Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 10
PETITIONER:
PURUSHOTTAM UMEDBHAI & CO.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S. MANILAL AND SONS (IN CONNECTED APPEALS)
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
07/10/1960
BENCH:
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
BENCH:
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
SARKAR, A.K.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION:
1961 AIR 325 1961 SCR (1) 982
CITATOR INFO :
R 1965 SC1718 (4)
RF 1967 SC 278 (6)
R 1969 SC1267 (4,6)
R 1978 SC 484 (12)
ACT:
Pleadings--Suit by foreign firm in firm name--Plaint, if a
nullity--Application for amendment of plaint for
substitution of names of Partners instead of the name of the
firm--Maintainability--Code Civil Procedure, 1908 (Act V of
1908), s. 153--O. XXX rr. 1, 2--O. 1, rr. 10(1), 10(2).
Partnership--Power of Attorney--Partner if can execute power
on behalf of all partners--Indian Partnership Act, 1932 (IX
of 1932) ss. 4, 18 and 19(2).
HEADNOTE:
The respondent a firm carrying on business in Singapore
filed a plaint in the firm name against the appellants for
the breach of contract. The plaint had been signed and
verified on behalf of the firm by one ’D’ on a power of
attorney executed by one of the partners only. After about,
6 years the respondents made an application for the
amendment of the plaint. The amendment sought was to the
effect that the name of the firm as plaintiff be struck off,
as it was a misdescription and in its place and stead the
names of five partners of the firm should be brought on
record in order to bring the controversy between the proper
parties into clear relief.
The amendment petition was rejected, inter alia, on the
grounds that the original plaint was no plaint in law and it
was not a case of misnomer or misdescription, nor a case of
a nonexistent firm or a non-existent person, but a legal
bar, as the plaint was a nullity. The proper course when
there is such a mistake is not to amend disregarding the
condition of 0. i r. 10 of the Code of Civil Procedure but
to seek the Court’s permission to withdraw the suit with
liberty to file a fresh suit under 0. 23 r. i of the Civil
Procedure Code on the ground of formal defect and which
should be done before limitation.
In appeal the High Court came to the conclusion that the
description of a plaintiff by a firm name in a case where
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 10
the Code of Civil Procedure does not permit a suit to be
brought in the firm name should properly be considered a
case of description of the individual partners of the
business and as such a misdescription, which in law can be
corrected and should not be considered to amount to a
description of non-existent person.
It also rejected the contention that the power of attorney
in favour of D was insufficient.
983
Held, that the word,’ firm" or the "firm name " in s. 4 Of
the Indian Partnership Act is merely a compendious
description of all the partners collectively. Where a suit
is filed in the name of a firm it is still a suit by all the
partners of the firm unless it is proved that all the
partners had not authorised the suit.
The provision of 0. XXX r. 1 & 2 of the Code of Civil Pro-
cedure are enabling provisions to permit several firms who
are doing business as partners to sue or be sued in the name
of the firm and do not prevent the partners of a firm from
suing or being sued in their individual names, nor do they
prohibit the partners of a firm suing in India in their
names individually although they may be doing business
outside India; since a firm is not a legal entity the
privilege of suing in the name of a firm is permissible only
to those persons, who as partners are doing business in
India. Such privilege is not extended to persons who are
doing business as partners outside India. In their case
they still have to sue in their individual names. If
however, under some misapprehension, persons doing business
as partners outside India do file a plaint in the name of
their firm they are misdescribing themselves, as the suit
instituted is by them, they being known collectively as a
firm.
A plaint filed in a court in India in the name of a firm
doing business outside India is not by itself a nullity. It
is a plaint by all the partners of the firm with a defective
description of themselves for the purpose of the Code of
Civil Procedure. A civil court could permit under
provisions of S. 153 of the Code an amendment of the plaint
to enable a proper description of the plaintiffs to appear
in it in order to assist the court in determining the real
question or issue between the parties. Neither r. 10(i) nor
r. 10(2) of Order I have any application to a case of this
kind, as the suit had been from its very inception a suit by
the partners of the firm and no question of adding or
substituting any person arises, the partners collectively
being described as a firm with a particular name.
