41 S.E. 779 | S.C. | 1902
April 16, 1902. The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Plaintiffs instituted this suit to foreclose two real estate mortgages executed to the Carolina Interstate Building and Loan Association, one by the defendant, Finlayson and the other by L.H. Fesperman, payment of which was assumed by Finlayson, who had purchased the mortgaged premises. The defendant plead usury. The cause was first heard before Judge Ernest Gary, who made decree sustaining the plea of usury and ordering a reference to S.W.G. Shipp, Esq., to compute the amount due on the bonds and mortgages set forth in the complaint, under sec. 1390 Revised Statutes. This judgment, on appeal therefrom, was affirmed by this Court,
1. That the questions considered by Judge Gage were resjudicata by the former decision in this case, under the issues as then presented.
2. That the rule announced in Butler v. Butler,
We sustain the first proposition, in so far as it relates to the Fesperman mortgage, Judge Gary having sustained the plea of usury made as to both mortgages, and ordered a reference to compute the amount due under sec. 1390, and that judgment having been affirmed by this Court, all issues involving the right of Finlayson to plead usury as to the Fesperman mortgage was necessarily concluded. Plaintiff's ninth exception to the order of Judge Gary claimed specifically that he erred in holding that Finlayson could plead usury against the Fesperman bond and mortgage, and this Court, speaking through Mr. Justice Pope, whose view in this regard was concurred in by the other members of the Court, dissenting on other grounds, *540 said, "While Mr. Finlayson, as the assignee of Fesperman, could not hold the Carolina Interstate c. Association to the penalties for usury — because the plea of usury has been held by the Courts of this State as a personal privilege — still, when he comes to settle with the association on a contract which he has made with such association, he can invoke the defense, as a protection, as far as it extends, to the payments made by himself." This language, in whatever way it may be construed, could not alter the legal effect of the judgment affirming the order of Judge Gary, in view of the exception made thereto; for if such exception had been sustained, a judgment of affirmance could not have been properly made. Furthermore, this particular matter loses all practical importance, for the referee has found that rejecting all payments made by Fesperman and considering only the payments made by Finlayson, the result would be the same, viz: that the payments of dues and interest exceeded the principal debt.
Before considering whether the matter of crediting the principal debt with payments alleged to have been made and accepted as interest was adjudicated in the former appeal, we will notice the second proposition. The case of Buist v. Bryan,
The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed and the complaint is dismissed.