If the exception taken to the decree of the court- below by. the complainant be sustained, it will be unnecessary to notice those taken by the respondents. ;
Was the contract of Brice and Birkey with Ruffner, which shows the consideration of the mortgage and notes assigned to the complainants, usurious?
The statute of Indiana declares, that “the rate of interest upon the loan or for the forbearance of any money, &c., shall be at the rate of six” per cent.; but “if a greater rate of interest shall be contracted for, received, or reserved, the contract shall not, therefore, be void;” “the plaintiff shall recover only his principal, without interest,” and the “defendant shall recover costs.”
To constitute usury, there must either be a loan and a taking .of usurious interest, or the taking of more than legal interest for the forbearance of a debt or sum of money due. • This statute does not profess to enlarge the commonJ^w definition of the term, while it aims to include the common devices"' resorted to by usurers to evade its penalties.'
The original contract by which a debt is created may be for the purchase and sale of land, and it will be, nevertheless, contrary to the statute for the vendor to demand or receive more than legal interest for the forbearance of such debt, as in the case of Crawford vs. Johnson, (11 Indiana Reports, 258,) where separate notes were taken for two per cent, interest, in addition to the legal interest, on the sum due for the purchase money of land.
But it is manifest that-if A propose to sell to B á tract of land for $10,000 in cash, or for $20,000 payable in ten annual
Does this case come within this category ? We are of opinion that it does. '
The mortgage and-notes in question were given in execution of a contract between the parties; dated the 20th of April,, 1855. This coutract is in writing, and signed by the parties. It would be tedious and unprofitable to enumerate its various covenants; but the chief subject of it is a sale of land by Brice and Birkey to .Ruffner for the sum of $38,000, in ten annual instalments, the sale to include, also, certain personal property. There is no proof that the recitals of this contract are untrue, or that the consideration of the notes and mortgage in question was other than is there stated. These parties had formed a partnership in February, 1854, “for dealing in land) farming,” &e., &e. Brice and Birkey advanced money, and had each an interest of one-third in the lands whose title was in the name of Ruffner. In October -of the same year this partnership was dissolved, and Ruffner afterwards agreed ■to pay certain sums of money to the other parties for a release of their interest in the land, and gave them his obligations, Afterwards, in February, 1855, in order to extinguish these obligations, which he was unable to meet, he agreed to.reconvey to Brice and Birkey certain tracts of the land. In the spring of. 1855 they made arrangements to take possession of these lands, with their tenants, stock, farming utensils, &c., &c. Ruffner then refused to let them have possession. Finding they could not obtain possession without great and ruinous delay,
Now the hearsay testimony of witnesses, who relate what they “ understood ” from conversations with the parties, or may have misunderstood to be the contract between them, and their inference, because the parties had a' “settlement,” that therefore the first terms proposed, but not accepted, amounted to .the ascertainment of a debt due, cannot be received to contradict the written contract of the parties and the testimony of witnesses cognizant of the whole antecedent history of the transaction. Nor is there any irreconcilable discrepancy between their impressions or “ understandings,” and the written agreements and other testimony. They construed the “ settle ment” of the difficulties, which had long existed between the parties, to mean a balance of accounts of money due from one party to the other, and consequently inferred that the -increased amount of the securities'was for usurious interest for the forbearance óf its payment. " This was but the usual error-of arriving at a false conclusion by the'úse of equivoeal or ambiguous terms.
Decree of the Circuit Court reversed, and record remitted, with directions to proceed in conformity to the opinion of this court.
