are quite beyond the purview of this Court at the present moment.
Mr. Philp then put it this way. He says the debt must be the
same debt at the date of the presentation of the petition, and at
the date of the hearing. He argues that the debt is now a different
debt because the new incident of non-liability to payment before
31st December next, has been added to it by force of the State law.
He calls in aid the decision In re King and Beesley; Ex parte King
and Beesley (1), in which case the reporter pointed out that the
petition itself alleged that execution on the judgment had not been
stayed. He urges that the grant of a sequestration order at the
present moment on the original debt, would be in effect to hold that
the debt is still presently payable, notwithstanding that no legal
proceedings (apart from proceedings in Bankruptcy), may now be
taken in Queensland to recover it. He submits that, in the events
that have happened, by taking judgment in the Supreme Court
action, the petitioner has brought about a state of facts which prevents
this Court from finding as a fact that a good petitioning creditor's
debt still exists. All this argument depends upon the suggestion,
so far as I can see, that the debt now proved to be due is a different
debt from the debt which has been proved to have existed at the
date of the filing of this petition. It is difficult to deal with such
an argument except to say that, as far as one can see, the debt is
not a different debt. To my mind, the amount of £7,980 which
was due at the moment the petition was filed in respect of five
dishonoured promissory notes and interest thereon, is the same debt
as is now due for the same reason from the debtor to Mrs. Whyte.
The mere fact that superior authority, the State law, has deferred
payment of it so that, instead of being payable on demand it is
now payable only on the last day of December next, and cannot be
recovered by execution before then, does not make it, in any respect,
for the purposes of this Bankruptcy Act, a different debt from the
debt which it has always been. I do not know that I can answer
that contention in any other way than I am suggesting. To my
mind it is the same debt, although the State law has intervened to
prevent its being presently payable. In this connection, Mr. Philp
refers me to sec. 52 (j), referring to bankruptcy notices. I think,