JUDGMENT
Jwala Prasad, J.
1. This appeal arises out of a suit to recover Rs. 1,546-14-5 with interest at 24 per cent, per annum aggregating to Rs. 2,210-6-5.
2. The learned Subordinate Judge had decreed the suit. On appeal the learned Judicial Commissioner set aside the decision of the Subordinate Judge and dismissed the plaintiff’s suit. Hence the plaintiff has come in second appeal.
3. The facts are admitted. Plaintiff Ranglal Sahu purchased the tenure which belonged to the defendant Kali Shanker Sahai in execution of a mortgage-decree on the 7th March 3916. Prior to this plaintiff’s superior landlord-, the Maharaja of Chota Nagpur, had obtained a decree for rent and cess against the original tenure-holder Kali Shankar Sahai for the years 1966-1969 (corresponding roughly to 1909-1912). That decree was dated the 19th September 1913. In execution of that decree the tenure was advertised for sale and the plaintiff Ranglal Sahu paid the dues under that decree, Rs. 824 odd, on the 17th March 1916 and thus saved the tenure from being sold in execution of the decree. The landlord had obtained another decree for, arrears of lent for the years 1934 to part of 1916, that is, prior to the purchase of the plaintiff, against the original tenure-holder. The decree was put into execution and the tenure was attached. On the 8th September 1917, plaintiff Ranglal, however, filed a petition on the strength of his purchase under the mortgage-decree and got his tenure released from attachment. At that time Ranglal’s name was mutated in place of the original tenant in the landlord’s book. The landlord then sued Rantlal for arrears of lent for the same period, that is, 1974-1916, excepting the first year which was barred by limitation, and obtained a decree on contest on the 15th July 1916. In execution of this decree the tenure was advertised for sale, and Ranglal prevented the sale of the property by putting into Court the sum of Rs. 722-5-9, the amount due under the decree. On the 4th Match 1919, plaintiff commenced the action out of which this appeal has arisen for recovery of the afore-said two sums of Rs. 824 odd and Rs. 722-5-9, which he had paid in order to protect the property from sale. The said sums represent the arrears of rent due from the tenure when the original tenant Kali Shankar Sahai was in possession of it, that is, prior to the purchase of the tenure by plaintiff under the mortgage-decree.
4. The sole question for determination in this appeal is whether plaintiff can get himself re-imbursed of the aforesaid sums from the original tenant, Kali Shankar Sahai, the defendant in the present case.
5. Learned Counsel on behalf of the appellant has invoked the aid of Sections 69 and 70 of the Indian Contract Act in support of his contention that the plaintiff is entitled to recoup the said sums from the defendant. The Court below has overruled this contention and has held that the provisions of the aforesaid sections do not apply to the present case. In this view the learned-Judicial Commissioner is supported by the decisions in the cases, of Srimati Moharanee Dasya v. Harendra Lal Roy 1 C.W.N. 458, Maharaja Manindra Chandra Nundi v. Jamaher Kumari Bibi 9 C.W.N. 670 : 32 C. 634 and Peary Mohan Mukhopadhya v. Sreeram Chandra Bose 6 C.W.N. 794. It is not disputed by Mr. Sen that the a oresaid authorities apply to the present case. The first two cases are on all fours with the present one. In the case of Srimati Moharani Dasya v. Harmara Lal Roy 1 C.W.N. 458, as in the o present case, the plaintiff had purchased the tenure in execution of his mortgage-decree and then paid the money due under the decree obtained by the landlord against the tenure-holder for arrears of rent for. a period anterior to the confirmation of sale. It was held that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover the money paid by him for satisfying the rent-decree. Similarly in the case of Peary Mohan Munhopadhya v. Sreeram Chandra Bose 6 C.W.N. 794, the plaintiff purchased a putni taluk in execution of a rent-decree and subsequently paid the decree for rent obtained by the landlord for a period anteridr to that of the rent-decree in. execution of which plaintiff had purchased the property. It was held in that case that the purchaser was not entitled to contribution from the original tenant against whom the rent-decree was obtained. These cases lay down that the purchaser of a tenure purchases the property who the incumbrance of rent dire from the original tenant with respect to the tenure in question at the date of his purchase, the rent being the first charge. He must be deemed to have knowledge of the prior incumbrances and the existence of an incumbrance must have affected the price which he offered at the auction-sale. The cage of Srimati Giribala Delia v. Srimati Ranee Mina Kumari 5 C.W.N. 