1. A judgment for damages for injuries to the plaintiff's automobile, caused by the negligent and unlawful operation of the defendant's automobile, without any intention on the part of the defendant or his driver to injure the plaintiff's automobile, is not a wilful and malicious injury to the property of another within the meaning of section 17 (2) of the bankruptcy act (11 U.S.C.A. § 35), and such judgment is dischargeable in bankruptcy.
2. Consequently, the trial judge did not err in granting a stay of the garnishment proceedings based on such judgment, where the defendant had been discharged in bankruptcy and the judgment was listed as one of his debts provable in bankruptcy.
The question for determination is whether or not the discharge in bankruptcy released the defendant from liability under the judgment against him for damage to the plaintiff's automobile, or in other words, whether the judgment was a debt dischargeable in bankruptcy.
Section 17 (2) of the bankruptcy act (11 U.S.C.A. § 35), provides, in part: "A discharge in bankruptcy shall release a bankrupt from all of his provable debts, except such as (first) are due as a tax levied by the United States, the State, county, district, or municipality in which he resides; (second) are liabilities for obtaining property by false pretenses or false representations, *Page 394 or for wilful and malicious injuries to the person or property of another." If the injury to the plaintiff's automobile by that of the defendant was wilful and malicious, then the judgment was not dischargeable in bankruptcy; but if the damage to the automobile for which the judgment was rendered was caused by the negligence of the defendant in the unlawful operation of his automobile, without intending to injure the plaintiff's car, then the judgment is dischargeable in bankruptcy.
The only evidence introduced upon the trial of the application to stay the judgment was the petition of the plaintiff in the suit for damages to his automobile, and therefore it is necessary to look to the allegations of this petition in order to determine the question here presented. The petition alleged substantially, so far as material to the question now under consideration, that the plaintiff had parked his automobile on the right-hand side of Marietta Street, headed towards Five Points, about half way between Foundry and Nelson Streets in the City of Atlanta; that D. W. Beasley, a minor, driving the automobile of the defendant King, came around on the left-hand side of a streetcar headed towards Five Points at a terrific speed of not less than fifty miles per hour, and after he crossed over Foundry Street he seemed to lose control of the automobile and turned his car directly into the rear of the plaintiff's car, striking it at such a high rate of speed that he knocked it up on the sidewalk and damaged it as alleged; that D. W. Beasley was driving the defendant's car for him at the time of the accident, as his agent and at his request, and the defendant was in the car with him at the time; that the plaintiff saw the accident happen, and he went immediately to the scene and found that both King and Beasley were intoxicated and neither one of them was in a fit condition to operate or to direct the operation of the automobile. The petition alleged that the defendant's negligence was wanton and wilful and malicious: (1) in getting a minor to operate his car while he and the minor were both heavily intoxicated; (2) in having the minor to operate his car without any driver's license; (3) in operating his car at such a terrific rate of speed through his agent and driver, acting under his instructions, that it would have been impossible to keep the car under control at the speed of at least fifty miles per hour; (4) he was negligent in passing the streetcar on the left side so *Page 395 as to put them on the wrong side of Marietta Street; (5) they were negligent in cutting the car too quickly to the right, so that it would have been impossible to bring the car under control before it struck the plaintiff's car.
The allegations of the petition fail to show that his automobile was damaged wilfully and maliciously by the defendant, so as to bring the judgment in that case within the provisions of section 17 (2) of the bankruptcy act (11 U.S.C.A. § 35), which provides that certain debts are not affected by a discharge in bankruptcy, among which is "wilful and malicious injuries to the person or property of another." But, on the contrary, the facts alleged in the petition show that the plaintiff's automobile was damaged by certain acts of negligence chargeable to the defendant in the negligent and unlawful operation of his automobile, without any intention on the part of the defendant or his driver to injure the plaintiff's automobile. In dealing with this provision of the bankruptcy act, it was said by the United States Supreme Court in Tinker v. Colwell,
Under the facts of the present case and the law applicable thereto, the judgment was dischargeable in bankruptcy and the trial judge did not err in granting the stay of the garnishment proceedings.
Judgment affirmed. Felton and Parker, JJ., concur.