(1.) These are petitions to revise the order of the learned District Judge of West Tanjore in C:M.A. Nos. 37, 42, 43 and 44 of 1940 on his file dismissing them on the ground that no appeal lay. The order appealed against was an order on a petition filed under Order 9, Rule 13 of the Civil P. C..
(2.) The learned District Judge relies upon three rulings of this Court reported in Jagannatha Pillai V/s. Kathaperumal Pillai , Ramakrishnayya V/s. Naganna and Gopalakrishnayya V/s. Narasimha Rao , as authority for the position that no appeal lies against a decree or an order, not provided for in Section 189(2) of the Madras Estates Land Act. In Ramakrishnayya V/s. Naganna all that was held was, that if in execution of a decree passed by the Revenue Court in a summary suit the decree-holder attached certain lands and another person claiming as purchaser from him put in a petition objecting to the attachment under Order 21, Rule 58 of the Civil P. C. and the objection was upheld, the suit by the decree-holder under.Order 21, Rule 63 should be filed in the Civil Court and not in the Revenue Court. When reliance was placed on Section 192 of the Madras Estates Land Act, it was pointed out that it could not enlarge the scope of the jurisdiction conferred on the revenue Court under Section 189 of the Act. That decision therefore does not deal with the question as to right of appeal. In Jagannatha Pillai V/s. Kathaperumal Pillai , it was held that a suit to set aside a sale in execution of a rent decree under the Madras Estates Land Act on the ground of fraud and material irregularity in publishing and conducting the sale was not barred either expressly or impliedly by the Madras Estates Land Act. There also there was no occasion to deal with the question as to the right of appeal. In Gopalakrishnayya V/s. Narasimha Rao , it was held that the procedure prescribed under Order 21, Rule 90 of the Civil P. C. by which execution sales affected by material irregularity are allowed to be set aside was not available in the case of a sale of a holding in execution of a revenue decree under the Estates Land Act. But this decision was based on the provision of this Act as it stood prior to the amendment of Section 192.
(3.) Under Section 192 of that Act as it stood then, it was only certain provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure that were applicable to proceedings under the Act. The Act has been subsequently amended and the provisions of Order 43, Civil Procedure Code, are applicable to proceedings under the Act before a Revenue Court unless there is a notification by the local Government that they are not to apply. Order 21, Rule 90 was not one of the provisions of the Civil Procedure Code stated to apply to proceedings under the Act before the amendment. That was why in Gopalakrishnayya V/s. Narasiniha Rao , it was held that a petition under Order 21, Rule 90 was not maintainable in respect of a sale held under the pro visions of that Act. Since under the amended Act the provisions of Order 43 of the Civil P. C. apply to proceedings under the Estates Land Act before Revenue Courts, it will have to be held that the appellant has got a right of appeal. My learned brother Patanjali Sastri, J., had occasion to hold recently in C.M.S.A. No. 298 of 1940 that the objection as regards the maintainability of an appeal from an order of remand in proceedings under the Madras Estates Land Act was not sustainable after the amendment of Section 192 of the Act.