('dissenting). I cannot agree to the conclusion which my associates have announced in this case. In my opinion .it is not warranted by the language of section 5-210, Rev. 'Codes 1899, which we all agree applies to this action, and does violence to well-settled legal principles. Their conclusion, as I view it, rests upon a misconstruction of the governing statute so radical in character that in effect it amounts to a judicial amendment. It may be true that the results which will follow in this case are desirable, and that the consequences which will follow the adoption of the theory of the majority in future cases, arising upon different facts, involving, as they necessarily will, its future -elaboration and- application, may be in furtherance of justice. This, however, even if true, a point which I cannot concede, does not touch the question, for the question of policy of limitations of actions and the extent of the restrictions to be placed upon th-e right to invoke the- various remedies belongs to the legislature and not to the courts, and I take it that the courts are only acting within the limits of their authority and duty when they apply the statutes as they are written- without regard to motives of expediency or policy. All attempts to- depart from this rule 'have properly been received with strong disapprobation. The courts do not now, unless compelled by the force of former decisions, give a strained -construction to evade- the effect of these -statutes. McCluny v. Silliman, 3 Pet. (U. S.) 270, 7 L. Ed. 676. It has been well said that “this is not the epoch when * * * a statute of limitations * * * should be frittered away by judicial refinements and subtle exceptions that never entered into the contemplation of -its -enlightened framers, and it has for years been a subject -of avowed and sincere regret with the m-ost distinguished judges and -eminent jurists of the age that any -constructive innovations were ever -in-grafted upon acts of limitation.” Mr. Justice Livingstone, of the Supreme- Court of the United States, said: “It is as much a duty to give effect to 1-aws of this description, with which the courts, however, take .great liberties, as to any other which the legislature may be disposed to pass. When the will of the legislature is clearly expressed, .it ought to be followed without regard to -consequences, and a -construction derived from -a consideration -of its reason and spirit should never be resorted to but where the expressions are so ambiguous as to render such mode of *165interpretation unavoidable.” Fisher v. Harnden, 1 Paine, 61, Fed. Cas. No. 4819; Angell on Limitations, section 23. Referring to this subject in McIver v. Ragan, 2 Wheat. 25, 4 L. Ed. 175, Chief Justice Marshall said: “Wherever the situation of-a party was such as, in the opinion of the legislature, to furnish a motive for excepting him from the operation of the law, the legislature has made the exception, and it would be going far for this court to add to these exceptions.” Likewise Chancellor Kent, in Demarest v. Wynkoop, 3 Johns. Ch. 146, 8 Am. Dec. 467, maintained that “it would be not only impolitic, but .contrary to established rule, both in law and equity, to depart from the plain meaning and literal expression of these statutes.” Angelí on Limitations, section 485, after referring to the authorities, states that “it obviously appears that statutes of limitations are to be strictly construed by courts of justice, and that, although there may have been some instances in which this rule has been departed from, owing to conceptions of inherent equity, they have altogether failed .in establishing a contrary precedent.”
With this rule of construction for my guidance, I now turn to the merits. The action is to foreclose a real estate mortgage securing the mortgagor’s note, which matured November 1, 1888. The mortgagor has been absent from the territory and state since 1887. In that year, and before the note was due, he conveyed the mortgaged premises, subject to the plaintiff’s mortgage. In 1901 it was conveyed to defendant, likewise subject to the plaintiff’s mortgage. This action was commenced in 1903. The cause of action accrued on November 1, 1888, when the mortgagor made default in meeting his obligation. His default gave the party to whom the obligation was due two remedies for its enforcement: (1) An action at law to recover from the personal assets of the debtor; or (2) an action in equity to enforce payment by a sale of the mortgaged premises, and, through a deficiency judgment, against the debtor, if the land proved insufficient to, discharge the'obligation. Section 5865, Rev. Codes 1899. The legislature has placed different and definite periods of limitation upon these remedies. The action at law is limited to six years, the foreclosure action is limited to ten years, from the time when the cause of action as to which the remedy is sought accrued. The legislature has also provided for an extension of these periods. The defendant, a foreign corporation, whose title was received subject to the plaintiff’s mortgage, and but two years *166prior to the commencement of this action, pleads, as its sole defense, the statute of limitations. It will be noted that sufficient time has elapsed since the cause oí action accrued against the mortgagor, which was November 1, 1888, to bar both remedies, unless it has been extended by the mortgagor’s absence. If the statute was tolled by his absence the action is not barred. The case turns entirely upon section 5210, Rev. Codes 1899, which, so far as material, reads as follows: “If, when the cause of action shall accrue against any person, he shall be out of the state, suoh action may be commenced within the terms 'herein respectively limited1 after the return of such person into the state. * * * ” Some courts have treated foreclosure actions as in rem, and the cause of action as one against the land. From this assumption the conclusion is logical and necessary that the mortgagor’s absence does not extend the period of foreclosure; for it is only when the cause of action is against a person, and the person against whom it accrues is absent, that the statute declares that the period is extended. The cases holding that the action is in rem represent the minority view. Anderson v. Baxter, 4 Ore. 105, and the decision of Judge Deady, of the federal district court, in Eubanks v. Leveridge, 4 Sawy. 474, Fed. Cas. No. 4544, an Oregon case in which he followed the conclusion in the case just cited, and Peters v. Dunnels, 5 Neb. 460, are of this class. The decided weight of authority is the other way. As. stated in the majority opinion, “we are agreed that this action is not in rem,” and “we are of the opinion that the absence from the state of a person against whom the cause of action accrued sta3rs the running of the statute of limitations against an action to foreclose a mortgage, the same as in any other action in personam.” In other words, section. 5210, supra,, which extends the time for commencing an action when the person against whom the cause of action accrues is absent from the state applies to this action.
