ing to the Court's sense of what is just as between the parties.
There is one special fact T must refer to. It is that on 1th
August 1916 the mortgagee recovered, and still holds, a judgment -
in the Supreme Court of Victoria against the mortgagor for £5,28
6s. 1d., and £5 19s. costs, for principal and interest due under th
mortgage of 17th February 1915. The mortgagee has urged that
as he has a right to proceed under that judgment, obtained before -
the earliest extant Moratorium Regulations, Statutory Rules 1916, |
No. 284 (10th November 1916), it is an additional reason for granting
his application, because it would save expense and trouble. T do
not so regard it. If he has the right so to proceed under his judg-
ment - as to which I say nothing - it is because the prior judgment
is something designedly left outside the scope of the Regulations,
In that event I am best following the intent of those regulations in
the circumstances before me by excluding the assumed right to pro-
ceed from my consideration of this particular application.
Two other matters are present to my mind to which the attention
of the parties should be directed.
The first matter is that the licence of the Barooga Hotel
ought not to be allowed to lapse by reason of disrepair. Appar-
ently it is the duty of the mortgagor to see to this. I have
considered the question of getting an undertaking from him -
in this connection, though I see some difficulties in framing it. I _
do not, however, ask for that undertaking for two reasons. One
reason is afforded by the proviso to reg. 4, to which I invite the -
mortgagor's attention. It runs in these terms: '' Provided that
where interest is in arrear for not less than thirty days and the
mortgagor fails to observe the provisions of any covenant, agreement
or condition express or implied in the mortgage for any of the matters
specified in sub-par. (ii.) of par. (c) of sub-reg. (1) of this regulation,
nothing in this paragraph shall preclude the mortgagee from entering -
into possession of the mortgaged property, but in any such case the
mortgagor may apply to the Court for an order requiring the mort-
gagee to vacate the mortgaged property, and in the event of the
application being granted by the Court the mortgagee shall vacate