103 N.J. Super. 445 | N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. | 1968
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Judge Barrett, on August .17, 1961, found that defendant’s conduct, in driving while he was intoxicated, was under the totality of the circumstances, “wilful and malicious as the terms are used in the Bankruptcy Act.” Consequently, the judge denied defendant’s motion to stay, pending his bankruptcy proceeding, the execution against his wages issued to satisfy a judgment in a negligence action. This finding was incorporated in an order dated August 24, 1961.
We agree with Judge Hayden’s determination made on March 8, 1968 upon a renewed application for a wage execution, and here appealed, that Judge Barrett’s decision was res adjudícala on the issue of dischargeability of the judgment in bankruptcy.
Defendant first contends that prior to a bankruptcy discharge a state court does not have jurisdiction to decide the issue of whether a debt allegedly arising from a willful and malicious act is dischargeable. He asserts that any such prior finding is therefore not res adjudicata in a state court until
However, defendant himself in 1961, in opposing plaintiff’s wage execution and in requesting a stay, asserted the dischargeability of the judgment entered against him as an absolute bar against the issuance of the wage execution. Defendant did not then take the position he now urges. Thus, dischargeability was the issue that was contested by the parties and submitted to the court for determination. And the court flatly decided it on the merits. The decision of the question was material to the court’s action of denial of the motion for a stay, being the only ground therefor. AYc therefore find an identity of issues in the 1961 and 1968 proceedings.
None of the cases cited by defendants holds that a state court with jurisdiction over a claim cannot, prior to discharge, adjudicate on the merits the dischargeability of that claim in the course of a hearing on a request for a stay. To the contrary, it would seem that such jurisdiction has been taken for granted. See Pettit v. Port Newark Nat’l Bank, 110 N. J. Eq. 324, 329 (Ch. 1932); Mass v. Kuhn, 130 App. Div. 68, 114 N. Y. S. 444 , 445 (App. Div. 1909); St. Louis, B. & M. Ry. Co. v. Brack, 102 S. W. 2d 261 (Tex. Ct. App. 1937); Hartsfield Co. v. Newlin, 49 Ga. App. 546, 176 S. E. 516 (Ga. Ct. App. 1934). We conclude that this contention is without merit.
Defendant further argues that the determination and order of Judge Barrett was not res adjudícala because it was not a “final” judgment reviewable on appeal. This point is frivolous. The determination terminated the litigation on the matter decided, being an adjudication of a litigated matter in the proceedings subsequent to judgment. The
Judgment affirmed.