| Ind. | May 15, 1864

Perkins, J.

On the 25th of February, 1858, Thomas G. Noble was the owner of a certain tract of land in Wayne county, Indiana. He was the husband of Skoda Noble, a second wife, by whom he had children living, and who, with their mother, still survive. On the day above named said Thomas G. Noble executed, his wife not joining therein, a mortgage on the tract of land above mentioned to Wm. S. T. Morton, to secure him “in the payment of all sums now due, or which may hereafter be due him from said Noble, and from all liabilities for him now or hereafter,” &c.

We say the instrument was a mortgage because both parties so treated it. Noble became indebted to Morton in a given sum, prior to May 6,1853. He became indebted to him in a given sum afterwards. In February, 1858, Thomas G. Noble *161died, leaving his wife, JRhoda, and children by her, surviving, and leaving some debts, secured by the mortgagein question, unpaid.

In 1861, Morton proceeded to foreclose the mortgage; the Court ordered two-thirds of the land, one-third having been set off to the widow, to be sold on the mortgage. Those two-thirds sold for a sum sufficient to pay the debts Thomas G. Noble owed to W. S. T. Morton on the 6th day of May, 1853; but left those contracted after that date, unpaid. Morton now claims that the remaining third of the land, that set off to Mrs. JRhoda Noble, shall be sold to pay the debts contracted by her husband, Thomas G. Noble, after the 6th of May, 1853.

He makes this claim on the ground that Noble mortgaged the entire tract of land, subject to the dower right of his wife, prior to May 6th, 1853; that, on that day, her dower was abolished, and, hence, the entire right in the land vested, under the mortgage, in Morton. Talbott v. Armstrong, 14 Ind. 254" court="Ind." date_filed="1860-06-02" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/talbott-v-armstrong-7034640?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="7034640">14 Ind. 254, and cases cited, are relied on. The mortgage in question was executed to secure future advances unlimited as to amount and without specification as to time. "While mortgages to-secure future advances may be valid as between the parties, and also against subsequent creditors writh notice, it is said' by Kent, in his Com., vol. 4, p. 176, that it is necessary to the validity of such mortgages against subsequent creditors, “that the agreement, as contained in the record of the lien, should give all the requisite information as to the extent and certainty of the contract, so that a prior creditor may, by inspection of the record, and by common prudence and ordinary diligence, ascertain the extent, of the incumbrance.” See 1 Hilliard on Mort. 285, et seq.

But the mortgagee is no longer, in our law, regarded as the owner of the land mortgaged. In the early period of the eommon law, the mortgagee was the owner, but subject to *162have his title divested by the strict performance of a condition by the mortgagor. Later, the mortgagor acquired the ¡right in equity to redeem in a time- undefined, after failure to perform the specified condition on the day. Later, the mortgagee acquired the right to foreclose the equity of redemption ; and this is a right which, according to Story, the mortgagee can not waive by an executory contract. 2 Story’s Eq., .§ 1019.

Noble, then, after having mortgaged the land in question, remained the owner, subject to the mortgage; and, as his wife did not join in the mortgage, subject, also, to her dower-right in the premises. Morton’s interest was an equitable interest to the amount of his unpaid advances to Noble. But Morton’s equity was inferior to the equity of Mrs. Noble, and, on the 6th day of -May, 1853, he had no interest in the land which it required any part of Mrs. Noble’s third of the land to satisfy. At that date the legislature changed her inchoate interest in the land from a contingent life estate into a contingent fee. That enlarged right attached to the land so far as it was not curtailed by prior equities. This, it was competent for the legislature to ordain. We have seen that no equities then existed preventing the attaching of her enlarged right. :See Noel v. Ewing, 9 Ind. 38. We think this is the plain equity of the case. Morion is not wronged. He took the ¡mortgage without Mrs. Noble’s signature. He knew that, on the 6th of May, 1853, the legislature abolished her dower, a life estate, but at the same instant created in her a contingent fee. He, at that time, was safe in the advancements he had made; and .as to them, we may admit, for the purposes of this case, that he might have held the land, under the cases of Strong v. Clem, 12 Ind. 37" court="Ind." date_filed="1859-05-23" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/strong-v-clem-7034100?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="7034100">12 Ind. 37, and Frantz v. Harrow, 13 id. 507. .But they were satisfied without encroaching upon the share of the wife. In the -case at bar, Noble still continued the 'owner of the land, and the right of his wife -continued to *163exist therein, except as to Morton’s equity in the interest of her husband.

Reelle § Wilson, for the appellee.

However it might have been as between Morton and junior creditors of Noble, who .might have obtained liens, we are clear that a mortgage by the husband, such as that executed in this case, should not operate, under the circumstances of this case, to bar the right of the wife to her third of the land. See Navis v. Stonestreet, 4 Ind. 101; Reasoner v. Edmunson, id. 393.

Per Curiam.

The judgment below is affirmed, with costs. J. S. Newman, J. F. Kibbey and J. P. Siddall, for the appellant.

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