Held, further, that it is not necessary that the power of
attorney should be signed by all the partners of the firm.
A partner is an agent of the firm and there is no
prohibition to a partner executing a power of attorney in
favour of an individual authorising him to institute a suit
on behalf of the firm.
Vyankatesh Oil Mill Co. v. Velamahomed, A.I.R. 1928 Bom.
191, disapproved.
Amulakchand Mewaram v. Babulal Kanalal, A.I.R. 1933 Bom.
304, Sadler v. Whiteman, [1910] 1 K.B. 868, Mura Mohideen v.
V.O.A. Mohomed, A.I.R. 1955 Mad. 294 and Kasturchand
Bahiravdas v. Sagarmal Shriyam, (1892) I.L.R. 17 Bom. 413,
discussed.
Hajee Sattar Hajee Peer Mohomad v. Khusiram Benarsilal,
I.L.R. [1952] 1 Cal. 153, referred to.
984
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 10
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE, JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 178 and
179 of 1960.
Appeals by Special Leave from the Judgment and Decree dated
the 18th December, 1958, of the Calcutta High Court in
Appeals from Original Orders Nos. 108 and 138 of 1957
respectively.
B. R. L. Iyengar for the Appellants (In both the appeals.)
N. C. Chatterjee and D. N. Mukherjee for the Respondents
(In both the appeals).
1960. October 7. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
IMAM J.-These are appeals by special leave against the order
of a Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court dated
December 18, 1958, setting aside the order of P. B.
Mukherjea, J., dated February 8, 1957, whereby he rejected
the petition of the respondent for amendment of the plaint,
filed in Suit No. 1452 of 1951 in the High Court, in
exercise of its Ordinary Original Civil jurisdiction.
The plaint in Suit No. 1452 of 1951 was filed in the name of
Manilal & Sons, a firm carrying on business at No. 11A,
Malacca Street, Singapore. The partners of this firm were
five in number. They were (1) Manubhai Maganbhai Amin (2)
Pravinbhai Dahyabhai Patel (3) Gangabhai Iswarbhai Patel (4)
Bachubhai Manibhai Amin and (5) Dahyabhai Trikambhai. The
defendant was the firm of Purushottam Umedbhai & Co. (now
the appellant)-a firm registered under the Indian
Partnership Act, 1932-carrying on business at No. 55 Canning
Street, Calcutta. In July, 1949, there was a contract
between the plaintiff and the defendant under which the
defendant was to sell to the former, subject to certain
conditions, 950 bales of Heavy Cees gunny bags c. i. f.
Singapore to be shipped from Calcutta in August, 1949. It
was also agreed between the plaintiff and the defendant in
July-August, 1949, that the latter would sell, subject to
certain conditions, 600 bales of Heavy Cees gunny bags c. i.
f. Hong Kong to be shipped from Calcutta
985
in August, 1949. According’ to the plaintiff, the defendant
did not perform the contract entered into by the parties and
as a result of the default on the part of the defendant the
plaintiff had suffered loss. The plaintiff accordingly
claimed compensation to the extent of Rs. 2,73,864 and Rs.
7,850 towards expenses incurred, in all Rs. 2,81,714. The
breach of the contract is alleged to have taken place in
October and November, 1949. The suit was instituted on
April 2, 1951. The defendant’s written statement was filed
on or about May 21, 1951. The petition for amendment of the
plaint was filed on January 31, 1957. The amendment sought
was to the effect that the name of the firm Manilal & Sons
as plaintiff be struck off and in its place and stead the
names of the five persons who were the partners of the firm
may be entered in the plaint as plaintiffs. The petitioner
also sought ’the necessary consequential amendments in the
body of the plaint. According to the petition praying for
amendment, on January 29, 1957, the solicitors of the
plaintiff received a letter from the attorney of the
defendant to the effect that inasmuch as the firm Manilal &
Sons was carrying on business at Singapore, an objection
would be taken on behalf of the defendant that the suit, as
framed, was null and void and not maintainable. The suit
had been pending in the court of P. B. Mukherjea, J., and
appeared on the peremptory list, for the first time, on
January 3, 1957. According to the petition, the petitioner
was advised that as the misdescription of the plaintiff was
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 10
a bona fide one, the names of the partners of the firm
Manilal & Sons should be brought on to the record in order
to bring the controversy between the proper parties into
clear relief. Accordingly, the petitioner filed the
petition for amendment.
