delivered the opinion of the court.
On the tenth day of October, 1893, Charles Hiller, an insolvent merchant, made a general assignment of his property to the appellee, Ellis, for the benefit, of his creditors. Preferences were given to Messrs. Miller and Dodds, the attorneys by whom the instrument was prepared, for their fees, and, also, in the order named, to F. Dillard, for the sum of $250 and interest; to the Merchants & Planters’ Bank of Hazelhurst, for the sum of five thousand dollars, and interest; to Mrs. Hannah Klotz, tor the sum of five thousand five hundred dollars; to Hyman, Hiller & Co., for the sum of nine thousand one hundred dollars, and, after the payment of said sums, the assignee was directed to distribute any remaining funds to all other creditors pro rata. The assignee filed his petition in the chancery court of Copiah county, as required by law, and gave bond as receiver. Many creditors of Hiller, soon after the execution of "the assignment, exhibited cross petitions against the assignee, seeking to vacate the assignment as fraudulent and void, on the grounds that it was made for the purpose and with the intent of defrauding creditors; that some of the preferred debts were ¿simulated; that the debt to the Merchants & Planters’ Bank was composed in part' of usury, and upon other grounds not necessary to be stated. The firm of Marshall Field & Co., of Chicago, exhibited their cross petition, charging .that among the assigned property was a lot of goods bought from them by the assignor, and for which the purchase price had not been paid; that Hiller procured the sale of said goods to be made to him on credit by falsely and fraudulently representing himself to *707be solvent and. the owner of a large amount of property, and by falsely and fraudulently understating and concealing the amount of his liabilities; that the assigned goods were in the hands of the assignee, and capable of identification. They prayed that the purchase of said goods by Hiller be declared fraudulent, and the goods returned to them. A like cross petition was exhibited by the firm of Kyle & Co. to recover certain goods they had sold to Hiller. It was admitted by the assignee that the goods mentioned in the cross petitions of Marshall Field & Co. and Kyle & Co., came to his hands, and were identified by the claimants, but the fraudulent purchases by Hiller were denied. Under agreement, they were sold, and the proceeds yet remain in the hands of the assignee, subject to the order of the court. On final hearing, the court found all the issues joined on the several cross petitions in favor of the assignee, and dismissed the petitions, and from the decree, the cross petitioners appeal.
In considering the questions presented for decision, it is only necessary to state such facts as are relevant to the points on which the cause turns. The record is voluminous, and contains much evidence not necessary to be stated in the view we take of the cause. One of the preferred debts, that due to the Merchants & Planters’ Bank, is evidenced by five promissory notes, each for one thousand dollars, dated at different times, and which, when executed, the bank discounted at the rate of 10 per cent, per annum — i. e., retained the interest as prepayment thereof at the full legal rate. Mr. Ellis, the cashier of the bank, and who is the assignee in the assignment, gives this explanation of the circumstances of the negotiation of the loan by Hiller and. the execution and discount of the notes. Some time in January or February Hiller applied to the bank and stated that he wanted to borrow four or five thousand dollars, and wanted to know when he could get it, and what security would be needed. I told him that he could get it. He said, however, he would not want it until later in the year ; and I told *708him, to be sure of getting it, he would have to pay interest from that time. He stated the time he would want it, which was about the first of March, I think. We agreed upon the amount of security he was to give. I do not remember the amount of interest he ivas to pay. I do remember having-told him we could not hold the money for him all that time and not charge him interest for it, and he agreed to pay interest at whatever rate was required. I think this was in January or February, and do not think he had any list of securities with him. The understanding was that he was to get up his collaterals, and also give Mrs. Klotz as security. There was no security furnished at that time, but the collaterals which he agreed to give were such as are usually given in such cases. I would have been at. liberty, after that, to decline the loan unless satisfactory security had been furnished.
There was no written contract entered into between the bank and Hiller with reference to the interest he was to pay when he first approached the bank to borrow money. I don’t remember that the rate of interest which he agreed to pay from that date was mentioned, though I suppose, of course, it was, and do not think it could have been less than 10 per cent. I did not lay aside any specific money at that time in separate packages to save for Hiller, but I promised to let him have it. In making our arrangements we loan so much money, and no more, and we have to know what we are going to do with it. I made the discounts on the notes with a view of charging him and covering the interest from the time I promised to let him have the money. Mrs. Klotz was in Texas, and we had to send the notes over there for her signature. ’ ’ These facts, stated by the officer of the bank by whom the money was negotiated' for by Hiller, are, in effect, agreed to be true by Hiller, who was examined as a witness in the cause, and they fix, beyond doubt, the usurious nature of the debt. As a matter of fact, interest was not charged on the amount Hiller applied to borrow from the date of the application, of which date *709no memorial was made and which neither of the parties can fix except approximately. The bank did not then lend Hiller any amount, and no contract which obligated it so to do was entered into. The bank was not bound to lend, nor Hiller to borrow, any specific sum, for in truth no specified sum was applied for, Hiller stating only that he would need four or five thousand dollars. When and as the money was borrowed, no calculation of interest on the money from the daté of the application to the dates of the respective notes was made, nor any amount reserved or included in the notes therefor. What was done was to reserve from the money loaned the full legal interest for the time intervening between the date and maturity of each note, and this was usury. Bank v. Nolan, 7 How. (Miss.), 508; Hyde v. Finley, 26 Miss., 468; Polkinghorn v. IIendricks, 61 Ib., 366. Our statutes against usury would go for nothing if so simple a device as charging interest on a promise to lend money, and carrying such interest, in addition to full legal interest, into the note when the money is loaned could be successfully resorted to. Because of the usury thus reserved in the notes to the bank, all interest thereon was forfeited, and might, if paid, be recovered back by suit at law. Code 1892, § 2348.
