Sir Binod Mitter:- This is an appeal against the decision of the High Court of Patna, dated 29th March 1926 affirming the decision of the District Judge of Purneah, whereby it was held that a decree obtained by Dhanpat Singh dated 10th July 1896 cannot be executed against the respondent. Dhanpat Singh was the zamindar of Lot Saifganj in Pargana Haveli in the district of Purneah, and Chatterpat Singh was the holder of the patni of the said lot. He settled the same in several parcels with various darpatnidars amongst others with the father of the present respondent. Dhanpat sold his zamindari to Bhagwanbati on 27th June 1893. Dhanpat instituted a suit against the patnidar Chatterpat Singh on 21st September 1893, for arrears of rent due to him up to 27th June 1893, and obtained a decree which became final on 10th July 1896. On 19th July 1896, Dhanpat executed a deed of trust in favour of several trustees for the benefit of his son Maharaj Bahadur Singh (and they are hereinafter referred to as appellants or decree-holders) of several properties, including amongst others the decree of 10th July 1896. Dhanpat died on 2lst July 1896. Chatterpat again defaulted in the payment of rent of the putni and on 14th May 1900, Bhagwanbati, the purchaser, put up the putni for sale for arrears of rent for a period subsequent to her purchase. Mr. Forbes paid the arrears due to Bhagwanbati, amounting to Rs. 6,562-8, for the protection of his darputni tenure, and by such payment became a mortgagee of the entire putni under S. 13, sub-S. 4 of the Putni Regulation, and he was put into possession of the same under the same section. In execution of a money decree the right title and interest of Chatterpat in the putni tenure was sold on 1st September 1902, and one Surendra Naryan Singh purchased the same and obtained symbolical possession of the putni on 18th May 1902, although Mr. Forbes continued to be in actual possession. Thereafter there was litigation between the decree-holders and Surendra. The latter alleged that the decree was a money decree, but it was ultimately held between them that the decree was a rent decree creating a charge on the putni tenure under S. 65, Ben. Ten. Act.
Forbes continued to be in actual possession. Thereafter there was litigation between the decree-holders and Surendra. The latter alleged that the decree was a money decree, but it was ultimately held between them that the decree was a rent decree creating a charge on the putni tenure under S. 65, Ben. Ten. Act. The decree-holders applied on 9th May 1908, for execution of that decree against the judgment debtor and the execution case was numbered 11 of 1908. The putni was attached and sold in execution of the said decree, but the sale was ultimately set aside on 16th February 1911. Mr. Forbes on 9th July 1906 instituted a suit against the decree-holders and Surendra for a declaration that the decree was a mere money decree, and on 9th March 1914, it was ultimately held by their Lordships of the Judicial Committee that the decree of 10th July 1906, was not a decree for rent under S. 65, Ben. Ten. Act, creating a charge on the tenure, but only a money decree, and that the respondent in this appeal had a charge under the Putni Regulation, and in any event this charge was not affected by any charge under the Bengal Tenancy, Act. Their Lordships further held that the appellants were not entitled to execute the decree against the putni and they were restrained by a perpetual injunction from doing so. A. F. Forbes v. Maharaj Bahadur Singh AIR 1914 P. C. 111 : 41 Cal. 926 : 41 I. A. 91 (P. C.). In the meantime a suit numbered 240 of 1910 had been instituted by Surendra against the respondent, Forbes for accounts to which the decree-holders, that 13 Maharaj Bahadur and others, were not made parties. In that last mentioned suit a final decree for the sale of the putni was made under O. 34, R. 5, in favour of the respondent on 8th January 1917, and the property was sold at the instance of the respondent and purchased by the latter on 4th August 1917, for the sum of Rs. 2,000. The appellants, the present decree-holders, on 22nd January 1915, and on dates subsequent thereto, made various applications for execution of the decree against the judgment debtor and Surendra and the respondent. The last application was on 2nd December 1922. The details of such applications will be discussed later on.
2,000. The appellants, the present decree-holders, on 22nd January 1915, and on dates subsequent thereto, made various applications for execution of the decree against the judgment debtor and Surendra and the respondent. The last application was on 2nd December 1922. The details of such applications will be discussed later on. The application on 2nd December 1922, was against the respondent and asked for process against him for the sale of the putni mahal. This application was dismissed by the trial Judge on 16th April 1924, on the ground that the respondent was not a representative of the judgment-debtor and that the decree could not be executed against him. The trial Judge further held that the application of 2nd December 1922, was not a continuation of the application of 9th May 1908, but was a fresh application within the meaning of S. 48, Civil P. C., and was barred by the law of limitation. The decree-holders appealed to the High Court of Judicature at Patna, and Das, J. one of the Judges, dismissed it, holding that, although the respondent as purchaser must be regarded as the representative of the mortgagor, he must also be considered as the representative-in-interest of the mortgagee and that the charge of the mortgagee is not extinguished in the hands of the respondent as purchaser of the property. He did not in that view express any opinion upon the other questions raised in the appeal. Mr. Justice Foster, the other Judge, held that by reason of the decision of the Judicial Committee in 1914 there was res judicata not only between the appellants and the respondent but also between the present appellants and Surendra, and he further held that the decree was barred by limitation. The present appeal is against the last-mentioned decision.
