64 Vt. 302 | Vt. | 1892
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is a petition to the County Court, praying that the petitionee be dealt with for contempt for neglecting to perform the decree of that court, made in a divorce
The petitionee pleads in bar to the petition, a discharge granted him since the making of the order, by the court of insolvency.
The facts of the plea are admitted by the demurer. The contention is, whether the discharge in insolvency relieved the petitionee from the payment' of the money ordered by the decree of alimony. By R. L. s. 1856 the discharge in insolvency discharged the petitionee “ from debts proved against his estate; and from debts provable founded on a contract made by him while an inhabitant of the State, if made within the State, or to be performed within the same or due to a person resident therein, at the time of filing of the petition.” The claim for this alimony was not proved against the estate of the petitioner in insolvency.
The petitionee contends, that the claim sought to be enforced is a debt provable, because he contends that the decree granting the alimony is a judgment, and a judgment for the payment of money is a debt founded on a contract. If it be of that character, it could not be enforced by proceedings for contempt, since the passage of the Act in 1839 abolishing imprisonment for debt founded on a contract. Sawyer et al. v. Vilas, 19 Vt. 13.
While ordinary judgments for the payment of money are held to evidence debts founded on contract, express or implied, which were discharged by a discharge in bankruptcy under the law of 1811, (Harrington v. McNaughton, 20 Vt. 293; Downer v. Rowell, 26 Vt. 397), all orders, decrees and judgments for the payment of money are not of that nature. Clark v. Trombly et al. cited, 19 Vt. 18. In re Merrill Bingham, 32 Vt. 329; Leach v. Leach, 51 Vt. 440; Leach v. Peabody, 58 Vt. 185.
A decree of alimony to be performed by the payment of
Judgment reversed, demurrer sustained, plea in bar adjudged insufficient, and cause remanded.