In re Johnson

1 F. Supp. 649, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1811
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedMay 26, 1932
DocketNo. 12035
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1 F. Supp. 649 (In re Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Johnson, 1 F. Supp. 649, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1811 (D. Conn. 1932).

Opinion

HINCKS, District Judge.

This matter comes before the court upon the exceptions of the bankrupt to the report of the special master recommending that the bankrupt’s application for a discharge be denied. The application for a discharge was heard by the special master upon specifications of objection duly filed by the Delaware County National Bank of Chester, Pa. (hereinafter called the “bank”), charging a false statement within the provisions of section 14b (3) of the Bankruptcy Act, as amended (11 USCA § 32 (b) (3).

[650]*650The transcript of evidence discloses that in 1926 the bankrupt was an executive officer and substantial stockholder of a prosperous steel company in Pennsylvania. Both the corporation and the bankrupt were customers of the bank. Early in February, 1926, it was desired to increase the plant of the corporation, and the bankrupt applied for an additional and substantial loan from the bank, the proceeds to be used by him for the purchase of additional stock in the corporation. The bank requested a financial statement, and on February 8th, or thereabouts, the bankrupt sent the bank a statement, which is the basis of the present controversy, copy of which is shown in the footnote.1

The truth and accuracy of this statement is not questioned except with respect to the two items listed among the assets which are stated to be “Trust Inheritance from Mother” and “Inheritance Father’s Estate,” neither of which was listed in the bankrupt’s schedules. At the time this statement was given, it was known to the bank that the bankrupt’s father and mother were still in life, and the special master has found in effect that the bankrupt intended, and the bank understood, that the item “Inheritance Father’s Estate” was an expectancy merely, and consequently was not of itself a materially false statement in writing such as to bar a discharge. The bank, however, by its specifications of objection, contends that the item “Trust Inheritance from Mother” was a statement materially false, and, as such, sufficient to bar a discharge, and the special master has sustained this contention.

Upon this issue the transcript of evidence further discloses that after the statement in question was furnished, and before the loan was made, the subject-matter of the statement was discussed in conversations at which there were present the bankrupt, Eagan his business associate, and the president and cashier of the bank. Each of these persons has testified in these proceedings, and no one of them agrees with the others as to just what was said by the bankrupt with respect to the item of “Trust Inheritance from Mother.” The bankrupt himself testified that at this time he told the bank that the item was an expectancy only; that he had understood his grandmother to say that she was going to create a trust which he would come into upon attaining the age of forty, or when his mother died. The bankrupt testified further that he had in fact had sueh a conversation with his grandmother, and that in 1919 “she specifically brought it up again. I understood her to say at that time this trust had been created”; and that when his grandmother died in 1927, he learned for the first time that he took nothing by her will. The testimony of the president of the bank was vague and inconsistent. Speaking of the conversations had after the statement was furnished, he said, first, that he understood from the bankrupt that both items were expectancies only, but on redirect examination modified his testimony and said that he understood from the bankrupt that one of the two items in question (he did not know which) represented an estate which would come to the bankrupt either upon the death of a parent or when he attained the age of forty; and that this item (whichever it was) represented an existing trust. He testified, however, that he made no inquiry whatever, not even of the bankrupt, as to the terms of the trust, or as to whether it was irrevocable. The cashier testified that the bankrupt said that he would receive one of the two items (as to which he was not sure) upon attaining the age of forty years. He also confirmed the fact that no further inquiry was made, even of the bankrupt, as to the details of the trust. Eagan, the bankrupt’s business associate, who also was present, testified that the bankrupt informed the bank officials that the trust inheritance represented something “established by his grandfather and was to be given to him at the time of the death of his grandmother— not his mother — or at the age of forty.” And both of the bank officials expressly disclaimed any knowledge that anything said to them by the bankrupt was contrary to [651]*651the fact as it existed at that time, and both, without objection, testified to a belief that the bankrupt at the time believed all he said to them to he true.

Further facts disclosed by the transcript, having some bearing on the issue involved, are as follows: That the loan made at this tune was secured by a substantial amount of the bankrupt’s stock in the steel company; also by an assignment of his personal insurance which, however, was term insurance without cash surrender value. That subsequently, in 1927, the bankrupt arranged for his father to put up second mortgage bonds of the steel company of $25,000 par value as additional collateral for the loan. It further appeared that subsequent to the loan, even up to the date of these proceedings, the bank had made no inquiries and did not even know whether the bankrupt’s parent, upon whose death depended the falling in of the trust estate, had died, or whether the bankrupt had attained the age of forty. In fact, the bankrupt became forty not until February, 1932, subsequent to the master’s hearing.

In view of the fact that the loan in question, when made, was supported by a substantial amount of collateral, and that the bankrupt at the time was in possession of a salary of $18,000 per annum, with substantial other income, a reading of the transcript creates some douht as to whether the loan in question was induced by the inclusion in the bankrupt’s statement of the two items in question. This doubt is fortified by the fact that the hank at no time, even after the loan had apparently gone sour, made inquiry as to the details of the “trust”; also by the fact that the bankrupt’s corporation as a result of the loan was given fresh capital and, at least to that extent, more assets to satisfy its corporate obligations to the bank. However, in view of the testimony of the bank officials that they did rely to some extent at least upon one of the two items in question (even though they cannot now recall which item it was), I should be reluctant to disturb the conclusion of the special master that the loan was induced by one of these items. In re Slocum (C. C. A.) 22 F.(2d) 282.

It is on the law rather than the facts that I find myself compelled to disagree with the special master. He reports as follows:

“The bankrupt has testified that his grandmother told him this in 1913, and that he was surprised and shocked to learn after her death in 1927 that he had not received anything by her will.

“The bankrupt did not know that a trust had been created for him and then existed, and the single conversation with his grandmother thirteen years before did not honestly warrant its inclusion in a bank statement. In re Gilpin, 160 F. 171, 20 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1023, 20 A. B. R. 374; In re Weitzman, 11 F.(2d) 897, 898, 6 A. B. R. (N. S.) 427.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 F. Supp. 649, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1811, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-johnson-ctd-1932.