The subject matter of this controversy has already been three times before this Court, and as often decided against the present appellee. He has a note against John J. Vining, deceased, secured by mortgage on the tract of land which he has recovered in this controversy, and the substance of the former decision in relation to this note and mortgage was, that inasmuch as they had not been presented in the time prescribed by law, under the Act of 1840, to the administrator, no suit could be maintained upon them, nor judgment bad for their recovery or for the foreclosure of the mortgage; that all monied claims were required to be presented, under the 17th Section of the Act of 1840, and that a failure was a bar to recovery, and that a debt secured by mortgage on specific property formed no exception to the general rule, and was consequently barred if not presented within the time prescribed by statute; and that it was barred not only as against the administrator, but as against the heirs and creditors of the estate.
*433But it is contended by the appellee, that notwithstanding the debt is barred and that with this bar his remedy by statute is gone, yet that he is entitled to the land itself under an action of ejectment or an action of trepass to try the title.
Whether an action by the mortgagee, to recover possession of the land, would lie in this State, must depend (if it be not excluded by implication under onr statute,) upon the character of right or title under which he holds. If his right be superior to that of the mortgagor, then on default of the latter he might recover and hold possession, at least until payment out of the rents. But if the mortgagor have the superior right or title, he should be entitled to possession unless there were some special stipulation to the contrary.
We will attempt now, by a survey of the authorities, to ascertain which has the better title; and we will perceive in this inquiry, that there has been the greatest contrariety of views on the subject, between Courts of Law and Courts of Equity; and even these have sometimes not been consistent with themselves. The conflict of opinions and views has Anally terminated in giving a vast superiority, at least in equity, to the right of the mortgagor over that of the mortgagee.
It seems that at law, upon the execution of a mortgage, the legal estate vests in the mortgagee, subject to defeasance upon performance of conditions. Technically speaking, the mortgagor has a mere tenancy, and is subject to be put out at any time, even before default, by the mortgagee. But even under the severe rules of the Common Law, the mortgagor has some rights. He is not subject to the payment of rents, and can lease, sell and deal with the land as owner, so long as he remains in possession, persons under him taking subject to the rights of the mortgagee. But when we ascend to the views entertained of mortgages in Courts of Equity, we find an almost complete change of principles. The estate of the mortgagor, so narrow and precarious at Common Law, is by equity enlarged to the real ownership of the fee. The mort*434gage instead of being a conveyance of the land, subject to defeasance, is held to be but a chattel interest, a mere security for the debt. The estate of the mortgagor is in equity tantamount to that of the mortgagee, and is descendable by inheritance, devisable by will, and alienable by deed. (4 Kent, p. 160.) It is Vendible on an execution at law, and chargeable with the dower of the wife, where that estate is known; whereas the estate of the mortgagee is not the subject of execution before foreclosure, (at least before entry,) though there has been default and the mortgage is forfeited. (4 Kent, 161-2.) In equity the debt is considered the principal, and the mortgage only the incident, and the discharge or forgiveness of the debt at any time before foreclosure, extinguishes the mortgage, and no reconveyance is necessary to restore title to the mortgagor.
“ An assignment'of the debt by deed, by writing simply or “ by parol, is said to draw the land after it as a consequence “ and as being appurtenant to the debt. The one is regarded “ as the principal, the other the accessory and onme principíale traMt ad se accessorium. The assignment of the in- “ terest of the mortgagee in the land, without an assignment “ of the debt, is considered to be without meaning or use. “ This is the general language of the Courts of Law as well as “of the Courts of Equity; and the common sense of the “ parties, the spirit of the mortgage contract and the reason “ and policy of the thing, would seem to be with the doctrine.” (4 Kent.)
