Action by Mullís against the appellants,upon a promissory note made by the latter to the former.
The defendants answered separately:
First. — Usury, setting out the circumstances, and going to the entire note.
Second. — Want of consideration.
The plaintiff replied to the first paragraphs of the several answers, that, before that time, to wit, &c., the defendants had filed a bill in chancery in the Orange Circuit Court, against the plaintiff herein, setting up the same matters in their bill as are now alleged in the first paragraphs- of the answers, praying that the- plaintiff herein be enjoined from the collection of said note; and that upon the hearing of the *20cause, at the September term of the Court, 1853, it was decreed that the plaintiff herein be perpetually enjoined from attempting in any way to enforce the collection of the note, except as to the sum of $296.25, with the interest thereon from January 18, 1845, the date of the note.
Issue was taken on the second paragraphs of the several answers.
Maxwell afterward withdrew his answer. The issues' were tried by a jury. Verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, for a sum equal to $296.25, and interest thereon from the date of the note.
In the brief of counsel for the appellants, a point is made upon the ruling of the Court upon a demuri'er, but as the assignment of errors does not embrace the point, we pass it.
On the trial, the plaintiff offered in evidence the record of the chancery suit pleaded by him, to which objection was made by the defendant, and overruled. The defendant SutherUn offered luis co-defendant Maxwell as a witness in his behalf, but Ms testimony was rejected, on the plaintiff’s objection.
These two rulings present the only questions involved in the case.
The objection to the decree in chancery is stated as follows, in the brief of counsel, viz., “Either the note was merged in the decree, or it was not. If-merged, the plaintiff’s only remedy was to enforce the decree, and no action could be maintained on the note; and the plaintiff therefore replied himself out of Court. Or if it was not merged, but was open to the plaintiff to sue upon it, and support it by evidence, it was equally open for SutherUn to impeach and overthrow it by evidence. If the decree did not estop the plaintiff, it did not this defendant, and was no bar to his defense.” However forcible this reasoning might be in some cases, it does not appear to be conclusive against the record offered in evidence. From the record offered, it appears that the Court found the note to be usurious, except as to the sum named, and accordihgly decreed that the plaintiff be perpetually enjoined from collecting any more. Perhaps the Court might have rendered a decree requiring *21(he residue to be paid, thus merging the entire note in the decree; or perhaps might have required payment to be made ol“ what was due, as a condition of granting the relief claimed; but nothing- of this kind was done. The decree, while it left the plaintiff free to collect the residue of Ms note by action, determined the whole question of usury involved in the transaction. The defendants, having instituted a suit to cancel the note as usurious, and having obtained a decree establishing the alleged usury in part only, can not now go beMnd the decree, and set up the sarhe defense to-the residue of the note. There was no error in admitting the record.
We come to the other question. Had the pleading of Maxwell stood, neither of the defendants could have been a witness for the other, because the defense set up by each, had it succeeded, would have defeated the action as to both. There would have been no question within the issues, in which they would not have been jointly interested. Vide Blodget v. Morris, 14 N. Y. 482.
But it is insisted that inasmuch as Maxwell had withdrawn his pleading, he was a competent witness for his co-defendant, ^because as judgment might be rightfully rendered against him for the amount of the note and interest, although Sutherlin should succeed in his defense; that there was no longer any joint interest. But this view is fully met by the case of Blodget v. Morris, supra. There, Johnson, J., says: “It was well settled, before the code, that in actions ex contraclu, a plea by one defendant to the action enured to the benefit of ail the defendants who did not plead; and if one of several defendants succeeded upon a plea going to the merits of the action, the plaintiff was precluded from obtaining any benefit from a judgment by default, suffered by other defendants. This, I apprehend, is still the law,” &c. Vide, also, Kincaid et al. v. Purcell, 1 Ind. 324. This, we have no doubt, is the correct doctrine; and applied to tMs case, it shows that the -witness was correctly excluded, because so far as Sutherlin should succeed, the witness offered must succeed. In other -words, if Sutherlin succeeded in his defense, no damages could be assessed against Maxwell, on *22Ms default. The answers of Sutherlin, we have seen, were usury and want of consideration. If he succeeded on either of these, it would defeat the note, not only as against himself, a]so as against Maxwell. Although Maxwell made default, yet the entire record would show that there was no good cause of action against him. This is in accordance with the case of King v. The State, 15 Ind. 64.
B. Crawford, for the appellants. W. T. Otto and John Baker, for the appellee.Per Curiam. — The judgment is affirmed, with 5 per cent., damages and costs.