By the Court.
Lumpkin, J.,delivering the opinion.
This cause came on for a hearing before Judge Meriwether, in Richmond Superior Court, from which it appeared, that on the first day of July, 1833, Grace Rowell gave to Thomas Cumming a mortgage on certain lands and slaves, to secure the payment of a promissory note for nine thousand dollars, due the first day of July, 1836, with interest payable thereon annually. That on the 23d of September, 1835, said Grace Rowell made a conveyance of part of the mortgaged property to Henry H. Cumming, subject to the trusts in the deed of conveyance mentioned, the deed purporting to be founded upon love and natural affection as well as the sum of ten dollars, and containing a clause of warranty of the title against all persons claiming under the said Grace. That on the 29th of the same month, said Grace conveyed by a similar instrument, another part of the mortgaged property to Joseph Ware, subject to the trusts in this last deed mentioned. That said note and mortgage have been duly transferred to complainant, and there is yet a considerable amount of principal and interest due thereon. That said Grace Rowell has died testate, and that George L. Twiggs and John P. Eve, are her acting executors. The bill seeks for a foreclosure of said mortgage, and a decree for the sale of so much of said property mortgaged as may be sufficient to pay the balance of the debt yet due; the estate of said Grace in the hands of said executors not being sufficient for that purpose.
The defendant, Henry H. Cumming in his answer, admitting the material facts contained in said bill, insisted, that no part of the property conveyed to him as trustee as aforesaid, by Grace Rowell, ought in law or equity to be subjected to the payment of said mortgage dept, until the whole of the property included in said mortgage, and remaining in the hands of the said Grace Rowell at and after the execution of the deed to the defendant, and then undisposed of by her, should have been exhausted by such payment, and that the complainant should be. decreed to proceed first against the property in the hands of Joseph Ware, *468contained in his deed of the 29th of September, 1835, for the satisfaction of said debt.
The defendant, Joseph Ware, likewise admitting all the material facts, insisted that the instruments in writing under which both he and the defendant Cumming, claimed to have property-conveyed to them by Grace Rowell, were testamentary in their character, and if not, were voluntary conveyances, and that whatever rights the several cestuis que trust derived from them, those rights all accrued at the same time, to wit, at the decease of the said Grace Rowell, and had no reference whatever to the dates and times of the execution of said respective instruments; and prayed that Henry H. Cumming and himself be decreed to contribute ratably, according to the value of the property held by them, to the payment of complainant’s demand.
The cause being before the jury, the presiding judge instructed them, that by the deeds of the 23d and 29th of September, Grace Rowell conveyed to Cumming and Ware, absolute titles to the property therein mentioned, vesting immediately, and that upon the execution and delivery of said' deeds, she had no power by any act of her’s, to affect in the slightest manner the titles to said property, beyond the life estate which she reserved to herself; that her whole relation to the property was changed; that before, she had an absolute fee, whereas now, she held only an estate for life. That notwithstanding the deeds to Camming and Ware were of.different dates, and their titles accrued at different times, they should be held in equity to contribute ratably to the payment of complainant’s debt, in proportion to the present value of the property held by them respectively under said deeds, and that the said Grace Rowell, by said deeds, conveyed nothing more than the equity of redemption in the property embraced in each, subject to the reservation of her life estate.
A verdict was rendered by the jury corresponding to said charge, whereupon the defendant, Henry H. Cumming, excepted to the judgment and charge of i the Court, 1st, because he is not liable in equity to such contribution, and 2ná, because such contribution, if made at all, should not be made in proportion to'the value of the property at the time of the decree.
[1.] The first point to be settled is, whether or not there be any fixed and well defined English rule upon this subject; for if it be the law of the mother country, as adopted in this, in 1776, we are bound by it of course, whether it be reasonable or otherwise.
*469It was well remarked,, however, by Lord Denman in his judgment in the House of Peers in Mr. O’Connell’s case, “ that a large portion of that legal opinion which has passed current for law, falls within the description of ‘ law taken for granted;’ and that when in the pursuit of truth we are obliged to investigate the grounds of the law, it is plain and has often been proved by recent experience, that the mere statement and re-statement of a doctrine, the mere repetition of the cantilena of lawyers, cannot make it law, unless it can be traced to some competent authority, and if it be irreconcilable, to some clear legal principle.”
It is conceded that where there is a lien upon different parcels of land for the. payment of the same debt, and some of those lands still belong to the person who in equity and justice owes and ought to pay the debt, and other parcels of the land have been transferred by him to third persons, his part of the land, as between himself and them, shall,be primarily chargeable with the debt. Gill vs. Lyon, 1 Johns. Ch. R. 447; Stoney vs. Shultz, 1 Hill Ch. R. 500; Commercial Bank of Erie vs. Western Reserve Bank, 11 Ohio (Stanton) R. 444; Hartley vs. O'Flaherty, Lloyd & Gould R. 216; Temp. Pl. 19.
