Bajpai, J.@mdashThis is a reference by the Munsif of Tilhar through the District Judge of Shahjahanpur on two questions of law on which the
Court below entertains a reasonable doubt and they have been sub-mitted to us for our opinion. The facts are that one Kalyan Singh held a simple
money decree, No. 939 of 1929 of the Small Cause Court of Tilhar against Ajudhia Prasad. The first application for execution of the decree was
made on 11th March 1932, and the application which has given rise to the present reference is an application for execution dated 19th March
1937, and execution is sought by attachment and sale of the agricultural produce of Ajudhia Prasad, the judgment-debtor. Presumably the decree
has been kept alive. Ajudhia Prasad has objected, and his contention is that he is an agriculturist within the meaning of the U.P. Agriculturists''
Relief Act, Local Act 27 of 1934, and u/s 6 no decree passed by a Civil Court against an agriculturist shall be executed by attachment or sale of
agricultural produce after a period of four years calculated from the date of the filing of the first application for execution. As we said before, the
first application for execution was made on 11th March 1932, and the present application dated 19th March 1937 has been filed more than four
years after the first application and is for attachment and sale of the agricultural produce of the judgment-debtor. The learned Munsif has therefore
asked us to give an opinion on the following two points:
(1) Whether Section 6, Agriculturists'' Relief Act, only applies to decrees passed after the commence-ment of the Agriculturists'' Relief Act or also
to decrees passed prior to its commencement?
(2) Whether the ''first application for execution'' referred to in Section 6 means the first application for execution made after the commencement of
the Agriculturists'' Belief Act or the first application for execution of the decree whether made before or after the commencement of the
Agriculturists'' Relief Act?
2. It seems that it was argued before the Court below by the decree-holder that the operation of Section 6 was limited to decrees passed after the
commencement of the Act and the first application for execution mentioned in the section applied to the first application after the commencement of
the Act, and the argument seems to be based on the principle that the Legislature has no authority to pass a law which may have the effect of
curtailing or divesting vested rights. The learned Munsif is of the opinion that the Section applies both to decrees passed prior to the
commencement of the Act and after it and that the ""first application for execution"" referred to in Section 6 means the ""first application for execution
made after the commencement of the Act."" He holds the view that proviso 2 of Section 6 makes a reference to Section 5 which applies both to
decrees passed prior to the commencement of the Act and also after it and that gives a clear indication that Section 6 was intended to apply to all
decrees whether passed before or after the commencement of the Agriculturists'' Belief Act, but the expression ""first application for execution"" in
Section 6 cannot be given a retrospective effect because that would have the effect of curtailing the valuable period of limitation.
3. The word ""decree"" and the phrase ""first application for execution"" occurring in Section 6 are not qualified by any limitations and are general in
their application; the Section, as it reads, would apply to ""all decrees"" and to ""all first applications for execution,"" and the only question that we
have got to decide is whether we ought to impose any limitations by reason of any well recognized principle. Now it cannot be denied that the
Legislature has full authority to pass retrospective laws even to the divestment of vested rights; but when it intends to do so, it must do so by clear
expression or unmistakable indication on the face of the law itself. It was held in Lal Mohan Mukerjee v. Jogendra Chunder Roy (1887) 14 Cal.
636 (F.B.) by a Bench that:
The provision of an Act which creates a new right cannot in the absence of express legislation or direct implication, have a retrospective effect.
4. In the absence of any such guides to the ascertainment of the intention, the presumption is that a statute depriving the subject of a vested right is
not retrospective. Maxwell in his book on the Interpretation of Statutes, Edn. 7, p. 187 says that:
Every statute which takes away or impairs vested rights acquired under existing laws or prejudicially affects the legal character of past transactions
by creating a new obligation, attaching a new disability or imposing a new duty must be presumed to be intended not to have a retrospective
operation.
Such a presumption however does not exist where a statute is remedial and merely affects the procedure in Courts of justice, and where its
language in terms applies to all actions, whether before or after the Act, the new procedure may be retrospectively applied, but where the change
in procedure is complicated by the divestment of preexisting right the presumption against its retrospectively revives in its full strength : see the
observations of Westropp C.J. in In the matter of Ratnsi Kalianji (1877) 2 Bom. 148 at page 180.
5. It is well established that nobody has a vested right in procedure, and statutes of limitation, as distinguished from statutes of prescription, are
generally regarded as Acts regulating procedure and would govern all proceedings from the moment of their enactment even though the cause of
action might have accrued before the Acts came into existence. Section 6, Agriculturists'' Belief Act, when it says that a decree shall not be
executed by attachment or sale of the agricultural produce of an agriculturist judgment-debtor after a period of four years from the date of the filing
of the first application for execution, does curtail the limit of time prescribed for execution by Section 48, Civil P.C., which says among other things
that no order for the execution of a decree shall be made upon any fresh application presented after the expiration of 12 years from the date of the
decree sought to be executed. A litigant has no vested right in any period of limitation, and a suit or proceeding is ordinarily governed by the law of
limitation which is, actually in force at the time when it is instituted, and in the absence of any hard-ship or injustice the provisions of the Section
under discussion have to be construed retrospectively. All that has been enacted is that if a decree-holder wants to execute his decree by
attachment or sale of the agricultural produce of an agriculturist judgment-debtor, he must apply within four years of the ""first application for
execution."" Any other remedy by way of execution and which might be taken within the limit of 12 years prescribed by Section 48, Civil P.C., still
remains intact. It is to be observed that this limit of 12 years also occurs in a procedural Act, and thus no substantive rights seem to have been
interfered with by the enactment of Section 6, Agriculturists'' Belief Act. Like the learned Munsif, we are of the opinion that the word ""decree
appearing in Section 6 applies both to decrees passed prior to the commencement of the Act and after it, and unlike the learned Munsif we are of
the opinion that the words ""first application for execution"" occurring in the same Section also apply to ""first applications for execution"" made before
or after the commencement of the Act, and these are our answers to the two questions referred to us.