Imlay v. Carpentier

14 Cal. 173
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 14 Cal. 173 (Imlay v. Carpentier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Imlay v. Carpentier, 14 Cal. 173 (Cal. 1859).

Opinion

Cope, J.

delivered the opinion of the Court—Baldwin, J. concurring.

This is an action to set aside a judgment and execution. The complaint was demurred to, and the appeal is from an order sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the complaint. The action is based upon the following facts: The defendant, Carpentier, in the month of January, 1858, commenced a suit against the plaintiff, upon a promissory note, executed on the 4th of May, 1857, and recovered a judgment by default, for the amount of such note, and the costs of the suit. During the pendency of this suit, and about ten days anterior to the judgment, the plaintiff instituted proceedings in insolvency, in pursuance of the provisions of the Act of May 4th, 1852, for the relief of insolvent debtors and protection of creditors, and was afterward duly released and discharged from all his debts and liabilities, including his said debt to the defendant, Carpentier. An execution was subsequently issued upon the judgment, and levied upon the property of the plaintiff.

We agree with the Court below, that the complaint does not disclose sufficient equity to entitle the plaintiff to maintain this action, but as that Court based its decision upon the general ground of a want of equity, and as we think the plaintiff entitled to relief in some form, it is proper for us to examine the whole subject, without reference to any specific objection to the complaint, and to indicate what we deem to be the correct practice in such cases.

The question to be first disposed of, relates to the effect upon this judgment of the discharge of the plaintiff as an insolvent debtor. The statute limits the discharge to such debts and liabilities as were owing at the time of the application, and named in the schedule attached to the petition; and it is contended that this judgment is not within the operation of the discharge, for the reason that it did not exist at the time of the application, notwithstanding the debt upon which it was recovered was specially set forth in the schedule, and included in the discharge. This provision of our statute is not peculiar, and the authorities upon the question involved in the proposition contended for, are numerous and pointed.

In England, such debts only are affected by a discharge in [175]*175bankruptcy, as were due and owing at the date of the commission. It is, however, the settled doctrine of the English Courts, that a judgment recovered against a bankrupt after the issuance of the commission, and before he obtains his discharge, upon a pre-existing indebtedness, occupies the exact position of the original debt, and is equally within the purview and operation of the discharge. Blandford v. Foote, (1 Cowp. 138,) is a case in point. The defendant had been arrested in a suit upon a judgment recovered against him after he had committed an act of bankruptcy, and a commission had issued. An order was made requiring the plaintiffs to show cause why he should not be discharged under the provisions of the Bankrupt Act. Mr. Mansfield, who appeared for the plaintiffs, insisted “ that the judgment upon which the defendant had been taken—being subsequent to the commission sued out—the defendant was not within the favor of the statute, which expressly relates to any debt or debts due, or contracted, before such commission issued, and to such debts only.” Mr. Baldwin, contra, contended that “ the defendant ought to be discharged; though the judgment was signed after the commission issued, yet the cause of action was antecedent to the commission, and therefore within the intention of the statute.” Lord Mansfield, in ordering the discharge of the defendant, said: “ The only doubt that can arise in this case is with respect to the interest and costs accrued since the bankruptcy; but I think they stand upon the same foundation as the original debt which was clearly due before the bankruptcy, and therefore, equally within the benefit of the statute.” Mr. Justice Willes was of the same opinion, and referred to a similar case, which was decided in the same way, with the concurrence of the whole Court.

The same principle has been decided in many other cases. (See Bouteflouer v. Coates, 1 Cowp. 25; Dinsdale v. Evans, 2 Bro. & Bing.; Scott v. Ambrose, 3 Maule & Selw. 326; Willett v. Pringle, 5 Bos. & Pul. 193.) If there is any English case in which a contrary doctrine is maintained, it has escaped our attention.

In this country a similar question has frequently arisen in the different State Courts, and while the decisions have not been uniform, the preponderance of authority is largely in favor of the English rule.

[176]*176Dresser v. Brooks, (3 Barb. 429,) was an action of debt upon a judgment recovered in an action of assumpsit, in the Supreme Court of the State of Hew York. The defendant interposed a plea in bar, setting up his discharge and certificate under the Bankrupt Act of the United States, of August, 1841. The application for the benefit of the Act was voluntary, and the judgment was recovered intermediate the petition and discharge. It was objected, that the plea was not sufficient, for although the debt existed when the petition was presented, the judgment which constituted a new and perfect debt in itself, was recovered afterward, and was not within the operation of the discharge, which was limited by the Act to such debts as were owing at the time of the application. But the Court sustained the plea, and Gridley. J. in an able and well considered opinion, after citing numerous authorities, remarked, as follows: “How, we are unable to perceive why the cases which we have cited are not entirely conclusive of two propositions: 1. That there is no merger and extinguishment of the original debt, in the judgment subsequently recovered, so as to prevent the certificate from discharging the judgment founded on such debt; and, 2. That the costs which are included in the judgment are accessorial to the debt, and are discharged with it. It is true, that the questions in these cases arose on motions for relief. But these decisions are just as conclusive authorities on the point in question, as if they had arisen upon the pleadings. In both cases, the relief is granted, if at all, on the ground that the discharge is a bar to the judgment. If it were not so, and if the old debt were not extinguished, and the judgment is to be regarded as an original debt, newly created, then there could be no relief on motion, or in any other way. So that the only ground of relief must of necessity be, that the original debt still exists in the judgment, and that the judgment is but the original debt in a new form, and is therefore discharged by the certificate.”

There are many other decisions in that State to the same effect. (See Alcott v. Avery, 1 Barb. Ch. 347; Johnson v. Fitzhugh, 3 Id. 360; Clark v. Rowling, 3 Com. 216.) And these cases are supported by numerous authorities in other States. (Ewing v. Peck, Ala. 339; Brown v. The Branch Bank of Montgomery, 22 Id. 420; Curtis v. Sloson, 6 Barr, 265; Parks v. Goodwin, 1 Mann. 35; Downer v. Rowell, 26 Vt. 397.)

[177]*177The opposing decisions are from Massachusetts and Maine, and proceed upon the technical doctrine, so pointedly repudiated in Dresser v. Brooks,

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Bluebook (online)
14 Cal. 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/imlay-v-carpentier-cal-1859.