122 A. 790 | Conn. | 1923
This case was before this court on an appeal from the denial of a motion to set aside a nonsuit.Baggish v. Offengand,
Upon this trial the court found all the issues in favor of the plaintiff. In its finding it states that the defendant Kaplan did not attempt to deny his signature on the note in suit in such a position as to render him liable to the plaintiff as a prior indorser. Therefore it is apparent that the plaintiff had "produced sufficient evidence to prove the allegations of his complaint," as we had declared in the opinion in the former appeal, giving the reasons fully.
In this appeal the only reasons which the appellant insists upon are founded on the assertion that he was an *686 accommodation endorser, and therefore was entitled to rely on his special defense that the agreement between the plaintiff and the maker of the note was usurious. Whether it was so or not it is not necessary now to decide. Whatever it was, the appellant did not allege in his special defense, nor does it appear as a fact, that he was a party to it and could be injured thereby. And, as we have said, it does appear that he failed to prove that he was an accommodation endorser. Hence the appellant has laid no foundation for these reasons of appeal. Under the pleadings and the facts which appear in the record of this case, which in all essential respects are the same as those which were before us in the former appeal, we discover no cause to change our conclusions concerning the liability of this defendant as an endorser, and the futility of his attempt to escape his liability behind the defense of usury in the agreement between the maker and payee of the note. In such circumstances, it could not rationally be expected that the trial court would reach other conclusions.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.