The first proposition — namely, that, the court of chancery in this State has no j urisdiction whatever of the subject of mortgages — may seem startling to-some of the older members of the profession, the generally received opinion being, as I had supposed, that such jurisdiction exists. It is not the dictate, however, of sound reasoning; to reject a proposition as untrue upon its first announcement,, and for the reason, solely, that it has never been heard of before. Such a determination would necessarily lead to the rejection of all propositions, however correct and demonstrable; for all propositions have had a 'first announcement. The position taken by the solicitors of the defendants was supported by an earnestness and ingenuity, and an extent of research into the constitutional and legislative history of the State, that are not only commendable, but which entitle their arguments to careful consideration and to a deliberate judgment by this tribunal.
From the time that Delaware became an English colony, its inhabitants became subject to law, and were entitled to the rights, benefits, and privileges of law. Even before statutory law was enacted, law ruled among them, determined their rights, their obligations, and secured to them the vindication of those rights and enforcement of those obligations, either presently or in the future. What was this law which,, in the absence of any legislation by themselves, was to them a protecting shield and an avenging sword ? What was this, that measured their rights, prescribed their duties, and which protected and enforced those rights and duties ? It was the common law of England, which belonged of common right to every subject of the English government. Chancellor Kent has well remarked that this common law has been assumed by the courts of justice, and declared by statutes, so far as is applicable to their situation and government, as the . law of the land in every State of the Union. It was imported *211by our Colonial ancestors as far as it was applicable, and was sanctioned by royal charters and Colonial statutes. It is also the established doctrine that English statutes passed before the emigration of our ancestors, and applicable to our situation, and in amendment of the law, constitute a part of the common law of this country. How, what is this common law in its broad, just, and most comprehensive sense ? In this sense it is not simply that portion of remedial justice which is administered in common-law tribunals; but it consists of those principles, usages, and rules of action applicable to the government arid security of person and property, which do not rest for their authority upon any express and positive declaration of the will of the Legislature. It is that law which derives its force and authority from the universal consent and immemorial practice of the people. And this was the common law which the English colonists who settled in what is now the State of Delaware brought with them as their right, and which they were entitled to enjoy, and did enjoy, even before they had established local tribunals for its administration or enforcement. This common law, thus defined, included those equitable principles, usages, and rules of action applicable to the government and security of person and property which do not rest for their authority upon any express declaration of the will of the Legislature, as well as those technically legal principles, usages, and rules of action of like applicability, administered in purely legal tribunals. The rights of a free people are to be construed, not in a narrow technical sense, but in a broad and comprehensive sense; and in this sense equity is as much common law as is that law which is administered in tribunals other than those of equitable jurisdiction. How this common law, in the language of Sw Matthew Hale, is not the product of the wisdom of some one man or society of men in any one age; but the wisdom, counsel, experience, and observation of many ages of wise and observing men. A great proportion of the rules and maxims which constitute the immense Code of the common law, in the language of Chancellor Kent, *212grew into use by gradual adoption, and received, from time to time, the sanction of the courts of justice without any legislative Act or interference. It was the application of the dictates of natural justice and cultivated reason to particular cases. The common law may properly be called the omnium, gatherum of the choice, selected principles of all Codes of law applicable to human rights and human conduct, human or divine. Even the principles applicable to the subject of mortgages were not indigenous in early English law. They were borrowed from the Roman civil law, and adopted into the English common law; and thus became of necessity a subject of cognizance under that portion of the common law distinctly denominated “ equitable jurisprudence.”
An examination of the legislation of this State confirms the views here presented. Our published laws date from the year 1700. They assume the existence of the common law as I have defined it, and provide for its enforcement with such additional legislation, supplementary thereto, as the supposed necessities of society required. It was held, however, at an early day, that English statutes in respect to crimes did not extend to these “ plantations,” except where they were particularly named in the body of such Acts; and therefore in 1719, “ An Act for the Advancement of Justice, and more Certain Administration thereof ” was passed, prescribing the punishment for certain crimes therein enumerated. This was the first general Act in relation to crimes, in the legislation of Delaware, of which I have any knowledge. It did not pretend to define the several crimes mentioned in it, but simply prescribed a punishment for their commission. These crimes were treated in the Act as common-law offenses. The preamble to the Act, however, as well as the omission to define the crimes mentioned in it, show that the legislators of that early day regarded the English common law as the law of the Colony. The beginning of that preamble, among other things, recites “ that, whereas the common law is justly esteemed to be the birthright of English subjects, and ought to be regarded in this government as the safest rule of our conduct,” etc.
*213At an early day, “ An Act for the Establishing Courts of Law and Equity within this Government ” was passed. By § 21 of this Act a court of equity was established, to be held il by the justices of the respective county courts of common pleas, four times a year, at the respective places and near the said times as the said courts of common pleas are held in every county of this government.” By this Act the justices holding said court of equity were “ empowered to hear and decree all such matters and causes of equity as shall come before them in the said courts, where proceedings shall be, as heretofore, by bill and answer, with such other pleadings as are necessary in chancery courts, and proper in these parts, with power, also, for the said justices of the respective courts of equity to issue forth all manner of subpmnas, and all other process as may be needful to oblige and force defendants to answer suits there, as also to award commissions for taking answers and examining witnesses, and to grant injunctions for staying suits in law, ¡and stopping wastes, as there may be occasion; observing, as near as may be, the rules and practice of the High Court of Chancery in Great Britain, with power to make orders and award all manner of process, and do all other things necessary for bringing causes to hearing, and to enforce obedience to their decrees in equity,— which may be by imprisonment of bodies or sequestration of lands,—and admit bills of revivor, as the case may require.”
