The claim of the widow must be admitted, according to a series of decisions in the Courts of this State. In England, dower is considered as a mere legal right, and equity follows the law, and will not create the right where it does not subsist at law. It is on this principle, according to Lord Redesdale, (2 Sch. and Lef. 388.) that a Court of Equity will not allow dower of an equity of redemption reserved upon a mortgage in fee, though there may be dower of an equity of redemption upon a mortgage for a term of years, because in that case, the law gives dower, subject to the term. The justice, however, of allowing dower of an equitable estate, seems to have been very generally felt and acknowledged in the 3English Courts of Equity. But we have nothing to do, at present., with the English adjudications on the subject, for as our Courts of law do now allow dower, in certain cases, of an equity of redemption, this Court, according to the doctrine referred to, ought to follow the law, and also allow dower out of the proceeds of the equity of redemp*455tion, an,d which proceeds have in this case been placed before the Court.
in Waters v. Stewart, (1 Caines Cases in Error, 47.) in which the decree of this Court was, in 1804, unanimously affirmed in the Court of Errors, it was established, that an equity of redemption reserved upon a mortgage in fee, might he sold on execution at law against the mortgagor, as real estate, so long as the mortgagor was in possession, and there had not been a foreclosure of the mortgage- The purchaser would take as the mortgagor held, subject to the lien and rights of the mortgagee. According to this decision, the mortgagor was regarded as seised at law, before foreclosure or entry by the mortgagee. In pursuance of this decision, it was decided by the Supreme Court, in 1809, in Jackson v. Willard, (4 Johns. Rep. 41.) tiiat the interest of the mortgagee in the mortgaged premises, before foreclosure or entry by him, was not the subject of sale on execution at law as real estate. The one decision was a necessary consequence of the doctrine in the other. This doctrine was first applied in the case of Hitchcock v. Harrington, in 1810, (6 Johns. Rep. 290.) to the case of dower. The mortgagor died in possession after the debt became due, and before foreclosure; and he was held to have died seised, in respect to the dower of his wife, and that she was entitled to dower, as against a purchaser holding under the heir. But in that case, the mortgage was no longer subsisting, and had been paid off and satisfied by the purchaser; and the case is only worthy of notice in this review, for the recognitipn which it contains of the doctrine, that the mortgagor, in respect to all the world but the mortgagee, continued seised in law, so long as the mortgagee had not exerted his right of entry or foreclosure under his mortgage, and that such a seisin was sufficient for the wife’s dower. The case of Collins v. Torry, (7 Johns. Rep. 278.) went a step further, and held that the estate of the mortgagor was the real estate at law, and that the widow of a person purchasing *456of the mortgagor, subsequent to tie mortgage, might recover her dovrer, against a purchaser under the husband, who could not set up the mortgage, even as a subsisting title, there having been no entry or foreclosure under it* In that case, however, the mortgage was not considered as any longer a subsisting title; but in respect to the general doctrine, that the mortgagor, before entry or foreclosure, was seised, and that no purchaser of the equity could set it up in bar of dower, the Court go on and observe, that it did, “ in effect, enable the wife to be endowed of an equity of redemption, and under the above limitations, it was just, and consistent with principle, that she should be endowed of it. We cannot now, (alluding to the above decisions,) with any justice or consistency, say, that the interest of the mortgagor is the real estate at law, and yet that it is not such an estate, when the mortgagor’s widow comes to ask her dower of the heir or grantee of her husband. The plain and necessary rule is, to allow her the dower, which she must take, as the heir or purchaser takes the estate, subject to the mortgage.”
It is to be observed, that the mortgage, in that case, was given by a person from whom the husband purchased, and therefore, the interest of the wife, as well as of the husband, subsequently acquired, might have been held subject to the mortgage. It could not have been intended, by any observations in the cáse, that if the husband, during coverture, and while seized of the equity of redemption, should mortgage that equity, that the right of dower of the wife could be affected by that mortgage any more than by an absolute sale of the equity.
The case of Coles v. Coles, 15 Johns. Rep. 319.) went a step still further, and held, that where a person seised of land in fee, mortgages it, and afterwards marries, his widow was entitled to dower out of that equity of redemption," against the purchaser of that equity, though the mortgage *457ivas still subsisting. Here was a final and full establishment in our Courts of law of the principle not admitted in the English Courts of law, that a wife could be endowed of an equity of redemption arising upon a mortgage in fee-, and this Court ought to follow the rule of law. It ought to do so, according to the rule and practice of the Courts of Equity in England, in the like case, and because the doctrine recognizing the legal title of the mortgagor before foreclosure, first originated in this Court, and was confirmed in the Court of Appeals, and, finally, because, it is a most just and reasonable doctrine-, and has been so acknowledged throughout the history of the cases.
When Coles took his second mortgage, he took it as a purchaser would have taken the equity, subject to the Tight of dower of the wife; and if he did not deem the security sufficient, under that condition, he should, as the first mortgagee did, have procured a release of her right. When the wife joined in the first mortgage, she only parted with her right of dower to the extent of that mortgage debt, and she would have been entitled to have redeemed the mortgage, upon her husband’s death, for the sake of her dower, and to reinstate herself in all her rights. If she consents to a sale under the first mortgage, it is with a reservation of her rights ; and if the right of dower be consummated by the husband’s death, before the sale, (for it is clear, that she would have had no claim upon the proceeds, after the satisfaction of the first mortgage, if her husband had been living,) she has a good right in equity to have her dower satisfied out of the surplus proceeds, which represent the equity of redemption. Suppose the land could properly have been sold in parcels, and the direction in the decree had been to have sold only one parcel of the mortgaged premises, sufficient to have satisfied the first mortgage, she would have been most clearly entitled to her dower in the residue of the land, in preference *458to the -claims of the second mortgagee ; and then, according to the doctrine on the part of Coles, the second mortgagee, her right must depend upon a circumstance resting so entirely in discretion, as the mode to be adopted for satisfying the mortgage sought to be foreclosed by the bill. Her right must be of -a more fixed and stable cha» racier.
In Tabele v. Tabele, (1 Johns. Ch. Rep. 45.) there was mo question raised, or opposite interests set up, but it seem-ed to be assumed, as the course of the Court in such cases, to allow to the widow her dower out of the surplus proceeds of the mortgaged premises, after satisfying the mortgage in which she had joined. I do not perceive what right a subsequent mortgagee of the husband’s equity, has to that equity or its proceeds, in a case in which the wife -was no party to the mortgage, which any subsequent purchaser or other lawful representative of the husband, would -not equally have.
I shall accordingly grant the prayer of the petition, by •directing, that the sum of 2,281 dollars, be invested in government stock, and the income thereof, as it may be received from time to time, be paid to the petitioner during her natural life, and that the principal, after her death, and the income thereafter accruing, remain subject to the further order of the Court. Her claim to costs against iiim is denied.
Order accordingly.