Thе only question presented on this appeal is whether the order of the referee, sustained by the District Court, which permitted appellee, A. F. Lowes Lumber Company, to file its amended claim after expiration of six months allowed by law for filing claims in bankrupt estates was erroneous. Bankruptcy Act, § 57, sub. n, 11 U.S.C.A. § 93, sub. n.
The original claim, filed within the statutory period, disclosed the amount of the indebtedness, $24,100, and conformed to all requirements as to form except that (1) instead of being signed and verified by a corporate оfficer, it was attested by the attorney for the company, for the reasori, as he said, it was impossible at that time to reach the officers of the corporation; (2) it contained an allegedly insufficient statement of the indebtedness and the consideration therefor. Neither the trustee nor the creditors objected upon thе merits, or insisted that the amount claimed was not due and owing from the bankrupt, but they did object to the form of the claim. Appellee moved for and obtained leave tо amend some months after expiration of the time permitted for filing claims but before any distribution of assets to creditors. The amended claim differed from the one originаlly filed only in that it corrected the two formal defects; the amount remained the same.
In accord with proverbial rules abiding in American jurisprudence, the bankruptcy сourt, sitting as a court of equity, has consistently, under the Act of 1867, that of 1898 and that of 1938, the
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Chandler Act, extended every reasonable liberality in allowance of amendments. This principle was approved by the Supreme Court in Hutchinson v. Otis,
Appellants insist that the amendment to Section 57 of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S. C.A. § 93, sub. n, by the Chandler Act of June 22, 1938 has made it mandatory to deny an amendment presented under the circumstances existing here. ■ It should be observed that the two decisions last referred to, frоm this circuit and the tenth respectively, were decided after the Chandler Act had become effective and, though the opinions do not indicate that the courts were called upon to rule upon the point, they did so in each instance, sub silentia, by interpreting the statute as they did.
Appellants urge in this respect that the District Court, in Re Srikalite,
We find no implication in the statute that the right to amend and the power to permit an amendment in order to correct formal defects do not still exist just as hardily аnd just as stoutly as ‘before the amendment. Indeed, such was the conclusion in Re Weco Equipment, Inc., D. C.,
The order is affirmed.
