Meredith, J.This appeal, by defendant 2, is from a decision of the learned Subordinate Judge of Saran, dated 30th September 1937. The appellant, Mt. Jagpati Kuer, is the widow of Damri Sahu, who was a partner in a Samastipur firm known as Damri Sahu Halkhori Ram. The suit was for realisation of a sum of Rs. 11,240 by sale of certain properties of this firm specified in schedules II and III of the plaint. The plaintiffs, who are two sons of Halkhori Ram claimed to be partners in the firm and that they had acquired an equitable lien on the properties in question on account of a sum of Rs. 11,240 which, they said, had beed realised from them individually on account of the debts of the firm.
2. According to the plaintiffs, the firm was owned as follows: Damri Sahu and Kunja Sahu (both deceased) eight annas; Halkhori Bam (deceased) four annas three pies, and Bishun Prasad (deceased) three annas nine pies. The firm had branches at Calcutta and Matia, and the shares of each party were the same in the branches.
3. In the plaintiffs suit the firm Damri Sahu Halkhori Earn was made defendant 1. Defendants 2 to 5 are the heirs of Damri and Kunja, and defendants 6 and 7 the heirs of Bishun Prasad. Defendant 8, Rambaran Ram, was the gomashta of the Calcutta branch.
4. There was another firm in Samastipur known as Damri Sahu Srikant Prasad. The firm of Damri Sahu Halkhori Ram owned an eight annas interest in that firm, and defendants 9 to 11 were the holders of the remaining eight annas. Again at Darbhanga there was a firm, Damri Sahu Thakur Ram Ganga Prasad in which the firm Damri Sahu Halkhori Ram owneds a share of five annas four pies, while the remaining 10 annas 8 pies belonged to defendants 12 to 15.
5. The Calcutta branch of Damri Sahu Halkhori Ram had transactions with a Calcutta firm known as Dasrath Bhagat Gulabchand. There were adjustments from time to time, and ultimately a suit for the balance due was brought by Dasrath Bhagat Gulabchand against the partners of the firm of Damri Sahu Halkhori Ram. This was Suit No. 38 of 1928 of the Court of Chapra. The suit was decreed for a sum of Rs. 13,042 and odd, including interest and costs, against all eight defendants including Rambaran Ram, the gomashta, as defendant 8. This Rambaran Ram was sued as one of the partners, and was held liable with the other defendants, though the question as to whether he was a partner or not was left open as between the defendants inter se.
6. This decree was put into execution. The properties of the present plaintiff-respondents it is said were put to sale, and sold for a sum of Rs. 11,240. Other persons also held decrees against the firm, Damri Sahu Halkhori Bam. They applied for and were allowed rateable distribution, and accordingly the entire sum of Rs. 11,240 was applied towards satisfaction of claims against the firm. The plaintiffs claimed that as the debts were partnership debts they had an equitable lien on the partnership properties, and they sued to enforce that lien by sale of those properties specified in Schedule II and III, which were actually the shares which, they said, the firm of Damri Sahu Halkhori Bam held in the two other firms, Damri Sahu Srikant Prasad and Damri Sahu Thakur Ram Ganga Prasad.
7. A number of pleas were made in defence, including, for example, one by defendants 9 to 11 and 12 to 15 that the firm of Damri Sahu Halkhori Ram had no share in the other Samastipur firm and Darbhanga firm just mentioned (a question which was not decided); but the plea taken, which is now material, was that the suit as framed was note maintainable, as all the firms were going concerns and a suit by some of the partners in a firm to sell assets of the firm in satisfaction of their claim against it, or against other partners of the firm for contribution, would not lie without asking for dissolution of the partnership and general accounts.
8. The learned Subordinate Judge held that in fact the suit as framed was misconceived, and that the suit did not lie against the partnership property without a prayer for dissolution and taking accounts. Hence he dismissed the suit as regards the realization of the claim from the properties specified. He was of opinion, however, that he could give the plaintiffs a personal decree against the other partners of the firm for the amount realised from them in excess of their own share, since there was the usual general prayer in the plaint for any other relief to which the plaintiffs might be found entitled and since, to use his own words "on the facts it is abundantly clear that the debt which is also a decree debt is not in any real sense of the word a partnership debt."
