delivered the opinion of the court.
The Ranck Publishing Company, in February, 1894, sold to the plaintiffs in error, defendants below, the effects, property and good will of a periodical, known as “ Milling,” they agreeing to continue the publication of said magazine and to pay therefor fifteen per cent of the gross receipts of such publication, quarterly, until such payments aggregated the sum of $3,000, the title of the property so sold to remain in the vendor until full payment had been made, the vendee having the right to pay said $3,000 at any time, and thereupon receive a bill of sale.
The property was delivered to the vendees and they . entered upon and continued the publication of the magazine until the fall of 1896, when publication was, by them, finally suspended.
Thereafter the vendor brought suit, and admitting having, during the publication, received from the vendees $741.24, recovered, in February, 1900, a judgment for $2,258.76, being the balance of the $3,000, to be paid out of the gross receipts.
Plaintiff in error insists that as the title, under the terms of the contract, had not passed at the bringing of the suit, the sale was conditional, and that the vendor can not recover the purchase price. The sale was absolute; that is, the vendees had an absolute right to pay at any time or to pay fifteen per cent of the gross receipts until such payments amounted to $3,000, and thus entitle themselves not only to possession and use, which they already had, but to absolute title. That they had not absolute title is their own fault; in no wise that of the vendor.
By refusing to go on with the publication, as .they agreed, they made it impossible that there should be gross receipts, fifteen per cent of which will amount to the purchase price. They thus gave to the vendor a present right of action to recover the amount of the purchase price remaining the,n unpaid. Kadish v. Young, 108 Ill. 170; Fox v. Kitton, 19 Ill. 519; Chamber of Commerce v. Sollitt, 43 Ill. 519; Lee v. Pennington, 7 Ill. App. 247; Lyon v. Culbertson, 83 Ill. 33-49; Roebling Sons Co. v. Lock Stitch Fence Co., 28 Ill. App. 184-188; Broom’s Legal Maxims, marginal paging, 250-279.
When one party to a contract, to be performed in the future, refuses to go on with his undertaking, the question of whether the other party may bring suit before the period for performance has arrived has elicited much discussion and divergence of opinion; as see Burtis v. Thompson, 42 N. Y. 246; Hollaway v. Griffith, 32 Iowa, 409; Freer v. Denton, 61 N. Y. 492; James v. Adams, 16 W. Va. 245; Daniels v. Newton, 114 Mass. 530; U. S. v. Behan, 110 U. S. 339; Dingley v. Oler, 117 U. S. 490-503; Johnstone v. Milling, 16 Q. B. Div. 460; Hochster v. De la Tour, 2 E. & B. 678; Roper v. Johnson, Law Rep. 8 C. P.
The instruction of the court that if the jury found that although the publication had gone on there would have been no more gross receipts, then under such finding the plaintiff could not recover, was certainly as favorable as the vendees could have expected. The judgment of the Superior Court is affirmed.