This is a bill, to foreclose. It is founded on a mortgage executed by the defendant Walter E. Lawton to the complainants’ intestate, John C. Grafflin, to secure $150,000 in three years from -its date. It is dated on the 5th of July, 1884, and was recorded on the 18th of March, 1887, nearly three years later.
The defendant Lawton does not appear, and a decree pro confesso went against him.
The other defendants who have answered are judgment creditors of Lawton, under proceedings in attachment begun March, 17th, 1887, one day before the record of complainants’ mortgage, •and set up several defences, which may be classified as follows: First. That the mortgage was never delivered by Lawton to Grafflin. Second. That neither $150,000 nor any other sum was advanced by Grafflin at the date of the mortgage to Lawton. Third. That, if ever delivered, it was kept off the record until *278the date of its record, for the purpose of enabling Lawton to' obtain mercantile credit on the strength of the unencumbered, ownership of the property which it covers, and that the indebtedness of the several defendants was incurred as a consequence,, in the belief that Lawton was the owner of the.premises without encumbrance. Fourth. That if given to secure a running account for present and future advances, nothing is due on that account. Fifth. That the suits which resulted in the several judgments-held by the defendant were commenced by foreign attachment, which was levied on the 17th of March, 1887, one day before the complainants’ mortgage was recorded, and thus the defendant lost his priority. Sixth. That complainants’ testator must beheld to have waived any rights he had as a mortgage creditor by himself issuing an attachment on the 19th of March, 1887, and' attaching the same premises, and in coming in as a creditor under-the attachment of March 17th, and obtaining judgment for the only debt which he'has against Lawton.
The facts are, that Mr. Grafflin was a wealthy manufacturer, residing and engaged in business at Baltimore, and that Lawton was a dealer in fertilizers, living and doing business in New York. For some time prior to the date of the mortgage in question Grafflin had been in the habit of making advances of money to Lawton, and also of loaning him commercial paper which he,. Grafflin, had taken in the course of business, and which he-loaned to Lawton before its maturity, and which Lawton procured to be discounted for his own use and benefit. On the 30th' of June, 1884, six days before the date of the mortgage, Mr.. Lawton was indebted to Mr. Grafflin in the sum of $56,689.82, for advances in cash and interest up to that date, and in nearly $50,000 for commercial paper before that time loaned to Mr. Lawton.
Lawton, in addition to his dealing in fertilizers, had purchased a large tract of land in Bergen county, which he had devoted, or was about to devote, to the purpose of making brick, and on the-11th of July, in the absence of Mr. Grafflin, he went before a-commissioner of deeds for New Jersey residing in New York, and executed the bond and mortgage in question. How it came-*279into the possession of Mr. Grafflin does not appear, but it. does appear in the most satisfactory manner that it did come into his possession shortly afterwards without being recorded, and was by him placed among his valuable papers and preserved until the 17th of March, 1887, when, upon the receipt by him of a telegram from Lawton’s confidential clerk and cashier that Law-ton had absconded, he, Grafflin, took the bond and mortgage from the safe, proceeded directly to New York, and the next day, March 18th, caused the mortgage to be recorded in the Bergen county clerk’s office. In the meantime, and on the 1st of January, 1885, the balance due from Lawton to Grafflin had increased to about §135,000, and remained, with some fluctuations, at about that amount until the time the mortgage was recorded.
On the 17th of March, 1887, the Commercial National Bank, one of the defendants, issued an attachment out of the circuit court of the county of Bergen against Lawton, and the sheriff attached the mortgaged premises. On the 18th of March, Grafflin, as above stated, recorded his mortgage, and on the 19th he caused an attachment against Lawton to be issued out of the same court. 'Whether, under these two writs, any other property besides the mortgaged premises was attached, does not appear.