9. In this view of the case, he decreed the suit in part with proportionate costs against defendants 2, 3 to 5, and 6 and 7 as partners in the firm. He dismissed the suit against defendant 9 and defendants 12 to 15 representing the other Samastipur firm and the Darbhanga firm, and he said nothing one way or the other with regard to defendants 1, 8, 10 and 11. It is clear that so far as defendants 10 and 11 were concerned, their names were omitted from the decree and the order portion of the judgment merely by clerical error, because in the body of the judgment the learned Subordinate Judge observed: "The suit will therefore be dismissed against defendants 9 to 11 as representing the firm Damri Sahu Srikant Prasad, as also against defendants 12 to 15 as representing the Darbhanga firm." With regard to defendants 1 and 8, the learned Subordinate Judge presumably intended that as against them also the suit should be dismissed, since he gave no decree against them, and he held that only the partners in the firm individually were liable.
10. The main point, which has been urged by Mr. MulHck on behalf of the appellant, is that a decree could not be given against the partners individually for the same reason that it could not be given against the firm, namely, that one partner in the case of partnership debts cannot sue another for contribution, his only remedy being a suit for dissolution and accounts. He conceded that a suit for contribution might lie where the debt was not really a partnership debt but he argued that the learned Subordinate Judge was quite wrong in the present case in holding that this was not a partnership debt, since the plaint, judgment and decree in Suit No. 38 of 1928 clearly showed that the debt was one for which the partnership was liable.
11. As subsidiary points, Mr. Mullick contended that in any case since no personal decree had been specifically asked for, no such decree could fairly have been given merely because the plaint contained the usual prayer for general relief, and he argued that the defendants were taken by surprise and might have had defences to put forward which they would have done had the pleading been more specified. He contended further that in fact out of the amount decreed in suit No. 38 of 1928, Rs. 10,050 had actually been realized out of the partnership assets, and indeed the present appellant had herself actually filed a suit (plaint Ex. 48) for contribution on the allegation that two villages sold for that sum of Rs. 10,050, villages Tajpur and Chehful, were her personal property. The amount realized from the present plaintiffs on account of the decree, he says, was only the balance of Rs. 3000, and in any case it could only be in respect of that sum of Rs. 3000 that they could claim contribution.
12. Lastly, he contended that if it were held, as the learned Subordinate Judge seemed inclined to do, that this was not a partnership debt inasmuch as it had merged in a decretal debt, then the decree made all eight defendants jointly and severally liable. Any defendant from whom the entire decretal amount had been realized could realize from any other defendant only one-eighth share, the liability being equally apportioned amongst all the defendants.
13. Upon Mr. Mullicks main point, it appears to me that the law is really quite clear. The learned Subordinate Judge has himself quoted from Lindley on Partnership, at p. 438: "In order to discharge himself from the liabilities to which a person may be subject as partner, veto partner has a right to have the property of the partnership applied in payment of the debts and liabilities of the firm.... In other words, each partner may be said to have an equitable lien on the partnership property for the purpose of having it applied in discharge of the debts of the firm.... The right, lien, quasi-lien, or whatever else it may be called, does not exist for any practical purpose until the affairs of the partnership have to be wound up, or the share of a partner has to be ascertained."
14. The law on this point has been briefly and clearly, stated in Halsburys Laws of England, new edition, Vol. 24, Article 918, p. 481 (corresponding to Vol. 22, Article 146, p. 75, old edition) in the following terms: "Partners are not, as regards partnership dealings, considered as debtor and creditor inter se until the concern is wound up or until there is a binding settlement of the accounts. It follows that one partner has no right of action against another for the balance owing to him until after final settlement of the accounts."
15. The English law was long ago laid down in the old case of Sadler v. Nixon 10 E.R. 1038: "One of several partners in trade, who pays money on account of his co-partners, cannot maintain an action against them for contribution on the ground that he made such payment not voluntarily but by compulsion of law."
