21 A.2d 393 | Conn. | 1941
The plaintiff brought this action against his wife to recover upon a negotiable promissory note in the amount of $38,725, payable to his order, claiming that his wife executed the same June 16, 1936, and that he was the owner. In an answer, the defendant, after denying that the plaintiff was the owner of a valid note or that she was indebted to him, set up a second, third and fourth separate defense. The second defense alleged that the signature upon the instrument sued upon had been obtained by fraud in that she had been presented a blank note for signature which she had been induced to sign by his representation that it would be used in renewing a note then held by a bank; and in the third and fourth defenses she alleged that the instrument was without consideration and never delivered. The case was tried to the court and judgment entered for the plaintiff to recover the amount of the note, with interest. The defendant has appealed, claiming corrections and additions to the finding and annexing the evidence taken at the trial for that purpose; and claiming that with the corrections to which she is entitled the finding establishes that no adequate consideration was given for the note and that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover upon it because of a material alteration in the instrument.
The essential facts found by the trial court, with such corrections as the defendant is entitled to, are these: The parties were married in 1929. Following the marriage, the plaintiff went to live with the defendant *245 at her home. After 1930, the parties made occasional purchases of orchids which were kept in the house and greenhouse. From 1931 to 1933, the plaintiff continued the collection and propagation of orchids and the selling of orchids on commission. He bought a collection of plants and increased and developed his business, until in the year 1935 he resigned the position where he was employed to devote his time exclusively to the business of raising and selling orchids. From that time on the business increased so that the plaintiff found difficulty in supplying the demand. On June 16, 1936, the parties drove to New York to a flower store of William Kohn. On the way, they discussed the sale of the business. At Kohn's store, they discussed the matter further and the plaintiff took a blank note from his pocket and filled it out. It was drawn on a printed form, payable on demand after date to the order of the plaintiff for $38,725, payable at the First Stamford National Bank. The defendant then signed the note and it was then delivered to the plaintiff who has owned it ever since, and it has not been paid.
The defendant asks, among other things, for an addition to the finding to the effect that in filling in the note the plaintiff originally inserted the year of the date but that he has since obliterated the same so that it is impossible to tell the year of the date from the note itself. The note was introduced in evidence and in place of the last figure in the year of the date is a round hole entirely obliterating the last figure. From the evidence of the plaintiff, it appears that this mutilation occurred while the note was in his possession or control and after the signature of the defendant. From an examination of the note, it is not possible to determine whether its date was 1936 or any other year *246 from 1930 to 1939. The effect of the alteration was to obliterate the year of the date, except for the first three figures.
In the third defense, the defendant alleged that there was no consideration for the instrument sued upon. As between these parties the failure in whole or part of the consideration would be a good defense in whole or part to the action on the note. Pulsifer v. Hotchkiss,
It thus appears that the consideration of the note was not solely the sale of the orchids. One thing that entered into it was services performed and expenditures made on the wife's property. But these were not rendered under such circumstances that they gave rise to an indebtedness by her to him; they were husband and wife and it does not appear there were any circumstances which would in such a case give him a right to be compensated for them. Cotter v. Cotter,
The claim of alteration does not appear to have been clearly raised in the pleadings, except that in the amended answer the defendant denied that the plaintiff owned "any valid note of hers." The parties apparently treated this pleading as sufficient to raise the issue and we would be justified in following that theory. Where an alteration is not apparent upon the face of the note, it must be specially pleaded. 5 U. L. A. 777. Where, however, the alteration is apparent upon its face the instrument should not be admitted until explained. Landt v. McCullough,
There is error and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.