19 Wis. 103 | Wis. | 1865
By the Court,
Chapter one hundred and sixty-one, relating to the discharge of insolvent debtors, requires the insolvent, among other matters, to state in the schedule a full and true inventory of all his estate real and personal. Subd. 6, sec. 2. In the affidavit which he is required to make and annex to the petition, account and inventory, he must likewise swear that he has made a true statement in the schedule of his assets and liabilities, and that he has not at any time or in any manner whatsoever disposed of or made over any part of his estate for the future benefit of himself and family or in order to defraud any of his creditors. Sec. 8. Every discharge
It is also stated in the affidavit of William Smith, that the defendant in error prevented him from being present before the judge on the hearing of the application, and, as agent of the plaintiff in error, opposing the discharge, by causing him to be arrested on a warrant for a pretended assault and battery and thus keeping him from the place where the hearing was had. Such conduct as this on the part of the insolvent, if it was really dictated by the purpose of preventing an opposing creditor from being present to resist the application, would not only be grossly improper but would probably bo a fraud within the last clause of section 24, and avoid the discharge. But without dwelling upon this point, we’are clearly of the opinion that there must be a new hearing of the application on account of the omission to include in the schedule all of the insolvent’s property.
A new trial or hearing is therefore awarded to the circuit court of Winnebago county.