202 F. 51 | 4th Cir. | 1912
On December 27, 1911, Isaac Kirsner was adjudicated a voluntary bankrupt. Trustees were duly elected. On February 23, 1912, they filed with the referee a petition alleging that the bankrupt was in possession of property belonging to his estate, and praying that he might be required to turn it over to them. On March 8th he answered. He said that he had delivered every dollar's worth of property to his trustees. A hearing was thereupon had before the referee. The trustees relied upon the testimony given by the bankrupt at his examination by the creditors, and upon the books and papers which he had given the trustees. He was examined by his counsel on his own behalf in opposition to the granting of the trustees’ petition. On May 9, 1912, the referee found that there had been traced to the possession of the bankrupt goods and merchandise of the kind and sort'carried by and dealt in by him in his retail stores of an invoice or wholesale value of $4,166.54, and that the bankrupt had failed to account for the same. He was ordered within 15 days to deliver to the trustees goods and merchandise of the character and class heretofore carried by him, being dry goods, notions, and ladies’ ready-made clothing to the value of at least $4,166.54 wholesale price.
On the day upon which the referee made the above findings and passed the order recited, both parties filed petitions for review. The trustees complained that the evidence showed that the bankrupt had withheld from them more goods than the referee had found that he had. The bankrupt said that the record did not show that he had withheld any. Both parties had their hearing before the learned judge of the District Court. He overruled both petitions for review. He approved and confirmed the order of the referee. He ordered that the bankrupt should on or before the 17th of July, 1912, comply with the referee’s order, or, in the alternative, should pay to the trustees the sum of $3,000 in cash, which the court fixed as the equivalent cash value of the goods, which the order required the bankrupt to turn over. If he did not deliver the goods or pay the money by the 17th of July, he was further ordered to show cause on that day why he should not be attached and committed for contempt until he did so. On the last-named day he filed what he called a petition for a rehearing. It would have been more accurately described as a request that the court should reconsider the conclusions to which upon the record it had come. The bankrupt did not say that he wished to offer any new testimony, nor did he in fact then or at any time offer any. Pie contented himself with saying that the referee, upon the testimony already in the case, had come to an erroneous conclusion. He asserted that at no time since he had been adjudicated a bankrupt had he been possessed of any property of any kind either in merchandise or money, and that he was absolutely penniless. He asked that his petition for rehearing should be treated and considered as an answer to the rule to show cause why he should not be committed for contempt.
On the 18th of July, after argument by counsel, the petition for
So far as our researches go, there have been at least 16 occasions upon which the propriety of an order committing or refusing to commit a bankrupt, or some one holding for the bankrupt, for contempt in failing to obey an order to turn over property to the trustee, has come before Circuit Courts of Appeal. In 13 of these cases the matter has been brought up by petition to revise. Two of these cases were in the First Circuit: In re Cole, 144 Fed. 392, 75 C. C. A. 330; Id., 163 Fed. 180, 90 C. C. A. 50, 23 L. R. A. (N. S.) 255; In re Goodrich, 184 Fed. 5, 106 C. C. A. 207. Three in the Second: In re
We are therefore of opinion, as well upon reason as upon authority, that an order of the court of bankruptcy ordering the bankrupt to turn over to his trustees property of the estate and committing him to prison until he does so is an order made in a proceeding in bankruptcy and may be brought before the Circuit Court of Appeals by a
The appeal of the bankrupt in No. 1,132 must therefore be dismissed.
Upon consideration of the petition to superintend and revise in matter of law, we may not go into disputed questions of fact. Kenova Loan & Trust Co. v. Graham, 135 Fed. 717, 68 C. C. A. 355. In his petition the bankrupt says that the order of June 22, 1912, confirming the findings of the referee and directing him to turn over goods or cash to the amount therein stated, is erroneous, because there is no sufficient evidence to justify the finding of the referee or to justify the court in confirming the same, the opinion of the referee having been based upon erroneous, improper, and insufficient testimony, and having been arrived at really by a speculation and conjecture, and is not based upon any fact or facts. If upon a petition to revise we can consider such a specification at all, it must be upon the assumption that it is in effect a demurrer to evidence, and is equivalent to the assertion that there was no evidence at all before the referee and the court below from which a rational mind could have drawn the conclusion to which they both came.
On hand 2 months before adjudication. $20,000
Purchased since. ... 10,000
$30,000
Less good sold. $12,500
Deduct 25% profit. 2,500 10,000
Goods which should be on hand. $20,000
Wow if the bankrupt actually turned over to his trustee goods of a cost value of only.. 5,000
There would be a discrepancy of. $15,000
In the case supposed there might well be a presumption either that the bankrupt still had a very large quantity of goods, or that, if lie did
The bankrupt says that there was error because the court below undertook to decree against him for certain goods without specifying or describing in any manner the same so as to enable him to know how or in what manner to comply with said order. The goods were described as such as he had carried in his stores,' namely, dry goods, notions, and ladies’ ready-made wear of the cost or wholesale price of $4,166.54. This was sufficiently definite.
The bankrupt claims that it was error for the court to give him the alternative of paying the trustee $3,000, which he says the court arbi
The above are all the errors of law which are pointed out. by the bankrupt as having been made in the order of June 22, 1912; that is, in the order of the court confirming the previous finding and order of the referee. , He says, however, that it was error for the court in the face of his sworn denial that he was in possession of the goods or the money to adjudge him in contempt.
