JUDGMENT : BLAIR, J.:— This is an appeal from an order rejecting the application of the appellant here, to have his name entered in the register of the Instalment Banking Company, Limited, Meerut, now in liquidation. A preliminary objection to the hearing of this appeal was urged upon us by Mr. Baldev Ram, who appears for the opposite-party, He contended that the applicant's appeal must fail because of his failure to comply with the provisions of section 169 of the Companies Act No. VI of 1882. That section provides that no appeal from an order or decision made or given in the matter of the winding up of a Company by the Court shall be heard unless notice of the same is given within three weeks after any order complained of has been made. It is not disputed that in this case no such notice has been given. 2. But it is contended by Mr. Dillon that this was a case in which the application made was an application under section 58 of the same Act. That is the section which provides for the circumstances in which the Register of share-holders may be rectified by a court during the continuance of a Company. By section 147, a court is empowered, when a Company is in liquidation, to make orders under the circumstances set out in section 58. Section 58, however, only gives autho-rity to pass orders in a case where a Company is a going concern. All applications made for rectification of the Register after liquidation must be made under and by virtue by the authority conferred by section 147. We find it impossible to say that the present case is not a case to which the limitation imposed by section 169 applies. We, therefore, under the provisions of that section, decline to hear the appeal, and order that the appellant do pay the cost of the respondents.