(After stating the facts.)
1. The doctrine of subrogation was ably discussed by Justice Cobb in the case of Wilkins v. Gibson, 113 Ga. 31, where the rule was announced (p. 47) that “subrogation will arise only in those cases where the party claiming it advanced the money to pay a debt which, in the event of default by the debtor, he would be bound *546to pay, or where he has some interest to protect, or where he advanced the money under an agreement, express or implied, made •either with the debtor or creditor, that he would be subrogated to the rights and remedies of the creditor.” The case of Simpson v. Ennis, 114 Ga. 202, which is relied upon by the defendant in •error to support the ruling of the court below, is not in point in the case at bar. In that case Simpson purchased certain lands from the heirs of a deceased person. At the, time of the purchase it was represented to Simpson by the heirs and their attorney that there were no other debts against the estate, except one due the Georgia Loan & Trust Company and some State and county taxes, which it was agreed that the purchaser should pay out of the purchase-money, and which he did so pay. There is nothing in the record to show that the purchaser had either actual or constructive notice of any other debts due by the decedent. Subsequently to this conveyance the defendant qualified as administrator of the estate of said deceased, and brought an action .of ejectment against the grantees of Simpson to recover, as the property of the decedent, the lands thus sold, in order, to subject them to judgments which had been obtained against him as administrator. Simpson filed an equitable petition to enjoin the administrator from prosecuting the ejectment suits until he should have reimbursed the petitioner for the amounts paid by him in extinguishing the debt to the Georgia Loan & Trust Company; and this court very properly held that the plaintiff was subrogated to the rights of the creditor whose debts he had extinguished, as against the plaintiff in the eject/nent suits. In the present case, however, the plaintiff purchased a piece of property against which there were two recorded mortgages. He paid off the senior mortgage, and “the bank [the holder■ thereof] cancelled its said' mortgage and surrendered the same to Corley,” the plaintiff’s vendor; and the plaintiff now seeks to be subrogated to the rights of the bank as against the holder of the junior incumbrance.
The rule in such cases is thus stated in Sheldon on Subrogation (2d ed.), 48: “Where the purchaser from a mortgagor pays off the mortgage and has it discharged, without more, equity will not subrogate him to the rights of the mortgagee against an incumbrancer whose lien is subject to the mortgage, but prior to the purchase.” And in 27 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law (2d ed.), 238, *547it is said: “A purchaser of property who has discharged an incumbrance thereon - will be subrogated to the lien of such incumbrance as against the holders of other incumbrances of' Which he had no notice, but not as against the holders of other incumbrances of which he had notice, either actual or constructive.” See also Woodside v. Lippold, 113 Ga. 877. When the Standard Scale Company purchased the property in controversy from Corley and paid off the mortgage to the bank, it did so with constructive, if not actual notice that Eagan held another mortgage against the same property; and it is not contended that the Scale Company made any agreement with either the debtor or the creditor that it was to be subrogated to the rights and priorities of the bank. Under the rule above announced, it follows that the court erred in holding that the plaintiff was subrogated to the lien of the bank as against the mortgage held by Eagan.
Judgment reversed.
All the Justices concur.