LAWS(PVC)-1936-9-67

RANI CHHATER KUMARI DEBI Vs. BHAGWATI PRASAD

Decided On September 18, 1936
RANI CHHATER KUMARI DEBI Appellant
V/S
BHAGWATI PRASAD Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) This application in revision is directed against an order of the Munsif of Bettiah allowing the claim of the opposite party which purported to be under Order XXI, Rule 58, Civil Procedure Code and as preferred in execution of a decree which is claimed by the decree-holder petitioner to be a decree for the rent of a tenure. The decree is against one Subasni Kuer whose husband Bir Bharthe was admittedly entitled to half of the tenure which she is said to have transferred to the respondent, the remaining half belonging to one Musammat Nanhuka Kuer and Ram Chandra Prasad. The rent suit was "originally instituted against all these three persons, namely, Subasni, Nanhuka Kuer and Ram Chandra, but later the plaintiff obtained leave to amend the plaint by excluding Nanhuka Kuer and Ram Chandra and the claims against them on the allegation that the tenure was split up and a separate tenure consisting of half of the original tenure was created for the share of Subani. A decree was passed on this basis. It was in execution of this decree that a claim was perferred on behalf of the opposite party Bhagwat Prasad and others. They claimed that they were purchasers of the tenure from the husband of Subasni and that the decree had been wrongly obtained against her and was therefore not a rent decree and they were entitled to come in under Order XXI, Rule 53. The learned Munsif held that the decree was not a rent decree for the reasons stated above, namely that it was against a person who was no longer a tenure holder, her husband having already transferred it to the claimant lie, therefore, allowed the claim. The decree-holder has come up in revision.

(2.) It was held by the Full Bench of the Calcutta High Court in Amrita Lal Base v. Nemal Chand Mukhopadhya 28 C. 382 : 5 C.W.N. 474 that a claim under Section 278, Civil Procedure Code (now Order XXI, Rule 58) was barred under Section 170, Bengal Tenancy Act, if it is not disputed that the decree-holder is the land lord of the tenure or holding and that the decree is for the rent due in respect of it. A claimant cannot be allowed to plead that the decree has been obtained against wrong person. This decision has been , uniformly followed in this Court see Deonandan Prasad V/s. Pinhi Narayan 11 Pat. 790 : 142 Ind. Cas 40 : A.I.R. 1933 Pat. 32: 13 P.L.T. 643 : Ind. Rul. (1933) Pat. 104; Dwarka Singh V/s. Nema Singh 10 P.L.T. 118 : 117 Ind. Cas. 203 : A.I.R. 1929 Pat. 95 : Ind. Rul. (1929) Pat 411 and Surpat Singh V/s. Shital Singh A.I.R. 1936 Pat. 460 : 162 Ind Cas 805 : 614 : 17 P.L.T. 385 : 2 B.R. 502 : 8 R.P. 575. It was i Held in these cases that if a claimant does : not deny that the holding (or in this case the tenure) was held under the decree holder and that rent was due thereto but contends that the decree has been passed against a wrong person, he cannot maintain the claim case. Generally speaking the position is this: If it can be shown that the decree was not a rent decree third party can file objections under Order XXI, Rule instance, if it appears that the Plaintiff is not the 16 annas landlord of the tenure or holding or that suit was in respect of a portion of a holding or tenure or that rents for two or more holdings or tenures had been claimed in one and the same suit, the claim is entertainable; but if the decree is a rent decree but against a wrong person the clam is barred Though sometimes it may be difficult to distinguish between cases in which Order XXI, Rule 68, is applicable and where it is not the distinction is there and can be found out for all practical purposes.

(3.) The learned Advocate for the opposite party contended that these cases are no longer good law in view of the decision of their Lordships of the Privy Council in Jitendra Nath Ghose V/s. Manmohan Ghose 34 C. W N. 821 : 126 Ind. Cas 422 : A.I.R. 1030 P.C. 193 : 57 I.A. 214 : 58 C. 301 : Ind. Rul. (1930) P.C. 326 : 2 C.L.J. 272 : 59 M.L.J. 607 : 32 L.W. 736 (P.C.). In my opinion the Privy Council decision does not in the least affect the decisions which I have already cited The question came before their Lordships in a substantive suit instituted for a declaration that the decree was not binding as it was not a rent decree. It was contended that the suit itself was barred under Section 170, Bengal Tenancy Act. Their Lordships referring to Section 170 observed that section bars the investigation of the claim in the course of the execution proceeding but not the suit. In my opinion this decision instead of helping the opposite party is against them. Their Lordships say: Reliance has been placed by Counsel for the appellants upon Section 170, Tenancy Act, which makes Secs.278 to 283, Civil Procedure Code of 1832, (now Order XXI, Rules 58 to 63 of the Code of 1908) inapplicable to a tenure attached in execution of a decree for arrears of rent. The effect of this provision is that there can be no investigation in execution proceedings held under Chap. 14, Tenancy Act, of claims by third parties to an interest in the tenure; but it does not in their Lordships opinion bar a substantive suit such as that filed by the respondents.