delivered the opinion of the court:
Our statute provides that all instruments of writing made for the purpose of securing the payment of money, whether such instruments be from the debtor to the creditor, or from the debtor to some third person in trust for the creditor, shall be deemed mortgages, and be subject to the same rules of foreclosure, restrictions and forms as are or may be prescribed by law in relation to mortgages ; and that a mortgage shall be held in our courts to be a specific lien on property for a specific object. McClellan’s Digest, pp. 765, 766. Independent of this statute, even parol evi. dence is admissible in equity to show that a deed of conveyance, absolute upon its face, was intended as a mortgage, and where it is shown that such a conveyance has been^ executed to secure the payment of money, equity will treat it as a mortgage. The court looks beyond the terms of the instrument to the real-transaction, or what was intended to be effected by the parties, and any evidence, whether written or oral, tending to show this, is admissible. The admission of oral testimony for such purpose is not a violation of the rule ivhich precludes such admission for the purpose of varying or contradicting the terms of a written instrument; that rule has reference to the language *385of which the instrument is the repository, but this permits an inquiry into the objects of the parties in executing and receiving the instrument, and equity exercises its jurisdiction to carry out such object and to prevent fraud and imposition, and to promote justice. Peugh vs. Davis, 96 U. S., 336 ; Pearce vs. Robinson, 13 Cal., 116. Our statute and the decisions of this court upon it fully establish the rule in favor of such admissibility. Lindsay vs. Matthews, 17 Fla., 585 ; Shear vs. Robinson, 18 Fla., 379 ; Franklin vs. Ayer, 22 Fla., 654. In Shear vs. Robinson a deed of conveyance of a married woman’s separate statutory property was held to be a mortgage. . ;
Parol evidence is admissible to connect papers, which, together, constitute a deed and. defeasance or mortgage, and to show that an instrument bearing a subsequent date to the deed was either executed at the .same time, or that its terms and substance were in fact agreed upon at the same time, and, though subsequently reduced to writing, constitute a part of the same transaction with the deed. Franklin vs. Ayer, supra; Jones on Mortgages, §248. When the instruments connect themselves and show that the purpose was to secure the payment of money, no parol proof is necessary, even if it can be said to be admissible. Franklin vs. Ayer, supra, and 31 Penn. St., 131, 295.
In Lindsay vs. Matthews, supra, where the deed was not from the debtor, it was held that the words “whether such instruments of writing be from the debtor to the creditor or from the debtor to some third person,” in our statute, are descriptive of certain instruments embraced within the act, but that such words do not affect its application to any instrument conveying property for the purpose of securing the payment of money. The doctrine of Carr vs. Carr, 52 N. Y., 251, is that whenever property is trans*386ferred, no matter in what form or by what conveyance as a security for a debt, the transferee takes merely as mortgagee, and has no other rights or remedies than the law accords to mortgagees. See also Hooper’s Appeal, 64 Penn. StM 315.
It is settled that in this State a mortgage does not convey the legal title of land out of the mortgagor, but only creates a specific lien on the property. McMahan vs. Russell, 17 Fla., 698 ; Berlack vs. Halle, 21 Fla., 236 ; Franklin vs. Ayer, et al„ 22 Fla., 654. See also Brinkman vs. Jones, 44 Wis., 498. This is no less true where the method of mortgaging is an absolute deed of conveyance, made either to the creditor or a third person, with the defeasance resting simply upon verbal proof or upon written evidence connecting itself with the deed or capable of being so connected by oral evidence, than it is as to an ordinary formal mortgage. Any other view would practically ignore the statute.
As a further premise to the conclusion we reach in the case before us we may remark that a homestead is the subject of mortgage by the husband and wife in Florida. Patterson vs. Randall and Taylor, 15 Fla., 337 ; Hart vs. Sanderson’s Administrators, 18 Fla., 103. See also Miller vs. Marx, 55 Ala., 336 ; Scott vs. Simmons, 70 Ala., 357, which affirm a similar view as existing in Alabama.
