By the Court.
Lumpkin, J.delivering the opinion.
Our investigation in this case, will be restricted to the single inquiry, whether the verdict of the Jury was contrary to evidence ? In other words, whether upon any hypothesis consistent with the proof, the finding of the Jury can be sustained?
In order to ascertain this satisfactorily, it becomes necessary to settle several important points of law ilii^iltoflffiuiiil^iL ij
[1.] What is the proper construction " thorizing discoveries at Common Law ? The Act providestmt the adverse party shall be compelled at tories on his oath or affirmation, and in solemn form; and tlfe answers when made and filed shall be the cause, u in the same manner and to tn^ame purogggííand extent, and upon the same condition in all respect^as if the same had been procured upon a bill in Chancery for discovery, but no further or otherwise.” New Digest, 465, 466.
Under this Statute, it is contended that before the answers of the plaintiff to the interrogatories can be read by the defendant, in support of his plea of usury, he must offer to pay the principal and legal interest due by him — indeed, that he impliedly consents to do this, by resorting to the conscience of the adverse party for proof.
We fully recognize the doctrine in Chancery, that whenever a borrower files his bill in Equity, to be relieved against a usurious contract, the Court refuses relief, except upon the terms of his paying up the principal sum due, and legal interest. It is *392based upon that corner-stone principle of the Court of Chancery, that he who asks equity must do equity, and in that forum it is rigorously required in all cases, notwithstanding the law may have positively declared the contract void. 1 Fon. b. 1, ch. 1, §3. (h.) 5 Johns. Ch. Rep. 137. 4 Band. 415.
[2.] It will be observed, however, that this exaction is only made where relief is sought from the illicit contract, and that it is made, whether the applicant had or had not the benefit of his adversary’s answer.
[3.] For, although he could prove the usury, by aliunde testimony, and without a discovery from the lender, still he is not entitled to relif, except upon the terms stated. It is a misapprehension, therefore, to suppose that the condition of paying up the money lent with lawful interest, was a reward to the lender for making the discovery. It was a condition to the relif sought, and not to the discovery. See Bovauquet vs. Dashwood, Cas. Temp. Talbot, 38. Brownsund vs. Edwards, 2 Ves. jun. 243, 249. Scott vs. Nesbitt, 14 Wes. 442. Fanning vs. Dunham, 5 Johns. Ch. Rep. 122.
We take the Act according to its obvious and literal meaning ; and the Legislature, neither in this Statute nor that passed previously, in 1842, (New Digest, 601,) compelling the plaintiff to discover usury on oath, having made, the payment of the money lent with lawful interest, a condition to the reading of the evidence, we do not feel at liberty to superadd it.
It will be readily perceived how much the result in this case, depends upon our opinion upon this point.
[4.] One of the main issues in this controversy is, whether the first note of f1000, with the usurious interest thereon, entered into and constituted a part of the consideration of the note sued on ? The question is distinctly and repeatedly asked in the interrogatories, and as fully and explicitly answered in the negative. Zeigler swears that this first loan, with the interest thereon, was paid off and discharged in January, 1842, by the two negroes sold to him by Scott, and the note which he let him have on Colbert; and that the first-note had no connexion what*393ever with that which is the foundation of the present action, and there is not a particle of proof contradicting this statement.
Now the Statute declares, that the answers to the interrogatories are to be evidence “ to the same extent in all respects as if the same bad been procured upon a bill in Chancery for discovery.” But an answer in Equity is conclusive, when responsive to the bill, unless contradicted by two witnesses or one witness and circumstances.
If, then, the Jury arrived at the result which they did, by adding this first debt of $1000 to the last loan of $2000, and deducting from the aggregate the $2000 paid in property and paper, and the $396 credited on the last note of $2498 — and such is not unlikely the fact — then the verdict is contrary to the evidence and ought to be set aside; for the Jury had no right to assume, in face of the proof, that any portion of the $1000 note was left unextinguished, by the settlement between the parties, in January, 1842.
