
    Jacob S. Nilkin, complainant, v. Pinkas F. Silverman and Etta Silverman, his wife, defendants.
    [Decided February 20th, 1924.]
    A mortgage given to a surety to secure the payment of a note may be assigned to the holder of the note. Such assignment simply clothes him with the legal title to that which in equity would be his by subrogation.
    
      Mr. Abraham Henig, for the complainant.
    
      Mr. Benjamin M. Weinberg, for the defendants.
   Backes, Y. C.

This case is before me on an agreed state of facts. The bill is to foreclose a mortgage on real estate given by the defendants to Brown-Hñnkele Corporation, and by it assigned to the complainant. The provision in the mortgage is that if the mortgagors shall pay to the mortgagee

“The sum of forty-five hundred dollars represented by a promissory note of even date herewith, made by the party of the second part and given to Max Silverman, or any renewal or renewals of the same (this mortgage is given to secure the party of the second part from any and all liability by reason of the delivery by the party of the second part to Max Silverman, of a promissory note on which the sum of $4,500 is due in three months from the date hereof, or any renewal or renewals of said note, and in the event said note is paid when due, or paid at any renewal date, the within mortgage is to be immediately canceled, otherwise to remiain in full force and effect).”

The note was endorsed by Max Silverman to the complainant, an innocent purchaser for value, and when it came due it was protested for non-pajunent. T'he Hunkele company thereupon assigned the mortgage to the complainant. Without going into the antecedents of the note it is sufficient to say that it was given by the Brown-Hunkele Corporation for the accommodation of Max Silverman, and that the latter is the primary debtor and the corporation the surety.

The defense is that the mortgage is personal to the BrownHunkele Corporation to secure it against liability on the note; that it is not assignable, and that it can be foreclosed only by the mortgagee. The position is not sound.

The mortgage was given not only to indemnify the surety against liability on the note, but also to pay the debt, and the holder of the note is entitled to the benefit of the security. The assignment of the mortgage to the complainant simply clothed him with the legal title to that which in equity would be his by subrogation. In Demott v. Stockton Paper Ware Manufacturing Co., 32 N. J. Eq. 124, 131, it is laid down that “as a general rule, where a surety or a person standing in the situation of a surety for the payment of a debt, receives security for his indemnity and to discharge such indebtedness, the principal creditor is in equity entitled to the full benefit of that security; and it makes no difference that such principal creditor did not act upon the credit of such security in the first instance. And the right of the creditor is the same when the security is a mortgage or other lien given to the surety by the principal after the principal and surety have both become bound, even though there may have been no previous agreement that indemnity should be given, and to entitle the creditor to enforce this right in equity, it is not necessary that he should have exhausted his remedies at law or have reduced his debt to judgment. Brandt Sur. § 282.

If the mortgage had been given to the surety only as indemnity against liability the creditor would be entitled to subrogation. Meyers v. Campbell, 59 N. J. Law 378; Johnson v. Martin, L. R. A. 1916 c. 1057.

The complainant is entitled to a decree.  