Lerian v. Rohr
Lerian v. Rohr
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action of assumpsit was brought by the appellee against the appellant on the 8th of July, 1884, in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County. The defendant pleaded that on the 21st of June, 1879, he was by the same Court adjudged .an insolvent debtor, and discharged as such from all debts and contracts made before the filing of his application. To this plea there was a replication of nul tiel record, and upon the trial of this issue before the Court the defendant offered in evidence the docket entries in the matter of his application for the benefit of the insolvent laws entered on the insolvent docket of the Court, together with the original papers in the insolvent proceed-, ing, but the Court refused to receive them in evidence and gave judgment for the plaintiff on the issue thus joined. The defendant excepted to the ruling excluding these docket entries and original papers as evidencing the discharge, and this is the only matter presented for review by this appeal.
The application in insolvency having been made in the same Court in which the issue of nul tiel record was on trial, it was not necessary to produce a formal record of the insolvent proceedings. All. that it was incumbent upon the defendant to do was to have the docket entries and original papers laid before the Court for its inspection, and if these showed his final discharge, his plea should have been sustained. The docket entry in this respect is as follows: “June 21st, 1879, certif. pub. notice filed, same day petitioner finally discharged;” and on the original petition there is this endorsement signed by the clerk: “Petitioner discharged June 21st, 1879, by order of Court.”
But it is objected in argument that this docket entry does not show from luliat the Court ordered the defendant to be discharged. But it is plain that it must be read in connection with the previous entries and all the original papers, and in view of their purpose and object as well as the provisions of the insolvent laws under which they were taken. So read the entry was short, but appropriate, and expresses all that was necessary as the basis of a full record. It would have been the duty of the clerk if he had been required to make out a formal record, to have extended and amplified this entry to the effect that the Court ordered the petitioner to be “fully and finally discharged from all debts and contracts made before the filing of the application aforesaid.”
Again it is further argued that the proof was properly rejected because the offer of the docket entries and original papers was coupled with an offer of a certificate of the clerk of the Court of the final discharge of the defendant,
In our judgment the docket entries and original papers in the insolvent case, show a valid final discharge of the defendant from • the contract sued on. The ruling complained of was therefore erroneous, and the judgment on the issue of nul tiel record should have been in favor of the defendant, and his plea of discharge sustained. The record shows that the plaintiff in reply to the.plea of discharge, also set up a new promise after the discharge, and in order that he may have the benefit of a trial of this issue the cause will be remanded.
Judgment reversed, and neto trial awarded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Jacob Lerian v. Charles Rohr
- Status
- Published