25 N.Y. St. Rep. 853 | City of New York Municipal Court | 1889
The poor debtor’s act of Michigan (2 How. St. c. 309) is a beneficent statute under which impecunious debtors may be relieved from imprisonment. The discharge does not affect the debt, which remains unimpaired, but terminates the imprisonment, and provides that ‘.‘the debtor, after being so discharged, shall be forever exempted from arrest or imprisonment for the same debt.” The effect of the discharge, under this enactment, was to prevent a second arrest “in that state” for the same debt. The act can have no greater effect, for it has no extraterritorial force, and cannot be invoked here. True, the creditor opposed the discharge, but this circumstance adds nothing to the extraterritorial operation of the statute. If the proceed