8 Mass. 135 | Mass. | 1811
The action being continued nisi for the decision of the whole Court, their opinion was delivered to the following effect, at an adjournment of the last March term in Suffolk, Parsons, C. J., Sewall and Parker, Justices, being present:
By the statute of 1783, c. 55, for the restraining the taking of excessive usury, it is enacted that all contracts and assurances whatsoever, made for the payment of any principal or money lent, upon or for usury, whereupon or whereby there shall be reserved or taken above the rate of six pounds in the hundred, shall be utterly void.
*In the case at bar, besides the,legal interest of six per cent, per annum, reserved in the note, there was paid another sum, equal to three per cent, of the principal. There was. then, more than legal interest reserved by the note, and it thus became usurious and void by the statute. The case of Fisher qui tam vs. Beasley
Doug. 235.