No one seems to dispute that this doctrine is altogether equitable and proper as to the original owner; but if he has sold or transferred different parcels of land at different times to different persons, as incumbrancers or purchasers, the question is, how are they to be charged as between themselves 1 • Is the lien to be borne ratably between them, according to the relative value of their respective estates 1 or in the reverse order of the liens of the transfers to them 1 that is to say, the land last sold to be first charged to its full value, and so backward until the debt is fully paid.
Judge Story seems to incline strongly to the former opinion, and says that the doctrine has been asserted in the ancient as well as the modern English cases upon the subject. 2 Story Eq. Jur. sec. 1233. And the able editor of the American Law Magazine, declares, that the following rules of proportion or contribution, as laid down in the Year-Book, and repeated in Sir Edward Coke’s Reports, are now firmly established in Westminster Hall.
“ 1. That the feoffee of a conusor, or person who has charged his land with an incumbrance, may throw the whole charge' upon the conusor.
“2. That the feoffees may claim contribution from each other *470towards the extinguishment of such a charge without regard to the time of their respective purchases; and
“3. That the heir of the conusor, stands in this respect, in the place of his ancestor, being liable to all his disabilities, and entitled to claim no benefit which the ancestor could not have demanded.” 3 Amer. Law Mag. 71.
I would remark, that the only cases cited, are from Broke’s Abridgment and Sir Wm. Harbert’s case, 3 Reports, 13 a.; and further, that I have carefully and laboriously examined the authorities referred to in support of this doctrine, said to be rooted and grounded in the English law, and I must say, with the most perfect distrust of my own opinion when weighed in the balances against such fearful odds, that I do not find the doctrine so fixed in England as to make it necessarily the law of this Court. Indeed, the comments of the learned writer last quoted, show conclusively, that to adhere to the precedents from Broke and Coke, would be to set up “a misconception of the law, in destruction of the law.” Moreover, a rule justified perhaps by the feudal policy in which it originated, would be wholly inapplicable to the commercial spirit of the present age.
The case of Hamilton vs. Royal, 2 Schoales & Lefroy, 315, teaches, undoubtedly, a contrary doctrine. It is true this is an Irish case, but if the decisions of Lord Redesdale (Mr. Milford) are not evidence of what the law is in Britain, what judges’ are 1 In this case the principiéis distinctly laid down, that the second purchaser takes subject to all the equities to which the vendor was liable, and the doctrine as to the exoneration of one estate by another, is certainly carried very far.
So also in Averall vs. Wade, 1 Molloy 567; Lloyd & Gould R. 252, where a party seised of several estates and indebted by judgment, settles one of the estates with a covenant against incumbrances, and subsequently acknowledges other judgments, it was held that the prior judgment should be thrown altogether on the unsettled estates, and that the subsequent judgment creditors had no right to make the settled estate contribute.
While this question then cannot be said to be res intacta, we may well conclude that it is res non adjudicata, and that the Courts in this State are free to follow either of the rules, untramelled by authority.
Chancellor Kent maintains, that as between several purchasers in succession, at different times, there is no equality, and conse*471quently no contribution; thus, for instance, if there be a judgment against a person owning at the time three acres of land, and he sells one acre to A, the two remaining acres are fh-st chargeable in equity with the payment of the judgment debt, and that too whether the lands be in the hands of the debtor himself or of his heirs. If he sells another acre to B, the remaining acre is then chargeable in the first instance with the debt as against B, as well as A, and if it should prove insufficient, then the acre sold to B ought to supply the deficiency, in preference to the acre sold to A, because when B. purchased, he took the land chargeable with the debt in the hands of, the debtor, in preference to the lands already sold to A. Clowes vs. Dickenson, 5 Johns. Ch. R. 235.
Is it Mr. Justice Story who is in the right, and Chancellor Kent who is in the wrong on this point? or is it Chancellor Kent who is in the right and Mr. Justice Story who is in the wrong? for the difference between the two is so essential that both cannot, we apprehend, be in the right.
To my mind, the proposition as enunciated and illustrated by! the chancellor, is unanswerable, namely, that it cannot be in the j power of the debtor, by the act of assigning or selling his remain- ' ing land, to throw the burden of the judgment, or a ratable part ' of it, back upon the first purchaser.
This leading case, and the satisfactory reasoning upon which it is founded, is destined to exert a controlling influence over the courts of this country. In New York, the principle thus proclaimed, has been steadily and constantly acted on, without ever having been doubted or modified, much less overruled, viz., that where there is a lien upon different pal-cels of laud for the payment of the same debt, and some of these lands still belong to the person who in equity and justice ought to pay such debt, and a portion has been transferred by him .to other persons, his land shall be first charged, and if he has sold the several parcels at different times, they are to be charged in the inverse order of their alienations. James vs. Hubbard, 1 Paige R. 228; Gouvernuer vs. Lynch, 2 id. 300; Guion vs. Knapp, 6 id. 35; Skeel vs. Spraker, 8 id. 132; Patty vs. Pease, ib. 277; Schryver vs. Teller, 9 id. 173.
