Heretofore, on August 6,190-1, the referee in bankruptcy made findings, and a recommendation based thereon, that the bankrupts were entitled to their discharge. Certain creditors, deeming the findings unsupported by the evidence, have moved the court to set them aside and to deny the recommendation. The specifications in opposition to the discharge are numerous; but, in the view I take of the matter, it will he necessary to consider only the sixth of the first charge, which is, in effect, that the bankrupts did, knowingly and fraudulently, while bankrupts, conceal from the trustee property belonging to their estate, to wit, a sum oE money, being the proceeds received by them from the sales of goods, wares, and merchandise, and from the collection of accounts, claims, and demands, in their business at Toledo,-between about" June 1, 1898, and January, 1899. In reality this specification, being general in its scope, going to the conduct of the principal business, comprises, in substance and effect, the five preceding, and questions the bona fides of the bankrupts in accounting for all sums received by them in the management of their business intervening the dates designated.
The firm embarked in business at Toledo, Wash., with a branch house at Portland, Or., in the summer of 1895, on a capital of $1,000; Jacobs contributing $2,500, cash and merchandise, and Verstandig the remaining $1,500, mostly in cash. According to Jacobs, the firm, did
On August 1, 1898, Verstandig gave to L. C. Wachsmutli & Co., of Chicago, for the purpose of obtaining credit, a statement of the firm’s resources and liabilities, in substance, as follows:
Merchandise on hand, cash value January 1, 1898................$12,000 00
Amount of book accounts and notes considered good.............. 500 00
Total ...................................................$12,500 00
Owing tor merchandise, open account...........................$ 1,100 00
Other money ................................................... 300 00
Total ...................................................$ 1,400 00
Annual sales .................................................$20.000 00
In connection with -this statement, the firm writes:
“That outside of stock in merchandise wo have about $1,500 worth of produce on hand, but we could not give you exact statement of stock on hand only from inventory taken Jany. 1st, 1898.”
Tliis statement is one of three made all in a comparatively short period of time, and all for the purpose of sustaining and procuring credit. The first was on July 20, 1898, and shows:
Stock „........................................................$11,000 00
dash on hand.................................................. 500 00
<3ood accounts.................................................. 500 00
Stock at Portland.............................................. 2,000 00
Total ...................................................$14,000 00
Indebi edness ..................................................$ 2,300 00
The third, being of date August 20th, shows:
Stock .........................!...............................$12,000 00
Notes and accounts............................................. 1,700 00
Total ...................................................$13,700 00
Indebtedness ..................................................$ 1,725 00
These statements, as compared one with another, are consistent, and indicate that the business was conducted regularly. A gareful estimate of subsequent purchases by the firm, of wholesalers and jobbers, which is based upon data contained in a book kept by Verstandig personally, shows that they procured additional goods prior to their failure of the value of $12,086.27. I may say the failure dates from about December 13, 1898, when their main store at Toledo was attached. Within the same period of time the book shows amounts paid out aggregating $1,392.90 only; so that by adding stock on hand August 1st, namely $12,000, to the subsequent purchases, $12,086.27, we have an aggregate of $24,086.27; and deducting amount disbursed, to wit, $1,392.90, leaves $22,693.37 of stock alone to be accounted for, omitting all reference to other property, which is of no significance in the
Are the members of the firm entitled to a discharge upon such a record? The rule undoubtedly is that the discharge cannot be with
Now. considering the entire testimony, a resumé of which, or of such as is material to the present controversy, is contained in the foregoing statement, it is impossible to draw any inference other than that the bankrupts concealed a large amount of the assets of the firm. Presumably such assets were in lhe form of money, as no other property is to he found in their possession. Having the money prior to the adjudication. they must have had it since, and have it now in legal contemplation. The wide discrepancy between the assets thev had on hand August 1, 1898, added to those they procured subsequently, and those' they had on hand according to the inventory of the trustee, proves this; and, while it is possible that they yet have merchandise of their stock while in business, yet the most reasonable inference from the manner of conducting their business in the latter days of their career in that line is that they have money to a considerable amount, the proceeds of such merchandise. They were doing their best to reduce their stock to cash, but have failed utterly to account for the proceeds. As was said by Brown, District Judge, in Re Mendelsohn, supra:
“In order to secure any effective administration of the law in bankruptcy, it is indispensable to hold'bankrupts to the performance of the duties imposed upon them by the act, and to deny them a discharge whore tile only reasonable inference from the testimony and exhibits made is a concealment of assets and intentional nonproduction of hooks, which might otherwise account for their disappearance.”
In the case at bar the bankrupts have produced what books thev had, but they were grossly derelict in failing to keep intelligible books
The discharge will therefore be denied.