Appellant, Mrs. Nowland, recovered at law, a j udgment against Lanagan, for a debt originally contracted *110under the constitution of 1868. Subsequently Lanagan was adjudged a bankrupt; and afterwards, under the constitution of 1874, made a new promise to pay the debt; upon which promise this judgment was recovered. Execution issued, and he filed a schedule of property claimed as' exempt under the constitution and laws existing when the debt was originally contracted. Supersedeas issued from the clerk, and Mrs. Now-land moved the court to quash it, upon the ground that the exemptions were governed by the law in force when the new promise was made. The court refused to quash, and she appeals.
Bankruptcy New promise Exemption.
The question is, does the promise of a bankrupt to pay a debt, from which he has been discharged, renew the old obligation with all its incidents and consequences ? or is it to be considered as a distinct original promise, based on the moral obligation, but attended with- the incidents and consequences which would appertain to any other promise, about a new matter ? In other words, what is the contract upon which the judgment is based?
In case of the statute of limitations the current of authority is, that a debt thereby barred as to time, but taken out of the operation of the statute by a new promise, rests upon its original basis, preserving its original nature and consequences. This is upon the ground that the statute itself does not, in fixing the limitation, mean to determine thereby that the debt has been actually discharged or was invalid at first, but simply, for the sake of peace and for security against perjury or loss of evidence, absolves the defendant from all proof as to the matter. It was for sometime the doctrine in England that an acknowledgment of the debt, even with a repudiation of any intention to pay it, took the case out of the statute, but-the courts there have receded from this laxity, and now hold that there must be a new promise to pay, either explicitly made or to be inferred from an unequivocal acknowledgment of the justice of *111the debt, unaccompanied with any expression, or indication of an intention to rely upon the statute as a defense. See Angell on Lim., Sec. 134, et seq. This is the most approved American doctrine also. (Ubi supra) But this “ new promise,” as it is called, is not original. It is a promise to do, either absolutely or conditionally, what the party was morally bound'to do under the old contract. For without such reference to raise the moral obligation, the new promise would be without consideration. It cannot, therefore, be independent. It connects back with and revives the old contract.
Debts, discharged in bankruptcy, stand in some respects upon a different footing. The old debt which might have beén proved in bankruptcy is not simply outlawed of remedy, but absolutely discharged as effectually as if paid. We do not see, however, that this affords any grounds for a distinction as to the effect of a new promise. None such has been adverted to in the few cases which have come before this court touching this point. A new promise after bankruptcy has been looked upon as reviving the old debt with all its character. There has, indeed, been no occasion to rule expressly upon the distinction, but it has been taken for granted that bankrupt debts are revived by a new promise.
Our present constitution provides (Art. IX, Sec. 9,) that “the exemptions contained in the constitution of 1868 shall apply to all debts contracted since the adoption thereof and prior to the adoption of this constitution.”
The debt in this case was contracted during that period, although revived by the new promise afterwards. We do not think the court erred in refusing to quash the supersedeas issued in accordance with the exemptions allowed under the constitution of 1868.
Affirm.