Opinion
The plaintiffs as agents of an insurance company induced the defendant to take a policy of life insurance and sign a note for the amount of the premium, payable to the company in four months, telling him that if he did not pay the premium in that time that would end the matter and the policy would lapse. The plaintiffs took the note and without the defendant's knowledge indorsed it and sent it to the company. Held that as there was no negotiation of the note by the defendant after the indorsement the facts would not support an action by the plaintiffs as accommodation indorsers.
Argued October 14, 1942
Decided December 14, 1942.
ACTION by indorsers against the maker of a promissory note, brought to the Superior Court in Fairfield county, where a demurrer to the complaint was overruled, Munger, J., and the issues were tried to the court, Foster, J.; judgment for the defendant and appeal by the plaintiffs. No error.
George E. Beers and Edward S. Snyder, for the appellants (plaintiffs).
John Keogh, Jr., and Frederick F. Mack, with whom, on the brief, was Gerald R. Steinberg, for the appellee (defendant).
The complaint in the action sets up a claim by the plaintiffs, as accommodation indorsers of a note, against the defendant, the maker of the note, who negotiated it by delivery to the payee and failed to pay it when due, thereby compelling the plaintiffs to do so. The plaintiffs ask judgment for the principal amount of the note with interest. The facts present a quite different situation. These, with such corrections as the plaintiffs are entitled to, are that the plaintiffs as agents of the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia exerted "high pressure salesmanship" on the defendant in an attempt to induce him to take a policy of life insurance; that the defendant told the plaintiffs that he did not have the money to pay the premium; that the plaintiffs produced a blank note for the amount of the premium payable in four months to the company as payee and stated to the defendant that if he signed the note he would have four months in which to pay the premium and that if he did not pay it within that time that would end the matter and the policy would lapse, whereupon the defendant signed the note, gave it to the plaintiffs and received the policy of insurance; that the plaintiffs later without request or knowledge on the defendant's part indorsed the note and sent it to their company; that the defendant failed to pay the premium or note, and one of the plaintiffs paid the note in part and it was returned to them without, so far as the record shows, the payee's indorsement; and that by agreement with the company half of the premium was to go to the plaintiffs.
These facts will not support an action by an accommodation indorser. "An accommodation party is one who has signed the instrument as . . . indorser, without receiving value therefor, and for the purpose of lending his name to some other person. Such a person is liable on the instrument to a holder for value. . . ." General Statutes, 4346. An indorsement for accommodation must be before delivery; General Statutes, 4381; "`indorsement' shall mean an indorsement completed by delivery"; General Statutes, 4317; Myrtilles, Inc. v. Johnson, 124 Conn. 177, 181, 199 A. 115. The plaintiffs received the note as agents of their company. They personally indorsed it thereafter and there was no negotiation of the note by the defendant after the indorsement.
The plaintiffs make the further claim in their brief that by payment of the note they became the real owners and as owners they were entitled to sue, citing General Statutes, 4391. If the complaint were broad enough to support such a claim, which seems doubtful, it is not among those appearing in the finding as having been made on trial and we do not consider it. Ennis v. Clancy, 106 Conn. 511, 513, 138 A. 432.