delivered the opinion of the Court :
The first question presented is, should the demurrer have been allowed ? Taking everything stated in the bill to be true, does it present a case for the interposition of a court of equity ? A singular fact appears by a com*242parison oí the allegations of the bill with the so-called ' mortgage, referred to as exhibit “A,” and that is, that not one of the articles of personal property described in the bill- is mentioned in said exhibit “A” except the French brandy, which is described in the bill as “one lmndi'ed and twenty-six gallons,” and in the exhibit as “one hundred and fifty gallons.”
Every averment necessary to entitle a plaintiff to be entertained in a court of equity must be contained in the bill. Vanbibber v. Beirne, et al., 6 W. Va., 168. Nothing must be left to inference, but there must be sufficient positive állegations in the bill, to show that equity has jurisdiction of the matters therein set forth. The language of exhibit “A” is that, “I do hereby assign to McClintic and Thompson, -$250 of the judgment,” &c. diseribing the property, then follows, “all which property the said McClintic and Thompson, are to hold until they are released from all liability by virtue of said bond which they have signed for me, and when they are released, then said property reverts to me.”
Potlieir defines a pawn, or pledge, to be a contract by which a debtor gives to his creditor, a thing to be detained as security for his debt, which the creditor is bound to return when the debt is paid'. Judge Story, says the definitions of pawns and pledges as given by some of the writers, are limited in terms to cases where a thing is given as a mere security for a debt; but a pawn may well be given as security for any other engagement. The definition of Domat, is therefore, more accurate because it is more comprehensive; namely, that it is the appropriation of the thing given, for the security of an engagement. Story on Bailments sec. 286. In section 287, of the same work, Judge Story says that, “A mortgage is in the common law distinguishable from a mere pawn. By a grant, or conveyance of goods in gage or mortgage, the whole legal title passes conditionally to the mortgager; and if the goods are not redeemed at the time stipulated, the title becomes absolute at law, although equity will interfere to compel a redemption/'’
*243In the case of Jones v. Smith, 2 Ves., 372, a transfer of £2,000 Scotch mine stock, by one party, as security for a debt, and the creditor signed a memorandum to transfer it back on payment of the debt, was held to be pledge and not a mortgage.
The master of the rolls said: “ This is not a mortgage but a pledge. A mortgage is a pledge and more, for it is an absolute pledge,' to become an absolute interest if not redeemed at a certain time; a pledge is a deposit of personal effects, not to be taken back but on payment of a certain sum, by express stipulation, or in the course of trade to be a lien on them.”
In Hasbrouck v. Vandervoort, 4 Sandf., 74, where a party had borrowed money, the delivery of a certificate of a share of stock as collateral security for the payment of the money borrowed with a power of attorney to transfer it so as to vest the title, for the purpose of security and no other, was held to be a pledge.
The property in this case was assigned to the parties to hold until their liability on the bond was released, and then it was to be returned to the assignor. We think it was a pledge and not a mortgage. There was no time specified in the writing when the title to the property should become absolute in McClintic and Thompson, but there was a time specified when the pledge should cease, to-wit, when they were released from all liability on the bond. Judge Story says, (2 Sto. Eq., §1032): “ Generally speaking, a bill in equity to redeem will not lie on behalf of the pledgor or his representatives, as his remedy upon a tender is at law. But if any special ground is shown, as if an account or a discovery is wanted, or there has been an assignment of the pledge, a bill will lie.,” No doubt if the specific goods pledged have been assigned by the party, and he wants to redeem them, that is the goods, themselves, a bill would lie; also if the plaintiff required a discovery, from the defendant, to ascertain what he had done with the goods, or any of them. In the case of Hasbrouck v. *244Vandervoort, above cited ; the bill was filed to redeem in a manufacturing: company, and for an account ° x J' of'the profits of the stock. Judge Campbell in his opinion, says: “It is said that a mortgage passes the title to the mortgagee, subject to be defeated on payment of the mortgage debt. And it is admitted, that in case of forfeiture by non-payment on the day, the mortgagee may come into a court of equity for the purpose of redeeming. But it is insisted that in case of a pledge, though the possession passes to the pledgee, the title remains in the pledgor, and in case of non-payment, the pledgor must bring his action at law for the redemption of the article pledged, or rather for its return, or for compensation in damages. Admitting the transaction