delivered the opinion of the court i
As this is a suit in equity to foreclose a lien against real estate, the rights of the parties are governed by the law as administered in courts of equity and not by the rules that would obtain if an action at law had been begun to procure a judgment upon the note. This .court held in Olds v. Cummings, 31 Ill. 188, that mortgages and trust deeds not being assignable at law, the assignee takes them subject to the same defenses that existed between the original parties. In that case it was said (p. 191) : “He who buys that which is not assignable at law, relying upon a court of chancery to protect and enforce his rights, takes it subject to all infirmities to which it is liable in the hands of the assignor; and the reason is, that equity will not lend itself to déprive a party of a right which the law has secured him, if such right is intrinsically just of itself.” In Buehler v. McCormick, 169 Ill. 269, it was said (p. 275) : “The purchaser knows from the papers who the mortgagor is, and may, by notice and inquiry, protect himself in making the purchase much more readily than the mortgagor may, if for any reason he is unable to obtain at once the cancellation and return of his obligations. The assignee is charged with knowledge of the law that a mortgage is assignable only in equity and subject to the equities between the original parties to it, and he cannot relieve himself from the consequences of his own negligence by simply showing that the mortgagor failed to take up the note and mortgage when he paid the debt to the then legal holder.” The law as announced in Olds v. Cummings, supra, has been adhered to and applied in every subsequent case which has come before this court where the .same questions were involved, and there is nothing shown by the evidence in this case that could take it out of the operation of or malee inapplicable the law announced in Olds v. Cummings, and subsequent cases.
The bill here was filed by appellant before the maturity of the principal indebtedness. It was filed on the theory that there had been a default in the payment of interest, and appellant elected to declare the principal sum due and to foreclose the lien on account of such default. Both the note and trust deed contained a provision that if default should be made for thirty days in the payment of any installment of interest after it became due, then the legal holder of the note might elect to treat the principal sum, together with accrued interest, due and payable. If appellee was 'not in default in the payment of interest then appellant’s bill was prematurely filed and the Appellate Court properly reversed the decree of the circuit court and directed the dismissal of the bill.
In arriving at the amount due from appellee to Howe on the note at the time it was assigned to appellant the master charged the appellee with $734 interest paid by Howe to the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company, $830.67 taxes paid, $7 insurance, $22.25 title expenses and $200 commissions on the $3000 loan. This made a total of $1793.92, from which the master deducted $130 for rents collected by Howe before he assigned the note to the appellant, leaving $1663.92 as the net amount of money expended by Howe for appellee for which the $3000 note and trust deed were given. To this amount the master added $109.23 as interest, $5 for judgment search and $100 for solicitor’s fees, making a total of $1878.15 for which the court entered a decree. No credit was allowed appellee on account of the $710 rents collected by Howe after the assignment of the note and trust deed to appellant. The Appellate Court held this $710, less three per cent commission Howe was entitled to for collecting it, must be applied as a payment on the mortgage indebtedness. Upon this question we agree with and adopt the views of the Appellate Court as expressed in its opinion in the following language:
“The evidence shows that no repairs became necessary or were made and no subsequent taxes accrued for Howe to pay; that between the date of the assignment and February 2, 1906,—the date the appellee gave notice of the assignment to appellant,—Howe collected rents due from the appellant’s tenants aggregating $710, which, under the agreement between appellant and Howe, should be applied in payment of interest on the note and mortgage held by appellee and in reduction of the principal indebtedness secured thereby. Under the above authorities, and Towner v. McClelland, 110 Ill. 542, Napieralski v.. Simon, 198 id. 384, and cases there cited, we are of the opinion that the rents so collected by Howe before appellee gave notice of the assignment to appellant must in equity be applied in payment pro tanto of the indebtedness secured by the note and trust deed, less the commission thereon of $3.90, reducing it by the amount of $706.10, for the obvious reason that if appellee had given appellant notice of the assignment when it was made, appellant could have protected herself from the fraud of Howe in collecting the rents and not applying them on the note. By keeping silent and permitting appellant to believe that Howe was still the owner of her note and trust deed appellee enabled Howe to continue collecting the rents and to apply them to his own use, in violation of his agreement with appellant. Under the agreement between appellant and Flowe the interest due on January 1, 1906, and July 1, 1906, should have been paid by Howe out of the rents collected before the balance of the money collected by him was applied in reduction of the principal indebtedness. The money collected must be so applied. It follows from such application of the money that appellant was not in default in the payment of interest when the bill in this case was filed.”
The decisions cited herein, and many others to the same effect, are too familiar to the profession to justify extended comment upon them or quotations from them. They abundantly sustain the proposition that where a mortgage has been assigned, and the mortgagor, without any negligence on his part and without notice of the assignment so made, pays the payee, who has parted with the note, that will discharge the mortgage, and in a suit to foreclose such payment may be set up in bar of a decree for its foreclosure. We are unable to see upon what principle appellee could be denied the right to have the rents paid Howe before she was notified he had sold and assigned the note and mortgage, treated as a payment pro tanto upon the mortgage. If she was not entitled to have any of said sum applied as a credit upon the principal of the note before its maturity she was entitled to have it applied to the payment of interest falling due, and if Howe had retained the note and mortgage he could not have maintained the bill to have it foreclosed for the non-payment of interest, for he had received from' appellee, through her tenants, more than a sufficient sum to pay all interest that had accrued or would accrue on the note up'to the time of its maturity. Appellant, under the authorities cited, and for the reasons in them stated, occupied no better position than Howe himself.
Some attempt is made by appellant to show that Howe negotiated the note and trust deed as the agent of appellee, and that therefore the doctrine of Olds v. Cummings, and subsequent cases, does not apply. We think this contention wholly without merit, as it is contrary to the evidence in this case.
A considerable portion of appellant’s brief is devoted to a discussion of what occurred between the parties in their efforts to effect a settlement after appellee received notice that appellant owned the note and trust deed. We have considered this branch of the case and read the evidence offered upon it, but there was nothing in anything done by the parties during those negotiations that would in anywise alter the rights of the parties in this litigation or justify a different judgment from that rendered by the Appellate Court.
The judgment of the Appellate Court is therefore affiimed.
Judgment affirmed.