(after stating the facts as above). The appellant by his assignments challenges the conclusions made by the court that the obligation of indebtedness sued on is tainted by usury, and that the mechanic’s lien contract is in part invalid. The controversy between the parties is upon these two points. As the ground for holding the mechanic’s lien contract invalid in part is not connected with the defense of usury,, the two questions can be considered separately. The court’s findings are to the effect (1) that the original agreement of loan to appellees by the loan company was a scheme to cover up an usurious rate of interest, and that the recitations in the documents turned over to appellant Cain at the time when he purchased the debt from the loan company were sufficient to carry notice to Cain that the original agreement of loan was usurious; and (2) that the contract subsequently made by appellees with appellant Cain in 1900 to repay the debt so purchased by him from the loan company stipulated for usurious interest, and the subsequent renewal or extension of such contract in 1903 was affected and tainted by the usurious stipulations of the one of 1900.
[1 ] Appellant Cain, it is admitted, purchased for value from the loan company the original indebtedness, less certain credits upon the principal, and the mechanic’s lien contract. The only notice or knowledge that Cain had of any facts rendering the original agreement for the loan by the loan company usurious was, as found by the court, such as appeared from recitations on the face of the written documents. The recitations in these written documents evidence on their face, we think, a contract only for a legal rate of interest. Thus it would appear as a conclusive fact in the record that Cain had no notice or knowledge of any facts or agreements that would render the original. agreement for the loan usurious. This fact appearing, and the further fact admitted by the record that the appellees, the debtors, induced the appellant, by representations that the debt was valid, to purchase it from the loan company, the appellant Cain’s rights as a purchaser of the debt would not be affected by illegality or usury at the hands of the loan company, for appellees would be estopped in the circumstances to allege against Cain that the obligation purchased by him was usurious. Real Estate Co. v. Bahn, 27 S. W. 1047. The appellees being in the circumstances estop-ped from asserting that the obligation was usurious at the time of the purchase by ap
[2] On the same day of the above transfer of the debt the appellees executed to appellant an obligation in writing, contracting therein to pay appellant the sum of $2,319.-90 in installments of $35.80 per month, to begin in January, 1900, with the express stipulation that the $35.80 installment to be paid per month should be apportioned and applied per month as follows: $17.90 on the principal of the claim, and $17.90 on the interest of the claim, with the proviso that the failure to pay as many as 12 installments should at the option of the holder mature the entire claim. It was agreed that “at the end of two years’ payments the above sum on interest will be reduced and said reduction added to payment on the principal.” Clearly, by the terms of the contract, the debtor was obligated for the first two years before the interest sum would be adjusted by reduction to pay interest at the rate of $17.90 per month on the principal of $2,319.-90. Calculating interest at 10 per cent, on the original principal for the first year, the installment of $17.90 interest per month would not make the contract usurious. But by its terms the debtors were obligated to pay the second year the same amount of interest as the first year, which was to require the ap-pellees to pay interest on part of the principal which would already have been paid by the installment payments on the principal in the previous year. Thus the installment payment of interest in the second year at the stipulated amount would have the effect of exacting more than 10 per cent, on the principal owing in the second year. The contract is, we think, usurious and illegal. Investment Co. v. Grymes, 94 Tex. 609, 63 S. W. 860, 64 S. W. 778; Id., 50 S. W. 467.
[3] This contract being usurious, then it must further be held that the renewal or extension contract of January 16, 1903, was illegal, as involved in the conclusions of the court, because the record admits the fact that this renewal or extension contract intentionally, and by agreement of the parties carried into it the usurious interest of the one of January 16, 1900. The renewal or extension contract being tainted with usury, then the court was correct and fully warranted in applying the payments for interest received in reduction of the principal of the debt purchased by appellant from the loan company, as prayed for by the pleadings of appellees. The amount appropriated by appellant to the satisfaction of the interest'charged by him on the renewal or extension contract was found by the court to be $1,412.86, and this finding is fully supported by the record. There is a further finding that $167.-50 was paid on the contract of 1900, which is fully supported by the evidence. Applying the aggregate amount as payments on the principal of $2,319.90, then there remains, as admitted by the record, unpaid by appellees on the original loan the sum of $739.54. Add to this sum the $6.55 for revenue stamps and exchange, and $25.72 for fire insurance premium, and there exists the total of $771.-81, together with the stipulated 10 per cent, on such sum for attorney’s fees, that appellant is entitled to have judgment for.
[4] In this connection-we would say that appellant’s petition must be construed as declaring on the renewal or extension contract of 1903; otherwise, it was subject to the appellees’ plea of limitation. Howard v. Windom, 86 Tex. 565, 26 S. W. 483.
[5] The mechanic’s lien was an incident of the debt sued on. Of the sum here found payable appellant is entitled to. have personal judgment against both appellees for the sum of $739.54, with 10 per cent, attorney’s fees, for it appears that the debt was contracted for the benefit and improvement of the separate estate of Mrs. Bonner, and a married woman is authorized to make such contract as she did here.
[6] The mechanic’s lien, however, cannot be foreclosed to pay the attorney’s fees. The balance of the above amount found due is a personal liability against O. T. Bonner alone, but the mechanic’s lien cannot be foreclosed to pay it.
[7] Next for consideration is the conclusion of the court that the mechanic’s lien contract was invalid in part. The court concluded as a matter of law that the mechanic’s lien contract was void to the extent of $1,210 worth of material which was on the premises bought and owing for by appellees to divers persons at the time of the creation of the lien, for the reason that the appellees did not have the power under the Constitu
[8] A further conclusion of the court upon the validity of the lien is made dependent upon another state of facts, and should be sustained. Such conclusion -was that the husband and wife having the power under the law to execute a mechanic’s lien for material to be furnished and labor to be performed on the home, and having executed what purported to be a valid mechanic’s lien, and, appellant being an innocent purchaser thereof for value, the appellees cannot now claim as against appellant that there was no contract in fact with the contractor. While the latter conclusion is not complained of, the approval of the court’s conclusion is an answer to appellees’ contention in respect to such fact. Further the first cross-assignment is overruled.
[9] The second cannot be considered, because appellees did not appeal from such judgment; and, if they had, we do not think a’ recovery could be allowed in view of their other pleading electing to ask application of the payments in liquidation of the principal
[10] There being no matter of fact or amount uncertain or issuable, the power of this court to here render the judgment the court below should have rendered exists. The judgment is reversed and here rendered in favor of appellant against Mrs. Mary D. Bonner and C. T. Bonner for $739.54 and 10 per cent, attorney’s fees on such sum, and against C. T. Bonner alone for $32.27 and 10 per cent, attorney’s fees on such sum, and with a foreclosure of the mechanic’s lien on the property described in the mechanic’s lien contract against Mrs. Mary D. Bonner and C. T. Bonner and order of sale of same to satisfy only the sum of $739.54. The costs of the appeal and of the district court will be taxed against appellee O. T. Bonner.