The opinion of the court was delivered by
Mr. Justice McIver.Some time in 1864 W. W. Rees died, leaving a last will and testament, of which one Samuel J. Bradley was the qualified executor. Before fully administering the estate of his testator, Bradley died, leaving a will, of which Elizabeth Bradley was the qualified executrix. It is alleged in the complaint that one Charles Mayrant was duly appointed administrator de bonis non, cum testamento annexo, of the estate of said W. W. Rees, and that as such he filed a complaint against said Elizabeth Bradley, as executrix, as aforesaid, and the heirs at law and devisees, asking, amongst other things, for authority to sell a portion of the lands of the estate of Rees to pay debts, current expenses, taxes, &c., of said estate; that such authority was duly granted, and on January 30, 1873, in pursuance of such authority, the said Mayrant, as administrator as aforesaid, duly sold several parcels of land belonging to said estate, including the parcel described in the complaint, which was purchased by the defendant, Paul Rees, who, to secure the purchase money, executed his bond, secured by a mortgage of said parcel, to the said Mayrant, as administrator as aforesaid; that after-wards, to wit, on September 24, 1873, the said Mayrant, as administrator as aforesaid, in order to raise money for the use and benefit of said estate, borrowed from plaintiff’s testator the sum of seven hundred and twenty-six dollars and forty-two cents, for which he gave his bond, secured by an assignment of the above mentioned bond and mortgage of Paul Rees; and the object of this action, to which the heirs at law of W. W. Rees, who are now in possession of the mortgaged premises, are made parties, is to obtain a foreclosure of said mortgage.
It also appeared in evidence that the bond of Paul Rees was, *444at some time prior to April 15,1876, delivered by Judge Fraser, who was then the attorney and agent of plaintiff’s testator, to said Charles Mayrant, at his request, for suit, he being a practising attorney, and was by him sued in his own name, without the knowledge or consent of Mark Reynolds, the expectation of Judge Fraser being that it would be sued in the name of Reynolds as assignee. On May 15, 1876, Mayraut, as administrator as aforesaid, obtained judgment on the bond against Paul Rees, and Mayrant settled said judgment with Paul Rees “by taking the land back as the property of the estate of W. W. Rees, and the said Paul Rees then rented the same from the said Mayrant while he lived, and from the defendants since his death, as of the estate of the said W. W. Rees, deceased but the said Paul Rees, at the time of this settlement, had no notice of the assignment o£ his bond and mortgage to said Mark Reynolds. It also appeared that Charles Mayrant died before the commencement of this action, and that the amount due on the bond of Mayrant to Reynolds exceeded the balance due on the bond of Paul Rees to Mayrant.
These allegations of the complaint, and the other facts above stated, were found by the Circuit Judge to he true, and he concluded as matter of law : I. That Paul Rees is fully discharged from all liability to the plaintiff on his bond aforesaid. II. That the plaintiff is entitled to a judgment of foreclosure and sale of the mortgaged premises for the purpose of paying the amount due on the bond of Paul Rees as ascertained by the judgment recovered against him by Mayrant, not, however, including the costs of that case. III. That plaintiff is entitled to a judgment for the costs of this action, to be paid from the proceeds of the sale of the said land, or if that should not be sufficient to pay the debt due on said mortgage, to be paid by the defendants other than Paul Rees, who should only pay his own costs.
From this judgment the defendants appeal upon numerous grounds set out in the record, which need not be repeated here, but there is no exception by any of the parties to the first conclusion of law as to the discharge of Paul Rees from any personal liability, and therefore that question is not before us for consideration.
*445So far as the exceptions impute error to the Circuit Judge in his findings of fact, it will be sufficient to say that there was testimony tending to support his several findings, and that they are not contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence. On the contrary, we think they are well supported by the testimony.
As to the exceptions based upon the incompetency of the testimony offered, they may be divided into two classes: First. Those based upon the provisions of section 400 of the code. Second. Those based upon the idea that the existence and contents of a record cannot be established by parol evidence. We are unable to perceive the pertinency of the objection based upon section 400 of the code. Judge Fraser, whose testimony was objected to on this ground, was not a party to the action, and had no interest in the matter, and we are unable to perceive any ground upon which his testimony as to what occurred between himself as the attorney of plaintiff’s testator and Mayrant can be regarded as incompetent.
Second. It is true that the original record of the proceedings in the case of Mayrant v. Bradley and others was not produced, but its loss was fully proved, which, under well settled rules, let in secondary evidence, which, in our judgment, was not only competent and relevant, but was amply sufficient to establish the existence of such a case and the result of it. The entries on the docket and the common pleas journal, together with the testimony of Judge Fraser and Mr. Blanding, who seem to have been the attorneys immediately charged with the case, conclusively show that there was such a case, and that it culminated in an order for the sale of a portion of the lands of the estate of W. W. Rees for the purpose of providing means to meet the wants of the estate. This case differs materially from that of Brown v. Coney (12 S. C., 144), relied on by appellants. In that case the court was asked to infer the existence of a judgment from certain fragments of a record supplemented by parol testimony. As was there, said: “It is not pretended that there was any direct evidence whatever of any judgment or final order for the partition of the land in question, either by record or by parol. No such record was produced, and no witness testified that any such record had ever existed.” Here, however, there was evi*446dence, secondary it is true, but upon proof of the loss of the original, competent, that there was an order of sale.
Assuming, then, as true the facts found by the Circuit Judge, we think his conclusion of law was unquestionably correct. Here is a case in which a third person advanced his money, in perfect good faith, to the administrator of an estate for the uses of said estate, and took as security a pledge of certain assets of the estate — the bond and mortgage of Paul Rees — which, according to the case of Rhame v. Lewis (13 Rich. Eq., 329), cited by the Circuit Judge, he had a right to do under the circumstances proved; and, in the absence of anything that would defeat such right, plaintiff’s testator would clearly have the right to subject the mortgaged property to the payment of the money so advanced for the use of the estate by a foreclosure of the mortgage.
