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, Einlayson and the other by L- H. Eesperman, payment of which was assumed by Einlayson, who’ had purchased the mortgaged premises. The deféndant 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, 55 S. C., 105. Thereafter a reference was had under said order, the referee holding that the question of usury and the right of Einlayson to plead usury as to the Eesperman mortgage were concluded against plaintiffs by the affirmance of the order of Judge Gary, and applying the penalty of usury under sec. 1390 and the rules regulating settlements between insolvent building and loan associations and borrowing members, as announced in Buist v. Bryan, 44 S. C., 128, reported that nothing was due upon the mortgages, inasmuch as the payments of dues and interest exceeded the sums bor *539 rowed, no interest thereon being recoverable because of usury. The referee also reported, with reference to the Fesperman mortgage, that the result would be the same if only payments of dues and interest thereon by Finlayson be considered, and excluding all payments made by Fesperman previous to the transfer to Finlayson. On exceptions to this report, the Circuit Court, Judge Gage presiding, held (i) that the referee erred in construing the decision of the Supreme Court as concluding the question as to Finlayson’s right to set up usury with reference to the Fesperman mortgage, and (2) that all payments made and accepted as'interest, as distinguished from instalments on stock, should not be credited on the principal debt, for the reason that debtor and creditor had agreed to make a different application, and had in fact made it. From this decree the defendant appeals, and upon the exceptions taken argues two questions or propositions.
1. That the questions considered by Judge Gage were res judicata by the former decision in this case, under the issues as then presented.
2. That the rule announced in Butler v. Butler, 62 S. C., 165, does not apply in the case of a suit involving a settlement between an insolvent building and loan association and a borrowing member.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed and the complaint is dismissed.