It seems, then, that in equity the debt is the principal thing. The land is but an incident of the debt, and the mortgagor notwithstanding the terms of the conveyance, remains the real owner of the fee. Why, under such circumstances and such rights in the mortgagor, the mortgagee should have been entitled to oust the mortgagor and take possession is not very easily to be perceived, especially when such possession does not give him the land, but he is accountable for the rents and profits. There might be some reason to permit such right to *435be enforced at law, where, in equity, he is entitled to a corresponding and in fact still higher right under a decree of strict foreclosure, by which the land is secured to him in absolute property ; or where there are separate jurisdictions, the mortgagee may have some sort of pretence to resort to both to enforce his rights. But is there any sufficient reason why such an accumulation of suits should be tolerated under our system of jurisprudence, in which equity and law are incorporated with each other, and under our code of procedure, which abhors a multiplicity of suits between the same parties relafive substantially to the same subject matter ; and especially where the new action, proposed in augmentation of other remedies, is one of a most oppressive character, by which the real owner of the land is to be dispossessed, for the benefit of one who has but an unfair interest or title to the land \ Gould it be permitted for a moment, in this State, that a mortgagee should simultaneously institute three different suits for the recovery of the same debt, one on the note or bond, another to forclose the mortgage, and a third to recover possession of the land itself, although it seems that this tripartite division of the debtor to respond to the thrice repeated exactions of the creditor, is suffered in other States in which the jurisdictions of law and of equity are still preserved separate and distinct. Such an attempt will perhaps never be made, but if so, it would certainly end in defeat and in mulcting the plaintiff with costs in two of the suits. In fact, under our procedure, there can be no pretence that any other remedy than that prescribed by statute is necessary to do justice to the mortgagee. It affords all the redress which can be extracted from either the property mortgaged or any other property of the mortgagor. True, it does not award to him the land. jSTo such thing as strict foreclosure is known, (and that is one evidence that the Legislature intended that the mortgagee should not have the land, and consequently that he should not recover it in ejectment,) but it gives him judgment for his debt, and for the sale of the property mortgaged, if the same can be found, *436and if the proceeds be insufficient or if the property cannot be found, then he is to have further execution against the defendant for the balance or the whole of the debt, as the case may be. (Art. 773, Dig.) The form of the judgment shows that there is no necessity for a separate suit on the- bond or note. They, with the mortgage, constitute but one cause of action ; and if there be no note or bond, the judgment is still the same, viz: for the debt and for the foreclosure of the mortgage ; and this judgment would be given (being prescribed by the statute) without any express covenant for the payment of money being inserted in the mortgage. It thus appears that every judgment rendered on a mortgage in this State, is equivalent to a judgment at law on the bond and of foreclosure in Courts of Equity, and is coextensive, in its operations, with both of those judgments. In fact the terms of our statutes on the foreclosure of mortgages are such as might be fairly held to exclude the hypothesis that an action could be maintained for the land itself. They speak of suits being instituted for the enforcement of specific liens on property, and they prescribe judgments which subject not only the property under mortgage, but all the property of the defendant to the satisfaction of the debt; and it is a reasonable conclusion that if the Legislature intended there should be any further or other remedy for the enforcement of “ specific liens,” some intimation of an intention to that effect would have been given. The universal construction has been, so far as I have any knowledge, that there is no other remedy; and the present is believed to be the only instance in which any other was ever attempted.
In New York, it seems that by statute the action of ejectment by a mortgagee or his assigns has been abolished, an alteration in the law which is commended by Chancellor Kent in his Commentaries as a desirable improvement, that action not being a final remedy, but vexatious, terminating in a litigious matter of account and deterioration of the premises. (4 Kent, p. 156, Note.) It appears also, that by statute in *437the same State, the mortgagee is in effect inhibited from pursuing his remedies simultaneously in both Courts. (4 Kent, 184.)
But there seems no necessity for special provision to that effect, by statute, in this State. There is but one jurisdiction in which to bring suits, and as a matter of course it would not permit a multiplicity about the same subject matter. Nor does there appear any positive necessity to abolish the remedy by ejectment, where in fact it has never been introduced in practice, and the law affords a remedy so ample, comprehensive and perfect as to legitimately exclude the idea that any other mode of redress would have been intended or allowed.
But whether an action of trespass to try title could be maintained in any case, it certainly could not be permitted after the debt, the principal to which the mortgage was but an incident, is barred and lost. The lien by the mortgage on the land was but an- incident to the debt, and when the principal falls, the incident must fall with it. The debtor, to secure the appellee against loss, had hypothecated this tract of land, and the law had provided most energetic and ample remedies to enforce the lien thus given. But the time within which the law would afford its aid was limited, and the appellee having failed to avail himself of these aids in the time prescribed, cannot justly ascribe his loss to any other cause than his own laches, nor can he require the Courts to introduce and adopt new and unusual remedies for his relief.
It is not necessary to again discuss the policy of our statutes, in requiring all claims to be presented to the administrator, before suit can be brought, nor to show that mortgage debts are included in the general designation of money claims. These have been sufficiently considered in the previous decisions relative to this controversy. (1 Tex. R.; 2 Tex. R.)
It is ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment be reversed and that judgment be rendered for appellant.
Reversed and re-formed.