In re De Gottardi

114 F. 328, 1902 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 302
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedFebruary 20, 1902
DocketNo. 1,547
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 114 F. 328 (In re De Gottardi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re De Gottardi, 114 F. 328, 1902 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 302 (S.D. Cal. 1902).

Opinion

WELLBORN, District Judge.

The creditors’ petition in this matter, asking that the respondents be adjudged bankrupts, was filed May 18, and the adjudication had June 21, 1901. On September 3d next following, the trustee in bankruptcy and one of the creditors filed with the referee a petition alleging, in substance, that the bankrupts were wrongfully withholding from the trustee a large amount of assets not reported in their schedules, and charging specifically upon both the concealment of $7,500, and upon De Gottardi the concealment of $6,500, and asking an order requiring them to pay such assets to said trustee. The bankrupts made answer to said petition, denying, in the main, its allegations; and thereupon evidence was taken, and the findings and order now under review were made by the referee. Thus it will be seen that the proceeding before the referee was not an examination of the bankrupts and other witnesses for the purpose of acquiring information generally as to the bankrupts’ estate, but was a hearing on specific issues duly raised by appropriate pleadings. To account for the two amounts of money which they were specifically charged with concealing, the bankrupts claimed that, within a few weeks prior to their bankruptcy, De Gottardi became involved in an intrigue with a woman, in consequence of which he paid to the woman $6,000, and to a doctor, for services in connection with the same matter, $425. They further claimed that on the night of the 30th of April, 1901, their store at Cayucos, Cal., was burglariously entered, and a large amount of money ($7,500 or $8,500) abstracted from their safe by the burglars. Both of these claims the trustee contested.

The findings and order of the referee were as follows:

