(dissenting.) I cannot concur in the decision in this case. The question is, what is the meaning of the word “foreclosure ” in the first section of the act of 1878, (Gen. Statutes, § 3010,) which is as follows:—“The foreclosure of a mortgage shall be a bar to any further action upon the mortgage debt, note or obligation, unless the person or persons who are liable for the payment thereof are made parties to such foreclosure.” Does it include or exclude a complaint in equity for a sale of personal property mortgaged ? I maintain that it excludes it.
Prior to 1832 a formal mortgage of personal property was practically unknown in this state. Such a conveyance was invalid unless accompanied by possession. As security therefore the inconvenience was so great as to prevent its use except to a limited extent. Other kinds of property, such as bonds, stocks, etc., of which possession could be conveniently delivered, were in use then as now. Then as now such securities were not mortgaged but pledged. Hence we find no statute regulating chattel mortgages until 1832; and few such mortgages, if any, existed. Therefore the word “ foreclosure ” will be presumed to have had no reference to chattel mortgages. It was in common use, both in our statutes and in our reports, but it referred exclusively to mortgages of real estate. ’ At a time then when there was but one meaning to the word, and that a strict fore*263closure of mortgaged real estate, the legislature passed an act providing that certain kinds of personal property might be mortgaged with the real estate, and the lien thereby created be valid without delivery of possession, and also pro viding that such property might be foreclosed with the real estate. In passing I observe that a foreclosure of personal property as then provided for does not mean a sale, for the law is, and the practice has been, to foreclose the personal property as real estate is foreclosed. By the same act provision was made for mortgaging the same kind of personal property without the real estate and without delivery of possession. In case the mortgagor fails to pay, the remedy prescribed is a bill in equity for a sale. Subsequently other kinds of personal property were brought within the provisions of the act. That act as amended, including the remedy, a special provision, is now in force. Nowhere in the statute is that remedy or the decree of the court called a foreclosure. As to real estate the proceeding is called a foreclosure ; as to personal estate alone it is called a bill in equity for a sale, etc.
Prior to 1833 the foreclosure of a mortgage, irrespective of the value of the property, paid the debt. In many in stances that was unjust to the creditor. To remedy that an act was passed that year providing that the foreclosure should not preclude a remedy for the balance of the debt. That statute clearly referred to real estate only; for until 1832 none other was recognized by statute or known in practice as the subject of mortgage. It was a remedial statute, the mischief being that creditors were often wronged; and no such mischief then or ever existed in respect to mortgages of personal property. If there was a mortgage or pledge of that as security, and the thing mortgaged or pledged was converted into money, and was insufficient to pay the debt, it was never held that the balance of the debt was thereby discharged. The proposition then is undeniable that the act of 1833 referred only to mortgages of real estate. That act continued in force until 1878, when the act now under consideration was passed. That act is en *264titled, “An act relating to the Foreclosure of Mortgages.” It purports to deal only with the subject matter of the act of 1833. It clearly was intended to affect that act, and there is no evidence that it was intended to affect any other statute or law. It was in effect and substance an act in addition to and in alteration of the prior act. .The word “foreclosure” having a fixed and definite meaning in the former act, it should be construed as having the same meaning in the latter, unless a different intention is clearly expressed.
For nearly sixty years these two classes of mortgages, of real estate and of personal property, have stood side by side in our law. The law supplies a distinct and radically different remedy for each:—the one, a strict foreclosure, by which the equitable right of the mortgagor is extinguished, and the absolute title vested in the mortgagee ; the other, not a foreclosure in the strict and popular sense, but a decree that the thing pledged, or mortgaged, be sold, and the avails applied in payment or part payment of the debt. The latter in the statute is not called a foreclosure but a decree for a sale.
But it is said that a judicial sale is a foreclosure ; that is, - it extinguishes the right of the mortgagor and appropriates the security. That is doubtless true, and in a loose sense it is sometimes called a foreclosure ; but legallyin Connecticut the word is not often used in that sense by the legislature, the courts, or the profession. A history and review of the law in this state clearly demonstrates that the legislature did not use it in that sense in this instance.
But it is said that a mortgage of personal property is within the spirit and mischief of the act. Is it,? I venture to affirm that not an instance can be pointed out in which the sale of mortgaged personal property has been attended with any such mischievous consequences as have existed in reference to real estate. The two cases are unlike each other. While there were many cases of injustice which were designed to be prevented by the act of 1833, and difficulties existed in the application of that act to remedy which the act of 1878 was passed, yet no such evils exist or ever have *265existed, with reference to mortgages of personal property-only.
If indorsers, in cases where the maker secures the debt by a mortgage of personal property, need the protection of the statute, they need it also when the security is by way of a pledge. A pledge differs from a mortgage chiefly in this ; a pledgee has the possession but not the title, while a mortgagee has the title and not the possession. Both are in a broad sense mortgages. Is it proposed to extend the provisions of the statute by requiring notice to indorsers when it is proposed to appropriate things pledged ? It may be so that no great harm will result when it is understood; but it seems to me dangerous for the court to make such law by construction. If there are evils in that direction, let the legislature devise and apply the remedy.
