94 Ill. 328 | Ill. | 1880
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This is ejectment, begun in August, 1874, by George Mil-mine and Edward C. Bodman, against Pinkard, who was tenant of Bobert Fisher, the appellant. Afterwards Fisher was admitted to defend instead of Pinkard.
On the trial, plaintiffs relied upon a mortgage executed by Fisher, defendant, dated March 28, 1873, made to secure the payment of four promissory notes of that date, for $1000 each, payable, respectively, in one, two, three and four years from date, to “Milmine & Bodman,” by which Fisher purported to convey the property in question to George Milmine and Edwin C. Bodman, styled Milmine & Bodman, upon condition, to be void on the full payment of the notes.
Defendant objected to the mortgage going in evidence; when plaintiff proved that the mortgage was given to secure a debt of Fisher to the firm of Milmine & Bodman, consisting of 'plaintiffs; and that when the scrivener was about to draw the mortgage, Fisher was asked for the given names of the members of the firm, who were to be named as grantees, and Fisher was understood by the scrivener to reply that Bod-man's name was Edwin C. Bodman, and so the mortgage was drawn, and, after execution, Was put in the hands of the agent of plaintiffs. Thereupon the mortgage was permitted to be read in evidence.
This, appellant insists, was error. We think not. The mortgage was delivered to plaintiffs. The grantees are said in the mortgage to be the persons styled “ Milmine & Bod-man,”—the proof shows that the persons composing that firm were George Milmine and Edward C. Bodman, the plaintiffs. The only inference which can arise is that the conveyance of the land was to the plaintiffs, and invested them with the title, although one of them is called by a wrong name in the mortgage. Board of Education v. Greenbaum, 39 Ill. 609; Pinkard v. Milmine et al. 76 id. 453.
It is also contended that the failure to pay the first note was not such a breach of the condition as necessary to maintain the action. The condition is, “if said Charles Fisher shall pay all said notes * * * as the same shall become due, * * then these presents * * shall become null,” etc., and it is insisted there can be no breach until all the notes fall due. This is a misconstruction of the condition. The mortgagor, to fulfil this condition, must pay each note as it falls due.
The prior mortgage to McPherson, as between these parties, was not such an outstanding title as could defeat this action. Ther.e is nothing in the record showing that the defendant held under McPherson as his tenant. If this were otherwise appellant was estopped to allege that the McPherson title was of force as against plaintiffs.
The judgment must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.