delivered the opinion off the Court:
After a careful review of the whole case, and after carefully considering the grounds of our former decision, when the casé was previously before this court, we still adhere to the decision then made. We still hold that the deed from appellee to appellant, of the 19th day of February, 1856, must be regarded as a mortgage, or security for a pre-existing indebtedness, as well as for money then advanced, and for contemplated future ádvances. The last trial in the court below has disclosed no evidence which in our judgment should change the conclusion then announced. The only additional evidence on that question is the testimony of the parties themselves, and it is contradictory ; one swearing it was intended only as a security, and the other, that it was an absolute conveyance. In this conflict we can only look to the corroborating evidence in the case to settle the repugnance; and we think it sustains the version given of the transaction by appellee. Holding the deed to be but a security, the court below decided correctly in referring tlie case to-a-master to state the accounts.
When the former decree was reversed, and the cause was remanded, with leave to examine the parties as to the state of their accounts, it was supposed the case would be greatly relieved from the uncertainties and inexplicable confusion that then embarrassed a statement of their accounts. But, when it comes before us on exceptions to the master’s report, we discover, that the case is not by any means relieved of its former difficulties. The parties differ widely in their statements, and parts of their testimony are entirely unreconeilable.
We shall assume, that appellee was indebted on the 19th day of February, 1856, to appellant, in the sum of $4,101.20. We arrive at that conclusion from the fact, that on that day the parties came together, and, upon a settlement, they agreed that sum was due to appellant. Appellee says that it was composed of his bond for $1,771.85, with interest, and his note for $1,400, with accrued interest, which, after deducting payments, left due to appellant but $3,778.54; and the remaining portion" of the sum was made up of usury. Appellant, on the contrary, says that it was composed of the bond, note and other items, due from appellee to him. We fail to flnd any evidence sufficiently definite to change the result at which the parties then arrived, and hence we adopt that sum as the starting point in the statement of the account.
It is urged, that, if the deed is to be regarded as a security, still the account is erroneously stated, in allowing but six instead of ten per cent interest on this sum as well as advances subsequently made. On the 19th of February, 1856, the interest law of 1849 was in force, and consequently governed the transaction. That act declared that the rate of interest should be six per cent except for money loaned, which might, by agreement of the parties, bear ten per cent. The act also provides if a greater rate of interest than six per cent should be reserved when the debt was not for money loaned, the rate, upon establishing that it was not for money loaned, should be six per cent. This being the law then in force, the sums embraced in the bond for $1,771.85, and the note for $1,400 due on that day, must be controlled by this act. Then does it appear that these sums were originally for money loaned. About the note there seems to be no question that it was not, as the parties agree in their statements that it was given for an engine purchased of Cushman & Co. And, as usury is relied upon by appellee, this note can bear but six per cent interest. The master then took the proper view of the note when he computed the interest at that rate.
As it regards the bond for $1,771.85, the evidence does not seem to disclose the consideration for which it was given. Appellant states that he is unable to give the items which composed the amount of that instrument, owing, as he says, to the loss of one of his books of account. But he does not say that it was for loaned money. Nor does he say that he loaned that amount to appellee. Appellee also fails to state what the items were which formed the consideration. The instrument does not state that it was for money loaned. We, in the absence of proof, may safely infer that it was not for the loan of money. And as to this sum appellee also interposed the statute of usury, and says that the amount was the sum found to be due appellant, on a settlement of large transactions running through a series of years. This, appellant admits in his answer, but insists, that he had loaned him large sums of money. He, however, fails to state that such sums form any part of this indebtedness, nor does the evidence establish the fact. Under the allegation of usury in the bill, appellant in his answer admits that the bond was given on a settlement of accounts, and this was responsive to the bill. And in opposition to this admission the law will not presume that it was for money loaned. The bill having charged that the bond was given on a settlement of accounts, and that being admitted by the answer, we must conclude that it could; under the plea of usury, be allowed to appellant in the account, with six per cent interest. And in this the computation of the master was correct.
As to the other items, there seems to have been no agreement to pay the same rate of interest which they were bearing when they were taken up by appellant. But there seems to have been a verbal agreement that appellee should pay fifteen per cent on money subsequently advanced. All advances, therefore, which were made after the agreement, and prior to the passage of the interest law of 1857, could bear but six per cent, even with an express agreement for usurious interest on contracts not for money loaned. The act of 1849 leaves the act of 1845 in force, where a greater rate of interest is reserved on money loaned than the statute authorizes. Under the statute of 1845, a party reserving usurious interest forfeited all of the interest and incurred a penalty besides. On these sums then, at law, he was not entitled to any interest as they were advanced under a usurious contract, but before appellee can redeem he must pay legal interest. And as to the sums advanced after the adoption of the act of 1857, being also under a usurious agreement, the act declares that all of the interest shall be forfeited. But to redeem appellee must pay six per cent, which is legal interest, and this the master has allowed, as he who asks equity must do equity before he can have relief. Snyder v. Griswold, 37 Ill. 216.
We are, for these reasons, of the opinion that the decree of the court below should be affirmed. Decree affirmed.