i. building associations: pa;?uSp°f: h °c ' The appellees contend that the Phoenix Loan Association was not a building and loan association, and that the loan of 1892, and its renewal in 1896, are for this reason usurious. This contention is based . upon the provisions of its by-laws authorizing the issue of pail-up stock. The law. of Missouri authorizes this, as we understand it, and since the enactment of the Code, of 1897 it has been expressly authorized in this st ate, and prior to that time there was no prohibition of such stock. In fact it is a general rule, recognized by all the courts, that in all building and loan associations there are members and stockholders who are nonborrowers, and hence the mere fact that the laws governing. the association permit the issue of paid-up stock within certain limits should not be construed by the courts as placing it beyond the pale of strictly building and loan associations, even where the statutory law does not authorize it. It is often of great benefit to the borrowing members to have fellow members who are investors instead of borrowers, and, unless it clearly appears from the transactions of the association that its incorporation under the building and loan law is pimply to afford a convenient disguise for evading the usary laws, it should not be held without the protection of such laws. Endlich, Building Associations (2d Ed.), section 17; 4 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d Ed.) 1002. It seems to us that the question of whether an association is organized for legitimate building and loan purposes is one of fact, to be determined from the evidence in- the case. Parker v. Association, 46 Ga. 166; Shannon v. Dunn, 43 N. H. 194.
*536In the case at bar the paid-up stockholders were none the less members of the association, with no greater rights or privileges than the other members, and, under the bylaws-prohibiting them from participating in the profits of the association beyond the receipt of eight per cent, interest, there is absolutely nothing in the record tending to indicate that it was a money-loaning scheme in the interest of investors, for the purpose of evading the usury laws. We think the association was a building and loan association, within the meaning of both the law of Missouri and of Iowa.
2 same-fornrasilTuSs state' But, even if found to he a foreign association of the kind in question, it is urged that it had no authority to do business in this state as such an association. We know of B0 ^aw forbidding a foreign building and loan association doing business in this state, providing it is done in compliance with our statutory requirements, and it is not in itself unlawful. The contracts of such associations have been repeatedly enforced by this court, recognizing the general comity existing between states, and it is held as a general rule that “corporations of one state may exercise any or all of their • powers in another state, unless the latter state, by its statutes, decisions, or policy, forbi's. ” Cook, Stock, Stockh. & Corp. Law, 694; Bank v. Earle, 13 Pet. 519-521 (10 L. Ed. 274); Christian Union v. Yount, 101 U. S. 352 (25 L. Ed. 888).
Neither in 1892 nor in 1896 was there any law in this state requiring foreign building and loan associations to procure any other or different permit for doing business in this state than was required of corporations generally; and on the 16th day of June, 1891, a permit was issued to the Phoenix Loan Association by the then auditor of state, under section 1, chapter 76, Laws 21st General Assembly, authorizing it to transact its business in this state. The act just referred to was an indirect invitation to foreign *537corporations of all kinds to engage in business in. Iowa, and in the absence of any statute directly forbidding building and loan associations entering the state, it must be held that they had the right so to do, upon complying with the law relating to foreign corporations generally.
3. usury:.par-by borrower, With the propositions settled as to the character of the association and as to its right to transact business in this state, we reach the question of usury in one or both of the loans. The uncontradicted evidence is that there was no premium actually bid at the time of the first loan. This being true, it is clear that there was usury in the transaction. It is claimed, however, on the part of appellant, that when the new loan was made the stock originally issued to the defendants was surrendered, and credit then given for its value, including profits earned, and that the appellees participated in the usurious earnings of the association, if there were any, and cannot now be heard to complain thereof. There is evidence tending to support this claim, as there had been but about $2,000 paid at the time of the renewal, and the actual amount then found due, after computation and surrender of the old stock, was $970.20, and we think, under the circumstances, that the defendants should be bound by the settlement then made. Barrow v. Association (Tenn. Ch. App.) 48 S. W. Rep. 736; Milnor v. Association (Tenn. Ch. App.) 84 S. W. Rep. 732. See, also, Association v. Peed (Ind. Sup.) 52 N. E. Rep. 201.
