We gather from the oral pleadings, which are laconic and abbreviated, that the plaintiff sues for the deficiency after the sale, pursuant to a chattel mortgage executed by the defendant, and that the defendant answered by general denial and a counterclaim for the value of the chattels over and above the amount of the mortgage. The mortgage was upon the express condition that if the mortgagor should pay unto the mortgagee $800, “ being the amount of a certain promissory, note, bearing even date herewith, executed ” by the said mortgagor and “ payable on demand to the order ” of the mortgagee, then the mortgage should be void. The plaintiff produced the said note and read it in evidence. The Municipal Court held that the' action should have been brought upon the note, and for that reason dismissed the plaintiff at the close of the case, without prejudice.
The plaintiff could enforce the debt secured by the mortgage and the note by foreclosure of the mortgage, even if the mortgage did not'Contain a covenant to pay, and must be regarded as collateral to the note. (Pratt v. Huggins, 29 Barb. 277; approved in Hulbert v. Clark, 128 N. Y. 295.) If the mortgage expressly acknowledges an existing debt, then the personal liability of the mortgagor is implied from the execution of the mortgage. (Culver v. Sisson, 3 N. Y. 264; Thomas *173Chat. Mort. 147.) I think that there is in this mortgage such an acknowledgment of a debt of $800 (see Elder v. Rouse, 15 Wend. 218), and, therefore, that a suit for deficiency would lie. (Case v. Boughton, 11 Wend. 106; Thomas Chat. Mort. supra.) I think, then, that the dismissal was error, and that without expression upon the merits we should reverse the judgment and order a new trial, costs to abide the event.
Hirschberg, Burr, Thomas and Carr, JJ., concurred.
Judgment of the Municipal Court reversed and new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.