272 F. 678 | 7th Cir. | 1921
This is an original proceeding in this court to revise and have vacated an order of the District Court reopening the estate of the bankrupt, Ueigh. Oñ the petition of respondent, Raugh-iin, the District Court made the order, and the basis of it was probable cause to believe, that the assets of the estate had not been fully administered because the bankrupt had fraudulently concealed assets from the trustee. Raughlin notified the equipment company and the bank, petitioners here, of the pendency of his application to reopen the estate. They appeared and resisted the reopening on the ground that the trustee had sold at judicial sale under order of court the bankrupt’s interest iu the assets in question and they -were purchasers thereof in good faith. Dsughlin in response introduced evidence tending to prove that the petitioners were purchasers in behalf of the bankrupt, that at the sale 1he petitioners and the bankrupt suppressed from the trustee and from possible competitive bidders material facts, and that the price obtained at the sale, in view of the suppressed facts, not discovered until after the estate was closed, was shockingly inadequate.
It should be needless to say that the order reopening the estate is not an adjudication of the petitioners’ rights to the assets in question.
The petition is denied.