It is apparent, then, that the decisive question is this, 'against whom did the cause of action in this case accrue? for it is the fact of the absence of the person against whom “-the cause of action shall accrue” which this statute declares shall extend the period for commencing the action. It is in answering this question that I am compelled to part company with my associates. My answer is that it is the absence of the obligor, Fred West, the person who executed the note and mortgage, the person whose obligation this action is brought to enforce, and the only person who, upon this *167record, owes any obligation, contractual or otherwise, to the plaintiff. In my view, the question involves no difficulty, and, if it were not for the views of my associates, I would not consider it fairly debatable. There is no controversy as to the facts, and' there is no ambiguity in the language of the statute, and no obscurity or uncertainty as to the meaning of the phrase “cause of action.” The statute makes the general declaration applicable to all actions that the absence of the person against whom the “cause of action shall accrue” shall extend the period for commencing the action. This declaration, applied in the light of the legal meaning of the phrase “cause of action” — and I do not understand that it has any other meaning — will designate with certainty in every action the persons whose absence tolls the statute, i. e., the debtor or person whose obligation is being enforced. The phrase “cause of action” was coined early in the history of English jurisprudence. It is a phrase peculiar to the language of the law and the courts. It was employed in the acts of parliament from an early day (see statute 21, James I, c. Id, entitled “An act for the limitation of action,” etc.), and it has been a familiar phrase in the statutes of this country from its earliest history. While it is true the language of the courts and text-writers in defining it has not always been uniform, yet it may be safely stated that in every instance in which its elements were under discussion it has been .held to include as one of its essential and constituent elements an obligation, or legal duty, an obligation or duty resting upon- the person against whom the cause of action exists. The cause of action accrues in favor of the person to whom the obligation or duty is due, and it accrues against the person who owes the obligation or duty, and arises upon the latter’s default. The following analysis by Prof. Pomeroy in his Code Remedies, section 453, has been generally approved by the courts and text-writers, and, so far as I know, as to its essential elements it has never been criticized: “Every judicial action must involve the following elements: A primary right possessed by the plaintiff, and a corresponding primary duty devolving upon the defendant; a delict or wrong done by the defendant, which consists in a breach of such primary right and duty; a remedial right .in favor of the plaintiff, and a remedial duty resting upon the defendant, springing from this delict; and finally, the remedy or relief itself. Every, action, however complicated or however simple, must contain these essential elements. Of these elements, the primary *168right and duty and the delict or wrong combined constitute the cause of action in the legal sense of the term, and as it is used in the Codes of the several states. They are the legal cause or foundation whence the right of action springs.” Section 459. “The different reliefs which the plaintiff seeks to obtain do not constitute different causes of action.” Other courts and text-writers have defined it as follows: Veeder v. Baker, 83 N. Y. 161. “It may be sáid to be composed of the right of the plaintiff, and the obligation, duty or wrong of the defendant, and these combined, it is sufficiently accurate to say, constitute the cause of action.” Wildman v. Wildman, 70 Conn. 700, 41 Atl. 1; Goodrich v. Alfred, 72 Conn. 260, 43 Atl. 1041. “Stated in brief, a cause of action mgy be said to consist of a right belonging to the plaintiff, and some wrong o.r omission done by the defendant by which that right has been violated.” Kennerty v. The E. P. Co., 21 S. C. 226, 53 Am. Rep. 671. “A cause of action, defined in a few words, is a primary right of one, either legal or equitable, invaded by another.” Dicey on Parties to Actions, p. 8. “A cause of action; i. e., a right on the part of one person, combined with a violation of or infringement upon such right by another.” Maxwell on Code Pleading, 97. “(1) A primary right of plaintiff, and a wrong done by defendant in respect to such right.” Phillips on Code Pleading, section 32. “A primary right and its corresponding duties, and (2) the infringement of this right by a party owing this duty.” See also sections 29 to 33, inclusive. 1 Estee’s Pleadings, section 128. “A right on the part of one person, the plaintiff, combined with a violation or infringement of that right by another person, the defendant.” 