In Virginia, up to 1830, their courts had - uniformly held, that all the alienees of the lands of a debtor, bound by a judgment or recognisance, no matter in what'order the alienations were made, are bound to bear equally the burden of satisfying the lien by mutual contributions pro rata, according to the value of the prop-, *472erty held by each ; all being considered as in equali jure, without regard to the priority of their purchases. Thweatt’s adm’r vs. Jones’ adm’r, &c., 1 Rand. R. 332; Chamberlayne vs. Temple, 2 id. 400; Beverly vs. Brooke et al., Same vs. Pickett et al., 2 Leigh R. 442; 2 Tuck. Com. 491, 492.
But in Conrad vs. Harrison, 3 Leigh. R. 532, this principle, which had been considered well settled, underwent the .revision of the Court of Appeals, and the consequence was a reversal of their previous adjudications, upon the authority of the several cases “so powerful in their reasoning and so very ably handled ” by' Chancellor Kent, especially that of Clowes & Dickenson, which seemed to have escaped both the bar and the bench, no reference having been previously made to them.
Carr, Justice, in delivering the opinion of the Court in the case of Conrad, thus strongly puts the point: “ Suppose a man had bought a thousand acres of land at the price of $10,000 ; that he had mortgaged it for the purchase money, and had paid all of it but $1,000, and another wants to buy a hundred acres of his land; in making his contract, it will not weigh a feather in the scale, that the whole tract is still bound for $1,000, while he knows tha.t nine hundred acres still remain in his vendor’s hands, liable for this balance, before the hundred acres he proposes to buy can be charged; he would without hesitation give the full price and pay the money, satisfied that the lien could never touch him. But suppose the vendee of the thousand acres had sold to different purchasers nine hundred acres, and offered the last hundred to another with the original lien still on the tract; assuredly his prospects in the purchase would be very different; and common prudence would induce him to pause till he should see clearly how the incumbrance was to be met. It seems plain, therefore, that the successive purchasers or incumbrancers do not stand in ceguali jure, and that no one who comes after can call on those before him for contribution.”
It is a little singular that this court, as did Chancellor Kent, consider Sir William Harbert’s case, which is invariably referred to as the corner-stone of the contrary doctrine, as inculcating these very principles of equity, when thoroughly examined and well understood.
In Nailer vs. Stanley, 10 Serg. & Rawle R. 450, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania quote with approbation the decision in Clowes vs. Dickenson, and give in their adhesion to the doctrine. *473One Vanleer was seised of certain lands and tenements; his creditors obtained a judgment against him for a large amount; subsequent to the rendition thereof, he conveyed a portion of these lands to Nailer, arid afterwards another portion to Stanley; the sheriff, by virtue of an alias venditioni exponas, issued under said judgment, sold the tract of land conveyed to Stanley, which discharged the debt, and the land conveyed to Nailer was thereby exonerated. Stanley brought his action of assumpsit against Nailer for contribution.
Duncan, Justice. — “ This is not a case of contribution ; no contribution lies between the parties. The plaintiff below could neither by audita querela, scire facias, or bill in equity, compel a contribution. Why should the second purchaser come in as the first? He can stand in no better situation than Vanleer. He took the land subject to all the incumbrances against -Vanleer; he was bound to look to the state in which Vanleer and in which Nailer stood. How then did they stand ? Excluding this property sold to Nailer, there was land enough held by Vanleer to satisfy this judgment. In principle, Nailer cannot be called on for contribution. It is not consistent with justice that Stanley should put Nailer in a worse state than he stood with Vanleer; or that Vanleer could convey to Stanley anybetter right than he had himself.” See also Corporation vs. Wallace, 3 Rawle R. 109; Donley vs. Hays, 17 Serg. & Rawle R. 400.
This doctrine came under discussion in The Commercial Bank of Lake Erie vs. The Western Reserve Bank and others, 11 Ohio R. 444, and after the most elaborate argument, the Supreme Court of that State held, that lands lying under a judgment lien, whicli have been sold to purchasers, must be sold to satisfy the judgment, in the inverse order of the dates of the purchases.
By the Court. — “ Where debtors sell lands subject to judgment lien, they confer an equity upon the purchaser, to exempt what he purchases from the burden, until all the other lands subject to the lien shall be exhausted. Subsequent purchasers acquire the same equity but subordinate to that of older purchasers, because posterior in time.” ■ '
In P. & M. Bank vs. Dundas et al., 10 Ala. R. 668, the same principle is distinctly recognised. W. R. Hallett filed a bill to foreclose a mortgage on a tract of land, executed to him by one Gaggam. Subsequent to the execution of the mortgage, to wit, on the 16th November, 1835, Gaggam conveyed a portion of the *474mortgaged premises to one P. W. Brown; and on the 9th of April, 1836, another portion to Burns & Brown & Edmonds ; and at other subsequent dates, other portions, though to other persons. It appeared that the complainants held by a derivative title, under the conveyance from Gaggam to Brown of 16th November, 1835; and the P. & M. Bank also by a derivative title under the conveyance of the 9th April, 1836. The matter being referred to the master, he reported, that the portion of the mortgaged property not embraced in any of the deeds aforesaid, should be first sold to satisfy the mortgage, and that the property embraced in the other deeds should be sold in the inverse order of the sales, viz : that the portion of property last in Gaggam’s possession should bé first sold. The master subsequently declares, that the land held by the P. & M. Bank should be last sold; and this is the portion of the report which is alleged to be erroneous.
