Each of the notes declared on contains a recital that it is given in part payment for a certain lot of land described in it, purchased on the day of its date by the defendant from the Bluffton Land, Ore, and Furnace Company. By amendment of the writ, this corporation has become sole plaintiff in the case. On the same day as the making of the note, and as a part of the same transaction, a bond was given to the defendant by this corporation, which recited the execution of the note
In the present case, this corporation, about six months after making the sale to the defendant, executed a mortgage covering the same land to secure the sum of $100,000. This mortgage was in full force when the notes became due, and was foreclosed in 1896, nearly five years afterwards. The corporation became insolvent and passed into the hands of a receiver in February, 1895. In December, 1895, the receiver sold the equity of redemption in the land covered by the mortgage, and the persons who bought it afterwards became purchasers at the foreclosure sale. Although there was a provision in the mortgage for the release by the mortgagee of lots sold by the mortgagor upon payment of an agreed price, the mortgagor never obtained any release of the lots in question. Its insolvency occurred long before the commencement of this suit, and then, if not before, it was impossible for it to convey or cause to be conveyed the land sold to the defendant for which the notes were given.
The only difference between this case and Fort Payne Coal & Iron Co. v. Webster, ubi supra, is that in this case the condition of the bond was to cause to be made or to make a good title, while in the other the agreement was to convey, no reference
Judgment affirmed.