(1.) This appeal raises a very short and, we think, a very simple question.
(2.) The plaintiff sued the defendant for the rent of a holding. The defendant denied that the relationship of landlord and tenant existed. This defence prevailed, and the suit was dismissed, The plaintiff then appealed and in the appellate stage was allowed to withdraw his suit with liberty to bring a fresh suit. He then brought the present action to eject the defendant on the ground that in the former suit he had denied the relationship of landlord and tenant.
(3.) We think it may be said to be settled by the current of decisions in this Court that the mere denial of the relationship of landlord and tenant does not, in cases to which the Bengal Tenancy Act of 1885 applies, work any forfeiture unless the denial was given effect to by a decree of the Court. The only decree that here can be relied on is a decree which has ceased to exist owing to the withdrawal to which we have referred above. The result seems to us to be that there is no decree whatever, and that all that we have is the mere denial to which effect has not been given by any decree of Court.