Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DOKKU BHUSHAYYA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KATRAGADDA RAMAKRISHNAYYA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
27/04/1962
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
SUBBARAO, K.
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1962 AIR 1886 1963 SCR (2) 499
ACT:
Civil Procedure-Decree against minor-Execution and sale-
Application for setting aside sale-Compromise by guardian-
Leave of Court not obtained-Whether binding on minor-Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908 (Act V of 1908), s. 14, O. 32, r. 7.
HEADNOTE:
One B obtained a decree for money against the appellant and
his father. The appellant was a minor and was represented
by his maternal grandfather as his guardian. In execution
certain properties were sold and the appellant filed an
application for setting aside the sale through his guardian.
The guardian entered into a compromise with the decree hold-
er and the auction purchaser under which the application was
withdrawn. Subsequently the sale was confirmed. After at-
taining majority the appellant filed a suit for setting
aside the order for withdrawal of the application for
setting aside the sale and for a rehearing of that
application on the ground that the guardian bad not obtained
the leave of the court as required by O.32, r : 7 Code of
Civil Procedure before entering into the compromise.
Held, (per Suhba Rao and Mudholkar, jj., Sarkar, J. contra)
the O.32, r.7 was not applicable to the withdrawal of the
application for setting aside the sale and the order for
withdrawal of that application was binding on the appellant,
Order 32, r. 7 is applicable only to "an agreement or
compromise with reference to the suit", and there are the
following limitations to its applicability: (i) it is
applicable only where the rights put in issue in the suit
are involved and not to mere procedural steps; (ii) it is
applicable only during the pendency of the suit which
includes execution proceedings; and (iii) the agreement or
compromise must be with a party to the suit. Though the
application for setting aside the sale was an application in
execution of the decree, the agreement or compromise entered
into by the guardian with the auction purchaser to withdraw
the application did not affect the rights and liabilities
declared by the decree and therefore leave of the court
under O.32, r.7 was not necessary. Section 141 of the Code
500
could not be utilised to, make O.32, r.7 applicable to the
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agreement in question. as s. 141 was applicable to original
proceedings and not to proceedings in execution.
Virupakshappa v.Shidappa and basappa. (1901) I.L.R. 26 Bom.
110, Arunachellam Chetty v. Ramanadhan Chetty, (1906) I.L.R
29 Mad. 309 Muthalakkammal v. Narappa Reddier, (1933) I.L.R.
56 Mad. 430, Jitendra Nath Roy v. Samarendra Nath Mitter
(1943) L.R. 70 I.A. 68, Katneni Venkatakrishnayya v.
Garapati China Kanakayya, I.L.R. (1938) Mad. 819 and Thakur
Prasad v. Sheikh Fakir Ullah, (1894) L.R. 22 I.A. 44,
referred to.
Per Sarkar, J.-The leave of the court under O.32, r. 7 was
necessary before the guardian could enter into the agree
ment or compromise to withdraw the application for setting
aside the sale. There was no justification for limiting the
operation of the rule in its application to execution
proceedings only to compromises which directly affected the
rights and liabilities under the decree; it was applicable
to all compromises which brought a proceeding to an end
thereby affecting the rights and liabilities of the minor,
The compromise in the present case was not merely concerned
with the conduct of proceedings but it seriously affected
the liability of the appellant under the decree.
Virupakshappa v. Shidappa, (1901)1.L.R. 26 Bom. 109 Rhodes
v. Swithenbank, (1889) L. R. 22 Q. B. D. 577, Gurmallappa v.
Mallappa, (1920) I. L.R. 44 Bom. 574 and Katneni
Venkatakrishnayya v. Ganapati China Kanakayya, (1938) I.L.R.
Mad. 819, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal 483 of 1957.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated November 25, 1949,
of the Madras High Court in Appeal No. 66 of 1946.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and T.V.R. Patachar for the
appellant.
Bhimsenakarama and B K.B. Naidu, for respondents Nos. 1 and
2.
T. Satyanarayan, for respondents Nos. 7 and 8.
1962. April 27. Sarkar, J., delivered a separate Judgment.
The Judgment of Subba Rao and Mudholkar, JJ., was delivered
by Subba Rao, J.
501
SARKAR, J.-In 1929, one Bapiah filed a suit against the
appellant, then a minor, his father and another person on a
promissory Dote executed by the two last mentioned persons,
The appellant was represented in that suit by his maternal
grandfather as his guardian ad litem. ’A decree was passed
in that suit. The decree holder put the decree in execution
and obtained an order for the sale of certain properties in
which the appellant was interested. The properties were
sold in due course in favour, it is said., of a clerk of the
decree holder. Thereafter, the appellant’s guardian ad
litem made an application under O. 21 r. 90 of the Code of
Civil Procedure for setting aside the sale. Later, however,
the guardian ad litem came to a settlement with the decree
holder and the auction purchaser that the guardian ad litem
would give up the contention regarding the invalidity of the
sale and withdraw the petition to set it aside and also give
up possession of the properties sold to the auction
purchaser and decree holder and the auction purchaser in
their turn would give up their claim for costs of the
petition. In pursuance of this agreement the petition was
withdrawn and dismissed by order made on August 12, 1932.
