Wilson v. Wilson

16 F.2d 177, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3790
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 23, 1926
DocketNo. 3763
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 16 F.2d 177 (Wilson v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Wilson, 16 F.2d 177, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3790 (7th Cir. 1926).

Opinion

ALSCHULER, Circuit Judge.

The appeal is from an order adjudicating Wilson a bankrupt, on petition of three creditors. Wilson denied insolvency and commission of the alleged acts of bankruptcy. The issues were referred to a special master, to take the evidence and report the same back to the court, with his conclusions of fact and law.

Appellee moved for dismissal of the appeal for appellant’s failure to condense the evidence and proofs in accordance with equity rule 75. The transcript certainly does set the rule at defiance, not only as to the oral tes[178]*178timony, but also as to the 400 printed pages, reproducing in full pleadings, orders, opinions, affidavits, etc., in cases pending and undetermined in other courts, involving in the main attacks there by Wilson upon the agreement out of which arose the notes whereon the petitioning creditors base their claims, and on the notes as well. It is quite apparent that the voluminous transcript here presented is five or six fold larger than was reasonably necessary to present the questions here involved. However, it appears that the salient facts are sufficiently shojvn in the master’s report to enable us to consider the questions which the appeal involves, the controlling questions involving deductions from the facts rather than the facts themselves.

Insolvency, which in appellant’s brief is termed “the big question in this ease,” appears, if at all, rather by inference than by direct evidence of it. On the hearing, Wilson, the alleged bankrupt, refused to submit to examination or to testify, or to produce his ' books, papers, and accounts. Section 3 of the Bankruptcy Act (Comp. St. §• 9587) provides:

“In case of his failure to so attend and submit to examination, the burden of proving his solvency shall rest upon him.”

In their brief counsel for bankrupt say:

“The proposition of law made by petitioner, that because Wilson did not produce his. books and testify the burden as to his solvency shifted under the statute, is well taken; but that simply means that the burden of proving solvency rests on Wilson, and, if he proves it by competent evidence, whether he produces his books or not, or testifies or not, then upon such proof he cannot be adjudicated a bankrupt.”

This correctly states the situation, and it follows that upon such refusal the presumption of insolvency attaches, subject, of course, to be rebutted by evidence of solvency suffi-. cient to overcome it.

Appellant’s main reliance is upon the report of an audit of his financial condition, made by one Colby, whom Wilson had employed as auditor of the American Distilling Company, of which Wilson was president, and who made an audit also of the financial condition of the members of the company, whose finances were involved with those of the company. The audit in question purports to be as of January 1,1922, whereas the petition in bankruptcy bears date September 22,1924, and charges acts of bankruptcy committed from June 3, 1924, to August 11, 1924. In the intervening time all sorts of things may have occurred to deplete Wilson’s assets and swell his liabilities. Indeed, it might be judicially noticed that farm lands and distillery stocks, whereof his property largely consisted, were in those years particularly subject to depreciation in value.

Apart from the element of depreciation, it appears that during that period, but more than 4 months prior to the bankruptcy, he conveyed to his children large amounts of his farm property, estimated to be worth about $400,000, and also conveyed away his large distillery stockholdings. Whether he then had left other property in considerable amount does not appear from evidence of those who knew the facts. If he had a large surplus of assets at the time of the audit, it does not necessarily follow that he had it 2% years thereafter. The burden of proving his solvency at the times of the alleged acts of bankruptcy is not sustained by showing solvency 2% years before.

Colby says he made the audit from Wilson’s books, so far as they showed the facts. But, if every item thereof were taken from the books, may an alleged bankrupt deliberately decline to testify and to produce his books, and then sustain his burden of showing solvency by the evidence of some one whom he had previously employed to examine the books ? If he may do this, he could withhold his books and accounts and his own testimony, and yet have the full benefit of the booká through the testimony of some one who saw them. With the absent books and accounts within the power of Wilson to produce, the report of the audit was clearly secondary evidence, and the objection to its admission- should have been sustained.

But, apart from this, Colby, whose testimony alone identified the report, did not personally know it was true, particularly as to the valuations, for which he says he accepted Wilson’s statements to him. When it is considered that about 90 per cent, in value of the total assets shown in the report is in the item “real estate and farm properties, $1,294,255.-02,” the estimates for which were given to Colby by Wilson, it is evident that the report as to the assets is, in the main, only Wilson speaking through Colby. There is little else, except some evidence as to a few items of his property, but none as to his liabilities, a subject which, generally speaking, is peculiarly within his own knowledge. Refusing to give evidence thereon, by way of his testimony, books, or papers, and no evidence of his liabilities appearing, he has not sustained the burden of proving his solvency, which could appear only through evidence of his assets and liabilities at the times in question.

[179]*179As bearing on tbe question of solvency we may state what is quoted in the master’s report from a bill in chancery which Wilson filed in the circuit court of Putnam county, 111., January 14, 1924, involving his financial relations with the distilling company and others:

“That under the terms of the pretended contract [a contract of March 6, 1923, which is assailed in said bill] your orator is deprived of each and every of his various assets, and is without means to meet the said indebtedness or any part thereof.”

In this state of the record we are not at liberty to disturb the finding of the master and the holding of the court to the effect that Wilson did not sustain his statutory burden of proving solvency.

The other issue which is specifically made by Wilson’s answer to the petition is as to the acts of bankruptcy charged, of which there were five: (1) Payment of the grocery bill of $277.66; (2) transfer to a creditor bank of com worth $1,700; (3) suffering judgment to be entered against him for $5,-400, and execution thereon to be levied on his personal property, and not discharging the same within five days of date set for sale thereunder; (4) applying to a court of competent jurisdiction for the appointment of a receiver for all his property; and (5) the appointment of such receiver — all while he was insolvent and within four months of filing the petition.

The first four grounds were sustained by the master’s report and by the court, although the report stated that the first ground was sustained only in its connection with the second, third, and fourth. Without detailed discussion of these three grounds, we think it plain that, assuming thé insolvency, the record sufficiently shows them to be acts of bankruptcy.

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16 F.2d 177, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-wilson-ca7-1926.