(1.) This is a plaintiff's appeal. The suit was decreed in the Court of first instance but on appeal by the defendant the lower Appellate Court has dismissed the suit on the ground of limitation. In my opinion the judgment of the lower Appellate Court is wrong and must be reversed. The facts are very simple. The plaintiff executed a sale-deed in favour of the defendant in the year 1913. One of the terms of the sale-deed was that as part of the consideration the purchaser was to pay to a man named Ram Khilawan a sum of Rs. 285. Ram Khilawan was a creditor of the plaintiff-vendor.
(2.) The defendant failed to pay this sum and the result was that Ram Khilawan brought a suit against his debtor, the plaintiff in the present case, and obtained a decree against him which the plaintiff was obliged to satisfy.
(3.) It appears that by reason of the failure of the defendant to pay off Ram Khilawan, as he was bound to do under the terms of the sale-deed of 1913, the debt in Ram Khilawan's favour swelled and the plaintiff had to pay a sum of Rs. 254 odd in addition to a sum of Rs. 285, the former sum representing the accumulation by way of interest.