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SON’S SEVERE ACTION

MOTHER MADE BANKRUPT. ' SEQUEL TO FAMILY DISPUTE. “It seems a dreadful thing,” said the. Chief Justice, Sir James Blair, when Walter Charles Clifford, carter, applied in the Brisbane Supreme Court recently for a sequestration order against the estate of his mother, Lena Elizabeth Clifford. The amount of the debt was £556. Mr. P. E. Copley, counsel for the son, said that ’'oth he and the solicitor had had misgivings about accepting the case. The Chief Justice: The petitioner is actually making his mother bankrupt. Mr. Copley said he recognised that it was very undesirable for a son to take such action against his mother. The petitioner had advanced the money to give the mother a home, but other members of the frmily were receiving benefits from his generosity to which he considered they were not entitled. The Chief Justice: Then it is a family reud? Mr. Copley said it was more than that. The mother was originally prepared to sign a mortgage, but she had not done so. The Chief Justice: Was the £556 lent unsecured in one sum? Mr. Copley: Yes, to pay a deposit on the home and to pay other debts for the mother at the time. In granting the sequestration order, the Chief Justice said: “I have to do my duty under the Bankruptcy Act, but I urge the son to avcid if possible taking | extreme or drastic action on this order.”

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TDN19340116.2.142

Bibliographic details

Taranaki Daily News, 16 January 1934, Page 10

Word Count
239

SON’S SEVERE ACTION Taranaki Daily News, 16 January 1934, Page 10

SON’S SEVERE ACTION Taranaki Daily News, 16 January 1934, Page 10