1. When the mortgage in question was given by Porter, the title to the mortgaged premises was in Stiles, the other defendant; but under the circumstances °f the case, the defendant S. ought to he estopped from setting up bis title in bar of that mortgage. The defendant S. ™ his answer, denies that the mortgage was given with his knowledge or assent; but there are two witnesses (TV. BumPus ai,d Underwood,) who contradict the answer in this Particular, and declare that the defendant S. was knowing ancj assenting to the mortgage, when it was given. It is ° " also in proof, and is admitted by the answer, that the defendant S., afterwards treated the mortgage as valid and subsisting, and that he paid to the present plaintiff, as assignee of TV. 17., the original mortgagee, three out of four of the instalments, of which the payments were to consist. The defendant says, the payments were voluntary and gratuitous on his part; but whether they were voluntary, or made in pursuance of some contract between S. and P., founded on a valuable consideration, is not material. It is sufficient, that the defendant S. assumed the mortgage to be valid, and if he was not present at the execution of it, he knew that P. (who resided on the premises with him,) had it in contemplation to give such a mortgage, and he gave to it his subsequent assent and ratification. When U. took the mortgage, we have reason to presume he dealt with P. as owner of the land; emd the defendant S. suffered him so to act, without objection, and without disclosing his title. We have no evidence that Ü knew of the title of S., and upon settled principles of equity and justice, the defendant S., who suffered ¿7. so to deal, and who subsequently ratified the bargain, ought not now to be permitted to interpose his own title in avoidance of the mortgage.- Another, and an equally *273conclusive answer to any such objection is, that Bay’s mortgage was a subsisting lien on the whole lot, and bound the land sold to S., and the new mortgage was a continuation of the former lien, and so intended by an arrangement So which all parties acceded.
2. The only difficulty in the case arises from the objection of a want of consideration for the mortgage.
When the mortgage was given, the land was held under a title derived from Henry Platner, who claimed under a deed from Mien MlDougall, the original grantee, and it continued to be so held, until the defendant S. took a title under the State, in May, 1818. This was almost twenty-four years after Platner had sold the premises in question to N. /. Bumpus, and after the land had been held and occupied under that title. The mortgage in question was given for a rateable proportion of the money due on a former mortgage, covering the whole lot, and of which the premises were only a part. The former mortgage was given by the purchasers under Platner to Bay, the assignee of the original bond and mortgage given to Platner. The present mortgage of 1814, was thus a renewal of a mortgage given to Bay, in 1799, which was a renewal, in part, of the original mortgage given to Platner, in 1794; and if Platner had no title to lot No. 28, in the Freemason’s Patent, when he sold to N. fy J. Bumpus, in 1794, and took their bond and mortgage, the present mortgage may be said to want consideration, on being traced back to the original source of consideration; and this is the foundation of the present defence.
But there are several objections to this defence.
In the first place, the plaintiff appears to have been a bona fide purchaser of the mortgage in question, for a valuable consideration ; and when the mortgage was executed, both the defendants were apprized of the condition of the title and of the claim of title said to exist in the State. The mortgage was given without surprize, imposition, or igno*274ranee, and under a sense of the peril to which Plainest title .was exposed, when he look this and other mortgages from the settlers on the lot, for their rateable proportions of the prior mortgage to Bay, deducted from the sum due on' the prior mortgage of 1,100 dollars, in consequence of this alleged prior and better title in the State. The defendant P. may, therefore, be considered as having given, and the defendant S. as having assented to or ratified the mortgage, with an assumption of the risk of the State claim. This inference is the more necessary, when we advert to the fact, that U. when he took the mortgage in question, never warranted the title under Plainer, though he declared his belief that the settlers never would or could be disturbed by the State claim, and though he offered to warrant the Platner title, if the settlers would give renewed mortgages for the whole of the prior mortgage, including the costs of the Chancery suit stated in the pleadings, which offer was declined.
