STATE Ex Rel NILSEN v. BEAN

346 P.2d 652, 218 Or. 506, 1959 Ore. LEXIS 456
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 4, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 346 P.2d 652 (STATE Ex Rel NILSEN v. BEAN) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
STATE Ex Rel NILSEN v. BEAN, 346 P.2d 652, 218 Or. 506, 1959 Ore. LEXIS 456 (Or. 1959).

Opinion

SLOAN, J.

The trial court entered an order discharging a judgment held by the state against the defendant. The order which discharged the judgment was based upon the defendant’s prior discharge in bankruptcy. ORS 18.420. The state appeals. The facts are stipulated. The only question we must decide is the effectiveness of the discharge in bankruptcy to extinguish the state’s judgment. ORS 18.420 provides:

“Any person discharged from his debts pursuant to the federal bankruptcy laws may file in *508 any court or tribunal in which a judgment has at any time been rendered or a transcript thereof filed against him, either before or after such discharge, a motion in the suit, action or proceeding for the discharge of the judgment from the record. If it appears to the court that he has been discharged from the payment of the judgment or the claim upon which the judgment was based, the court shall order that the judgment be discharged and satisfied of record, and thereupon the clerk of the court shall enter a satisfaction thereof; * * * ??

The chronology of events is decisive. Prior to April 20, 1956, one Eichard Wright was employed by defendant. On the date that the employment terminated, April 20, 1956, unpaid wages in the amount of $277 were due to Wright from defendant. The wages were not paid. On May 5, 1956, Wright made a written assignment of the unpaid claim for wages to the Commissioner of the Oregon Bureau of Labor in the manner prescribed by ORS 652.330 (2). On or about May 20, 1956, the commissioner gave the defendant notice in writing of the assignment and made demand for payment. ORS 652.350. July 24, *509 1956, the defendant filed his voluntary petition in the Federal Bankruptcy Court to be adjudged a bankrupt and was so adjudged on that day. After May 20, 1956, and before July 24, 1956, the commissioner had caused two additional notices of the commissioner’s claim for the wages to be served on the defendant. In the schedule of creditors filed by defendant in the bankruptcy proceedings he listed Wright as a creditor but not the commissioner. Wright received notice of the bankruptcy but did not notify the commissioner. The commissioner never received any written notice of the bankruptcy proceedings until after the defendant was discharged in bankruptcy.

On August 5, 1956, the commissioner, in the name of the state of Oregon as plaintiff (ORS 652.370(2)), filed action against the defendant on the Wright wage claim in the circuit court for Douglas county. Defendant was personally served with summons in Douglas county on the same day. The defendant made no appearance in response to the summons and default judgment in favor of the state of Oregon for the wages, penalty and attorney’s fees prayed for in the complaint was entered on August 21, 1956.

The defendant received a general discharge in bankruptcy on November 15, 1956. The commissioner, still with no knowledge of the bankruptcy, levied execution and garnisheed defendant’s employer on August 15, 1958. The defendant responded to this with the present proceedings to have the judgment discharged as provided by ORS 18.420, already cited. The trial court allowed the order of discharge and the state now appeals from that order.

The Bankruptcy Act, § 17a (3); 11 USCA § 35a, (3), excepts from the operation of the discharge all provable debts which “* * * have not been duly *510 scheduled in time for proof and allowance, with the name of the creditor, if known to the bankrupt, unless such creditor had notice or actual knowledge of the proceedings in bankruptcy.” Section 7a (8) of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 USCA 25a (8) requires the bankrupt to include in his schedule of creditors “* * * a list of all of his creditors, including all persons asserting contingent, unliquidated or disputed claims # # * .” It has been consistently and uniformly held that:

“The return of the sheriff upon the summons herein dissipates defendants’ right to ignore the entry of judgment herein in making their bankruptcy schedules on the ground that they were not aware of the rendition of such judgment.
“In order to secure a discharge in bankruptcy from liability upon a judgment based upon an assigned chose in action, the bankrupt must either list the claim in the name of the judgment creditor or show that the judgment.creditor had knowledge of the pendency of the bankruptcy proceeding in time to permit him to prove his claim therein. Black on Bankruptcy, (4th Ed.) 1524, § 1210; In re Osofsky, et al., 50 Fed. 2d 241; Columbia Bank v. Birkett, 174 N. Y. 112, 66 N. E. 652, 102 Am. St. Rep. 478, affirmed in 195 U. S. 345, 25 S. Ct. 38, 49 L. Ed. 231; Hein v. Liberman, et al., 141 N. Y. S. 314; Lansing Liquidation Corporation v. Heinze, 184 App. Div. 129, 171 N. Y. S. 738.” Liquidators v. Van Bruggen, et al., 167 Or 212, 217, 116 P2d 809.

See also 1 Collier on Bankruptcy (14th ed) § 17.23 et seq., p. 1625; 2 Remington on Bankruptcy, § 574.

The defendant has made no appearance here, but in the trial court he prevailed upon the argument that in the circumstances of this ease the commissioner was merely an agent or conduit for the collection and payment of the proceeds of the claim to *511 Wright; that Wright remained the real party in interest; that notice to Wright was the equivalent of knowledge to Wright’s agent, the commissioner. No authority was cited either by the defendant or by the trial court to sustain this theory.

Whatever may be the exact legal status of the commissioner when acting pursuant to ORS 652.310 to 652.410, we need not now decide. The judgment entered in the action against the defendant established that the assignment was made; that the assignment carried with it the right to file the action as the real party in interest, to obtain the judgment and to satisfy the judgment when entered, and thereby extinguish the claim and the right of all persons having any legal or beneficial ownership in the claim. The judgment establishes every fact necessary to sustain it. Butler v. Maas, 163 Or 201, 94 P2d 1116. It must follow that the commissioner was a creditor, as defined by 11 USCA § 1 (11) and entitled to notice.

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Bluebook (online)
346 P.2d 652, 218 Or. 506, 1959 Ore. LEXIS 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-nilsen-v-bean-or-1959.