16. The position of partners with regard to the partnership assets has been considered by the Privy Council in Gopal Chetty v. Vijayaraghavachariar AIR 1922 P.C. 115: "Where", they say, "a partnership has been dissolved but no account has been taken, the proper remedy of a partner in respect of an I asset received by another partner is to have an account taken; if his right to sue for an account is barred by limitation, he cannot sue the partner who has received the asset for a share in it." In other words, the only remedy of one partner against another in respect of partnership assets is by way of suit for accounts, and not a suit for contribution.
17. Mr. Mullick has also relied upon a recent case of the Calcutta High Court, Debesh Chandra Mukherjee v. Benoy Krishna Banerjee 43 C.W.N. 1214, There their Lordships laid down that when some of the partners of a firm borrow money from a third party and on a joint decree being obtained by the creditor, one of the borrowers pays up the amount and sues the others for contribution, the first question to determine is whether the debt was really a partnership debt arising out of the partnership business or a separate liability incurred by the borrowers jointly on their own account. If it was a partnership debt, the judgment-debtor paying up the decretal amount cannot sue his co-judgment-debtors for contribution in the absence of the other partners and without adjustment of the partnership accounts, unless there are special circumstances such as an express promise by the co-borrowers to indemnify the plaintiff. The mere fact that a joint decree was passed against the borrowing partners alone would not prove that the debt was a separate liability incurred by such partners jointly.
18. The rule of law exemplified in these cases is subject to the limitation that the debt must really be a partnership debt, and where the debt is collateral to or independent of the partnership, the principle is not applicable. This difference was made clear as far back as 1857 in the old case of Sedgwick v. Daniell157 E.R. 132. The plaintiff and defendants were share-holders in a Joint Stock Mining Company. Money being required to work in mine, T, who was also a share-holder, applied to a bank for an advance of 500, which they consented to make on the security of the joint promissory note of the plaintiff, defendant, and T. The note was given and the money advanced, and applied for the purposes of the mine. The plaintiff, having been compelled to pay more than his share of the note, sued the defendant for contribution. It was held that this was not a partnership transaction, and, therefore, that the action was maintainable. It will be observed that the liability was of three of the share-holders only, upon a joint promissory note. This proviso, as it might be called, to the general rule has been applied in many Indian cases; for example, the circumstances in which a suit for contribution will lie are clearly set out in Cuda Kulita v. Joyram Das 26 Cal. 262n. as follows: "A suit for contribution by a partner against some of his co-partners, on account of money paid by him for the satisfaction of a debt contracted by him jointly with the said co-partners, is maintainable in cases where the liability satisfied by the plaintiff is (1) not a joint liability of the entire partnership, or (2) where the said partners were some only of several persons comprising the partnership, and the bond was executed not in the usual course of business of partnership, and (3) where the co-partners expressly promise to contribute their share of debt after a decree has been passed upon the bond." Again, in Ghishulal Ganeshilal v. Gambirmal Pandya 62 Cal. 510 it was laid down that one partner has no right of action against another for the balance owing to him until after final settlement of accounts; but a partner may have a right of action against another for a debt which is independent of the partnership accounts.
19. Some of these eases might seem to imply that it is necessary to sue at the same time for dissolution of the partnership and for accounts. There are certain cases in which it has been held that in exceptional circumstances a suit for accounts may lie in respect of a partnership debt without asking for dissolution; for example, Kassa Mal v. Gopi 9 All. 120 where it was observed that only in exceptional cases could a suit be brought by one partner against another, which involved the taking of partnership accounts prior to dissolution. And again in C. Krishnaswami Naidu Vs. K. Jayalakshmi Ammal, where it was held that if a partner asks for an account without asking for a dissolution, the Court must be satisfied that there are special grounds for granting the prayer, which grounds must be alleged by the plaintiff, and the defendant must have an opportunity of showing cause against it.
