TO the OP:
YES, in a MECHANICAL 4wd tractor you have 4wheel braking IF in 4wd, regardless of clutch pedal position.
THIS^^^ is wrong.
Remember the rules of a differential. They are very simple.
There is ONLY 3 ways a differential can work. (standard open diff) And 3 parts, 2 axles, and 1 driveshaft.
1. Everything is turning
2. Everything is STOPPED
3. Two things are turning. This can be a drive shaft + one axle (one wheel peelers). OR it can be BOTH tires and the driveshaft is stopped. BUT, the tires will rotate opposite directions (unless something is broken

)
BUT, why you (DK35vince) are wrong, is that it IF the rears are locked up, that means the DS feeding the front will ALSO be locked up. So based on the rules above, Either you tires will be spinning opposite directions (one forward one reverse) OR the most likely....they are also locked up.:thumbsup:
And these rules are EXACTALLY why stepping on only ONE brake does nothing. Because again, TWO things have to be turning, OR everything has to be stopped. It is easier for the engine to continue turning the other tire AND the driveshaft feeding the front vs the alternative of either stalling or smoking your clutch.
And to those who say "yea, but there are no breaks on the front tires".
Well, there are actually no brakes on the rear tires either. Or even the wheels for that matter. Most of our CUT's have inboard brakes, so they are actually NOT braking the wheel, rather they are braking the axle, which is coupled to the wheel. Same thing for the fronts, IF in 4wd, those SAME brakes are mechanically connected to the front wheels. It just has to go through a few more gears and shafts first, thats all. Think of it as one big system, all inter-connected. It dont matter where the brakes are.
Another example I like to use is the old 2.5T military axles (for those mudder guys). Those dont even have brakes on the axles. They have brakes in the Pinion:confused2:
Sorry to be long winded. Hope this clears things up for some. Have a happy Turkey day