“In our opinion,” says Ormond, Justice, “the objection here taken is valid. The leading principle of the decree is, that where different parcels of mortgaged premises have been sold at different times by the mortgagor subject to the mortgage, the sale for the satisfaction of the mortgage is to be made in the inverse order of the alienations. If, in this case, the alienees from Gaggam had retained the land, no difficulty whatever could have arisen, as the sale would have been made in the order of the alienations, commencing with the last, if no other fact existed disturbing the operation of this equitable principle.”
Several cases have been cited, which are supposed to militate against this doctrine, and among the rest three from Kentucky, namely: Hughes vs. Graves, &c. Litt. R. 317 (1822); Morrison’s adm’r vs. Beckworth, 4 Monroe R. 73 (1826); and Poston vs. Ewbank, 3 J. J. Marshall R. 42 (1829).
The first of these precedents is undoubtedly in point; mortgaged slaves were sold to different purchasers at different times, and the court held that while all the property was liable in the hands of the respective purchasers to the demand of the mortgagee, yet as between the purchasers themselves, equity would enforce contribution on the principles of equality. It is worthy of note, that this case was decided at an early period, almost eotemporaneously with Clowes and. Dickenson, and without either argument or authority, as appears from the report.
In Morrison vs. Beckworth, it is said, “ that when a mortgage is made to bear upon purchasers of different parcels from the mortgar *475gor, that they are bound to contribute in proportion to the value of the share that each holds, fixing that value at the date of the mortgage; but the bare statement of the facts will show that the question of contribution did not and could not arise in the case, and that consequently the expression relating to it which fell from the court, was the mere suggestion or obiter dictum of Judge Mills.
John and Upton Beckworth exhibited their bill, to be relieved against two judgments at law of five hundred dollars each, obtained against them by one Churchill on two notes, executed by them to Hugh Morrison. The injunction was dissolved pending the bill, as to both these judgments, and was reinstated as to one of them by two of the judges of the Court of Appeals, and on the final hearing it was dissolved as to that also; but by the decree, Churchill was not allowed to take out execution until he entered into bond in the clerk’s office, with surety approved by the clerk, conditioned to refund the money, if the lot for which the notes were given was ever lost or taken away by any claim superior to that sold and conveyed by Morrison to the Beckworths; and to reverse this decree, Churchill sued out the writ of error.
Judge Robertson, in delivering the opinion of the court in Poston vs. Ewbank, reiterates the rule, that all who purchase from the mortgagor, should be compelled to contribute to the extinguishment of the debt of the mortgagee, in proportion to the value of the interest which each holds in the estate, and he cites Stevens vs. Cooper, 1 Johns. Ch. R. 430, and Morrison vs. Beckworth, 4 Monroe R.; but the judge himself declares, that the principle did not apply to the case before him.
And well he might. One Ritchie purchased from Calloway certain houses and lots in the town of Winchester, obtained a conveyance and gave to him his bonds for the consideration ; one of these bonds having been assigned to Ewbank, he obtained a judgment on it, and caused a fieri facias to issue, which was returned “ no property.” In the meantime, Ritchie had mortgaged the houses and lots to Poston, who had procured a decree for foreclosing the mortgage. Before the sale of the property under the decree, JEwbank filed his bill against Ritchie’s representatives and Poston, asserting an equitable lien on the houses and lots, and praying for a sale subjecting the property to his judgment. Poston, the mortgagee, proceeded with the sale, and Duncan and Decreet and himself bought the property, each buying a separate portion of it. Poston, in his answer to Ewbcmh’s bill, alleged'that Duncan, Decreet *476and himself agreed on the day of sale to buy the property, and to be each responsible pro rata for the extinguishment of Ewbank’s lien, provided it should be enforced; and he therefore made his answer a cross bill against Duncan and Decreet, and asked for a decree against them to enforce contribution, according to their express stipulation to that effect.
This would be a clear case for contribution independently of the agreement, the parties having purchased at the same time, separate portions of property to be sure, but all equally subject to the equitable lien of Ewbank.