The object of the independent attachment by Grafflin is manifested by what followed. On the 5th of April, 1887, he filed a bill in this court to set aside a conveyance which had been made by Lawton on the 1st of March, 1887, and recorded on the 5th of March, 1887, to the New York and New Jersey Brick Company, and a mortgage given by the brick company, of the same date and record, to the Metropolitan Trust Company to secure the sum of §950,000; and such proceedings were had in that suit that on the 9th of June, 1890, this court decreed that the conveyance and mortgage just mentioned were null and void and should be set aside; and, further, that the attachment issued at the suit of the Commercial National Bank was a valid lien and encumbrance upon the premises, and that when the premises were sold by the auditor in attachment the sale should be subject to the mortgage made by Lawton to Grafflin.
*280The judgment creditors, defendants in this suit, who defended, were not parties to that bill.
Grafflin died in August, 1888, and letters of administration, with the will annexed, were issued to the complainants, and they were substituted as complainants in the suit of Grafflin v. Lawton, just mentioned, before decree, and after decree in that suit filed this bill.
In the attachment suit commenced by the Commercial National Bank, in which Grafflin applied as a creditor, he obtained judgment for $135,407.63.
Lawton has never been heard of since he absconded, which circumstance, together with the death of Grafflin, leaves the case bare of any evidence as to what the understanding was between the parties with regard to this mortgage, or why it was not recorded.
Mr. Grafflin’s confidential clerk, a Mr. Rogers, was sworn as a witness. He kept the account of the loans made by Grafflin to Lawton. He also had the custody, for part of the period between its date and record, of the mortgage and accompanying bond in question. He has no personal knowledge of how these papers were passed from the hands of Lawton to Grafflin, nor upon what understanding. Mr. Grafflin’s brother-in-law, one Keener, who was acting for him in some matters about that time, is also dead. Grafflin himself was at the time quite ill.
This state of the evidence leaves the object of the mortgage altogether a matter of inference, but I think that the established facts of the indebtedness from Lawton to Grafflin at the date of the mortgage, and its continuance and increase, leads fairly and legitimately to the inference that the mortgage was given to secure that indebtedness and such future indebtedness as might arise, and justify me in finding so as a matter of fact.
The absence of Lawton and the death of Grafflin account for the absence of any evidence to show why the mortgage was not placed on record. The proof shows that Mr. Grafflin was quite ill about that time, and he must have’relied upon Mr. Lawton to make him secure; and, although Mr. Rogers is quite, positive that Mr. Grafflin himself handed him the bond and mortgage *281for deposit among his valuable papers some time not very long •after their date, it is not difficult to believe that Mr. Graffiin did not observe that the mortgage had not been recorded, but relied, with misplaced confidence as the result has proven, upon his friend Lawton to do everything that was necessary to make him secure. Be that as it may, there is not the least evidence to show that the instrument was kept off the records intentionally and knowingly for the purpose of enabling Lawton to obtain commercial credit on the strength of being the owner of unen•cumbered property. To so presume, from the bare fact of non-record, would be to presume in favor of fraud instead of against it. Besides, it is highly improbable that in so large a transaction Mr. Graffiin would have taken so great a risk. It is much •easier to believe that the non-recording of the instrument escaped ■his attention.
There is evidence that, as to one judgment creditor, defendant Lawton did obtain credit on the strength of being the owner of the land in question free of encumbrance, but there is not the least particle of evidence that Mr. Graffiin had any knowledge of any such representation or conduct on the part of Lawton, and I do not see how he can be held responsible for it.
"With regard to the attachment being issued and levied before the mortgage was recorded, that point is res adjudieata in this state. The ease of Campion v. Kille, 1 McCart. 229, 2 McCart. 476, with the cases there cited, is conclusive in favor of complainants on that point.
It follows that the complainants are entitled to the benefit of their mortgage as a lien prior to any of the judgments under the attachment, unless the conduct of their testator, in himself issuing an attachment and presenting his claim under the first attachment and obtaining a judgment thereon, can be held as a waiver of his lien under his mortgage.