On a Chamber Summons being taken out, Mukherjea, J., heard
the matter and rejected the petition for amendment. He was
of the opinion that the original plaint was no plaint in law
and therefore was a mere nullity of a process. The proper
course, when there is such a mistake, is not to amend,
disregarding the conditions of O. I, r. 10 of the Civil
Procedure Code,
986
but to seek the Court’s permission to withdraw the suit with
liberty to file a fresh suit under 0. xxIII, r. 1 of the
Civil Procedure Code on the ground of formal defect and
which should be done before limitation. In his opinion, it
was not a case of misnomer or a misdescription. It was not
a case of a nonexistent firm or a non-existent person or of
a wrong description but of a legal bar; and when a plaint is
filed showing that the plaintiff was not a legally recog-
nised person at all such a plaint must be regarded as a
nullity. He was also dissatisfied with the explanation
given for filing the petition for amendment some six years
after the institution of the suit.
In appeal, the Division Bench of the High Court came to the
conclusion on a consideration of various decisions of the
High Courts in India and the courts in England that " the
description of a plaintiff by a firm name in a case where
the Code of Civil Procedure does not permit a suit to be
brought in the firm name should properly be considered a
case of description of the individual partners of the
business and as such a misdescription, which in law can be
corrected and should not be considered to amount to a
description of a non-existent person ". It also rejected the
contention on behalf of the defendant that the Power of
Attorney in favour of Dunderdale was insufficient. The
contention had been that this Power of Attorney did not
authorize Dunderdale to act on behalf of the the firm far
less the individual members of the firm. The Division Bench
accordingly allowed the amendment prayed for and permitted
the names of the individual partners of the firm Manilal &
Sons to be substituted as plaintiffs in the place of Manilal
& Sons. The individual partners were permitted either to
sign the plaint themselves or through their constituted
attorneys. The Division Bench allowed this amendment on the
condition that all the costs of the appellant before us
incurred upto the date of the judgment must be paid to it.
The Division Bench also allowed the appeal against the
decree of P. B. Mukherjea, J., dismissing the suit, which it
set aside. Appeal No. 179 of 1960 is by
987
special leave against the aforesaid order of the Division
Bench.
It was urged on behalf of the appellants that (1) the plaint
as filed was a nullity. The suit, therefore, was
incompetent. To bring on the record the partners of the
firm amounted to addition of new parties and if on the date
these partners are added as parties and the period of
limitation had elapsed then the entire suit would be time
barred; (2) even if it be held that the plaint is not a
nullity, neither the provisions of 0. 1, r. 10 nor those of
0. VI, r. 17 have any application to the case; (3) having
regard to the provisions of s. 45 of the Indian Contract Act
a suit by only one partner or one promisee is bad to start
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 10
with. There being within the period of limitation no suit
by all the partners, any amendment, if allowed, would
convert the old suit into a new suit and the new suit would
be barred by limitation if the amendment was allowed on a
date which was beyond the period of limitation prescribed
for such a suit; (4) if the amendment was allowed it would
be a case of adding or substituting new plaintiffs and as
regards them it would be deemed to have been instituted when
they were made parties. Reference to s. 22(1), Indian
Limitation Act, was made in this connection. In the present
case, so far as the new plaintiffs were concerned, the suit
was barred by time at the date when they were sought to be
made parties; (5) the circmstances of the case indicated
that there was no suit in the eyes of the law, nor was the
plaint verified or signed as required by law. Consequently,
there was no proceeding before the court in which any
amendment could be sought and (6) even if it was held that
the plaint was not a nullity the plaint had been signed and
verified on behalf of the firm Manilal & Sons by Dunderdale
on a Power of Attorney executed by one of the partners only.
