117 F. 774 | D. Ind. | 1902
The petitioner, the Peninsular Stove Company, filed its petition in the nature of a bill in equity against William C. Mitchell, trustee of the estate of the Hamilton Furniture & Carpet Company, which had been adjudged a bankrupt on March io, 1902, for the rescission of a contract of sale of a lot of stoves made by it to the bankrupt on December 27, 1901, and for the return of the stoves, or their value, on the ground that the contract of sale had been induced by the false and fraudulent representations of the bankrupt. The sale was made through a traveling salesman of the petitioner, who made inquiry of the bankrupt as to its solvency, and he was informed by the purchasing officer of the bankrupt that the company was perfectly solvent, and had $25,000 of paid-up capital behind it. The traveling salesman took the order for the goods, and reported it, with the representations of the bankrupt, to the petitioner. The petitioner then obtained a report from the Dun Mercantile Agency, of which it was a patron, of the financial standing of the bankrupt. The mercantile agency furnished to the petitioner a copy of a statement in writing made to the agency on February 1, 1901, by the bankrupt, which sets out the assets and liabilities of the bankrupt, showing that it was worth $32,875 over and above all liabilities. The petitioner was induced by these statements, which it believed and relied upon as true, to sell and ship to the bankrupt between the 6th and 31st days of January, 1902, stoves to the amount and value of $550.27. The representations of the bankrupt were false, and were known- to have been so at the time they were made, and the petitioner, relying upon them as true, sold and delivered the stoves to the bankrupt. The bankrupt was grossly insolvent on February 1, 1901, and continued to be insolvent from that time until it was adjudged to be a bankrupt. From February 1, 1901, until it was adjudged a bankrupt, it was not possessed of property and assets to a greater amount than 50 or 60 per cent, of its liabilities. On these facts the referee decreed that the contract of sale should be rescinded, and the trustee was ordered to pay to the petitioner the value of the the goods, which had been sold under an order of the court. The trustee has taken an appeal, and asks the court to review and reverse the finding and order of the referee. The right to such review and reversal is bottomed on a single proposition, thus stated:
“To entitle the petitioner to rescind the contract set forth in the intervening petition, it was incumbent upon it to show that the purchase was made by the bankrupt while insolvent, with the preconceived design then present in its mind not to pay for the stoves.”
It is well settled that where a party, by fraudulently concealing his insolvency and his intent not to pay for goods, induces the owner to sell them to him on credit, the seller, if no innocent third party has acquired an interest in them, is entitled to disaffirm the contract and
The order of the referee is affirmed, with costs.
. See Bankruptcy, vol. 6, Cent. Dig. §* 219.