Looking at the pleadings before us, which are fully set forth in the statement of the case, we find that before and at the time of the execution of the deed of conveyance, Mrs. Ashmead was informed by her husband and the attorneys of the complainant, that the deed was intended and was prepared to be executed by her husband and herself for the purpose of securing the indebtedness mentioned in the agreement, and that she executed said deed with full information of the contents of the agreement and for said *387purpose and intent. This allegation of the bill is not denied by the plea. The object of the parties in making the deed cannot, therefore, be questioned ; it was ■ made to secure the payment of money, and is a mortgage. Nor is there in view of the pleadings any room for the contention of counsel for appellee, that there was no joint consent of the husband and wife, or of the wife with her husband, to the creation of a mortgage lien on the property. It cannot be denied, in face of the pleadings, that both before and at the time of the execution of the deed of conveyance Mrs. Ash-mead was informed by her husband and the attorneys of the complainant that the deed was intended and was prepared to be executed by her husband and herself for the purpose of securing the indebtedness mentioned in the agreement; nor that she executed such deed with full information of the contents of the agreement and of said purpose and intent. If she had full information of the contents of the agreement, and of the fact that the deed was intended to secure the indebtedness mentioned in it, she, by her execution of it with her husband, intended in fact nothing more nor less than the making of a deed of conveyance of the homestead property to' secure the indebtedness mentioned in said agreement, upon the terms stated in the latter instrument.
The defence made by the plea is that the property mortgaged was at the time the deed was made, and still continues to be, the homestead of Mr. Ashmead, occupied as such then, and still by himself, his wife and their children. The Constitution in force at the date of the deed provided that a homestead could not be then alienated without the consent of the husband and wife. So far as the deed is concerned, it is not denied that it is in due form as an absolute deed of conveyance, as well as to the separate acknowledgment of the wife, as otherwise. No court which *388has permitted the introduction of either parol or written evidence to show that an absolnte deed was made to secure a debt, and was, in effect, a mortgage, has.ever regarded it as an attempt either to supply any deficiency in' a separate acknowledgment, or to change or add to the language of any part of the. deed. This is clearly shown not to be the case, by the authorities we have cited. There is nothing of the kind in any case we have seen, and certainly nothing in those cited by counsel for appellee. The ground upon which a separate acknowledgment of a married woman can be effectually assailed,are well known, and need not be commented on here. Why an absolute deed of conveyance of a homestead, which has been executed in due form by the husband and wife, cannot be shown by written or even by parol proof to have been made to secure a debt and to be a mortgage, we are unable to perceive. The Constitution, in requiring the joint consent of husband and wife to an alienation of it, requires no more than the statute does to a conveyance, or mortgage of the wife’s statutory separate real property. McClellan’s Digest, §9, p. 756.
The principle upon which the evidence is admissible in the case of a conveyance of the wife’s real property, or of the real property, other than a homestead, of an unmarried person, is in no way inapplicable to its admission in the case of a deed of conveyance of a homestead. If parol evidenee; or written evidence which the wife has not formally executed, is not admissible to ascertain the object of the parties in executing and receiving a deed of conveyance of a homestead, then such a deed, though really executed by the husband and wife for the purpose of securing a present loan of au amount of cash far less than the value of the property, will sustain an ejectment, and the substance and justice of the case must be smothered under the form of the *389instrument, and neither the father, the mother or the children can rescue the home place, either under the rule of equity or the statute of this State, either of which would enable the grantors to rescue any other piece of real estate under similar circumstances.
The provisions of the agreement as to a reconveyance to Ashmead and his heirs, or to any one he may appoint, did not pass the legal title to the property to Schumaker. Nothing but a lien on the property was created by the deed, or b}7 any or all the papers, and the provision in question cannot be taken in view of the law of this State, either as vesting or intending to vest Schumaker with any power to convey the fee of the property to a third person on payment of the money. If, however, it is to be said that Ashmead understood in fact that it did give Schumaker such power, it must, under the pleadings, also be similarly understood as to Mrs. Ashmead, and there was consequently intended, though ineffectually, as much “ conscious ” joint consent as to it as to any other feature of the transaction. Such provision does not defeat the purpose of the parties to make a mortgage. Hughs vs. Edwards, 9 Wheaton, 495.
All we need say of the decision of the U. S. Circuit Court, in Iowa, in the case of Mersman vs. Winges, cited by counsel for appellee, as it appears in Myer’s Federal Decisions, vol. 9, p. 73, is, that it will be found to have been overruled, and we think correctly so, by the Supreme Court of the United States, on appeal, at the October Term, 1884. Mersman vs. Winges, 112 U. S. Reports, 139.
