Murdock v. Schindel

98 A. 149, 128 Md. 633, 1916 Md. LEXIS 107
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 17, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 98 A. 149 (Murdock v. Schindel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murdock v. Schindel, 98 A. 149, 128 Md. 633, 1916 Md. LEXIS 107 (Md. 1916).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant, Joseph Murdoclc, brought suit in the Circuit Court for Washington County against the executrix and executors of Andrew J. Schindel, deceased, on the following single bill:

“$3,000.00. Hagerstown, Md., Sept. 14th, 1903.
Two years after date I promise to pay to the order of Joseph Murdock Three Thousand Dollars ($3,000) at four per cent, interest, for value received. Witness my hand and seal.
“A. J. Schindel. (Seal).”

Issues were joined on the plea of non est factv/m and a traverse of a plea that the alleged deed or single bill was procured by fraud, and the plaintiff has brought this appeal from a judgment in favor of the defendants.

The record contains seven exceptions, the first six being to the rulings of the Court on the evidence, and the seventh to the granting, at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence, of the defendants’ prayers withdrawing the case from the jury on the ground that the plaintiff had offered no evidence legally sufficient to entitle him to recover.

*635 The sixth exception, which presents the important question in the case, is to the refusal of the Court to admit the alleged single hill in evidence, and the prayers granted at the instance of the defendants rest upon that ruling.

The whole single hill was typewritten, except the signature of the maker and the seal, which were written and made with “pen and ink.” It was in the possession of the plaintiff, and before offering it in evidence the plaintiff produced a number of witnesses who testified that they were familiar with the signature of Andrew J. Schindel, the defendants’ testator, and that the signature to the single bill was his signature. He had also put in evidence a number of records containing the signature of the testator, and several letters and postal cards proved to have been written and signed by him.

The plea of non est factum, imposed upon the plaintiff the burden of proving the execution and delivery of the single bill sued on and offered in evidence, and the theory upon which it was objected to by the defendants and excluded by the Court was that the plaintiff had offered no evidence to show that it was sealed by the testator. The contention of the appellees, defendants, is based mainly, if not entirely, upon the language of Chief Judge Alvey in Keedy v. Moats, 72 Md. 325. A careful examination of the record and opinion in that ease will show that the decision is not open to the construction relied on. The suit was on a single hill, and the defendant pleaded non est factum, and that the alleged single bill was procured by fraud. The plaintiff offered the single bill in evidence, the whole of which, except the signature, was in his handwriting, and also offered evidence tending to show that the signature thereto was the signature of the deceased. The defendant offered evidence tending Jp show that the instrument sued on was procured by fraud anct that the signature of the maker was not the genuine signature of his testator. The Court below granted the first prayer of the plaintiff which instructed the jury: “That the possession of the single bill in suit by the plaintiff is prima facie *636 •evidence of the sealing and delivery of the same by the deceased, to the plaintiff, provided the jury find that the single bill was subscribed with the signature of the defendant’s testator, in his own proper handwriting.” The verdict and judgment being in favor of the plaintiff the .defendant appealed, and in passing upon this prayer of the plaintiff, Chief Judge Alvby said: “The general issue plea of non ■est factum, denying as it does the allegation in the declaration that the single bill sued on was the deed of the defendant’s testator, threw the whole burden of proof upon the plaintiff, of the execution of the single bill, including the •delivery thereof by the obligor. Bank v. Ridgely, 1 H. & G. 416. The execution of the deed, to make it effective, consists of the signing and sealing, thereof, fallowed by the act or ceremony of delivery. But proof of execution and possession is sufficient evidence, prima facie, of delivery, and in the absence of all proof on the part of the defendant, would entitle the plaintiff to a verdict. Edelen v. Sanders, 8 Md. 118. Mere proof of possession,, however, in no manner relieves the plaintiff, of the burden of proving the execution of the instrument as the deed of the obligor, that is, that the instrument was duly signed or sealed by or for him,; for the mere possession of the instrument has no evidential relation to the existence of the seal. * * * The first instruction given was erroneous and calculated to mislead 'the jury, because, by it, the jury were told that mere possession of the single bill by the plaintiff was prima- fade evidence, not only of the delivery, but also of the sealing of the note, if they believed the signature thereto was in the handwriting of the defendant’s testator. The existence of the seal of the party to be charged, the thing that makes the instrument a deed • as distinguished from a promissory note, was the substantial matter put in issue by the plea; and the mere possession by the plaintiff, upon the proof simply of the signature, did not prove the essential act of sealing of the instrument; and •especially not when it is admitted that the whole instrument is in the handwriting of the plaintiff, except only the signa *637 tare thereto,—the seal being no part of the subscribed name-of the- party. The jury should have been left to find, from all the facts' and circumstances of the case, whether the note-sued on had-been duly executed as a deed, by signature and seal of the defendant’s testator. Eor though the scroll may have been made or fixed to the note by the plaintiff,, if the maker of the note subscribed his name opposite the scroll thus made, he thereby adopted the- scroll as his own seal, as completely as if ho had made it himself.” When the language we have.quoted is applied to the- 'record' in that case, it is clear that Judge Alvey did not mean to say it was necessary for the plaintiff' to prove that the .testator sealed the instrument, by a witness who saw him mdke tho seal or write-his name opposite the seal, previously made, or b-y'the admission of the testator that he had sealed it, for notwithstanding tho alleged single bill, the testimony of witnesses who stated that the .signature thereto was the signature of the testator,, and that they heard him say that he owed the plaintiff a note,. and certain “notes and writings containing the admitted signature- of the” testator was all the evidence in the case to show that the instrument sued on was the single bill of the testator, he said: “The jury should have been left to find, from all the facts and circumstances of the case, whether the note sued on had been duly executed as a deed, by signature and seal of tb© defendant’s testator.” The learned Judge was discussing a prayer which instructed the jury that the mere possession of the alleged single bill was prima facie

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 A. 149, 128 Md. 633, 1916 Md. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murdock-v-schindel-md-1916.