delivered the opinion of the court.
A motion was made by appellee, that was reserved to the hearing, to dismiss the appeal on the ground that it. is an appeal from an interlocutory order, and was not perfected within sixty days from the entry of the order appealed from, as provided by the statute relating to appeals from interlocutory orders. Hurd’s Rev. Stat. 1899, Sec. 52, Ch. 22, entitled Chancery.
We do not think the motion to dismiss the appeal should prevail. The decree of foreclosure and sale settled the amount due from the appellant to the appellee, and was final in respect thereof, and payment was the only matter for controversy that remained. The sale of the premises fully satisfied the decree in favor of the complainant insurance company, but yielded nothing to apply on the amount found to be due to appellee. The right to the possession of the premises, and the rents and profits thereof, during the period of redemption, then fell to the appellant mortgagor. Davis v. Dale, 150 Ill. 239; Bogardus v. Moses, 181 Ill. 554.
The amount due to appellee remained unchanged, and the appointment of a receiver for the rents and profits during that period, and the order that all persons in possession attorn to him, or refusing to so attorn that they surrender possession to him, was, in its nature, final process to collect the money due and satisfy the decree. All ultimate rights between the parties were fully settled by the decree and nothing remained to bed one except to pay the money, or enforce its collection. In whatever way the decree should be enforced, whether through a receiver of the rents and profits, or otherwise, would not, we conceive, make the decree any less a final one. Wright v. Case, 69 Ill. App. 535; People v. Prendergast, 117 Ill. 588.
The cases cited by the appellee do not seem to us to fit the facts of this case. In them all, there appears to be something yet to be done beyond the mere collection of moneys found to be due by final decree. In this case there are no persons except the two parties to this appeal who are or can be concerned in the result of the receivership, and the mere possibility that an accounting may be necessary between the receiver and Cohn at the end of the redemption period, does not, in our opinion, make the order any more interlocutory than might be the case in the instance of any execution to collect a debt. This leawes the merits of the order appointing the receiver to be considered.
It does not seem to be'denied by the appellant that the provisions of the mortgage securing the indebtedness to appellee constitute a sufficient pledge of the rents and profits during the redemption period to justify the appointment of a receiver thereof, if the proper foundation were laid. The original bill being filed by the senior incumbrancer, and the junior incumbrancer being made a party defendant, the right of the latter to participate in the distribution of the surplus after satisfaction of the former seems to be unquestionable, where the latter has duly set forth his claim by answer. A cross-bill was unnecessary unless affirmative relief other than a foreclosure were asked. And so, also, it was not necessary that the decree should specifically provide for a foreclosure of both mortgages, or specifically subject the premises "to sale for the payment of the amounts found due under both mortgages. (Soles v. Sheppard, 99 Ill. 616; Roach v. Glos, 181 Ill. 440; First Rational Bank v. Illinois Steel Co., 174 Ill. 140.) Appellee’s mortgage pledged the rents and profits to him, and after the first mortgage was satisfied by the sale, it would seem to be no more than right and proper that the rents and profits during the redemption period should be applied in satisfaction of the amount due him. The only way this could be done was through a receiver. The receiver was first applied for by the appellee, by petition, at the time he filed his answer, and was refused temporarily—until sale was had—with leave to renew it after final decree and sale. After the sale and in the term at which it was approved, the application was renewed and allowed. This was a timely insistence upon his rights by the appellee, and if, under any authority, a cross-bill was a proper mode of urging relief by way of a receiver, we do not see why the petition did not answer all purposes of a cross-bill for that object.
Upon the merits, the order appealed from must be affirmed.