1. Under the provision of § 14b of the Bankruptcy Act
denying a discharge to a bankrupt who has
"obtained money or property on credit upon a materially false
statement in writing made by him to any person . . . for the
purpose of obtaining credit from such person,"
the vice inherent in the original falsity of a statement is not
remedied by lapse of time, and if the creditor extend credit upon
such a statement while it is still in force and binding upon the
bankrupt, within the time in which the bankrupt intended it should
serve that end, it does not lie in the bankrupt's mouth to say
that, by reason of extrinsic circumstances, the creditor was not
justified in relying upon it. P.
266 U. S.
326.
2. Under § 14b of the Bankruptcy Act, to withhold discharge
from a bankrupt upon the ground that he failed to keep books of
account,
Page 266 U. S. 322
etc., with intent to conceal his financial condition, this
intent must be shown. P.
266 U. S.
327.
3. Upon review of a bankruptcy case wherein decision of the law
involved left the outcome dependent upon questions of fact which
had not been determined by either the referee or the district court
or the circuit court of appeals,
held appropriate that the
case be remanded to the district court, although this Court could
determine the questions itself from an examination of the
testimony, or remand to the circuit court of appeals. P.
266 U. S.
327.
289 F. 481 reversed.
Certiorari to a judgment of the circuit court of appeals which
reversed an order of the district court refusing a discharge in
bankruptcy.
MR. JUSTICE SANFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
Lustgarten, the respondent, was adjudged bankrupt in an
involuntary proceeding in the Southern District of New York. He
duly filed an application for discharge. Two creditors filed
objections, specifying four grounds of opposition, [
Footnote 1] which were referred to the
referee. [
Footnote 2] Thereupon
an order was made directing the trustee to prosecute the
specifications at the expense of the estate.
Only two of them are here involved, one alleging that Lustgarten
had failed to keep proper books of account and the other that he
had obtained credit from the Corn Exchange Bank, an objecting
creditor, upon a false statement in writing.
Section 14b of the Bankruptcy Act, as amended by the Act of June
25, 1910, c. 412, 36 Stat. 838, provides that the judge, on hearing
a bankrupt's application for discharge
Page 266 U. S. 323
and the pleas and proofs made in opposition thereto, shall
"discharge the applicant unless he has . . . (2) with intent to
conceal his financial condition . . . failed to keep books of
account or records from which such condition might be ascertained;
or (3) obtained money or property on credit upon a materially false
statement in writing, made by him to any person or his
representative for the purpose of obtaining credit from such
person. . . ."
No evidence was introduced before the referee under the
specification of opposition relating to the books of account. As to
the obtaining of credit, it was shown that, on January 6, 1920,
Lustgarten gave the Bank a signed statement setting forth his
financial condition on December 15, 1919, and showing a net worth
of more than $58,000. This statement recited that it was made "for
the purpose of obtaining loans," and stated that:
"This statement is to be regarded by Abraham Lustgarten and by
The Corn Exchange Bank as continuous and binding, and to form a
true statement as to the assets and liabilities of the undersigned,
and other matters, to be relied upon by The Corn Exchange Bank upon
application by the undersigned, for all loans until another
statement in writing shall be substituted for this, or this
statement recalled. . . . And further, whenever my financial
condition is changed materially from the financial condition shown
in the above statement, I agree to notify the said Bank at once of
such change, whether applications for further loans are made or
not."
There was conflicting evidence as to whether or not the
statement as to Lustgarten's financial condition was materially
false. In October and November, 1920, and February, 1921, the Bank,
on his applications, made him three loans, aggregating $11,000. He
had meanwhile given the Bank no notice of any change in his
financial condition, and there was no evidence that it had in fact
substantially changed.
Page 266 U. S. 324
The referee reported that, without deciding the "difficult"
question of fact whether Lustgarten's statement to the Bank was
false when given, and assuming that the Bank had relied upon it in
extending the credits, he was of opinion that it had no right so to
do, since, in view of the financial depression prevailing in 1920,
the "reasonable time" for which the statement remained a
"continuing statement" had expired when the credits were extended,
and he recommended that the discharge be granted.
The district court. at a hearing on the referee's report --
apparently assuming, but not deciding, that the financial statement
was false and that the Bank had relied upon it -- held that, as the
statement was a continuing one and provided for notice of any
material changes, the Bank had a right to rely upon it until such
notice was given. The court also considered the specification
relating to the books of account, [
Footnote 3] and upon the evidence that had been taken
before the referee upon a closely related specification not here
involved, [
Footnote 4] held
that the fact that the books did not show an indebtedness which
Lustgarten claimed to have owed his nephew constituted a failure to
keep proper books, and that the intent to conceal his financial
condition was reasonably to be inferred. The discharge was
accordingly denied.
On an appeal by Lustgarten from this order, the circuit court of
appeals, without passing upon the question whether the financial
statement was false, and expressing doubt whether on the testimony
it could be said that the Bank had relied upon it, held that, in
any event, on account of the lapse of time between the making of
the statement and the obtaining of the loans and the general
Page 266 U. S. 325
financial conditions then prevailing, the Bank "was not
justified in relying upon the statement." [
Footnote 5] And, on the testimony relating to the books
of account, the court found that the failure to make entries
showing the indebtedness to Lustgarten's nephew was due to
inadvertent and faulty bookkeeping, and "not to any intent to
conceal financial conditions." The order of the district court was
accordingly reversed, with instructions to grant the discharge.
In re Lustgarten, 289 F. 481. Thereafter, this writ of
certiorari was granted the trustee. 262 U.S. 741.