When one of several occupiers of land on which there was a mortgage, executed a mortgage of his part of the land, towards relieving the land from the prior mortgage, he can-1,ot afterwards object, that Such prior mortgage, was without consideration, and void, as he knew the true state of that mortgage when he gave his own mortgage.Another objection to this defence is, that the defendants and five other settlers on the lot, presented a petition, under their signatures, to the Legislature, in January, 1818, praying for relie! against the State claim, in which they stated, that they had satisfied the prior mortgage to Bay. That satisfaction consisted in giving the present and other renewed mortgages for their rateable proportions of the prior mortgage ; and upon that representation the Legislature, by the act of April 3d, 1818, entitled “ an act relative to lot No. 28, in the Freemasons’ patent,” remitted to them 13 years interest on the appraisement of 1804. The answer admits that the deduction was made upon the ground of hardship stated in the petition ; and after that representation and consequent abatement, on the part of the State, the defendants would seem to be bound, in equity and good faith, to make good their representation, by a complete satisfaction of their rateable proportion of the mortgage to Bay. The State made an equivalent deduction on account of that mortgage, and *275the defendants may be considered as having had credit from the State for the whole amount of the mortgage now in question. There appears, then, to be injustice, if not a colour of fraud, in this defence.
Relief is not granted against a mortgage, on account of an outstanding claim which the mortgagor, for greater security to his title, oought in, without any judicial decision on such claim. aiAct^the thll'the'tme to ÍÍTthiTstate by vefuh^iui^of fngpeádversciy¡ ^eviction5;* cornednw7There is one remaining objection, which is, that the title of the State has never been established by any judgment at law. Before the plaintiff’s mortgage is to be set aside, as being without consideration, the claimants under Plainer ought to have been regularly evicted by due course of law, and in an action in which they might have had due opportunity to make their defence. The State derived title under the attainder of John Weatherhead, in 1779, and it had never asserted its claim, by any suit at law, from 1779 down to 1818, when the defendants applied to the Legislature for a release of their claim. Here was a lapse of 39 years, and for more than half that period the land had been held and occupied under an adverse title. Why was not this application made to the Legislature before the renewed mortgages in 1814? I doubt whether this Court has ever given relief against an incumbrance, in consequence of some outstanding claim which the debtor, for greater caution, chooses to buy in, before it has ever received a judicial determination and sanction, in a suit to which all proper persons were parties, or were called to put forward their title.
The act of the 15th of April, 1817, ( sess. 40. ch. 245.) does, indeed, recite, that the Attorney General had given a certificate, “ that the title of certain lands in the Freemasons’ patent, in the county of Oneida, was vested in the state by the attainder of John Weatherheadand it also recited, that “ the title of the State in said lands had since been perfected by removing incumbrances.” The act of April 3d, 1818, (sess. 41. ch. 81.) also directed conveyances to be given to the defendants, and the other five petitioners, as being occupants of lot No. 28, in Freemasons’ patent, forfeited by the attainder of John Weatherhead.” But *276neither that recital, nor that declaratory averment, was sufficient to devest the persons holding under Plather, Without a regular eviction, founded on a fair discussion and decision, in the ordinary course of justice. The plaintiff has an undoubted right to insist, that his claim as a mortgagee is not forfeited and lost by the mere force and effect of such a recital and declaratory clause. It cannot affect or impair that right; and so the doctrine on this point was declared by the Supreme Court, in Jackson v. Catlin ; (2 Johns. Rep 248.) and the judgment in that case was afterwards affirmed in the Court of Errors.
The deed set up by the defendants may be considered in the light of an attornment to a stranger, and a recognition of his right, in order to defeat the mortgage ; but I am of opinion that the defendants cannot be permitted in this case to avail themselves of such a defence. I shall, conse'quently, decree, that they pay the last instalment of 15Q dollars, with interest from the 1st of June, 1817, and the costs of this suit to be taxed, or that the mortgaged premises be sold.
Decree accordingly.