(1.) These appeals are against orders recognising the respondent as assignee of the decree in 0.S. No. 27 of 1919 and allowing attachment and sale. That suit was filed on a mortgage and ended in a compromise. No part of the original mortgage was reserved at the time of filing of the suit. The whole original mortgage was merged in the decree. The decree provided that the defendants were to pay a certain amount and that it shall be charged on the mortgaged properties. Whether there is a sale decree as the first Subordinate Judge has thought or a decree creating a fresh charge it is unnecessary to decide: The objections taken to the application of the respondent are: 1. That the assignment is not genuine, not for consideration and made with a view to evade the appellant's commission. There is no evidence on the last point. The transfer is provided by a document and it is not for the appellant to raise the question of consideration apart from saying it is a nominal transaction which case has not been suggested.
(2.) The assignment ought to have been made by the Receiver of the Kovvuri family litigation. There is no substance in this.
(3.) The next objection is that the decree is unenforceable because the decree-holder did not get Order S. No. 29 of 1920 withdrawn. That suit against the appellant was allowed to be dismissed and was not prosecuted. There is no failure of consideration under the terms of the compromise.