LAWS(PVC)-1921-3-101

MEKA VENKATADRI APPA ROW Vs. PARTHASARATHI APPA ROW

Decided On March 01, 1921
MEKA VENKATADRI APPA ROW Appellant
V/S
PARTHASARATHI APPA ROW Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) Their Lordships do not desire to hear counsel for the appellants in reply, nor do they need further time to consider the advice that they will tender to His Majesty, for in their opinion this case is quite plain. It appears that in 1899 the respondent instituted a suit the defendants to which are represented by the present appellants; he claimed partition of two estates, known as the Nidadavole Estate and the Medur Estate, asserting that ho was entitled to a one-third share in each. The District Judge, by whom the action was first heard, decreed in the plaintiff's favour with regard to the first estate, but against him with regard to the other. An appeal was taken from that decree to the High Court who varied it by declaring that the plaintiff was entitled to one-third of the second estate as well as of the first. A receiver having been appointed of the rents of both estates on the 14 February, 1907, the plaintiff obtained an order enabling the receiver to pay over to him his interest on the Medur Estate under the judgment of the High Court as it then stood. Unfortunately for him the uncertainties of litigation resulted in a decree of His Majesty in a Council on the 19 December, 1913, restoring the judgment of the District Judge and it consequently followed that the share of the property in the Medur Estate which he had received from the receiver was money which he was bound to restore. The representatives of the original defendants accordingly appealed to the District Court for restitution, asking for repayment out of the moneys in the receiver's hands, representing the plaintiff's share in the Nidadavole Estate and against him personally for the balance. The matter came before the District Judge, who decided that the defandants were entitled to the relief they claimed and made an order on the 31 August, 1915, directing that the interest at the rate of nine per cent, with yearly rests was to be charged against the plaintiff, and that so much of the amount due as represented principal should carry simple interest from the date of the order at the rate of nine per cent.

(2.) On the 19 October, 1916, the High Court varied their order by declaring that the amount so received should only bear simple interest at six per cent., and on the 15th December, 1916, the matter being before them they directed that the whole amount should carry interest from the date of the order, but that the moneys received should be treated as though they had been received in respect of the principal moneys and not of the interest. An order was accordingly drawn up embodying the decision of the 19 October, 1916; that order has been accepted by the appellant, but from the direction given on the 15 December as to appropriation this appeal has been brought. The reason given by the learned Judges for their judgment was that they regarded the payments already made us shown in an account filed by the defendants in the District Court on the 25 August, 1915, as payments that had in fact been appropriated by the defendants as against principal and that from such appropriation there was no opportunity for them to recede. The account referred to is set out in the record in these proceedings and it shows that as each sum of money was received it was charged with interest at the rate of nine per cent and carried forward until the end of the year, when the total amount I so found was credited as against the total amount which was due. At no time did the sums so credited do more than cover the claim for interest, and it therefore seems impossible to understand why it was that the money received was regarded as definitely appropriated in respect of the principal. Nothing has been pointed out to their Lordships to lead them to the conclusion that the High Court was right in the assumption that they then made in that respect.

(3.) The question then remains as to how, apart from any specific appropriation, these sums ought to be dealt with. There is a debt due that carries interest. There are moneys that are received without a, definite appropriation on the said or on the other, and the rule which in well established in ordinary cases is that in those circumstances the money is first applied in payment of interest and then when that is satisfied in payment of the capital. That rule is referred to by Lord Justice Rigby in the case of Parr's Banking Co. V/s. Yates [1898] 2 Q.B. 460, 468: The defendant's counsel relied of the old rule that does, no doubt, apply to many cases, namely, that, where both principal and interest are due, the sums paid on account must be applicable, is only common justice. To apply the sums paid to principal where interest has accrued upon the debt, and is not paid, would be depriving the creditor of the benefit to which he is entitled under his contract.