(1.) The petitioner, the Traders Co-operative Bank, Limited, sued on the allegation that defendant 3 had borrowed Rs. 300 from the Bank and that defendants 1 and 2 had stood sureties for the debt. The Bank alleged that defendant 3 had paid only Rs. 36 and that the amount due for principal and interest was Rs. 442. Before instituting the present suit the petitioner had taken action against defendant 3, the principal debtor, under the Co-operative Societies Act. The amount awarded to him was less than he had claimed and less than his claim in the present suit. The amount of Rs. 36 paid by defendant 3 was in part satisfaction of that award. The petitioner alleges that he had been unable to secure further payments from defendant 3 who has absconded.
(2.) The learned Small Cause Court Judge has dismissed the plaintiff's suit on the ground that as the award has the force of a decree against defendant 3, the petitioner is not entitled to obtain another decree against defendants 1 and 2. It is contended on behalf of the petitioner that the cause of action against the sureties is different from the cause of action against the principal debtor and that as the liability of debtor and sureties is joint and several, the present suit is not barred by reason of the existence of the award. On behalf of the opposite party reliance was placed on the decision in King V/s. Hoare 153 E.R. 206 in which it was held that a judgment (without satisfaction) recovered against one of two joint debtors is a bar to an action against the other. It is to be observed however that it was expressly stated in that case that the position is otherwise where the debt is joint and several.
(3.) The learned advocate for the opposite party maintains that the present case furnishes an illustration of the impracticability of holding that a decree obtained against the principal debtor does not bar a suit against the surety. He points out that in the proceeding under the Co operative Societies Act the amount due from the principal debtor has been found to be less than that claimed by the plaintiff and from this he argues that if the plaintiff succeeded in the present suit in obtaining the amount which he claimed, he would not be able to recover from the principal debtor the amount which he himself has to pay. The difficulty is not as great as suggested.