205 F. 556 | D.N.J. | 1913
The creditors’ petition, alleging the bankruptcy of William J. Thompson, was filed on the 22d day of April, 1911. On the 22d day of A lay, 1911, the bankrupt filed his schedules of assets and liabilities. On June 8, 1911, at an adjourned first meeting of tlie creditors, the “bankrupt was examined pursuant to section 7 of the Bankruptcy Act (Act July 1, 1898, c. 541, 30 Stat. 548 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3424]). On October 11, 1911, John J. Stoer, by his attorney in fact, W. Fred Stoer (his son), filed his petition praying- for the surrender to him of dredge No. 1, which, being-in the possession of the bankrupt at the time of the filing of such creditors’ petition, first passed with other property into the custody of the receiver, and subsequently into that of the trustee. Between the last-mentioned date and the taking of testimony in such reclamation proceedings the bankrupt died. The present review is the second involving the title to this dredge. The first order was reversed because of the rejection of the sworn statements made by the bankrupt in his said examination before the referee, which in effect disclaimed ownership in this dredge, and declared that it was owned by the claimant. After receiving and considering such statements, the referee renewed his former finding that the title to the dredge was in the bankrupt at the time of the institution of bankruptcy proceedings.
To John S. Thompson, son of the bankrupt, in May or summer of 1910, as testified by him:
“ * * * That Mr. Stoer owned the dredge, and that ho would lose all he put in it.”
To the claimant in January of 1911, as testified by John W. Boileau, an employe of the bankrupt:
“Don’t worry yourself about the dredge, because I will have that cared for during the winter. 1 run the boats up the creek, and your dredge will be there, it won’t cost you a penny; the watchman that takes care of iny boats will take care of yours.”
To John Scully, in 1910, as testified by him:
“That a man by the name of Stoer owned the dredge.”
And in March of 1911:
“Remember I do not own that blower, a man by the name of Stoer; X am not the owner.”
To Woodman Bloxson, an employe of the bankrupt and who had charge of the dredge for several years and up to the institution of bankruptcy proceedings, in December of 1910, as testified by him:
“That owing to Ms ill health and the mouey panic of 1907, which took ail of his money, and since which he bad never recovered himself and Unit he had never paid for the dredge, and that Mr. Stoer was to take the dredge and operate it,” and “that he had never paid Mr. Stoer for the dredge and what money and what repairing and what improvements he had made to the dredge in operating it would have to go with the dredge, he would have to lose that, because he didn’t own the dredge.”
John Harris who had represented the bankrupt for a number of years testified to two occasions when the bankrupt said that claimant owned the dredge. He said that in the early part of 1910 he was called into the bankrupt’s office where he met bankrupt and claimant, and that in the course of a conversation regarding the operation of the dredge the bankrupt stated that claimant owned the dredge; that he (bankrupt) could not raise the money to pay for it and wanted.to pay for it in notes; that on a later occasion, two or three months prior to the bankruptcy proceedings, the bankrupt again said that the dredge was Mr. Stoer’s; that he wanted witness to prepare papers so that he could get title in his (bankrupt’s) name. Harris further testified to preparing a bill of sale for the dredge; that bankrupt said he would not pay for it in cash; that he offered to pay $10,000 for it in notes, which was not accepted, and that the bill of sale was not executed.
“In the light of the Philadelphia testimony (given in the Grim case), the only construction that I can place upon evidence of this character hy these and other witnesses is that Thompson was speaking from the layman’s standpoint that he had purchased the dredge from Stoer, as testified to in the Grim case, had given notes for the payment of the purchase price, had met some of those notes, and because he would be unable to raise the balance, expected to lose the dredge' to Stoer or on his suit.”
These statements were made at various times during a period of several years, during all of which time the bankrupt was in possession of the dredge, and during almost all of which he was operating it, and they were made to different persons, two of whom were his regular employés, another his own son, and still another an agent who transacted some of his real estate business and assisted him in preparing .the schedules which the bankrupt executed and filed in these proceedings. All these statements were antagonistic to the bankrupt’s pecuniary and proprietary interest. All, either expressly or by exclusive implication, disclaimed ownership in the dredge, and put the ownership in the present claimant. Some of them were coupled with statements showing that the bankrupt recognized that.in asserting ownership in another he was doing so at considerable pecuniary loss to himself ; and those made to the real estate agent, or to the claimant in such agent’s presence, were accompanied by a deliberate purpose on the bankrupt’s part to secure title to the dredge. The character of these declarations, the'time when made, the conditions confronting the declarant, and the situation in which he found himself, all evince in the clearest possible manner that they were not haphazard expres
The probative value of these declarations made before the bankruptcy act was invoked is enhanced, if that be possible, by judicial statements made by the bankrupt, when interrogated at the instance of the trustee, at such first meeting of the creditors. This testimony is as follows:
“Q. Did -you liave a contract in writing with J. J. Stoer providing terms under which you were to operate that dredge? A. No.
“Q. It was an oral understanding between the two oí you? A. Yes/
“Q. Was it an agreement between you and Stoer that you should operate the dredge and pay the expenses of operation? A. Yes.
“Q. There are three or four libels filed against the dredge for wages of various items, from captain down to cook, 1 think. A. Yes.
“Q. Who incurred those bills? A. I was to pay all the expenses.
“Q. You incurred those bills, did you? A. Yes.
“Q. Was Stoer to get any profit out of the operation of the dredge? A. The only profit he was to get out of it was that the dredge was to be fixed up and given a lot of rehabilitation, and they were to have the dredge at any time.
“Q. And yon were to put it in repair? A. Yes. Q. And keep it in repair? A. Yes.
“Q. And you had ’to pay the expense of operation? A. That’s right.”
Such testimony was given after he had filed his schedules in which there is no mention of the dredge in question, though other dredges are named therein, and in the following question, asked by counsel for the trustee: “Did you have a contract in writing with J. J. Stoer, providing terms under which you were to operate that dredge?” the word “that” undoubtedly was used to direct the bankrupt’s attention to the dredge in controversy which, with others in the possession of the bankrupt, had been taken over by the receiver, and was then in his custody as trustee. These statements made before and after the institution of bankruptcy proceedings, the latter being judicial in their nature, and all being against the pecuniary and proprietary interests of the bankrupt, cannot, in the light of the circumstances surrounding them, be disposed of as the utterances of one not understanding either their import or his legal and proprietary rights in the premises. The bankrupt was a man of considerable business experience, accustomed to handling large enterprises, and presumably possessed of a native desire to retain all that belonged to him.- The time of making the earlier disclaimers of ownership negatives the idea that he was hope
If Complainant’s right to the dredge depended upon what he might say in explanation of his course 'in attempting to use a spent bill of sale, or of what actually took place between him and the bankrupt, such conduct might justify a finding against him, but, as shown, such right of recovery is not thus based, but rests solely on what the bankrupt has said both in and out of court. While public policy denies claimant the right to testify to statements made by the deceased and to transactions had with him, it does not close the lips of the other witnesses from whom we have the cited declarations which are affirmative proof of title in the claimant. Such declarations are utterly at variance with the idea that the bankrupt had title in the dredge; they consistently and effectively.prove that the ownership of such dredge is in the claimant, and are in legal effect the equivalent of documentary evidence of title in the claimant against which the mere possession of the dredge by the bankrupt, at the time the bankruptcy proceedings were instituted against him, cannot prevail.
The order under review is reversed, and the cause remanded, with direction that an order be made in accordance with this opinion.