In the two last of these cases, Stevens & Cooper is adduced in support of the opinion thrown out by the court; but that case, as well as the previous one in the same volume, of Cheeseborough vs. Millard, p. 409, relate to a different head altogether of equity jurisprudence. They treat of the right of contribution as between a mortgagee or judgment creditor who releases a portion of the land bound by his incumbrance from its lien, and a subsequent purchaser or incumbrancer, of the part not released ; and the rule there established is, that the mortgage in such case could only be levied pro rata, as the mortgagee could not ,be permitted by his own act, wittingly to jeopardize the situation of one of the grantees. Pothier has, in his Treatise on Obligations, clearly elucidated this doctrine-of the Civil law. 2 vol., 61, 62, 63, 64, 65. It rests upon the maxim, qui sentit commodum, senlire debet el onus.
It is proper to state, that I find that so late as 1842, the courts in Kentucky still adhere to their position. In Burk and others vs. Chrismen and others, 3 B. Monroe R. 50, the court say, “that each subsequent purchaser of a portion of the land subject to the express lien against the original vendor, took it cum onere, and was therefore liable to contribution according to the value of his parcel when he bought it.
It is obvious, however, that this question has never been examined in any of the cases cited from Kentucky, in a manner suitable to its importance. In none of them was it directly made by *the pleadings, nor treated by the court as cardo causae, the very point of the litigation.
The cases in chancery in South Carolina have been relied on in. the argument, in behalf of the defendant in error, particularly Screven vs. Joyner, Ex’r. &c. and others, 1 Hill Ch. R. 252, and Thompson and Wife vs. Murray and Wife, 2 id. 204. We do not perceive that either of these cases afford any help to that side ; on *477tlie other hand, Stoney vs. Shultz and others, 1 Hill Ch. R. 465, is a strong precedent for the plaintiff in error. There the counsel on the appeal consented to modify the decree, in accordance with the leading views already intimated in this opinion. And Judge Johnson, in delivering the judgment of the court, says, “I do not regard it as depending entirely on the concession of counsel. As between the complainants and defendants, the whole is equally liable, but amongst the defendants themselves, there is an equity which ought to be kept in view. Knowing of the mortgage and judgments, the first purchasers must necessarily have looked to the residue of the land as a security for the satisfaction of them. Every subsequent purchase diminished the amount of this security, and operated as a fraud upon the first purchasers’’
I deem it a waste of time to examine the case of Taylor & Wilson vs. Porter, 7 Mass. R. 354. It is true that Chief Justice Parsons in the close of his opinion does state, that when there are two or more grantees under the mortgagor, whether severally or in common, if either pay off the mortgage the other shall be holden to,a reasonable contribution; and the judgment was right upon the case before him.
One Uriah Cotting and others, (who afterwards released to Cot-ting,) being seised in fee of certain premises, sold them to Taylor & Wilson, who executed a mortgage to secure to the vendor the notes given in payment. Taylor & Wilson subsequently sold to Newhall & Lincoln, who gave them a mortgage of the same lands, conditioned to savé them harmless from the debt to Cotting. Lincoln conveyed one undivided moiety of the premises to Porter, the tenant, who undertook to discharge and pay one half of the purchase money due to Cotting. Newhall conveyed the other half to Robbins Sf Inman, who undertook to pay the other half of Cotting’s debt. Taylor fy Wilson now sought to foreclose their mortgage upon the whole of the land, for the sum of $442 10, remaining unpaid upon the original debt. No argument was had, and the opinion of the court was, that judgment be rendered for the demandants for the aforesaid balance, with the interest.
Reason, as -well as the weight_of authority, repudiates the proposition that purchasers at different times, of property under a lien against the vendor, stand in equality as it respects the incumbrance, and must contribute proportionably to its discharge.
“Does a subsequent grantee,” asks the learned editor of the periodical heretofore quoted, “ acquire rights to which his grantor was *478not entitled 1 If so, to what principle of law or equity are they to be referred ? It would be difficult to invoke any support for the affirmative of this inquiry from that system, one of whose leading rules in cases of this kind is, that priority in point of time, gives superiority of right; but as the ground upon which the position is maintainable, is supposed to exist in the elementary maxim which directs the chancellor, that equality is equity, a principle which woujd also appear of early adoption by the common law, (see the Year-Books cited in 3 Reports, 13 a.) let us see what the equality is between grantees at different times of the same grantor.
“ Part of a tract of land bound by a judgment or mortgage to an extent short of its whole value, is conveyed away, the grantee paying the full price, satisfied that the remaining portion is adequate for the discharge of the incumbrance. The law here would place the grantee in precisely the same condition as if he had expressly stipulated for, and received a release of, the lien of the incumbrance on the portion purchased by him from the creditor of his grantor; for if an attempt were made to levy the debt on the land of the grantee, upon a proper application it would be ordered to be raised exclusively from the part remaining with the grantor. Shall a purchaser, then, confiding in this principle of equity which would exonerate him from riskv where none was contemplated, or if foreseen, left to be provided against by the proper working of the law, be placed in a worse situation by the act of \his own grantor, which he cannot prevent? A subsequent grantee ,has his position clearly defined, and he would buy with his eyes open, as to every liability of the land in the hands of the- original owner. He stands in the place of the person under ‘Whom he claims; and where is his right as to a division of the burden, when he must be aware, that by the operation of the'first grant, the land remaining with the grantor has become charged with the whole incumbrance ? And yet under the authority of the case in the Year-books, this inequitable consequence resuits, from holding all the purchasers liable for the charge, in the proportion of their respective ownerships.”