It will be observed that there is no attempt in this Act to define what are “ causes of equity.” What those causes were, was to be determined by the justices holding the said court of equity. How were they to determine this matter ? Unquestionably by the principles, rules, and practice of the High Court of Chancery in Great Britain. They were not supposed to be familiar with the jurisdiction and practice of any other court of equity; but, being British subjects, they were supposed to be familiar with the jurisdiction and practice of the High Court of Chancery of the government under which they lived, and to which special reference was made in the Act. The powers of the court of equity thus created Were in no *214respect limited by the Act creating it, otherwise than by providing that the justices comprising it should observe “ as near as may be ” the rules and practice of the High Court of Chancery in Great Britain. It is not easy to conceive of a court of equity possessing more undefined and unlimited powers. Whatever power and authority the High Court of Chancery in Great Britain possessed in respect to “ causes of equity,” and which were proper to be exercised in “ these parts,” was possessed by the first court of equity in Delaware by the law which created it.
The solicitors for the defendants seem to think that the powers of this court were greatly limited by § 25 of this Act. That section is as follows: “ Provided, also, that nothing herein contained shall give the said justices any power or authority to hear, decree, or determine in any matter, cause, or thing, wherein sufficient remedy may be had in any other court, or before any other magistrate or judicature in this government, either by the rules of the common law, or according to the tenor and directions of the.laws of this government; but thatwhen matters determinable at common law shall be brought before them in equity, they shall refer or remit the parties to the common law ; and when matters of fact shall happen to ai’ise upon their examination or hearing of the matters and causes to be heard and determined in the said court, then, and in every such cause, they shall order the matter of fact to issue and trial at the court of common jaleas for the proper county where the fact arisefch, before they jaroceed to sentence or decree in the said court of equity.” How this supposed limitation amounts substantially to no limitation at all, for the reason that, where there is a complete remedy at law, courts of equity do not assume to exercise jurisdiction. This is a fundamental princijfie of equity jurisjarudence, and it is this principle which is incorporated in § 25 of the Act for the Establishing Courts of Law and Equity within this Government. A cause in which there is a complete remedy at law is not a matter and cause of equity at all. The section cited, therefore, is nothing but a legislative declaration of what would have existed without it.
*215But the solicitors for the defendants, if I understand their argument aright, maintain that the court of chancery of this State has no jurisdiction to decree the foreclosure of a mortgage, even if such power exists elsewhere, because they say that the Colonial authority of Delaware, somewhere between the years 1726 and 1736, passed an Act entitled “ An Act for Taking Lands in Execution for Payment of Debts,” 1 Del. Laws, chap. 46, p. 109 ; and that by § 5 of said Act a mortgagee, in default of payment, may, after one year from the day of the last payment, sue forth a writ of scire facias ■on such mortgage, and take out execution on any judgment given therein, and expose the mortgaged premises to sale. It is difficult to perceive the force of this argument. What was the object of this Act? What was the evil proposed to be remedied by it ? It explains itself. It declares its own purpose and object. That purpose and object it declares thus : “ To the end that no creditors may be defrauded of their just ■debts due them from the persons who have sufficient real, if not personal, estate to satisfy the same, be it enacted . . . that all lands, tenements, or hereditaments whatsoever, within this government, where no sufficient personal estate can be found, shall be liable to be seized and sold upon judgment and •execution obtained.” How the court of chancery has never assumed to make anything liable—whether land or anything •else—for debt, by force of its own decree, which was not so liable by the law of the land. It would seem by the recital •of the Act referred to that, prior to the passage of the Act, real estate in Delaware was not subject to be seized in execution to satisfy even a debt evidenced by judgment, and that the Act was passed to render lands subject to the payment of judgment debts, and authorized execution to be issued on such judgments, under which the lands of judgment debtors could be seized and sold. And “ forasmuch,” says § 5 of the Act, “as divers persons have mortgaged their lands and tenements in this government for securing the payment of moneys, :and some of them have died before the time of payment, and left others to succeed that have proven insolvent, and others *216have neglected to pay the mortgage money, and so mortgages, are become no effectual security; considering how low the annual profits of tenements and improved lands are here, and the= discouragement which the mortgagees meet with by reason of the equity of redemption remaining in the mortgagors,”— it is provided that the mortgagee, in default of payment of the debts secured to be paid by the mortgage, may after one year sue forth a writ of scwe facias upon the mortgage in order that judgment may be recovered thereon; and that when judgment is so recovered the mortgagee—the plaintiff' in such judgment—“ shall have execution by levari facias directed to the proper officer, by virtue whereof the said mortgaged premises shall be taken in execution and exposed to sale.” The object of this section was none other than to enable a mortgagee to recover judgment against the mortgagor for the debt secured to be paid by the mortgage, and, the amount of the debt due on the mortgage being thus ascertained by proceedings on scwe facias and reduced to judgment, to-place such judgment on an equal footing with other judgment debts in respect to execution process, being distinguished only in this: that the judgment recovered for the mortgage debt might be proceeded on in execution by levari facias, as-against the specific mortgaged real estate, whereas the general judgment creditor might have execution on his judgment, by a fieri facias against the real estate general of the debtor in his judgment.
