1866
No. 10 of 1931.
BANKRUPTCY.
[s. 30 contd.]
discharge acquired property or income available towards payment of his debts:
Provided that, if at any time after the expiration of two years from the date of any order made under this section the bankrupt satisfies the court that there is no reasonable probability of his being in a position to comply with the terms of such order, the court may modify the terms of the order or of any substituted order in such manner and upon such conditions as it may think fit.
(4) The facts hereinbefore referred to are-
(a) that the bankrupt's assets are not of a value equal to fifty per cent. of his unsecured liabilities, unless he satisfies the court that the fact that the assets are not of a value of fifty per cent. of his unsecured liabilities has arisen from circumstances for which he cannot justly be held responsible;
(b) that the bankrupt has omitted to keep such books of account as are usual and proper in the business carried on by him and as sufficiently disclose his business transactions and financial position within the three years immediately preceding his bankruptcy, or in the case of a firm carrying on business under a Chinese firm name, that a partnership book has not been kept, or that such books have not been available for the trustee during the bankruptcy proceedings, unless they have been accidentally lost or destroyed, the onus of proof of such accidental loss or destruction being on the bankrupt;
(c) that the bankrupt has continued to trade after knowing himself to be insolvent;
(d) that the bankrupt has contracted any debt provable in the bankruptcy without having at the time of contracting it any reasonable or probable ground of expectation (proof whereof shall lie on him) of being able to pay it;
(e) that the bankrupt has failed to account satisfactorily for any loss of assets or for any deficiency of assets to meet his liabilities;
(f) that the bankrupt has brought on or contributed to his bankruptcy by rash and hazardous speculations, or by unjustifiable extravagance in living, or by gambling, or by culpable neglect of his business affairs;