GIVING A BAD CHECK DOES NOT PREVENT DISCHARGE IN BANKRUPTCY.
Giving a worthless check for goods and disposing of them immediately is not a ground for refusing a discharge from bankruptcy. Judge Hough of the United States District Court has recently granted a discharge to a party who filed a petition in bankruptcy on October 24, 1906, with liabilities of $11,577 and no assets. His discharge was opposed by a creditor, who said that on June 6, 1892, the debtor bought $1,964 worth of goods, giving a check in payment, which was deposited in bank and came back marked “no funds.” The creditor went at once to debtor’s place of business and found that he had sold out and left the city. When debtor’s application for a discharge came up for a hearing he excepted to the specifications of objections, and Judge Hough sustained the exception on the ground that the objections are not within the statutory list.
Opinion No. 41.