(1.) In Ramasawmi Mudaliar V/s. Sellathammal (1882) I.L.R. 4 M. 5, the case by which the District Judge holds himself bound, Innes J. no doubt held that the reversioners will not be bound to pay a debt contracted by the widow unless the debt is charged on the estate. Kindersley J., however, took a different view, holding that the plaint did not allege clearly that the promissory-note was made by the widow as representative of the estate and did not allege such a state of facts as would, by operation of Hindu law, render the debt due on the promissory-note binding on the reversioners.
(2.) Neither Kindersley J. nor Turner C.J. who rejected the plaint in the Original Court takes the view that, as a matter of law, the reversioners cannot be bound unless the debt is formally made a charge on the estate, and there is no other authority in this Court for that view except the opinion of Junes J.
(3.) In our opinion, no distinction can be properly drawn between the case where a charge is formally created and the case in which the creditor lends for the necessary purposes of the estate to the widow as representative of the estate. In such a case though there is no formal charge upon the property forming the estate, the debt is a debt due by the representatives of the estate and recoverable from them. This seems to be the view of Turner C.J. and Kindersley, J.