But it is argued that, inasmuch as one of the reasons assigned in the preamble to § 5 of the Act for giving the remedy by scwe facias to the mortgagee was “ the 'discouragement which the mortgagees met with, by reason of the equity of redemption remaining in the mortgagors,” therefore there is no power in the court of chancery in this State to foreclose the equity of redemption to which a mortgagor is. entitled. It appears by the section recited that conveyances-by mortgage, as a security for the payment of money, were recognized by the laws of the Colony. It also appears that, the existence of the right to the equity of redemption in the *217mortgagor of the premises so conveyed was, in like manner,, recognized. Now the right of redemption and the right of foreclosure, as we shall hereafter see, are coexisting and. mutual rights. This mutuality necessarily arises from the nature and character of a mortgage. The discouragement which mortgagees met with before the passage of the Act referred to might have arisen notwithstanding the words of the preamble to § 5 thereof, not by reason of the equity of redemption remaining in the mortgagors, but because there may not have been any tribunal established by the laws of the colony, clothed with the power of foreclosing the equity of redemption remaining in the mortgagors. The right to foreclose the mortgage did necessarily exist, if the right of redemption existed; and the right of foreclosure may have existed without the power to foreclose being available by reason of the nonexistence of a tribunal clothed with the power to decree foreclosure. I have no means of ascertaining whether such a tribunal did or did not exist in the colony prior to the passage of the Act entitled “An Act for Taking Lands in Execution for the Payment of Debts.” It is true that § 21 of the Act for the establishing courts of law and equity within the then government before referred to declared that the-justices of the respective county courts of common pleas who should hold the court of equity established by said Act should have power and authority to hear and decree all such matters and causes of equity as should come before them in the said courts, “ where the proceedings shall be, as heretofore,, by bill and answer.” I have no means of determining what these proceedings were, nor the extent of authority and power of the tribunals where those proceedings were had. The Act for the establishment of courts, being numbered chapter 54-of the Public Laws, was, I presume, subsequent in date to-the Act for Taking Lands in- Execution for Payment of Debts, which is numbered chapter 46 of the same laws. If any court exercising equitable jurisdiction existed at the time of the passing of „the latter Act, it is reasonable to presume that the jurisdiction thus exercised was of a very limited *218character, and did not comprehend the power of foreclosing mortgages, nor extend to all such matters and causes of equity as are mentioned in § 21 of the former Act; and such want of jurisdiction in such tribunals, if they existed, was doubtless one'cause of the creation of a court of equity “ empowered and authorized to hear and decree all such matters and causes of equity ” as should come before the justices of the courts of common pleas holding said court of equity. If the High Court of Chancery in Great Britain had the power to decree the foreclosure of mortgages, there can be no doubt that the court of equity created by § 21 of the Act for the Establishing Courts of Law and Equity within the Government of the then Colony possessed the same power, because such cause would be a cause of equity; nor in such case would the provision of a law prior in date, giving to a mortgagee, in default of payment after one year, the. right to sue forth a writ of scire facias on his mortgage, to recover judgment therein, and to have execution thereof by levari facias, and to expose the mortgaged premises to sale, oust such court of equity of its jurisdiction, for the' reason that remedy under the proceedings upon scire facias is not such an adequate or complete remedy as to devest the jurisdiction of such court of equity; the former remedy being available only after the expiration of a year from the last day whereon the mortgage money ought to have been paid or other condition performed, whereas the remedy in equity would have been available immediately upon the nonpayment of the mortgage debt, or other breach of the condition of the mortgage, or upon forfeiture for any cause whatever. In fact the power of sale by execution upon judgment recovered in scire facias upon a mortgage is in no pro2Der sense a foreclosure of a mortgage; no such a foreclosure as exists as a right in the mortgagee in respect to mortgaged premises; no such a foreclosure as is treated of in' books of authority and in judicial decisions as a judicial foreclosure of a mortgage. It is but a summary proceeding for the sale of mortgaged premises, without resort to a judicial decree of foreclosure; the right to make which *219■decree is inherent in a court of chancery, and results from the nature of a mortgage, two essential and necessary characteristics of which are the power to redeem, and the power, judicially, to foreclose. ■
It was said by the solicitors for the defendants, in their argument of this cause, that a statute providing for the sale •of mortgaged premises by execution on a judgment recovered in scire facias on a mortgage, very similar to our own, exists in the State of Pennsylvania, and that the only remedy or means to foreclose a mortgage in that State is by proceedings had under the statute; and that therefore, inasmuch as a remedy is given by the statute, no remedy exists by bill in equity ■or otherwise than under the statute for the foreclosure of a mortgage ; and they cite in support of their position the case •of West Branch Bank v. Chester, 11 Pa. 282. This, no ■doubt, is very good law in the State of Pennsylvania, for it is the decision of the supreme court of that State. But it is .argued that such, being the law of Pennsylvania, must be the law of this State, because the statute of Pennsylvania and the statute of Delaware for the sale of mortgaged premises on execution upon a judgment in scire facias for the mortgaged •debt are substantially the same. The conclusion is not logical, because some of the conditions upon which the