It is well settled by a long series of decisions in Yew Jersey, that the obligee of a bond secured by a mortgage does not waive his mortgage lien by suing at law upon his bond and recovering judgment and issuing execution and levying upon the mortgaged premises. It is, however, inequitable for the mortgagee to pro*282ceed to a sale of the mortgaged premises,, and this court will restrain him in so doing at the- instance of the owner of the equity. The cases in this state are collected and commented upon by Chancellor Runyon in Lydecker v. Bogart, 11 Stew. Eq. 136. It follows plainly that, by merely issuing a general attachment against the defendant, u-pon the debt secured by his mortgage, Mr. Grafflin did nothing to- disturb- his lien under the mortgage. "While it does not appear that any other property besides the mortgaged premises were seized under that attachment, the contrary does not appearand it was perfectly proper for him to issue the attachment as he-did,,and also to come in as a creditor under the previous attachment, with the view of getting the benefit of any other property which might be found and subjected to the lien of the process. Resides,, the position of a-plaintiff in attachment gave him. a standing in this court as the-complainant in a suit to set aside the previous conveyance and-mortgage, under the rule established in Hunt v. Field, 1 Stock. 36, and Williams v. Michenor, 3 Stock. 520. It follows that nothing that the complainant has done can be construed, as either a discharge or waiver of his lien under the mortgage. The apparent hardship of this result is much softened by the circumstance that the mortgagee proceeded,, unaided by the defendants, to bring suit and remove out of the way the fraudulent conveyance made by Lawton, which, un assailed, was a complete bar to-any success on their part.
Complainant is entitled to a decree.
On the argument the point was made that the mortgage can only stand as security for the amount which was due the mortgagee at the time it was made and delivered,, and which, it is insisted, was only $56,689.82, and that against t-hat sum should be credited all the payments which were made by Lawton on-account after that date, which amount to upward of $30,000. I cannot adoprt that view. • The mortgage was evidently given to secure the amount due at its date and also future advances ; and it is perfectly well settled in New Jersey that a mortgage for future advances is good for all the money advanced under it up-to such time as some third party shall have acquired an interest *283by mortgage, conveyance or judgment in the mortgaged premises,, and notice thereof be given to the holder of the mortgage to-secure advances. jSTo defence of any such lien or interest in this case prior to the 17th of March, 1887, is made, and the complainants did not claim for any moneys advanced after that time. In fact, none were advanced.
On the examination of Mr. Rogers before a commissioner in-Baltimore, counsel for one of the defendants, in the course of cross-examination, interpolated into his questions what purported-to be extracts from the testimony of Mr. Grafflin, taken in some suit in Maryland, in which he, Grafflin, was a defendant. Objection was made to that mode of examination. The deposition-itself, if any such there be, was possibly competent evidence, but it was not offered. Counsel for one of the defendants referred to-these supposed extracts from the evidence of Mr. Grafflin as evidence in this cause, but they cannot be so construed. There is-not the least particle of proof before the court that Mr. Grafflin ever swore to anything of the kind, and it would be highly improper to pay any attention to mere extracts from a deposition-without having the whole before the court.
One other matter remains. It appears that complainants hold! as collateral to Lawton’s indebtedness to them certain shares of stock in an incorporated company, and the defendants contend that they are not entitled to a decree in this court until they shall have exhausted their remedy by a sale of these shares of stock. The proof shows that the shares of stock are probably of very little value; but, however small their value may be, the equity claimed by the defendants was not seriously resisted by the complainants’ counsel at the argument, and, as I recollect, he offered! to have them so appropriated. It does not seem to me necessary that the proceedings in this cause should stand until those shares are sold. The result may be. attained by placing them within the power of the court, and upon depositing with, the clerk of the-court the certificate, with a transfer in blank, executed by the complainants, a decree will be made.
There will be a reference, if the defendants desire to dispüte the amount complainants claim to be due, but it hardly seems *284to be worth while in face of the fact that the auditor in attachment passed upon the complainants’ claim, and judgment has been rendered upon it in the attachment suit, to which all the defendants were parties.