1550 MORTGAGES. [ART. 66
1888, art. 66, sec. 19. 1860, art. 64, sec. 18. 1826, ch. 192, sec. 6.
19. The purchaser of any estate or interest in lands and
tenements sold under this article, on the confirmation of the
sale to him, shall be entitled to sue forth out of the court con-
firming the same, a writ of possession against the mortgagor,
his heirs, executors or assigns, if the same shall be in his or
their possession, directed to the sheriff of the county or city,
commanding him to put such purchaser into possession of
such mortgaged property, which shall be executed in the same
manner as other writs of possession.
Ibid. sec. 20. 1860, art. 64, sec. 19. 1826, ch. 192, sec. 7.
20. All purchasers under such sale shall have the same
rights and remedies against the tenants of the mortgagor as
the mortgagor had, and the said tenants shall have the same
rights and remedies against the purchaser as they would have
had against the mortgagor. But no lease made after the mort-
gage was made shall be valid as against the purchaser.
Harrison v. Annapolis & Elkridge R. R. Co., 50 Md. 498.
Ibid. sec. 21. 1860, art. 64, sec. 20. 1839, ch. 26, sec, 1.
21. On the death of a mortgagee of lands, his interest and
estate in the mortgaged premises together with his right to the
debt thereby secured shall devolve on and vest in his executor
or administrator.
Harnickle v. Orndorff, 35 Md. 351.
Ibid sec 22. 1860, art. 64, sec. 21. 1833, ch. 181, sec. 1. 1839, ch. 26,
secs. 2-5.
22. The executor or administrator of any mortgagee, or the
assignee, or the executor or administrator of any assignee of
any mortgagee who is legally and equitably entitled to receive
the mortgage debt, or where the mortgage debt has been paid
in the lifetime of the mortgagee, may release a mortgage in
the same manner and by the same means that a mortgagee can
release.
1890, ch. 187, sec. 23.
23. Any and every sale of real estate or personal property
heretofore made between the first day of January eighteen hun-
dred and sixty and the last day of December eighteen hundred
and seventy-eight, under or so intended and purporting to be a
power of sale contained in a mortgage authorizing the mort-
gagee, his executors, administrators or assigns or any person to
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