Opinion of the court by
CHIEF JUSTICE BURNAM,Reversing as to First National Bank and Affirming as to Mercer National Bank.
This appeal is from a judgment of the Mercer circuit court rendered in three cases, which were consolidated and heard together. A summary statement of the facts out of which the litigation grew is necessary for the proper understanding of the questions of law which we are asked to decide. On the 9th day of July, 1893, T. F. Alexander executed a note to the First National Bank of Harrodsburg for $2,-000, due on tka 12th of January, 1894, which the appellants Edgar Alexander and his sister, Artie Alexander, signed as his securities. On the 13th of September, 1893, he executed his note to the same bank, with the same securities, due on the 16th of December, 3893, for $6,728.09. This latter note was taken up by the execution of a '30-day note by the same parties for $6,777.42, and which matured on the *68819th. day of January, 1894. At this latter date, T. F. Alexander executed his note to the bank for $8,768.34, due seven months after date, with his brother, Edgar Alexander, and his sister, Artie Alexander, and James L. Bond as securities. The proceeds of this note were applied to pay off the balance due upon the $2,000 note, dated on the 9th of July, 1893, and the $6,777.45 note, dated the 16th of December, 1893. All these various notes bore interest at the rate of 8 per cent., and the accumulated interest was added to the principal at the date of each renewal. On the 6th day of April, 1894, Thomas F. Alexander executed his note to the Mercer National Bank for $4,368.25, dire six months after date, with Artie Alexander, Edgar Alexander and James L. Bond as his securities. The net proceeds of this note— $4,200 — was put to the credit of T. F. Alexander, a discount of $168.25 being reserved as interest at the rate of 8 per cent. Thomas F. Alexander died intestate on the 15th of April, 1894, before the maturity of either of the debts to the banks, and his sister and security, Artie Alexander, qualified as his administratrix. It was developed after his death that his estate was insolvent, and his heirs at law, with a view of facilitating the settlement of his estate, and saving his sister, Artie Alexander, from loss, so far as possible, because of the various liabilities incurred by her as surety for her brother, sold and conveyed to her in fee all their interest in his estate, real and personal. His realty consisted of a tract of land in Mercer county, containing 220- acres. It was ascertained prior to the 23d of April, 1895, that, after reducing to cash all the available personal estate of decedent and selling the 220 acres of land belonging to T. F. Alexander for $40 per acre, his estate would pay 70 per cent, of his debts, and on that day a consultation was had between the administratrix, Artie Alexander, and the *689appellant, Edgar Alexander, and their attorney, on one side, and the officers of the First National Bank and the Mercer National Bank, their principal creditors, at which it was agreed that the appellant, Edgar Alexander, should purchase the 220 acres of land at $40 an acre, amounting to $8,800, and that the two banks would loan him enough money to pay 70 per cent, of the indebtedness of T. F. Alexander. and also a sufficient sum to pay the overplus of his indebtedness, which would fall upon Edgar Alexander and his sister, Artie. To carry out this agreement, the First National Bank loaned to Edgar Alexander on that day $8,507.36, on which interest was charged at the rate of 8 per cent., and a note was taken therefor, due six months after date, for $8,847.95, and the Mercer National Bank on the same day advanced to him $4,195.45, taking a note therefor, due six months after date, for $4,366.22. on which interest was charged at the rate of 8 per cent. Seventy per cent, of this money was paid over to Artie Alexander, administratrix, by Edgar Alexander, and- was by her applied to the indebtedness of T. F. Alexander. The balance’ of the money was used by Edgar Alexander to pay the over-plus due the respective banks by his sister and himself as securities thereon. To secure the payment of this note so executed to the banks, Edgar Alexander and his sister, Artie Alexander, executed a mortgage on several tracts of land, including that which had formerly belonged to the estate of Thomas F. Alexander. The note to the First National Bank was renewed on the 26th day of October, 1895, by Edgar and Artie Alexander by the execution of a new note for $9,201.82, due on the 29th of April, 1896, interest being added at the rate of 8 per cent., and was again renewed by the execution of a note for $9,569.89, due six months after *690date. On the 1st of November, 1896, this note was renewed by the execution. of a note for $9,752.83, due six months after date. On the 4th day of May, 1897, this note was renewed by the execution of a new note for $9,752.83, due six months after date. At this time Edgar Alexander paid to the bank $390.12, as interest at the rate of 8 per cent., by his check on the Boyle National Bank, and on the 7th of November, 1897, this note was renewed by the 'execution of a new note to the bank for the same amount, due six months after date, interest on this note at the rate of 8 per cent., being paid to the bank by the check of Edgar Alexander on the Boyle National Bank for $390.12. On the 3d of September, 1898, the appellee, the First National Bank of Harrodsburg, instituted this suit, asking a personal judgment on the last renewal of their debt and for an enforcement of the mortgage lien executed to them on the 23d of April, 1895, jointly with the Mercer