Case Name: Mary Ludlow v. John Lansing Junior, and others
Court: New York Court of Chancery
Jurisdiction: New York
Decision Date: 1824-07-14
Citations: 1 Hopk. Ch. 231
Docket Number: 
Parties: Mary Ludlow v. John Lansing Junior, and others.
Judges: 
Reporter: Hopkins' Chancery Reports
Volume: 1
Pages: 231–232

Head Matter:
Mary Ludlow v. John Lansing Junior, and others.
1824. July 14.
This court has the power to issue all process to carry its decrees into effectual execution.
On a sale of mortgaged premises, if a defendant in possession will not, on being shown the master’s deed, deliver them up, an order may be taken requiring him to deliver possession; and on disobedience of that order, an injunction may issue.
The bill was for the foreclosure of the equity of redemption in mortgaged premises and for a sale; and was taken pro confesso. On the usual subsequent proceedings, a sale had taken place, at which the premises brought a price much less than the amount reported by the master to be due. The complainant had become the purchaser, and had received a deed from the master, which she showed to one of the defendants upon the premises, demanding possession, which the latter refused to give.
The complainant now preferred her petition, stating these facts, and praying for an order requiring the defendant in possession to deliver up possession to the complainant, and in default thereof, that an injunction might issue, or for other relief.
It was objected on the other side, that this court have no power to order a sale of mortgaged premises.

Opinion:
The Chancellor.
It is objected, that the decree directing a sale of the land mortgaged, was not authorised by law. If this objection could be maintained, it now comes too late, as an answer to this application. It should have been made at the hearing, or it may be urged upon an appeal.
The application now made is, that the mortgagor, being a defendant in this suit, and in possession of the mortgaged land, which has been sold under the usual course of proceedings in this court, deliver possession to the purchaser. This practice, though not usual before the case of Kershaw against Thompson, 4 John. ch. 609., was always, I conceive, within the power of the court. I have examined all the cases which have been cited; and the English cases seem to warrant the decision made by this court, in the case of Kershaw against Thompson. But if that decision of the late chancellor, was, in any respect, new, the innovation was in my opinion, judicious and fit. This practice is not an extension of the jurisdiction" of this court; it is merely an exertion of its acknowledged powers, in a particular manner; a species of relief by way of execution. Where this court has power to decree, it has power to carry its decree into effectual execution; and there can not be any good reason, that the purchaser of mortgaged lands sold under a decree in equity, should not be put into possession by the court which makes the sale and transfers the title. To transfer the title and leave the purchaser to another suit to obtain possession from a party, whose rights have been fully decided by this court, would be useless, and vexatious circuity. But without pursuing this question, I entirely concur in the decision of this court, in the case of Kershaw against Thompson ; and the petition in this case, is granted. .