Salem Glass Works v. Muller
Salem Glass Works v. Muller
Opinion of the Court
The suit in its present aspects is against the alleged endorser of two trade acceptances in the hands of the plaintiff as a holder in due course. The only question argued is one of fact, and is whether the endorsements appearing to be those of the defendant, Margret Muller, are her proper endorsements. She is a woman over eighty years of age and, being sworn as a witness, denied the genuiness of her signature, and it was not claimed that it had been signed by anyone else with her authority. The witness Wentworth for the plaintiff testified with much particularity about visiting Mrs. Muller at her house and seeing her sign the two endorsements, using a pen and ink which her grandson, Eay Muller, according to Wentworth’s testimony, produced for that purpose. This is the only evidence before us of the genuiness of Mrs. Muller’s signature and it is flatly contradicted by her testimony. Eay Muller was not sworn by either party as a witness, no expert of any handwriting was called in, nor was any ordinary witness who claimed to be familiar with Mrs. Mul
The rule to show cause will therefore be discharged.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- SALEM GLASS WORKS v. MARGRET MULLER (IMPLEADED, ETC.)
- Status
- Published