49 F.2d 342 | W.D. Wash. | 1930
Under a fair consideration of the testimony and the record, I think it is made to appear that the bankrupt mill hand acted fairly, in so far as his intelligence and knowledge directed him, and there was no intent or purpose at any time to mislead or defraud the creditors or to withhold any of his assets with fraudulent intent. Fraud is never presumed. The bankrupt states that the entire matter arose from a misunderstanding between him and his lawyer and from the information received from the employer as to the amount of wages due. The omission could more reasonably be credited to the attorney than the bankrupt.
The administration of the bankruptcy laws must be liberally construed, and not by strict interpretation deprive the unfortunate of the benefits permitted by wise and humane public policy. The attorney for the trustee has filed a closely typewritten brief covering some nine or ten pages of manuscript paper, and a supplemental and reply brief, largely repetition of former briefs, and citing many cases having no bearing whatever on, and not elucidating, the issue here.
Section 703, Remington’s Compiled Statutes 1927 Supp. (section 1, c. 287, p. 703, Laws of Washington, 1927), provides: “Twenty dollars out of each week’s wages or salary for personal services, rendered by any ' person having a family dependent upon Mm for support, shall be exempt. * * •» ”
A man may have a family, whether it is living with him or not. A family has been defined as a “collective body of persons in one home under one head or management,” and the general exemption laws of Washington use the term “householder”; the head of a family shall have exempt certain personal property, and, likewise, a homestead of given .value, but this special statute exempts to a person “having a family dependent upon him for support.”
The exemption laws of the state of Washington have uniformly been liberally construed. In re Crook (D. C.) 219 F. 979; Hills v. Joseph (C. C. A.) 229 F. 865; Lemagie v. Acme Stamp Works, 98 Wash. 34, 167 P. 60.
The family is said to be the greatest moral phenomenon in the history of the human race, and under the Roman law included father, mother, children, slaves, moneys, lands, houses, etc. The welfare of the unfortunate and the need for immediate means of subsistence
Bequests to a family include parents and children, whether living together or not. Higgins v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co. of Baltimore, 127 Md. 171, 96 A. 322. See, also, Hall v. Stephens, 65 Mo. 670, 27 Am. Rep. 302; Taylor v. Watson, 35 Md. 519. And by the same token the minor children of the bankrupt, in the custody of his divorced wife, upon the reeord in this ease, is a family dependent upon him for support within the purview of this statute; all of the money in issue being wages, except the savings account.
The order of the referee is affirmed.