Court Opinion

ID: 6425915
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:03:52.561382+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:51:59.293041
License: Public Domain

Holmes, J.
This is an action upon a recognizance given in poor debtor proceedings, conditioned for the debtor’s delivering himself up for examination within thirty days. St. 1888, c. 419, § 6. The recognizance is dated April 20, 1895. As we understand the defective bill of exceptions, the debtor submitted himself for examination and made default on May 17, at half past ten in the morning. Earlier on that day he had begun proceedings in insolvency, and on December 26,1895, he was discharged from all debts due. on May 18. The judge before whom this case was tried found for the principal defendant, the debtor, but found against the surety in favor of the plaintiff. The surety excepted.
It is difficult to extract from the bill of exceptions what questions are raised by it. One point seems to be that the debtor was excused from appearing for examination by the fact that he had begun insolvency proceedings an hour before, although *103of course the result of the proceedings was uncertain, and that therefore there was no breach. This is not the law. Everett v. Henderson, 150 Mass. 411, 415. Smith v. Randall, 1 Allen, 456. The language of Everett v. Henderson, relied on by the defendant, applied only to a case where a discharge in insolvency has been granted before the time fixed for the examination.
The other point is that the discharge in insolvency is a bar. If there had been no breach of the recognizance before May-18, it would not have been affected by the discharge, because it still had some time to run. Smith v. Randall and Everett v. Henderson, ubi supra. But it seems fair to assume that the default of. May 17 was the breach relied on, and we assume that the debtor was discharged, as the defendant contends. But the surety was not discharged on that account. His liability is preserved by the statute in terms. Pub. Sts. c. 157, § 85. Carpenter v. Turrell, 100 Mass. 450, 453, has no application. That was a decision upon a bond given to dissolve an attachment upon which the discharge in bankruptcy had no direct operation as to any of the parties.
There is no question of pleading before us.

Exceptions overruled.