The note specified in the condition of the mortgage deed to the plaintiff, had been put in suit before the county court of Fairfield county. The present defendant appeared in that suit; pleaded the general issue of non-assumpsit; and gave notice, that under that issue, he should offer evidence to prove, that the note was given upon a usurious consideration, and was void. This issue was tried by a jury, who returned a verdict against the defendant; and the county court thereupon rendered judgment in favour of the plaintiff.
*552The debt not being satisfied, the mortgagee brings the present action to recover possession of the pledge; and the defendant again offers to shew, as he before attempted, that the note is usurious and void. The superior court decided, that the judgment of the county court to recover the debt, was conclusive in this action, so far as respected the debt; and the correctness of this decision is the question before us.
There is a great difference between the effect of judgments and verdicts in former suits. When a verdict is given in evidence merely, and is not, or cannot be pleaded, by way of estoppel, it is not clear, that it is ever conclusive: indeed, the better opinion seems to be, that it is merely evidence to he weighed by a jury, in connection with other evidence. Not so, with judgments; for in many cases they are conclusive, when given in evidence.
If, for instance, a plaintiff deriving title to two pieces of land, by the same deed, should bring an action of ejectment against the grantor, for one peice of the land conveyed; and the defendant should plead no wrong or disseisin; although the defendant might proceed on the ground that the deed was a forgery, and the jury should find for the plaintiff; here the verdict must, indeed, have proceeded on the ground that the deed was established; but neither the verdict nor the judgment would be evidence in another suit brought for the other peice of land contained in the same deed. The judgment would not be evidence, because it only affirmed the title of the plaintiff to the land in litigation in the first suit. The verdict would not be evidence in the second action, because the validity of the deed was not in issue directly, and was only involved, by way of inference, in the result.
If, however, we suppose, that the issue in the first action was formed directly on the existence and validity of the deed, by which the plaintiff derived title to both pieces of land, and the jury should specially find the deed to be the act of the grantor; here the verdict would be evidence in the second action, though probably not conclusive.
In the action on the note, not only the jury found, that the defendant assumed and promised; but the judgment of the court was a direct adjudication that the plaintiff should recover upon that note. The making of the promise, and the validity of it were not points drawn incidentally in question, nor to be inferred argumentatively, from the judgment; but the judg*553ment itself was for the plaintiff to recover the very money secured by the mortgage deed.
With these preliminary remarks, I proceed to consider the question, whether the judgment of the county court is conclusive? Though verdicts must generally, if not always be specially pleaded, when they are relied on as conclusive, yet a judgment of court, when properly given in evidence, is as conclusive as though specially pleaded.
It has been urged in the argument of this case, that the object of the first suit, and of the present being different; the former being brought to recover the debt, and the latter to recover the land mortgaged; that consequently, the judgment in the first suit cannot be, either conclusive evidence, or indeed evidence at all, in the present action, on the point decided in the former suit.
For this position no authority was cited at the bar, except Judge Swift's treatise on Evidence (pa. 17.) and this authority does not support the position contended for. Where the cause or object of two actions is different, though the matter or point in dispute is the same in both, a prior judgment is no bar to a subsequent action; but the verdict may be matter of evidence to prove such point in dispute. This is the doctrine laid down by Judge Swift; this has been already conceded in giving this opinion; and this in no way interferes with the ground of this decision; for although the object and purpose of two actions being different, the judgment in one, cannot be used by way of bar to the other, it does not follow, that in the second action, either party can be permitted to contradict what was expressly adjudicated in the first. In the case of Hopkins v. Lee, 6 Wheat. Rep. 109. the facts were, that Lee sold Hopkins an estate, called “ Hill and Dale,” then under certain incumbrances, which Lee agreed to remove; and Hopkins was to pay therefor 18,000 dollars, partly in military lands, and partly in some other way, as soon as the incumbrances were removed. Hopkins filed a bill in chancery against Lee, stating that Lee had omitted to pay the incumbrances, and that he, Hopkins, had been compelled to pay them. Upon the hearing of this bill, the Court found, that Hopkins, the petitioner, had satisfied the incumbrances on the Hill and Dale estate, but with the funds of Lee advanced for that purpose; and thereupon decreed, that the petitioner, Hopkins, should pay Lee the overplus remaining in his hands, after paying off the incumbrances. Lee then brought an action of covenant against Hopkins, for not conveying the *554military lands agreeable to covenant; to which Hopkins pleaded, that Lee had never discharged the incumbrances on the estate of Hill and Dale.