20. Even if for any exceptional reasons, it may be possible to sue for contribution and accounts without asking for dissolution, there is no case so far as I am aware in which it has been held that a suit for contribution will lie respecting a partnership debt without asking for accounts. Dr. Mitter for the respondents has cited a number of cases, but all of them upon examination are found to observe the principles exemplified in the cases which I have just noted; and if in those cases suits for contribution by one partner against other partners were held maintainable, it was always because the debt was held to be not a partnership liability in the true sense, but a debt, independent of the partnership. For example, in Durga Prosonno Bose v. Raghunath Das 26 Cal. 254 , the money had been borrowed upon -the individual credit of the partners concerned. In Laban Sardar v. Choyen MullikA.I.R. 1915 Cal. 438, the money had been borrowed by the plaintiff and defendants jointly and was applied for the partnership business, but the money had been borrowed by them upon their individual credit for the purposes of the business, so that they, and not the firm itself, were the principal debtors. The same feature is to fee found in Arunachalam Servai Vs. K. Nottam Beer Varu Rowther, . That was a case where the partners had borrowed on their individual credit to raise money to pay off the partnership debt, and the borrowing moreover had been done after dissolution of the partnership. The only case in which a view inconsistent with the above principles appears to have been taken is Su. Ellappa Mudaliar Vs. A. Swaminatha Mudaliar, , where Ramesam, J. sitting singly, held that a partner who is made to pay the whole of the decretal amount for a partnership debt is entitled to maintain a suit for contribution as against other partners. That case is not an authority, and with all respect to the learned Judge who decided it I am unable to follow his reasoning, and I do not think lie states the law correctly.
21. Dr. Mitter has also relied upon a number of English cases, but in-all of them the distinction which I have noticed is clearly to be found. Thus, in Boulter v. Peoplow 137 E.R. 984, it is clear that the creditor had dealt with three partners only out of a number, and, it was observed, would probably not have dealt with a larger number. Those three partners alone, therefore had incurred a joint liability, and it was held that the contract was entirely collateral to the partnership. Batard v. Douglas118 E.R. 776, appears to have been a case of co-contractors merely, and not of a partnership at all.
22. Wooley v. Batte (1823) E.R. 172 was a case of joint tort-feasors, and no point regarding the rights of partners inter se appears to have been taken.
23. The law, in my view, as I have already said, is quite clear. If it is not a partnership liability, but an individual liability of any of the patners, then an action for contribution may lie, and in each case the question which has to be asked is whether the debt was really a partnership debt or not, and that is a question of fact. In the present case the learned Subordinate Judge appears to have appreciated the law, but he has held that the debt was not actually a partnership debt. In that finding he was, in my opinion, plainly wrong. The plaint (Ex. 65) in Suit No. 38 of 1928 makes it clear that the claim was against the partnership. It is stated therein "that the defendants to the suit are the proprietors of the firm Damri Sahu Halkhori Ram. There was monetary transaction between the firm of the plaintiffs and that of the defendants since a long time. Accordingly in 1333 Fasli, the firm of the defendants received Rs. 64,921-6-9 including previous balance and paid Rs. 51,443-11-0. Rs. 13,477-11-9 remained as balance. The amount received by the defendants in 1334 Fasli, including the previous balance amounted to Rs. 17,958-9-0 and Rs. 8348-8-0 was realized from the defendants. In 1335 Fasli the defendants firm received Rs. 21 and repaid Rs. 21. The amount due by the defendants firm upto 10th Asin Sudi 1335 Fasli, amounted to Rs. 9610-1-0. Defendant 8, a partner and gomashta made his signature and added interest at the rate of 1 per cent, per month. The last adjustment of account between the two firms was made on 10th Asin Sudi 1335 Fasli and Rs. 9610-1-0 was found due to the plaintiffs firm by the defendants firm... Demands were made on behalf of the plaintiffs on the firm of the defendants for payment of money. But Damri Sahu Halkhori Ram or the defendants did not pay the same." In the judgment in the case (Ex. C-4) appears the following: "From plaintiffs bahi khata as well as from certain bahis which were filed on behalf of the defendants firm by Rambaran Ram in the land registration case, items of which have been exhibited in this suit on behalf of the plaintiffs it is quite clear that plaintiffs claim as against the defendants firm is correct, and therefore plaintiffs are entitled to get a decree for the amount claimed against the defendants."