2 Words and Phrases, 1115. “A cause of action may be said to consist of the right belonging to the plaintiff and some wrongful act or omission done by the defendant by which that right has been violated.” Note numerous cases cited. Emory v. Hazard Powder Co., 22 S. C. 476, 53 Am. Rep. 730, 732. “Causes of action are very often confounded with remedies, and, being regarded as synonymous, the rules established with reference to the one are sometimes supposed to be applicable to the other. This, however, is a mistaken view of the subject, as a brief investigation will show. A cause of action may be defined in general terms to be a legal right, invaded without justification or sufficient excuse. Upon such invasion a cause of action arises, which entitles the party injured to some relief by the application of such remedies as the laws may afford. But the *169cause of action and the remedy sought are entirely different matters. The one precedes, and, .it is true, gives rise to the other, but they are separate and distinct from each other, and are governed by different rules and principles.” See, also, Andrews’ Am. Law, sections 1063, 1064; Armes Co. v. Railway Co., 1 Yale Law Review, 245, also found on page 1153, Appendix Andrews’ Am. Law; Frost v. Witter (Cal.) 64 Pac. 705, 84 Am. St. Rep. 53; Fields v. Daisy Gold Mining Co. (Utah) 73 Pac. 521; Bank v. Dickinson, 6 N. D. 222, 235, 239, 69 N. W. 455, 49 L. R. A. 285; Von Campe v. City of Chicago (Ill. Sup.) 29 N. E. 892. It is manifest that the cause of action which gave rise to the remedy now being invoked accrued against Webb, the debtor and mortgagor, and against no one else. It was -his debt, apd it is secured by his mortgage. He alone executed the mortgage, and it was upon his own property. No one else has agreed -to pay the debt; no one else signed the mortgage; no one else has assumed any contractual relations with the plaintiff either as to the note or mortgage. It was his default, and his alone, which gave rise to the plaintiff’s cause of action. The several grantees took their title with constructive notice of the mortgage, and expressly sub] ect to it. They did not obligate themselves to pay the debt. .They therefore owed the plaintiff no duty. They have made no default, and as between them and the plaintiff there has been no concurrence of right, duty and default which would give -rise to a cause of action against them. Had -they assumed the mortgage and agreed to pay the debt, or had they given the mortgage upon their own property to secure West’s debt, a cause of action would have arisen against them in plaintiff’s favor, and the statute would, as to that cause of action, run in their favor as to all remedies to enforce it. Daniels v. Johnson, 129 Cal. 419, 61 Pac. 1107, 79 Am. St. Rep. 123; Farmers’ National Bank v. Gates, 33 Ore. 388, 54 Pac. 205, 12 Am. St. Rep. 724; Fowler v. Wood, 78 Hun (N. Y.) 304, 28 N. Y. Supp. 976. But we have no such case here. The grantees have assumed no liability, and have made no default. The remedy invoked against the defendant is upon the cause of action against the mortgagor and debtor upon his debt, and his mortgage, and rests upon his default, and not upon any default of his grantee. The “cause of action” accrued against 'him. He has been absent from the state. The statute declares that in that event the time for commencing the action is extended. This action was therefore brought within the statutory *170period. This conclusion, to ray mind, cannot be avoided if the statute be given effect. The majority opinion does not meet the question with directness, if at all; and I am therefore in .some doubt as to the exact ground upon which they really rest their conclusion. If they mean that “the cause of action” does in fact accrue against a grantee who takes expressly subject to the mortgage, I disagree with them as to the fact. If they mean that the period of time for commencing an action depends upon, the presence or absence of “parties,” I answer that the statute does not so provide, for it only extends the period upon the absence of the obligor or obligors— the person or persons against whom “the cause of action accrues.” In some instances the necessary party or parties defendant may be the same person or persons whose obligation is being enforced. In this case that is not true, and this is frequently -the case in equity actions, especially in foreclosure actions in which subsequent purchasers and incumbrancers are made defendants. So far as .this conclusion is based upon the ground that the phrase “cause of action” has a different and “popular” meaning, and that the “popular” meaning should be ascribed to it so that the statute may include “necessary parties” instead of .merely obligors, it rests, as has been previously pointed out, upon an unwarranted assumption. This is the first instance in which this statute has been before this court. Neither this court nor any other court, so far as I can learn, has ever held that the phrase “cause of action” as used in this statute has any other than its legal meaning, and I cannot assent to its amendment by judicial construction. Neither do I agree that courts can avoid giving effect to a statute which is written in plain terms upon the ground that it would be in “furtherance of justice” to do so. The legislature having declared the law, it is our duty to apply it as it is written.
