
    Jackson, ex dem. Bruyn and others, against Dewitt.
    UTICA,
    Aug. 1826.
    ^ D. took a land, from B.; at the same time giving the latter a secure3”6 the purchase mo-intermarried men Released his equity oí B.^eandtl0died°, M. surviving, his widow, tied to°dower'
    The pro-fore a°\urro-gate, to ad-measure and set off dower, dence of title in the widow.
    A release, or conveyance of the equity of redemption by the mortgagor to the mortgagee, extinguishes the mortgage,
    Ejectment, tried at the Ulster circuit, October, 1823, before Betts, C. Judge; when the following facts were admitted:
    Bruyn, being seised in fee of a farm, on the 12fA of September, 1783, conveyed it in fee to Depuy, in consideration of £800 ; and, on the same day, Depuy executed to Bruyn a mortgage tor the purchase money. Depuy, ^e'nS *n possession under his purchase, married Catharine Bevier. On the 8th of April, 1793, tire mortgage money being due, Depuy re-conveyed to Bruyn, for the moneys due on the mortgage ; and continued in possession, as tenant, 2 or 3 years, under Bruyn. The lessor of the plain-Hixon, derived title by several mesne conveyances from Bruyn, for valuable consideration, all subsequent to ⅛6 re-conveyance. Depuy died several years since, and his widow intermarried with Miller. In 1817, her dower ^ ^ 1 was admeasured and set off on application to the surrogate, alu* the admeasurement affirmed on appeal to this court. She recovered possession of her dower, by verdict, judgment and execution, in ejectment brought in this court, against Hixon, the lessor. (See the case, 17 John. 123.) Dewitt, at the commencement of this suit, held as her tenant.
    Verdict for the plaintiff, subject to the opinion of the court.
    
      iSudani, for the plaintiff,
    cited 15 John. 458; 4'Mass, Rep. 566; 1 Cowen, 479,
    
      
      B. F. Butler, contra,
    cited 5 Covoen, 168; 2 id. 246, 286.
   Curia, per

Woodworth, J.

The admeasurement of dower is not conclusive. When the widow brings ejectment, she must, as in other cases, make out a title. (5 Cowen, 168.)

In this case, the defendant holds under the widow, who in a former ejectment recovered. (17 John. 123.) The question now raised, was not then before the court.

If the mortgage given by Depuy had been foreclosed, it is conceded that the widow would not be entitled to dower; and it is contended that the release of the equity of redemption is to be considered the same as a foreclosure. On the other hand, it is urged, that on the execution of the release, there was a merger, by uniting the equitable and legal estates in the same person, which precludes the mortgagee from setting up the mortgage as a subsisting security. (2 Cowen, 284.) It is undoubtedly sound, that the mortgage cannot be set up. But the question is, did the right of dower attach ? The case of Hitchcock v. Harrington, (6 John. 290,) and Collins v. Tracy, (7 John. 278,) decide that the widow may recover her dower out of the land mortgaged, against the tenant deriving title by mesne conveyance from the husband of the demandant ; that the tenant cannot deny the seisin of the husband; nor set up the mortgage as a subsisting title, when there has been no foreclosure, or entry by the mortgagee. In this cause, the plaintiff’s title is not derived from the husband of the widow; but from Bruyn, the mortgagee, who accepted a release of the equity of redemption. The plaintiff may, therefore, set up any matter that Bruyn, the mortgagee, might have set up, had Mrs. Miller brought an ejectment against him, to recover the land set apart for her dower. From the case of Stow v. Tift, (15 John. 458,) it is evident that, up to the time that Depuy, released, his wife could have no claim of dower; for the husband had an instantaneous seisin only. If the release operated as a discharge of the mortgage mere* ly, the Vidovv became entitled to dower; the husband be = ¡ng considered as having been seised ab initio. (6 John. 294.) But there was no actual payment of the mortgage, leaving the husband seised. There was a merger, by which, it is true, the mortgage was satisfied ; but the same act annihilated the mortgagor’s title. There was not á moment of time between the discharge of the mortgage, and the vesting of the title in the mortgagee. It was all done unoflatu. If, then, no right of dower existed, the moment previous to the merger, (and clearly there did not,) and if the release extinguished all the title the mortgagor ever had; it follows that there never was an instant of time in which the widow was entitled to dower. I am ef opinion that the plaintiff is entitled to judgment.

Judgment for the plaintiff;  