24. It is clear that the claim was against the firm and the Court held that the debt was a debt of the firm, and decreed the suit against the defendants not as individuals, but as partners of the firm. Dr. Mitter argues that though the parties to the present litigation were parties in that case, they were all defendants, and as between the present I plaintiffs and defendants the question is not, therefore, res judicata. It is quite clear however, from the terms of the present plaint that the plaintiffs have accepted that decision as correct, and have brought the present suit on that assumption. Thus para. 7 of the present plaint runs: "That the Calcutta branch had monetary transaction with the firm Dasrath Bhagat Gulabchand Ram." Paragraph 8 states: "That firm Dasrath Bhagat Gulabchand Ram instituted Suit No. 38 of 1928 for the realisation of Rs. 10,529-6-9 due from the firm at Calcutta." Paragraph 9 recites that in the said suit a decree was passed on 16th December 1929, for Rs. 12,013-4-9 with costs "and the liability for the payment of the same rested and rests with the firm Damri Sahu Halkhori Ram." In view of all this it cannot possibly be contended with any show of reason that the debt was not a partnership debt.
25. Dr. Mitter attempted to bring this case within the rule of Boulter v. Peoplow (1845) 137 E.R. 984 on the ground that the mukhtearnama (Ex. 15) of Rambaran Ram was executed not by all the partners of the firm, but only by two, Damri Sahu and Halkhori Ram. Therefore, he argues, when Rambaran Ram as agent signed an adjustment of accounts, he could have acted only for those two partners, and the liability was theirs alone. It appears probable, however, that Damri Sahu and Halkhori Ram signed the mukhtearnama as they were the managing partners. Apart from that, there is a short answer to the argument. The suit was not brought on any acknowledgment executed by Ram Baran as agent of some of the partners, but was a suit on bahi khata, and whether Rambaran was actually entitled to sign the adjustment on behalf of the firm as an agent or not, it is clear that he purported to do so.
26. Dr. Mitter has further pointed out that in that suit the firm as a firm was not separately made a defendant in accordance with the provisions of Order 30, Rule 1, Civil P.C. The decree, he argues, consequently was not a decree against the firm, but only a decree against individual partners, and it was a decree also against Rambaran, who was not a partner at all. As for Rambaran, he was sued as a partner, and the question whether he was actually a partner or not was left open. As for the fact that the firm itself was not made a defendant, that merely means that the special procedure provided by Order 30, Rule 1 was not adopted. This rule, however, is permissive, and not mandatory. It provides one mode of procedure, but it does not take away any existing right of suit, and since the partners in a firm in this country are jointly and severally liable for the debts of the firm, they can be sued individually even without naming the firm one of the defendants, just as has been done in the case under consideration. In Bibi Kazmi Begam Vs. Lachman Lal Sao and Others, it has been held by this Court that although the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, allows the plaintiff to sue the members of a firm not in their individual capacity but as a firm, it does not affect the law on the subject which is to the effect that a plaintiff bringing a suit against a firm may implead all the members of the firm as defendants in the suit. That seems to have been a case where the defendants had been impleaded without making the firm as such a defendant. It was argued accordingly that the suit could not be regarded as a suit on a hundi. Das, J. observed that he did not think there was anything at all in the point. The CPC merely provided a new procedure, and did not affect in the slightest degree the right of the plaintiff to bring on the record the different members of the firm.
27. In my view, the debt in the present case was clearly a partnership debt. The suit even as a suit for contribution was not, therefore, maintainable in the absence of any prayer for dissolution or for accounts. Mr. Mullicks main point must, therefore, succeed.
28. As the appeal succeeds upon this point, it is not necessary to consider Mr. Mullicks subsidiary points at any great length. With regard to his contention that a personal decree could not be given in the absence of any specific prayer for that relief, this seems to ignore the provisions of Order 7, Rule 7, Civil P.C. The case is analogous to the case where a personal decree is given in a suit brought upon a mortgage. In the present case the real claim of the plaintiffs was for the money, and they asked merely that their claim might be enforced, if possible, against certain specified property, upon which they claimed to have a lien. In my opinion, the form of the pleadings would not debar a personal decree had the suit been held to be maintainable.
