The opinion of 'the Court was delivered by
These four actions for the foreclosure of four several mortgages were heard together. One of the defense^ made was that the contract was made in *552 New York, and payable there, and was void for usury under the laws of New York. The Circuit Court held that the notes and mortgages were executed in South Carolina; that under the authority of Thornton v. Dean, 19 S. C., 583, the parties could contract with reference to the laws of either State, and that the preponderance of the evidence was that, while the notes were payable in New York, the place of payment was merely a convenience, and that the parties contracted with direct reference to the laws of South Carolina.
The appellants’ exceptions impute error: 1. In holding that the notes and mortgages were made in South Carolina, and in not holding that they were made in New York. 2. In holding that the parties could contract in reference to either the laws of New York or the laws of South Carolina. 3. (Substantially as the first.) 4. In decreeing for foreclosure, when he should have held that the contracts were governed by the laws of New York, and so void for usury.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
