pure and simple. In 1932 he mortgaged property under the Real Property Act for the purpose of securing the satisfaction of his own liability under the guarantee, but when that mortgage was given the parties contracted out of the Act, and contracting out was per- missible under S. 13 of the 1930 Act. That section provided that, subject to certain provisions which are not material in this case, the Act should not apply to a mortgage if it contained a condition or covenant expressly excluding the provisions of the Act.
In 1931 an amending Act, No. 43, was passed. Section 4 (i) (i) Latham C.J. of that Act provided that, in the case of mortgages executed after
the commencement of the 1931 Act, a mortgage containing a con- tracting out clause must be witnessed and certified in a particular manner if such contracting out was to be effective. The mortgage in the present case was SO witnessed and certified.
The Moratorium and Interest Reduction (Amendment) Act 1931, No. 66, inserted a provision in S. 25 of the Moratorium Act 1930-1931 in the following terms (7) That subject to subsection four hereof, notwithstanding anything in this or in any other Act contained, all covenants, agreements, or stipulations by a mortgagor for the payment or repayment of any mortgage moneys secured by a mort- gage of real property shall, except for the purpose of enabling a mortgagee to exercise all or any of his rights against the mortgaged property, be void and of no effect for any purpose whatsoever." (Sub-section 4 of S. 25 relates to the rights of mortgagees against or in respect of mortgaged property and is not material for the purpose of this case.)
Section 25 (7) was in force when Dr. Wood executed the mortgage to the bank. That section contains the words "notwithstanding anything in this or in any other Act contained." The consequence, therefore, is that, notwithstanding the exclusion of the Moratorium Acts by the terms of the mortgage given by Dr. Wood in 1932, the covenant by him for the payment of the mortgage moneys secured by the mortgage was void. Section 25 (7), though now repealed (1932 Act, S. 3), operated upon the covenant in the mortgage, and prima facie, therefore, would exclude liability of the respondent in this case. It is contended for the appellant, however, that subse- quent legislation has reinstated liability on the covenant because that legislation has deprived guarantors of protection which they had against personal liability upon a mortgage when the mortgage was a security for a guaranteed debt. Dr. Wood, it is said, is a guarantor of a debt, the debt is secured by a mortgage, namely by his own mortgage, and therefore the subsequent legislation has restored his liability.