At the trial of this cause in the court of com'mor pleas, before Williams, C. J. the defendants rested their de fence on the ground of usury ; but the jury, under the instruc tians of the presiding judge, returned a verdict for the plaintiff. The defendants excepted to these instructions ; but it appears to the court very clearly, that the exceptions cannot be sustained.
It was proved, that when the note in suit became payable, the plaintiff called on Davis, the principal defendant, for payment, who was unable to pay; and that the plaintiff thereupon told him that he thought he could obtain a loan of the money for ninety days on his own note, but that it would cost him $7'50, and that he thought the defendant ought to pay him a part or the whole of that sum : That the plaintiff afterwards, at the request of the defendant Davis, obtained the money of one Russell, and paid him the sum of $ 7-50 ; and that the defendant promised to repay the plaintiff what he had to pay Russell, and afterwards did repay him the sum of $ 7.
The question was, whether this sum was paid as extra interest on the note in suit, or for the loan of the money by Russell, and for his use. The jury were instructed, that if the defendant paid and the plaintiff received the $ 7, as and for interest beyond the rate of six per cent, on this note, then the taking of that sum was a usurious taking, within the statute ; but if the representation made by the plaintiff to Davis, the principal defendant, by which he obtained the $ 7, was truly and fairly made, and if he in fact paid said sum to Russell, in order to obtain the loan from him, then said taking was not usurious. These instructions, we think, were perfectly correct. It was for the jury to decide whether the transaction was fair and as it was represented to be, or was a cover for usury. Comyn on Usury, 119. And there seems to be no doubt that it was correctly decided. But however that may be, the only question now to be decided is, whether the jury were rightly instructed.
The case, on which the defendants’ counsel principally relies, is The Commonwealth v. Frost, 5 Mass. 53, in which it was decided, that if a lender on usury acts as agent for another, this will be no excuse for him ; especially if he does not disclose the *213fact, at the time of the transaction. But there are severa, striking distinctions between that case and this. In that case, Frost acted, or offered to prove that he acted, as agent of a third party, without disclosing his agency ; and the money received by him was received expressly for the use of the money lent. Whereas, in the present case, the plaintiff acted as the agent of the defendant Davis, in obtaining the loan from Russell, and on his promise to repay him what he should have to pay therefor And the $7 was not paid for interest on the note in suit. This we consider as decided by the verdict; for if the jury had found that the $ 7 had been received as interest on the note sued, they would have been bound, under the instructions of the court, to return a verdict for the defendants, for their costs, and for threefold the amount of the interest paid, according to the statute.
Exceptions overruled.