(1.) It appears that one Lalta Singh was owner of a 5 biswas' share in zamindari property. He executed a usufructuary mortgage of it on 3rd October 1882, for Rs. 1750 is favour of one Gajodhar. On his death the shares in his property devolved as follows : Mt. Rukmin got one biswa, Mt. Chhoti got one biswa, Mt. Mulla got one biswa, Mt. Umrai got one biswa and Durga Singh got one biswa.
(2.) Bechey Singh and Khetal Singh bought Mt. Rukmin's share. Under Section 12, Agriculturists' Relief Act, they applied for redemption of this share of her property. This application was-allowed on 24th November 1944, without payment of any mortgage money, The present. applicants, who were the opposite parties in that application under Section 12, Agriculturists' Relief Act, went up is appeal. The appeal was dismissed. Then they filed the present application in revision. Daring the pendency of this application Khetal Singh, one of the two applicants under Section 12, died on or about 15th August 1948, On 12th September 1949 an application was made for substituting his heirs on the record. This-Court held that there was no sufficient cause for the application for substitution having been made more than one year after the death of Khetal Singh, The application for substitution was rejected and it was said that the revision abated so far as Khetal Singh was concerted' and its effect on the whole revision would be considered at the time of hearing of the revision, application.
(3.) The learned counsel for the opposite parties has accordingly raised a preliminary objection that the revision has abated not only against Khetal Singh but as a whole. He has-pointed out that there is a joint decree foe redemption in favour both of Khetal Singh and Bechey Singh that should the revision application be allowed there would be two inconsistent, decrees in the case. The learned counsel for the applicants states that there is a khewat on the record which shows that the interest of Khetal Singh and Bechey Singh was separable and separate and each possessed equal interest. That might be so but the decree itself is indivisible and does not specify the shares of Bechey Singh and Khetal Singh. In Bam Jas v. Ram Lal, 1935 O. W. N. 297 : (A. I. R. (23) 1936 Oudh 209), it has been held that ; ''The question, whether an appeal can or cannot proceed in the absence of the legal representatives of a deceased respondent, must depend upon the nature of each case, and it is impossible to lay down a general rule applicable to all such cases. Each case must depend upon its own circumstances, If in such a case the decree under appeal is a joint decree in favour of all the respondents the appeal abates! as a whole, for if the whole appeal is allowed not to abate, the decision may result in two conflicting decisions with regard to the same subject-matter." Earlier decisions of the Allahabad High Court on the same point were followed. In Ghulam Abbas v. Safdar Jha Zahid Ali, 1941 O. W. N. 418 : (A I. R. (28) 1941 Oudh 219 F. B.), the decision referred to above wan approved and. accepted. The learned counsel for the applicants has been unable to show me any authority where it has been held to the contrary in such cases like the present where a joint decree hast been obtained by the respondents and one of them dies during the pendency of the appeal or the revision as the case may be end his heirs are not impleaded. In these circumstances this revision must abate as a whole.