Again. “ This construction fends to unsettle the rights of a purchaser buying in the confidence of full security, by exposing him to loss from events which he can neither foresee nor prevent. A construction which at a glance must strike us as leveled at that certainty which is the life of the law, demands a more powerful *479support than that offered by Lord Coke, which, by the bye, is the only one which he attempts to give; for it is plain, that the situation of the first purchaser is thus made precarious in the extreme. As long as his vendor remains seised of the residue of the land bound, the first vendee is secure; but by a second conveyance, a liability springs up, uncertain in its extent, and on that account1 most harassing, and thus the enjoyment of his estate is impaired by a cloud suspended over it, which may at any moment burst and pour out, if not destruction, at least considerable damage and annoyance. Nor can it be replied, that the first vendee may always protect himself at the time of his purchase, by procuring a release of the lien on his portion. The incumbrancer may refuse to afford him this accommodation ; but admitting the practicability of obtaining a release — suppose it omitted from negligence or mistake — it is precisely for such unforseen cases that the law should lay down a correct rule ; for if the agreements between man and man comprehended every possible contingency, there would be -little left for the exposition of the judge. A powerful motive, therefore, derivable either from the reason of the law, or from those technicalities which are so interwoven with the principles of real property, that they cannot be rooted up without danger to the whole trunk of the system, would seem,requisite to sustain a rule so illusive in its effects, and so destitute of any thing like an equitable operation.” 3 Amer. Law Mag., title Contribution.
No apology, I trust, is necessary for the length of this extract; if so, my excuse is to be found in the fact, that we are about solemnly to settle a prominent principle, which merits .our most careful consideration from its magnitude, as well as the amount involved in it, in the case at bar ; and about which, not only the two mightiest minds of the legal science, but the most reputable courts of the country, have come to contrary conclusions. '
Whether we look, then, to the weight of authority, or the reason of the thing, there would seem to be no equality and no contribution between several purchasers in succession at different times.
The only remaining inquiry is, whether there be any difference between purchasers for a good and purchasers for a valuable consideration 1 From the apparent hardship of this case, I have struggled hard to persuade myself that there was; and it is certain that there are reasons for the rule which we are about to establish, which apply to the one class and not to the other. Still *480lam unable to suggest a sound legal distinction which would be satisfactory to m'y own mind, for taking donees out of the operation of the rule.
Donees are purchasers. “ If I give land freely to another, he is in the eye of the law a purchaser, for he comes to the estate by his own agreement; that is, he consents to the gift.” 2 Black. Com. 241. “ The title to land is either by purchase, to which the act or agreement of the party is essential, or by mere act of law.” Hargrave 2 note to Coke on Litt. 18, b. “ Estates can accrue only by two means, descent and purchase; which latter word, in legal signification, includes every kind of title thereto, except only hereditary transmissions ; it amounts, therefore, to no more than saying, that a man is either by deed, devise, escheat, and the other means allowed by law, the first acquirer in his family of the estate in question, or else derives it from his ancestors.” 2 Wood. Laws of Eng. 150.
The books make no discrimination between the two, except, perhaps, as it regards creditors and bona fide purchasers. Sir William Harbert’s case, in the exchequer, put them upon the same footing. The second resolution of the court was, “ If land of the heir be seized in execution upon a recognisance of the ancestor, he shall not have contribution against a purchaser of his ancestor, although he came in without consideration, and although the heir be not charged as heir, but partly as terretcnant; but one purchaser shall have contribution of another purchaser, and one heir against another heir, because they are in cequali jure.” <
Chancellor Kent, in commenting on this case, says “ the heir shall not have contribution against purchasers, for the heir sits in the seat of his ancestor; and the rule is the same, though the purchaser take the land without consideration.” And he cites Harvey vs. Woodhouse, 1731 Select Cas. in Ch. 3, 4, S. P.
Indeed, the very foundation principle upon which the rule rests, to wit, that the residue of the property in the hands of the vendor or donor, is first chargeable in equity with the burden of the payment of the prior lien or incumbrance, protects alike donees as well as purchasers for price. And this concession alone would seem to be conclusive upon the subject.
4 Besides, one of the strongest grounds upon which the rule is founded, namely, the harassing uncertainty which would attend the tenure of property and which the law so much abhors should the opposite doctrine obtain, applies with equal force to volunteers and *481to purchasers for value. Every gratuity is not a benefit; and one might well hesitate before he would consent to receive property, especially female slaves at the South, and buy, and sell, and get credit upon the possession of it, and be at all the trouble and1' expense of rearing the increase, if he were at last liable to have it swept from him by the subsequent acts and alienations of the donor. And whether the intervening space between the transfers be six days or six years, can make no difference in principle.
