This case has been heard both upon petition for revision and upon appeal. The petition is intended, says the petitioner’s brief, to obtain the revision by this court of the referee’s refusal to receive certain proofs, and of the action of the district judge “in not investigating the merits of the application for discharge.” The appeal is from the order of the court granting’the discharge.
The specific errors assigned go to the action of the court below in affirming the referee’s findings upon matters of fact. To refer to these specifications in detail, and discuss the proofs with reference to them, would serve no useful purpose, and would occupy much time. Suffice it, therefore, to say, that we have thoroughly scrutinized all the evidence, and upon careful consideration of it are clearly of opinion that the material facts were correctly found by the referee, and that, consequently, the court’s confirmation of his report with respect to them was unquestionably right. It has, however, been contended that the facts as found by the referee did not justify the discharge of the bankrupt, because, as to certain oaths made by him in the course of the proceed
Both upon the petition for revision and upon the appeal the order of the District Court discharging the bankrupt, Francis D. Carley, is affirmed.