(1) When complainant filed bis original bill of complaint, tbe chancery court acquired full jurisdiction of tbe cause for tbe purposes set forth. “It is of no consequence that a foreclosure under tbe power contained in tbe mortgage has been bad since tbe filing of tbe bill. Tbe equity of redemption and tbe right of its enforcement by bill in chancery, under tbe facts alleged, existed at tbe date of tbe filing of tbe bill; and, this being true, it is not within tbe power of tbe mortgagee to impair such right by any subsequent act of foreclosure under tbe power contained in tbe mortgage. Tbe court, having acquired jurisdiction for tbe purpose of an accounting and redemption, will set aside any subsequent sale made under tbe power, by tbe mortgagee, when necessary to accomplish that for which jurisdiction has been assumed.”—Nat. B. & L. Ass’n v. Cheatham, 137 Ala. 395, 401, 34 South. 383, 384.
This principle is so elementary that it has seldom been challenged, and it is stated as of course by tbe *251text-writers.—2 Jones on Mortg. (9th Ed.), § 1797; 27 Cyc. 1453. It has been several times affirmed by the courts of other states.—Ryan v. Newcomb, 125 Ill. 91, 16 N. E. 878; Clark v. Griffin., 148 Mass. 540, 20 N. E. 169.
It is to he observed, of course, that the execution of a power of sale pending a hill for redemption is not a nullity, and, indeed, is valid for every purpose not inconsistent with the relief afterwards granted to the redemptioner under the prayers of his bill, assuming that any part of the mortgage debt remained due and unpaid. The decree for redemption usually fixes a future day on which the mortgage debt must be paid, and, in default of payment, declares the bill must stand dismissed at the cost of complainant.—McGuire v. Van Pelt, 55 Ala. 344, 351. It is obvious that, when a bill for redemption is thus dismissed, an intervening foreclosure would stand as though the bill had never been filed.
Hence, while a power of sale is not absolutely suspended by the mere pendency of a bill to redeem, its exercise is subject to the equity of the bill, as decreed by the court, and as availed of by the complainant. The statement in the recent case of Presnail v. Burgess, 181 Ala. 263, 61 South. 804, that “the pendency of the cause to redeem will not suspend the right to exercise the power of sale, * * *' notwithstanding the bill offers to do equity by satisfying the ascertained sum secured by the mortgage,” must be taken with the qualifications above stated, and, as there applied, it is not in conflict with the principles now affirmed. In that case it appeared that the amount of the mortgage debt had been previously fixed by a mutual accounting and adjustment between the parties. The bill not-impeaching this account stated, and not offering to pay the sum *252thereby fixed, was without equity, and was properly dismissed. This left the foreclosure sale, though made! pending the suit, in full force and effect.
(2) It results that on the allegations of the original bill, as amended, in connection with the admission of the answer, the complainant was entitled to an accounting to ascertain the balance due on the mortgages, if any, and finally to a decree for redemption upon its payment as directed, or if, as alleged, no balance remained due, then to a decree of cancellation. The chancellor erred, therefore, in holding that the special plea was sufficient as a bar to the relief sought.
(3) It may be conceded that the complainant, in a bill for the redemption of mortgaged property, is not in every case entitled, as of course, to the issuance of a temporary injunction to prevent a foreclosure under the power of sale, or to prevent a recovery of possession of the property by the mortgagee in an action at law. The law in that regard has been frequently discussed and stated.—S. L. Ass’n v. Lake, 69 Ala. 465; Whitley v. Dunhan Lumber Co., 89 Ala. 493, 7 South. 810; Wittmeier v. Tidwell, 147 Ala. 354, 40 South. 963 ; Id., 150 Ala. 253, 43 South. 782.
In the instant case, however, the bill charges usury in the mortgage indebtedness, and alleges that, interest excluded, the principal has been satisfied, and that the complainant is not indebted to the mortgagee respondent in any sum whatever. If these allegations are true, the supplemental bill for a temporary injunction contained equity, and the writ was properly issued, and should have been retained until the cause was disposed of by final decree.
It results that there was error in the decree sustaining the motion to dissolve the injunction for want of equity in the supplemental bill, and also in sustaining *253•the demurrer to the supplemental bill. The decree of the chancery court will be reversed, and a decree will be here rendered overruling the respondent’s special plea, as being insufficient, overruling the demurrer to the supplemental bill, and reinstating the temporary writ of injunction as originally issued.
