— This is a proceeding in equity to •cancela note and deed of trust and restrain a sale thereunder. The decree in the circuit court was for plaintiff.
Plaintiff became a member of the Missouri Guarantee Savings and Building Association which company afterwards made an assignment and defendant Verity *489was made assignee. Plaintiff borrowed of snob association $400, giving Ms note containing a contract that plaintiff was to pay tbe association on the twentieth of each month, two dollars on his stock; one dollar and .sixty cents for premium and preference in the loan, and two dollars and forty cents interest, making a total of .six dollars per month. The interest charge, together with the charge made for preference of loan, exceeded the rate allowed by law. Therefore, if it be true, as the evidence tended to show, that there was no competitive bidding for preference of loan, the statute on building and loan associations (in force at date of loan) will not protect the loan from the vice of usury. Brown v. Archer, 62 Mo. App. 277, and like cases since decided. And, assuming that plaintiff’s calculations of amounts paid were correct, he would be entitled to a cancellation of the note and deed of trust unless for the following consideration:
Defendant charges, by answer, that after the note aforesaid had been running for a long space of time and many payments had been made, there was a settlement in writing between plaintiff and the assignee aforesaid wherein the note and all payments made by plaintiff and all profits due him were adjusted and a new obligation entered into by plaintiff; thus bringing the case within the rule laid down in State ex rel. v. Stockton, 85 Mo. App. 477; Covey v. Building and Loan Ass’n (not yet reported). In those cases, the. rule is stated and the reason given therefor, that if a borrowing member of a building and loan association who has • taken a loan outside the protection of the statute and thereby infected with usury, afterwards makes a settlement with the association and takes to himself a part of the money earned by his and other contracts, he is bound by it.
But conceding such to be the law, plaintiff charges that the settlement did not contain the contract between the parties and was also obtained by fraud, and is therefore not binding on him. He contends that even though the settlement was not obtained by fraud, yet he had a *490right to show that it did not contain the contract between the parties, and cites Wright v. McPike, 70 Mo. 175, in support of his assertion. That case sustains plaintiff’s position, but it has been lately overruled by the Supreme Court and declared not to state the law. Crim v. Crim, 162 Mo. 544.
There is no evidence whatever to sustain the charge of fraud. The plaintiff, a man who can read and write, signed the paper without reading it. He did, however, take it to his neighbor, a business man of experience, and, on his advice, signed it. Plaintiff can not be allowed to show that the written paper signed by him does not contain the contract. If a party is induced to sign a contract by fraud, he can, of course, avoid it for that reason. It is, however, clear that merely falsely representing to a man in possession of his faculties and able to read, that a writing embodies their verbal understanding, is not the fraud the law means. Johnson v. Ins. Co. (not yet reported). These considerations make it necessary to reverse the judgment.
But something was said at the argument, as well as at the trial, that the new agreement or settlement was never recognized by the parties after it was made. Evidence as to this may develop further on, at another trial, and we will therefore remand the cause. If it be true that a settlement was made but abandoned and never recognized, it could be of no force.
Reversed and remanded.
All concur.