211 F. 738 | E.D.N.Y | 1914
Demurrer has been interposed to the individual indictments by each of the above-named defendants.
The indictment, however, does allege that the referee was investigating the affairs of the bankrupt, and that the answers to the questions put were material “with respect to the financial condition of the business of the said bankrupt and with respect to the amount of assets and liabilities of the said bankrupt.” It is evident that the questions would be upheld if they were material to. any step in the bankruptcy. proceeding. The question under discussion is not one of refusal to" testify, nor was it raised by objection interposed as to “materiality.”
The demurrer, therefore, to counts 1 and 2 of indictments Nos. 1476 and 1477 and to count 1 of indictment No. 1478 should be overruled, and the defendants directed to plead thereto. A further count has been inserted in each indictment alleging the pendency of the bankruptcy proceedings, the appointment of the receiver, election of a trustee, and the general reference to a referee in the Matter of the United Metal Bedstead Co.
There is no allegation in any one of these counts that there was concealment by the bankrupt, nor that the three individuals mentioned as defendants were acting for the bankrupt or concealing the property for the bankrupt. The other counts of the indictment indicate that these individuals were officers of the corporation, but these other counts are not included in the counts under discussion, even by refer
As was held in U. S. v. Lake, supra, 129 Fed. at page 502, the bankruptcy statute makes concealment of assets a crime under section 29b-(1) when committed by a person “having knowingly and fraudulently concealed while a bankrupt, or after -his discharge, from his trustee, any of the property belonging to his estate in bankruptcy.” The statute also defines the word “bankrupt” to be a person “against whom a petition has been filed, or who has filed a voluntary petition or been adjudged a bankrupt.” The word “person” includes corporations and officers, partnerships, and women .(section 1 [19]),” and when used with reference to the commission of acts which are herein forbidden shall include persons who are participants in the forbidden acts, and the agents, officers, and members of the board of directors or trustees, or other similar controlling bodies of corporations” (19). Section 29b-(4) makes it a 'crime for any person to “receive any material amount of property from a bankrupt after the filing of the petition, with intent to defeat this act.”
The matter contained in the last count of each of the indictments under discussion would seem to relate to the receipt of assets prior to bankrputcy, and, following the decision in U. S. v. Lake, supra, the conspiracy section of - the Criminal Code (section 37 of the Act of March 4, 1909, c. 321, 35 Stat. 1096 [U. S. Comp. St. Supp. 1911, p. 600]), or the sections as to accessories (332-333), would be the only provisions under which an outsider or third party could be prosecuted for concealing assets in contemplation of claim thereto or search therefor by a trustee.
The counts under discussion do not allege any receipt of1 assets after the filing of the petition, nor do they show any act by officers acting for the corporation. Nor do the counts allege concealment from the trustee by the corporation, with participation therein by the defendants named, under section 1(19) and section 332 of the Penal Code, nor do-these counts set forth a conspiracy. The precise language of the counts could only be supported as a general charge of the concealment of property which apparently belonged to another person, and this, while forbidden under the Penal Code of the state of New York, is not specifically made a crime by any section of the United States law, unless brought within the definition of larceny or the provisions above recited. The demurrer to these counts must be sustained.
The suggestion of the defendants is that the indictment does not show in its allegations a conspiracy for the concealment of assets by
The indictment charges that the business of the bankrupt was conducted by the three defendants as its officers, and their offices are specified. The three defendants are charged as individuals with “doing business as aforesaid” and planning to sell “its outstanding accounts” and to conceal the proceeds which were to be paid to the three individuals for the assignment of the accounts of the bankrupt corporation, with intent to defraud the creditors. The defendants are then charged with conspiring, in anticipation of the election of a trustee in bankruptcy, to conceal from that trustee, while “the said United Metal Bedstead Company should be a bankrupt, the property which should then and there belong to the estate in bankruptcy.” This sets forth sufficiently a conspiracy to which the bankrupt corporation, through its officers and agents, was a party, and, under the language of section 1(19) of the statute, the concealment of assets on behalf of the corporation by the individuals named from the trustee during' bankruptcy would be a crime, and a conspiracy to commit that crime could be prosecuted. U. S. v. Cohn et al. (C. C.) 142 Fed. 983. The present indictment seems to sufficiently set forth such a charge of conspiracy.
Further objection is made that insolvency at the time of selling the assets is not sufficiently alleged. This is unnecessary. Conspiracy by a solvent corporation, to conceal assets in contemplation of insolvency, would be a crime, and the indictment states that the corporation was insolvent and properly in bankruptcy.
The demurrer to this indictment will be overruled, and the defendants ordered to plead.