(1.) THIS is an appeal from a judgment of the High Court in a suit brought by the Respondents, who are infants, in the name of their guardian, against the Appellant, in the Court of Bhagulpore. The object of the suit was to prevent the Appellant from executing a decree which he had obtained against the Respondents. The case arose in this way: The Plaintiffs and Sheo Nundun and Hur , Nundun, were members of a joint Hindu family, and joint proprietors of an ancestral family estate situate in the district of Bhagulpore and subject to the Mitakshara law. The suit in which the decree was obtained was brought on a bond, dated the 21st of April, 1870, for Rs.16,348, executed by Hur Nundun on behalf of himself and as uncle and guardian of the present Plaintiffs. Hur Nundun was not at the time when he executed the bond the guardian of the present Plaintiffs, or at any time the manager of the estate; the elder brother, Sheo Nundun, after the death of Lalji, the father of the present Plaintiffs, was the manager. The suit in which the decree about to be executed was obtained was brought against Sheo Nundun and the present Plaintiffs. The present Plaintiffs being minors, the suit was stated to be brought against Sheo Nundun as heir of Hur Nundun, and against the present Plaintiffs under the guardianship of Sheo Nundun, and Mussamat Ghuneshyam Konwari, mother and guardian of the minors. It turned out that the mother was not the guardian; that although a certificate of guardianship had been granted to the mother, that certificate had been set aside, and that the mother really was not the guardian. An ex parte decree was obtained against the Defendants; but the mother came in and asked to have the decree set aside upon the ground that no notice had been served upon her. The Court ordered that the case should go down for another trial, but upon the second trial the Judge who tried the case struck out the name of the mother and did not allow her to appear as the guardian of the infants. The suit was decreed against Sheo Nundun Persad and the Plaintiffs for the total amount of the bond, with interest. The Plaintiffs contend that that decree was not binding upon them, inasmuch as they were infants at the time, and were not represented by a guardian. On the other hand, it is contended that Sheo Nundun Persad, who was named as guardian in the suit, was their guardian, he being the co-proprietor and manager of the estate. It is clear that the manager of an estate although he may have the power to manage the estate, is not the guardian of infant co-proprietors of that estate for the purpose of binding them by a bond, as Hur Nundun did, or for the purpose of defending suits against them in respect of money advanced with reference to the estate. Act XL. of 1858, passed for making better provision for the care of the persons and properties of minors in Bengal, enacted, Section 2, that, " except in the case of proprietors of estates paying revenue to Government, who have been or shall be taken under the protection of the Court of Wards,"-which does not apply to this case,-" the care of the persons of all minors (not being European British subjects), and the charge of their property, shall be subject to the jurisdiction of the Civil Court." That shews that Sheo Nundun Persad, although he was a co-proprietor and manager of the estate, was not the guardian of the infants, who, according to the Act, were subject to the jurisdiction of the Civil Court. Then Section 3 enacts that " Every person who shall claim a right to have charge of property in trust for a minor under a will or deed, or by reason of nearness of kin or otherwise, may apply to the Civil Court for a certificate of administration; and no person shall be entitled to institute or defend any suit connected with the estate of which he claims the charge until he shall have obtained such certificate." No certificate was obtained by Sheo Nundun Persad; and although it is stated that he was the guardian of the infants, he clearly was not the legal guardian, and had no right to defend that suit in their name. The decree in the suit, therefore, was not binding upon the infants. The Plaintiff in that suit attempted to execute his decree against the property of the infants. The Judge of the First Court says:-
(2.) THEN it was attempted to shew that, although the decree had been obtained against the infants without their having been re-pipiented by a guardian, still the suit was brought for a debt for which they were liable. Whether that could justify the execution of the decree it is not necessary now to inquire, because the Courts below went into the question whether the bond was given for a debt for which the infants were liable, and held that it was not. After stating all the facts of the case, the Judge says,
(3.) UNDER these circumstances their Lordships are of opinion that the High Court came to a correct decision; and they will humbly advise Her Majesty that the decree of the High Court be affirmed. The Appellant must pay the costs of this appeal.