National Bank. The Mercer National Bank was made a defendant, and on the same day filed its answer, which was made a cross-petition against its codefendants Artie and Edgar Alexander, in which they set up their note dated November 9, 1897, for $4,721, which they allege was a renewal of the note executed on the 23d of April, 1895, and ask a personal judgment against Edgar and Artie Alexander, and joined in tihe prayer for an enforcement of the mortgage. The defendants were not prepared to file their answers to the petition and cross-petition at the following October term of court, and, in consideration of the continuance of the cause to the next term of the court, which began in February, 1899, and an extension of time to file their answer until the fourth day of that term, they paid to the banks interest on the notes sued on to February 10, 1S99, at the rate of 6 per cent. The amount paid to the First National Bank under this agree*691ment was $438.87 and to the Mercer National Bank $211.14. In January, 1S99, before the expiration of the .time given to the defendants to answer, Artie Alexander died, and shortly after her death the codefendant Edgar Alexander qualified as her administrator, and the action was, by consent, revived against him as administrator.
The answer of appellants t'o the petition of the First National Bank denies the amount of its claim, and in the second paragraph alleges that the obligation sued on carried with it a large amount of usurious interest, and they ask the forfeiture of the entire interest from the date of the first note executed by T. F. Alexander to the bank, under sections 5197, 5198, Rev. St. U. S. [U. S. Comp. St., 1901, p. 3493]. A similar answer was filed to 'the cross petition of the Mercer National Bank. And while this suit was pending the appellant Edgar Alexander, on the 20th of January., 1899, filed a separate suit against each of the banks, in which he sought to recover double the amount of interest paid on Ms indeMedness to them within two years prior to the institution of the suits: His petition against the First National covers the following alleged payments of interest on the debt sued on:
To amount paid as interest at 8 per cent., May 25, 1897 ................................... $ 390 11
To amount paid as interest at 8 per cent., Dec. 27, 1897................................... 390 12
To amount paid October 26, 1898.............. 438 87
Total ................................... $1,219 10
The claim against the Mercer National Bank on this score is as follows:
To amount paid as interest May 27, 1897, at 8 per cent. $109 89
*692To amount paid December 24, 1897.............. $190 23
To amount paid October 26, 1898................ 211 14
Total ..................................... $517 28
The issues were made up in the three cases, and they were consolidated, and the proof taken in the consolidated actions, and final judgment rendered in all the cases in February, 1901. The suit of Edgar Alexander against the' First National Bank was dismissed. In his suit against the Mercer National Bank he was given a judgment for $376.46, being double the amount paid as interest on the 24th of December, 1897. .In the suit of the banks against Edgar Alexander they were given judgment for the amount loaned by them on the 23d day of April, 1895, without interest prior to the institution of their respective suits, and a decree of foreclosure directing the sale of the mortgaged lands entered. From that judgment Edgar Alexander and Edgar Alexander, administrator of Artie Alexander, deceased, have appealed.
He insists that under the proof he is entitled to a judgment against the First National Bank for $2,830.20, double the amount of interest paid within two years from the institution of his suit; also that he was not given a judgment against the Mercer National Bank for the full amount sued for. And in the case of the banks against him he, complains that the judgments did not give him a credit for all the interest which accrued upon the original loans of T. F. Alexander to the banks prior to the, execution of the notes by him and his sister on the 23d of April, 1895. Nearly all the questions of law involved upon this appeal have been passed upon by this court in the recent cases of Bank v. Fitzpatrick, 111 Ky., 228 (23 R., 610) 63 S. W., 459, and Bank v. Forman’s Assignee, 111 Ky., 206 (23 R., 613) 63 *693S. W., 454, 757. It will, therefore, only be necessary for us to apply the law as determined in these cases to the facts as developed by the proof in these consolidated actions. We will first consider the questions involved in the, suit by Alexander against the two banks to recover double the amount of interest paid. The money paid to the banks by the, appellant on October 26, 1898, can in no sense be regarded as a payment of usury. Appellees were entitled at that term of the court to a judgment by default for their respective demands, or that the issues should be made, up by answer. To prevent this, and secure time for the preparation of their defense,, appellants paid a stipulated sum, which was in fact 6 per cent, interest upon the principal of the respective debts sued on. Courts will not permit agreements of this character, made in good faith, to become the basis of a claim for double the amount so paid as a penalty under the statute, and, in our opinion, the trial court properly refused to so treat these payments. The $109.89 paid to the Mercer National Bank on the 27th of May, 1897, was less than interest at the rate of 6 per cent, for the time covered upon the debt, and consequently did not contain usury for which a suit can be maintained under the statute.
