28 F. Cas. 790 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia | 1822
said that the presumption from those circumstances was so strong as to justify the admission of Mr. Vanzandt to testify as to the similarity of the handwriting.
The jury found a verdict, stating that the traverser did feloniously utter and publish the forged papers contained in the letter to the paymaster-general, with intent to defraud the United States, he then knowing the same to be false, forged, and counterfeit. But they also found “that the letter inclosing the same was written in the state of Tennessee by the traverser, and was sealed up by the traverser in the state of Tennessee, and directed and