What effect does the fact that this' usurious interest was secured to be paid and preferred by the assignor have upon the deed of assignment? Is the assignment thereby annulled, or is the consequence only that the assignee shall withhold the payment of the forfeited interest ? In Wetter v. Dinkens, 70 Miss., 835, the assignor preferred a debt as to which usurious interest had been reserved, and attempted to fix the amount to be paid as that of the principal and legal interest, and this we held he might lawfully do; but by error in calculation, ten dollars in excess of legal interest was stated as the sum due. The assignor had, however, by the terms of the assignment, provided that of the debts stated to be due in the instrument, the assignee should only pay the amounts really found to be due, and this was held to preserve the assignment.
*710There is great conflict of authority as to what effect the fact that a simulated, usurious or excessive debt is provided for or preferred will have upon the assignment. In some of the states, by statute or decision, the assignee is treated as a purchaser for value; in others, the courts separate the valid from the invalid debts, and uphold the assignment as to the valid debts it secures ; in others, this will be done if the invalid debt does not rest upon an unlawful, as distinguished from, an insufficient, consideration. We need not now go into an examination of these decisions; they are noted and discussed in Marks v. Bradley, 69 Miss., 1.
Throughout all our decisions there runs the controlling rule that, in assignments by insolvents, and especially in preferential assignments, the utmost good faith to creditors must be observed; that the insolvent, claiming to act under the law, which, notwithstanding his insolvency, recognizes his dominion over his property as owner, must keep himself within the law, which not only recognizes, but controls, his conduct; that, while the law will not obstruct the exercise of the legal right to prefer one creditor over others of equal merit, it will try his action by strict rules, confine him to travel along a narrow path, and lend him no assisting hand if he departs therefrom. The assignment, as written, is the law for the administration of the insolvent’s estate; neither the assignee nor the courts may add to or subtract therefrom, and, as written, it must be susceptible of complete execution, without depriving creditors of their legal rights, or it may not stand against their attack. Richardson v. Stapleton, 60 Miss., 97; Marks v. Bradley, 69 Ib., 1; Selleck v. Pollock, Ib., 870. Applying the principle of these cases, it follows that the preference given by the assignor to the usurious debt due to the bank annuls the deed. The assignee is, by the deed, directed and required to pay to the bank the debt and its usurious interest, and this he must do. ITe pays it, if at all, not as debtor, nor by virtue of the obligation springing from the contract between the assignor *711and the bank, but by reason simply of the terms of the deed' under which he holds. The deed is the law under which he-acts, and ita lex seripta est. In the payment thus directed to-be made, the estate of the assignor is to that extent diminished, and prevented from being devoted to the demands of other' creditors. But more than this results, for the payment, when made, creates eo instanti a right of action in the assignor to-recover from the bank, not only the usury, but the whole interest reserved. The assignee may not sue, for it is not his money that has been paid; nor is the right thus arising a chose in action which passed by the assignment, for it did not exist when the assignment was made. The assignee, in paying the usurious debt, would be paying as the representative of the assignor. Chapin v. Thomson, 89 N. Y., 270. And the payment so made, though a voluntary one, would create a right of action in the assignor to recover the whole interest paid. Code 1892, § 231S. The legal effect of what the assignee was directed to do was a purchase b} the assignee of a right of action for the assignor, at the expense of the fund which he professed to devote to the payment of his creditors. That this cannot lawfully be done we think is clear-. In some of the states the statutes against usury simply declare a forfeiture of the usury, or of all the interest, but no provision is made, as with us, that the usurious interest, if paid, may be recovered back. In such states it has sometimes been held that, by providing for the payment of the debt in an assignment, the forfeiture is waived. These authorities are not applicable under our statute, under which actual payment is not a waiver.
