In re Hirsch

96 F. 468, 1899 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 335
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Tennessee
DecidedAugust 16, 1899
DocketNo. 1,773
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 96 F. 468 (In re Hirsch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Hirsch, 96 F. 468, 1899 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 335 (W.D. Tenn. 1899).

Opinion

HAMMOND, J.

The first specification, as originally hied, in opposition to the bankrupt's discharge, set out that he “had not offered to surrender all his property for the benefit of his creditors; that he is now the real owner of the stock of goods, business, and property of the Jacob Hirsch Company, a corporation located and doing business at Somerville, Tennessee; and that he is now withholding ihat property from his creditors.” The second specification charged that, with the fraudulent intent to conceal his true financial condition, and in contemplation of bankruptcy, be destroyed, concealed, or failed to keep books of account or records from which his true condition might be ascertained, in this: that he has destroyed or concealed the hook where he kept the account of the cash taken in by him in his business at Somerville, Tenn., during the year 189(1, and prior thereto, from which the original entriés of his business were copied in the ledger. A motion to strike out these specifications, as insufficient, was granted upon the ground that specifications in opposition to a disci large must distinctly aver the facts of the case, and not mere conclusions of fact. Substantially, the plead[470]*470ing must be as specific as a criminal information or indictment; the purpose being that the bankrupt shall have notice of that particular conduct of his which is challenged as an objection to his discharge. This is particularly so under the act of 1898, because by the fourteenth section it is provided that most of the grounds of the opposition to the discharge shall be based upon some offense committed by the bankrupt which is made punishable with imprisonment by the act itself. The other grounds of opposition mentioned in the fourteenth section need not be criminal in their nature, necessarily; but they likewise fall within the ordinary rule that, where the language of a statute does' not of itself serve the purpose of giving notice to the.offender of the particular conduct which is charged against him as an offense, the pleader must aver the facts with sufficient fullness to accomplisii that object. The specifications, as originally drawn, do not do this.

It was also objected to the specifications, in their original form, that the alleged destruction of the books, or failure to keep them, had not been charged to have occurred since the passage of the act of 189B, but, upon the contrary, that it appeared upon the face of the specifications that they related to the business done in 1896. This objection is probably covered by the one just disposed of, but it is not improper to say that in the statute itself there, is no indication of any intention' to withhold a discharge because of any destruction or failure to keep books occurring before the passage of the act. Undoubtedly congress might have extended the grounds of opposition in that manner, but, by the statute itself, the act complained of “must have been in contemplation of bankruptcy.” It was ruled in Re Holman, 92 Fed. 512, that this phrase necessarily implies that it must have been done after the passage of the bankruptcy statute, since, before that time, there could have been no .bankruptcy in contemplation, and if seems to me that there is no answer to that proposition; but of this more will be said presently, in considering-the amended specifications. Indeed, it has been argued for the bankrupt that this provision of the fourteenth section cannot, in the nature of the case, apply to any books or records of a business carried on prior to the passage of the bankruptcy statute. But this is not, in my judgment, altogether sound, and I wish to guard against any misunderstanding on that point of the ruling that has been made. Whatever may be said of “keeping” books of account or records, in respect of that, certainly if one has kept records of his business carried on before the passage of the bankruptcy statute, and these were destroyed or concealed after the passage of the act, the offense would fall within the provisions of the second class of offenses denounced, as a cause for withholding a discharge, by the fourteenth section.

Another reason urged for striking out the first specification is that it does not charge any ground for denying a discharge which is recognized by the fourteenth section of the statute. The act of 1898 nowhere requires the bankrupt to “offer to surrender his property,” nor does it provide any penalty for “withholding the same from his creditors.” If we turn to section 29, which designates the offenses punishable by imprisonment under the statute, we find that what is [471]*471described as an offense is to “knowingly and fraudulently conceal from his trustee any property belonging to bis estate in bankruptcy.” Also, it is an offense punishable by imprisonment to make any false oath in relation to any proceeding in bankruptcy. If a bankrupt willfully leaves off any property which he should disclose by his schedules, he certainly makes a false oath to the same, and Ms discharge may be denied on that ground. Again, if he knowingly and ii audulently conceals his property, no matter how, he cannot be discharged, but the fact that he left the property off the schedule is only an evidence in the one case of concealment, and in the other of the falsity of the oath; but as the statute nowhere denounces as a ground for denying the discharge the mere failure to put the property upon the schedules or to surrender it to the trustee, and inasmuch as these accusations are penal 'in their character, as before stated, nothing can be implied from or based upon such language in a specifics tion opposing a discharge. There must be a distinct averment of the facts bringing the case within the specific denunciations of the statute, and nothing less will do. Failure to schedule or surrender property to the trustee is not per se, or ipso facto, to “knowingly and fraudulently conceal” it.

The amended specifications upon which issues have been taken now present the following grounds of opposition to the discharge: First. That the bankrupt knowingly and fraudulently concealed from the referee, from his creditors, and from the trustee, while a bankrupt, certain proj>erty; that is to say, that he was, on the day on which he filed his petition in bankruptcy, the sole owner of the stock of goods, wares, and merchandise with which he is now doing business in the town of Somerville under (lie name and style of the Jacob Ilirscli Company, and he has not returned this property upon any sworn schedule filed by Mm, showing its location or value. Second. Thai' he has likewise concealed one share of stock, of which he was and is the owner at the time of the filing of his petition in bankruptcy, in the corporation known as the Jacob Hirsch Company, of the value of $50, which he did not return upon Ms schedules, and which he has not made known to his creditors by any sworn return in the bankruptcy proceedings. Third. That, with the fraudulent intent to conceal Ids true financial condition, lie had failed to keep books of account from which ids true financial condition might be ascertained, in that on the 24th of December, 1896, he was engaged in business as a merchant, and made a general assignment for the benefit of his creditors on December 5, 1896, at which time he kept and had on hand a full set of books, consisting of two ledgers, a cotton book, a blotter, and a cash book; that he had filed with the referee Ids ledgers and Ids cotton hook, but not: Ms cash book and blotter from which the original entries were made, hut pretends that he has lost those two books, when, as a matter of fact, he has destroyed or concealed them in contemplation of bankruptcy. Fourth.

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Bluebook (online)
96 F. 468, 1899 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hirsch-tnwd-1899.