279 F. 425 | E.D.N.C. | 1922
The petitioners, O. C. Parker, A. C. Parker, and Jasper C. Johnson, were on and prior to July 12, 1920, co-partners, engaged in a general mercantile business in the town of Dunn, Harnett county, N. C., under the firm name and style of Parker Bros. & Johnson. On June 1, 1921, the partnership and O. C. Parker and A. C. Parker individually • were, upon the petition of creditors in an 'involuntary proceeding, adjudged bankrupt. The petition as to Joseph ' C. Johnson was dismissed, because it was found upon the hearing that he was engaged chiefly in farming. A trustee was appointed, and the estate of the' partnership and the individual partners, other than J. C. Johnson, were duly administered. On August 26, 1921, the bankrupts
On the day set for the hearing, October 3, 1921, S. & B. Soloman and the Remarkable Waist Company, creditors of said bankrupt, duly entered appearance and filed objections to the granting of the discharge, and later filed specifications setting forth the grounds of each objection, to wit:
“Said bankrupt, through the defendant A. C. Parker, obtained credit and goods from said creditors upon a materially false statement in writing made by them through A. O. Parker, for the purpose of obtaining credit, said statement being given to E. G. Dun & Co., a commercial agency, on or about July 12, 1920.”
The statement was made and signed “Parker Bros. & Johnson, by A. C. Parker,” and contained the following:
Assets.
Merchandise ............................ $25,000.00
Accounts receivable, good................ 15.000. 00
Fixtures ................................ 500.00
Other real estate........................ 10.000. 00
$70,500.00
Liabilities.
Open account for merchandise............. $17,000.00
Others for borrowed money................. 10,000.00 $27,000.00
Net worth
$43,500.00
This statement .was made upon estimated values as a basis for credit and communicated to S. & B. Soloman, subscribers to the R. G. Dun & Co. Agency, credit extended, and goods sold by them upon the faith of said statement, upon which there is a balance due of $1,181. The specifications filed, after setting out the statement, alleged that—
“In truth and fact the assets were grossly overvalued, and particularly the item of real estate, which was practically of no value.”
Upon the hearing the Remarkable Waist Company did not appear or introduce evidence. S. & B. Soloman attacked the items in the statement of the assets, the accounts receivable, and the real estate.
In regard to the accounts receivable, no evidence was offered denying the amount of them, but it was insisted that the estimated value was “grossly exaggerated.” The statement was made July 12, 1920, being midsummer. The evidence showed that O. C. and A. C. Parker, the active and managing partners, were young men, 26 and 28 years of age, respectively; that the younger member had been in the military-service in Europe during the war. Neither of them had much experience in mercantile business. The other member, Jasper C. Johnson, was the uncle of the other two, resided on his farm in Johnson county, seven miles from Dunn. He owned, as hereinafter set forth, a tract of land upon which he resided and cultivated.
During the month of December, 1919, they formed the partnership
Taken most strongly against the bankrupts, the statement as testified by A. C. Parker, as he told the representative of R. G. Dun & Co., was an “estimate.” It could not have been otherwise. It is a fact, in respect to which' all men living in Eastern North Carolina are aware, shown by the records of this and other courts, that during the month of July, 1920, accounts against farmers, based upon the prifce of cotton and tobacco at that time and during the years 1919 and 1920, for goods, merchandise, and supplies sold to farmers, were generally regarded as “good.” At that time, and during the summer of 1919 and 1920, cotton sold at and above 30 cents a pound and tobacco averaged 50 cents. All farm products were on the same plane of value. The drop in prices during the fall months of 1920 was as unexpected to the average farmer and merchant as it was unprecedented. The cost of
Under these well-known general conditions, any fair-minded, reasonable merchant in Eastern North Carolina would have estimated his accounts on July 12, 1920, as “good and collectible.” The opinion of the trustee, based upon the outcome of the conditions existing during the summer of 1921, that A. C. Parker overestimated their value, would be unsafe to predicate a finding that such statement was “grossly” false within the meaning of the Bankruptcy Law. To show, on June 7, 1921, that, in the opinion of the trustee, one-third of accounts, amounting to $15,000 on July 12, 1920, in the light of the almost revolutionary change in the financial condition of the farmers and others in the section in which the bankrupts did business within that period, are at the last date uncollectible, falls short of showing, as the objecting creditor must do, to bar the petition for a discharge, that the statement of July 12, 1920, was materially false. At most, the statement, given a fair and Reasonable construction, was an assertion that the amount due from customers, generally farmers, were, in the opinion of the partner making the statement, “good”; that is, that under present and fairly reasonable conditions they would be paid when the crops were matured and marketed. The records of this court during the past year disclose the financial ruin of merchants and others who, on July 12, 1920, regarded themselves, and were regarded by others, as amply solvent, having frequently considerable surplus estate after meeting their obligations. It is well known that hundreds, if not thousands, of industrious, intelligent farmers in Eastern North Carolina lost by the decline in the price of staple crops, not only their year’s labor, but their entire estates. To deny such men the relief afforded by the Bankruptcy Law, upon charges of making materially false statements in estimating the value of their property on July 1, 1920, would work injustice and wrong.