The majority hold that the action to foreclose the mortgage is barred. In defense of this conclusion they state, and it is a correct statement, for the statute so provides, “that the remedy against the debtor on his personal liability may be barred by lapse of time and yet the remedy upon the mortgage remain available.” Following this, they state that “it is likewise apparent that the converse is true — the remedy for the enforcement of the mortgage may be barred though the action at law against the debtor is still maintainable.” The converse is not true in this state, for the legislature has fixed a longer period for commencing the foreclosure *171action than for the action, at law. The statement is spfifcious, but unsound. If the legislature had fixed the same period for both actions, the bar would fall as to both at the same time. If it had reversed the periods' and fixed six years for the foreclosure action and ten years for the action at law, the remedy by foreclosure would of course be lost before the action at law was barred. But this is not our statute. On the contrary, it preserves the remedy by foreclosure for ten years and the remedy at law for only six years. In short, the statute Itself preserves the remedy by foreclosure after the action at law is barred, which is directly contrary to the conclusions reached by my associates. It is true, a number of courts have held that the absence of the mortgagor from the state will not extend the period for commencing a foreclosure action as against a resident grantee, but I am free to confess that I am unable to find in the opinions in these cases any satisfactory reason for that conclusion. They will be found to rest either upon an erroneous assumption of fact, or upon the courts’ views as to what the law ought to be. The reasons advanced are noted for their lack of harmony, and it is evident that they do not appeal to my associates, for they apparently are unwilling to rest their conclusion upon ■the grounds stated by any court which reached a like result. It will be found upon -an examination of these cases that the grounds stated by the majority in this case are in some respects without precedent. This is particularly true as to the new meaning ascribed to the phrase “cause of action.”
In the following cases a statute like our own was applied to foreclosure actions, and the question under consideration was directly involved. In Waterson v. Kirkwood, 17 Kan. 9, the grantees of one Pearsoll, the absent mortgagor, pleaded the statute of limitations. Their plea was overruled. The court said: “They have merely succeeded to the rights of Pearsoll; they stand in his shoes; they have nothing more than he at any time had the right to transfer them. The stream has not and cannot rise higher than the fountain, nor can they, by the purchase of Pearsoll’s interest in the land, cast additional burdens and inconvenience upon the holder of the mortgage. And therefore, as Pearsoll had never obtained or had the right to plead the statute of limitations, the grantees * * * have no such right.” See, also, opinion of Judge Brewer in Schmucker v. Seibert, 18 Kan. 104, 26 Am. Rep. 765. In Clinton County v. Cox, 37 Iowa, 570, the plea of the resident grantee of one Cox, *172the absent mortgagor, was overruled, against the contention which is made in this case — that because the action could have been brought before the -ten-year period expired, notwithstanding the mortgagor’s absence, the action was therefore barred — with the cogent statement that “the law does not so provide.” This conclusion was again announced in Robertson v. Stuhlmiller, 93 Iowa, 326, 61 N. W. 986, upon a like state of facts. The court said: “The obligation to Stuhlmiller [the mortgagor] is valid, and the lien of the mortgage is still in force. * * * The interest of the grantee is junior to the lien of the mortgage, * * * because the -title he acquired is subject to the mortgage.” These decisions were rendered by -a united court, and this was true in Leeds Lumber Co. v. Haworth, 98 Iowa, 463, 67 N. W. 383, 60 Am. St. Rep. 199, in which the same court held that “an action to -foreclose a mechanic’s lien which w-as not barred by limitation against the principal debtor because of his removal from the state before the statute had fully run was not barred as to other lienors who have been residents of the state during the entire period.” The question also arose in Minnesota in Whaley v. Eldridge, 24 Minn. 358. It was contended by a subsequent grantee that the statute had run notwithstanding the mortgagor’s absence from the state, upon the theory that the action was in rem, and that the statutory exception for absence was not applicable; citing in support of this view Anderson v. Baxter, 4 Ore. 105, and Eubanks v| Leveridge, 4 Sawy. 274, Fed. Cas. No. 4544. This the court denied, and held that the time had been extended. It is true, it appears in the statement of facts prefixed to the opinion, that the mortgagor’s immediate grantee was also absent. That fact, however, was not adverted to in the briefs of counsel or in the opinion of -the court, and plainly was not considered of any legal significance. As to the effect accorded to this decision, see Bush v. White, 85 Mo. 361, and 2 Pingree on Mortgages, section 1572. The courts of Illinois, applying a statute like our own, have held against the conclusions of my