131 A. 399 | Conn. | 1925
The plaintiff in this action is seeking to recover as indorsee for value of a note made by the defendant to the Holt Trading Company. The answer admitted that the defendant signed the note, but denied the other allegations of the complaint; and it then set up in an involved manner certain special defenses, the gist of which was that the note, though payable to the Holt Trading Company, was the same in effect as though made payable to one Jerome, who was its president and treasurer and who had sole management of it; that it was executed entirely for the accommodation of Jerome, and was without any consideration, or at least that there had been a total failure of consideration; and that the plaintiff took the note with full knowledge of the circumstances under which it was executed. Issue being joined, the case was referred to a committee for hearing. He reported that the plaintiff was an innocent holder of the note, for value, having given $2,500 consideration for it; and that there were in fact no equities or disabilities against it. To this report the defendant filed a remonstrance; the first two grounds set forth that the committee found, "without evidence to support" his conclusion, that the plaintiff gave $2,500 consideration for the indorsement of the note to it, and that it was an innocent holder *534 for value; the third, fourth and fifth grounds allege that the committee found certain facts without "any sufficient evidence" to support them; the sixth ground alleges the committee's failure to find that the note was executed in pursuance of a certain agreement and conversation which is not otherwise set up than by means of a short excerpt from the defendant's testimony before the committee, which was given in the form of brief questions and answers, and which was alleged to be uncontradicted; and the remaining grounds allege rulings of the committee claimed to be erroneous. The plaintiff demurred to the remonstrance and the court held that all grounds except the first six were insufficient in law. Issue was then joined upon the first six, and they were overruled, and judgment given for the plaintiff.
The third, fourth and fifth grounds might well have been overruled as insufficient in law; it is not a proper ground of remonstrance that a fact is found "without any sufficient evidence" to support it; the Rules of Court permit a remonstrance claiming corrections of the nature of those here sought only upon the grounds that the report "contains a material fact found without evidence or omits to find a material fact which is admitted or undisputed." Practice Book, p. 266, § 102; Goodrich v. Stanley,
The other grounds of remonstrance set out various objections of the defendant made before the committee and rulings by the committee upon them. It is for the most part impossible properly to weigh these objections and rulings because the circumstances under which they were made are not properly stated. A remonstrance based upon a ruling before the committee should, like a finding for appeal, set out the circumstances under which it was made, and, if necessary, other evidence or facts claimed to have been proven, so that the ground of objection and ruling may be intelligently weighed. The rulings in question, except for those stated in two paragraphs of the remonstrance, had to do with evidence as to circumstances under which the note was given or as to the transaction out of which it grew. The finding of the committee, that the plaintiff had no notice of any equities or disabilities against the note, is not attacked before us; as the trial court points out in its memorandum upon the demurrer, so long as that finding stands these rulings, if erroneous, would be harmless; and harmless errors of a committee do not furnish ground for the rejection of *537
a report. Practice Book, p. 267, § 102(d); Ives v.East Haven,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.