171 F. Supp. 231 | D. Mass. | 1959
This is an appeal by an objecting creditor from an order granting a discharge. The bankrupt in November, 1955, executed a voluntary petition, which was subsequently filed and allowed. The referee’s original certificate was filed in this court December 6, 1956, and recommitted for amplification. In Matter of Dynak, D.C.D.Mass., 157 F.Supp. 349. A very full record has resulted. None of the amounts involved are large, but it seems to me that there is a rather important matter of principle. I approach the case, of course, from the standpoint that all findings of the referee must be accepted unless clearly erroneous. General Order 47, 11 U.S.C.A. following section 53. The only question is whether he was too complaisant towards the absence of books and records, and the presence of untrue and seemingly improbable testimony.
The following facts were either found by the referee, or admitted by the bankrupt. The bankrupt for some ten years had been a journeyman plumber. He maintained a set of books until June 1, 1955. By June 1st he had incurred in
After the first trustee examination the bankrupt was instructed to correct his books. Even as so remedied the referee found them “inadequate and incomplete.” In addition to the fact that a number of jobs other than those specifically referred to in this opinion have never appeared, there are three items of particular importance. On the original creditor examination the bankrupt testified that he was owed $450 for materials by one Des jaríais, a personal friend. Thereafter the creditor summoned Desjarlais, who produced a receipted bill for $565 for materials and labor in the bankrupt’s handwriting. The bankrupt then admitted the payment. The referee stated the omission was excusable by poor memory, and noted that the bankrupt readily admitted the payment. A ready admission under these circumstances was scarcely significant. It is to be noted that this payment was within a month of the execution of the petition, and within a week of the completion of the work, and was not an inconsequential amount for this debtor. Secondly, there was no record of a receipt of $700 during the summer from one Tarka, or even of the fact the work was done. The bankrupt admitted the receipt when faced with a newspaper item, but offered no explanation for its omission. This, again, was a substantial matter. Thirdly, the bankrupt claimed to have paid $850 in cash during June to “subcontractors.” He identified these payments as having been made to a master plumber, one John Steele.
On the subject of the books the referee, after saying he was satisfied they were inadequate, stated, “The question is whether a man of this type would be expected to make more detailed records.” I am not at all sure, as a general proposition, that that is a question. The errors here were not merely
. A journeyman cannot hire assistants, and if he cannot do a job himself he must employ a master plumber. In such event he receives only a commission on the materials used, although, seemingly, it remains his own job so far as the customer is concerned.
. This tolerance also extended to the omission of the other jobs previously referred to even after the bankrupt was given opportunity to correct his books; testimony as to gambling losses, the existence of which had been denied in the petition; and false statements, allegedly in the interest of domestic tranquillity, about money taken by his wife.