(1.) This is an appeal on behalf of the plaintiffs in a suit for recovery of arrears of rent. The substantial question in controversy between the parties relates to the character of the holding, whether it is a holding at a money-rent as the tenants allege or at a produce rent as the landlords contend. The Courts below have concurrently decided this question in favour of the tenants. That decision has been attacked in this Court as erroneous in law, because relevant evidence has been excluded. The evidence in question is a road-cess return filed in 1896 by a ticcadar of the property, by name Biswanath Singh. The learned vakil for the appellant has contended that the road-cess return is admissible in evidence--first, because it was used in evidence against the plaintiffs by the defendants in another suit for declaration of title; secondly, because Section 95 of the Bengal Cess Act of 1880 does not present a bar to the admission of the road-cess return; and, thirdly, because the person by whom it was filed was no other than a benamidar for the grand-father of the defendants themselves.
(2.) In so far as the first reason assigned by the appellants is concerned, we do not feel impressed by it. The mere circumstance that the road-cess return has been successfully used in evidence by the tenants against their landlords for the purposes of another litigation does not show that it is admissible in evidence in the present litigation on behalf of the landlords themselves.
(3.) In so far, however, as the second ground is concerned, it is in oar opinion well founded. Section 95 of the Bengal Cess Act has no application to the case before us. That section provides that every return filed by or on behalf of any person in pursuance of the provisions of the Act shall bear the signature and address of such person or his authorised agent, and shall be admissible in evidence against such person but shall not be admissible in his favour. Now, as was pointed out in the cases of Mohan Pandey v. Lala Bhagwati Charan (1909) 1 Ind. Cas. 813 and Chalho Singh v. Jharo Singh See ante p. 995 the provisions of Section 95 of the Bengal Cess Act are not exhaustive, They merely limit the application of Section 21 of the Indian Evidence Act and exclude road-cess returns when they are sought to be admitted in favour of the person by or on behalf of whom they have been filed: Hem Chandra Chowdhry v. Kali Prosanna Bhaduri (1903) I.L.R. 30 Calc. 1033. It has not been disputed that if a road-cess return is not admissible in favour of such person, it is equally inadmissible in favour of a person who claims through him or who may be deemed to ha his representative in interest. Now, in the case before us, the road-cess return was not filed by the present plaintiffs, nor was it filed on their behalf. It was filed by Biswanath Singh in his capacity as temporary lessee of the property. The question, therefore, arises whether when the plaintiffs seek to have the document admitted in evidence, they can rightly be regarded as persons by or on behalf of whom the return has been filed. In our opinion, the question ought to be answered in the negative. The learned vakil for the respondent has ingeniously contended that as during the subsistence of the ticca a part of the superior interest was vested in the ticcadar, upon the expiry of the term of the ticca when the landlord became the sole owner, he must be deemed to have acquired a part of the interest through his ticcadar. This argument is obviously unsound. The landlord cannot be said to claim through his tenant in whose favour he had created an interest limited for a time. We are, therefore, of opinion that the road-cess return is admissible in evidence, notwithstanding the provisions of Section 95 of the Bengal Cess Act.