It was therefore not manifest that all the partners intended
to sue. Furthermore, the Power of Attorney executed in
favour of Dunderdale by one of the partners could not be
regarded as authorizing him to to act on behalf of the firm
of Manilal & Sons.
Very great reliance was placed on the decision of
988
Blackwell, J., in the case of Vyankatesh Oil Mill Co. v. N.
V. Velamahomed (1) where the learned Judge held that the
suit was brought by an entity which had no legal existence
in the eyes of Indian law and there being no mode of
procedure whereby such an entity was permitted to sue in
India, the suit, as framed, was not maintainable at all. It
followed therefore that the amendment asked for could not be
treated as an amendment following upon a mere misdeseription
but must be treated as an application for the substitution
of the individual persons who composed the entity which the
law did not recognize. This view of Mr. Justice Blackwell
was not accepted by Beaumont, C. J., in.the case of
Amulakchand Mewaram v. Babulal Kanalal Taliwala (2) where he
expressed himself as follows:
"I must confess that I have some difficulty in
following both the reasons and the conclusions of the
learned Judge in that case. It was a case of a suit brought
in the name of a firm carrying on business outside British
India, and therefore not justified by the terms of 0. 30,
Civil P. C. and the learned Judge expressed the view that
the plaintiff firm was a nonexistent entity. But the order
which he subsequently made giving leave to amend seems
inconsistent with that finding."
He further held:
" But I do not see how 0. 30 can affect the question of
fact, whether a suit brought in the name of a firm in a case
not within 0. 30 is in fact a case of misdescription of
existing persons, or a case of a suit brought by a non-
existent entity."
In the case of Hajee Sattar Hajee Peer Mahomad v. Khusiram
Benarsilal (3), the Calcutta High Court did not accept the
view expressed by Blackwell, J. it referred to the following
observation of Farwell, L. J., in Sadler v. Whiteman(4):-
"In English law a firm as such has no legal existence;
partners carry on business both as principals and as agents
for each other within the scope of the
(1) A.I.R. 1928 Bom. 191.
(3) I.L.R. [1952] 1 Cal. 153.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 10
(2) A.I.R. 1933 Bom. 304, 305.
(4) [1910] 1 K.B. 868, 889.
989
partnership business; the firm name is a mere expression,
not a legal entity, although for convenience under Order
XLVIII-A it may be used for the sake of suing and being
sued."
In the case of Mura Mohideen v. V.O.A. Mohomed(1) the Madras
High Court dissented from the opinion expressed by
Blackwell, J. and the, learned Judges stated :
"We are unable to agree with Blackwell, J. in his view
that a foreign firm not being a legal entity which could as
such file a suit under the Civil P. C., by itself determines
the question whether the impleading of the members of that
firm is the addition of a new party. The view of Blackwell,
J. appears to have been concurred in by two decisions
reported in-’ Neogi Ghose and Co. v. Nehal Singh’, AIR 1931
Cal. 770 (F) and-, L. N. Chettiar Firm v. M.P.R.M. Firm’,
AIR 1935 Rang. 240 (G), but we are unable to agree with the
soundness of the reasoning in these decisions either of
which do not furnish any further reasons in support of the
view of Blackwell, J."
The Madras High Court then concluded as follows:
"If however imperfectly and incorrectly a party is
designated in a plaint the correction of the error is not
the addition or substitution of a party but merely clarifies
and makes apparent what was previously shrouded in obscurity
by reason of the error or mistake. The question in such a
case is one of intention of the party and if the Court is
able to discover the person or persons intended to sue or to
be sued a mere misdescription of such a party can always be
corrected provided the mistake was bona fide vide 0.1, R.
10, C.P.C. Such an amendment does not involve the addition
of a party so as to attract S. 22(1), Limitation Act. Suits
by or on behalf of dead persons stand in a different
category. The principle that a misdescription could be
corrected by amendment could not obviously be applied to
such a case but this is far from saying that merely because
the law does not recognise the firm as being a legal entity,
the firm
(1) A.I.R. 1955 Mad. 294, 297, 299.