29. As for the point that a portion of the decretal dues in Suit No. 38 of 1928 was realised by sale of partnership property and only Rs. 3000 by sale of the property of the plaintiffs, it is impossible to decide in the absence of any clear evidence on the record exactly how much of the sale proceeds of the plaintiffs property went towards the realisation of the decree in question. It is, however, in my view, quite unnecessary to decide that point. As I have already noticed, in para. 11 of the plaint it was alleged that besides the said decree other persons had obtained decrees for various sums against the firm Damri Sahu Halkhori Bam, and the said decree-holders had applied for rateable distribution, which was allowed. The essential feature of the plaintiffs case was that Rs. 11,240 of their money had been applied in satisfaction of claim against the firm, and that essential feature of the case does not seem to have been challenged at the trial, and the trial proceeded upon the basis, which seems to have been accepted by both sides, that the whole amount of Rs. 11,240 had gone towards the satisfaction of the firms debts.
30. Lastly, there is Mr Mullicks contention that as to the decree against eight defendants the claim of one partner against any other for contribution would have to be limited to one-eighth part of the total decretal amount. It may be the prima facie position that where a number of defendants are made jointly and severally liable and the entire decretal amount is realised from one, that one can sue his co-defendants for contribution of equal proportionate shares from each; but that is only the I prima facie position, and it may be shown that there are special circumstances in the case which render it inapplicable. That was clearly noticed in Arunachalam Servai Vs. K. Nottam Beer Varu Rowther, . In that case Srinivas Ayyangar, J. observed: "Prima facie when there is a decree against two persons jointly and severally, each is liable to contribute equally to discharge the decree, and there is always in such cases an implied contract of indemnity: that if one of them should be compelled to pay up more than his share, the other is bound to make good the same. This is, however, on the basis that the obligations of the defendant inter se are determined only by the decree and are not subject to any other rights or obligations. No doubt, if it should be established that, having reference to the facts of the particular case, such implied contract as between co-judgment-debtors should be deemed to be displaced, then the legal principle may not be applicable." I find myself in agreement with those observations.
31. The result is that the appeal must succeed, and the suit must be dismissed as against the appellant, defendant 2. It remains to consider the position with regard to the remaining partners against whom the decree has been made and who have not joined in this appeal, namely, defendants 3 to 5, 6 and 7. On the one side, there is the fact that the ground for the failure of the suit applies equally in. the case of all the partners, on the other side is the fact that as defendants 3 to 7 have not appealed within the period of limitation, the decree holders have acquired a valuable statutory right.
32. If the decree as against any of these defendants is to be altered, it could only be under the provisions of Order 41, Rule 4, Civil P.C., and Order 41, Rule 33, Civil P.C. These provisions are in wide terms and, in my view, do give the appellate Court ample power to pass such orders as it may deem just and proper and necessary to do full justice having regard to all the circumstances of the case; though it has been observed, and rightly observed, in a number of cases that they must not be so applied as to disregard other provisions of the law, such as those contained in the Limitation Act and the Court-fees Act. Now, let us examine the circumstances of the particular case before us. There are, practically speaking, two separable decrees. The suit has been decreed against defendants 2 to 5 jointly for a sum of Rs. 5620, and it has been separately decreed for a sum of Rs. 2634-6-0 against defendants 6 and 7. Though, formally, there is one decree, substantially there are two quite separate decrees against different persons, one for Rs. 5620 and the other for Rs. 2634-6-0. This is the position which Dr. Mitter has himself adopted on behalf of the respondents and has used it as an argument for not interfering with the decree against defendants 6 and 7 which, as he has rightly observed, is quite separable.