All this was done in this case. After his answer has been put in, or after the time at which it should haye been put in has expired, and upon reasonable notice to him, evidence in support of the allegations of the petition may be taken. One of the contentions pressed upon this court by the counsel for the bankrupt was that the testimony of the bankrupt taken at his examination at the creditors’ meeting and before the filing of the petition of the trustees had been used against him. Had such evidence been that of any person other than himself, his objection might have been well taken. Fie would have been entitled to know that the issues made by the petition and his answer were to be litigated, and that the evidence of the witness was to be used in such litigation so that he could have cross-examined if he had been so advised. Obviously, however, there is no such reason for holding inadmissible what he himself swore, or for that matter said either before or after the filing of the trustees’ petition. As an admission of a party to the cause it was receivable in evidence against him. The proceeding was not criminal within the prohibition of section 7a, cl. 9, of the act. The bankrupt’s testimony at the meeting of creditors may be in it used against him. It was apparently expressly so decided in Re Cole, 163 Fed. 180, 90 C. C. A. 50, 23 L. R. A. (N. S.) 255. In all other cases of this character the admissibility of the bankrupt’s testimony at his examination by the creditors has been assumed to be so manifest that it has so far as we know never been challenged.
After all the testimony offered by both sides has been received, the referee makes up his findings. If he is of opinion from the evidence that the allegations of the trustee’s petition have been sustained in whole or in part, he so finds, and he thereupon orders the bankrupt by some certain date to turn over to his trustee the assets of the estate which he holds the bankrupt unlawfully retained and still has in his custody or under his control. The bankrupt may ask for a review of these findings and order, or he may not. If he does and the referee’s order is confirmed, or if he does not, the same procedure in substance follows. Before he can be treated as in contempt, he must be notified to show cause why he should not be attached and committed for failing to comply with the order of the court. In re Cole, 144 Fed. 392, 75 C. C. A. 330; Id., 163 Fed. 180, 90 C. C. A. 50, 23 L. R. A. (N. S.) 255. If he shows cause, the court is bound to hear any new evidence he may offer. In re Goodrich, 184 Fed. 5, 106 C. C. A. 207. In this case the bankrupt offered none, and in the argument here expressly stated that he had none to offer. The question before the court below was therefore whether the evidence already in was sufficient to establish the facts necessary to justify a committal for contempt. Many of the cases say that an order that the bankrupt shall turn over property to his trustee may be passed upon less conclusive evidence than that which will be required to justify an order for committal for failure to comply with the order to turn over. The reason assigned is usually that the first is a civil and the latter a criminal proceeding. It is very doubtful, whether this ex
It must be borne in mind that the form of the order in the case at bar was that the bankrupt should be imprisoned not for a definite term as a punishment, but until he complied with the order by turning over the property in question to his trustees. It is because the order is so worded that the court must be satisfied of the present ability of the bankrupt to comply with it. It is easy to conceive of cases in which a bankrupt had so dealt with his property after he had been ordered to turn it over as to make it impossible for him to do so. In such case no such order as that passed below could properly be made against him, but for all that he might well be subject to punishment for the contempt of which he had been guilty. That punishment would take the form of a fine of a definite amount or a committal to prison for a term of fixed duration. In the case of Gompers v. Bucks Stove & Range Co., supra, the Supreme Court said:
“The distinction between refusing to do an act commanded — remedied by imprisonment until the party perforins the required act, and doing an act forbidden- — punished by imprisonment for a definite term, is sound in principle, and generally, if not universally, affords a test by which to determine the character of the punishment.”
The court instanced the case of a refusal to turn property over to a receiver upon the order of a court as an illustration of a civil contempt. It said that:
“Unless there were special elements of contumacy, the refusal to comply with the order is treated as being rather in resistance to the opposite party than in contempt of the court. * * * The order for imprisonment in this class of cases, therefore, is not to vindicate the authority of the law, but is remedial and is intended to coerce the defendant to do the thing required by the order for the benefit of the complainant. If imprisoned, as aptly said in Re Nevitt, 117 Fed. 461 [54 C. C. A. 635], ‘he carries the keys of his prison in his own pocket.’ He can end the sentence and discharge himself a-t any moment by doing what he had previously refused to do.”
It therefore follows that, when the court is asked to commit, it should very carefully consider the case which has been made out. That does not require that the testimony which has been once taken in the proceeding should be again heard. To do so would be a useless waste of time.' If new testimony is offered, the court must hear it. It will be well for the judge again to give thought to that which he has already considered in order that he may feel sure that no mistake is being made. There is nothing in the present record to suggest that the learned and experienced judge below did not do all this. 'We have gone so fully into this case because it is the first of this kind to' come before us, and because we are profoundly impressed with the caution with which the power to commit in these cases should be exercised. Such proceedings are usually taken against bankrupts who in some or in many ways have acted badly. They frequently richly deserve some sort of punishment. Their manner on the witness stand sometimes adds to the indignation which their conduct in other respects excites. All these things may sometimes not unnaturally lead to their commitment for failure to do what after all they could not do if they would.
From what has already been said, it is apparent that we discover no error in matter of law in the action of the court below. The order in No. 1,122 will therefore be affirmed. In so doing, however, we will follow the wise precedent set by the Supreme Court in Mueller v. Nugent, 184 U. S. 1, 22 Sup. Ct. 269, 46 L. Ed. 405, and will remand the case with liberty to the court below, if it shall think it expedient so to do, to take such further proceedings, if any, as it may be advised.
Affirmed.