Judgment :- 1. This appeal is directed against an order rejecting an application filed by the appellants for filing the suit as indigent persons under O. 33, R. 1, C.P.C. The appellants have stated in the petition filed before the Court below that they are not owning any movable or immovable properties of their own except the property described in the plaint schedule. The plaint schedule describes only two dhoties, two shirts and four skirts. Nothing has been mentioned in the plaint schedule but when P.W.I was examined in the course of the proceedings it was admitted by him that his wife died in an accident and he got provident fund amount of Rs. 10,000/-. He also admitted that he got in all a sum of Rs. 13,000/- and that his two children were getting Rs. 458/-. per mensem. No reference was made whatever to the said amounts in the petition for leave to file the suit in forma pauperis. 2. In such circumstances, the appellants have not disclosed the full particulars of their properties in the petition. In Chellammal v. Muthulakshmi Ammal 1 a Division Bench of this Court has held that under O. 33, R. 2, C.P.C, read with R. 5(a) thereof, it is the bounden duty of the petitioner to make a full and accurate verified statement of his or her properties. They have also affirmed the judgment in Kupuswami Naidu v. Varadappa Naidu 2 in which it has been held that utmost good faith is required of the petitioner in the matter of the disclosure of his or her assets and that any intentional departure from good faith, whatever the motive may be, must result in the dismissal of the petition. 3. It is contended by learned counsel for the appellants that the date on which P.W.I got the amounts are not brought out on the record. According to him, even though in the cross examination it was elicited by the respondents that the appellants got Rs. 13,000/- in all and Rs. 458/- per mensem for the two children, it is not shown to the Court that P.W.I got the amounts prior to the filing of the petition or at the time oi filing of the petition. This argument cannot be accepted. It is the duty of the appellants to have disclosed the relevant dates.
13,000/- in all and Rs. 458/- per mensem for the two children, it is not shown to the Court that P.W.I got the amounts prior to the filing of the petition or at the time oi filing of the petition. This argument cannot be accepted. It is the duty of the appellants to have disclosed the relevant dates. They should have placed before Court the material facts and pointed but that the amounts which they got earlier had already been spent or that they had not received the amount till then. When once it is brought out in the evidence that they had other amounts available with them, the non-disclosure thereof is sufficient to reject the application for leave to file the suit in forma pauperis. Hence the order of the Court below is unassailable. This civil miscellaneous appeal fails and it is dismissed. No costs.