in this case, according to the ruling in Wilson v. Little, 2 Comstock, 443, was a pledge, and not a mortgage of the stock, yet though termed a pledge, the legal title passed, and the same reason might exist therefor, for coming into equity to redeem. In that case, and in that of Allen v. Dykers, 3 Hill, 593, which were both actions at law, the plaintiff did not seek a return of the stock, but compensation in damages. Here the plaintiff asks for a retransfer of the stock. In Kemp v. Westbrook, 1 Ves. Sr., Lord Hardwicke says: “I will not say in general, that there is a right to come into equity in every case to redeem pledged goods, yet there are cases where it may. As the possessor of stock is not bound to bring a bill of foreclosure of the equity of redemption of the stock, but may sell it, and notwithstanding the mortgagor may bring a bill here for’an account of what is due, and to have a transfer to him.” It would seem that in case of pledging stock, where the legal title passes, the remedy would be the same as upon mortgages. Indeed the distinction seems to be only in name in this respect, though it may be considered as real as was the case in Wilson v. Little, where the action was for the recovery of damages and not for a retransfer. Here an account is wanted, and the bill avers that the loan was *245made by the firm which was composed of the defendants; that the certificate of stock was first given to the defendant, Hayward, for the security of the firm ; that the was subsequently dissolved, and Hayward transferred the certificate to the other defendant Vandervoort, who has continued to receive the dividends. It appears to us to be, therefore, a proper ease for a bill in equity, and we think the plaintiff selected the right form for the determination of the controversy.”
The demurrer in that case was overruled, and we think properly, and if the bill in this case had made as strong an appeal to equity jurisdiction, as the one in that case did, it would bo entertained. This is a case similar to Wilson v. Little, 2 Comstock, 443, and is a suit to recover damages for the goods which the bill alleges the defendant, McClintie, has converted to his own use. We think that ease was properly brought at, law, which could give full and complete relief, and that this ease is in the wrong court-, unless he is entitled to come in for an account.
It is insisted bv appellee’s counsel, that he is entitled to have his deed delivered to him — that the bill prays for this. There is no allegation in the bill that the deed has any specific value; it is not claimed that it is needed as a muniment of title to be used for evidence. The bill shows that he “ delivered to McClintic a deed for two thousand acres on Williams river, in Pocahontas county.” It does not say he executed the deed, and does not pray for a re-conveyance of the land, but that he be compelled “to deliver to your orator the said deed.” A copy from the record of a deed in our state answers all the purposes of evidence, as the original. If there was any special Aralue to the deed; or that it- was wanted as evidence, and it was so alleged, it might entitle the plaintiff to relief. In Cone v. The East Haddam Bank et al., 39 Conn., 86, the Judge says: “ The averments in the bill show that the bonds, and order therein described are held by the bank as bailee merely ; they were *246simply deposited with' Boardman for safe-keeping, to be re-delivered to the petitioner on demand. They retained essentially the same character after they came into the possession of the bank, as they had while in the possession of Boardman. There is no averment that any one of the articles claimed is wanted as evidence, or that they, or any one of them, possess any special value to the petitioner over and above their actual pecuniary value. The case, therefore, does not fall within that class of cases where courts of equity will decree deeds, bonds, wills, and other writings of a valuable nature, to be delivered up, whenever they are necessary to evidence any title, claim or debt, &c. The market value, being their only value to the petitioner, he is fully compensated when he receives that; and that he may recover in an action at law.” It is insisted for the appellee that in this case equity has jurisdiction, because he could not have an adequate remedy in one suit at law. We do not think this alone is sufficient to give chancery jurisdiction of the case.
In the case of Cone v. East Haddam Bank, the Judge said, “If it be objected that two actions, one in trover and one in assumpsit, may be necessary, in that event the reply is two-fold ; first, the bill does not show that two actions will be required, as there is no averment that the coupons have been collected; and, second, the fact that a party has two causes of action against another at law, does not of itself authorize him to combine the two, and proceed against the other in chancery, even Avhere both causes of action arise out of the same transaction. In any aspect of the case as stated, we are unable to see why the petitioner’s remedy is not full and adequate at law.” The demurrer to the bill was sustained.
