Judgment CHHANGANI, J. ( 1 ) THIS is a defendants revision in a money suit. The plaintiff suwalal Mahajan, resident of Nathdiyas brought a suit against the defendant Hausoo for the recovery of Rs. 1280/- in the Court of the Munsif, Gangapur. The suit is being contested by the defendant. During the pendency of the suit, on 24-7-1958 the defendant, claiming to be an agriculturist, put an application under Section 5 of the Rajasthan Relief of Agricultural Indebtedness Act No. 28 of 1957 (hereinafter referred to the Act) for staying proceedings and to enable him to file an application under Section 6 of the Act before a Debt Relief Court. The petition was opposed by the plaintiff. The Munsif held that the defendant was an agriculturist but he refused to stay suit on the ground that the Act cannot have retrospective effect and that the petitioners case will have to be determined in accordance with the Mewar Agriculturist Relief Act, 1942. The petition was, therefore, held to be incompetent and was dismissed by him. ( 2 ) THE defendant has come in revision. The revision was originally heard in the involved and as there was no decision of this Court on the point, the matter was referred to a Division Bench. ( 3 ) WE have heard Mr. J. S. Chordia for the petitioner and Mr. S. L. Mardia on behalf of the respondent. The Munsif relied upon Section 24 of the Act, which reads as follows:-Section 24 "repeal.-- (1) The enactments specified in the Schedule to this Act and all laws amending the same shall stand repealed on the date this Act came into force. (2) Such repeal shall not affect any proceedings pending on the date of the commencement of this Act under any law so repealed before any court, board, tribunal or authority and all such proceedings shall continue and be heard and determined by the Debt Relief Court in accordance with such law as if this Act had not been passed. " Subsection (2) of Section 24 clearly saves from the operation of this Act any pending proceedings which shall continue to be heard and determined in accordance with the law in force before the commencement of the Act. The sub-section also makes it clear that pending proceedings shall be determined by a Debt Relief Court. ( 4 ) MR. J. S. Chordia contends that although.
The sub-section also makes it clear that pending proceedings shall be determined by a Debt Relief Court. ( 4 ) MR. J. S. Chordia contends that although. pending cases shall be determined in accordance with the old law yet they have to be tried by a Debt Relief Court. The language of Section 24 Sub-section (2) supports his contention. ( 5 ) MR. S. L. Mardia does not oppose this contention of the petitioners advocate. He has, however, invited our attention to the Revenue Departments Notification No. F. 1 (1681) Rev. D/57 dated May 2, 1958, according to which the Munsif Gangapur has been appointed as the presiding officer of the Debt Relief Court having pecuniary jurisdiction upto Rs. 5,000/-, and we are told that the present suit is being tried by the Munsif as a presiding officer of the Debt Relief Court. ( 6 ) IN view of the position discussed above while the Munsif was right in holding that the present suit shall be governed by the prior Mewar Law, he was not justified in dismissing the application completely inasmuch as he was not competent to try the suit as a Munsif. However, as the Munsif is now the Presiding Officer of the Debt Relief Court also, and is trying the suit in that capacity, the revision petition has, therefore, become infructuous. In the circumstances, we leave the parties to bear their own costs.