Reversed and rendered. All the Justices concur, except McClellan, J., who dissents. McCLELLAN, J.The prevailing opinion qualifies the following expressions of doctrine set forth in Presnall v. Burgess, 181 Ala. 263, 270, 61 South. 804, 807: “Where the bill does not show that the entire amount for which the mortgage affords security has been paid or tendered, the pendency of the cause to redeem will not suspend the right to exercise the power of sale vested by the mortgage in the mortgagee, * * * notwithstanding the bill offers to do equity by satisfying the ascertained sum secured by the mortgage.”
Reduced to final analysis, the qualification made of the stated doctrine is that the unenjoined exercise of the power of sale, according to the terms of a mortgage given to completely secure a named or legally ascertainable money obligation or obligations, pending a bill for an accounting and redemption, in which offer is made to pay the ascertained sum secured by the mortgage, is subordinate to the thus initiated effort to redeem; and, being so, such an exercise of the power, though unrestrained by injunctive process, is subject to be set aside, notwithstanding all of the obligation secured by the mortgage has not been in fact tendered or paid.
In section 1906, pp. 863, 834, of Jones on Mortgages (6th Ed.), it is said: “Where a power in a mortgage is to continue as long as any part of the mortgage debt *254remains unpaid, it can be exercised in spite of the pendency of a bill to redeem, as long as the sum due on the mortgage debt had not been paid or actually tendered. A sale made under such conditions cannot be set aside,” (Italics supplied.)
The doctrine of the quoted text is pointedly supported by the opinion in Stevens v. Shannahan, 160 Ill. 330, 43 N. E. 350. Justice Craig wrote the opinions in Ryaai v. Newcomb, cited in the opinion prevailing here, and in the just cited case of Stevens v. Shannahan. The court there said of its previous deliverance in Ryan v. Newcomb: “It is claimed that, since the original bill of Bridget Shannahan for an accounting and for redemption was pending and undetermined at the time of. the sale under the power, such sale was improper and void, and the case of Ryan v. Newcomb, 125 Ill. 91, 16 N. E. 878, is cited as sustaining such claim. The doctrine of the case so relied on, even if it should be adhered to, is not to be extended beyond what was there decided. There is a very marked difference between that case and this. Them it was claimed in the bill that was. pending at the time of the sale that Ryan, the complainant, was not indebted to Newcomb in any amount, whatever, and that nothing was due on the note for $1,400 that the trust deed was given to secure. Assuming the averments of the bill to' be true, Ryan, was not in default, and the mortgage indebtedness had entirely ceased to' exist, and the power of sale had become inoperative and void.”
It is plain that Ryan v. Newcomb cannot be advisedly taken as authority for the announcement made in the prevailing opinion on this appeal.
Precedent for the qualification of the stated doctrine of Presnail and Burgess is said to exist in section 1797 of Jones on Mortgages (6th Ed.), 27 Cyc. *255p. 1453, and Clark v. Griffin, 148 Mass. 540, 20 N. E. 169.
Reference to the citation from Jones on Mortgages and from Cyc. will disclose that both are based on Clark v. Griffin, 148 Mass. 540, 20 N. E. 169. The decision in the case of Clarke v. Griffin, supra, was expressly put upon the other earlier case of Way v. Mullett, 143 Mass. 49, 8 N. E. 881, and the ruling in the Way Case was expressly rested upon the statutes of that state the court saying at page 54, of 143 Mass., at page 884 of 8 N. E.: “The majority of the court are of opinion that the plaintiff has brought himself within the terms of the statute, and that he is entitled to redeem the estate upon paying what is due the defendant.”
Reference to the statutes cited and construed in these Massachusetts eases discloses that redemption and notice of lis pendens, and, in consequence, the respective rights of mortgagors and mortgagees in that connection, were governed, in these cases were in fact controlled, by the statutory system therein considered and applied. So, there being no such statutory system in this state, these cases cannot be taken as supporting the ruling made here; and, in necessary consequence, the text in section 1797 of Jones’ work should be accorded an interpretation consistent with its foundation, and not as immediately contradictory of the same writer’s text in section 1906, pp. 853-4. My judgment is that the language employed in section 1797 of Jones’ work shows that the author was stating a statutory rule.
