During the argument it has been assumed on both sides that the
doctrine of Doe d. Parsley v. Day (3) is applicable to sec. 116 of the
Transfer of Land Act 1893, The same assumption was made by
the Full Supreme Court of Victoria in the cases of Commercial Bank
v. Breen (4) and Farrington v. Smith (5), in relation to the Victorian
section which corresponds with sec. 116. According to that doc-
trine, if there is a covenant for quiet enjoyment until default, that
covenant does not operate as a demise of the land to the mortgagor
unless some definite, certain date is fixed for payment. Under the
common law a demise for years must be for a term certain. The
words of sec. 116, however, are that the mortgagee shall have the
same rights and remedies at law and in equity as he would have
had or been entitled to if the legal estate in the land mortgaged
had been actually vested in him with a right in the mortgagor of
quiet enjoyment until default &c. There is no express reference
in sec. 116 to a fixed day for payment, or even to demise; the
words are simply " with a right in the mortgagor of quiet enjoyment
until default "' - not " with a covenant on the part of the mortgagee
for quiet enjoyment." The common law Courts in 1842 would not
treat a covenant for quiet enjoyment as giving a right to possession
unless the words operated as a demise in themselves; a mere
covenant or other agreement was ignored for the purposes of an
action in ejectment. But now, in all States where the provisions of
the English Judicature Act of 1873 have been copied, the rules of
equity are to prevail; and equity, in considering the rights of the