No lawyer can suppose, that let the judgment or decree on the bill in chancery have been either way, it could have been pleaded in bar to the last action of covenant brought by Lee against Hopkins. The object of the bill in chancery was to get refunded, money, which the purchaser of an estate alleged, that he had been obliged to expend, to free that estate from incumbrances, which the seller was bound to remove. The object of the action at law, was to recover damages for not conveying the military lands, which were to be taken in part payment. Nothing could have been more distinct than the object of the two suits they were not for the same matter, cause and thing: and let the issue of the bill in chancery have been as it might, the decree could not have been pleaded in bar of the action at law.
But by way of evidence, the decree in chancery was held conclusive, to prove, that Lee had discharged the incumbrances on the estate; that being the matter directly adjudicated upon in the suit in chancery. 6 Wheat. Rep. 109. It is not sufficient, then, for the defendant to shew, that let the issue of the suit in the county court have been for the defendant, that judgment could not have been pleaded in bar to the present; action; for we have seen, that a judgment may not only be evidence, but conclusive evidence, and still be no bar to a second action.
Nothing can be more distinct than the object of an ejectment in England, and the action of trespass on the case for mesne profits; yet the judgment in ejectment is conclusive against the defendant upon the right of possession at the time of the demise laid in the declaration; (Phill. Evid. 224. Aislin v. Parkin, 2 Burr. 666. 668. and Lord Mansfield, in giving his opinion, says, that “ the judgment in ejectment, like all others, concludes the parties, only as to the subject matter of it: Therefore, beyond the time laid in the demise, it proves nothing at all; because, beyond that time, the plaintiff has alleged no title, nor could be put to prove any.” So a record of conviction, on an indictment against a parish for not repairing a road, will be conclusive evidence, on a plea of not guilty to a second indictment, of the liability of that parish to repair. Phill. Evid. 224, Rex. v. St. Pancras, Peake's Rep. 219.
No writer has laid down the law on this subject with more latitude, or more justice, than Judge Swift, whose dicta have *555been pressed to the support of a contrary doctrine. In his treatise of Evidence (pa. 10.) he says: “It is an established rule of law, that when a fact has once been directly decided, it shall not be again disputed between the same parties; and therefore, a judgment of the same court, or one of concurrent jurisdiction, if directly upon the point, may be pleaded in bar, in cases where special pleading is required, and in other cases, given in evidence, on the general issue, as conclusive between the parties, upon the same matter coming directly or incidentally in question.” Peake and Phillips, in their treatises on Evidence, lay down the rule substantially in the same language.
I know of no case, which comes more properly within the rule than the present. In every case of mortgage, the debt is the principal thing, and the land and the securities, are mere incidents to the debt. When the debt is extinguished, the land in equity belongs to the mortgagor. I see no use or propriety, in suffering the legality of this debt to be questioned, after being once directly decided, in every case where the creditor finds it necessary to resort to law to get possession of the collateral securities. The existence and legality of this debt have been once directly settled, by a court of competent jurisdiction; from whose decision the defendant might have appealed, if he had just cause of complaint. But having neglected to do this, the judgment of the county court is binding, and conclusive. Marriott v. Hampton, 7 Term Rep. 269. Peake's Evid. 34. 11 State Trials, 261.
I would, therefore, direct, that the rule to shew cause be discharged.
Hosmer, Ch. J. and Peters, J. were of the same opinion; Brainard, J. being absent.New trial, not to be granted.