The theory of the bill in this case, which is prosecuted by John A. Lusk and Robert N. Bell against Seaborn T. Smith and others, is that Smith had,
The theory of the bill as to the- manner and the. fact of complainants’ acquisition of Smith’s .equitable title to the land first above described, the northeast .quarter of northwest quarter and the one-third undivided interest in the northwest quarter of the northeast quarter of said section thirty-six is rested upon its averments that Smith mortgaged this land to Henry to secure a debt, that at the suit of other-creditors this mortgage was held to be part of a general assignment.for the benefit..of all the mortgagor’s creditors and decreed to be .and was sold accordingly; and that complainants purchased it .under that decree and sale, and took- a conveyance thereof. It is not questioned but that complainants in this way succeeded to all the right and title,of Smith in this part of the land. As to-the other part — the south half of northeast quarter and the north-half of southeast quarter, .of said section — there is a contention on the part of appeh lants that the mortgage to Butler and others was. not assignable because it' contained certain personal covenants on the part of the mortgagees “to use all proper diligence” to secure certain funds in the registry of, .the chancery and apply the same to the. liability, which, .the mortgage was intended to secure. As to this., however, and as to all the other conditions of the instrument, the bill alleges that said mortgagees fully complied-with all the obligations they assumed in said mortgage, .actually paying the liability the mortgage was executed to indemnify them against; and further -that in the cause in which the creditors of Smith sought to and succeeded .in .having his mortgage to Henry along-with other-conveyances or transfers of property declared a general assignment for creditors, the complainants as assignees of the Butler mortgage and the said Smith were parties, and it was therein decreed that Smith owed these complainants as such holders of that mortgage $1,110.46 which he was adjudged to pay. On these averments our conclusion is that the mortgage was assignable (Code 1886, §1762);
These considerations lead to the conclusion that the bill has equity for the divestiture of the legal title out of the heirs of Griffin, all whom are made parties defendant and the investiture of it in the complainants; but it has no equity and presents no case for the foreclosure of a mortgage since there is no subsisting mortgage between the parties on the land. '
But it does not folloAv that complainants were not entitled to have a receiver appointed. To the contrary we think the receiver was properly appointed. Complainants having a good equitable title to the land, and in equity the right to its immediate possession, are also in equity entitled to its rents, incomes and profits and to stay waste pending the litigation. A part of the relief they here seek and are entitled to, if they prove the case they have stated in their bill, is a decree for possession and for the value of the use and occupation; and on the averments as to the insolvency of the defendants in possession the decree for rents, etc., Avould be entirely abortive without the appointment of a receiver. Again they are entitled to the land as it is at the filing of the bill. Yet if the averments as to the land being chiefly valuable for its timber and as to the defendants denuding it of its timber be true, and they must be taken to be true for present purposes, the appointment of a receiver would be the most, if not the only, effective means of conserving the value of the land pending the litigation. And we
The order appointing the receiver is affirmed.
Affirmed.