RULING ON MOTION TO DISMISS
Plaintiff is a former professor at the Wethersfield School of Law. He filed for and was adjudicated a bankrupt on June 11, 1976. Plaintiff now brings this diversity action against the Acting President of the school alleging that as a result of defendant’s misrepresentation and negligence, plaintiff was induced to execute a contract deferring payment of certain back wages for a period of five years. He claims damages for loss of income, insurance, credit rating, and reputation. Defendant moves to dismiss and contends that only plaintiff’s trustee in bankruptcy may maintain this suit. 1
Section 70(a) of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C. § 110(a) provides in pertinent part:
“The trustee of the estate of a bankrupt . . . shall ... be vested by operation of law with the title of the bankrupt as of the date of the filing of the petition ... to all of the following kinds of property wherever located . . (6) rights of action arising upon contracts, or usury, or the unlawful taking or detention of or injury to his property.”
The question thus presented is whether plaintiff is suing for an injury to his property or rather seeks damages for personal injury which do not vest in the trustee. The defendant is alleged to have committed a business tort. Plaintiff had a claim against the school for moneys due and owing. Because of defendant’s fraud or negligence, plaintiff was deprived of prompt payment of that debt. Construing plaintiff’s complaint liberally as setting forth an action in deceit, it is still clear that the claim passed to the trustee and that plaintiff cannot • bring such an action in this court.
Rights based upon fraudulent misrepresentation or deceit through which the bankrupt incurred losses are injuries to his property and accrue to the benefit of his creditors.
Hermsmeyer v. A.L.D., Inc.,
*527
Plaintiff alleges also, though, that because of defendant’s fraud he sustained a loss of reputation and pain and suffering personal to him. Whatever aspersion the allegation of deceit may cast on the defendant, the mere fact that plaintiff was misled or deceived resulted in no injury to his own reputation. The situation here is very different from that in
Boudreau v. Chesley,
The complaint should not be dismissed, of course, unless “it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim which would entitle him to relief.”
Conley v. Gibson,
More important, as a matter of law and logic, the fraud or negligence here could not have been a proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injuries. When he filed for bankruptcy in June 1976, plaintiff possessed a cause of action against the defendant. This cause of action might be expressed as either a contractual claim for back wages and recission of the prior deferment or as a suit in fraud. In either case, the chose in action was property of the estate. Plaintiff, however, voluntarily chose not to list this claim as an asset. He is foreclosed by his own actions from arguing that the inclusion of the ■ claim against the defendant when added to his other assets would have rendered him solvent. If, on the other hand, plaintiff’s debts would have exceeded his assets even with the addition of the claim for back wages, then the defendant’s deceit is not even a “but for” cause of plaintiff’s subsequent losses.
Finally, plaintiff contends that he is entitled to bring this action because the trustee has abandoned the claim, and it has reverted back to the bankrupt. Plaintiff was adjudicated a bankrupt June 11, 1976. He brought this suit on July 21, 1976. Because plaintiff did not list this chose in action as an asset of his estate, he cannot now claim an abandonment by the trustee.
Hermsmeyer
v.
A.L.D., Inc., supra
“It cannot be that a bankrupt, by omitting to schedule and withholding from his trustee all knowledge of certain property, can, after his estate in bankruptcy has been finally closed up, immediately there *528 after assert title to the property on the ground that the trustee had never taken any action in respect to it. If the claim was of value ... it was something to which the creditors were entitled, and this bankrupt could not, by withholding knowledge of its existence, obtain a release from his debts, and still assert title to the property.”
Plaintiff’s claim of abandonment is therefore premature.
The default previously entered against the defendant shall be set aside. Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss is granted.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. It is undisputed that plaintiff did not list the instant claim in his schedule of assets when filing for bankruptcy.
. Since all services in connection with the back wages in dispute had been performed prior to the adjudication of bankruptcy, plaintiffs citation of cases dealing with executory personal service contracts is inapposite.
. At least one court has held that plaintiff is precluded from prosecuting an action for such consequential injuries when the underlying claim is vested in the trustee.
Patton v. Fidelity-Philadelphia Trust Co., supra. See also Reichert v. General Insurance Co. of America,