associates in a series of cases. In Banking Association v. Bank, 157 Ill. 524-536, 41 N. E. 919, it was argued on behalf of one who held under a sheriff’s deed that, inasmuch as the mortgage might have been foreclosed notwithstanding the mortgagor’s absence, no reason -remained why the statutory exception for absence should apply or the time of the mortgagor’s absence be deducted. This was answered in the following language: “As the case comes within the express language *173of the exception, we cannot assume the province of the legislature and say that the exceptions are not to apply.” Again, in Richey v. Sinclair, 167 Ill. 184, 47 N. E. 364, it was held in a foreclosure action that “the time of the mortgagor’s absence from the state after the right of action accrued on the debt cannot be reckoned as a part of the time limited for the commencement of the foreclosure proceedings against his grantee, though he is not a party to the suit;” basing its conclusion- upon a previous case, Emory v. Keighan, 94 Ill. 543, in which it had held, in harmony with the almost unanimous voice of authority, that “the rights of one holding under a mortgage of real estate may be affected by the fact that the payment of Interest or payment of a part of the mortgage debt by the mortgagor after maturity and before the statute of limitations had run, though he may not be a party to either;” and stating that, “upon the same principle and for a like reason, the grantee of the mortgagor will be affected by the fact that the mortgagor had gone out of the state and thus arrested the running -of the statute of limitations. The holding has- been uniform in this state.” This construction of the statute was also followed in Falwell v. Hening, 78 Tex. 278, 14 S. W. 613, in which it was held that the absence from the state of -the maker of a vendor’s lien suspends the statute as well against the lien as against the indebtedness, and that a purchaser from -the vendee or mortgagor could not avoid the lien by limitation while the debt and lien -are valid against the original vendee. See, also, Jones v. Foster, 175 Ill. 459, 51 N. E. 862; Emory v. Keighan, 94 Ill. 543; Von Campe v. Chicago, 140 Ill. 361, 370, 29 N. E. 892, is to the same effect, and more to the point relied upon- by my associates, in that it holds that “grantees are not the persons against whom the cause of action accrues within the meaning of -section 18” (our section 5210, supra). Ewell v. Daggs, 108 U. S. 143, 2 Sup. Ct. 408, 28 L. Ed. 682, is in point upon the principle upon which the foregoing case rests, aside from their adherence to the governing statute. That was a foreclosure action, wherein a grantee of the mortgagor, as in- this action, relied upon the statute of limitations. James B. Ewell and his wife gave a note to Daggs, secured- by a mortgage upon land which in equity belonged to George W. Ewell, a brother. Later, James B. Ewell transferred the land back to his brother, George, the latter having no knowledge of the existence of the mortgage. George pleaded the statute of limitations. Mr. Justice Matthews, speak*174ing for the court, said: “There is no force in the suggestion that, although the defense of the statute of limitations would not avail Jas. B. Ewell, * * * it, nevertheless, is a protection to Geo. W. Ewell, because * * * the suit now pending was not 'brought till after the time limited for an- -action to recover the debt. For the present suit is not to recover the debt, nor is it a suit against Geo. B. Ewell. He is a party defendant, because he has an interest by a subsequent conveyance in the lands sought to be sold under the mortgage. He has -an equity of redemption, which entitles him to prevent a foreclosure and -sale by payment of the mortgage debt; but the debt he has to pay is not his own, but that of Jas. B. Ewell. If he can show that -debt no longer exists because it has been barred by the statute of limitations, he is entitled to do so; but he must -do it by showing that it is barred as between the parties to it. If not, the land is still subject to the pledge, because the condition has not been performed. It is not to the purpose for the appellant to show that he owes the debt no longer, for in fact he never owed it at all; but his land is subj ect to its payment as long as it exists as a debt against the mortgagor, for that was its condition when his title accrued.” Mr. Justice Washington in Hughes v. Edwards, 9 Wheat. (U. S.) 489, 6 L. Ed. 142, sets forth the legal relation existing between a purchaser and the holder of a prior mortgage as to this question in the following language: “A purchaser, with notice, can 'be in no better situation than the person from whom be derives the title, and is bound by -the same equity which would affect his rights. The mortgagor, after forfeiture, has no title at law, and none in equity, but to redeem upon the terms of paying the debt and' interest. His conveyance to a purchaser with notice passes nothing but an equity of redemption, and' the latter can, no more than- the mortgagor, assert that equity -against the mortgagee without paying the debt, or showing that it has been paid or released, or that there are circumstances in the case -sufficient to warrant the -presumption of those facts, or one of them.” See also, upon the same principle, it was held in Murdock v. Waterman, 145 N. Y. 55, 39 N. E. 829, 27 