LAWS(P&H)-1971-9-21

DROPTI Vs. CHINTA AND ORS.

Decided On September 13, 1971
DROPTI Appellant
V/S
Chinta And Ors. Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) THIS is an application under Order 41, Rule 21 of the Code of Civil Procedure for setting aside the ex -parte judgment and decree passed by me on April 1, 1971, in Regular Second Appeal 361 of 1961, on the ground that Mr. Amar Chand Hoshiarpuri, learned Counsel for the applicants (who were Respondents in the appeal) had died on January 23, 1970, and the applicants had thereafter become unrepresented in the case, and still no notice was issued to them by the Court informing them of the death of Mr. Hoshiarpuri and giving them an opportunity to make other arrangement for being represented in this Court

(2.) PROVISIO to Rule 8 of Chapter 3 -A, Volume V, of the Rules and Orders framed by this Court, requires that intimation of the actual date of hearing fixed in a case (pukka date) has to be seit by registered post (acknowledgement due) to such parties as are not represented by counsel after service of notice for a tentative date. Though the applicants were represented by late Shri Amar Chand Hoshiarpuri, and, therefore, no question of issuing any actual date notice to them could consequently have arisen, they became unrepresented on and after January 23, 1970, when Mr. Hoshiarpuri expired, and the office should have sent actual date notice to the Respondents in the appeal who had become unrepresented. It is not disputed that this has not been done.

(3.) I , therefore, recall and set aside my ex -parte judgment, dated April 1,1971, allowing the Regular Second Appeal, and set aside the ex -parte decree passed by this Court on the basis of that judgment and restore the appeal (R.S.A. 361 of 1961) which shall now be listed for hearing on October 26, 1971. The records of the lower Courts which are stated to have been sent back should be recalled immediately. The appeal should be listed at the top of the daily board on October 26, 1971. The costs of this application shall abide the result of the appeal. The appeal having been restored, status quo as today may be maintained till the final disposal of the appeal.