Mr. Justice Foster, the other Judge, held that by reason of the decision of the Judicial Committee in 1914 there was res judicata not only between the appellants and the respondent but also between the present appellants and Surendra, and he further held that the decree was barred by limitation. The present appeal is against the last-mentioned decision. The appellants in the present appeal contended, firstly, that the application of 2nd December 1922, was a continuation of the execution proceedings initiated by their application of 9th May 1908; secondly, that as it had been held that the decree created a charge on the putni against Surendra and as the respondent merely purchased the equity of redemption from Surendra, the decree-holders must be deemed to be in the position of a second mortgagee of the putni and were entitled to sell the equity of redemption in the hands of the respondent, but they conceded that if the respondent insisted, then they would have to redeem the respondent; and thirdly, that Mr. Justice Foster was wrong on the question of res-judicata. Mr. Dube, for the respondent, disputed all these contentions. Their Lordships will now refer to the various applications for execution in some detail. On 22nd January 1915, the decree-holders applied for execution of the decree of 10th July 1896, whereby they prayed that the rent decree might be converted into a money decree and that Surendra be made one of the judgment-debtors and they be allowed to take further proceedings in the execution case. Surendra, on 27th March 1915, alleged that he was not a representative of the judgment-debtor's interest in the putni, and that the same had been extinguished by his purchase and that the decree was barred by limitation. On 19th March 1917, the decree-holders on the footing of the decree being merely a money decree, applied for attachment of other properties belonging to Chatterpat Sing. Before this application was disposed of and on 4th August 1917, the respondent, as has already been stated, had purchased the putni mahal in execution of his decree. On 23rd November 1918, the decree-holders, again on the footing of the decree being a money decree, applied for and obtained an order that certain personal properties of Surendra might be attached and sold and from such sale proceeds their claim be satisfied. On Surendra's application his properties were ordered to be released.
On 23rd November 1918, the decree-holders, again on the footing of the decree being a money decree, applied for and obtained an order that certain personal properties of Surendra might be attached and sold and from such sale proceeds their claim be satisfied. On Surendra's application his properties were ordered to be released. The decree-holders appealed against the order releasing Surendra's personal properties, and the appeal was dismissed on 24th March 1922. In dismissing the appeal, Mr. Justice Das said that, in his opinion, it was open to the decree-holders to proceed against the putni tenure in the hands of the respondent. This observation of the learned Judge was unnecessary for the purposes of his decision and was in no way binding on the respondent, who had not been made a party to the aforesaid proceedings. In the view that their Lordships take of limitation, it is unnecessary to decide any other questions involved in the appeal, and accordingly their Lordships express no opinion whatsoever on any of the other points decided by the High Court. Their Lordships observe that, after the decision of the Judicial Committee in 1914, the decree-holders by their application of 22nd January 1915, gave up the position that their decree created any charge on the tenure, and in all their subsequent applications they attempted to execute the decree against properties other than the putni tenure. They observe that on 19th March 1917, the decree-holders, in their application against Chatterpat, applied for process against properties other than the putni, and again on 23rd November they applied against Surendra for attachment and sale of properties other than the putni.
They observe that on 19th March 1917, the decree-holders, in their application against Chatterpat, applied for process against properties other than the putni, and again on 23rd November they applied against Surendra for attachment and sale of properties other than the putni. This course the decree-holders persistently took till the observation of Das, J., on 24th March 1922, to the effect that it was open to them to proceed against the putni tenure in the hands of the respondent Their Lordships have no doubt that the applications of 22nd January 1915, 19th March 1917, and 23rd November 1918, were essentially different in character from the application of 9th May 1908, and they are inclined to the view that the decree-holders had abandoned the application of 9th May 1908, which proceeded on the footing that their decree created a charge on the tenure, but in any event they are clearly of opinion that the combined effect of these previous applications marks such substantial departure from the original application of 9th May 1908, as to make it impossible to hold that the application of 2nd December 1922, was a continuation of the application of 9th May 1908. Their Lordships are, therefore, clearly of opinion that the application of 2nd December 1922, was a fresh application within the meaning of S. 48, Civil P. C., and that the execution of the decree of 10th July 1896, is barred by limitation. They accordingly will humbly advise His Majesty that this appeal should be dismissed with costs. Appeal dismissed.