L. R. A. 418, that “a partial payment by a mortgagor of the debt, even after he bad conveyed the premises mortgaged, would -continue the lien of the mortgage. * * * The mortgage is an -incident to the debt, and, when payments are made -by the debtor, -the mortgagee is not called upon to inquire how the mortgagor has dealt with *175the equity of redemption. If the mortgage is recorded, the purchaser has constructive notice of its existence, and a dealing with the debt between the debtor and creditor in the usual course is to be expected. The mortgagors, until at least the debt is barred, represent all persons interested in the land.” This is indeed so well settled that it is now seldom questioned. See N. Y. Life Ins. Co. v. Covert, 6 Abb. Prac. (N. S.) 154; Kendall v. Tracey, 64 Vt. 522, 24 Atl. 1118; Sanger v. Nightingale, 122 U. S. 176, 7 Sup. Ct. 1109, 30 L. Ed. 1106; and Hanchett v. Blair, 100 Fed. 817, 41 C. C. A. 76, and cases cited on page 825 of 100 U. S., page 84 of 41 C. C. A. “The general if not universal rule is that a partial payment or an acknowledgment of a debt which would prevent the statute from running against it will also prevent the statute from running against the remedy on the security.” Carson v. Cochran, 52 Minn. 67, 53 N. W. 1130. See, also, Wiltsee on Mortgages, section 65; 2 Jones on Mortgages, section 1214b, 1201, 1202; 2 Pingree on Mortgages, sections 1570, 1572.
I will now refer to the cases cited in support of the conclusion that the absence of the mortgagor does not toll the statute. We are agreed that Anderson v. Baxter, 4 Ore. 105, and Peters v. Dunnells, 5 Neb. 460, which hold that the action is in rem, are unsound, and furnish no precedent for the construction or application of this statute. Tate v. Hawkins, 81 Ky. 577, 50 Am. Rep. 181, does not touch the question of absence, or the effect to be given h> the statute involved in this case. Fowler v. Wood, 78 Hun. 304, 28 N. Y. Supp. 976, affirmed without opinion in 150 N. Y. 584, 44 N. E. 1124, is in its facts wholly unlike the case at bar. It was not a case like this, in which the grantee of an absent mortgagor pleads the statute. The mortgagor had mortgaged her own property to secure the debt of another. The plea of the statute was interposed by the mortgagor, and she had resided in the state for the full period. The court held that the absence of the maker of the note, to secure which she had mortgaged her individual property, did not toll the statute as to the action to foreclose her mortgage, and upon the ground that she was the obligor and that it was her obligation which was being enforced, a position which is in entire accord with the cases previously cited, and in my view, a correct application of the statute. In Bush v. White, 85 Mo. 339, an ejectment action, the court apparently was of the opinion that the mortgagor’s absence would toll the statute if he still held the title, but held that his *176absence would not toll the statute after he had parted with his title. This conclusion rests upon the following statement: “If the mortgagor’s absence happens after he has parted with his estate, the reasons for deducting his absence, so far as any proceeding against the land is concerned, are wanting. He has ceased to be a necessary party to such proceeding as it rests in the ordinary process of suits. His assigns and the owner of the land is a necessary party to the ordinary process of law for the purpose of foreclosing the mortgage, and the debtor is not a necessary party.” The reason upon which this case rests is directly opposed to that stated in Lackland v. Smith, 5 Mo. App. 153, an action in equity against one Garesche, the resident holder of the legal title upon a cause of action against Smith. It was argued that the action might have been commenced at any time by personal service on Garesche and publication against Smith. The court said: “It seems to be a sufficient answer to this obj ection to say that a cause of action accrued against Smith, and that the statute is express that in every such case the time of absence from the state shall be counted out. Wag. St. p. 919, section 16. The fact that one has left property in the state, subject to attachment, does not keep the statute running. Hancock v. Heugh, 1 Mo. 678. And, because plaintiff might have brought suit by publication, it does not follow that lie was guilty of laches in not doing so. Fisher v. Fisher, 43 Miss. 212. Process of law could not be served on Smith, and, whilst this was so, the statute was arrested as to any cause of action accruing against him.” In Arthur v. Screven (S. C.) 17 S. E. 640, a foreclosure action, the grantee of a mortgagor stood upon two defenses: (1) That he was an innocent purchaser; and (2) upon the statute of limitations. The court, after sustaining the first defense, also held that the plea of the statute was good, stating that “the provisions of the section relating to absence relate onfy to absentees, and have no reference whatever to any person who may be liable to a suit even upon the same_cause of action accruing at the same time; otherwise, if two persons should sign a joint and several promissory note, and one of them should leave the state and never return, the other could never plead the statute of limitations to an action on their breach of contract evidenced by the note.” In Wood v. Goodfellow, 43 Cal. 185, two of the