LAWS(MAD)-1965-4-54

SRINIVASAN AND OTHERS Vs. V. MATHRUBUTHAM AND OTHERS

Decided On April 21, 1965
Srinivasan And Others Appellant
V/S
V. Mathrubutham And Others Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) This is an appeal by the minor petitioners whose petition for leave to sue in forma pauperis for partition of suit properties and allotment of 3/8th share therein to them was dismissed by the lower Court. The petitioners are sons of the first defendant. The second defendant is the brother of the first defendant. The first defendant filed a suit O.S. No. 60 of 1950, against the second defendant for partition and separate possession of his half share in the properties. That suit was dismissed, and an appeal to the High Court against the dismissal of the suit was withdrawn in pursuance of a memo filed by the parties. The present suit is filed by the minor petitioners for partition and allotment of their 3/8th share in the properties, on the ground that their father, the first defendant, and his brother, the second defendant, were members of a joint family. Two questions were raised in the petition for leave to sue in forma pauperis. The first was whether the petitioners were paupers and the second was whether the suit was barred by res judicata. On the first point the lower Court found that the petitioners were paupers. On the second point it held that the suit was barred by res Judicata. Against the decision of the lower Court, the present appeal is preferred to this Court.

(2.) Mr. P. Sherfuddin, the Learned Counsel for the appellants, submitted that the decision in the suit instituted by the father of the minor petitioners, the first defendant, without including the minor sons as to nomine parties would not operate as res judicata. He also submitted that the father acted in a manner prejudicial to the rights of the minors in withdrawing the appeal after receiving some money from the second defendant. He further submitted that the Court below ought not to have gone into the question whether the suit is barred by res judicata in the petition for leave to sue in forma Pauperis. I am unable to accept any of these contentions. The Privy Council in Lingan Gowda v/s. Basan Gowda, 25 L.W. 789 790 (P.C.) held that, where the leading member of the family was acting in a prior litigation on behalf of minors in their interest, the decision arrived at in the prior litigation would operate as res judicata in a subsequent litigation by or against any of the members of the family. The Privy Council observed that

(3.) In the present case though there was a suggestion on behalf of the petitioners that the father acted against their interest, there was no prayer that the judgment and decree in the previous litigation should be set aside as the father acted fraudulently. The mere statement that the father had not acted in the interests of the minors will not have the effect of nullifying the previous judgment in the suit in which the father represented the minors. It is not disputed that the father filed a suit for partition which represented not only the share of the father but also that of the minors. In Krishnamurthi v/s. Chidambaram Chettiar : (1946) 1 M.L.J. 58 = 59 L.W. 33 this Court accepted the view of the lower Court that where a Hindu father sued as the manager of a joint family the junior members of that family were bound by the decree in the suit. this Court held that the principle that a minor can sue to set aside a decree passed against his own rights cannot be extended to cover a case like the case before this Court where the father as the manager of the family represented all the coparceners and sued on the basis that the property belonged to the family. It is, therefore, clear that the minor sons cannot be permitted to have the decree passed against the father who represented the minors to be set aside.