12 A.2d 835 | Conn. | 1940
The plaintiff alleged that her grandmother loaned to the defendant personally the sum of $500, and as evidence of said loan the defendant gave her a note payable to the plaintiff in the sum of $500; that the defendant caused the note to be signed "The Katz Mullen Co., Trustee by Jacob H. Katz President" *556
but there never was any legal entity in manner and form as that signature would indicate, but, instead, the entity described in the signature was the defendant; and that there was a balance due on the note, together with all interest on the sum of $500. The court has found that on August 23, 1938, $450 was given by the grandmother to the defendant personally, for him to invest in a mortgage for the plaintiff and upon his assurance that he would do so; that thereafter the grandmother repeatedly asked the defendant for the mortgage and note and some four or five months after he received the money he gave her the note in question, signed as alleged in the complaint; and that The Katz Mullen Co., Trustee, was in reality the defendant. Under these circumstances the plaintiff was entitled to recover against the defendant personally upon the note, and judgment to that effect would not be a departure from the case set up in the complaint. Chesnut-Hill Reservoir Co. v. Chase,
Although the face of the note was $500, the plaintiff was only entitled to recover upon it the actual amount of money paid to Katz. Contino v. Turello,
The defendant cannot claim any estoppel against the plaintiff from asserting her rights under the note, as the defendant was in no way misled to his disadvantage by the acceptance of the note in the form in which it was made. The ruling of the court admitting the note in evidence was, of course, correct. The defendant having on cross-examination been asked, without objection, whether he had committed perjury in a certain trial and denied it, the subsequent further cross-examination in regard to the matter did not exceed the limits of a permissible discretion in the trial court. State v. Ferguson,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.