conclusion is founded in the one case do not exist in the other. Ho •court of general equity jurisdiction exists or ever has existed in the State of Pennsylvania. Such a court does exist and has existed from an early period in our history, even of our Colonial history, in the State of Delaware; and because there is no remedy by bill in equity for the foreclosure of a mortgage in Pennsylvania, and because the only remedy there for the collection of the mortgaged debt is by proceedings at law under their statute,—which in fact is no such proceeding for the foreclosure of a mortgage as is known to courts of equity,-— it does not follow that the remedy by bill for foreclosure in •equity does not exist in Delaware, and may not exist elsewhere. But the authority cited is important in respect to some of the issues raised or objections made in the cause *220before me. In the case of West Branch Bank v. Chester the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania says: “ In England a default, in payment of half a year’s interest on the appointed day is a sufficient breach of condition to enable the mortgagee to foreclose. Coote, Mort. 518; and see Gladwyn v. Hitchman, 2 Vern. 135. With us the remedy is so modified that we cannot foreclose for such a breach of condition, nor until a year-after the whole mortgage debt becomes due; but the nonpayment of interest, where it is expressly stipulated for, is no-less "a breach of condition here than in England, or than the-nonpayment of the installment of the principal. In a -word, the interest is part of the substance of the mortgage debt. It belongs not to it by tacking,—it is not an incident of the-debt, but pro1 tanto it is the debt itself., The parties anticipated it at a fixed rate of increase, and it was just as sure to accrue as time was to last; and they put it into the mortgage as part and parcel of the debt which it was the office of the mortgage to secure. There it remains, and a judgment at. law for it must have the same effect as a judgment for any other part of the mortgage debt. There is no room for a. distinction between a judgment for the interest and a judgment for an installment of the principal. Both .are judgments for part of the mortgage debt. A distinction here-would be arbitrary and without a difference. But on a judgment for an installment of the principal, a virtual foreclosure-of the mortgage is effected by a sheriff’s sale, as we have seen,, the equity of redemption in the mortgagor is extinguished,, and. the legal estate still in him is transferred, and the lien of the mortgage is devested. It follows, as a necessary conclusion, that the same consequences must attend a sheriff’s, sale of the mortgaged premises made upon a judgment-obtained for the interest.”
The powers of the court of equity, thus early in our history-established or conferred by statute, continued substantially the same throughout our Colonial history, and until after our separation from Great Britain by the common declaration of the Colonies of their independence, and existence as separate and-*221independent States, and until the 20th day of September, 1776, when the first Constitution of the State of Delaware was adopted. Article 13 of this Constitution is as follows: “The justices of the courts of common pleas and orphans’ court shall have power of holding inferior courts of chancery, as heretofore, unless the Legislature shall otherwise direct.”
Articles 24 and 25 of this Constitution are as follows:
“Art. 24. All Acts of Assembly in force in this State on the 15th day of Hay last (and not hereby altered, or contrary to the resolutions of Congress or of the late House of Assembly of this State) shall so continue until altered or repealed by the Legislature of this State, unless where they are temporary, in which case they shall expire at the times respectively limited for their duration.
“Art. 25. The common law of England, as well as so much of the statute law as has been heretofore adopted in practice in this State, shall remain in force unless they shall be altered by the future law of the Legislature; such parts only excepted as are repugnant to the rights and privileges contained in this Constitution and the Declaration of Rights, etc., agreed to by this convention.”
This Constitution did not in any respect, in my judgment, destroy or abridge the power and authority theretofore existing in the equitable tribunals of the State as conferred upon them by the Act for the Establishing Courts of Law and Equity within this Government, hereinbefore referred to, but affirmed and continued such power and authority in the inferior courts of chancery mentioned in article 13 aforesaid. The inferior courts of chancery mentioned in said article are the same courts of equity originally authorized to be held by the court of common pleas, etc., and hence the power to hold them, mentioned in said article, was the same in the justices of the courts of common pleas “ as heretofore,” unless the Legislature should otherwise direct. These inferior courts of chancery continued to be empowered and authorized' to hear and decree all such matters and causes of equity as should come before them as fully as they were so authorized to hear *222and decree by § 21 of the Act for the establishing courts of law, until the 12th day of June, 1792, when the second Constitution of this ’State was adopted, for the reason that the Legislature had not in the mean time otherwise directed. The fact that these courts are called inferior courts of chancery does in no respect refer to the question of extent or subject-matter of their jurisdiction. Courts. are of various kinds. When considered as to their powers, they are of record and not of record. When compared to each other, they are supreme, superior, and inferior. When examined as to their original jurisdiction, they are civil or criminal. When viewed as to their territorial jurisdiction, they are central or local. When divided as to their object, they are courts of law, courts of equity, courts martial, admiralty courts, and ecclesiastical courts. They are also courts of original jurisdiction, courts of error, and courts of appeal. Bouv. L. Diet. These courts were called inferior courts of chancery for the reason that they were not administered by a chancellor of their own, but by the justices of another court,—the justices of the supreme court.
