On the call of the case the defendant moved to continue, on the ground that the plaintiff had been put into the hands of a receiver, who was authorized to intervene in the present suit, supporting the same by certified copies of the order of the circuit courts of the United States in Alabama and Georgia. The defendant, by a plea in abatement, or motion to make parties, might have raised the question as to whether the case could be prosecuted in the name of the plaintiff, or in its name for the use of the receiver, or by the receiver alone. But this could not be done by a motion to continue. The appointment of the receiver did not abate the suit. Branch v. Augusta Glass Works, 95 Ga. 579. There need be no danger of paying to the wrong party. According to Griffin v. Mutual Life Insurance Co., 119 Ga. 664, the defendant by appropriate proceeding may obtain a proper receipt from the one entitled to the money. But here the evidence as to the appointment of a receiver was not offered on the trial, and there is therefore nothing properly in the record to indicate that the company is not in a position to receive and control its own "funds, or to prosecute suits in its own name.
The former record in this case (115 Ga. 400) raised the question as to the validity of the “ fully. paid,” “prepaid,” and “installment ” stock. The verdict then was for the plaintiff, and, except in the admission of interrogatories improperly executed, this court held that “ the principles of law involved in this case have been ruled in favor of the company, and no error appears to have been committed by the trial judge.” The same issue as to the “prepaid” and “installment” stock was again presented by an amended plea, more elaborate in detail but involving the same legal principle. It is almost a case for the application of the doctrine of the “law of the case” or “res ad judicata.’ But, as the two pleas are not identical, we will deal with the errors assigned. The note sued on is dated at Huntsville, Alabama, is made there payable, and according to its terms it is to be construed as an Alabama contract. The plea nowhere alleges that the contract was usurious according to the laws of that State; the record contains no copy of its statute concerning interest and usury; though it may be proper to say that a contract identical in form with that sued on has been held to be valid, in Sou. B. & L. Assn. v. Ector, *94498 Fed. 171. Compare Smith v. Sou. B. & L. Assn., 111 Ga. 811. On general principles there would be no presumption that the parties had made an illegal contract, but rather that the transaction was valid according to the foreign law by which it was to be governed.. Craven v. Bates, 96 Ga. 80; Pomeroy v. Ainsworth, 22 Barb. 120. Nor would the result-be different on the presumption that the common law prevails in Alabama; for by it the rate of interest on money was not limited. Smith v. Munsey Bank, 29 Ind. 158; White v. Friedlander, 35 Ark. 55; Union Bk. v. Dottenheim, 107 Ga. 609. There might be an extreme case in which a contract made and to be performed in a foreign State was on its face clearly usurious according to the law of the forum, and where the court, in aid of the State’s public policy, might hold that, in the absence of proof of what was the foreign statute, it would presume that the laws of the foreign State were similar to those of the forum on the subject of usury. Such a ruling is suggested in Hubble v. Morristown Co., 95 Tenn. 585 (3); Leake v. Bergen, 27 N. J. Eq. 360; City Bank v. Bidwell, 29 Barb. 332. But there is no room for the application of any such principle here, because the contract on its face was with a building and loan association, and presumptively valid under the laws of Alabama as well as of Georgia. The defendant, however, seeks to attack this apparent validity by pleading that the plaintiff was not a building and loan association, inasmuch as it issued different classes of stock under which there was inequality of liabilities and profits. The plea was properly stricken. In the first place it failed to aver that this inequality existed at the time of the making of the contract. For, if the company was doing a building and loan business when the contract was made, a new scheme, and the issuance of various classes of stock thereafter, might give the defendant as a stockholder the right on an accounting’to the profits to which he was entitled according to the original plan. But subsequent action by the corporation would not have the effect of converting a non-usurious into a usurious contract.
Mutual participation in profits and losses is undoubtedly the basic principle on which contracts between this class of associations and its members have been saved from the consequences attaching to other usurious loans. While there has been some doubt expressed as to the right to issue paid-up or preferential-*945stock, still the authorities, in the main, tend to sustain the legality thereof, provided the scheme is not shown to be oppressive to one class and unduly advantageous to another. Thompson on Building Associations, §§ 124-133. They recognize that the demand for money by the members may be so great as to make it necessary, by borrowing, or selling paid-up stock, to- put the company in funds to lend to those who prefer to pay in monthly installments, and that such inequality in the amount contributed may entitle the paid-up stockholder to a preference on dissolution, and to fixed dividends while the company is a going concern. Besides, the defendant’s plea does not aver that the issuance of different classes of stock was in violation of the charter, or of the statutes of Alabama; nor does it show the money value of the difference, nor whether the amount of profits accruing to the “paid-up” stock was relatively greater than that on installment stock. Certainly there was nothing to indicate such a want of equality as to destroy the company’s character as a building and loan association, and convert its transactions into a class like those between ordinary debtor and creditor. The rights of members do not have to be identical, unless the conditions are identical. Bosworth v. Sumter Beal Estate Co., 100 Ga. 60. If the issuance of' this paid-up stock was without authority, that would not prevent the corporation from still existing as a building and loan association, nor would it affect its contract obligations, unless the member showed that the scheme was such as to destroy the corporation’s character as a building and loan association. Smith v. Sou. B. & L. Assn., 111 Ga. 811 (3), See also Burns v. Equitable B. & L. Assn., 108 Ga. 183 (2), where there was common stock and coupon stock.
A mere name can not be used as a cloak under which the law' against usury can be evaded. If the plaintiff is not a building and loan association in fact, it can not, by calling itself such, acquire the privilege of charging more than the lawful rate of interest. But its name prima facie imports that it is such. Smith v. Southern B. & L. A., 111 Ga. 811. The burden was on the de-, fendant to meet this presumption. , .The plea does not nega-* tive the idea that it was chartered as such, nor .does it aver that the defendant did not recéive the benefits to which he was entitled as a member of such during the years he was not in default. *946He and all the other members contracted to pay a high rate of interest, but they also contracted to receive their share of these very payments. If through misfortune or mismanagement the association went into the hands of a receiver, that did not relate back so as to invalidate what was a legal contract when made.
There was no motion for a new trial, but a direct bill of exceptions in which the evidence, objections to evidence, colloquies between counsel, arguments to the court, and his rulings thereon are set out. In addition to the points hereinbefore discussed, the exceptions relate mainly to the admission of testimony by the officers of the company, over the defendant’s objection that this evidence was as to cash, items of payments, and facts knowledge of which must necessarily have been derived from the books, and that the witnesses could not testify from the ledger, but only from the books of original entry. • On the face of the bond the plaintiff promised to pay $2,500 with five per cent, interest and five per cent, premium from July 24, 1895. The other primary evidence, in the shape of the deed, the note, the stock-scrip, and the bylaws, entitled the plaintiff to principal, interest, premiums, and, on default, to fines and attorney’s fees. The defendant’s original answer admitted the date of his default. On this primary evidence therefore the plaintiff was entitled to a verdict, and the burden was on the defendant to make his own proof as to the credits to which he was entitled. It is true that the plaintiff attempted unnecessarily to make this proof for the defendant by the cashier and other officers. If it was secondary, it was harmless, because it caused a reduction in the amount which the plaintiff would otherwise have been entitled to recover. If we concede that the testimony would have been incompetent to debit the defendant, here it was helpful and not harmful, in that it went to establish a credit.
Judgment affirmed.
All the Justices concur.