Hibler ex rel. Glover v. Hammond
Hibler ex rel. Glover v. Hammond
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this case, the defendant, J. D. Hammond, had been arrested on a ca. sa. by the plaintiff. He gave a bond to keep the bounds and render a schedule, under the Prison Bounds Act. Pie filed his schedule, gave the requisite notice to his creditors, and was discharged, without objection, under the Insolvent Debtors Act, passed in 1759 — the plaintiff, by his attorney, being present, and making no objection.
The object of this action is to charge him and his security With the plaintiff’s debt, on the allegation that his schedule was false, in this, that it did not include two mares and colts, of which he was the owner at the time; and the question we are called on to decide is, whether the discharge, which could not have been made if the schedule was false, is not a bar as to every thing which was or might have been decided on the question whether the defendant was entitled to his discharge.
It is not denied by the plaintiff’s counsel, that if he had appeared according to the notice, and made the question as to the falsity of the schedule, and the matter had been decided, it would have been res judicata, and could not again be called in question.
As regards the prisoner, it has been frequently decided that in an action on the bond, the record of conviction of having rendered a false schedule was conclusive evidence of a breach of the condition; and in the recent case of McCarly v. Davis and others-, the defendants were denied the right to question the finding on the issue made on the objections to his discharge.
No one can read the Insolvent Debtors Act without the conviction that it was intended to be a judicial proceeding. The debtor must apply by petition; notice must be given to the creditors to appear. A schedule of the debtor’s property must be filed. The creditors may object to his discharge. If the creditors appear, the Court shall hear what may be alleged for or against the discharge; or if they shall
Every thing partakes of the nature of judicial proceedings. The commencement by petition; the notice to the creditors; their right to contest the discharge; the Court to examine the matter of the petition; the administration of the oath; and the legal effect of the discharge upon all debts, either in barring them altogether, or postponing their collection, all show that this is a judicial proceeding. If it is, then, the judgment of the Court on that which was decided, it is res judicata, and cannot again he called into judgment between the parties. Nor do I consider that the fact that the plaintiff did not appear, and that no issue was in fact made on the truth of the schedule, can vary the case. I suppose if the issue had been made, there would he no doubt the plaintiff would be bound by it, and it seems to me to be very clear, both on principle and authority, that whatever might have been pleaded or given in evidence as a bar, is equally concluded by the judgment. This was decided in the case of Caston v. Perry, 1 Bail. 533. In McDowell v. McDowell, 1 Bail. E. R. 330, Chancellor Harper says — “When the ques* tion is res judicata, the true rule is, if the party has once had an opportunity of litigating in the course of a judicial proceeding, he shall not draw it into question again, but that whatever he might have properly put in issue, shall be concluded to have heen put in issue and determined.” The same principle was carried out in the case of Stoney v. Bank of Charleston, Rich. E. R. 275. In the case of Sims v. Wise & Slacum, 3 Cra. 300, the Supreme Court of the U. States decided, that a discharge from the prison rules under the Insolvent laws of Virginia, although obtained by. fraud, is a discharge in due course of law, and on such discharge no action can be maintained on the Prison Bounds bond. And a similar decision was made on the law of Rhode Island for the relief of poor prisoners for debt, in the case of Ammedon v. Smith and al. 1 Wheat. 447. There is nothing in conflict with this opinion in the cases of McLure v. Vernon, and
I suppose, after the decisions made in this State, the question cannot now be considered as open — that the legal effect of the discharge is, that all the Suing creditors are barred forever from the recovery of their debts. As to them the discharge is a perpetual, bar, whilst it remains unreversed.
The Act of 1759 contains no provision for the reversal or revival of the plaintiff’s debt, unless the 15th section can be so construed. The words of that section are — “And in case it shall, at any time after the discharge of such petitioner, appear that any such debtor did conceal any part of his estate and not make a full surrender and delivery thereof, such debtor shall not be entitled to the benefit of this Act, and every such debtor shall be deemed and adjudged guilty of peijury,” &c. It was argued at the bar that this clause only applied to cases of concealment and non-delivery to the as-signee of what is contained in the schedule. This may be so, and, if so the only consequence is that the Act discharges the debt without providing any way in which it may be again set up, even if the schedule should be false. But the 10th section of the Act of 1788 applies in all cases, 1 presume, where the schedule is rendered in on oath. That section
Motion granted.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.