Section 1, art. 6, of this second Constitution of this State, is as follows : “The judicial power of this State shall be vested in a court of chancery, a supreme court, and courts of oyer and terminer, and general jail delivery; in a court of common pleas, and in an orphans’ court, register’s court, and a quarter sessions of the peace for each county; in justices of the peace j and in such other courts as the Legislature—two thirds of all the members of each branch concurring^may from time to time establish.”
Section 14 of the same article is as follows : “ The equity jurisdiction heretofore exercised by the judges of the court of common pleas shall be separated from the common-law jurisdiction, and vested in a chancellor, who shall hold courts of chancery in the several counties of this State. In cases of equity jurisdiction where the chancellor is interested, the cognizance thereof shall belong to the court of common pleas, with an appeal to the high court of errors and appeals.”
The jurisdiction vested in the court of chancery by this *223Constitution was as extensive, and was in fact the same, as that vested in the justices of the old supreme court when holding courts of equity, which extended to all matters and causes of equity. This jurisdiction was no longer to depend upon the will of the Legislature. It was fixed in the Constitution, and could only he changed by a change of the Constitution. It was not so changed, but continued the same until the 2d day of December, 1831, when the present Constitution of the State was adopted. The present Constitution made no change in the jurisdiction of 'the court of chancery. That court has now, under the present Constitution,—as had the justices of the old supreme court holding courts of equity in the respective conntieg of this State, under the provisions of the Act Establishing Courts of Law and Equity within the Colonial Government,—full power and authority “ to hear and decree all such matters and causes of equity as shall come before it.”
Section 1, art. 6, of the present Constitution of the State, is as follows : “ The judicial power of this State shall be vested in a court of errors and appeals, a superior court, a court of chancery, an orphans’ court, a court of oyer and terminer, a court of general sessions of the peace and jail delivery, a register’s court, justices of the peace, and such other courts as the General Assembly, with the concurrence of two thirds of all the members of both Houses, shall from time to time establish.”
Section 5 of said article declares: “ The chancellor shall hold the court of chancery. This court shall have all the jurisdiction and powers vested by the laws of this State in the court of chancery.”
We have already seen what powers were vested by the laws of this State in the court of chancery at the time of the adoption of the present Constitution. These powers the court of chancery now possesses. By Bev. Code of this State, chap. 95, § 1, it is declared, in words almost a literal transcript from the Act establishing courts of law and equity during the period of our Colonial history hereinbefore so often referred to, that “ the court of chancery shall have full power to hear *224and decree all matters and causes in equity, and the proceedings shall he, as heretofore, by bill, answer, and other proper pleadings ; and the chancellor shall have power to issue subpoenas and all other process to compel defendants to answer ■suits there, to award commissions for taking answers and examining witnesses, to grant injunctions for staying suits at law, and to prevent wastes, as there may be occasion, according to the course of chancery practice in England, with power to make orders and award, and do all things necessary to bring causes to hearing, and to enforce obedience to decrees in ■ equity by imprisonment of the body or sequestration of lands; provided that the chancellor shall not have power to determine any matter wherein sufficient remedy may be had by common law or statute, before any other court or jurisdiction of this State; but that where matters determinable at common law shall be brought before him in equity, he shall remit the parties to the common law; and when matters of fact, proper to be tried by a jury, in any cause depending in chancery, the chancellor shall order such facts to trial by issues at the bar of the superior court.” This provision of the statute does not attempt in any respect to abridge the jurisdiction conferred by the Constitution upon this court. It would not be competent for the Legislature to do so, either directly or by conferring upon any other court any portion of that jurisdiction, or to make cognizable in any other tribunal any matter or cause of equity of which this court has original jurisdiction under the Constitution of the State. The law upon this subject is very well expressed by Chancellor Walworth in the case of Sailly v. Elmore, 2 Paige, 499. The chancellor said : “But as this court had originally the exclusive jurisdiction in such cases, it is no objection to a bill filed here, at this time, that the complainant has an adequate remedy or good defense at law.” In the language of Loi'd Eldon: “ This court will not allow itself to be ousted of any part of its original jurisdiction because a court of law happens to fall in love with the same or a similar jurisdiction.” Eyre v. Everett, 2 Russ. 382. If a suit at law is commenced in such a case, and the defendant in that suit *225.unnecessarily files a bill here to set up a defense of which he inay now avail himself at law, this court may refuse to interfere by way of preliminary injunction, or it may not give him costs on a final decree. But if he establishes his equitable defense here, this court cannot dismiss the bill for want of jurisdiction.”
Having thus traced the history of the origin and extent of equity jurisprudence in this State, and of the tribunals by which it has béen administered from the time of their creation until the present; and having shown that throughout their whole existence they have been authorized and empowered toi hear and decree all “matters and causes of equity,” it remains to consider whether a foreclosure of a mortgage by judicial decree is a matter or cause of equity. What is a mortgaged It is the conveyance of an estate by way of pledge for the security of a debt, and to become void on payment of it. At law the legal ownership was considered vested in the creditor, but in equity the mortgagor remains the actual owner until he is debarred by his own default or by judicial decree. “ There is no branch of the law of real property,” remarks Gha/noeUor Kent, “ which embraces a greater variety of important interests, or which is of more practical application. The different, and even conflicting, views which were taken of the subject by the courts of law and equity have given an abstruse and shifting character to the doctrine of mortgages. But the liberal minds and enlarged policy of such judges as Hardwicke and Mansfield gave expansion to principles, tested their soundness, dispersed anomalies, and assimilated the law of the different tribunals on this as well as on the other heads of jurisprudence. The law of mortgage, under the process of forensic reasoning, has now become firmly established on the most rational foundations.”
