Order entered on or about June 28, 1966, denying plaintiff’s motion to dismiss defendants’ affirmative defense of usury, unanimously reversed, on the law, and the motion granted, with $50 costs and disbursements to plaintiff. Pursuant to the conditional sales contract by which defendant purchased certain dry-cleaning machinery from Arco Machinery Corporation at the stated price of $41,690, defendants paid Arco $16,000 in cash and delivered to it a promissory note for $33,397 payable in 60 monthly installments, with provision for acceleration upon nonpayment of any installment. The $33,397 figure represents the balance of the stated price, $25,690, plus a sum of $7,707, described in the contract as “ carrying charges.” After the note and contract were executed Arco transferred them for value to plaintiff, a company evidently engaged in the business of buying commercial paper growing out of the sale of industrial machinery. When payments on the note had reduced the principal to $20,594.57, defendants defaulted, and plaintiff brought the present action to recover the accelerated unpaid principal, together with the attorney’s fee stipulated in .the note. Pleading usury, defendants point out that the carrying charges were $7,707, whereas “ Six per cent interest on the reducing principal sum resulting from a monthly liquidation over the five-year term of the note totals but $7,110.” The prohibitions against usury are inapplicable, however, to a sale of property on credit (Brooks v. Avery,