“Tfiat from December, 1900, the bankrupts bad been engaged in buying produce on commission for Loeb, Fleishman & Go., of Los Angeles, and others, and that until about April 24, 1901, it had been their practice to receive payments from Loeb, Fleishman & Co. through the mail, by checks of that firm, drawn on the Farmers’ & Merchants’ Bank of Los Angeles, which checks, until the last-named date, they had regularly deposited with their bankers in San Luis Obispo. On said April 24th they had overdrawn their accounts at two banks in San Luis Obispo, and on the same day they requested Loeb, Fleishman & Co. to send them $5.000 in coin by express, which that firm declined to do., Loeb, Fleishman & Co., in answer to the request of the bankrupts for coin by express, said they would send them checks for all they owed, but would not send coin, and that if they wanted coin they must come and get it. Within 25 days before that time (April 24th) the bankrupt De Gottardi had drawn out of the firm $6,500. Three days afterwards (April [331]*33127th) De Gottardi, one of the bankrupts, left Cayucos, taking with him a check of Loeb, Fleishman & Co., payable to the order of De Gottardi & Righetti, for $3,375.10. He arrived that night at San Luis Obispo, stopping at the French Hotel, and early next morning (April 28th) left for Los An-geles. He remained in Los Angeles Sunday, and on Monday forenoon, the 29th of April, obtained the coin on the Loeb, Fleishman & Co.’s cheek, and also the cash on another cheek, dated April 29, 1901, for $2,028.91, making in all $(>,001. This money he claims to have put in his satchel or dress suit valise, and with it left Los Angeles for Cayucos on the afternoon of the same day. He arrived at San Luis Obispo that night, and took a room at the Commercial Hotel, where he slept. He left San Luis Obispo early in the morning of the 30th of April for Cayucos, without calling on bis bankers, loitered on the road, and arrived at Cayucos about 2 or 3 o’clock p. m. of tbe same day. He also claims to have taken the six thousand and odd dollars to his home at that plaee. No one saw the money after he obtained it, so far as the evidence discloses, except his wife. lie also claims to have taken this money, and an additional $1,500 which he asserted he had had at his home since the latter part of March, to the store of the firm at Cayucos, and placed the whole amount in the safe, and left it there; that on the night of April 30th some person or persons effected a violent entry into the store and robbed them of the money. In fact, the evidence shows that the amount alleged to have been stolen was eighty-iive or eighty-six hundred dollars. It also appears that the bankrupt De Gottardi drew out from the funds of the firm of De Gottardi & Righetti, in cash, the following' sums: On March 21st, $3,000; on April 11th, §2,000; and on April 16th, §1,500; making the $6,500 hereinbefore mentioned. De Gottardi says that $6,000 of this money he paid to a woman with whom he got into a scrape, and $425 to a doctor for services rendered said woman in connection with said scrape, hut he does not account for the remaining $75 of the $6,500 already mentioned. It will be seen that the said bankrupts have attempted to account for the money brought from Los Angeles, and the $1,500 that De Gottardi had at home, by the alleged burglary of the store on the night of April 30th, and for the $6,500 drawn by De Gottardi from the store by the alleged payment of the same to a woman and a doctor in settlement of De Gottardi’s ‘scrape.’ These explanations, in the light of the evidence, are, to say the least, unsatisfactory. The firm of De Gottardi & Righetti were overdrawn at the Commercial Bank of San Luis Obispo on April 29th to the extent of about $3,000, and at the Andrews Ranking Company, of San Luis Obispo, in the sum of nearly $1,500. They had been requested to at once settle these overdrafts, and it was then, in my judgment, they concocted the scheme of obtaining possession of large sums of money and defrauding their creditors. Shortly after these requests were made it appears that the firm must have had in its possession the following cheeks: Loeb, Fleishman & Co., on Farmers’ & Merchants’ Bank of Los Angeles, dated April 17, 1901, §3,375.10; Loeb, Fleishman & Co., on same bank, dated April 24, 1901, $2,058.18; and one of I-Iilmer & Bredhof. dated April 27, 1901, for $685.76. Neither of these checks was applied towards the payment of the overdrafts, yet on May 1st, the day after the alleged robbery, the last two named checks, aggregating $2,743.94, were given to Mr. F. A. Dorn in payment for alleged past services, $800, and the balance as a retainer in tbe matter of the alleged burglary. It appears further that no person other than the bankrupts were aware that the money brought from Los Angeles had been collected or placed in the safe. There are also a number of other suspicious circumstances tending to show that no burglary in fact was committed, which 1 deem unnecessary to detail.
■‘The bankrupt De Gottardi declined to answer certain questions propounded to him with the object of ascertaining the names of the woman arid doctor to whom he claims he paid money, as well as the place of their respective residences. While De Gottardi’s refusal to disclose the name of the woman might he commended in a social sense, as an act of gallantry, it cannot in law be excused. This denial being based on tbe ground that his answers might tend to incriminate him. it must bo taken as a mere subterfuge, for tbe reason that, whether his meretricious relations with the [332]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Crail v. Commissioner
46 B.T.A. 658 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1942)
In re Bosak
6 F. Supp. 958 (M.D. Pennsylvania, 1934)
In re Vyse
220 F. 727 (E.D. New York, 1915)
In re Automatic Musical Co.
204 F. 334 (N.D. New York, 1913)
In re Richards
183 F. 501 (W.D. Arkansas, 1910)
In re Isaacson
175 F. 292 (E.D. New York, 1909)
Scherer v. Everest
168 F. 822 (Eighth Circuit, 1909)
First Nat. Bank v. Abbott
165 F. 852 (Eighth Circuit, 1908)
In re Ruos
164 F. 749 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1908)
In re Machargo
4 P.R. Fed. 194 (D. Puerto Rico, 1908)
Moody v. Cole
148 F. 295 (D. Maine, 1906)
Bank of Ravenswood v. Johnson
143 F. 463 (Fourth Circuit, 1906)
In re Romine
138 F. 837 (N.D. West Virginia, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 F. 328, 1902 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-de-gottardi-casd-1902.