The answer to this contention is that since the mortgaged property has been partially disposed of, the mortgagee cannot permit the mortgagor to redeem, and the court will not permit the mortgagee to proceed on the covenant for payment for anything more than a known deficiency. It is clear from the much cited case of Lockhart v. Hardy (1846), 9 Beav. 349, 50 E.R. 378, a case decided in 1846, that where a mortgagee has obtained a final disclosure and has disposed of the mortgaged property, so that he is no longer in a position to allow a mortgagor to redeem, he will be unable to take any action to recover a deficiency.
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