156 Pa. 329 | Pa. | 1893
Opinion by
The days of actual sealing of legal documents, in its original sense of the impression of an individual mark or device upon wax or wafer, or even on the parchment or paper itself, have long gone by. It is immaterial what device the impression
These decisions establish beyond question that any flourish or mark, however irregular or inconsiderable, will be a good seal, if so intended, and a fortiori the same result must be produced by writing the word “ seal,” or the letters “ L. S.,” meaning originally locus sigilli, but now having acquired the popular force of an arbitrary sign for a seal, just as the sign “ & ” is held and used to mean “ and ” by thousands who do not recognize it as the Middle Ages manuscript contraction for the latín “ et.”
If therefore the word “ seal ” on the note in suit had been written by Nissley after his name, there could have been no doubt about its efficacy to make a sealed instrument. Does it alter the case any that it was not written by him, but printed beforehand? We cannot see any good reason why it should. Rati
Jameson, 5 Bin. 288, 244.
We are of opinion that the note in suit was duly sealed.
We have not derived much light from the decisions in other states, but so far as we have found any analogous cases they are in harmony with the views herein expressed. In Whitley v. Davis, 1 Swan (Tenn.) 333, the word “ seal ” without any scroll, was held to be a good seal even to a public deed by the clerk of a court, he stating in the certificate that no seal of office had been provided. And in Lewis v. Overby, 28 Gratt. (Va.) 627, the word “seal ” without any scroll was held a good seal within a statute enacting that “ any writing to which the person making it shall affix a scroll by way of seal, shall be of the same force as if it were actually sealed.”
Order opening judgment is reversed and judgment reinstated.