"The judgment is never conclusive in bankruptcy.
It does not always represent itself as the relevant
debt of the petitioning creditor, even though under
the general law, the prior existing debt has merged
in a judgment. But the Bankruptcy Court may accept
the judgment as satisfactory proof of the
petitioning creditor's debt. In that sense that
Court has a discretion. It may or may not so
accept the judgment. But it has been made quite
clear by the decisions of the past that where
reason is shown for questioning whether behind the
judgment or as it is said, as the consideration for
it, there was in truth and reality a debt due to
the petitioning creditor, the Court of Bankruptcy
can no longer accept the judgment as such
satisfactory proof. It must then exercise its
power, or if you will, its discretion to look at
what is behind the judgment: to what is its
consideration. ... the emphasis is upon the
paramount need to have satisfactory proof of the
petitioning creditor's debt. The court's
discretion in my opinion is a discretion to accept
the judgment as satisfactory proof of that debt.
That discretion is not well exercised where
substantial reasons are given for questioning
whether behind that judgment there was in truth and
reality a debt due to the petitioner."