after stating the facts as above reported, delivered the opinion of the court.
The only question considered' at all these trials was whether the discharge of the defendant in ,the barikruptcy proceeding is, under the facts found by. the court, a bar to the present action; and, as the decision by the New'York court against the. plaintiff -in error as to the effect of that .order of discharge is to refuse to. him a right claimed under the laws of the United States, this court has jurisdiction to review the decision.
The Superior Court of Massachusetts had jurisdiction of the suit of the Copper Company against Dimock, both as regards the subject-matter and the parties. This jurisdiction was rendered complete by.service of process and by the appearance of • the defendant. All this was before the beginning of the bankruptcy proceeding. Nothing was done to oust this jurisdiction, and the case accordingly proceeded in due order to the rendition of the judgment which is the foundation of this action. It is not argued that this judgment was void, or.that the court was ousted of its jurisdiction by anything done in the bankruptcy court. No such argument could be sustained if it were made. In the case of
Eyster
v.
Gaff,
*565
So l^ere, if Dimock had brought his discharge to the attention of the Superior Court at any time before judgment, it would have been received as a bar to the action, and, under proper circumstances, even' after judgment, it might be made the foundation for setting it aside and admitting the defence.
Ray
v. Wight,
In the case of
Thatcher
v.
Rockwell,
It is said, however, that, though the defendant had his discharge before the judgment in the State court was rendered, and might have successfully pleaded it in bar of that action add *566 did not do so, the judgment now sued on is the same debt, and was one of the debts from which, by the terms of the bankrupt law, he was discharged under the order of the bank- , ruptcy court, and to any attempt to enforce that judgment the discharge may be shown as a valid defence, That is to say, that the failure of the defendant to plead it when it was properly pleadable, when, if he ever intended to rely on it as a de-fence, he was bound to set it up. works him no prejudice, because, though he has a dozen judgments rendered against him for this debt after he has received his discharge, he may at any time set it up as a defence when these judgments are sought to be enforced. Upon the same principle, if he had appeared in the State court and pleaded his discharge in bar, and it had been overruled as a sufficient bar, he could, nevertheless, in this action on that judgment, renew the defence.
But, in such case, his remedy would not lie in renewing the struggle in a new suit on such judgment, but in bringing the first judgment for review before this court where his right under the discharge would have been enforced then', as he seeks to do it now, after submitting to that judgment without resistance ,.and without complaint.
We are of opinion that, having in his hands a good defence at the time judgment was rendered against him, namely, the order of discharge, and having failed to present it tó a court-which had jurisdiction of his case, and of all the defences which he might have made, including this, the judgment is a valid judgment, and that the defence cannot bé set up here in an action on that judgment. The case of
Steward
v. Green,
It is clear that until the judgment of the Massachusetts court is set aside or annulled by some direct proceeding in that court, its effect cannot be defeated as a cause of action, when sued in another State, by pleading the discharge as a bar which might have been pleaded in the original action.
The judgment of the New York court is Affirmed.