126
990
name could not indicate or designate the individuals
Composing the firm."
"To sum up, the situation is analogous to a case where
an individual who has an alias or an abbreviated name by
which he is sometimes called initially describes himself in
that name but subsequently applies to have it rectified so
as to describe in the manner in which he is most generally
known. There cannot be any doubt that by the correction in
the name, a new plaintiff is not added so as to attract s.
22(1), Limitation Act. A trade name either of a person or a
group of individuals carrying on business in partnership is
in true an alias for the person or the group."
Before the introduction of O. XXX in the Code of Civil
Procedure apparently suits were instituted, particularly in
the Mofussil courts, in the name of a firm or were
instituted against a firm in the firm name and no objection
was generally taken. Presumably this practice was largely
based on the assumption that the suit concerned was either
by all the partners of the firm or against all the partners
of the firm. If, however, an objection were to be taken
that a suit in the name of a firm was not maintainable
because it had no legal entity, the courts would have to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 10
decide whether the suit had been instituted by non-existent
persons. If so, the suit was not maintainable. In the case
of Kasturchand Bahiravdas v. Sagarmal Shriram (1), which was
before the introduction of 0. XXX in the Code, the suit had
been brought in the name of the firm Kondanmal Sagarmal by
its manager Sagarmal Shriram. The defendants objected that
one Malamchand was also a partner in the firm and should be
made a party. He was accordingly added as a plaintiff on
the 27th of January, 1888. The defendant then contended
that the suit was barred under s. 22, Limitation Act. It
was held by the Bombay High Court that it was a case of
misdescription and not of non-joinder for the action was
brought in the name of the firm by its manager. The
introduction of 0. XXX into the Code
(1) (1892) I.L.R. i7 Bom. 413.
991
prevents such an objection being taken because it permits
two or more persons carrying on business of the firm to sue
or be sued in the name of the firm but the firm must be
carrying on business in India. The introduction of this
provision in the Code was an enabling one which permitted
partners constituting a firm to sue or be sued in the name
of the firm. This enabling provision, however, accorded no
such facility or privilege to partners constituting a firm
doing business outside India. The existence of the
provisions of 0. XXX in the Code does not mean that a plaint
filed in the ’name of a firm doing business outside India is
not a suit in fact by the partners of that firm
individually.
Section 4 of the Indian Partnership Act, 1932, hereinafter
referred to as the Act, states that :
" " Partnership " is the relation between persons who have
agreed to share the profits of a business carried on by all
or any of them acting for all.
Persons who have entered into partnership with one another
are called individually " partners " and collectively " a
firm " and the name under which their business is carried on
is called the " firm name "."
It is clear from this provision of the Act that the word "
firm " or the " firm name " is merely a compendious
description of all the partners collectively. It follows,
therefore, that where a suit is filed in the name of a firm
it is still a suit by all the partners of the firm unless it
is proved that all the partners had not authorized the suit.
A firm may not be a legal entity in the sense of a
corporation or a company incorporated under the Indian
Companies Act but it is still an existing concern where
business is done by a number of persons in partnership.
When a suit is filed in the name of a firm it is in reality
a suit by all the partners of the firm. If 0. XXX had not
been introduced into the Code and a suit had been filed in
the name of a firm it would not be a case of a suit filed by
a nonexistent person. It would still be a suit by the part-
ners of a firm, the defect being that they were described as
a firm. In order to clarify matters a court would permit an
amendment by striking out the name
992
of the firm and replacing it with the name of the persons
forming the partnership. It would be a case of
misdescription. Even if the provisions of 0. 1, r. 10 and
0. VI, r. 17 did not strictly apply the amendment could be
permitted under s. 153 of the Civil Procedure Code because
it was not a case of either adding parties or substituting
parties. The High Court referred to a number of decisions
to which no particular reference need be made but they do
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 10
support the view taken by the High Court that in the present
case the plaintiff described in the plaint as the firm of
Manilal & Sons was a mere misdescription capable of
amendment and not a case where a plaint had been filed by a
non-existent person and therefore a nullity.
