In this case the defendant, Lyman, gave a mortgage to the orator. He subsequently conveyed a portion of the premises to one Lewis Lyman, with full covenants, and subsequent to that gave the defendant Briggs a mortgage of the remaining portion of the estate mortgaged to the orator. These conveyances were all upon record, and each one before the execution of the one next following it. And subsequent to all these conveyances being on record, the orator released that portion of the estate conveyed to Lewis Lyman, and with actual knowledge that the defendant Briggs held a mortgage.
The orator now seeks to obtain a foreclosure of the mortgage upon that portion of the estate not released, and which was subsequently mortgaged to the defendant Briggs. Briggs claims a deduction from the mortgage in proportion to the value of the *80estate released, as compared with the remaining portion. This is undoubtedly equitable, provided any such burden could have been placed upon that portion of the estate if it had not been released.
It seems to be well settled by all the decisions, both in this country and in England, that in a case where a general burden ■rests upon an estate, and a portion of it is conveyed, the grantee of such portion is entitled to redeem the mortgage or incumbrance, and be subrogated to the rights of the owner, and thus enforce it against that portion of the estate still remaining in the hands of the debtor; 2 Story’s Eq. Jur. sec. 1233 a. and cases cited. This proposition is unquestionable.
Before the conveyance to Briggs then, the orator’s mortgage, as between Lewis Lyman and George Lyman, was chargeable upon the portion of the estate still in the mortgagor’s hands. The inquiry then arises whether his executing a mortgage of this portion of the estate, or what was the fact, of the whole estate subject to the conveyance to Lewis Lyman, changes the equitable, burden of the orator’s mortgage, as to the estate mortgaged to. Briggs. The question does not seem to have been decided in any case in this State. The case of Chittenden v. Barney & Howe, 1 Vt. 28, seems to assume the ground that the first mortgage is to be apportioned upon the different parcels of the whole estate, conveyed to different persons, according to their value, without reference to the order of time of the several conveyances. It is said in Gates v. Adams, 24 Vt. 70, that this kind of equal apportionment of the incumbrance upon the different parcels of land, cannot in equity be made compulsory upon the first incumbrance of the whole estate, but that the subsequent purchasers may redeem the whole incumbrance and compel contribution among themselves. But the question in regard to ¡my priority among themselves does not seem to have arisen there.
But this question has been repeatedly made in other American States, and the current of American authority seems to be almost. uniform in favor of charging the several portions of the estate, conveyed in the inverse order of the time of such conveyances. This rule has been repeatedly recognized and acted upon in the, Stato pf New York, beginning with Gill v. Lyon, 1 Johns. Ch. *81447. The same rule is more or less directly adopted and acted upon in Clowes v. Dickerson, 5 Johns Ch. 235 ; S. C. affirmed in 9 Cowen 403 ; Skeel v. Sprakee, 8 Paige 182 ; Stuyvesant v. Hall, 2 Barb. Ch. 151; and the other cases cited by the orator’s counsel. See also 1 Hilliard on Mortgages, 326, and cases cited in notes. This rule is approved in the American notes to Leading Cases in Equity, 2 Vol. 208. There will here be found an extensive and very satisfactory review of the American authorities upon this subject. This general rule seems to have been adopted in most of the American States, but with occasional qualifications, as where the first purchaser of a portion of the whole estate stipulated in his purchase to pay a portion of the general incumbrance, or remains indebted to the vendor for the purchase money, which is still secured upon the land, as in Allen v. Clark, 17 Pick. 47.
Mr. Justice Story, in his Equity Jur. sec. 1233 a. raises a' query in regard to the soundness of this view, and intimates ah opinion that some of the English cases to which he refers, do not countenance such a mode of marshalling the equities among the./ different purchasers. But the case of Averall v Wood, 10 Eng. Cond. Ch. 498, one of the cases referred to by the learned author seems rather to favor the American rule upon the subject, where there is full notice to all parties. And if there is any hesitation in the English equity courts, in regard to extending the equities between the prior purchaser of a portion of the estate who pays for the same and takes covenants of warranty, and the vendor who still retains a portion of the estate, both parties resting under a general burden, to the subsequent purchaser of the remaining portion, it rests unquestionably upon the want of notice, either actual or constructive, there being no general registry system in that country, as is well known.
The registry of a subsequent conveyance is not, in general, constructive notice to a prior purchaser or incumbrancer, but the registry of a deed is notice to those acquiring a subsequent interest in the estate. And with this construction, or actual notice of the state of the title and of the subsisting equities, it seems to us highly reasonable and just that, as among themselves, the purchasers of different portions of the estate are to contribute to the common burden, in the inverse order of their acquiring title! *82Defendant Briggs therefore had no equity, as against Lewis Lyman, having purchased with knowledge of his prior equity against the remaining portion of the estate not conveyed by the mortgagor.
Decree affirmed and case remanded.