.i. competitive usury. ' We are also well satisfied that there was no genuine bid at the time of the second loan or renewal. The pretended bid was in writing, and in the hands of the secretary of the association, with a large number of other written bids. There were no applicants for loans present ,at the meeting of the board of directors at which these loans were placed, and the secretary seems to have bid against himself as the representative of all applicants for loans. Such bidding has been *538held a farce. Moore v. Association, 74 Mo. App. 468; State v. Phœnix Loan Ass'n (Mo. App.; unreported, but copy of opinion attached to appellees’ brief). But section 1898 of the Code of 1897 removed the necessity for competitive bidding. And chapter 48, Acts 27th General Assembly,, made said section 1898 retroactive. Association v. Heidt, 107 Iowa, 297.
Should section 1898, as amended by the 27th General Assembly, as above stated, be applied to foreign buil ling and loan associations? Let us look at the language of this section. It says: “All building and loan or savings and loan associations upon receiving the certificate from .'the auditor shall have power,” etc. Section 19 of the same act (section 1908, Code 1897) points out what foreign building and loan associations shall do to entitle them to transact business in this state, and then provides that, upon compliance with the statute, the auditor shall issue a like certificate, as in the case of domestic associations. The legislature, in enacting this law, clearly sought to put foreign associations on an equality with domestic ones, upon condition only that they comply with the requirements peculiar to them. It is manifest, then, that section 1898, Code 1897, was intended to apply to foreign as well as domestic associations; for it ivas a matter known to every member of the legislature that foreign associations had been doing business in this state for years. It was known that the trouble arising over the question of usury in contracts of this kind was not alone confined to domestic corporations, and the law in question ivas to remedy this very trouble, and, if it had been the legislative intent to apply it only to domestic associations, it would have been so declared. This statute is as broad as it could well have been, there is no limitation except as to certificates, and we think the intent clear to apply it to foreign, as well as domestic, associations.
*539That this interpretation of the law is correct is further sustained by section 32 of the building and loan law (section 1919, Code 1897), which provides that “all such associations having heretofore transacted business in this state, which shall not have complied with the provisions of this chapter, shall have the right to close up their business and fulfill their contracts heretofore entered into with the residents of this state, without being subject to the penalties prescribed in this chapter.” From the foregoing it follows that the transactions in question were purged of the usury inhering in them originally, and we come to the question of the amount due the plaintiffs on the note and mortgage in suit.
5. computaTION Of amount due. The original loan was adjusted by the parties themselves in 1896, while the association was a going concern, and the note and mortgage in suit were then executed. Whatever of interest in excess of the twelve per cent, provided for by section 1898 of the Code may have actually been -paid up to that time, we have no m :ans of knowing certainly, nor is it material; for, as we have heretofore said, when the old stock was surrendered it may be inferred, at least from the evidence, that it was credited with its proportionate share of the earnings of the association, and if we are correct in this we should determine the status of the parties from the conditions existing at the time of the renewal of the loan. At that time there was found to be due the assoeation $970.20. Interest should be computed on 'this sum from the date of the note at the rate of six per cent, per annum, the rate provided for therein, and ■ from the total amount so found there should be deducted the whole amount of interest paid on the new loan, with interest on such monthly payments at the rate of six i)er cent, per annum, computed as partial payments. As the association is insolvent, this rule applies, and defendants are not entitled to credit for dues paid on stock. Hale v. Kline, 113 Iowa, *540523; Spinney v. Miller, 114 Iowa, 210. The defendants are entitled also to offset the value of their stock, as it shall be determined upon final settlement of the affairs of the association.
The case is reversed and remanded, for a judgment in harmony herewith. — Reversed.