Cuming, J.@mdashThis is an appeal against an order of the learned Subordinate Judge of Assansole rejecting an application under Order IX, Rule
13 to set aside two decrees which had been passed ex parte. The ground for refusing the application is that ""it was not maintainable. The facts
appear to be these. A certain suit was instituted on the 13th February 1922 for recovery of certain royalty which had been made a charge on the
property. A preliminary decree was passed on the 31st October 1924 and the final decree was passed on the 17th November 1924. Both these
decrees were passed ex parte. The present applicant is a puisne mortgagee under a mortgage deed executed in June 1921 and is now in
possession. Admittedly he was not a party to the suit.
2. It seems to me that the application was rightly rejected. Order IX, Rule 13 provides that ""In any case in which a decree is passed ex parte
against a defendant, he may apply to the Court by which the decree was passed for an order to set it aside; and if he satisfies the Court that the
summons was not duly served or that he was prevented by any sufficient cause from appearing when the suit was called on for hearing, the Court
shall make an order setting aside the decree as against him. Now, admittedly the applicant was not a defendant in the suit and he does not come
within the purview of Order IX, Rule 13. The learned Advocate who appears for him contends that this case comes within Section 146 of. the
Code which provides as follows: ""Save as-otherwise provided by this Code or by any law for the time being in force, where any proceeding may
be taken or application made by or against any person, then the proceeding may be taken or the application may be made by or against any
person claiming under him."" I do not think that this case comes within the terms of the section.
3. Section 146 would not, I think, enable a pusine mortgagee who is not a party to the suit to maintain an application under Order IX, Rule 13. Let
us suppose for the sake of argument he was allowed to make the application and the ex parte decree was set aside. He would surely not be a
party to that suit and the defendant could, once more allow the suit to be decreed ex parte.
4. The order of the learned Subordinate Judge is right and the appeal must be dismissed with costs. I assess the hearing fee at 3 gold mohnrs.
Chakravarti, J.
5. I agree. The learned Advocate for the appellant relied upon the case of Sitaramaswami v. Dulla Lakshmi Narasamma 48 Ind. Cas. 840 : 41 M.
510 : 8 L.W 21 in support of his contention that a person who was not a party to a suit was held entitled to come u/s 146, C.P.C, and allowed to
file an appeal against a final decree. It appears to me that that case is clearly distinguishable for two reasons; first, because the interest of the
appellant in that case accrued after the institution of the suit; and the second ground on which I think the present case is distinguishable is that it was
not an application under Order IX, Rule 13 but an appeal against a final decree. This case, therefore, is no authority for the proposition which, the
learned Advocate wanted to establish in the present case. I think, therefore, this appeal is not maintainable. I agree, there-fore with my learned
brother that this appeal should be dismissed with costs.