In re Skurat

14 F.2d 490, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1356
CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 30, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 14 F.2d 490 (In re Skurat) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Skurat, 14 F.2d 490, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1356 (mnd 1926).

Opinion

JOHN B. SANBORN, District Judge.

The hearing was originally set for December 5, 1925, at a special term of this court held in Minneapolis, Minn. Herman Zander, the attorney for the bankrupt, appeared at that time and moved that the report of the special master be confirmed, and there was no appearance by or on behalf of the objecting creditors. Thereupon the court granted such motion. Thereafter counsel for the bankrupt and for the objecting creditors agreed that an order might be entered, setting aside the order confirming the report, and such order was made and a hearing fixed for the 19th day of Deeemhef, 1925. The clerk of the United States District Court of the Sixth Division was not notified of such order, and the files were not in court on the 19th day of December.

Thereupon the court ordered that the creditors should serve their brief within five days after December 19, 1925, that the bankrupt should answer thereto within five days thereafter, that the creditors should have five days in which to serve a reply brief, and that the matter should then be considered submitted. It was further agreed by counsel at that time that, if the court found that, because of the delay and expense caused by the failure of the objecting creditors to appear on the 5th day of December, and to have in court the files on the 19th day of December, additional and unreasonable expense had been caused to the bankrupt, that the court- might determine what additional costs should be paid to the bankrupt or his attorney by the objecting creditors. Briefs have been filed in accordance with such order, and the court has examined such briefs, and the files and records in said-proceeding, and the transcript of the testimony taken before the special master.

The objections filed to the discharge o£ the bankrupt raised the following questions %

(1) Did the bankrupt, willfully and witfe intent to hinder, delay," and defraud his creditors, convey an undivided one-eleventh interest in the south half of the southwest quarter of section 16, township 125, range 37, Pope county, Minn., to his mother, Mathilda Skurat, on the 2d day of February, 1924, or did he convey said interest to said Mathilda Skurat in order to give her an-unlawful preference, she being a creditor?

(2) Did the bankrupt, with intent to conceal his ownership of an undivided one-eleventh interest in two-thirds of the north half of the northeast quarter and the southeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section 16, township 125, range 37, Pope county, Minn., knowingly omit the same from his bankruptcy schedules, and did he knowingly testify falsely, at the time of his examination under section 21a, in regard to his ownership of an interest in said land?

(3) Did the bankrupt, in order to enable L. C. Scbuhmaker and Paid Zemke to purchase certain property mortgaged to the Pop© County State Bank and sold at a chattel mortgage foreclosure sale, place in their hands moneys, credits, and other property belonging to him, for the purpose of placing th© same beyond the reach of his creditors, within four months prior to the filing of Ms petition in bankruptcy?

(4) Did the bankrupt, knowingly and-with intent to defraud his creditors, and to prefer the Pope County State Bank, of Glen-wood, Minn., as a creditor, within four months of the filing of his petition in bankruptcy, in the month of December, 1923, [492]*492mortgage to the Pope County State Bank a Holstein bull, and knowingly fail to include the same in his schedules ?

(5) Did the bankrupt, with intent to hinder, delay, and defraud his creditors, and to eonceal his. assets, property, and his financial condition from them and from his trustee, fail to keep records or books of account or memorandums of his business transactions?

The special master, after a full hearing, determined all of these questions adversely to the objecting creditors. There can be no question of the correctness of his findings, so far as they relate to the third, fourth, and fifth specifications, and there would be no useful purpose served in discussing those matters.

The claim of the bankrupt was that the property referred to in the first specification of objection belonged to his mother, and that he had no right, title, or interest in it, having conveyed his interest in it to her in the year 1916, or thereabouts, for a valuable consideration. It appears that the bankrupt is one of eleven children of Joseph Skurat, deceased, and Mathilda Skurat, his wife; that he is a man without much education, and has always been engaged in the business of farming; .that he stayed upon the home farm until about the year 1909; that after the death of his father he married, and has never lived there at any time since; that his mother has at all times operated the farm, paid the taxes, and has taken whatever rents or profits accrued therefrom; that on February 14, 1916, a petition for determination of descent of land was filed with the probate court of Pope ■ county, Minn., by Mathilda Skurat, this particular property, at the time of the death of Joseph Skurat, being in his name; that the court entered a decree on the 13th day of March, 1916, whereby the land was assigned to the widow, Mathilda Skurat, for life, and a one-eleventh interest to each of the children, subject to the widow’s life estate.

There was evidence to the effect that some time in 1916, or prior thereto, some of the children, including Emil Skurat, conveyed their interests to the mother, and thát she paid them some consideration therefor. She testified that she gave each boy $1,000 when he left the farm. Emil Skurat claims that she gave him about $1,000, partly in cash and partly in property, for assigning to her his interest. The testimony to establish this is not clear nor definite, but there is nothing so inherently improbable in it as to justify this court in saying that a finding that that had happened is not justified by the evidence. Neither the son nor the mother were people of a great deal of intelligence or business experience. It is obvious that they did not consider the state of the record title of any particular importance until about the year 1916, when they filed a petition for determination of' descent, and it seems probable that at about that time there was an attempt made to put the title in some one.

It is entirely probable that the'deed dated on the 26th day of December, 1923, and within four months of the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, to Mrs. Skurat, the mother, and which was recorded in Book 11 of Deeds, on page 381, in the office of the register of deeds of Pope county, Minn., on February 9, 1924, and which recited: “It is fully understood and agreed by all the parties hereto that the real consideration for this deed is to correct the record title in the grantee herein, and is in place and in lieu of the deed made, executed and delivered to the grantee herein in 1916, which said deed the grantee herein has failed to record, and has been lost by her, the grantee being the mother of the grantors, and a widow with minor children to support, and that this deed is in place and in lieu of said lost deed, for which valuable consideration had been given” — was given with the fact of the insolvency of Emil Skurat and his contemplated bankruptcy in mind; but if, the fact is, as the referee finds it to be, that he had, prior to that time, actually parted with his interest in the land, this would not justify a refusal to grant him a discharge.

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Bluebook (online)
14 F.2d 490, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-skurat-mnd-1926.