59 Ga. App. 228 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1938
Duncan, the plaintiff in error, failed to pay a sum of money borrowed from Southern Savings Bank, the defendant in error, and filed a petition for extension in the Federal court for the northern district of Georgia as provided in § 74 of the bankruptcy act, 11 U. S. C. A. § 202. Southern Savings Bank refused to agree to the extension, but Duncan secured a judgment of extension against Southern Savings Bank which forced it to abide by the extension. The extension order granted by the referee in bank
“If the bankrupt is discharged, the certificate of the discharge would be a bar to any further prosecution of the suit. If the application for discharge is denied, the stay is at an end, and the suit proceeds to judgment. The suit in the State court being for the collection of a debt from which a discharge would be a release, there can be no doubt that the law required that the stay asked for should have been granted until the determination of the application for discharge.” Hunter v. Lissner, 1 Ga. App. 1, 3 (58 S. E. 54). However, in a suit for a debt in the State court, the defendant is not entitled as of right to a stay or abatement after he was adjudicated a bankrupt. Rogers v. Abbott, 206 (Mass.) 270 (92 N. E. 472, 138 Am. St. R. 394). The State court could not know or take judicial notice of a discharge in bankruptcy unless it was brought before it in some appropriate manner. The State does not lose jurisdiction of a case until the discharge is appropriately before it. Hunter v. Lissner, supra; Riggs v. Kinney, 37 Ga. App. 307, 309 (140 S. E. 41); Boynton v. Bell, 121 U. S. 457 (7 Sup. Ct. 981, 30 L. ed. 985).
“Bankruptcy is purely a matter oE Federal cognizance, arid, in the administration of the affairs of a bankrupt as such, bankruptcy courts and State courts are not courts of concurrent jurisdiction; in such matters the jurisdiction of the bankruptcy courts is para
“Where a suit has been filed in a State court against one who is adjudicated a bankrupt, it is the better practice, pending the determination of his application for a discharge, to file in the State court a plea or motion suggesting the bankruptcy proceedings and asking a stay of the suit until the question of discharge has been finally determined in the bankruptcy court (Adams v. McClendon, 30 Ga. App. 559, 118 S. E. 497), and when the discharge is granted, then to plead it. But even if the suit is ‘not stayed and a judgment is entered before discharge, the discharge may be availed of as a bar to further remedies on the judgment.’ 1 Collier on Bankruptcy (13th ed.), 641. Such a bankrupt, after discharge, when the discharge is pleaded, ‘is entitled to a perpetual stay of the execution on the judgment, although he did not before the rendition
The plaintiff in error filed a petition in the bankruptcy court, and as a result thereof there was a judgment by the referee allowing the plaintiff in error more time in which to pay defendant in error’s claims, and also allowing plaintiff in error an exemption. The plaintiff in error, at least, acquiesced in this judgment of the referee, for he obtained the judgment prayed for in his petition.
In order for the referee to have adjirdicated that he would extend the time of payment of the amount owed to the defendant in error by the plaintiff in error, he must have evidently arrived at the conclusion that there was a valid contract. Kelly & Jones Co. v. Moore, 128 Ga. 683, 686 (58 S. E. 181). The defendant in error having sued on this judgment of the referee, plaintiff in error is concluded from setting up that the contract was voidable and that lie elected to declare it invalid under the “blue-sky” law, Code, § 97-101 et seq.; for the referee must have necessarily decided that it was a valid contract in order to support the very judgment which he rendered and which was prayed for in the petition of the plaintiff in error. The validity of the contract was a necessary premise for the judgment of the referee. 2 Freeman on Judgments, 1467, (4, 5); 34 C. J. 1161, § 1644.
The suit being brought on “money had and received” and on the referee’s judgment, the plaintiff in error is concluded, at this late
Judgment affirmed.