delivered the opinion of the Court.
On the 2nd of October, in the year 1873, the appellee executed to the appellant corporation a mortgage to secure the payment of a loan to him of- $2080, with interest at the rate of eight per cent, per annum.
The appellee alleges in his bill that this interest is usurious, and asks to be relieved from the excess over six per cent.
The appellant corporation contends that the mortgage has been paid and settled, and tbat the Act of 3876, chap. 358, is a full and complete bar to the claim of the appellee.
The first question in the case, therefore, is the question of fact, whether the mortgage has been fully paid and settled in purview of the Act of 1876, chap. 358.
The evidence in this case satisfies us that the following are the facts:
The appellee having become a member in 1873 of the appellant corporation, and taken eight shares of its stock, each share being oí the par value of $260, obtained the *600loan of $2080 by virtue of his ownership of these shares, and continued to pay the dues required and the interest on the mortgage at the rate of eight per cent, until November, 1876. That about November, 1876, finding that he was unable to pay his dues and interest on eight shares, he determined to reduce the number of shares, and consequently the amount of his indebtedness to the appellant corporation. That to effect this purpose, he executed another and new mortgage on the same property for $1040' as an advance on four shares of stock. Out of this $1040' so received he paid up seven of the eight shares of stock he had originally taken, but left one share of the original stock still outstanding, and this one share was not paid up-until August, 1879. The consequence of this transaction was, that the appellee after the reduction of the number of his shares had to pay his dues and interest on five, instead of eight shares, thus reducing his payments nearly one-half. The Act of 1876, chap. 358, is to be applied to-these facts.
Prior to the Act of 1876 the debtor, who had paid, usurious interest, had the right to recover back the excess over the legal rate, in an action for money had and received, notwithstanding the debt had been fully paid, and the transaction closed between the parties. This Act made a change in the law, and provided that usury should not be “a cause of action in any cáse where the bond, bill obligatory, promissory note, bill of exchange or other evidence of indebtedness, has been redeemed or settled for by the obligor or obligors, in money or other valuable consideration, except that of a renewal in whole, or in part of the original indebtedness.”
It is the intention of that law that when a usurious,,^ contract is entirely paid, and the whole transaction closed:' between the parties, then no cause of action should lie against the usurer. But the Act is equally explicit in declaring that it means a real , and bona fide, and not a *601sham payment or settlement. It says in effect, that although the original bond, note, or other evidence of debt may he paid, yet if it he paid with money obtained from the creditor for that purpose, that Act shall not apply. Such a payment is a mere renewal of the debt. It makes no difference whether the renewal is for the whole, or for a part only of the debt; either comes within the exception engrafted in the statute. The debtor may pay five-sixths of the debt, and renew his note or obligation for the other sixth part, hut as long as that other sixth part remains unpaid, the debtor has the right of action to recover hack all the usurious interest he has paid on the whole debt.
The case before us has every ear-mark of a renewal, and comes within the exception of the Act of 1816. The appellee was indebted to the appellant corporation upon a mortgage. He executed another mortgage to the same appellant corporation, and applied a part of the money that he received on the last mentioned mortgage in discharge of the first. This makes this second mortgage transaction a part of the first, as clearly as the branch that springs from the trunk is a part of the tree.
The original transaction is not closed and settled, and the appellee has therefore the right to a rebate of all the usurious interest he has paid on the original mortgage.
In these two mortgages the appellee and appellant corporation were dealing as debtor and creditor. It makes no difference whether the appellee was a stockholder in the corporation or not. We are on this point of the case dealing with a loan of money from the appellant to the appellee, and they are to he treated precisely as any other borrower or lender.
The second claim made by the appellant is an untenable one. It is substantially this : That before the appellee is entitled to a release of his mortgage, although he may have paid every dollar due upon it, he must pay hack to *602the appellant corporation all the dividends or profits, which he may have, during his whole membership received from ' it. And in support of that proposition we have been referred to the 4th section of Article 6 of the Constitution of the Association.
(Decided 26th March, 1884.)If this 4th sec. of the 6th Art. of the Constitution was susceptible of such a construction (which, however, we do not think it is,) the 5th sec. of Art. 2 would put the question at rest. This latter section provides that the profits that may accrue, shall he credited as so much paid on the shares not paid up in full, and paid in cash to those who have paid up their shares. This latter section makes these profits a payment on the shares, and as a necessary sequence a payment on the mortgage, as the mortgage is given for the par value of the shares, and when the shares are paid in full the mortgage ipso facto is paid. In the latter part of the 2nd sec. of Art. 2, it is provided that when the shares are paid up by instalments and dividends of profits, the mortgaged property shall he released.
The profits, therefore, credited to the appellee are not to he refunded by him, but are to go as part payment of the mortgage.
Decree affirmed, with costs.