497, goes to the length of saying that the arrears of rent due in respect of the property sought to be sold is a material fact which, must be notified at the time of the sale of the properly. The purchaser therefore purchases the property with the liability of the prior rent charges. In short, the trend of the view expressed in the ca se referred to above seems to be that the liability to pay the prior rents, due for a period prior to the purchase (as in the ca se of the plaintiff in the present case) is that of the purchaser and in discharging the rent charges or in paying the rent decrees, he simply discharges his own liability and not that of the original tenant. Therefore the purchaser is not entitled to recover the prior rent charges paid by him from the original tenant. ” Mr. Sen virtually says that the aforesaid authorities were wrongly decided and in support of his contention, he refers to the following cases, Dakhina Mohan Roy v. Saroda Mohan Roy 21 C. 142 : 20 I.A. 160 : 17 Ind. Jur. 576 : 6 Sar. P.C.J. 366 : 10 Ind. Dec. (N.S.) 727 (P.C.), Mahatha Harsankar Sahai v. Bandhu Sahu 22 Ind. Cas. 720, Mohendra [Suchand Ghosal] v. Bhuban [Balaram Mardana] 6 Ind. Cas. 810 : 38 C. 1 : 14 C.W.N. 945 : 12 C.L.J. 566, Prosonno Kumar Basu v. Jamaluddin Mahomed 15 Ind. Cas. 55 : 18 C.W.N. 327 and Sera fat Ali v. Issar Ali 42 Ind. Cas. 30 : 45 C. 491 : 27 C.L.J. 607 : 22 C.W.N. 347.
6. In Dikhina Mohan Roy v. Saroda Mohan Roy 21 C. 142 : 20 I.A. 160 : 17 Ind. Jur. 576 : 6 Sar. P.C.J. 366 : 10 Ind. Dec. (N.S.) 727 (P.C.), the plaintiff obtained possession under ‘he decree of the High Court, of a rent paying estate and he paid the rents and cesses in default of which payment the estate would have been sold. The High Court decree was after wards reversed by the Privy Council. In 1885 the defendant obtained possession of the estate in execution of the High Court decree, and the plaintiff claimed the revenue and cesses paid by him while he was in possession of the property. Lord Macmaghten in delivering the judgment if the Judicial Committee observed: “It seems to their Lordships to be common justice that when a proprietor in good faith pending litigation makes the necessary payments for the preservation of the estate in dispute, and the estate is afterwards adjudged to his opponent, he should be recouped what he has so paid by the person who ultimately benefits by the payment, if he has failed through no fault of his own to reimburse himself out of the rents.” There can be no doubt that. the plaintiff in that case had paid the revenue and cess believing the property to be his own and with a view to protect it from being sold for arrears of Government revenue. The payment was to save the estate from sale, and the defendant having ultimately been adjudged to be the rightful owner of the estate was therefore benfitted by the same. The-plaintiff was interested in the payment because at the time when he made the payment he believed to be–and in fact’ he was under the decree of the High Court–the rightful owner of the property. The tenure in the present case has been lost for good to the defendant and the preservation of the tenure by payments of the rent-decrees in question benefitted not the defendant but the plaintiff who had, prior to the payments, acquired title in the properly. Therefore the important element which is essential for the application of the principles of Sections 69 and 70 of the Indian Contract Act and on the basis of which the plaintiff in the. aforesaid Privy Council case was declared entitled to recover from the defendant the sums paid by him, is wanting in the present case. The case of Mohendra [Suchand Ghosal] v.Bhuban [Balaram Mardana] 6 Ind. Cas. 810 : 38 C. 1 : 14 C.W.N. 945 : 12 C.L.J. 566, was really case of a co-sharer haying discharged the liabilities on the property, and’ he was therefore held entitled to recover the sums paid by him which benefited his co-sharers. In that case the entire tenure was sold in execution of rent-decrees obtained against only some of the co-sharer defendants. The plaintiff co-sharer who was not made a party in the rent-suit deposited under Section 310 of the Code of Civil Procedure, with the approval of the Court, the entire sums due under the decrees and thus had the sale set aside. This was case of contribution. The case of Prosonno Kumar Basu v. Jamaluddin Mahomed 15 Ind. Cas. 55 : 18 C.W.N. 327 is again one of a co-sharer so also are Serajat Ali v. Issar Ali 42 Ind. Cas. 30 : 45 C. 491 : 27 C.L.J. 607 : 22 C.W.N. 347 and Saknl Singh v. Chanderdip Lal 49 Ind. Cas. 627 cases of contribution among co-sharers. In a case of contribution the principles of the very sections of the Indian Contract Act, namely, Sections 43 68, 69, 70 and 72 would apply. The present case is not one of a co-sharer nor is it a suit for contribution.
