(1.) THESE two civil revisions under S. 115, Civil P. C,, are against two orders passed by the First civil Judge of Kanpur on 16-4-1952, in a suit pending in his Court. The suit was filed on 24-8-1950, by Ram Sarup Bhartiya and Anandi Lal Bhartiya against the Kanpur Muir Mills company, Ltd. , Indian Textile Syndicate, Ltd. , and 13 others. The reliefs claimed in the plaint are as follows:
(2.) THE plaintiffs are the share-holders in the Muir Mills Company Ltd. , Kanpur, defendant 1 and on 24-8-1950, they filed an application that they were filing the suit on behalf of themselves as also on behalf of other share-holders of the said company, except those who had been arrayed as defendants in the case. Since the number of shareholders of the Kanpur Muir Mills Company, ltd. , was very large and aggregated several hundreds and it was not possible to implead all of them either as plaintiffs or as defendants, the plaintiffs prayed for permission under Order 1, rule 8, of Civil P. C. , to institute this suit in a representative capacity on behalf of share-holders other than the share-holders who had been impleaded as defendants. Information regarding this suit was published in the Statesman, and in other newspapers, such as, the Citizen of Kanpur, the Amrit Bazar Patrika, the Hindustan Times, Kanpur Edition, the pratap, the Jagran and the Vir Bharat. These publications were made in August and September, 1950. An application was filed by Shri T. G. Jog and Shri Subhkaran, who held ordinary shares in the Muir Mills Company, Ltd. . , Kanpur, on 31-1-1951, and another application was filed by 51 share-holders of the mill on 2-2-1951. In the first application filed by Shri T. G. Jog and Shri Subhkaran, it was claimed that the plaintiffs had not asked for all the reliefs that could be asked and that not only certain resolutions passed on 20-10-1947, were bad but the resolutions passed earlier on 26-5-1947, were also invalid. Shri T. G. Jog and Shri Subhkaran, therefore, wanted to be added as co-plaintiffs and they also wanted that certain further reliefs should be asked for by amendment of the plaint. In the other application filed on behalf of 51 share-holders, it was pleaded that they may be impleaded as defendants since they had acquired shares in the company after 20-10-1947, and they were not prepared to challenge the resolutions of that date. They claimed that the plaintiffs did not represent their interest.
(3.) IT is not necessary for us, in this case, to go into the facts in greater detail. We may, however, briefly mention that, on 26-5-1947, Articles 4 and 161 of the Articles of Association were amended and preference share-holders were placed on a footing of equality with the ordinary share-holders in the matter of payment of dividends. On 20-10-1947 certain other amendments were made in the Articles of Association and Article 161 was re-numbered as 166 and a new set of Articles were adopted though most of them were similar to the old ones. We may also briefly indicate that the plaintiffs have challenged the amendments made on 20-10-1947, while Shri T. G. Jog and Shri Subhkaran have claimed that they want to go beyond the reliefs asked for by the plaintiffs and have challenged the amendments made on 26-5-1947, placing the preference share-holders on the same footing as the ordinary share-holders in the matter of participation in the division of dividends. We have already indicated that the other 51 share-holders claim that since they had acquired their shares after 20-10-1947, it was not to their interest to challenge those resolutions. This position has been accepted by the learned Civil judge. Dealing with the application of Shri T. G. Jog and Shri Subhkaran, the learned Judge has remarked: