This is a proceeding in equity seeking to cancel a note and deed of trust securing the same and to restrain a sale under the deed of trust. The ground relied upon by plaintiff is that on the 22d day of May, 1900, she only owed $286 on the loan, when proper credits, including usurious payments, were allowed, and she tendered that amount. Defendant claimed that there was due on that date $341.60, and refused the tender. The result in the trial court was for defendant.
It appears that, in 1894, Mrs. Endicott was a member of the defendant association and borrowed of it $400. At that time the association was governed by the general statutes of 1889 relating to building and loan associations. That statute- required competitive bidding in open meeting for premium for loans in order to protect them from usury. It was not had in making this loan and under repeated rulings of the appellate courts of the State the loan was usurious and the illegal payments could, ordinarily, have been forced as credits on the note. Brown v. Archer, 62 Mo. App. 277.
But Mrs. Endicott, in November, 1897, settled and adjusted that loan and made a new loan (the one in controversy) for $400. In this settlement she accepted all proper credits in the association which, being a mutual organization, included the profits to which, as a *680shareholder, she was entitled. The case, so far as concerns the first loan, is therefore governed by those of State ex rel. v. Stockton, 85 Mo. App. 477, and the recent case of Cover v. B. & L. Ass’n, 93 Mo. App. 302. Mrs. Endicott made various payments under the new loan until in 1899, when she sold to plaintiff the land in controversy and plaintiff succeeded her in membership in the association. Plaintiff then continued payments until in 1900, when a difference of $55.60, in what was considered due, arose and plaintiff made the tender as above stated.
This proceeding seems to have originated as though the controversy was governed by the statute of 1889, chapter 42, article 9. Under that statute, as above stated, and has been many times decided, organizations like defendant could receive interest and premium for privilege of the loans, which, together, would go beyond the rate of interest permitted by law in ordinary contracts. Te secure such extraordinary privilege it was necessary to make the loan on a premium determined by open competition of bidders. But in 1895, two years before the present loan was made, the Legislature saw fit to malm very material changes in the former statute, and that change has been carried forward into the revision of 1899, chapter 12, article 10. (It was shown without objection that defendant was acting under this statute.) It is not for the courts to pass upon the policy of this change, much less to refuse to obey it. By this last statute loans can be made at a premium named in a by-law without competitive bids; in other words, on what is termed a. fixed premium. In the Cover case, above referred to, we decided that though a premium thus fixed, added to the regular interest charged made a rate greater than the highest rate allowed by law in ordinary contracts, it was protected by the statute, provided only, that it was not “unreasonable and extortionate. ’ ’ Section 1364.
*681But we are asked to qualify, or rather to wholly change our construction of the statute in the Cover case. It is urged upon us with seeming earnestness, that the statute did not intend to authorize these associations to receive sums which would in any case aggregate above the highest rate of interest in ordinary contracts. Such construction would be in the face of the express words of the statute (section 1364) wherein it is declared that no premium, fines or interest, or interest on such premiums charged as provided in “this article” shall be considered usurious; and the same may be collected as any other ordinary debt: Provided, that the statute should not be construed as protecting an unreasonable, extortionate and oppressive charge. The statute thus says, in terms, that usury may be charged, but that it must not be so great usury as to become extortionate, unreasonable and unconscionable.
In the Cover case we held that a rate of four per cent above the rate permitted by law was not extortionate, considering the statute and the mutual, character of the association. What would be an extortionate and unconscionable rate of usury has been left open by the statute, with power of “investigation and correction by the courts.” The effect of the statute as to building and loan associations is to except them out of the general statute as to usury. And it is not the only instance to be found; thus, as to chattel mortgages, see section 1934; and as to pawnbrokers, see section 8858; Hilgert v. Levin, 72 Mo. App. 48.
No reason has been made to appear which would authorize us to interfere with the judgment and it is consequently affirmed.
All concur.