(1.) This is an appeal in an execution suit. The respondent-decree-holders on 5th December 1933, obtained a decree in original suit No. 18 of 1933 in the District Munsif's Court at Berhampur then in the Presidency of Madras. Execution proceedings were taken out, and the application was closed on 23 July 1934. On 1 April 1936, consequent on the coming into force of Section 289, Government of India Act, 1935, the District of Ganjam within which Berhampur is situate was transferred from the Presidency of Madras to the Province of Orissa; but the area to which the suit related remained however within the Presidency of Madras, and apparently the Presidency Court which now exercises jurisdiction over that area is the District Munsif's Court at Sompeta These proceedings (Execution Application No. 37 of 1939) were commenced in the Court of the Subordinate Judge of Berhampur in Execution Application No. 37 of 1939. It is clear that unless there were some intermediate proceedings which would stay limitation these proceedings would be barred by the Limitation Act. It is said that there were intermediate proceedings before the Subordinate Judge of Berhampur started in 1937 which barred the limitation. There is considerable doubt as to what occurred in these intermediate proceeding. I do not propose to discuss this point, which was the principal point discussed by the Subordinate Judge and on appeal by the District Judge, because, in my judgment, the objection taken by Mr. P.C. Chatterji for the judgment-debtor in his petition of appeal to this Court and before the lower appellate Court that the Subordinate Judge of Berhampur had no jurisdiction to entertain the proceedings, is well founded.
(2.) Upon the transfer of the District of Ganjam from the Presidency of Madras to the Province of Orissa, the Munsif's Court at Berhampur as constituted under the Madras Acts ceased to exist but the Court was deemed to have continued as constituted under the Bengal Civil Courts Act. The precise point now being agitated came before a Bench of the Madras High Court in Tilo Beherani V/s. Raghubehara A.I.R. 1939 Mad. 463 and the learned Judges there decided that the Berhampur Court had lost its jurisdiction to execute such of its own decrees as were passed when it was a Court within the Presidency of Madras except where an execution application happened to be pending on 1 April 1936. In a matter such as this affecting the rights of persons as between the two provinces (the Presidency of Madras and the Province of Orissa) it is, in my opinion, incumbent upon us to follow a decision of the Bench of the Madras High Court as it could not fail to produce extreme inconvenience and injustice if there were conflicting decisions of the two High Courts.
(3.) But even if this were not so, I should independently have arrived at the same conclusion as that reached by the Madras High Court. Mr. P.V.B. Rao for the execution-creditor-respondent referred us to numerous decisions of this Court and the Madras High Court tending to show that on a transfer of an area from the jurisdiction of one Court to another the original Court retained jurisdiction in execution proceedings; and, secondly, that an application to a Court which had jurisdiction but no power to do more than direct the transfer of an application for execution was sufficient to bar limitation.