In our opinion complainants are seeking only to carry out the purpose for which the papers were executed ; no other conclusion can be inferred from the papers, considered either alone or in connection with the pleadings.
*390The order appealed from will be reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings in accordance with chancery practice. It will be so ordered.
Appellees then filed a petition for a rehearing, which was denied.
Mr. Justice Ranevdelivered the opinion of the court;
This case was fully deliberated upon before the recent change in the Chief Justiceship of the Court, and has been, with the aid of the present Chief Justice, again carefully considered in connection with the petition for rehearing, and we have no doubt of the correctness of the opinion heretofore filed.
There is nothing in any of the authorities cited in the petition for a rehearing which in anywise conflicts with the doctrines of the opinion or their application. The case of Dickenson vs. McLean, 57 N. H., 31, holds that a married woman cannot, under the laws of that State, release her homestead in the estate of her husband by her separate deed. There is certainly no separate deed of the wife in the case we are considering, nor is there anything in the New Hampshire decision to the effect that it cannot be shown by parol that a deed to which the wife is a party with her husband was made to secure an indebtedness, and the terms of such indebtedness, even though there be written evidence of the husband’s assent to such terms.
"W"e think this to be a proper occasion for restoring the practice in applications for rehearings to a conformity to the rule properly governing in such cases.
Rule 24 of this court provides as follows: “ Rehearings must be applied for by petition in writing during the term at which the judgment is entered, and the attention of the court called thereto, unless further time is allowed by the *391court.. The petition shall not assume any new ground or position not taken upon the argument, or in the points made upon which the cause was submitted, but must set forth concisely the particular omission or cause for which the judgment is supposed to be erroneous. The court will consider the petition without argument. A petition for a rehearing is not a part of the record unless so ordered or rehearing granted.”
A petition for a rehearing is a pleading, and according to the rule it should set forth concisely the particular omission or cause for which the judgment is supposed to be erroneous. Such alleged omission or cause should be simply stated in order that the court may consider it (without argument) and determine whether it is a point which has failed to receive proper deliberation, and suggests any error of judgment and the propriety of a rehearing. If the court sees reason to apprehend that a mistake may have been made it will grant a rehearing, and the cause will be re-argued orally and on brief; or simply on written argument, if agreeable to counsel and the court. Rehearings are not a matter of right or granted in this country upon the mere certificate of counsel, but rest in the sound discretion of the court. 2 Daniels Chan. Pl. and Pr., 1479, note 5 ; N. J. Z. Co. vs. N. J. F. Co., 14 N. J. Eq., 308 ; Bruinmagin vs. Chew, 19 N. J. Eq., 337; Jenkins vs. Eldridge, 3 Story, 299 ; 1 Paige, 255. The latter is certainly the practice in Florida. Rot only is it improper to assume any new ground or position in the petition, but it is equally improper to embody in or accompany the petition with a written argument and citation of authorities. Is it not too plain, if such written argument and citation of authorities are permitted, that the petitioner, if we consider the petition, secures without leave the object of his petition ? If we read and consider the arguments and authorities what *392' more can he desire in the nature of a rehearing ? He certainly will put in all of both that his capacities and diligence will enable him to do up to the time the petition is filed. The impropriety of such practice is self evident. By it the petitioner secures all the advantages of a rehearing though the petition is denied. In Smith and Armistead vs. Croom, et al., 7 Fla., 180, it was held under a substantially similar if not more liberal rule that upon an application for a rehearing of a cause decided by this court it is irregular and an infraction of the rule to accompany the petition with a written argument and the citation of authorities. As entirely applicable to the ease before us now we may say, in the language of the court in the above case, 7 Fla., p. 198 : “ The application in this case has been presented in the form of an elaborately written argument, and not by simple petition, as is directed in the rule. We mention this merely for the purpose of maintaining the correct practice under the 'rule, and with no design to impute an intentional impropriety to the counsel who makes the application. The soundness of this interpretation of the rule is too obvious to need any argument in its support, for it will readily occur to every practitioner that if it be important to one party to have his cause reheard, it is equally important to the other that there should be an end to the litigation.”
Hereafter wre shall insist upon a compliance with the above rule, though in this case we have not done so. A rehearing is denied.