If any part of the act of 1878 applies to mortgages of personal property, all does-—the second section as well as the first. Let us test the practical working of the two statutes on the supposition that both apply. A complaint is pending for a sale under the statute of 1832; the court decrees a sale and limits a time within which the debtor may redeem ; some party to the suit applies to the court for the appointment of appraisers under the act of 1878, and they are appointed. Now the appraisers have ten days after the expiration of the time limited in which to make the appraisal. That necessarily postpones the sale, and it may be for ten days. Did the legislature contemplate that ? But that is a minor matter. We will pass on. An appraisal is made and in due time there is a sale. The property is' appraised at a much larger sum than it brings. The statute provides that “ such appraisal shall be final and conclusive as to the value of such mortgaged property; and the mortgage creditor in any further action upon the mortgage debt, note or .obligation, shall recover only the difference between the value of the mortgaged property as fixed by such appraisal and the amount of his claim.” Gen. Statutes, § 3011. The inevitable result is that the creditor must lose the difference between the valuation and the amount realized at the sale, *266together with all the expenses of the sale. Did the legislature contemplate that ? But more. The mortgagee is compelled to become the purchaser of the property at the appraisal of men, with no power to exercise his own judgment; and what is still worse, if possible, he is not permitted to bold it, and take the chances of effecting a favorable sale, but is compelled by the decree immediately to sell it at auction. Can it be possible that the legislature intended any such absurd and unjust consequences ? On the other hand, if the property sells for more than the appraisal, then the mortgagor is the loser and the mortgagee gains. Could that have been intended? Will it be suggested that the valuation as fixed by the sale is the better rule ? Then I ask, of what use is the appraisal? And by what authority is the positive provision of the statute disregarded ? The suggestion is of itself a confession that the statute has no application. It seems to me impossible to harmonize two such incongruous statutes and make them both apply to the same transaction.
The sole reason for requiring parties who may be liable for the mortgage debt to be made parties to an action for a foreclosure, is that there may be an appraisal of the property, and that they may have an opportunity to appear and be heard when the appraisal is made—that they may not be concluded without a day in court. It is hardly possible to assign any other reason for the existence of the act. No such reason exists, or can exist, in appropriating personal property mortgaged. A singular illustration, and almost a demonstration of the truth of this proposition, exists in this case. The mortgage in question contains a provision that on default the mortgagee may sell the machinery mortgaged without legal proceedings, upon “giving notice of the time and place of such sale by publication for three successive weeks in the Naugatuck Valley Sentinel, a week-a ly newspaper published in said Derby.” A sale under this clause is just as much a foreclosure as a sale pursuant to a decree of court. There is precisely the same reason for notice to the indorsers and an appraisal in the one case as in *267the other. If, not being made a party, the indorser is discharged in the one case, he is in the other. The logic of the decision leads inevitably to this result—that in all cases where personal property mortgaged or pledged is sold and the avails applied on the mortgage debt, the indorser, guarantor, or other surety, is thereby discharged unless he is made a party to the proceeding. Is this court prepared to announce that doctrine ? The business community will be surprised and alarmed at the announcement. It is not safe to overturn and unsettle well-established and well-known principles. A radical change by the court in simple elementary law is highly objectionable.
Again. Boulton and Hill were the indorsers. It is found that “ said Hill and Boulton were the chief stockholders in said company, and indorsed said notes for the accommodation of said company.” Hill was the treasurer and signed the mortgage deed as such for the company. Boulton, no less than Hill, probably had a voice in fixing the terms of the mortgage. They were satisfied to have the property sold without notice to them individually, and for the company actually agreed that it might be sold without other notice than the publication stipulated for. They correctly assumed that with that they would have all the notice they desired. Upon what principle can the court hold that they were entitled to other and different notice ?
It may be said that the property was not sold under that stipulation, but by order of court. True; and let us consider the case for a moment in that aspect. The statutory remedy required notice to the company that it might interpose any proper defense and be heard as to the time of redemption and sale. No appraisal of the property was appropriate or necessary and none was contemplated. Hence for that purpose there was no occasion to make the indorsers parties. By implication the}’ had waived personal notice in case of a sale without legal process. Why should they insist upon it in case of legal process ? The sale was strictly analogous to a sale on an execution. The indorsers have precisely the same interest in having the property *268bring its full value in the one ease that they have in the other; yet it has never been considered that sureties have such an interest in the sale of the property of the principal that they were entitled to notice of the time and place of sale; much less that they should be made parties. But suppose it be admitted that they had such an interest as that they were fairly entitled to notice, and as that they might have been made parties; then, I reply, assuming as I may that the statute has no application, that under our practice they had a right to come into court and be made parties. Not doing so they waived it. They cannot plead ignorance, for the case expressly states that “both had full knowledge of said suit and of the proceedings thereunder.” What more could they have had? Certainly there is nothing lacking but a mere matter of form. The substance of all that is or can be contended for they had.
The decision in this case then, discharging the indorsers from liability, rests either upon a misapplication of the statute, or upon grounds of the merest technicality. In either case it seems to me to be clearly wrong.
In this opinion Loomis, J., concurred.