The Case of the Captain's Coins

We have the rich side of the Farraday family (old and prosperous shipping line) and the poor side.

One Farraday cousin, either Jonathan or Thomas, saved the son of the Malay king when an earthquake followed by a tidal wave struck the region in 1871. They were both on the scene. Jonathan was a ship's captain and Thomas was the ship's clerk. In gratitude, a medal bearing a portrait of the rescuer was struck and the man was also rewarded materially. This was the beginning of the shipping company's wealth. Thomas died on the return voyage and Jonathan was in possession of the medal, the money and the contracts. Jonathan's family has benefited all these years while Cousin Thomas' family has been the have-nots. Whose face is on the medal?

Perry Mason is no piker.
PM: I have a somewhat bigger job for you. First, a thorough check on everyone connected with the case. Go back two or three weeks.
PD: Easy, Perry, I employ a staff, not an army.
PM: You'd better start recruiting.

Burger about has a stroke at one point when Mason changes his mind on an agreement the two had struck the day before.
Judge: The court is not interested in personalities.
It's not as if the Burger v. Mason courtroom personality conflicts are a key component of the series, Judge.

I nailed the murderer on this show, going by his own testimony on opportunity.

During the wrap-up, the coin is given to the Farraday woman who's engaged to the exonerated defendant. The camera zooms in.
PD: So that's the face that launched a thousand ships.