“Other real estate given in statement stands o£ record in name of J. O. Johnson, located in Johnson county, North Carolina.”
J. C. Johnson was a partner, but took no part in conducting the business, living upon and cultivating his farm of 131 acres some 15 miles distant from Dunn, tie knew nothing of the statement or its contents. The facts in regard to this real estate are:
The tract of land owned by J. C. Johnson was owned by his father, A. D. Johnson, who died prior to 1892, leaving a widow and three sons, J. C. Johnson, John P. Johnson, and Nathan M. Johnson, and Mrs. Parker, the mother of O. C. and A. C. Parker. Dower was allotted to his widow, September 10, 1892, and the-land covered by the dower partitioned, allotting to the three sons, including the home place and dwelling, 131 acres. The widow lived upon and cultivated the land, until J. C. Johnson reached his majority in 1910, when she sold her personal property and ceased the cultivation of the land. ,
“It seems to us clear that the plain language of .this third clause of section 14b requires that the written statement made by the bankrupt, for the purpose of obtaining credit, * * * should be knowingly and intentionally untrue, in order to constitute a bar to the discharge of the bankrupt. In other words, ‘false statement’ connotes a' guilty scienter on the part of the bankrupt. This primary and ordinary meaning of the word ‘false’ cannot be ignored. * * * Webster gives as its primary meaning: ‘Uttering falsehood’; ‘unveracious’; ‘given to deceit’; ‘dishonest.’ * * * To charge a person with making a false statement, is equivalent to charging him with uttering a falsehood, and imputes moral delinquency to the person so charged. * * * in Black’s Law Dictionary, under the title ‘False,’ it is said: ‘In law, this word means*431 something more than untrue; it means something designedly untrue and deceitful, and implies an intention to perpetrate some treachery or fraud.’ ”
See Words and Phrases, First and Second Series, False.
This definition, as applied to the term “false statement,” as used in Bankruptcy Act, § 14b (Comp. St. § 9598), has been approved by the Circuit Court of Appeals of this circuit in Peck v. Lowenbein, 178 Fed. 178, 101 C. C. A. 498, and Doyle v. Bank, 231 Fed. 649, 145 C. C. A. 535. In the last case Judge Pritchard says:
“It is well settled by the courts that the ground upon which he [the bankrupt] is denied his discharge is that the statement made is knowingly and intentionally false.”
In Re Cloutier Bros. (D. C.) 228 Fed. 569, Hale, District Judge, says:
“To bar a discharge, the * * * statement must * * * be false; it must be willful or intentionally misleading.”
The bankrupts were examined orally before me. I was impressed with their sincerity and purpose to say' the truth. Their explanation of their relation to the land, the family, the situation, impresses my mind with the truth of what they say. Putting one’s self in their position during their childhood, youth, and opportunities, I do not doubt that they were ignorant of the fact that their grandmother had a dower in the land. The statement as made is time; the real estate does “stand of record in name of J. C. Johnson, located in Johnson county, North Carolina.” This is doubtless the language of the agent who wrote the answers upon the blank slip upon which the entire “statement” is made. It is not denied that J. C. Johnson had been, a short time before the statement was made offered $30,000 for the land, which, in view of the prices at which farming lands at that time were being sold, is not unreasonable.
Upon a careful consideration of the evidence before me, I am unable to find that the bankrupts made a materially false statement for the purpose of obtaining credit, within the meaning of the Bankruptcy Act (Comp. St. §§ 9585-9656). The record discloses one of many of the cases in which men of little experience and business capacity were allured, by the conditions following the Great War, into business ventures beyond their capacity and capital, and were overtaken by the world-wide conditions, the cause of which is now and will for a generation be a subject of discord and dissension between those who undertook to deal with the aftermath of a World War, which under any guidance were probably inevitable, and from which it will require long years to recover.
Let the certificate of discharge issue.