Judgment.- The petitioner has preferred this revision against the order of the learned District Munsiff overruling his objection to the interpleader suit filed by the 1st respondent in the revision. The suit filed by the petitioner was one for recovery of a sum of Rs. 600 due under a pronote executed by the 1st respondent in favour of Garudamma and transferred to him. In the written statement filed by the respondent to that suit by the petitioner he pleaded inter alia that the original promisee Garudamma was not in law entitled to transfer the pronote in question and that the adopted son of Garudamma was entitled to the amount and further that he had already paid Rs. 200 on behalf of the pronote amount to Garudamma in the presence of the petitioner himself, who is no other than the maternal uncle of the original promisee. Issues have been framed in the original suit. After the framing of the issues, in consequence of certain notices issued by the adopted son to the respondent claiming the amount due on the promissory note, the respondent filed an interpleader suit to which objections have been taken by the petitioner. In the plaint of the interpleader suit the respondent has pleaded more or less the same ground as set out in the written statement filed by him to the previous suit filed by the petitioner. Therein he raised the contention that the transfer was without legal authority, that the original promisee was only the holder of life estate, that she was not entitled to dispose of any property, that the adopted son was the person properly entitled to claim the amount, and that he had discharged the pronote in part by payment of a sum of Rs. 200 during the lifetime of the original promisee. The question now is whether this interpleader suit could be entertained and whether there is sufficient justification for allowing the respondent to file the suit. This suit is obviously filed under section 88 of the Civil Procedure Code. Mr. Neti Subrahmanyam appearing for the petitioner has invited my attention to the decision reported in Hari Karmarkar v. J.A. Robin and two others1, which is more or less on facts similar to those contained in the present petition.
This suit is obviously filed under section 88 of the Civil Procedure Code. Mr. Neti Subrahmanyam appearing for the petitioner has invited my attention to the decision reported in Hari Karmarkar v. J.A. Robin and two others1, which is more or less on facts similar to those contained in the present petition. In that decision it has been held that if the plaintiff in the interpleader suit was found to have any interest in the subject-matter of the suit or that if he was found to have colluded with one of the claimants, then the right to file an interpleader suit could not be availed of by him. On the facts of the present case it is evident both from the written statement filed by the 1st respondent as also the plaint filed by him in the interpleader suit that he has sufficient interest in seeing that the claim of die petitioner is defeated. The contents of the written statement as well as the plaint would point out only to that fact. Besides there is also ample evidence to show that the 1st respondent is in collusion with one of the claimants, namely, the adopted son. In this view I do not think that there is enough justification for allowing the 1st respondent to file the interpleader suit. In this connection Mr. Subrahmanyam has also invited my attention to a decision in National Insurance Co. v. Dhirendra Nath2. The principle laid therein is that in order to enable a party to file an interpleader suit the party should be in a position to walk out of the suit with a mere claim for costs and shall not be entitled! to have any other matter of contest between himself and the claimants. In this case the fact that the 1st respondent is claiming to have paid Rs. 200 already to the original promisee and is also raising contentions which have to be gone into at length to find out whether the transfer is valid, whether the petitioner is a holder in due course and so forth will certainly not bring the interpleader suit within the scope of section 88 of the Civil Procedure Code. On the other hand, Mr. Kothandaramiah appearing for the respondent has referred to a decision in Secretary of State v. Mir Muhammad1.
On the other hand, Mr. Kothandaramiah appearing for the respondent has referred to a decision in Secretary of State v. Mir Muhammad1. I do not think the facts of that case apply to the facts in the present case. In my view the requirements of section 88 are not satisfied in the, present case so as to enable the 1st respondent to file the interpleader suit. The! learned District Munsiff, therefore, is not right in having allowed the 1st respondent to file the suit. The order of the lower Court is set aside. This revision petition is, therefore, allowed with costs. K.C. ----- Petition allowed.