The general rule is, that in a writ of entry, if the demandant or tenant die pending the suit,, neither the heir, nor the executor or administrator can prosecute or defend, but the writ necessarily abates; Stearns on Real Actions, 199; 2 Mass. Rep. 480; Com. Dig. “Abatement” H 32—34.
It is also a general rule that executors and administrators cannot maintain an action to recover seizin of the land of their testators or intestates ; because in general they have no interest in the real estate. 2 N. H. Rep. 72; 3 N. H. Rep. 306.
To this rule, however, estates of testators or intestates in land holden by them in mortgage, form an exception, and it has been holden that an executor or administrator may maintain a writ of entry upon a mortgage. 2 N. H. Rep. 27; 16 Mass. Rep. 18, Smith v. Dyer; Stearns, 258.
It has however been supposed that where the statute of June 21, 1797, to which counsel have alluded, declares that “actions of ejectment” shall not abate by the death of either party', writs of entry were intended. But if this supposition be well founded, it is clear that the provision can be applied only to the case of mortgages, in which executors and administrators have an interest, and not to other real estate with which they have no concern, and will form only an exception to the general rule first abovementioned.
*142It is settled, that a writ of review is affected by the death of a party in the same manner as an original writ. - We are therefore of opinion, as it is not suggested that the demandant’s title is under a mortgage, that the administrator of the tenant cannot be legally admitted to prosecute the review,
IVrit of review abated.