33. It appears to me that in these circumstances there is a wide difference between the case of defendants 6 and 7 and the case of defendants 3 to 5. Dr. Mitter has argued that Order 41, Rule 4 is not applicable to this case, because before it can be applied it is necessary that some one of the defendants should have appealed from the whole decree; but if the decree for Rs. 5620 against defendants 2 to 5 is regarded, as it must be, as a separable decree, then it seems to me that so far as it is concerned there has been an appeal against the whole decree. The appeal of defendant 2 has been valued at Rs. 6631-9-6, and the prayer of the appellant is that the appeal may be allowed, and the suit maybe dismissed to the extent of Rs. 5620. Thus, the prayer is for the dismissal of the decree as a whole so far as this sum is concerned, and court-fees have been paid accordingly. There is, therefore, no question of any deficit court-fee. Moreover, the decree against all four defendants 2 to 5 proceeds upon a common ground. Dr. Mitter has contended that in the case of defendant 3, the ground cannot be said to be common, inasmuch as defendant 3 did not appear in the suit. It appears to me, however, in the circumstances, that the non-appearance of defendant 3 can make no difference. So far as non-appearance is concerned, none have appeared before this Court, but the decree proceeds upon a ground common to all. It seems to me, it may fairly be said that there has been a competent appeal by defendant 2 so far as the entire decree for Rs. 5620 is concerned. The prayer is that the decree be set aside as regards that sum, and it has been established that on the merits that prayer is entitled to succeed. It is to be noticed that were this decree to be set aside as regards defendant 2, but not as regards defendants 3 to 5, it would involve penalizing defendants 3 to 5 in a manner which the decree itself has not contemplated, for, under the decree as it stands should any one of defendants 2 to 5 be forced to pay up the whole amount, then he will have a right of contribution against his co-defendants. But, if the decree be set aside against defendant 2, then the entire liability will be saddled on defendants 3 to 5, and the right of contribution will be gone. Should the decree be allowed to stand against defendant 3 only, then he would be even more heavily penalized, since he alone would be liable for the entire decretal amount without any right of contribution. In these circumstances it seems to me that this portion of the decree may fairly be set aside as a whole on the ground that the appeal has succeeded, and I see no reason why this decree, which has been shown to be wrong, should be maintained as against any of the persons who have been held jointly liable by the learned Subordinate Judge and who, according to the plaintiffs, are all members of a joint family.
34. With regard to defendants 6 and 7, the matter is quite different. The decree against them, as I have said, is separable. As such there has been no appeal against it, and Order 41, Rule 4 is clearly inapplicable; nor have court-fees been paid with regard to the amount decreed against defendants 6 and 7; nor has any explanation whatever been put forward for the failure of these defendants to prefer any appeal; nor will the maintenance of the decree against defendants 6 and 7 penalize them in any way which the decree itself does not already contemplate. As observed by Noor, J., in Ram Prasad Singh Vs. Mohan Mandal and Others, , Order 41, Rule 33 ought not to be applied to cases where there has been a distinct and separate decree against those defendants who. have not chosen to appeal. Again in Darogi Rai and Another Vs. Basdeo Mahto and Others, , the same learned Judge observed that where there are two distinct decrees against two different persons on two different causes of action, although in form there is only one decree, the appellate Court should not interfere with that part of the decree against which there has been no appeal. In Suraj Prakash Puri and Another Vs. Sant Lal Singh and Others, , this Court has laid down that Order 41, Rule 33, Civil P.C., 1908, is intended to enable the appellate Court, where its decision interferes with or modifies or extends the decision of the lower Court, to give effect to that decision by interfering, if necessary, even with rights and liabilities of those who have not in fact appealed from the decision of the trial Court; but it ought not to be applied to cases where there has been a distinct and separate decree against persons who have not chosen to appeal. Thus, it is clear that this is not a case to which Order 41, Rule 33 should be applied, and, as I have said, Order 41, Rule 4 is manifestly inapplicable. In the circumstances, in my view, there is no good reason why a right of appeal after it has lapsed should be handed out gratuitously to persons who have themselves neglected to avail of it, especially when they have not asked for it, and the interests of the case do not require it for the purpose of doing justice to the person who has appealed. Such a case is not one for the application by the Court of the 1 powers which Order 41, Rule 4 and Order 41, Rule 33 confer upon it.
35. In the result, therefore, I would allow the appeal with costs, dismiss the suit with costs as against the appellant, defendant 2, and without costs as against defendants 3 to 5. With regard to defendants 6 and 7, I would allow the decree to stand.
Shearer, J.
I agree.