Originally the mortgagee was entitled to the delivery of the possession of the mortgaged premises, the legal estate being vested in him subject to be defeated upon performance of the condition. He might at any time when he pleased, *226and before a default, put the mortgagor out of possession byejectment or other proper suit. The rigor and technicalities, which characterized the original common-law doctrine have been greatly abated and dispensed with even in courts of law.. They have, by a gradual and almost insensible progress,, adopted many of the equitable views of courts of equity, which are founded in justice and accord with the true intent- and inherent nature of every such transaction; and this is-particularly the case with the courts of law of this State. The equity doctrine is that the mortgage is a mere security for the-debt, and only a chattel interest, and that, until a decree of foreclosure, the mortgagor continues the real owner of the fee. The equity of redemption is considered to be the real and beneficial estate, tantamount to the fee at law ; and it is. accordingly held to be descendible, devisable by will, alienable-by deed, precisely as if it were an absolute estate of inheritance at law. The influence of these principles has reached the courts of law, and Chancellor Kent, in warm admiration, observes : “ The case of mortgages is one of the most splendid instances in the history of our jurisprudence, of the triumph of equitable principles over technical rules, and of the homage-which those principles have received by their adoption in the-courts of law. Without any prophetic anticipation, we may well say that returning justice lifts aloft her scale.” Lect. 58.
These remarks are peculiarly applicable to the doctrine of' mortgages as held both by the courts of law and equity in this State. The late High Court of Errors and Appeals, at. the June Term, 1818, in the case of Robinson v. Harriss, cited in 3 Harrington, 283, said: “ Mortgages are, more especially in this State, to be considered merely in the light of securities for the payment of money; the mortgagee is rarely, if' ever, put in possession of the land ;” and the superior court' of this State, in the case of Cooch v. Gerry, 3 Harrington,. 280, remarked that the mortgage is regarded, both at law and in equity, as a mere security for the debt. In the case of' Hall v. Twnnell, 1 Houston, 326, it was decided that “ a mortgage, as between the mortgagor and. the mortgagee, so long-*227as the former continues in possession of the mortgaged premises, is merely a security for the payment of money, and does not absolutely convey the legal title to the premises; but it is a lien on the property of so high a nature that it is not devested by a sale on judgments subsequently obtained against the mortgagor; yet if the mortgagee is in possession under tlie mortgage, and the condition of it be broken, it is no longer in the power of the mortgagor, or of anyone claiming his title by virtue of a sale ou such a judgment, to recover the possession in ejectment. His only right in such case, as we have before said, is to redeem the premises by paying the mortgage.” I submit, therefore, that it logically follows from the principles applicable to mortgages in this State, as held by the legal tribunals of the State, or as deducible from the reasoning of those tribunals, that a mortgagee in this State can only acquire the possession of lands mortgaged, by the voluntary act of the mortgagor admitting him to the possession, or by becoming the purchaser of the same at a sale on execution issued upon a judgment recovered in scire facias on the mortgage, or under a judicial decree of the court of chancery declaring a foreclosure of the mortgage. He cannot in this State, consistently with the doctrine here held in respect to mortgages, maintain an action of ejectment against the mortgagor in possession, even after condition broken, to obtain possession of the mortgaged premises, for the reason that the only interest he acquires under his mortgage is a chattel interest; the mortgage being but a high grade of security for the payment of a debt, and not being a conveyance of title in the land.' He has but two remedies to pursue. He may obtain judgment upon scire facias in the superior court upon his mortgage, at any time after the last day whereon the mortgage money ought to be paid or other conditions performed, or he may file a bill in chancery for a foreclosure of the mortgage at any time after condition broken; for notwithstanding the earnestness, ability, and no doubt sincerity, with which the opposite view was pressed in argument, I have no doubt that the foreclosure of a mortgage by judicial *228decree is a “ matter and cause of equity ” which the court of chancery in this State is “ empowered and authorized to hear and decree.”
Although it was usual in England for the mortgagee to enter into possession upon the delivery of the mortgage, and although he might recover possession, even as against the mortgagor, as well before as after condition broken, he might pursue all his remedies at one and the same time. He might bring an action on the covenant to repay the money, serve an ejectment on the tenant in possession, and file a bill to foreclose the equity of redemption; but he could not have his money and the estate too. In England “ a mortgagee may "bring an ejectment at law at the same time that he hath a bill of foreclosure depending; for he will not be prevented from pursuing all his remedies for the recovery of his debts.” 3 Powell, Mort. 966; Coote, Mort. 518; Booth v. Booth, 2 Atk. 343. In the latter case Lord Chancellor Hardwicke said: “ Though the defendant is foreclosing the equity of redenyption here, yet he is not precluded from bringing an ejectment at law at the same time, unless there is something-very particular to take it out of the common ease.” Many cases might be cited to the same effect, but it is unnecessary to do so. How the office of an action of ejectment is to recover the possession of lands. The plaintiff in ejectment brings the action, when out of possession, to recover possession when wrongfully withheld. The position, therefore, taken by the solicitors for the defendants,-—that the Court of Chancery in England had not the power to foreclose a mortgage when the mortgagee was out of possession; and that the mortgagee', if out of possession, could not file his bill to foreclose the equity of redemption until he had obtained possession of the lands by an action of ejectment,—is manifestly erroneous.
