| Ill. | May 12, 1887

Mr. Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the'Court:

Thomas W. Saunders, and Mary P. Saunders, his wife, executed and delivered to Mindwell L. Gr. Patton a deed of trust on certain property in Chicago, to secure the payment of $2500. The indebtedness not having been paid when it became due, according to the terms of the notes and deed of trust, Mindwell L. Gf. Patton filed her bill to foreclose the deed of trust. A decree of sale was rendered, and on the 1st day of April, 18S2, the premises were sold, and bid in by complainant for the amount of debt, and costs. Philip H. Decker, who acquired an interest in the property subsequent to the deed of trust, was not made a party to the foreclosure proceedings, and on the 28th day of May, 1883, he filed this his bill to redeem from the sale which had been made under the decree rendered in the foreclosure proceedings. The complainant in the foreclosure proceedings, Mindwell L. Gr. Patton, and others, were made defendants to the bill. Answers were put in, and the cause proceeded to a hearing, on the pleadings and proofs, on the 2d day of November, 1885, when a final decree was rendered. In the decree, the court found that there was due Mindwell L. G. Patton, on the promissory notes and trust deed executed by Thomas W. Saunders and wife, the sum of $2947.71; that the complainant, Decker, be allowed to redeem, by paying to the clerk of the court, within twelve months, the amount found due, with interest at six per cent per annum from that date, and costs. The decree also contained the following provision: “That on payment of said sum of money, interest and costs, in the time hereby limited, the decree in case of Patton v. Saunders et al., on March 1, 1882, and sale thereunder, be set aside, etc., and said trustee execute a proper release of trust deed. If said Decker shall not redeem said premises from said deed of trust by paying the money "above provided for within the time limited, his petition and bill filed herein shall be dismissed, and he shall from thenceforth stand absolutely debarred and foreclosed of and from all equity of redemption in and to said mortgaged premises, and the master execute a deed under said sale to said Patton, or her assigns. ”

It will be observed that the decree did not order the premises to be sold in case the complainant failed to pay the amount which entitled him to redeem, and upon this ground the complainant in the bill seeks to reverse a decree rendered on his own bill, in his own behalf. The time allowed for the payment of the redemption money (one year) was quite liberal in favor of the complainant, and would seem to afford ample opportunity to raise the money and discharge the incumbrance on the premises, and unless the law imperatively demands a re-sale in case the redemption money should not be paid, no good reason occurs to us why the decree should contain a provision of that character.

In 2 Daniell’s Chancery Practice, page 644, in speaking on this subject, the author says : “The same practice is also to be observed in the case of decrees for the redemption of a mortgage, which usually directs the plaintiff to pay the balances reported due to him within six months after the report, in default of which, the plaintiff’s bill against the defendant is from thenceforth to stand dismissed out of court, with costs to be taxed by the master. Under this decree, although it directs that in default of payment by the plaintiff his bill is to stand dismissed, with costs, yet it will not be so dismissed without a final order, which, however, may be obtained as of course.” The same rule is laid down in 2 Jones on Mortgages, secs. 1106, 1107. The author says: “The form of the judgment ordinarily is, that the plaintiff may redeem upon paying the amount due on the mortgage, within a specified time, together with costs, and that upon his doing so the defendant shall discharge the mortgage and deliver up the mortgaged premises, and that upon default of such payment the complaint be dismissed, with costs.” See, also, Pilmon v. Thornton, 66 Me. 469" date_filed="1876-11-27" court="Me." case_name="Pitman v. Thornton">66 Me. 469, where the same doctrine is announced. Indeed, we think it may be laid down as a general rule, on a bill to redeem, a proper decree is, that the complainant may be allowed to redeem the mortgaged premises upon payment of the amount found to be due, within a reasonable time to be named in the decree, together with the costs, and directing the defendant to discharge the mortgage on the payment of the money; but in case default shall be made in the payment of the money within the time specified, the bill should be dismissed.

The case of Hollingsworth v. Koon, 117 Ill. 514, has been cited as an authority; but that was not a bill to redeem, and the opinion does not undertake to lay down or establish any rule of practice which should control where a bill to redeem has been filed.

On the hearing, the complainant offered to show certain judgments existing against him in the courts of Cook county. The court excluded the evidence, and the ruling on the offered evidence is relied upon as error. The bill contained no allegations in regard to judgment creditors, nor were they parties to the proceeding. No relief was sought in their behalf or against them. Under such circumstances, we fail to see what advantage it would be to complainant to prove the existence of judgments against him.

But it is said in the argument, that the property was worth more than the mortgage debt, and if -there were judgment creditors, it was erroneous to decree a strict foreclosure. Had this been a bill to foreclose a mortgage, and had a decree been rendered cutting off the rights of parties in interest, without a sale of the mortgaged premises, and denying the redemption provided by the statute, there might be force in the argument. But such was not the case. As was said before, Mindwell L. G. Patton foreclosed her mortgage by bill. A sale was made, under which all persons in interest had opportunity to redeem within the time prescribed by the statute. But no redemption was made, and no effort whatever was made in that direction until fourteen months after the sale, when this bill was filed by Decker to redeem from the mortgage sale. The decree which was rendered in this case may, and probably does, cut off all equities and rights of Decker in case he fails to redeem within the time prescribed by the decree, but that does not render it a strict foreclosure decree, as contended by counsel for plaintiff in error. On the other hand, it is an ordinary decree on bill to redeem.

No error appearing in the record, the judgment of the Appellate Court will be aErmed.

Judgment affirmed.

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