We now refer to certain provisions of 0. XXX, C.P.C. Order
XXX, r. 1, C.P.C. states:
" (1) Any two or more persons claiming or being liable as
partners and carrying on business in India may sue or be
sued in the name of the firm (if any) of which such persons
were partners at the time of the accruing Of the cause of
action, and any party to a suit may in such case apply to
the Court for a statement of the names and addresses of the
persons who were, at the time of the accruing of the cause
of action, partners in such firm, to be furnished and
verified in such manner as the Court may direct.
(2) Where persons sue or are sued as partners in the name of
their firm under sub-rule (1), it shall, in the case of any
pleading or other document required by or under this Code to
be signed, verified or certified by the plaintiff or the
defendant, suffice if such pleading or other document is
signed, verified or certified by any one of such persons ".
This rule enables any party to a suit filed in the name of a
firm doing business in India to apply to the court for a
statement of the names and addresses of the persons who were
at the time of the accruing of the cause of action partners
in the firm to be furnished and verified in such manner as
the court may direct. Order XXX, r. 2 states:
" (1) Where a suit is instituted by partners in the name of
their firm, the plaintiffs or their pleader shall,
993
on demand in writing by or on behalf of any defendant,
forthwith declare in writing the names and places of
residence of all the Persons constituting the firm on whose
behalf the suit is instituted.
(2) Where the plaintiffs or their pleader fail to comply
with any demand made under sub-rule (1), all proceedings in
the suit may, upon an application for that purpose, be
stayed, upon such terms as the Court may direct.
(3) Where the names of the partners are declared in the
manner referred to in sub-rule (1), the suit shall proceed
in the same manner, and the same consequences in all
respects shall follow, as if they had been named as
plaintiffs in the plaint:
Provided that all the proceedings shall nevertheless
continue in the name of the firm ".
This makes it obligatory, in the case of a suit instituted
by the partners in the name of the firm, on demand in
writing by or on behalf of any defendant, to declare in
writing the names and places of residence of all the persons
constituting the firm on whose behalf the suit is
instituted. If the plaintiffs fail to comply with the
demand made under sub-r. (1) of this rule, all the pro-
ceedings in the suit may be stayed on such terms as the
court may direct. Under sub-r. (3) if the names of the
partners are declared in the manner referred to in sub-r.
(1) the suit shall proceed in the same manner and the same
consequences in all respects shall follow as if they had
been named in the plaint, provided that all the proceedings
shall nevertheless be continued in the name of the firm.
Rule 1 of 0. XXX is a general provision. Rule 2, however,
is confined to a suit instituted by partners in the name of
the firm. It is clear from this rule that although the suit
is filed in the name of the firm a disclosure has to be
made, on demand in writing by or on behalf of any defendant,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 10
of names and places of residence of all the persons
constituting the firm on whose behalf the suit is
instituted. The provisions of r. 2 would indicate that
although the suit is filed in the name of a firm, it is
nonetheless a suit by all the partners of the firm because
if a disclosure of the names of the partners is
994
asked for by any defendant, on such disclosure, the suit
shall proceed as if the partners had been named as
plaintiffs in the suit, even though the proceedings shall
nevertheless be continued in the name of the firm. It is
clear, therefore, that the provisions of 0. XXX, r. 1 and r.
2 are enabling provisions to permit several persons who are
doing business as partners to sue or be sued in the name of
the firm. Rule 2 would not have been in the form it is if
the suit instituted in the name of the firm was not regarded
as, in fact, a suit by the partners of the firm. The
provisions of these rules of 0. XXX, being enabling
provisions, do not prevent the partners of a firm from suing
or being sued in their individual names. These rules also
do not prohibit the partners of a firm suing in India in
their names individually although they may be doing business
outside India. Indeed, this was not disputed on behalf of
the appellant. Since, however, a firm is not a legal entity
the privilege of suing in the name of a firm is permissible
only to those persons who, as partners, are doing business
in India. Such privilege is not extended to persons who are
doing business as partners outside India. In their case
they still have to sue in their individual names. If,
however, under some misapprehension, persons doing business
as partners outside India do file a plaint in the name of
their firm they are misdescribing themselves, as the suit
instituted is by them, they being known collectively as a
firm. It seems, therefore, that a plaint filed in a court
in India in the name of a firm doing business outside India
is not by itself a nullity. It is a plaint by all the
partners of the firm with a defective description of
themselves for the purposes of the Code of Civil Procedure.
