1. That there was an effectual delivery of the note and mortgage by the defendant Joseph Pawlot, the mortgagor and maker of the note, either to Mathias Drichta or the plaintiff, is undisputed and indisputable. The circuit court held, substantially, that the delivery was to Mathias Drichta, and not the plaintiff. That is the significance of the conclusions of law that the plaintiff had no interest in the securities and was concluded by the payment of the mortgage debt to her father. Whether, in the light of established legal principles, such ruling can be upheld, is the main question in the case.
By the direction and procurement of her father, who paid the consideration therefor, the note and mortgage were executed to the plaintiff, who was named as payee in the note and mortgagee in the mortgage. Presumptively, this was an advancement by the father to his daughter. At common law such presumption might have been rebutted by proof, and a trust established in favor of the father, who paid the consideration. But our statute of uses and trusts (R. S. ch. 96) has abolished such resulting trusts. It is enacted in sec. 20 TJ that “ when a grant for a valuable consideration shall be made to one person, and the consideration therefor shall be paid by another, no use or trust shall result in favor of the person by whom such payment is made, but the title shall vest in the person named as the *266alienee in such conveyance, subject only to the provisions of the next section.” The next section merely preserves the trust in favor of creditors, and is of no importance in this case. That the provisions of the above sections extend to and include mortgages is not questioned. See sec. 2242.
It necessarily results from these statutes that when the mortgage in suit was delivered to Mathias Drichta, such delivery inured at once to the beneht of his daughter, the mortgagee named therein, by way of advancement to her, and he is precluded from asserting any trust therein, or in the debt secured thereby, resulting to him.
If a formal acceptance by the plaintiff of such advancement is essential to her title, there is satisfactory proof that her husband, acting by her authority, endeavored to obtain the securities for her; also that on the occasion of her marriage her father promised or spoke of the mortgage as her marriage portion; and that in other ways (besides bringing this suit) she sought to obtain her rights in the securities. This amounts to a sufficient acceptance.
These views are enforced in many of the authorities cited by counsel for the plaintiff, and in some of those cited by counsel for defendants. To the same effect are the adjudications of this court in Week v. Bosworth, 61 Wis. 78; McPherson v. Featherstone, 37 Wis. 641. See, also, Allen v. Allen, 58 Wis. 202. The case of Cross v. Barnett, 65 Wis. 431, was taken out of the rule by several circumstances peculiar to that case; the controlling one being that the father claimed the name of his son, the plaintiff, was inserted in the conveyance of the land in controversy by mistake, the intention being to convey the land to the father. So the plaintiff was there put to his proof of a delivery of the deed to himself.
Our conclusion-is that there was an effectual delivery of the mortgage to the plaintiff.
2. It is scarcely necessary to say that Mathias Drichta *267was not authorized to receive payment of the mortgage debt and cancel the securities. This results from the fact that they belonged to the plaintiff, and not to him. They were not negotiable, and so his possession of the instruments did not clothe him with the apparent ownership. If Pawlot or his grantee paid the mortgage debt to Mathias, they paid it in their own wrong. They were informed by the terms of the instruments to whom the debt belonged, and to whom alone payment could safely be made.
S. The pretended release or satisfaction of the mortgage on the record thereof was a nullity. The mortgagee is the plaintiff, Josepha Drichta, designated in the mortgage as a female. The satisfaction purports to have been executed by Joseph Drichta, designated on the face of it as a male person by the use of the pronoun “ his ” in the expression “ his mark.” The person who in fact executed it was Mathias Drichta, and this must have been known by Pawlot and his immediate grantee. No subsequent purchaser of the land had any right to be misled by that satisfaction. It bore upon its face evidence, patent to eveiy one who should examine it, that it was not executed by or for the mortgagee, hut by a stranger to the mortgage. It was little less than a forgery, yet not so liable to mislead as it would have been had the true name of the mortgagee been forged to it. Had the traditional name of John Doe been signed to-it, its complete insufficiency as a satisfaction of the mortgage would he no more obyious than it now is.
Because no one can be justified in relying upon the pretended satisfaction of the mortgage as effectual to discharge it, no duty of diligence was imposed upon the plaintiff to avoid it or obtain its cancellation. Every subsequent purchaser of the mortgaged premises must be held to have known that he purchased subject to the plaintiff’s mortgage, notwithstanding the alleged satisfaction.
4. The statute of limitations ivas interposed as a defense by the defendant Joseph Pawlot, the only person who could *268be charged with personal liability for the debt secured by the mortgage. The statute had run against the note before the action was commenced. ITence there can be no judgment over for any deficiency. But the statute has not run against the mortgage, and the plaintiff is entitled to the usual judgment of foreclosure and sale. Potter v. Stransky, 48 Wis. 235, and cases cited; Hayes v. Frey, 54 Wis. 503.
See note to this case in 28 N. W. Rep. 186.— Rep.By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to render judgment foi;the plaintiff as herein indicated.