The appellant, Belsey, brought suit in the Supreme Court of New York County against the appellee, Devereaux, upon two causes of action, one for false imprisonment alleged to be malicious, the other for malicious prosecution. Upon the former he obtained a verdict of $500, and upon the latter a verdict of 6 cents. Judgment was
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entered against Devereaux for $500.06. Shortly thereafter the judgment debtor filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy, duly scheduling Belsey’s claim as a judgment creditor. In due course the bankrupt was granted a discharge. Thereafter, pursuant to section 150 of the Debtor and Creditor Law (Consol. Laws N. Y. c. 12), he applied to the state court for an order canceling and discharging of record the judgment to the extent of «$500 — the damages awarded for false imprisonment. This application was denied by the state court after a hearing in which it inquired into the facts upon which the judgment was predicated, and determined that the arrest and imprisonment of Belsey constituted a “willful and malicious” injury to the person within the meaning of section 17 of the Bankruptcy Act (11 USCA § 35), and consequently the judgment was not affected by the debtor’s discharge in bankruptcy.
After Local Loan Co. v. Hunt,
In the Hunt Case the bankrupt sought an injunction to restrain the prosecution of a suit brought by his creditor against his employer upon an assignment of future wages. The highest court of the state had already established the rule that a discharge in bankruptcy did not destroy the lien of such an assignment. For the bankrupt to have intervened in the municipal court action would have been futile unless he was prepared to carry the case through the appellate courts of the state and up to the Supreme Court of the United States. In the meantime his future wages, which the Bankruptcy Act (11 USCA) intended to be freed from the claims of creditors holding dischargeable debts, would be tied up by the suit and he would risk the possibility of discharge by his employer. Under these circumstances the remedy in the state courts was thought to be entirely inadequate and to justify the bankruptcy court in exercising its power to determine the effect of the discharge upon the lien of the assignment. No such special circumstances are present in the case at bar. Here the bankrupt voluntarily initiated a proceeding in the state court to have his discharge adjudicated a bar to collection of the judgment; the judgment creditor appeared and contested; and the court found the facts and the law against the bankrupt’s claim that the judgment was released. To permit the same issue to be relitigated in the bankruptcy court, while the order of the state court remains unreversed, is contrary to the most elementary principles of res judicata and the comity which exists between federal and state courts. Compare Riehle v. Margolies,
The order is reversed.
