101 Pa. 296 | Pa. | 1882
delivered the opinion of the court, November 20th 1882.
So far as we can gather from the scanty records before us, the judgment in controversy, the one on which the sheriff’s sale
In these particulars the circumstances are essentially different from those in the cases of Wood v. Reynolds, 7 W. & S. 406, and Hutchinson’s Ap., 11 Nor. 186. In the first of these an initial letter, in the name of the defendant, by which he was principally distinguished from two other persons of the same name, was omitted in the transcription from the continuance docket to the judgment index, and in the second, in a like transcription, the middle letter of the name was changed from “A” to “G,” thus altogether destroying the defendant’s identity. But if, in the case before us, there was any default at all, it was the default of the defendant in having failed to sign the note with that name by which he was commonly known. Whether this was so or not was a question for the jury. There is testimony showing that he was known among his neighbors by the name of “ Fred. Zehnder;” he so states the fact himself, and the further proof is that he frequently signed papers as “Frederick Zehnder.” Under these circumstances the court below ought not to have taken the case from the jury.
Judgment reversed and a new venire ordered.