plea,'distinct from the answer in support thereof, and after-wards upon the bill and answer apart from the plea, was •..erroneous. The answer here was strictly and wholly in support of the plea. It denied suet, allegations in the bill . as were supposed to avoid the anticipated plea, such as con-i' sent to sale and the use of the moneys in improving the .•homestead property. It is true that the defendant files ■. the answer as an answer “ to the residue of the bill of complaint not covered by her plea.” Upon examination, however, it is plain that it is simply in support of the plea. (1 .Story, 212; Story’s Eq. Pldg., 764.) The plea is to the -whole of the bill. There is no “residue of the bill not covered by it.”
The rule by which to determine the sufficiency of an an- : swer in such a case as this is to consider every allegation in the bill.as time, which is not sufficiently denied by the an