Court Opinion

ID: 6959290
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 01:42:44.903291+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:08:23.010077
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Walker delivered the opinion of the Court: This was an action commenced before a justice of the peace of Cook county, by appellee against appellant. A trial was had, resulting in a judgment for $100, and costs of suit. Defendant perfected an appeal to the circuit court of that.county, and the cause was again tried by the court and a jury, resulting in a verdict for $113.50. This latter trial was had on the 22d day of January, 1876. On the rendition of the verdict in the circuit court, defendant suggested that he had been decreed a bankrupt, and leave was thereupon asked of the court to file a transcript of the proceedings in bankruptcy, which was granted, and the court thereupon rendered judgment on the verdict. The cause is brought to this court on appeal. It is urged that the G-eneral Bankrupt Act, (Bev. Stat. H. S. sec. 5106,) prohibits all creditors from “prosecuting their suits to final judgment against a bankrupt, until the question of the discharge of such debtor shall have been determined; and any such suit shall be stayed to await the determination of the court in bankruptcy on the question of discharge,” etc. The record contains no bill of exceptions, and it only states that appellant suggested his bankruptcy to the court, and asked leave to file the transcript of the record showing his bankruptcy. It nowhere appears that any motion was entered for a stay of proceedings until the question of his discharge should be determined. Before a justice of the peace, a motion, accompanied with the transcript and based thereon, would be proper practice, as it is not a court of record, and pleadings are not required. When based on the transcript alone, there must be a motion for an order to stay proceedings. That is the only means by which the court can have anything upon which to act. A court would not be authorized to enter such an order of its own motion, nor is it the duty of the judge to make inquiry to learn whether the parties, or either of them, have become bankrupt, nor can he act on any knowledge he may acquire, until asked in an appropriate manner. It is true, the statute prohibits the court from proceeding to final judgment until the question of a discharge shall be determined, but the fact must be pleaded or brought to the knowledge of the court in a proper manner. As well sav, that if a defendant were to suggest that he had paid the debt for which he was sued, and ask leave to and file the receipt, it should prevent the court from proceeding to try the case. A bankrupt may waive a discharge. The law does not compel him to rely on it, nor does it require a court to allow the discharge simply upon the fact being suggested. To defeat the action, it must be pleaded in the same manner as any other defense. The suggestion that the defendant was a bankrupt, was wholly unlike the suggestion of the death of one of the parties, as in that case the court thereby loses jurisdiction of the party b}r his death, and the court can proceed no farther until some person is substituted to represent him. Hot so with the bankrupt, as the court still continues to have jurisdiction of his person, and may proceed to trial arid judgment, unless he in a proper manner interposes his bankruptcy. But even if there had been a proper motion, it came too late, as the bankruptcy had occurred some five months before the trial, if we may look into the certificate of the register. Appellant should have made his motion for a stay of proceedings, based on the transcript, before the cause was called for trial. He could not be permitted to lie by and permit the plaintiff to incur the expense of a trial, and when it terminated in a verdict against him, then, for the first time, to ask for a stay of proceedings. Again, if a motion had heen properly made, and in apt time, and disallowed by the court, the motion, the transcript, and all evidence on the hearing of the motion, should have been embodied in a bill of exceptions, to become a part of the record in the case; so that, in any point of view in which the case can be considered, there is no ground for reversing the judgment of the court below, and it must be affirmed. Judgment affirmed.