412 A.2d 709 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1979
The plaintiff Hartford Federal Savings and Loan Association (hereinafter Hartford Federal) brought this action to recover moneys owed it under the terms of a promissory note executed by the defendant Rosa Lee Green. The complaint alleged, inter alia, that Green had failed to make a payment due on October 24, 1974 and that Hartford Federal was exercising its option to declare the note immediately due and payable. It also alleged compliance with certain requirements of General Statutes
The trial court rendered judgment for Hartford Federal on the complaint for $2319.85 plus an attorney's fee of $350 and costs. It also rendered judgment for Hartford Federal on both setoffs and on both counterclaims. The defendant Green has appealed from the decision rendering judgment for the plaintiff on the complaint.
The finding discloses the following relevant facts: The note that is the subject of this action was entered into incident to a home solicitation sale of materials and services for the installation of aluminum siding. On or about June 17, 1971, a representative of A C Contractors (hereinafter A C) appeared, unsolicited, at Green's home. As a result of this meeting, Green and A C entered into an agreement whereby Green agreed to pay A C $2700 for which A C would provide and install aluminum siding on premises owned by Green. Green also signed a promissory note in the amount of $4211.52, which was to have been repaid in ninety-six successive monthly installments of $43.87 and a final installment of any balance due. At the time Green signed the note it was not dated. On August 20, 1971, after the work was completed, Green signed a completion certificate. After signing that certificate, the note was dated August 24, 1971 and the dates for repayment were inserted. Green made forty-one payments on the note. Hartford Federal holds the note, which is now due and payable.
The defendant claims that the court erred (1) in concluding that Hartford Federal had complied with the provisions of the HSSA; (2) in concluding *509 that Hartford Federal was not subject to the provisions of the Connecticut Truth-in-Lending Act and that Hartford Federal complied with the provisions of the federal Truth in Lending Act; (3) in finding as a fact something that states a conclusion; and (4) in refusing to find certain facts claimed to have been admitted, undisputed or indisputable.
We turn now to the claimed violation of General Statutes
The defendant claims that the note does not bear on its face a conspicuous statement as the statute requires. We do not agree. The statutory language appears on the face of the note. It is printed just above the line on which the defendant placed her signature. There are spaces above and below this language that tend to set it out in an attention-getting location. Certainly the location of the required language just above the signature line on which the defendant actually signed the document and the spaces above and below it that set it off serve to sustain the conclusion that it is conspicuous.
We recognize that while the required language is on the face of the document as the statute requires, it is not printed in the largest type, employed in the note. There is, however, no statutory direction that it be so. An examination of
The defendant claims that because the plaintiff failed to insert the number, amount and due dates of payments scheduled to repay the indebtedness before the note was executed by the defendant, the disclosure provisions of
Section 226.2 (kk) of the Code of Federal Regulations defines with greater precision the time at which the truth in lending disclosures must be made: "A transaction shall be considered consummated at the time a contractual relationship is created between a creditor and a customer or a lessor and lessee irrespective of the time of performance *513
of either party." A promissory note is, in its essential form, a contract, and basic principles of contract law apply to its making and interpretation. 11 Am.Jur.2d, Bills and Notes 1. A contract is created or consummated when the law attaches rights or liabilities to the making of one or a set of promises. 1 Williston, Contracts (3d Ed. Jaeger) 1; see 1 Corbin, Contracts 3. To resolve the defendant's claim, we must determine at what point a contractual relationship arose between Hartford Federal and Green. See Waters v. Weyerhaeuser Mortgage Co.,
It is undisputed by the parties that Hartford Federal would not extend credit to the defendant until she signed a completion certificate containing an approval of the work performed and an agreement *514
to waive any claim against Hartford Federal arising out of the contract for the installation of aluminum siding. This event was a condition precedent to the formation of a valid contract. Hence, although the note was executed on June 17, 1971, a binding contract between Hartford Federal and Green did not exist until the condition was satisfied. Upon the happening of that condition, credit was extended, the transaction was consummated and the pertinent disclosures were made. We note that the essential terms of the loan were fully disclosed at the time the note was executed and, hence, the defendant's ability to shop for credit was unhampered. See
Ill
The defendant also assigns error to paragraph nine of the finding, in which the court found essentially that the language required by General Statutes
The final claim which we discuss is that the court erred in refusing to include Six paragraphs of the draft finding in its finding which were "either admitted, undisputed or indisputable." The court was correct in declining to include the particular paragraphs of the draft finding because doing so would not affect the result. See Lewis v. Lewis,
There is no error.
In this Opinion PARSKEY and A. ARMENTANO, Js., concurred.