With these principles adjusted, how stands the case ? The plaintiff lent the defendant $1000 in 1838, which compounded annually, at 16 per cent, amounted to $1863 77, in January, 1842, the date of the settlement. The payment of two thousand dollars, made at that time, discharged this debt, and left a balance of $136 23, to go to the $2000 loaned in March, 1840. This balance, and the $396 endorsed upon the note in suit, is all, according to the proof, that should be deducted from the $2000 in the way of payments. It is true that the plaintiff admits that in addition to these, some small sums were received, the amount of which he cannot recollect, and they may be well set off by the blacksmith’s work done, by him for the defendant; add the two items together, then, of $396 and $136 23, making $532 23, and subtract the aggregate from the $2000, and the verdict should have been for $1467 73, instead of $630 75.
[5.] But the defendant pleaded, among other things, as a set-off to the plaintiff’s demand, the usury paid on the first note, which amounted, as we have seen, to $431 88|-. Whether the Statute of Limitations was replied to this plea, the record does not disclose. The final payment of usury on the first note *394was made in January, 1842, and the action was not brought until January, 1849, just seven years thereafter.
This affords another striking illustration of the defect in our Judiciary Act, which sends parties to the Jury upon the written declaration and answer, all the subsequent pleadings being conducted orally. But take the most favorable view of the case for the defendant, namely, that the Statute was not replied in bar of the set-off, for usurious payments, and grant that the Jury allowed the full amount of the usury paid, $631 88J, still the verdict should have been for $1035 84J; and in all these' estimates, I have assumed that the Colbert note amounted to $700, as testified to by Colbert himself, and not $600, as stated by the plaintiff in his answers.
Of course, I only allow the defendant to recover back, in his plea of set-off, the usurious gain; for it is well settled, both in England and in this country, that if a borrower pays up the amount of his usurious debt to the lender, and afterwards sues to recover it back, in an action for money had and received, he can only recover the usurious excess, since ex osquo et lino, he ought not to recover back the money really advanced, and the legal interest thereon. 1 T. R. 153. Douglass, 697, in notes. 2 Johns. Ch. R. 191. 5 Johns. Ch. R. 146. 6 Johns. Ch. R. 95. 1 Leigh, 147.
[7.] In answer to the 3d interrogatory, the plaintiff sets up an agreement or understanding, between the defendant and himself, to the effect that the excess of $200 in the price which he claims to have paid for the two negroes, was to extinguish all the usury which he had extorted. But this portion of the answer is not elicited by the question propounded, and as the Act of 1847 only allows the answer to be evidence “ to the same extent as if obtained in Chancery, but no further or otherwise,” we hold that it was inadmissible for the purpose of setting up this independent contract.
In addition to the two sums of $1000 and $2000 loaned to the defendant, the plaintiff let him have cotton on the 11th of June, 1840, valued at $668 44, which the plaintiff contends is still unpaid, and made up a part of the present large note; but *395we think the Jury were warranted in finding that this indebtedness was totally extinguished. The plaintiff, among other things, was asked if he ever loaned the defendant any cotton ? He denied expressly that he ever did. The defendant, on the trial, tendered in evidence a paper given by his intestate to Zeigler, on the same day on which the cotton note was dated, wherein Scott promised on or before the 1st day of December next thereafter, to deliver to plaintiff in Macon, 8, 355J pounds of ginned cotton for value received of him, and upon the back of this receipt was an acknowledgement by the plaintiff, dated 4th February, (the year left blank,) that he had received 8000 lbs. of cotton. This writing, as well as the note, having been found in the possession of Scott, shows that he had discharged them both; and taking all the circumstances together, particularly the denial of the plaintiff that he had ever loaned Scott any cotton, we think that the Jury had a right to infer that this cotton constituted the consideration of the note, and that when it was delivered in Macon, the note as well as the receipt, were extinguished ; that they both related to one and the same transaction.
[8.] Under the views which we have presented of the case, both upon the law and the facts, justice would seem to require that it should be remanded for another hearing. Accordingly, it is so ordered.