I have already said, that as it regards creditors and purchasers without notice, the law discriminates between volunteers and purchasers for money. To be accurate, it may be proper to notice another distinction. While the assistance of the Court cannot be had without consideration to enforce executory agreements — as for instance the payment of a promissory note from a father to a son— still, if the contract is executed, or the legal conveyance actually made, though without consideration, the rights of the party in interest will be protected and enforced. Bold vs. Corbett, Pre. in Ch. 84; Lechmere vs. Carlisle, 3 P. Wills. 222; Ellison vs. Ellison, 6 Vesey R. 662; Bunn vs. Winthrop, 1 Johns. Ch. R. 337.
But, admitting that the general rule as between donees and [2.] purchasers for valuable consideration, was different, is there not that in-the present case which would take it out of its operation 1 The deed to Cumming is dated six days before the conveyance to Ware ; in it, Mrs. Rowell warrants and obligates herself to defend the title to the whole of the property, real and personal, thereby conveyed unto the said Henry H. Cumming, his heirs, executors, and administrators in trust, &c., against all persons claiming under her. Could she, by any subsequent transfer voluntarily entered into, defeat the liability thus undertaken % Did it not constitute a burden upon her estate 1 and did not after donees take it cum <mere i
That a guarantor or warrantor is to be considered in the light of a debtor, so as to prevent a voluntary alienation of his property, there can be no doubt. This proposition was extensively discussed and definitely affirmed by the Court of Errors of New York, in the case of Van Wyck vs. Seward, 18 Wend. R. 375. “ The objection,” says Mr. Justice Bronson, “is, that Van Wyck wás not a creditor of Seward at the date of the deed, because it was then uncertain whether' he would ever have a cause of action on the covenant. Let us see where this doctrine would carry us. If one promise to pay money at a future day, he may pay before the *482credit, expires ; and until that time arrives, it is uncertain whether an action will ever accrue on the promise. The contract of surety only creates a contingent liability ; until the principal is in default, it is uncertain whether an action will ever accrue against the,_ surety. The drawer of a bill of exchange is only bound to pay it upon a contingency which may never happen; and so it is with the indorser of negotiable paper of all kinds. The contract of indemnity is another case where an action may never accrue upon the undertaking. In these and all other cases depending upon contract, the person to whom the engagement is. made, is as much a creditor as though he had a debt in which the right of action already existed. There is no reason why he should not he entitled to the. same protection in the one case as in the other. In the language of Chief Justice Mellen, in ITow vs. Ward, “Although he cannot maintain an action on the contract until it has been violated, still he has an interest in the property conveyed, as a fund out of which the debt ought to be paid.”
The case of Lomas vs. Wright, 2 Myl. & Keene R. 769, (8 Eng. Ch. R. cond. 221,) would seem to define accurately the position of a covenantee in a voluntary conveyance or settlement. He is declared to he a creditor ; not entitled to compete, to be sure, even with simple contract creditors for a valuable consideration, but as against heirs, &c., he has the right to stand in the place of mortgagees who have exhausted the fund provided by the testator for the payment of simple contract debts, &c.
Shall it be replied, that both transfers contain a similar clause of warranty % That answer is met by the case of Guion vs. Knapp, 6 Paige R. 39. The chancellor says, “ if a mortgage is a lien upon 200 acres of land, and the mortgagor conveys 100 acres thereof to A, the 100 acres which remain in the hands of the mortgagor is to be first charged with the payment of the debt. But if A has subsequently conveyed one half of his 100 acres to B, with warranty, the 50 acres remaining in the hands of A, is in equity first chargeable with the payment of the balance of the debt which cannot be raised by a sale of the 100 acres which still belong to the mortgagor, or his subsequent grantee, before resort can be had to the 50 acres which A has conveyed with warranty. And if A conveys his remaining 50 acres to C, with or without warranty, that portion of the premises is still liable for the mortgage debt, and must be sold before resort can be had to the 50 acres previously conveyed with warranty to B.”
*483It is plain, therefore, that Henry H. Cumming could have gone into equity, as against Mrs. Rowell and subsequent volunteers under her; that her warranty constituted her a debtor,to him, and that all gratuitous after assignments would be void as against him. And if the court in Stoney vs. Shultz were right in holding “ that every subsequent purchase operated as a fraud upon the first purchaser, by diminishing the amount of the security,” how much more true is it in the case of volunteers in the face of such a covenant, and with a knowledge of the immense burden impending over the estate ?
There is still another striking aspect in which this transaction may be considered. Suppose Cumming and Ware stood in equality in every other respect, time only excepted, would not the maxim, qui prior estin tempore, potior est injure, or where equities are equal, that which is prior in point of time is strongest, be decisive of the preference contended for by the plaintiff in error? Among equitable incumbrances, I take it, the principle is not that the elder shall serve the younger, but the reverse, the elder shall have priority over every junior.
