In re Johnston

2 F. Supp. 443, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1643
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedMarch 12, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2 F. Supp. 443 (In re Johnston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Johnston, 2 F. Supp. 443, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1643 (W.D. Va. 1932).

Opinion

PAUL, District Judge.

Vivian D. Johnston was adjudicated a bankrupt upon his voluntary petition filed on July 11, 1929. Thereafter, on the 4th day of June, 1930, he filed his petition for discharge and objections to the granting of the discharge having been filed by James D. Johnston, a creditor, the questions raised by said objections were referred to W. S. Engleby, Roanoke, Va., as a special master to consider and report thereon.'

The special master filed his report on October 31, 1931, finding that the objections to the discharge were hot well founded, and recommended that a discharge be granted. To this report the objecting creditor filed his exceptions, and the matter comes before the court upon the report of the special master and the exceptions thereto. The original specifications of objections to the discharge of the bankrupt were four in number.

Specification Ho. 1 was to the effect that the bankrupt had knowingly and fraudulently made false statements in the schedules filed with his petition, in that he Had listed as a creditor in the amount of $23,000 the Farmers’ & Merchants’ Credit Corporation of Roanoke; whereas it is claimed that at the time of filing his petition he did not owe the creditor named any such sum, but that the amount named,' or.an approximate amount, was owing by the bankrupt to James D. Johnston, the objecting creditor, who had been indorser on notes to the amount named, and by virtue of his indorsement had taken up or paid off the notes owing to the Farmers’ & Merchants’ Credit Corporation.

It appears that James D. Johnston, objecting creditor, had been a partner with the bankrupt in an automobile business at Roanoke, conducted under the name of Johnston Motor Company. This business was begun about 1919. Vivian D. Johnston was the active manager of this business, and James D. Johnston appears to have had little knowledge of the actual manner of conduct or progress of the business, although he apparently furnished the larger part of such financial strength as the business had. This business venture was apparently a losing one, and its affairs came to a crisis in July, 1923, at which time- it owed large sums to various banking institutions. As far as appears from the evidence, the Johnston Motor Company did not continue an active business after July, 1923, but for the next several years the partners were engaged in adjusting and paying the obligations owed to the various banks, and appear to have finally paid these off during the course of the year of 1925, most of the money for this purpose being furnished by James D. Johnston. It is not clear what business or employment Vivian D. Johnston engaged in after the closing down of the Johnston Motor Company up until about the time, or shortly before, he filed his petition in bankruptcy. It appears that at the time the petition in bankruptcy was filed, and possibly for a short time before, he was employed by a manufacturing company at Covington, Va. It will be noted, therefore, that the business of the Johnston Motor Company was discontinued and finally wound up during a period of from four to six years previous to the filing of the petition in bankruptcy. This seems worth while to be noted in view of the fact that the acts of the bankrupt, which, are the basis for the objections to his discharge, with one exception, occurred while the Johnston Motor Company was in existence, which was, as above stated, from four to six years before the bankruptcy.

In the course of this business, the Johnston Motor Company had become indebted to the Farmers’ & Merchants’ Credit Corporation in approximately the 'amount set forth in the schedule, and James D. Johnston, as indorser on the notes evidencing this indebtedness, was compelled to pay, and did pay, the larger part, if not the entire amount, of the indebtedness, and these payments had been made before a petition in bankruptcy was filed.

From the schedules it appears that the bankrupt, in listing this indebtedness upon which he was, of course, liable as a partner, listed the same as due to the Farmers’ & Merchants’ Credit' Corporation and James D. Johnston, making such notation as would indicate that the debt was primarily due to the Farmers’ & Merchants’ Credit Corporation, and that James D. Johnston was an indorser on the notes. The objection is now raised' that this is a false statement, in that the ■bankrupt knew that the credit corporation had been paid off and that any indebtedness owing by the bankrupt was due to James D. [445]*445Johnston, who had taken up the notes as indorser thereon.

It seems to the court that this objection is not sufficient to deny discharge to the bankrupt on the ground that he made knowingly false statements in his schedule. Possibly the bankrupt knew, or had reason to believe, that the entire debt due the credit corporation had been paid oft' by James D. Johnston, but, had ho undertaken to list James D. Johnston as the creditor on this debt, it would have involved the ascertainment of just what amount had been paid on the debt by James D. Johnston and the further ascertainment .of jnst what amount the bankrupt was due to contribute to James D. Johnston as an equal partner in the concern which had been the primary debtor. Of course, this might have been done, but the bankrupt apparently knew that he was liable for the full amount of the debt to some one, and he proceeded to list the debt as one due to the credit corporation to which it had been originally due, and at the same time made it clear by his schedules that James D. Johnston was an indorser on these notes. It was perhaps carelessness not to have figured out more accurately just the amount of the bankrupt’s liability on this debt and the person or persons to whom the money was owed at that time, .but certainly no harm was done to any one by listing the debt in the manner in which it was set forth, for it is made clear in the schedule that the indebtedness was one originally due to the credit corporation on notes which were indorsed by James D. Johnston. The mere technical fact that at the time the petition Was filed the credit corporation had ceased to be a creditor because the indorser on the notes had paid them off is not sufficient to permit the court to say that the bankrupt made a knowingly false and fraudulent statement in Ms schedules.

The second specification of objections to the discharge is the statement that the bankrupt destroyed, mutilated, falsified, and concealed the records relating’ to the conduct of his business and failed to keep proper books of account and records from which his financial condition and business transactions might bo ascertained.

The principal difficulty about relating this charge, and also the other specifications which will be hei’einafter discussed, to the bankruptcy grows out of the following facts:

As previously stated, the Johnston Motor Company went out of active business some five or six years before the petition in bankruptcy was filed by Vivian D. Johnston. There is probably little doubt that during the existence of the business its records were not well kept and that in other respects it was carelessly and wastefully handled.

James D. Johnston was the principal financial backer of the business, but was inactive in the conduct of the business, and knew little about it. As is very frequently the case, he was deceived or misled by the optimism of his partner, and, when the collapse of the business finally came, James D. Johnston aw’oke to find himself heavily involved.

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Related

In re Hanson
309 F. Supp. 810 (D. Minnesota, 1970)
In re Burroughs
18 F. Supp. 921 (S.D. New York, 1937)
Johnston v. Johnston
63 F.2d 24 (Fourth Circuit, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
2 F. Supp. 443, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-johnston-vawd-1932.