three members of which that court was then composed, the chief justice dissenting, held, upon a plea interposed by the resident grantee, that the mortgagor’s absence did not pre*177vent the running of the statute. The ground of their decision is contained in the following quotation: “When the mortgagor has parted with his title to the property and ceases to have any interest therein, those who have succeeded to his rights stand in the same relation to the mortgage as if they had originally made the •mortgage on their own property to secure the debt of the mortgagor. The mortgagor has no interest in the property, nor are they under obligation to pay his debt. Their property, however, is bound as collateral security for its payment under the mortgage, which is a contract in writing by which the property is pledged as security for the debt.” The court said that -the argument that the grantee’s absence extended the period would be impregnable, “if it were conceded that the grantee who has succeeded to and now holds the equity of redemption of the mortgagor occupied precisely his status under the statute.” In reaching -its conclusion, the majority assumed that the relation of the grantee to the mortgagee was the same as one who mortgages his own property to secure the debt of another, and, in fact, used' that illustration to elucidate and fortify its conclusions. This case was presented to the Supreme Court of Kansas in Waterson v. Kirkwood, 17 Kan. 9, when the question was new in that state, and that court declared that this “decision is not good law in Kansas,” and, in my view, it should not :be held good law in North Dakota. In George v. Butler, 26 Wash. 456, 67 Pac. 263, 57 L. R. A. 396, 90 Am. St. Rep. 756, the Supreme Court of that state adopted the doctrine of Wood v. Goodfellow, supra, from which it quoted -at length, the case which was repudiated by the Supreme Court of Kansas. In Denny v. Palmer, 26 Wash. 469, 67 Pac. 268, 90 Am. St. Rep. 766, the court restricted the scope of the decision just cited to some extent-by holding that notice of some kind to the mortgagee of the transfer is necessary, and denied the right of a resident grantee to plead the statute, upon the ground that he was estopped by his failure to record his deed. The court said: “It appears that respondent did not know that he had a cause of action against appellant prior to the time the deed was recorded. He knew he held a cause of action against the mortgagor as to which the statute of limitations bad not run because of the mortgagor’s absence from the state, but he oou-ld not, under any principle of reason and justice, be chargeable with notice that appellant had any interest in the land, unless appellant’s deed had been of record, or some actual *178knowledge of its existence been brought home to him or -his assigns.” In the later case of De Voe v. Rundle, 33 Wash. 604, 611, 74 Pac. 836, that court evidenced some misgivings as to the correctness of the rule it had adopted, and, after conceding that a conflict of authority existed, stated that, inasmuch as it had previously adopted the California rule, it should be followed, “thus preserving the harmonious application of the principle 'heretofore adopted in a former decision.” That the conclusion in each of the cases referred to is grounded either upon error of law or of fact is manifest. The Missouri case rests not upon statute, but upon the ground of expediency 'and the court’s individual reasons why it should not apply to grantees; the South 'Carolina case to some extent rests upon the same reason, but also upon the erroneous assumption that the grantee and mortgagor are in legal effect joint obligors. The California court, followed by the Washington court, fell into substantially the same error in assuming that the grantee’s legal relation -to the mortgage is the same as that of one who mortgages his own property to secure the debt of another. If the assumption in the cases last referred to were correct, the conclusion would not -be subject to criticism, for in that event the grantee, as- an obligor, would be, within the statute, a person against whom “the cause of action accrued.” That “the cause of action” is not against him, and that the obligation being enforced is not his, but that of the mortgagor, , has already been pointed out. The errors in these cases should not -be perpetuated, by ou-r approval, and I cannot assent to an alteration of the meaning of the statute to cure -them. Neither can I assent to the doctrine laid down by any associates -as to the duties of mortgagees. This doctrine requires -that mortgagees shall know, and at their peril must know, at all times after the mortgagor’s default, and during the entire ten years in which the right to foreclose -is optional, what persons, if an}', have acquired subsequent -and subordinate interests in the mortgaged premises by purchase or otherwise, and whether such persons, or any of them, are residing within the state or are absent therefrom, and, if absent, the date of departure of each and the date of their return. Under the rule 'laid clown by the majority, a mortgagee whose mortgage is duly recorded may not rely upon the notice of the character and -extent of his interest which is imparted under the recording act to those who subsequently acquire interests in the mortgaged premises as a full performance of his duty.