At the time of the execution of the assignment, the Merchants & Planters’ Bank and Mrs. Klotz, two of the preferred creditors, indorsed thereon a release to Hiller of their demands against him personally, in consideration of the provision made in the deed for the payment of their debts. It is now urged that, whatever may have been the fraudulent purpose of Hil-ler in executing the deed, the assignee is a purchaser for value-*712;at least to the extent of holding the assigned property to an amount sufficient to pay these claims. This position is taken on the authority of Anderson v. Lachs, 59 Miss., 111. We think the principle announced in that case — i. e., that when a creditor, in consideration of the assignment, releases the assignor from personal liability on the debt for the payment of which the assignment is made, the assignee is a purchaser for value, and not bound by the undisclosed fraud of the assignor— cannot apply on the facts disclosed by this record. Unquestionably, the bank which, in lending the money, reserving the usury, accepting the assignment and releasing Hiller, acted by and through its cashier, Ellis, who is the assignee in the deed, is chargeable with full notice of the unlawful act of the assignor. Mrs. Klotz stands in no better attitude. The as-signee, Mr. Ellis, had knowledge of the unlawful act, and, though Mrs. Klotz had paid value for the deed, he would not have been a bona fide purchaser, for, to make one a bona fide purchaser, he must take not only for value, but without notice. The purpose of Hiller, the assignor, and the purpose of Ellis, the assignee, to devote the estate of Hiller to the payment of the usurious debt to the bank were identical. It does not matter that, as to Ellis, the assignee, and probably that as to Hil-ler, the assignor, this purpose involved no ¡moral turpitude. In law many things are dealt with as fraudulent because of their results as against creditors, as to which moral delinquency may not be predicated. If the purpose of the assignor and assignee be to do a thing not recognized by the law as valid, the instrument by which it is attempted to effectuate this design cannot be upheld.
.But we do not think it can be said that Mrs. Klotz gave up anything for the conveyance. The assignor was her son-in-law, and hopelessly insolvent. Nothing could be hoped for in the present except to get what might be realized from the assigned estate, and the future promised nothing except by resorting to the earnings the assignor might thereafter accumu*713late. The evidence makes it entirely certain that Mrs. Klotz did not, in fact, surrender anything which she thought was of value, nor give up anything for the deed. Under the advice of the attorneys for Hiller, that by surrendering her claim against him she would probably impart to the assignee the character of a purchaser for value under the decision in Anderson v. Lachs, she signed the release, not in consideration,but in aid of the conveyance. In no just sense can it be said, on the evidence in the cause, that she purchased the conveyance. The fact that it had been determined on, and that she was to be preferred without reference to a release by her to Hiller, and that the release was not at all influential in bringing about the assignment or the preference given to her claim, and that she signed the release for her own benefit and not for his, are as distinctly and fully shown as it is possible to establish any fact by evidence.
The cross petitioners, Marshall Field & Co., should have had the relief they prayed. Whether Hiller, in fact, made all the statements to the representative of the reporting agency of K,. (J. Dun & Co. contained in the report made by the representative, Moorman, as testified to by Moorman, or made only a part of them, as testified to by Hiller, is immaterial in view of the fact, which we think is abundantly proved, that, when called on by the manager of the credit department of Marshall Field & Co. for a statement of his financial condition, Mr. Hil-ler referred them to the report then standing on the books of Dun & Co. as a true one of his then condition. Mr. McConnell, the manager of the credits of Marshall Field & Co., testifies distinctly that Hiller, when applied to for a statement of his financial condition, stated that he was not prepared to make a statement, but that the repdrts standing on the books of the commercial agencies correctly represented his condition. Hil-ler, in some manner, implies that this he did not do, but that his memory is not clear appears from his statement that he does not remember to have seen or talked with McConnell at *714all. It is true, he says that he made no statement of his condition, and so says McConnell, but he does not deny that he referred McConnell to the mercantile agencies as supplying the information desired. It cannot be denied that the' report on the books of Dun & Co. exhibited his condition to have been infinitely better than, in truth, it-was; and, accepting as true the testimony of McConnell, which Hiller had an opportunity, and failed, to controvert, we are of opinion that the purchase so procured was a fraudulent one, and that the sellers have the right to rescind the sale and retake the goods.
The decree on the cross petition of Kyle & Co. must be affirmed. They state that they sold to Hiller, on the faith of a report made by Bradstreet & Co., that, on August 1, 1893, Hiller had made a certain statement to them, and on the faith of a report by Dun & Co., that, on August 9, 1893, he had made certain statements to them of his financial condition, which reports showed to Kyle & Co. the statements purporting to have been made by Hiller. But there is nothing in the record tending to show that Hiller, at these times, made any statements to these agencies. The only occasion on which the evidence tends to prove a statement made by him to any agency was in February, 1893, to Dun & Co., and it is not pretended that on this statement any goods were purchased from these cross petitioners.
The decree is reversed., except on the appeal of Kyle & Co. as to them, it is affirmed.