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Kothandarama Routh v. Murugesa Mudali

Kothandarama Routh
v.
Murugesa Mudali

(High Court Of Judicature At Madras)

Second Appeal No. 1138 Of 1900 | 19-03-1903


[1] The question which has been principally argued in support of this second appeal is that the composition-deed to which among others the appellant was a party and which was executed after the order of the Insolvency Commissioner in the High Court was passed, and before the dismissal of the insolvent s petition and the re-vesting order, is inoperative to transfer the property comprised in the composition-deed to the plaintiff and other persons appointed as trustees and that it cannot therefore prevail against the attachment made by the appellant, though such attachment was made subsequent to the composition-deed.

[2] Having regard to Section 7 of the Indian Insolvency Act, 1848, we think that this argument is untenable. That section provides that in case after the making of any vesting order, the insolvent s petition should be dismissed, the vesting order shall from and after such dismissal become null and void subject, however, to the condition that all acts done by the Official Assignee prior to the dismissal of the petition shall be good and valid, a saving which would be unnecessary if the re-vesting had not retrospective effect. We may observe that the section does not provide that the estate shall revest in the insolvent without any conveyance or assignment by the Official Assignee, though a provision is made in the earlier part of the section for the vesting of the property in the Official Assignee without any conveyance or assignment by the insolvent. In our opinion the use of the phrase " null and void" has the effect of re-vesting the property in the insolvent retrospectively from the date of the vesting order, and provision is therefore made for validating all acts done by the Official Assignee in the interval between the date of the vesting order and the dismissal of the insolvent s petition.

[3] The view which we take of Section 7 is in accordance with that taken by a division bench of this Court in Ramaswami Kottadiar v. Murugsea Mudaliar I.L.R. 20 M. 452.

[4] Independently therefore of Section 43 of the Transfer of Property Act the

composition-deed will be operative to vest the property in the trustees.

[5] The attachment therefore was rightly raised on a claim made by the plaintiff as trustee under the composition-deed. The plaintiff is the only trustee now alive except one who had renounced the trusteeship without the intervention of the court in accordance with a power contained in the trust deed. It is clear that Section 244 of the Civil Procedure Code is no bar to this suit.

[6] The second appeal therefore fails and is dismissed with costs of the 1st respondent.

Advocates List

For the Appearing Parties ----

For Petitioner
  • Shekhar Naphade
  • Mahesh Agrawal
  • Tarun Dua
For Respondent
  • S. Vani
  • B. Sunita Rao
  • Sushil Kumar Pathak

Bench List

HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE BENSON

HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE BHASHYAM AIYANGAR

Eq Citation

(1904) ILR 27 MAD 7

LQ/MadHC/1903/29

HeadNote

A. Debt, Financial and Monetary Laws — Insolvency and Bankruptcy — Re-vesting of property in insolvent — Retrospective effect — Vesting order passed by Insolvency Commissioner — Composition-deed executed after vesting order and before dismissal of insolvent's petition and re-vesting order — Effect of — Held, vesting order is null and void and re-vesting of property in insolvent is retrospective from date of vesting order — All acts done by Official Assignee in interval between date of vesting order and dismissal of insolvent's petition are therefore validated — Indian Insolvency Act, 1848, S. 7