1. On the question of the continuing effect of a false financial
statement, there is a conflict of opinion between the Circuit Court
of Appeals for the Second Circuit and those for the Third and Fifth
Circuits. In
Ragan v. Cotton (5th Circ.), 200 F. 546, 550,
it was held that, where a bankrupt had made a false financial
statement for the purpose of obtaining credit, which provided that
it should be binding for continuing credit unless changed, and a
creditor had relied upon such false statement in extending credits
for purchases made from nine to twelve months thereafter, the
discharge should be denied. And in
Haimowich v. Mandel (3d
Circ.), 243 F. 338, 342, it was held that, where a bankrupt had
made a false financial statement as a basis for obtaining credit,
and seven months thereafter, within the time in which the bankrupt
"intended the statement to serve that end," creditors had been
induced by its falsity to extend credit to him, the discharge was
barred. There, the court said that the test whether a false
statement given upon one date and acted upon at a later date
operates as a bar to a discharge is
"whether, at that time the false statement was still in force
and binding upon the bankrupt, to be determined
Page 266 U. S. 326
according as it is found that the sale on credit was or was not
the proximate result of the statement . . . and that its original
falsity was or was not the thing that worked the mischief."
We think that these two cases embody, in substance, the rule
that should be here applied. Under the Bankruptcy Act, the
discharge is to be denied if it is shown that the bankrupt
"obtained money or property on credit upon a materially false
statement in writing, made by him . . . for the purpose of
obtaining credit." The only essentials to the statutory bar,
insofar as relates to the present question, are: (a) that the
written statement was made for the purpose of obtaining credit; (b)
that it was materially false, and (c) that the credit was obtained
upon it. If these are established, the vice inherent in the
original falsity of the statement is not remedied by the lapse of
time, and if the creditor extends credit upon such a false
statement while it is still in force and binding upon the bankrupt,
within the time in which he intended it should serve that end, it
does not lie in his mouth to say that, by reason of extrinsic
circumstances, the creditor was not justified in relying upon it.
In short, the lapse of time is only material in determining whether
credit was extended within the period intended, while the statement
was still binding on the bankrupt, and whether the creditor in fact
extended the credit upon the faith of the statement. Here,
Lustgarten's statement expressly recited that it was made "for the
purpose of obtaining loans" from the Bank, and that it should be
regarded by himself and the Bank as "continuous and binding" and
relied on by the Bank "for all loans" until changed or recalled.
Lustgarten applied for the loans in question without either
changing or recalling the statement. And it is entirely clear that
the loans were made while the statement was still binding upon him
and serving the end which he intended, as shown both by its
Page 266 U. S. 327
plain and unambiguous provisions and by his own conduct in
pursuance thereof.
We therefore conclude that the circuit court of appeals was in
error in holding that, irrespective of the questions of the falsity
of the statement and the reliance of the Bank upon it, the
discharge should be granted upon the theory that the Bank was not
justified in relying upon it when the credits were extended, and
that, if the statement, when made, was materially false and the
Bank made the loans in reliance upon it, the discharge should have
been denied.
2. An examination of the evidence in reference to the books of
account discloses no error in the finding of the circuit court of
appeals that Lustgarten's failure to make the entries of the
indebtedness to his nephew was not due to any intent to conceal his
financial condition, and, on the contrary, leads us to the
conclusion that this finding is in accordance with the greater
weight of the evidence. Under the Bankruptcy Act, however, such
intent must be shown in order to bar the discharge.
3. The question then arises as to what disposition we should now
make of the case. The material questions of fact in reference to
the financial statement, upon which the decision must ultimately
depend, have not as yet been determined in the courts below. They
were not decided by the referee who heard the testimony; they were
apparently assumed by the district court, and they were not passed
upon by the circuit court of appeals on account of its ruling in
reference to the lapse of time. We may now either determine these
questions upon an independent examination of the testimony or
remand the case for further proceedings in order that they may be
determined in the lower courts.
Cole v. Ralph,
252 U. S. 286,
252 U. S. 290.
If they had been specifically decided by the district court and
only the circuit court of appeals had failed to pass upon them, an
appropriate course would be
Page 266 U. S. 328
to remand the case to the circuit court of appeals.
Lutcher
Lumber Co. v. Knight, 217 U. S. 257,
217 U. S. 268;
Brown v. Fletcher, 237 U. S. 583,
237 U. S. 588.
But, since they were not expressly decided by the district court,
we conclude that, under all the circumstances, we should take the
course adopted in
Marconi Wireless Co. v. Simon,
246 U. S. 46,
246 U. S. 57 --
that is, reverse the decrees in both the courts below and remand
the case to the district court. If it be determined that the
financial statement was materially false and that the Bank made the
loans in reliance upon it, the discharge should be denied;
otherwise it should be granted.
The decrees of the district court and of the circuit court of
appeals are accordingly reversed, and the cause is remanded to the
district court for further proceedings in accordance with this
opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
[
Footnote 1]
Gen. Ord. No. 32.
[
Footnote 2]
Gen. Ord. No. 12, cl. 3.
[
Footnote 3]
No reason was stated for considering this specification, which
apparently had not been relied on before the referee.
[
Footnote 4]
The referee had found that this other specification was not
sustained by the proof, and it was disregarded by the district
court.
[
Footnote 5]
In thus holding, the circuit court of appeals followed its
earlier ruling in
Re B. & R. Glove Corporation, 279 F.
372, involving the right of a creditor to reclaim property sold a
bankrupt on the faith of a continuing financial statement.