233 F. 418 | 2d Cir. | 1916
The amount received by the bankrupt from Zimmerman on and after January 29, 1912, was $21,300, the last advance being in May, 1912, after the marriage to Wray which was in June, 1911, and after the improper relations with Zimmerman had ceased.
There was nothing illegal in his advancing money to her to enable her to continue the business. That he should have lent her the money to keep the business, in which he had invested a large sum, from going into bankruptcy is plausible and natural. That he should have given it to induce her to keep up their former relations is, in view of the marriage with Wray, highly improbable.
No collateral agreement: express or implied is shown regarding these advances. It may be that they were made as appears bn the face of the transactions to keep up and save a business in which Zimmerman had invested so heavily. In the absence of proof, an illegal or immoral consideration should not be assumed. There is nothing to show that the advances which make up the $21,300 were made to continue the illicit relations. This record presents a deplorable situation in which it is difficult from a mere reading of the testimony to determine where the truth lies, but weighing it as best we may, we cannot resist the conclusion that the advances which make up the sum
“Q. Now is it your purpose to credit her with what you have received for it? A. $1,600 without the Edison batteries.”
This amount has not been credited; we think it should be, thus reducing the amount of the claim to that extent. The order of July 20, 1915, as so modified, is affirmed.
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