(1.) The petitioner in this case is the Zemindar of Ettiapuram. He left Ettiapuram, where he resides permanently and which is within the jurisdiction of the District Munsif of Satur, in the beginning of December 1902 to attend the Durbar in Delhi and returned to his station towards the e January, 1903. Before he left Ettiapuram the petitioner gave a general power of attorney to one Ettiahpandian authorising him, among other things, to institute suits on his behalf during his absence. On the 9 January 1903 Ettiapandian acting under the power of attorney, presented a plaint for rent due to the petitioner. Under Rule 23 of the Civil Rules of Practice the power of attorney should have been filed in court. But that was not done and the court returned the plaint with the order endorsed thereon, " Rule 23 should be complied with--returned, time one month." On the 13 February 1903 the plaint was re-presented accompanied by the power of attorney. The District Munsif thereupon rejected the plaint on the 20 April.
(2.) The question is whether the plaint was a proper plaint in that it was signed and verified only by the party who held the general power of attorney and this depends upon whether the petitioner was a party " non-resident" within the meaning of Section 37 of the Civil Procedure Code. My attention was drawn to a number of cases in which the terms reside, residence, dwell, dwelling have been construed with reference to the various legislative provisions in which those terms occur. I do not consider it necessary to refer to them in detail.
(3.) One general result of the authorities is that reside is an ambiguous and elastic expression and that it has to be interpreted with reference to the object and character of the provision in which it occurs. Now the purpose of Section 37 of the Civil Procedure Code is to provide for appearances being made and acts being done on behalf of suitors in courts within the jurisdiction of which they are not, at the time, present. Having regard to this, I agree with the learned judges who decided Ramachandra Sakharam V/s. Keshav Durgagi by his agent Hakma Depaji I.L.R. 6 B. 100 which deals with the interpretation of the above section that a liberal construction should be put upon the term non-resident in the section and I also hold that the present case is in a measure analogous to that in regard to its circumstances as well, though there the absence of the party from his permanent place of residence was about four months while here the absence was shorter. The occasion which led to the petitioner leaving his place was an official ceremony which the petitioner, as a landholder, was, as it were, bound to attend. The station he was going to was many hundred miles away from his native place and the affairs of his estate naturally required during his absence supervision by some one entitled to represent the petitioner. In these cir-cumstances the petitioner's absence could not be treated as 30 short and temporary as to warrant his being looked upon as still resident within the jurisdiction of the court in regard to the application of the section; and therefore the plaint as presented was in my view a proper plaint. No doubt when Rule 23 of the Civil Rules of Practice was complied with by the production of the power of attorney, the petitioner had returned to Ettiapuram but that could not affect a plaint which had been presented when he was away. The filing of the power of attorney on the date on which it was filed by the vakil who had been retained when the plaint was presented was an act perfectly within the power of the vakil.