Acme Harvesting Mach. Co. v. Bennett

277 F. 425, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 2028
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 5, 1921
DocketNo. 5625
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 277 F. 425 (Acme Harvesting Mach. Co. v. Bennett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Acme Harvesting Mach. Co. v. Bennett, 277 F. 425, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 2028 (8th Cir. 1921).

Opinion

COTTERAD, District Judge.

This appeal is from an order granting a discharge to the appellee. There was a reference to a master of the issues arising upon appellant’s objections, which were eventually confined to the ground that the appellee had obtained goods upon materially false statements in writing.

The appellee was the only witness at the hearing. Material discrepancies appear in the statements, as compared with his testimony, deeds, other instruments, and the schedules—two in the first statement as to incumbrances and three in the second as to real estate values, which counsel have pointed out and emphasized. Appellee testified that he verbally informed appellant’s agents as to his property and debts for insertion by them in the statements, and that he signed them without reading the contents. The master declined to accept his explanation to the effect that he honestly thought the items furnished [426]*426by him were correct and were according to his best information, and that the statements were not prepared as he intended,. and from the documents and the admissions of the appellee held the objection to be well taken, and recommended that the discharge be refused.

The District Judge, conceding that appellee’s assets were overstated and his liabilities understated, commented on the need in such cases of the testimony of the salesmen in support of the statements written up by them when purchasers do not read or understand them, and do not have the data to be exact, and considered that in this case such testimony was not produced, and its omission was not satisfactorily explained. The finding was that appellant had not met the burden of establishing the falsity of the representations. Accordingly the exceptions to the master’s report were sustained, and the discharge was granted. There were later proceedings wherein the discharge was formally ordered, and still later the order was vacated on motion of appellant and then re-entered.

. In substance, appellee attributed the errors in the statements to honest mistakes and incorrect entries by appellant’s agents. There was no denial of his testimony, and no showing that the statements were not obtained as he claimed, or that the items were inserted as he gave them. From a consideration of the evidence, including the concessions on his part, we are persuaded that there was a failure in this case, under its circumstances, to establish that appellee intended to misrepresent the facts by means of the statements signed by him, and that they were for. that reason false in the sense required by section 14 b (3) of the Bankruptcy Act (Comp. St. § 9598). Only a question of fact is presented, and in our opinion it was rightly^ determined by the District Judge.

The order appealed from is therefore affirmed.

Judge HOOK participated at the hearing of this case, hut died before a conclusion was reached and the opinion was prepared.

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Related

Bank of Monroe, of Monroe, Neb. v. Gleeson
9 F.2d 520 (Eighth Circuit, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
277 F. 425, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 2028, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/acme-harvesting-mach-co-v-bennett-ca8-1921.