LAWS(CAL)-1954-1-39

TARAPADA NANDAN Vs. SANKAR PROSAD DEY

Decided On January 07, 1954
Tarapada Nandan Appellant
V/S
Sankar Prosad Dey Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) This appeal arises out of a proceeding which was started on an objection purporting to be under, Section 47 of the Code of Civil Procedure although it was really a claim under Order XXI, Rule 58, of the Code.

(2.) The relevant facts lie within a short compass. A title suit was broiight by two persons Tarapada Nandan and Benoy Krishna Nandan and another against the present Respondent. That suit was dismissed on July 18, 1941, with costs against the present Respondent. The decree for costs obtained by the Respondent Sankar Prosad Dey was put into execution and in the course of such execution a compromise was arrived at between the parties on February 17, 1951. Under the compromise the costs were payable in certain instalments. There was default in the payment of these instalments and, accordingly, the present execution was taken out on June 20, 1952, against the judgment-debtors Tarapada Nandan and Benoy Krishna Nandan and certain properties were attached. Thereupon a petition was filed purporting, to be under Section 47 of the Code objecting to the attachment on the ground that half of the attached properties was in the possession of Tarapada and Benoy as shebaits of a certain deity and that the said moiety share belonged to the said deity. This objection was given effect to by the learned Munsif who directed release of one-half share of the property attached from attachment but on appeal by the decree-holder that decision was reversed. Against this appellate decision, the present second appeal has been filed by Tarapada.

(3.) The principal point which has been urged in support of this appeal is that the objection asserting the title and possession of deity to the moiety of the attached properties was really a claim under Order XXI, Rule 58, of the Code and that, accordingly, no: appeal lay from the decision of the learned Munsif to the court of the learned District Judge. In my opinion, that point must succeed. It is true that the objection was filed by the judgment debtors and purported to be under Section 47 of the Code of Civil Procedure but having regard to the nature of the objection, viz., that title and possession was asserted in favour of the third party deity of whom the judgment-debtors claimed to be shebaits, it seems to me that it was really a claim under Order XXI, Rule 58, of the Code. That being so, the decision of the learned Munsif must be held to be one allowing a claim under Order XXI, Rule 58, of the Code releasing on the basis of that claim a moiety share of the attached properties. The appeal to the learned District Judge was, therefore, not maintainable in law. I am supported in this view by the Full Bench decision of this Court in the case of Kartick Chandra Ghose v. Ashutosh Dhara,1911 ILR(Cal) 298 (F.B.) I, accordingly, hold that the appeal before the learned District Judge was not maintainable in law, and his decision, therefore, cannot stand.