The only semblance of authority for the ruling now made that has been discovered is our decision in Nat. B. & L. Ass’n v. Cheatham, 137 Ala. 395, 401, 34 South. 383. Its whole statement of reason and conclusion, per*256tinent to the question now under consideration, is quoted in the foregoing opinion of the majority. There was pointed insistence and citation of authority in the brief for appellant (see 137 Ala. 339, 34 South. 383), urging the ineffectiveness of the mere filing of a bill for an accounting and redemption to qualify the unimpeached contractual right of the mortgagee to exercise the power of sale provided in the instrument. The point was important; and the authority, for instance, of “Security-Loan Ass’n v. Lake, 69 Ala. 456, 465,” alone, should have at least suggested caution in respect of the declaration made, for, if the ruling of the Cheatham Case is sound, our courts have for generations been doing the entirely useless thing' of considering the issuance and of issuing injunctions to restrain mortgagees or their assignees from exercising powers of sale provided in mortgages, never for a moment thinking, as the Cheatham Case holds, that a mortgagor, or another in his right, could, by simply filing a bill for an accounting and redemption and offering therein to pay what was finally ascertained to be due on the mortgage debt, qualify and subject the exercise of the power of sale to the final determination of the cause the complainant thus instituted, and have a sale, lawfully made under the power, ignored or set aside. The reasons given for the ruling made in the Cheathamv Case are two, viz.: (a) That mortgagee cannot impair or defeat the right of redemption which the mortgagor initiates before sale under the power, by filing his bill to redeem; (b) that, the jurisdiction of the court having been invoked by such a bill, that jurisdiction will not be suffered to be impaired or defeated by a sale made under the power. The first (a) reason is opposed to and is refuted by the settled principle that a-“power of sale in a mortgage is a power coupled with an interest — that can*257not be revoked or suspended at tbe will of tbe mortgagor without tbe consent of tbe party secured.”—Presnall v. Burgess, 181 Ala. 263, 271, 61 South. 804, 807; Code, § 4896; Bergen v. Bennett, 1 Caines Cas. 1, 2 Am. Dec. 281; Perry on Trusts, § 602b. To allow a mortgagor to suspend or qualify tbe exercise of the power of sale provided in a mortgage by merely filing a bill for an accounting • and redemption is, manifestly, tbe according to him a power to suspend or qualify tbe contractual right be has vested, by tbe mortgage, in tbe mortgagee, without the mortgagee’s consent. It is only tbe mortgagor’s will that determines whether be will file such a bill. Costs to accrue in tbe cause and attorney’s fees are all be has to hazard in tbe premises. These charges be may be willing to incur while be delays tbe exercise of tbe power of sale under tbe valid contract be made". Tbe other reason (b) is referable only to tbe familiar doctrine whereby courts are wont to interpose to preserve their jurisdictions by forbidding tbe change or destruction of tbe subject-matter thereof. The cases of Coxe v. Huntsville Gas Co., 129 Ala. 496, 29 South. 867, Parrish v. Reese, 165 Ala 638, 51 South. 824, and Mayor, etc., v. Allison, infra, 68 South. 142, illustrate this doctrine. In the Oheaihmn Gase, no command or other preservative process was issued by tbe court to forbid tbe sale under the power contained in tbe mortgage. Hence tbe doctrine was not serviceable in tbe solution of tbe question there presented. Certainly tbe mere filing of a pleading is not tbe equivalent of preventive process issued by a court.
Now tbe only instance where tbe mere filing of a bill will render tbe exercise- of tbe power of sale subject, subordinate, to tbe court’s final decree in tbe cause, is when tbe bill appropriately shows that tbe power of *258sale has becpme extinct because the sum secured by the mortgage has been fully paid, or that there has. been adequate tender made to the person entitled to-the money secured by the mortgage.—2 Jones on Mort., § 1906, pp. 863, 831; Stevens v. Shannahan, supra. In all other cases the injunctive process of the court of equity must be invoked to restrain the exercise of the power; otherwise a sale made pending the cause cannot be set aside, for,' if any part of the sum secured by the mortgage is unpaid or is untendered, it will support the exercise of the power of sale, and pass the title conveyed by the mortgage.
I would affirm the decree.