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SON'S SEVERE ACTION

MOTHER MADE BANKRUPT “It seems a dreadful thing,” said the Chief Justice, Sir James Blair, when Walter Charles Clifford, carter, applied in the Brisbane Supremo 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 both he and the solicitor had had misgivings about accepting the case. The Chief Justice: The petitioner iw 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. Th<» petitioner had advanced the money to give the mother a home, but other members of the family were receivinjf’benefits from his generosity to which ho considered they were not entitled. The Chief Justice: Then it is a family feud? 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: “J have to do my duty under the Bankruptcy Act, but I urge the son to avoid if possible taking extreme or drastic action on this order.”

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WC19340125.2.99.12

Bibliographic details

Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 77, Issue 21, 25 January 1934, Page 8

Word Count
234

SON'S SEVERE ACTION Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 77, Issue 21, 25 January 1934, Page 8

SON'S SEVERE ACTION Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 77, Issue 21, 25 January 1934, Page 8

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