Sloan v. Grollman

77 A. 577, 113 Md. 192, 1910 Md. LEXIS 46
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 27, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 77 A. 577 (Sloan v. Grollman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sloan v. Grollman, 77 A. 577, 113 Md. 192, 1910 Md. LEXIS 46 (Md. 1910).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Among the debts excepted from the operation of a discharge in bankruptcy are such as “have not been duly scheduled in time for proof and allowance, with the name of the creditor if known to the bankrupt, unless such creditor had notice or actual knowledge of the proceedings in bankruptcy.” Section lY (3) F. S. Bankruptcy Act, Comp. Stat. 1901, page 3428.

The appellee filed his petition in voluntary bankruptcy on November 23rd, 1903, and on May 21st, 1904, obtained his discharge. At the time of his application he was indebted to the appellants upon a judgment for $215.19 recovered in 1900. This debt was not scheduled. In 1908 the appellants issued execution on the judgment, and in the present proceeding to restrain its enforcement the question is whether the judgment creditors had “notice or actual knowledge of the proceedings in bankruptcy” so as to be af *194 feeted by the discharge notwithstanding the omission of their claim from the schedule:

It is alleged in the bill of complaint that although the judgment in question was not mentioned in the schedule yet the plaintiff (appellee) “immediately, personally notified” the defendants (appellants) of the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, and the appellee’s attorney also “within a very few days” after the petition was filed wrote to the defendants at their place of business in Baltimore City notifying them of the filing of the petition with instructions to prove their claim, and that the letter was enclosed in an envelope bearing his name and address and was never returned.

These allegations were explicitly denied by the defendants in their answer to the bill.

As the discharge is for the benefit of the bankrupt and as the omission of a claim from the schedule is due to his default it is well settled that the burden is upon him to prove that the omitted creditor had the requisite notice or knowledge of the proceedings. Armstrong v. Sweeney, 73 Neb. 775; Collins v. McWalters, 72 N. Y. Suppl. 205; Wineman v. Fisher, 135 Mich. 604; Collins v. Crewes, 3 Ga. App. 238.

It appears from the appellee’s testimony that he had been engaged for a number of years in the business of buying and selling live stock, and that he failed in 1898. After his failure he conducted the business in his wife’s name until' he obtained his discharge in bankruptcy in 1904 when he resumed operations in his own name. In 1905 and 1907 he bought two farms, paying $2,600 on one of the properties and on the other $3,300. He stated that he borrowed for this purpose $2,200 from his wife, she having received the greater part of that amount from the estate of a relative who died in 1902. He claimed that he had not a dollar when he filed his petition in bankruptcy. Without attempting to support the averment in his bill of complaint, to which he had made oath, that he had personally notified the appellants of the bankruptcy proceedings immednately • after the filing of *195 his petition in November, 1903, he testified that in February, 1904, after the Baltimore fire, he went to that city on a Friday and got a certain Mr. Emory, with whom he had some business, to write the appellants a letter notifying them of the application in bankruptcy, and that the letter was mailed; that on the following Monday he went to Centreville and while there told Mr. Legg, his attorney in the bankruptcy matter, that the appellants’ claim had been left out, and asked that they be notified of the proceedings; that Mr. Legg at once wrote a letter to that effect and said that he would mail it; that in March, 1904, he (the appelleeq bought a bill of lumber amounting to about thirteen dollars from the appellants and gave a check signed in his wife’s name; that a little fellow he supposed to be Fisher Sloan, one of the appellants, asked why the check was signed in the name of B. Grollman, to' which the appellee replied by telling of his failure and stating that he was now taking the benefit of the bankrrqff law; that he asked the person to whom he gave the check whether he had not heard from Mr. Legg as to the bankruptcy proceedings, but to this question he received no answer. It was testified by Mr. Emory that in January or February, 1904, he wrote a letter at the appellee’s request giving notice of the latter’s application for the benefit of the bankrupt law, and while not certain to whom the letter was addressed his impression was that it was to Sloan & Bro., the appellants. He stated that he gave the letter to the appellee to mail, that it was enclosed in one of his business envelopes with his name and address on the outside and that it was never returned.

Mr. Legg testified that sometime after the petition in bankruptcy was filed, but just when he could not say, the appellee told him that he had omitted the claims of the appellants and some other creditors from the schedule, and that he at once wrote to the appellants informing them of the. proceedings ; that the appellee proposed to mail the letter, but the witness said he would mail it himself and did so in the appellee’s presence; that it was in one of the witness’ busi *196 ness envelopes bearing his name and address, with direction for its return in five days if not delivered and it was not returned.

On cross-examination Mr. Legg testified that when the appellee told him of the omission of the appellants’ claim from the schedule he mentioned two other creditors who had been omitted, and that he wrote to them all at the same time, and subsequently sent a list of the omitted creditors to the referee in bankruptcy. Upon being shown the supplemental list sent by him to the referee he stated that the appellants’ names were not included, but that he had always been under the impression that he had sent in their names until he had recently learned from the referee to the contrary.

The appellants are partners, and the firm is composed of George E. Sloan and Eisher Sloan. Each of them testified that neither of the letters mentioned by the appellee and his witnesses had ever been received by the firm or either of its members, and that they had not learned of the bankruptcy proceedings until long after the appellee’s discharge, their first information on the subject having been communicated to them by Mr. Barroll, their attorney, who wrote them in 1906 that the appellee had pleaded the discharge as against an attachment then issued and pending on the appellants’ judgment. Their letter in reply is in evidence. It expresses surprise at the statment contained in Mr. Barroll’s letter and declares: “This is the first we knew of Mr. Grollman taking-advantage of the Bankruptcy Law, and we have never received notice of same from the referee nor any other person.”

It was proven by the appellants that it was the custom in their office to keep and file all letters and that they had examined their letter files and found none from either Mr. Emory or Mr. Legg. They testified that the appellee never told either of them at any time that he had applied for a discharge in bankruptcy and they denied that he had bought or paid for the small bill of lumber he had mentioned. The testimony of Mr. Albert, the appellants’ bookkeeper, was to the same effect.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 A. 577, 113 Md. 192, 1910 Md. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sloan-v-grollman-md-1910.