Cundiff v. Brokaw

7 Ill. App. 147 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1880

Higbee, J.

On the 16th day of December, 1873, E. H. McClure executed a mortgage upon certain lands in McLean county to Abraham Brokaw, defendant in error, to secure the sum of $6,000 in six years, with ten per cent, interest per annum, payable semi-annually. McClure afterwards conveyed his equity of redemption in the mortgaged premises to John Starling, who died intestate, leaving a widow and children surviving him.

The mortgage contains a provision, that if any part or installment of said interest shall not be paid within six months after the same becomes due, then and in that case the whole of said note so secured by said mortgage, both principal and-interest then due, should, at the option of the mortgagee, become immediately due and payable, and the mortgage might be at once forclosed. On the 23d day of October, 1878; there being more than six months’ interest due and unpaid, defendant filed his bill to foreclose the mortgage, making the widow and heirs of John Starling defendants.

The court below decreed a foreclosure of the mortgage, from which plaintiffs prosecute a writ of error to this court.

It is insisted by plaintiffs in error that the decree should be reversed, because the evidence fails to show that defendant in error had given notice before the bill was filed, that he had elected to declare the whole sum secured by the'mortgage due and payable for non-payment of interest.

This objection we think not tenable. The mortgage required nb such notice to be given.

The mortgagor and those holding under him were bound to know that the mortgagee had reserved the right in the mortgage at his option to treat the principal as due, if default was made for over six months in the payment of interest, and that such a contingency was liable to occur at any time when default was made in payment, for the length of time mentioned in the mortgage.

If the mortgagor wished personal notice as á condition precedent to the commencement of a suit, he should have provided for it in the mortgage.

On the contrary, the mortgage provides that if default is made, the mortgage may be at once foreclosed.

To require such a notice, would be to add a condition to the mortgage not contained in it, and this we are not at liberty to do. The Princeton Loan and Trust Co. v. Munson, 60 Ill. 371.

The next objection is, that the court rendered a personal decree against defendants. The court found due from defendants to complainant, tiie sum of $5917.77, and decreed that they pay the same, together with interest and costs to complainant within twenty days, and in default of such payment, that the mortgaged premises be sold.

The defendants had not executed the note or mortgage, nor were they in any manner indebted to complainant, and the court erred in rendering a personal decree against them. Snell v. Stanley, 58 Ill. 31; O’Brian v. Fry, 82 Ill. 274.

The decree is reversed and the cause remanded.

Reversed and remanded.