delivered the opinion of the Court.
The articles of association of the appellant are exceedingly meagre, and the by-laws, if any, are not disclosed by the record. Enough appears, however, to enable us to say that the plan of the organization was of a mutual character, and intended to be in accordance with the general incorporation law of the State, found in the 26th Article of the Code, secs. 84 to 88, inclusive, as enacted by the Act of 1868, ch. 471.
Alois Kusbert, one of the mortgagors in the mortgage to the appellant, dated the 1st of April, 1871, was a shareholder and a member of the association; and the mortgage was executed to secure to the corporation, 1st. All unpaid instalments on the seventeen shares of stock sold to or redeemed by the association; 2nd. Interest on the sum paid or advanced by the association to the shareholder; and 3rd. The payment of all fines and penalties imposed for non-payment of weekly dues, being weekly instalments on the shares of stock redeemed, and the interest on the money advanced on such redeemed shares.
Such being the relation of the parties and the object of the mortgage, we cannot agree in the position of the appellee, that the mortgage is to be considered as one between individuals, and that it should be treated as for a simple loan of money. The covenant in the mortgage requires that the mortgagor, or his assigns, shall pay the weekly sum of $8.50, (that amount including both the instalments on the shares of stock redeemed, and the interest on the money advanced,) on every Thursday *202evening, until the time should arrive when the association should have sufficient funds on hand to pay the unredeemed shareholders the sum of $150, on each share held by them, clear of all losses and liabilities ; also all fines that should be imposed on him, &c. “All of which payments and covenants shall continue in force until the said body corporate shall have sufficient funds on hand to pay the holders of every unredeemed share, above all losses and liabilities, the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars, and the said corporation shall, by the terms of its Act of incorporation, have become extinct.”
From the terms of this covenant it is clear that, in the contemplation of the parties, the payment of the weekly sum of $8.50, embracing both weekly instalments on the shares, and the interest on the money advanced, should continue until the time arrived for the corporation to cease to exist, and not as contended by the appellee, only until the weekly payments should amount to a sum equal to that originally advanced on the shares redeemed. This covenant, however, must be taken to - be .made in contemplation of the fact that the association should continue in active operation, with a view to effectuating the objects and purposes of its organization, until its accumulations should be sufficient to enable it to close its operations upon the basis of a solvent corporation, according to the law under which it was created. Otherwise there might he no end to the payment of-the weekly dues, and the mortgagor would never be able to redeem his property. If therefore the association should cease active operations under its constitution, by reason of insolvency or other cause, before the proper time for it to terminate, from the time of such suspension the right to demand the weekly dues as such would cease; and if the amount paid in before that time be not sufficient to cover the original amount advanced on the shares redeemed, and all accrued interest thereon, the mortgagor will then only he liable for the balance of that *203amount with interest until paid. But if the amount paid in at the time of suspension, or when the association ceases operation, be equal to or more than the amount advanced on the redeemed shares, and the accrued interest thereon, and there be no arrearages of dues and fines, at that time, in such case, the mortgagor will be entitled to have the mortgage released.
Here, the decree sustaining the exceptions to the auditor’s report, and ordering a release of the mortgage, was passed on the 25th of March, 1878; and, according to a certified copy of an order of the Circuit Court of Baltimore city, filed in this Court on the part of the appellant, John Barrett, Jr., was appointed receiver of the appellant on the 10th of June, 1878; and by subsequent order of the same Court, passed on the 14th of October, 1878, it appears that the receiver was authorized and directed to prosecute this appeal. It thus appears that the active operations of the association have ceased, and its affairs are in course of settlement under the direction and control of a Court of equity. This is not only a suspension of the operations of the association, but it is, to all practical purposes, so far as the mortgagor or his assignee is concerned, equivalent to a dissolution of the corporation. Windsor & Applegarth vs. Bandel, 40 Md., 172; The Low St. Building Ass’n, No. 6 vs. Zucker and Wife, 48 Md., 448.
Now, while the decree appealed from must be reversed, the weekly dues or instalments can only be computed down to the time of appointing the receiver, and not for the probable duration of the association, according to the claim filed at the time of applying for the decree to sell the mortgaged premises. And in stating the account as between the mortgagor, or his assignee of the equity of redemption, and the receiver of the association, the principles already sufficiently indicated should be conformed to, in order to ascertain what amount is still due on the mortgage.
*204(Decided 25th March, 1879.)It is contended by the appellee that of the $8.50, the weekly payment required by the covenant in the mortgage, the sum of $4.25 is charged as -weekly interest on the sum of $2550, the amount advanced for the redeemed shares, and that such interest is excessive, and therefore usurious.
The articles of association are silent as to the weekly instalment required to be paid by the shareholder on each share of stock held by him; but the secretary of the association has testified that the unredeemed shares were required to pay but twenty-five cents per share per week, and in respect to the redeemed shares fifty cents per share per week were required to be paid. These facts lead pretty strongly to the conclusion, that the additional twenty-five cents required in respect of the redeemed shares must be for interest on the -money advanced for such shares ; and if this be so, it is clear there has been usury taken. The law under which the appellant was incorporated allows interest at the rate of six per cent: per annum on the sum advanced, (1868, ch. 471, sec. 87,) and neither this provision, nor the law regulating the rate of interest generally, •should be allowed to be evaded by combining the interest with the weekly payments of the unpaid instalments on the shares of stock. The two subjects are distinct, and they should be kept separate. All interest, therefore, in excess of the regular rate of six per cent, per annum should be disallowed in stating the account between the parties.
Decree reversed, and cause remanded.