It is contended, however, that the settlement made by Mayrant with Paul Rees of the judgment recovered on his 'bond, which said Mayrant had been enabled to make by the incautious delivery to him by the agent of plaintiff’s testator of said bond, in the absence.of notice to Paul Rees of the assignment of said bond and mortgage, operated as an extinguishment of the mortgage. It is true that the payment of the mortgaged debt operates as an extinguishment of the mortgage, but there was no payment of the mortgaged debt in this case. The mortgagor simply surrendered to the original mortgagee the property given to secure the payment of the debt, and although the' effect of this may very possibly be, as the Circuit Judge held, to relieve the mortgagor, in the absence of notice of the assignment, from any personal liability on the mortgage debt, yet it certainly cannot have the effect of releasing the property originally given as security for such debt from liability for the payment of the debt to the party really entitled thereto.
As between Mayrant and the plaintiff’s testator,'the latter was unquestionably entitled, both in law and equity, to the debt secured by the bond and mortgage of Paul Rees, and 'any money or property received by Mayrant in satisfaction of such debt would, in his hands, or in the hands of those whom he represented, necessarily enure to the benefit of the plaintiff’s testator, the person to whom the debt was really due. Reynolds having *447advanced money for the use of the estate of W. W. Rees, is entitled to have it refunded out of the property of the estate given to secure such advance by the legal representative of the estate.
Of course, we are not to be understood as saying that where a person lends money to the administrator of an estate, that any of the visible, tangible property of the estate may be mortgaged by the administrator to secure the payment of such debt. The distinction between the right of an administrator to pledge or alien any of such property, and his right to pledge or alien the dioses in action constituting a part of the assets of the estate, is clearly pointed out in the case of Rhame v. Lewis, supra. Under the sale made by Mayrant as administrator, by the authority of the court, the legal title to the land covered by the mortgage passed out'of the heirs and devisees of the said W. W. Rees into Paul Rees, and the property pledged by the administrator to secure the debt of Reynolds ivas not the land of the estate of W. W. Rees, but one of the assets of his estate, in the form of a chose in action, which, according to the case of Rhame v. Lewis, the administrator had a right to pledge for the uses of the estate. The land, therefore, which stood as security for the payment of the debt to Reynolds, must continue liable to the payment of that debt, in whosesoever hands it may be, the rights of purchasers for valuable consideration without notice not being involved.
The appellants, in their thirteenth exception, complain that the Circuit Judge erred “in ignoring the testimony that, at the time Mayrant withdrew the bond and mortgage of Paul Rees from Judge Fraser, that he, Mayrant, had paid to the said Fraser more than the amount of the bond of Paul Rees on the obligation to which said bond ivas collateral, some of which payments are stated to have been made by Paul Rees.” We do not understand that the testimony shows the fact to be as assumed in this exception. The precise time at which the bond of Paul Rees was delivered to Mayrant for suit by Judge Fraser does not appear, but it must have been either on or before April 15, 1876, as that is the day on which it is alleged that suit was commenced on the bond. At that date the payments endorsed on the bond *448of Mayrant to Reynolds did not amount even to the face of the bond of Paul Rees to Mayrant, and even the subsequent payments, one of which appears to have been made by Paul Rees and Lazarus Rees, do not appear to have been sufficient in amount to cover the amount of the bond of Paul Rees.
But, even granting the fact to be as assumed in the exception, we do not see how it would affect the case, except so far as any payments made on the bond of Mayrant to Reynolds may have been made by Paul Rees. For if Mayrant had paid to Reynolds on his bond an amount greater than the bond of Paul Rees, that would not operate as a satisfaction of the latter bond. There were several notes, besides the bond of Paul R.ees, which were assigned to Reynolds as security for the payment of the bond of Mayrant; and until that bond was fully paid, Reynolds had a right to hold all of the notes and the bond of Paul Rees as collateral security for the payment of such balance, and could enforce all or any one of them so far as might be necessary for the-payment of such balance. But of course any payment made by Paul Rees on the bond of Mayrant to Reynolds should operate as a credit on the - mortgage debt of Paul Rees. As there seems to have been at least one such payment, in part at least, credited on the bond of Mayrant to Reynolds, we think the judgment appealed from should be reformed, so that in ascertaining the amount due on the mortgage debt credit should be given for any payments made by Paul Rees on the bond of Mayrant to the plaintiff’s testator.
The appellants, in their fourteenth exception, complain that the Circuit Judge “erred in not holding that if the powers claimed for Charles Mayrant, administrator, were duly granted, that they were specific and limited and could not be departed from.” This exception is couched in such general terms that we might well disregard it. What were the limitations upon the powers of the administrator, or in what respect such limitations Avere disregarded, are not stated; but Ave infer from the argument that appellants’ contention is that the administrator was authorized to sell the lands for cash to relieve the pressing necessities of the estate, and that his sales on credit were unauthorized. The testimony does not show that the administrator was. author- - *449ized to sell for cash only, and we are not at liberty to infer that such was the order. It may be that a sale of land for cash at that time would have been very disastrous to the interests of the estate, and it may have been much the best policy to have sold on a credit and use the proceeds in the form of choses in action to raise the money needed, as was done. Be that as it may, however, we do not see any evidence that the administrator violated the terms of the order of sale, and hence we see no foundation for this exception, even if it had been taken in proper form.
The judgment of this court is that the judgment of the Circuit Court be modified as herein directed, and that in all other respects it be affirmed.