The next question to be considered is, When does the right of foreclosure of a mortgage occur, and for what may it be enforced in equity % It occurs upon breach of condition, whether such breach be the nonpayment of money or the nonperformance of any other act, the payment of which or the *229performance of which is stipulated for or secured by the mortgage at the time mentioned in respect thereto in the mortgage. It is objected, however, in this case, that a foreclosure of a mortgage cannot be decreed for the default in payment of the first installment due thereon. The condition of the mortgage is that the interest shall be paid annually, and that the sum of $4,500 was to be paid at the expiration of five years from the 1st day of January, 1868; and at the expiration of ten years from the said 1st day of January, 1868, the said residue or further sum of $1,500 was to be paid.
We have already seen what the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania said on this subject in the case of West Branch Bank v. Chester. It says: “ In England a default in payment of half a year’s interest on the appointed day is sufficient breach of condition to enable the mortgagee to foreclose.” In the case of Morgenstern v. Klees, 30 Ill. 422, it was decided that the interest falling due yearly on a note secured by a mortgage is an installment of th debt, and the mortgage may be foreclosed to enforce its payment. It is not necessary to wait until the maturity of the note. In the case of Brinckerhoff v. Thallhimer, 2 Johns. Ch. 486, a bill was filed to foreclose a mortgage executed by the defendant on the 24th of March, 1813, on a lot or parcel of land to secure the payment of $3,000 in seven years from the 1st of April, 1813, with interest annually. The master reported $752.16 due for interest. The bill was taken pro confessa. A decree was made for the sale of the mortgaged premises, or so much thereof as should be necessary to raise the interest due and cost, and which could be sold separately without material in jury to the parties or either of them. A default in payment of half a year’s interest on the appointed day will be a sufficient breach of condition to enable the mortgagee to foreclose. Coote, Mort. 518.
The power to foreclose a mortgage by bill in equity in England cannot be questioned, and is only questioned in this cause so far as the right to foreclose there is claimed before *230recovery of possession of the lands by the mortgagee in an action of ejectment or otherwise. This position, we have seen, is unsupported by authority. I have already asserted the power of this court to foreclose a mortgage for the nonpayment of the money or debt secured by it to be paid. I now decide that where the debt thus secured to be paid is by the stipulation of the mortgage secured to be paid in installments, a bill filed in this court to foreclose for the nonpayment of the first or any subsequent installment will be entertained, and that a decree of foreclosure for such cause is within the equitable jurisdiction, power-, and authority of this court. The only authority referred to ip the argument to show that a mortgage could not be foreclosed in equity for the nonpayment of one installment was a case to be found in the reports of the State of North Carolina. The reason assigned for the decision was that a foreclosure for such cause would be a violation of the contract between the parties to the mortgage. If the reason assigned fails, then the decision falls. That the reason must fail in this case is manifest from a consideration of the condition contained in the mortgage. That condition is as follows: “ Provided always, nevertheless, —and it is hereby agreed to be a condition to these presents,-— that -if the said Bolitha L. Wharton, his heirs, executors, or administrators, shall and do well and truly pay or cause to be paid unto the said James C. Wallace and Mary B. Wallace, their executors, administrators, or assigns, the aforesaid debt or sum of $9,000, in the days and times hereinbefore mentioned and appointed for payment thereof, with lawful interest for the same, according to the condition of said in-part-recited obligation, without any fraud or further delay, then and from thenceforth, as well this present indenture and the estate hereby granted as the said in-part-recited obligation shall cease, determine, and become absolutely null and void to all intents and purposes, anything hereinbefore contained to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding, otherwise shall remain and continue in full force and virtue.” Now the condition was broken by the nonpayment of the first installment at the *231time stipulated therefor; and by the contract of the parties a forfeiture then occurred which subjected the mortgage to foreclosure in equity.
