Opinion
Rehearing denied.
Appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Solano County refusing a discharge in insolvency.
COUNSEL:
Fred W. Hall, and J. F. Wendell, for Appellant.
Napthaly, Friedenrich & Ackerman, for Respondents.
JUDGES: In Bank. Hayne, C. Foote, C., concurred. Paterson, J., dissenting. McFarland, J., concurred in the views expressed by Mr. Justice Paterson.
OPINION
HAYNE, Judge
H. C. Good and James Roney were partners, "carrying on a grocery and bar business at Vallejo in a small way," for about four years. On the third day of July, 1886, they filed a petition in the superior court of Solano County, asking to be adjudged insolvents, and in February, 1887, Good applied to the court for a discharge from his debts. This application was opposed by some of the creditors, on the ground that the firm of Good & Roney had not kept proper books of account, and it was specified that they did not enter in their books "an indebtedness of said firm to John Good, amounting to about seven thousand five hundred dollars, and did not enter in said books an indebtedness of said firm to Walter C. Good, amounting to about two thousand five hundred dollars, and thereby falsely made it appear by said books that said firm was indebted in a less sum, to wit, ten thousand dollars less, than said firm actually owed, and thereby falsely made it appear by said books that said firm was solvent, and that the indebtedness of said firm did not exceed its assets, whereas said firm was wholly insolvent, and its actual indebtedness largely exceeded the value of its assets."
Good filed an answer to the objections made to his discharge, and, admitting that the indebtedness of seven thousand five hundred dollars to John Good, his father, and two thousand five hundred dollars to Walter C. Good, his brother, was not entered in the books of the firm, averred that the books were not kept by himself, but by James Roney, and that neither of the partners was an expert book-keeper, and that they did not consider it necessary to enter those items; that the items were for moneys loaned to the firm to enable the partners to commence and continue their business, and constituted their capital stock, and that promissory notes therefor had been given. He also averred that the omissions were made in good faith, and without any intention to deceive or defraud any one, or to make the firm appear solvent when it was insolvent, and that no creditor of the firm was injured or defrauded thereby; that the books correctly set forth the mercantile transactions of the firm, and did not purport to show its indebtedness for money borrowed and for which notes had been given, and therefore did not falsely or at all make it appear that the firm was indebted in a less sum than it actually owed, or falsely or at all make it appear that the firm was solvent, or that its indebtedness did not exceed its assets.
Upon the specifications of their grounds of opposition, and the answer thereto, counsel for the opposing creditors moved the court to deny Good's application for a discharge, and the motion was granted. From that order this appeal is prosecuted.
We think that the order was proper. The insolvent act was passed on the 16th of April, 1880, and provides that "no discharge shall be granted, or if granted shall be valid, if the debtor,. .. . being a merchant or tradesman, has not, subsequently to the passage of this act, kept proper books of account." (Sec. 49.) The books as kept showed that the firm was in good condition. If the omitted entries had been made, the books would have [20 P. 861] shown that the firm was utterly insolvent. Was it "proper" that they should show the true condition of affairs? What else are books for? If the omitted entries had been of outside matter, they would not have had to be made. But that is simply because the statute does not require books to be kept as to outside matters. These entries were not in relation to outside matters. They were for money lent to the firm as such, for the express purpose of being put into the business. Consequently the debt was a debt of the firm. Is it not "proper" that the books of the firm should show the debts of the firm?
But stress is laid upon the fact that the omission was "in good faith." This simply amounts to saying that, although the partners did not comply with the law, they did not mean anything by it. This might be material if it were proposed to inflict a positive punishment on them. But no crime is charged against them. They were simply offered a valuable privilege upon certain conditions; and they have not complied with the conditions. Good faith in the matter may enter into the question under certain circumstances; but it is not controlling. Suppose that a merchant should not keep any books at all. Would it make any difference that he acted in perfect good faith, and did not think that books were necessary? Or suppose that in perfect good faith, and from sheer stupidity, he kept books that were utterly incomprehensible. Would it avail him that his intentions were good? We do not think that it would. As said by Grier, J., in In re Solomon, 2 Nat. Bank. Reg. 287, concerning a similar provision in the federal bankrupt law, the object of the provision was "to enable any competent person to determine from the books and invoices the real condition of the debtor's affairs." Or, as said by Blatchford, J., in In re Garrison, 7 Nat. Bank. Reg. 287, the purpose was to require them to "keep such books in relation to their business as will furnish an intelligent account to their creditors of the state and course of their business transactions; not leaving such account to be made up from memory, or from sources other than such books. The requirement is, in our judgment, a wholesome one. It is difficult to prove fraud or want of "good faith." Any lawyer who has had much experience in this class of cases knows that, as a rule, creditors for moderate amounts prefer to let the matter go rather than to undertake the difficult and expensive task of a contest upon such a basis. Crowds of fraudulent bankruptcies take place in consequence. In view of this, the statute has very wisely made the failure to keep proper books one of the tests.
As a matter of course, trivial inaccuracies are not to be regarded. And books which would be proper for one kind of business might not be proper for another. The provision, like every other, must receive a reasonable construction. But we do not think that a set of books which shows that the firm was in good condition, when in fact it was utterly insolvent, can be held to be "proper" in any view.
We therefore advise that the order appealed from be affirmed.
The Court. -- For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the order appealed from is affirmed.
DISSENT:
PATERSON
Paterson, J., dissenting. I dissent. As the motion was made upon the pleadings, all the averments of the answer are taken as true. It is therefore admitted that proper books were kept of all the mercantile transactions of the firm; that the omissions complained of were made in good faith, without any intent to deceive or defraud any one, and that no creditor of the firm was injured or defrauded thereby; that the partners honestly supposed it was not necessary to enter in their books accounts of moneys which they had borrower on their promissory notes before commencing business, and which constituted their capital stock.
Now, conceding that some notes or memoranda of this borrower money should have been entered in the books, the question is, Did the [20 P. 862] failure to make the entries, under the circumstances shown, necessarily deprive the appellant of all right to a discharge from his debts? I am unable to see any good or sufficient ground for holding that it did. The statute was intended to be beneficent in its scope and purposes. In passing it, the legislature evidently thought that the best interests of the state and of its citizens would be promoted, if one who had become insolvent while endeavoring honestly and fairly to carry on some business could surrender his property to his creditors, and then be discharged from his debts, and permitted to commence his business life anew. Many restrictions were thrown around the proceedings, but they were intended mainly to hinder fraudulent and dishonest debtors in their efforts to escape from the just claims of their creditors.
An examination of the section of the insolvent act referred to will show that the keeping of books is made a condition of discharge only in case of merchants and tradesmen. It will also be seen that while many grounds for denying the discharge are specified, all but two of them are based upon the fraudulent and wrongful acts of the debtor. The exceptions are, the failure to keep proper books of account by the merchant or tradesman, and an application for discharge made within three years next after a prior discharge. Each case must depend upon its own peculiar circumstances. In In re Graves , 24 F. 551, the court said: "No fraud or dishonesty is charged, and it would seem not to be the policy of the courts to keep a young man under the harrow for years, when the only accusation against him is, that he failed to insert in his cash-book the items of his daily sales"; and it was held that although his cash-book was imperfect, inartistic, and inaccurate in a strictly commercial sense, it was not so improperly kept as to justify the court in withholding the discharge.