In all the legal science there is not a maxim more simple, more comprehensive, more frequently referred to by the bench, or cited and relied on by counsel in their arguments, than the foregoing. It is upon this principle, that where several notes secured by the same mortgage are assigned at different times, if the fund arising from the sale of the mortgaged premises is not sufficient to pay all the notes, the assignees will be entitled to priority in payment in the order in which the assignments were made, unless the assignor at the time of the assignment, gave a preference to one or more over, the rest. Priority of right of satisfaction, results, say the courts of'\ chancery, as a legal inference from priority of assignment. In other words, when equities are equal, the oldest will prevail. Cullen vs. Erwin, 4 Ala. R. 452; Bank of Mobile vs. P. & M. Bank of Mobile, 9 id. 645.
Some writers trace to this maxim the right of primo-goniture, or the rule of descent which declares that among males of equal degree, the eldest shall always inherit in preference to the others. It is usual, I know, to deduce it from the feudal system; it certainly existed in the patriarchal ages.
The doctrine of occupancy rests upon no better title ; so likewise the right of property in treasure-trove, in wrecks, waifs and estrays, which being bona • vacantia, belong to the first finder. *484The whole doctrine of possession — and a vast doctrine it is — and all the rights incident to it, and likewise of y>re-emption, depend upon this important maxim. So, all the preference given to attachments and other process, which is first executed ; so likewise, the whole subject of pledges and hypothecations. Indeed, it may be assumed as a general principle, that whenever a question arises as to the title to property, it is a mere comparison of dates, the eldest always being preferred The only interrogatory propounded is, when did your right accrue 1 or, who is prior in tempore 1
But this view takes a still widér range. The empire or sovereignty of a lar. e portion of the earth, is based upon this fundamental maxim. “All mankind,” says Vattel, “have an equal right to the things which have not yet fallen into the possession of any one; and these things belong to the first possessor. When, therefore, a nation finds a country uninhabited and without a master, it may lawfully take possession of it; and after it has sufficiently made known its will in this respect, it cannot be deprived of it by another.” B. 1, ch. 18, p. 159. And this is the settled international law of the civilized world.
Why should it be thought a strange thing, then, that the priority in the point of time, in this case, should secure to Cumming a preference so interwoven with the whole dominion which we claim over external things 1 By no better right do we, and the European nations, possess the lands on the American continent, and exercise control over the Indian tribes, the former proprietors.
Before dismissing this case, I will advert briefly to one other point glanced at in the argument.
[3.] It is suggested, that inasmuch as these instruments settle the whole of this property to the use of Mrs. Grace Rowell during her life, that, they do not take effect till her death ; and that consequently the title under both conveyances accrued at the same time. I am aware that this suggestion has not been deemed worthy of a place among the points made by the defendants in error. Still it is put forth as one of the grounds in the case, and relied on by counsel in the argument.
Now, if this be correct, these instruments are not deeds, but wills. What then is their true character ? The test for determining in cases of this description, whether an instrument be testamentary or not, is this, does the legal estate in theproperty whieh is the subject of disposition, pass by it 1 If the legal estate passes at the time of execution, it cannot be a will.
*485In Tompson vs. Browne, 2 Myl. & Keene R. 32, the case of the Attorney General vs. Jones, 3 Price R. 368, decided in the Court of Exchequer, was cited. In that case, three judges out of four held, that a settlement, by which the grantor reserved to himself the dividends of certain stock for his life, with limitations to take effect upon his decease, and a power of revocation, was substantially a testamentary paper.
By the Master of the Rolls. “ The decision in the Attorney General vs. Jones, seems to have proceeded upon the ground, that under the circumstances of that case,nothing passed from the maker of the instrument so as to entitle any other person to ''interfere with his property in his lifetime. If there be any thing in that decision to support the notion, that where a person by deed settles property to his own use during his life, and after his decease for the benefit of other persons, a power of revocation reserved in such a deed alters the character of the instrument, and renders it testamentary, I can only say that, if this were law, a great number of transactions of which the validity has never been doubted, would be liable to be impeached.”
Both of the instruments here tpok effect eo instanti upon the [4.] execution, with postponement of possession on the part of the donees. They purport to'be deeds', they use words of conveyance in presentí ; they are founded upon a good consideration; they warrant the title; they are sealed and delivered in the presence of witnesses, one of whom is a notary public, and another a justice of the Inferior court of Richmond county; they convey absolutely to trustees for certain purposes; 1, to the use of the grantor during her life ; 2, to the use of her relatives therein named in remainder; they are deeds, then, to all intents and purposes, and the right to the property thereby conveyed, took effect immediately.
In every view, then, which we have been able to take of this case, the judgment below must be reversed. Reason, as well as the main current of legal adjudications, are against it.
Judgment reversed.