In cannot be doubted in this case that an action for money had and received could have been maintained for the moneys collected by McClintic, if any were so collected, and an action of trover for the conversion oí the brandy to his own use. There is nothing stated in the *247bill, as before stated, to show that the deed had any special value. This is not a bill in equity to be permitted to redeem pledged goods. It is charged in the bill that “said McClintic has used, drunk and consumed and disposed of the whole of said French brandy, and he has collected the money due on the said two bonds,,and that he still holds the deed aforesaid,” and prays that said “ McClintic may be compelled to account for the said brandy at $5.00 per gallon, and maybe compelled to pay the money by him collected from Knight and from Ren-ick, and may be compelled to deliver.to your orator said deed,” and for general relief. A bill even without a demurrer will be dismissed at the,hearing, if it shows no ground for equitable relief. Hudson v. Kline, 9 Gratt., 379; Hale v. Clarkson, 23 Gratt., 42; Goolsby v. St. John, 25 Gratt., 146; Lewis v. Cocks, 23 Wall., 466; Morehead et al. v. De Ford et al., 6 W. Va., 316.
Then this bill shows no ground for equitable relief, unless it can be seen that it is a case proper for an account. Even if the bill had alleged that the plaintiff could not substantiate the items in his account except by the answer and testimony of the defendant, McClintic, himself, and in the progress ■ of the suit it appeared by his own showing that the account was susceptible of proof by another witness in a court of law; his bill would have been dismissed at the hearing if that had been his only ground for going into a court of equity. Meze v. Mayse, 6 Rand., 658. Judge Green in that case said: “ The plaintiff did not admit in his bill that the defendant had any setoff against his claims.hnd excepted to every set-off allowed by the commissioners, fso that/there never was a case more clearly proper for a court of law and improper for a court of equity than this. A claim on the part of the plaintiff for two sums of money, paid by him for the defendant, both capable of proof in af court of'law, and no setoff which could makejthe account,at all complicated. So far as this was^albill/or an accoun it should have been dismissed for want of jurisdiction *248on ■ ¿he plaintiffs own showing.” To the same effect is Norwich R. R. Co. v. Story, 17 Conn., 364; Knotts v. Farrer, 8 Ala., 743, and Lafever v. Billmyer, 5 W. Va., 33.
In the last case cited, the court decided that, “ courts of equity decline jurisdiction in matters of account, first, where the demands are all on one side, and no discovery is claimed or necessary; second, when on one side there are demands, and on the other mere payments or setoffs, and no discovery is sought 'or required. In this case the demand is all on one side, and no discovery is claimed or necessary. There is no discovery sought in the bill; it was not pretended that the plaintiff could not prove his case in a court of law, without an appeal to the conscience of the defendant, McClintic. It is admitted that if the plaintiff had shown by his bill that he had not a plain, adequate and complete remedy at law, equity would interfere and grant him relief. But he shows no reason why he may not have complete justice in a court of law; he is not asking to redeem the pledged goods; he does not pretend that he wants any discovery to enable him to find out what became of the goods; but, on the contrary, charges that the defendant, McClintic, collected the money on the bonds and converted the brandy to his own use. We can see nothing in the bill to show jurisdiction in a court of equity; but, on the contrary, the bill shows that the plaintiff had a plain, adequate and complete remedy at law. It is unnecessary to review the other facts in the ease.
For these reasons we are of opinion that the demurrer should have been sustained. The decree of the circuit court of Greenbrier county, overruling said demurrer, and all the decrees in said cause, are reversed, with costs to the appellant, against the administrator of Levi Sur-ber, deceased, to be paid out of the assets of his intestate in his hands, and this Court, proceeding to render such a decree as the circuit court of Greenbrier should have rendered : It is adjudged, ordered and decreed, that *249the demurrer to complainant’s bill be allowed; and it appearing from the depositions, and the whole record of the case, that the plaintiff could not so amend his bill as to give a court of equity jurisdiction of the case, it is further adjudged, ordered and decreed, that the plaintiff’s bill be’dismissed, and that the defendant, McClintio, recover of the administrator of Levi Surber, deceased, his costs about his defense expended, to be paid out of assets of his intestate in his hands to be administered.
Decrees Reversed' and bill dismissed.