In these circumstances, a civil court could permit, tinder
the provisions of s. 153 of the Code (or possibly under 0.
VI, r. 17, about which we say nothing), an amendment of the
plaint to enable a proper description of the plaintiffs to
appear in it in order to assist the court in determining the
real question or issue between the parties. Strictly
speaking 0. 1, r. 10(1) has no application to a case of this
kind because the suit has not been instituted in the name
995
of a wrong person, nor is it a case of there being a doubt
whether it has been instituted in the name of the right
plaintiff. The provisions of 0. I, r. 10(2) also do not
apply because it is not a case of any party having been
improperly joined whose name has to be struck out or a case
of adding a person or a party who ought to have been joined
or whose presence before the court is necessary in order to
enable the court effectually and completely to adjudicate
upon and settle all the questions involved in the suit. The
suit has been from its very inception a suit by the partners
of the firm and no question of adding or substituting any
person arises, the partners collectively being described as
a firm with a particular name.
One of the partners Manubhai Maganbhai Amin was the Manager
of the firm Manilal & Sons. He had executed a Power of
Attorney in favour of four persons including one Dunderdale.
By this Power he authorized any one of these persons to sue
for recovery of moneys due to the firm from the firm Puru-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 10
shottam Umedbhai & Co., the appellant. It also empowered
these persons to appear and to represent the firm in any
court, in any jurisdiction-civil, criminal, insolvency,
original, appellate or otherwise-and before any official in
any suit or proceeding or matter and to make, sign, verify,
present and file any plaint. Dunderdale had signed and
verified the plaint in the present case. We have no doubt,
on a perusal of the Power of Attorney, that it authorized
Dunderdale to file the plaint on behalf of the firm Manilal
& Sons and also to verify it. It was suggested that this
was a Power of Attorney by Manubhai Maganbhai Amin for
himself and not for the firm of Manilal & Sons. As we
understand the Power of Attorney that is not so. No doubt
the Power of Attorney is not signed by all the partners of
Manilal & Sons but only by Manubhai Maganbhai Amin. In our
opinion, it was not necessary that the Power should have
been signed by all the partners of the firm because Manubhai
Maganbhai Amin was the manager of the firm. Under B. 18 of
the Act a partner is an agent of the firm for the purposes
of the business of the firm. Manubhai
996
Maganbhai Amin was therefore the agent of the firm as well
as its manager. It is to be noticed that under s. 19(2) of
the Act instances are stated where, in the absence of any
usage or custom of trade to the contrary, the implied
authority of a partner does not empower him to do matters
mentioned in cls. (a) to (h). It is significant that in
these clauses there is no prohibition to a partner executing
a Power of Attorney in favour of an individual authorizing
him to institute a suit on behalf of the firm. In these
circumstances, it cannot be said that at the time the plaint
was filed it was defective because the Power of Attorney in
favour of Dunderdale was not a Power of Attorney on behalf
of the firm and its partners. As the High Court has pointed
out, there is on the record now Powers of Attorney on behalf
of all the partners of the firm.
It seems to us that the Division Bench of the High Court
took a correct view in holding that the plaint was not a
nullity. It was a case of a suit instituted by all the
partners of a firm who were misdescribed as Manilal & Sons,
a firm carrying on business at No. 11A Malacca Street,
Singapore and., accordingly the learned Judges rightly
allowed the plaint to be amended on terms and conditions
stated in their order.
It follows therefore that the High Court was also right in
setting aside the decree of P. B. Mukherjea, J., dismissing
the suit.
These appeals accordingly fail and must be dismissed but, in
the circumstances, without costs.
Appeals dismissed.
1