delivered the opinion of the Court.
The petitioner, Lewis, recovered a judgment against the Montevallo Mining Company for personal injuries caused by its negligence.' The Company was thereafter adjudicated a bankrupt in the Northern District of Alabama. Lewis filed in- the bankruptcy proceeding a proof of claim upon the judgment. The District Court confirmed an order of the referee disallowing this claim, upon the ground that- a judgment founded upon a tort was not provable, in bankruptcy. This decree was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals.
This decision is in conflict with an unbroken line of decisions in other Circuit Courts of Appeals and in the District. Courts.
Re New York Tunnel Co.
(C. C. A.),
We think these prior decisions were correct.
Section 63a of. the Bankruptcy Act, 1 entitled' “ Debts which, may be Proved,”'provides-.that: “Debts of the bankrupt may be proved and allowed against his estate which are (l).a fixed liability, as evidenced by a judg *469 ment . . . absolutely owing at the time of the filing of the petition. . . . ” Section 1, (11) declares that the word “ debt ” as used in the Act shall, unless inconsistent with the context, be construed to include “ any debt, demand, or claim provable in bankruptcy.”
It is clear that a judgment for tort is provable under the express provisions of § 63a(l). The language is broad and unqualified. It includes “ a fixed liability ” evidenced by a judgment ex delicto as well as by a judgment ex contractu, and makes the one as well as the other a provable “ debt.” There is nothing in the language or in the context which suggests its limitation to judgments founded on debts or warrants the reading in of such a limitation.
This conclusion is confirmed by a consideration of other provisions of the Act. By § 17, as originally enactéd, it-was provided that: “ A discharge in bankruptcy shall release a bankrupt from all his provable debts, except such as . . . .(2) are judgments in actions for fraud, or obtaining property by false pretenses or false representations, or for wilful and malicious injuries to the person or property of another.” 2 This express exception of certain judgments for torts from the “ provable debts ” released by a discharge, plainly indicates that Congress understood that under . § 63a judgments for torts were “ provable debts ”, and is strongly persuasive as a construction of that section.
Furthermore, if a judgment for tort is not a provable claim in bankruptcy under § 63a, it could not, under § 1; (11), be considered in determining whether one against whom an involuntary petition has been filed, is insolvent within the meaning of-§ 1, (15), providing that *470 “ a person shall be deemed insolvent . . . whenever the aggregate of his property . . . shall not. . . . be sufficient in amount to pay his debts.” The result of this would be that a person having property in excess of his other debts could not be adjudged an involuntary bankrupt under § 3b of the Act, although owing judgments for tort exceeding the amount of his property. Clearly Congress did not. intend so anomalous a result.
The trustee contends, however, that despite the broad language of § 63a(l),'the decision in
Wetmore
v.
Markoe,
*471
Nor is there anything to support this conclusion in
Schall
v.
Camors,
The decrees of the District Court and of the Circuit Court of Appeal are reversed, and the cause ig remanded to the District Court for further proceedings in .accordance with, this opinion.
Reversed and'remanded.
