213 F. 753 | 3rd Cir. | 1914
The plaintiffs in error, Charles Kaplan and Max Kaplan, were sentenced to imprisonment as a punishment for contempt of court. They were members of the bankrupt firm of Kaplan Bros, (no proceeding was taken against the third partner), and were called before the referee on May 13, 1913, for examination at the first meeting of creditors. Their answers and demeanor were so unsatisfactory that the referee (Joseph Mellors, Esq.) officially and of his own motion certified as follows:
“That in the course of the proceedings in this cause the said bankrupts were called for examination before 'me, and their answers to pertinent questions put to them showed that their whole testimony was practically a perfectly transparent case of intentional and willful evasion and refusal to make any explanation of the facts connected with thqir bankruptcy under the pretense of defective memory, ignorance, and stupidity, and a manifest and deliberate determination to conceal all material facts within their knowledge.
“The bankrupts are intelligent and have an average acquaintance with the English language and have been engaged in business many years.
“Their recollection, when they desired to exercise it, convinced the referee, as he watched them, that, when they desired to give facts, they could.
“The testimony taken before the referee shows to his mind a determination to refuse to give the trustee and the creditors any information whatever as to the disposition of their property. They pretended to be ignorant of facts which could have been known to any one who had sufficient' intelligence to perform the most ordinary business affairs.
“Although the bankrupts failed, owing about $56,000 to creditors, with tangible assets not much more than nominal, yet their manner on the witness stand was anything but serious, but, on the contrary, they were sometimes flippant and at other times defiant.
“During the examination the bankrupts repeatedly and continually testified (as the reading of their testimony will show) in a vague, unsatisfactory, ambiguous, and contradictory manner, with the intention of obstructing the administration of justice and preventing the collection and distribution of their property and the discovery of the whereabouts of the same.
“When they were asked regarding transactions directly within their knowledge, and facts which they must have known, they expressed ignorance or lack of recollection.
“Charles Kaplan, during an examination covering only 48 pages of testi-, ‘mony, answered to pertinent and important questions, T don’t know,’ and T don’t remember,’ 118 times. His brother, Max Kaplan, in an examination covering only 29 pages, answered to pertinent questions, T don’t remember,’ and T don’t know,’ 117 times.
“Even with the aid of the referee, counsel were unable to elicit proper and truthful answers to all of the pertinent questions put to these witnesses, and were therefore obliged to suspend the examination.
“From the foregoing facts the referee' finds that the said bankrupts have refused to submit themselves to ‘an examination according to law.’
“The referee therefore finds that the said bankrupts, in refusing to submit themselves to ‘an examination according to law,’ are now in contempt before him.”
It will be observed that the plaintiffs in error were not charged with perjury, so that the case of Magen v. Campbell, 26 Am. Bankr. Rep. 594, 186 Fed. 675, 108 C. C. A. 531, does not apply. A recent decision on the same subject is U. S. v. Appel (D. C.) 211 Fed. 495. After the referee’s certificate had been filed, the trustee petitioned the district
But, as the referee’s certificate had been brought to the attention of the District Court, Judge Thompson himself took action thereon, and on October 31st entered a new rule on the bankrupts requiring them to appear on November 3d “to show cause why they should not be held in contempt.” No objection was made to the regularity of this order, and the bankrupts appeared and filed answers thereto. An oral hearing also was held, and the bankrupts were further examined at their own request; the final result being that the court adjudged them to be guilty of contempt and sentenced them to imprisonment for 60 days. This order is now complained of on several grounds, all of which call for consideration.
“The examination of witnesses before the referee may be conducted by the party in person or by his counsel or attorney, and the witnesses shall be subject to examination and cross-examination, which shall be had in conformity with the mode now adopted in courts of law. A deposition taken upon an examination before a referee shall be taken down in writing by him, or under his direction, in the form of a narrative, unless he determines that the examination shall be by question and answer. When completed it shall he read over to the witness and signed hy him in the presence of the referee.”
“Criticism is made because these proceedings were commenced before the bankrupt’s examination was concluded and before he was ‘cross-examined.’ When it is remembered that this is a proceeding to punish the witness for contempt for refusing to be examined according to law, it will be seen that this complaint is not well founded. When the examination was concluded on January 7th, the offense had been finally and irrevocably committed, and the trustee was justified in presenting it to the court. He was not required to continue an examination which was absolutely abortive. It will hardly be pretended that a witness who, during his direct examination, makes an assault upon the presiding judge cannot be punished for contempt until his cross-examination is concluded. In other words, if the acts complained of amount to a contempt, they can be punished immediately; if they do not amount to a contempt they cannot be punished at all.” '
In the present case, if the bankrupts were guilty of contempt at all, the offense must have been complete at some point in the proceeding. If the referee was right, it had been fully committed when he intervened and certified the question to the District Court, and there was no necessity that the notes of testimony should be read over and signed. We may add that the accuracy of the notes was duly proved at the hearing before the District Court by the stenographer who made them, and nothing more was required.
We do not think Re Kahn, 30 Am. Bankr. Rep. 322, 204 Fed. 581, 123 C. C. A. 107, is in point. The present case did not include a prayer for civil relief, and there was no effort to obtain it. The sole object of the proceeding, was punishment for contempt committed before a bankruptcy tribunal, and the action was begun and carried on against
4. The remaining objection is that the facts do not justify the conclusions of the referee and of the district judge. We have therefore read the whole record with care, including the explanations offered by the bankrupts at the hearing before Judge Thompson, and we see no reason to disagree with the decisions below. What was said in Re Schulman, supra, is applicable to the examination now in question:
“In the ease at bar we know nothing of the bankrupt, * *. * except as he is portrayed in the printed record. The referee, on the contrary, had an opportunity to see and hear the bankrupt and observe his manner while testifying, which is an inestimable advantage in cases of this character. The testimony of a witness may sound plausible when read afterwards from a printed book, and yet his conduct on the stand may have been such that no one who heard him testify believed that he was telling the truth. * * * Disingenuous and evasive as his testimony appears when read, it is obvious that the opportunity to ‘watch’ the bankrupt gave the referee a very marked advantage in determining whether he wan acting honestly. His answers, T don’t remember,’ and ‘What do you mean?’ so often given might in some instances have been the result of a defective memory or an honest inability to understand. An appellate court may be unable to detect, under such conditions, the false from the true, the honest from the fraudulent, but any intelligent person, after observing the witness for hours on the stand, could not be deceived as to his purpose.”
See, also, Epstein v. Steinfeld, 210 Fed. 236, 127 C. C. A. 54.
We should hesitate long before.we disagreed with the conclusions of two competent and impartial, judicial officers, each of whom enjoyed the opportunity of hearing and seeing the witnesses.
The lapse of time will require the order in question to be slightly modified. The term of imprisonment should of course begin at a future date instead of on November 3, 1913, and the District Court will be at liberty to make the necessary change. In other respects the order is affirmed.