M. Sundararajalu Naidu Vs Natesa Mudaliar and Others

Madras High Court 27 Jul 1949 Civil Revision Petition No. 417 of 1949 (1949) 07 MAD CK 0022
Bench: Single Bench
Result Published
Acts Referenced

Judgement Snapshot

Case Number

Civil Revision Petition No. 417 of 1949

Hon'ble Bench

Krishnaswami Nayudu, J

Advocates

G.R. Jagadesa Iyer, for the Appellant; T.S. Venkatarama Iyer, for the Respondent

Final Decision

Allowed

Acts Referred
  • Civil Procedure Code, 1908 (CPC) - Section 52

Judgement Text

Translate:

@JUDGMENTTAG-ORDER

Krishnaswami Nayudu, J.@mdashThis revision petition arises in execution proceedings. The petitioner who is the decree-holder in S. C. S. No.

173 of 1947 filed the said suit for recovery of a sum of Rs. 148-7-0 due on a promissory note dated 29th March 1944 executed by one Ramiah

Mudaliar, the undivided son of defendant 1 and brother of defendants 2 to 5 and father of defendants 6 to 8, for the benefit of the joint Hindu

family consisting of himself and the defendants, in his capacity as the managing member of the family. Defendant 1, the father, raised a plea that

there was an oral partition by division in status in 1929 and that the estate in his hands was not liable. The learned District Munsif passed a decree

directing the defendants to pay Rs. 145-10-0 with interest and costs out of the properties and assets of Ramiah Mudaliar in their hand. The

petitioner filed E. P. No. 8 of 1949 for attachment of the standing crops and by an interim order the standing crops on the lands were attached. E.

A. No. 17 of 1949 was an application filed for the appointment of a receiver to take possession of the standing crops and sell the same and

deposit the realisations into Court. On this application an order was made appointing a receiver who took possession of the crops, sold the

proceeds and deposited the amount realised in Court. Defendant l filed a claim petition in E. A. No. 36 of 1949 for raising the attachment and by

the time the application came up for hearing most of the crops on the land had been harvested and the sale proceeds were deposited in Court. An

order was made on 31st January 1949 that as more than the decree amount had been deposited into Court, the- attachment was raised,

apparently the attachment relating to the crops other than those harvested already by the receiver. In the main execution petition E. P. No. 8 of

1948, defendant 1 raised an objection that the crops were raised by him after the decree was passed in 1947 and as such they do not belong to

the estate of the deceased Eamiah Mudaliar and hence not liable to be attached. He also raised a further contention that even the lands on which

the crops were raised do not form part of the estate of the deceased. In support of these objections, defendant l filed an affidavit wherein he again

referred to the oral partition by division in status in 1929 which was denied by the petitioner decree-holder in his counter affidavit. The learned

District Munsif did not however give a definite finding as to whether the lands on which the crops were raised formed part of the estate of the

deceased but held that he was of the opinion that the attachment of the crops was illegal because the crops, under no circumstances could be said

to belong to the estate of the deceased, as the decree was passed in 1947 and the crops were admittedly raised after that date. Though a clear

finding has not been given whether the lands formed part of the estate of the deceased or not, it is clear that the District Munsif proceeded on the

assumption that the lands were part of the estate of the deceased, but that, in any event, the crops having been raised by defendant l subsequent to

the decree in 1947 out of his own efforts and exertions himself meeting the expenses of cultivation, they could not be said to form part of the assets

of the deceased and therefore the crops were not liable to be attached in execution of the decree.

2. The learned counsel for petitioner relies on the Full Bench ease in Kadirveluswami Nayagar v. Eastern Development Corporation, 47 Mad.

411: A. I. R. 1924 Mad. 530 where it is held that on the death of a debtor, the income accruing to his heir from landed property of which the

debtor died possessed, is assets of the debtor in the hands of the heir, liable to satisfy his debts within the meaning of Section 52, Civil P. C. This

ruling of the Full Bench was followed in Manzur Husain v. Firm Ram Rattan Shah Rajmal, A. I. R. 1936 Lah. 236:165 I. C. 802 where the learned

Judge held that where the estate in the hands of the heirs of the original debtor against whose estate the decree was passed is liable for the

satisfaction of the decree, then even the produce and income of that estate which has accrued after the death of the original debtor is liable to

attachment and sale in satisfaction of such decree. Here it is contended that the standing crops having been raised by defendant 1, it could not be

said to represent the income as such of the estate. It may be that defendant 1 may be entitled to the cultivation expenses and to any expenses

which the might have incurred in raising the crops. But I am unable to agree with the learned District Munsif that under no circumstance the crops

could be said to form part of the estate of the deceased. I am of opinion that the learned District Munsif is in error in holding that the crops are not

liable to be attached. I therefore allow the civil revision petition with costs.

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