Taback v. Arai

21 F.2d 161
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedAugust 2, 1927
DocketNo. 3609
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 21 F.2d 161 (Taback v. Arai) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taback v. Arai, 21 F.2d 161 (3d Cir. 1927).

Opinion

DAVIS, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from an order of the District Court refusing to discharge the bankrupts.

Louis Taback and Nathan Taback, under the firm name of the Taback Bros., were dealers in raw and thrown silk. From some time in 1917 to May 1, 1920, their place of business was at 1133 Broadway, New York City, and from May to September, Í920, it was in Paterson, N. J. For a time the bankrupts conducted a prosperous business, but in 1920 one of the worst panics known in the silk industry occurred, and the price of raw silk dropped from around $15 to $4.50 per pound. The bankrupts had bought and were under contract to buy a great deal of silk when prices were at their peak, and had to dispose of it at a sacrifice. Like many others, they were caught in the slump.

As a result they were unable to pay their bills, and on September 29,1920, a petition in bankruptcy was filed against them. The case was referred to the late Hon. Frank Van Cleve, referee in bankruptcy. In due time the bankrupts made application for their discharge. The creditors objected, and filed many specifications of objection; but neither the trustee nor any of the creditors prosecuted any of them except Morimura, Arai & Co. Numerous meetings were held and a great! deal of testimony was taken in support of those specifications, but they were abandoned one after another, until finally the objecting creditor relied upon two only: (1) That the bankrupts, with indent to conceal their financial condition, destroyed, concealed, or failed to keep books of account from which such condition could be ascertained, and (2) that they obtained property on credit upon a materially false statement in writing made by them to a creditor for the purpose of obtaining credit from it.

Did the bankrupts destroy, conceal, or fail to keep books of account from which their financial condition could be ascertained, with intent to conceal such condition? There is no evidence whatever that they destroyed or concealed any books or records. This specification, therefore, is limited to the question of whether or not, with intent to conceal their financial condition, they failed to keep books and records from which such condition might be ascertained. There are two elements to this charge: The first is that their financial condition could not he obtained from the books and records which they kept; and the second is that they failed to keep books from which their financial condition eonld be ascertained, with intent to conceal such condition. Both elements must be established before a discharge may be denied.

The bankrupts did not have any technical training, or what is known as “book learn[162]*162ing.” Only one of them could read or write. The hooks were kept hy an inexperienced and untrained boy,' the son of one of the bankrupts; the business being a kind of family affair. He made all the entries in the books, under occasional supervision of an accountant, who knew little or nothing of the details of the business. At the hearings controversy seems to have arisen between the accountants of the bankrupts and the objecting creditor as to the correct method of keeping books, the system used by the bankrupts, and the conclusions to be drawn from the admitted facts. For instaneé, one accountant says that the “exchange account” is “fictitious,” and so he did not consider it in reaching his conclusions; the other says that it is genuine, and the items therein represent actual receipts and disbursements in the ordinary- and usual course of the business.

A great deal was made by the objecting creditor of several checks of the bankrupts, because the entries or notations made on the stubs did not correspond with those of the cheeks, naming, in some cases, a different payee. But this fact indicates carelessness of the boy, rather than intent of the bankrupts to conceal their financial condition, for, if they had intended to conceal what the checks and stubs, when brought together, show, one or both would have been destroyed; but they were both there for inspection, and the differences are without significance. These uneducated men were doing a very large business, and what for them was a tremendous business. At the same time, they were building a large silk mill, which made it necessary for this inexperienced boy to keep such accounts as would have taxed an older and trained bookkeeper. He attempted to keep the following books: A cash book, journal, purchase journal, general ledger, accounts payable ledger, a purchase returns and customers’ credit book, bills receivable book, bills payable book, and a cheek book. Many transactions to'which no ulterior motive could be attached were not recorded in any of these books. Consequently the books and business were in somewhat of a jumbled condition, just as might have been expected of untrained men doing a large business, with a young inexperienced and careless son keeping the books. There is now, as above stated, no contention that the bankrupts have any assets concealed, or that they did not turn over to the trustees everything they had. The objecting creditor had to abandon this specification.

The books are an exhibition of carelessness and inefficiency, but the manner in which they were kept did not change from the beginning. Carelessness was just as evident when the business was prosperous as when it was poor, and the panic at its height. Carelessness in keeping books for a long time while a bankrupt is prosperous negatives the charge of failure to keep books with intent to conceal his financial condition when the business becomes poor. Section 2549, Remington on Bankruptcy; In re Feldstein (C. C. A.) 115 F. 259; In re Mackenzie (D. C.) 132 F. 114.

The grounds for refusing a discharge to a bankrupt are statutory. Mere carelessness or stupidity in keeping books does not justify a refusal to discharge. In order to constitute grounds for denying a' discharge, the bankrupt must, with intent to conceal his financial condition, have failed to keep books of account from which such condition might be ascertained. Intent of the bankrupt, is the touchstone by which his right to a discharge must be tested. This may be gathered in the ease at bar from the books of the bankrupts, from the conduct of their business before and during the panic, and from their conduct on the witness stand.

The total purchases made by the bankrupts from the objecting creditor from September, 1919, to September 29, 1920, when the petition in bankruptcy was filed, amounted approximately to $300,000, and from January 7,1920, when the financial statement was signed, they amounted to $193,000. They paid for all this merchandise," except an amount valued at about $39,000, for which two trade acceptances were given some time in April, 1920. They matured in August following, 7 months after the statement was máde. There can be no doubt that these would have been paid, had it not been for the panic in the silk industry. Between January 1, 1920, and September 29, 1920, the bankrupts paid to merchandise creditors $546,-402.71 and in July of that year, in the midst of the silk panic, they paid $73,853.53 to their creditors. They not only turned over to their creditors the receipts as received from their business transactions, but in order to stem the tide they borrowed in the midst of the panic $50,000, which they also paid to their creditors.

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Bluebook (online)
21 F.2d 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taback-v-arai-ca3-1927.