The case of Adams v. Essex, 1 Bibb, 149, decided, not under any statute, but upon consideration of the general principles applicable to the subject, places the right of a court of ■equity to foreclose a mortgage for the nonpayment of one installment, upon grounds, in my judgment, perfectly satisfactory. The court says: “ In the former decree pronounced in this cause, we went upon the principle that when a contract is made for the payment of a sum of money by installments, no action is maintainable at law for the recovery thereof, until the last installment becomes due. Upon more mature reflection and a further examination of the authorities we are now convinced that this principle is not correct as a general rule; •and that in the books it is confined to the action of debt. It seems to have grown out of the rigid principles governing that particular form of action. But in assumpsit, in covenant, and special agreements, although the plaintiff must set out in his declaration the contract as made, he may assign breaches according to the truth of the case, and shall recover damages for so much of the contract as, at the commencement of the action, was broken, without depriving him of his remedy for other breaches of the contract when they happen; or, in other words, he can from time to time recover so much as is due. The case before the court, being a suit in equity for the foreclosure of a mortgage, ought rather to be assimilated to and governed by the liberal principles which govern in covenant, assumpsit, and special agreements, than those technical and rigid rules which are applicable to the action of ■debt only. We are therefore of opinion that the suit was properly commenced, although but one of the installments was due at the filing of the bill. And we are the more ■strongly confirmed in this opinion because the chancellor, from the liberality of those principles and rules which govern ■courts of equity, has it in his power so to mould and fashion his decree, either as to a part or the whole of the demands, *232as to do complete justice to the parties, and has power to-retain the cause for the purpose of making, from time to time,, such orders and decrees as justice may demand. This course of proceeding appears to be indispensably necessary in the case of mortgages to secure the payment of annuities, jointures, money acquired to be annually raised for the maintenance and education of children, and many other cases of a similar kind, in which, if it were required by law that no proceeding should be had upon the mortgage to foreclose or enforce payment until the last installment became due, the very object of the contract would be defeated, and those for whose benefit the mortgage was effected, in the mean time, might starve. The answer is not satisfactory, that the mortgagee might bring his ejectment to be let into possession, and thus compel the mortgagor to come into equity to redeem because the estate might be unproductive, even if the mortgagee were let into possession, and the mortgagor might not come for a redemption. From these considerations it now seems to us that the suit was not prematurely instituted, and that the court of chancery had jurisdiction thereof, although only the first installment was due at the commencement of the suit; and that the chancellor, having once jurisdiction of the cause, ought not to turn the parties around at the hearing to begin cLe nova, but should go on to finish the controversy.”
The ancient practice in proceedings for foreclosure, says-Chancellor Kent (Lect. 58), was by bill in chancery to procure-a decree for a strict foreclosure of the right to redeem, by which means the lands became the absolute property of the mortgagee. This is the English practice to this day, though sometimes the mortgagee will pray for and obtain a decree for a sale of the mortgaged premises, under the direction of an officer of the court; and the proceeds of the sale will in that case be applied towards the discharge of incumbrances, according to priority. The latter practice is evidently the most beneficial to the mortgagor, as well as the most reasonable and accurate disposition of the pledge. The practice in proceedings of foreclosure is not uniform in this country. We have *233had but little practice in this State upon this subject. A bill for foreclosure of a mortgage was, however, filed to the September Term, 1849, of the Court of Chancery in and for ISTew Castle County, by Joseph It. Townsend, executor of the last will and testament of William Townsend, deceased, against Bobert Wood et al. The mortgage was given on the 24th day of March, 1847, to secure the sum of $4,600, being the amount of the purchase money of the lands therein mentioned, with interest at the times therein stated; to wit, upon the payment of the sum of $600, with interest thereon from the date of the mortgage, on or before the 25th day of March, 1848; and the further sum of $2,000, with interest as aforesaid, on or before the 25th day of March, 1850; and the further sum of $2,000 on the 25th day of March, 1853. A decree pro confesso was made in the cause on the 8th day of September, 1851; and on the 19th day of February, 1852, Chancellor Johns made a decree, which, after other recitals, was as follows : “It appearing that the said sum of $600, with interest thereon from the 24tli day of March, 1847, was due and unpaid before the filing of the said bill of complaint, whereby the said condition of the said mortgage became forfeited; and that the further sum of $2,000, with interest from the same day and year, became due and remained unpaid since the filing of the said bill of complaint,-—which said two sums of $600 and $2,000, with interest thereon from the said 24th day of March, in the year aforesaid, to the date of this decree, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $3,3b4.84, which now remains due and unpaid by the said mortgagors,—it-is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the said mortgagors, do pay to the said complainant the sum of $3,364.84 on or before the 25th day of March next, and the sum of $96.74, the cost of the complainant in this canse; and in default of payment it is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the said mortgaged premises be sold by the sheriff of Flew Castle-County for the payment thereof, and that the sheriff make return of such sale to this court.”
I think it safe and proper to recognize the decree so made, *234as authority for a similar decree in this cause, unless further proceedings shall intervene. I therefore overrule the demurrer filed in this cause.
If I have extended this opinion beyond what may seem a reasonable limit, I have been induced to do so by a desire fully to consider the questions raised by counsel in the argument. It is not my desire to assume for this court any jurisdiction which, in my judgment, does not properly and constitutionally belong to it. That jurisdiction has for the first time in the history of this State been called in question, and with a degree of zeal, earnestness, ability, and, I doubt not, sincerity, by counsel, which do them credit and entitle their arguments to full and mature consideration. I may be indulged, however, in the remark that it was here, in the State ■of Delaware, that the Genius of Equity at a very early day, if not for the first time, erected on this continent that magnificent temple of Equity Jurisprudence so eloquently described by Story in the conclusion of his learned Commentaries. That Genius bids her ministerial servants to guard well the approaches to her temple, and to ward off all those who would seek to despoil her of her trophies or to bear away her treasures. To all such she commands her servants to say: Procul, procul este, profani!
Demurrer overruled.