7. The case of Mahatha Harsankar Sahai v. Bandhu Sahu 22 Ind. Cas. 720 relied upon by the learned Counsel does not seem to support him so far as Section 69 is concerned, for it was held that the claim of the purchaser to recover from the outgoing tenant the amounts under the prior rent decrees could not be supported by Section 69 of the Act. Their Lordships, however, allowed the claim under Section 70 of the Indian Contract Act. No reason has been giver for this view, nor the cases referred to in the earlier part of this judgment, in which a contrary view was taken seem to have been noticed in the case. “Whereas the facts of the cases relied upon by Mr. Sen are not similar to those of the present case, the facts of the cases upon which the learned Judge has relied are on all fours with the present case. Therefore if this case was to be decided upon the authority of decided cases, there is no doubt that the contention of Mr. Sen must fail.
8. It appears to me however that upon a true construction of Sections 09 and 70, there is hardly any room for doubt-that they do not afford any assistance to Mr. Sen in his contention that the present case is roverned by the provisions therein contained. True, a decree for rent binds not only the tenure but also the holder thereof for the payment of the same, and the decree-holder may at his option proceed against the person and other properties of the judgment-debtor instead of against the tenure concerned. If in the present case the landlord had proceeded against the person and other properties of the tenant defendant’ then no question would have arisen that the plaintiff who had purchased the tenure was not in any way interested in the payment of the said decrees. That event, however, did not occur. The landlord proceeded against the tenure itself. Having elected thus to proceed against the tenure he precluded himself from in any way proceeding against the person and other properties of the judgment-debtor so long as, the tenure was not sold and the amount fetched at the sale was not sufficient to pay off the decrees in question. The latter event also did not happen because the plaintiff paid oft the decrees before the properties were sold. But for aught we know from the result of the sale in the mortgage decree in which the plaintiff purchased the property, it was a very valuable property worth about Rs. 35,000, and the rent decrees in question would have very easily been, paid off out of the sale-proceeds without driving the landlord to tire necessity of proceeding against the person and other properties of the judgment-debtor, for the balance-of any decretal amount left unrealised by the sale-proceeds 01 the tenure in question, the landlord in the present case proceeded against the tenure and advertised the same for sale, and thus all danger to the person and other properties of the judgment-debtor ceased. Therefore he was not interested in the payment of the rent-decrees in. order to protect has person and other properties. In the tenure itself y he was not interested, his entire interest having ceased by the purchase thereof by the plaintiff. Therefore the defendant was not interested in. the payment of the rent-decrees, and the plaintiff and the same simply to protect his own property which he had already purchased. As has already been, shown the plaintiff was bound in law to pay the prior rent decrees and charges with the incumbrances of which he purchased the properly in question. Therefore the important element of Section 69, namely, that defendant should have been bound by low to jay the sums of the decrees which the plaintiff paid is wanting in. the present case. Now as to the benefit by the payment in question, the tenure was saved; defendant was not interested in the tenure; therefore, no benefit accrued to him, and unless any benefit accrued to the defendant by the payment made by the plaintiff the defendant was not liable under Section 70 of the Indian Contract Act. Consequently Section 70 has no application.
9. I, therefore agree with the views expressed in the decisions relied upon by the learned Judicial Commissioner and dismiss the appeal with costs.
Ross, J.
10. I agree.