Opinion oe the court by
CHIBE JUSTICE BURNAMReversing.
This suit was instituted in the Mason circuit court by the appellant, H. R. Wood, against the appellees, Charles Newell, presiding iudge of the Mason quarterly court, and *305R. A. Carr, to prohibit the collection of a judgment recovered against him by the defendant Carr in such court by the sale of a horse claimed by him as exempt, and for! the recovery of the horse, which had been taken under attachment, and damages for.his detention. The defendants filed a general demurrer to the petition, which was sustained, and, the plaintiff declining to plead further, it was adjudged that his petition be dismissed, and that defendants recover their costs; and from this judgment this appeal is .prosecuted.
The plaintiff alleged, in substance, that on the-day of September, 1899, the defendant R. A. Carr instituted a-suit against him in the police court of the city of Maysville1, and at the same time sued out an attachment, which was levied upon a gray horse belonging to him; that he appeared in the police court on the day the case was set for trial, and claimed to be a housekeeper with a family, and that the horse was exempt from attachment and sale; that the police court decided that it was not exempt, and adjudged it to be sold to satisfy the debt of the defendant Carr; that on the 30th day of October, 1899, he appealed from the judgment of the police court to the Mason quarterly court, and executed a supersedeas bond suspending the collection of the judgment; that on the 24th day of October, 1899, he filed his petition in the United States District Court at Covington, Ky., to be declared a bankrupt, in which he claimed the horse upon which the defendant Carr hald levied his attachment as exempt property; that notice of this proceeding was served upon the defendant Carr, who appeared in the office of the referee in bankruptcy on the morning designated for the appointment of a trustee, and that he made no objection to plaintiff’s claim of the horse as ex*306empt property; that on the- 10th day of February, 1900, he obtained his discharge in bankruptcy, and that subsequently thereto', and before the trial of the appeal in the Mason quarterly court, he filed therein a certified copy of the order adjudging him a bankrupt, and his certificate of discharge, and moved that the petition of Carr be dismissed, and the attachment discharged. He also alleges that he was insolvent when the attachment of the defendant Carr was levied upon his horse, and also at the time he was adjudged a bankrupt; that the defendant Newell, as presiding judge of the Mason quarterly court, in disregard of his certificate of discharge in bankruptcy, gave a judgment against him in favor of the defendant, and ordered the horse sold under the judgment to satisfy it; that he appealed from this judgment to the Mason circuit court, and all the papers and orders were transferred to the circuit court, but that the Mason circuit court dismissed his appeal for want of jurisdiction; that the defendants are proceeding to enforce the judgment of the Mason quarterly court by a sale of his horse. It is further alleged that at the time Carr sued out the order of attachment in the Mason quarterly court he was a married man, with a family, residing in this Commonwealth, and that he was the owner of only two horses.
Subsection “f” of section 67 of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898, 80 Stat. c. 541 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3450], provides that: “All levies, judgments, attachments or other liens, obtained through legal proceedings against a person who is insolvent at any time within four months prior to the filing of a petition in bankruptcy against him shall be deemed null and void, in case he is adjudged a bankrupt, and the property affected by the levy, judgment, attachment, or other lien, shall be deemed wholly discharged *307and released from the same, and shall pass to the trustee as a part of the estate of the bankrupt unless the court shall on due notice order that the right under such levy, judgment, attachment, or other lien, shall be preserved for the benefit of the estate, and thereupon the same may pass to and shall be preserved by the trustee for the benefit of the estate as aforesaid.” The, proceedings in bankruptcy were commenced by plaintiff within less than four months after the levy of the defendant’s attachment upon the horse in controversy; and under the express letter of the statute, if plaintiff was insolvent, all rights acquired thereunder became null and void, and the jurisdiction to determine all questions growing out of it was transferred to the federal court. In Bank of Columbia v. Overstreet, etc., 73 Ky., 150, the court, through Judge Lindsey, said: “It is insisted by the appellant that the provisions of this section do not apply to attachments sued out in State courts. This! position can not be maintained. The federal Congress had undoubted power to establish ‘uniform laws on the subject of bankruptcy throughout the United States.’ All laws of Gongress enacted pursuant to the powers delegated 'to it by the federal Constitution are binding as well upon the State as the federal courts. It may be tha-t the State courts are not bound to administer the federal laws, but they are bound to respect all rights acquired under them. There is nothing in the act of Congress from which it can be inferred that an exception was made in favor of creditors prosecuting their claims against a bankrupt in State courts; and if the law had been so framed as that a proceeding in bankruptcy would dissolve attachments sued out in the federal courts, and leave unaffected those sued out in the State courts, it would not have been ‘uniform,’ in the constitutional sense of that term. Ror are we able to per*308ceive that the dissolution of appellant’s attachment in any sense impaired the obligation of a contract or,divested it of a vested right. Tjie attachment lien was secured by legal diligence, and not by contract. The right to subject the attached property to the payment of its debt vested long after the bankrupt act- had gone into effect. It was, therefore, a conditional right, subject to be defeated by the debtor’s being thrown into bankruptcy. In this case no peculiar hardship results , to appellant. Its debt was' contracted after the bankrupt act became a law. The credit was extended to Overstreet, with notice of the fact that the remedies afforded by the State laws for the enforcement of the contract were liable to be interrupted or superseded by proceedings in bankruptcy which might be instituted by the debtor, or by one of his creditors, in case he should be guilty of an act of bankruptcy.” And the opinion of the court in this case is in accord with the rulings of other courts who have passed upon this question. See In re Hopkins, 1 Am. Bankr. R., 209; In re Richards, 2 Am. Bankr. R., 520, 95 Fed., 258; In re Rhoads, 3 Am. Bankr. R., 380, 98 Fed., 399; and Levor v. Seiter, 5 Am. Bankr. R., 576, 69 N. Y. S., 987. Section 17 of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898, 30 Stat. c. 541 [U. S. Comp St. 1901, p. 3428], provides that a discharge in bankruptcy shall release a bankrupt from all of his provable debts, with certain exceptions, to which defendant’s claim does not belong. His debt might have been proven in the bankruptcy, proceedings, and is, therefore, embraced by the language of the act.
The judge of the Mason quarterly court was bound to take notice of plaintiff’s discharge in bankruptcy. It had the effect to release the plaintiff from all debts which were or might have been proven against his estate in bank*309ruptcy, and, when properly pleaded, was a conclusive bar to any action on such debt. Tbe debt of this defendant having been wiped out, the attachment necessarily failed also.
The trial court erred in sustaining a demurrer to plaintiff’s petition, and the judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Petition for rehearing by appellee overruled.