We will not consider the claim of appellant for double the amount of interest paid to the First National Bank. He testifies unequivocally that on the 25th of May and 27th of December, 1897, at the dates of the renewal of his debt in the bank, he actually paid the interest thereon at the rate of 8 per cent, by checks drawn on the Boyle National Bank, and these checks are filed as exhibits with his deposition.. The president of the bank admits the receipt of these two sums of money, and that they were paid as interest; but seeks to escape liability under the statute on the ground that *694Artie Alexander in her lifetime informed him that she was jointly bound for the obligation sued on with the appellant Edgar Alexander; that she furnished to Edgar Alexander one-half the money which went to make up the respective checks. It was not competent for the appellee’s president to testify to oral statement made to him by Artie Alexander after her death as to what proportion of these payments were furnished by her; and, even if competent, it is not enough to outweigh the testimony on this point in favor of the appellant. We are, therefore, of the opinion that the appellant, Alexander, was entitled to a judgment in his suit against the First National Bank for twice the amount of these payments, which amounts to $1,560.44, and that their note against him should have been credited with this sum as of the date of the institution of the suit.
We now come to appellant’s claim to have the obligations due the banks purged of all the interest which accumulated during the lifetime of T. F. Alexander on his debts to them. This contention is made upon the, theory that the obligations executed on the 23d of April, 1895, by Edgar and Artie Alexander were mere renewals of the existing indebtededness of T. F. Alexander, deceased, to the banks as of that date. Appellees, on the other hand, insisted that the transaction of that date resulted in the total extinguishment of the indebtedness of T. F. Alexander, and the loan to appellant was a new transaction. The evidence of every witness who has testified as to what took place between the parties on that day, except the appellant Edgar Alexander, is to the effect that it was the intention of all parties that the indebtedness of T. F. Alexander should be paid, and his estate finally settled. He had been dead more than a year, and his creditors were importunate for the payment of their respective debts. It was made manifest that his estate was *695insolvent, and that his unsecured creditors would only realize 70 per cent, of their indebtedness if the estate was settled out of court in the most economical way. It was, therefore, agreed that appellant should take the land of T. F. Alexander at $40 per acre. The personal estate had already been reduced to cash, and it was easy to determine what the estate would pay. To save the cost of a settlement in court, the sale to Edgar Alexander was agreed to; and to enable him to pay for the land, and to consummate the agreement with the creditors, the appellee banks consented to loan him a sufficient sum of money to make the deal successful. They surrendered as of that date their old obligation on which James L. Bond was bound as security, they gave up all claim against the estate of T. F. Alexander, and loan the money solely upon the credit of appellant and his sister, with the mortgage, upon their-lands including that purchased from the estate of T. F. Alexander. We think that there can be no doubt that on the 23d of April, 1895, the administrator of T. F. Alexander could have, under the federal statute, required the banks to accept the principal of the indebtedness of T. F. Alexander in payment of their debt; and that, after payment, they might have maintained a suit for double penalty. But, having elected to pursue a different course, they can not at this late day, in this transaction, be permitted to treat the obligation sued on as mere renewals by the security of the debts, due the banks by T. F. Alexander. We therefore conclude that the, chancellor properly denied appéllants this relief.
For reasons indicated, the judgments in the cases of Edgar Alexander v. First National Bank and First National bank v. Edgar Alexander et al. are reversed. The cases of Edgar Alexander v. Mercer National Bank and the Mercer National Bank v. Edgar Alexander on cross-petition *696are affirmed, and the several causes remanded to the trial court for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Petition for rehearing by First National Bank of Harrodsburg overruled.