*179This doctrine, in my opinion, nullifies the effect of the recording laws; i. e., that an instrument duly recorded imparts notice to subsequent purchasers and incumbrancers — that such persons are bound to know of prior -transfers — and reverses the obligation in this: That it requires that prior incumbrancers shall be bound to a knowledge of subsequent transfers. It not only exacts instant knowledge of the fact of subsequent transfers, but also of the names and places of residence of the persons acquiring such subsequent interests — persons with whom the mortgagee has no contractual relations, who owe him no obligation, and of whose very existence he may be, and often is, entirely ignorant. I know of no legal principle or statute upon which this -rule may rest. As an arbitrary rule of duty, it will in many cases require the impossible. If -it is meant to bind mortgagees to this knowledge only when the subsequent conveyances are placed of record, it is clear that the rule is unsound, for: (1) “The registration of a deed given by a mortgagor subsequent to the mortgage is no notice of such conveyance to the mortgagee. The latter is under no obligation to search for such conveyance.” N. Y. Life Ins. Co. v. Covert (N. Y.) 6 Abb. Prac. (N. S.) 154, 171; Webb on Record Title, sections 4, 158. And (8) even if the recording of a subsequent transfer could be said to impart notice to the holders of prior transfers which -are of record (a point which will not be admitted), it cannot be claimed that it imparts continuous notice of the place of residence, and changes in places of residence, of the holders of such subsequent interests. (Since the opinion in this case was filed, the majority of the court have held, in the companion case of Paine v. Dodds, 103 N. W. 931, that the statute will run only from the date of the filing of the deed for record.)
It is well settled, I think, that the mortgagee has doné his full duty when he records his mortgage, and in this manner announces to all persons who may subsequently deal with the premises the extent of his interest. He may then remain silent. Dick v. Balch, 8 Pet. (U. S.) 30, 8 L. Ed. 856. And no negligence can-be imputed to him for so doing. No restriction is placed upon his right to foreclose so long as he exercises it within the statutory period, and he is not chargeable with negligence because he elects to delay the enforcement of his security. Heretofore it has not been counted a fault for a creditor to indulge his debtor, but rather an *180act of grace and favor, to be met with commendation rather than punishment.
(103 N. W. 915.)It is not necessary to make the subsequent grantees or lienholders parties to the action, unless at the time the action is commenced (and that fnay always be just prior to the expiration of the ten-year period) their conveyances and liens are then of record. He is not required to consult the records until that time, and then only for the purpose of ascertaining the names of the persons who have acquired interests subsequent to his mortgage, in order to join them as defendants. Section 5231, Rev. Codes, reads as follows: “In an action to foreclose a mortgage or other lien upon real property, no person holding a conveyance from or under the mortgagor of the property mortgaged or other owner thereof, or having a lien upon such property, which conveyance or lien does not appear of record in the proper office at the time of the commencement of the action, need be made a party to such action; and the judgment therein rendered and the proceedings therein had are as conclusive against the party holding such unrecorded conveyance or lien as if he had been made a party to the action.”
The rule laid down by the majority establishes different periods of limitation in the same action, and upon the plea of those who are merely parties to the action, which will be determined by the fact of their presence in or absence from the state and the length of ■their absence, instead of one period fixed by the presence or absence of the person whose obligation is being enforced and against whom the cause of action accures; and, if I am correct in my views, it-announces a new rule of property, the effect of which is to transfer interests and rights in real estate which have become vested. I cannot, therefore, consent to the adoption of this doctrine without protest.
From my standpoint, the question as to the right of a foreign corporation to plead the statute is not vital, and I therefore express no opinion upon that point.
The judgment of the trial court, in my view, is proper, and should be affirmed.