delivered the opinion of the Court:
"We understand that in the argument in the cause in the court below the respondent abandoned the defense of insanity, which constituted the substance of his answer to the petition, and relied entirely on technical objection to the petitioner’s right at this time to have execution of the decree of May 27, 1895. The question of insanity is' not brought forward before us, and we are confined to a consideration of the one assignment of error in the case, which seeks to show that the decree of May 27, 1895, was not a final decree as establishing a personal liability against the appellant; that the amount for which a personal judgment should be rendered against him has never been judicially ascertained; that the decree of November 19, 1895, whereby the auditor’s report was ratified and distribution ordered of the money in the hands of the trustees, put an end to the litigation; and that the silence of this last-mentioned decree with reference to the claim of the appellee, and which was consented to by the appellee, amounted to an abandonment of the appellee’s rights.
The argument in support of the appellant’s position is ingenious and plausible, but it does not command our assent.
The decree of November 19, 1895, ratifying the auditor’s report in this case, is in no proper sense a final decree otherwise than that it was the last decree entered in the cause. It is very true that in many cases the decree which ratifies an auditor’s report constitutes the final decree which terminates the litigation and from which appeals may properly be taken. But in order to be such it must purport to be final, or be such in contemplation of law by virtue of its disposition of the whole subject-matter of litigation. A decree is said to be final when it fully decides and disposes of the whole merits of the cause, and reserves no further questions or directions for the future judgment of the court. Cosby v. Buchanan, 90 U. S. 420; Mordecai v. Lindsay, 19 How. 199; Barton’s Suit in Equity, 137; Cyclopedia of Pleading and Practice, Vol. 5, p. 950. The decree in this *155case of November 19, 1895, of itself settled nothing except that the auditor’s report was correct, that the trustees who sold the property should distribute the proceeds of sale according to this report, and that after this distribution there was still a small balance due to the Washington National Building and Loan Association. So far as it is a finality in itself, it is so only as to the respective rights of this association and the appellant. The matters in controversy between the appellant and the appellee remain unaffected by it. Only by its silence in regard to them can these be said to be affected; and that silence implies that there were no proceeds of the sale to be applied to the payment of the claim of the appellee. A decree which affects merely the rights of two defendants to a cause, and wholly ignores the controversy between the principal defendant and the complainant, can not be said to have decided and disposed of the whole merits of the cause.
It is true that oftentimes all the equities of a controversy may have been settled by a prior decree in the cause, and there is left only an account to be stated; and in that case a decree confirmatory of an auditor’s report may operate as the final adjudication of the case. But that would present a very different case from the present. There is here no accounting between the parties, but only an accounting as to a collateral matter. Here were two claimants having several demands against a third person, and each also holding liens against his property as security for the payment ■of the demands. By the first decree rendered in the cause, that of May 27, 1895, the right of one claimant, who was the complainant in the suit, was fully determined and its amount ascertained. Between him and the principal defendant there was no further accounting necessary. As to these two there was nothing further to be done than to -enforce payment of the amount. That enforcement, under the law, was to be: (1) By devoting to it the proceeds of the sale of the property so far as they were available; (2) by a personal decree and execution thereunder. But the holder of the prior claim exhausted the security, and *156there was nothing left for the other claimant. The accounting which was had was an accounting-between the debtor and the prior claimant; and only incidentally and by implication was it an accounting between the debtor and the second claimant. It is very clear that it did not affect the rights of these two last further than as it showed that the security was wholly inadequate to yield any sum whatever towards the satisfaction of the claim, and that the claimant was compelled to fall back on the personal liability of the debtor. • We do not think that the decree ratifying the auditor’s report has any bearing whatever on the respective rights of the appellant and the appellee, except in as far as it shows that the appellee’s security for his claim was inadequate. Further than this it determined nothing between them. Further than this it simply left them where it found them. They were remitted by it to the decree of May 27, 1895, with an adjudication by inference only that the contingency contemplated by that decree had in fact occurred—'the contingency that the sale of the property would yield nothing or only an insufficient amount to satisfy the appellee’s claim after the payment of the prior incumbrance.
The true meaning and construction of this decree of May 27, 1895, are not that it was an interlocutory decree, but a final decree suspended as to its execution by the necessity of determining how much of the security was available for its satisfaction. The argument on behalf of the appellant goes to the effect that there should have been no personal judgment at all until it was shown that there was a deficiency, partial or total, in the security. But even if this were the preferable course in ordinary cases, in regard to which we decide nothing, it is not apparent that it was not within the discretion of the court of equity to render the decree which it rendered here, and. which is in the nature of an alternative decree, conditioned to become effective on the determination of certain conditions for the ascertainment of which provision is made in the decree itself.
*157That this form of decree was within, the purview of the statute under which the proceedings were had, may fairly be inferred from the words of the statute itself. The mechanics’ lien act of July 2, 1884 — 23 Stat. 64 — provides in its fifth section “ that the proceedings to enforce the lien created by this act shall be by bill in equity. * * * If judgment be rendered for the complainant, the court shall decree the sale of said land and premises, and shall declare the proper distribution of the fund arising from snch sale, and if upon sale the proceeds be insufficient to pay all liens under this act, they shall stand as a judgment against the party who incurred the debt, if he be made or become a party to the suit, but not otherwise; and such judgment shall bear interest, and have the same force and effect, and be enforced in the same manner as in cases of judgment at law.”
This would seem to contemplate the rendition of a judgment upon the claim, ascertaining its validity and the amount which the complainant is entitled to recover, being the equivalent of a personal judgment, before there is any order for a sale; and it would seem not to contemplate any new judgment or decree after the sale, in the case of the inadequacy of the proceeds to satisfy the claim, but that the adjudication previously made should stand as a personal judgment to be enforced, as at law, against any other property of the debtor. A subsequent specific adjudication of the amount remaining due after the determination of the amount of the available proceeds of sale, would not, of course, be improper, and might be very desirable. But what we decide is that, in a case like the present, its omission is not an omission of something essential to the validity of the proceedings.
The authorities on this point are not numerous, and naturally not many can be found. Two cited by the appellee tend to support his contention. They are Decker v. O’Brien, 1 App. Div. (N. Y.) 81, and Baptist Church v. Andrews, 87 Ill. 172. It is unnecessary to review them here, since the point under consideration is one of local practice under local law.
*158Assuming tbat tbe decree of May 27, 1895, was a final adjudication between tbe appellant and tbe appellee for tbe purpose of tbe present proceedings, it is not claimed tbat tbe course pursued by tbe appellee to revive and enforce it, was not proper. No objection is made in tbat regard, and none could validly be made.
"We are of opinion tbat tbe order or decree appealed from was right and proper, and tbat it should be affirmed, with costs. And it is so ordered.