After attaining majority, the appellant filed a suit in 1944
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to set aside the order of August 12, 1932, and for a re-
hearing of the petition which was dismissed by the order of
that date. It is from this ,suit that the present appeal
arises. The suit was decreed by the trial Court but on
appeal the decision of the trial Court was reversed by the
High Court at Madras and the suit was ordered to be dis-
missed. There is no dispute that the suit was competent and
within time.
The only question in this appeal is whether the order of
August 12, 1932 is voidable under O. 32 r. 7 of the Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908, at the instance of the appellant.
That rule forbids the
502
guardian for the suit to "enter into any agreement or
compromise on behalf of a minor with reference to the suit"
without the leave of the court and provides that the any
such agreement or compromise entered into without the leave
of the court shall be voidable against all parties other
than minor.
Order 32, r. 7 of the present Code corresponds to s. 462 of
the Code of 1882. It has been settled since the Code of
1882 was in force that the provision under the consideration
applies to proceedings in execution though it only mentions
agreement or Compromise with reference to the suit. As
long ago as 1901, Jenkins C.J. said in Virupakshappa v.
Shidappa, (1) "I will first deal with the question whether
section 462 applies to a compromise of execution
proceedings. On the words of the section I think it does;
applications in execution are proceedings in the suit, so
that a compromise of such a proceeding would be a compromise
with reference to the suit. This view has been followed
ever since.
The High Court took the view that a compromise of an
execution proceeding would be within O. 32, r. 7 only when
it affected directly the rights and liabilities created by
the decree. It observed that the compromise in the present
case was not affected by the rule as it concerned only the
rights and liabilities under the auction sale and not those
arising under the decree.
I am unable to agree with this view. The High Court rested
itself on the fact that all the reported decisions dealt
with cases in which the agreements had directly affected the
rights and liabilities under the decree. This does not to
my mind furnish sufficient justification for the High
Court’s view. No decision has been brought to our notice in
which it has been held that O. 32, r. 7 does not apply to a
compromise of execution proceedings
(1) (1901) I.R.L. 26 Bom. 109, 114.
503
which does not directly affect the rights and liabilities
created by the decree. It does not seem to me that on
principle the High Court’s view can be justified.
It is true that O. 32, r. 7 does not apply to all
agreements. In Bhodes v. Swithenbank (1) it was observed,
"This is an action by an infant by means of her next friend,
who undoubtedly has the conduct of the action in his hands.
If, however, the next friend does anything in the action
beyond the mere conduct of it, whatever is so done must be
for the benefit of the infant, and if, in the opinion of the
Court it is not so, the infant is not bound". It may
therefore be said that an agreement concerning the conduct
of the proceeding does not require the sanction of the
Court.
Beyond this, I find no justification for limiting the
operation of the rule. I observe that Jenkins C.J. in what
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I have earlier read from his judgment, said that the rule
"applies to a compromise of execution proceedings".
Therefore, it seems to me that according to the learned
Chief Justice it applies to all compromises of execution
proceedings, excepting, of course, compromises concerning
the conduct of them, and this whether the compromise
directly affects the rights or liabilities under the decree
or not. I think the principle of the rule was correctly
stated by Heaton J. when dealing with s. 462 of the Code
of 1882 he observed in Gurmallapa v. Mallappa (2), "That
section, I think, necessarily implies that during the
continuance of proceedings in Court, the dispute between the
minor and another party which the Court had to decide could
not be compromised except by the guardian ad litem of the
minor, and by him only with the leave of the Court." I think
that any compromise of a proceeding which concerns the
dispute involved in it
(1) (1889) L.R. 22. Q.B.D. 577,578.
(2) (1920)I.L.R.44 Bom.574,581.
504
would require the sanction of the Court. I should also
point out that sub-r. (6) of r. 3 of O. 32 provides that a
person appointed guardian for the suit for a minor shall
unless his appointment is terminated, continue as such
throughout all the proceedings arising out of the suit
including the proceedings in execution of a decree.
The object behind O. 32 seems to me to be that when an
infant is involved in a legal proceeding, he should have a
guardian assigned to him and that guardian should be under
the control of the Court before which the proceeding is
pending so as not to be able to affect the rights and
liabilities of the infant, the subject matter of the
proceeding, by a compromise which the Court has not approved
as one for the benefit of the infant. If this is the prin-
ciple, as I think it is, there would be no justification for
limiting the operation of the rule in its application to
execution proceedings, only to compromises which directly
affect the rights and liabilities under the decree. The
rule, in my view, would apply, among others, to compromises
which bring a proceeding to an end and thereby affect the
rights or liabilities of the infant involved in it. I think
this view receives support from the observations of
Varadachariar J. in Katneni Venkatakrishnayya v. Ganapati
China Kanakayya(1) that, "Rule 7 deals with the conduct of a
next friend’ as such who, as pointed out in Bhodes v.
Swithenbank(2) is an officer of the Court to conduct the
suit; and the principle underlying are 7 is that whenever he
proposes to do anything beyond the normal conduct of the
suit, he has to obtain the leave of the Court to do so.",
Quite obviously the word "suit" in this observation would
include a proceeding in execution.
It is of some interest to point out that the learned Judges
of the High Court were careful to
(1) (1938) I.I.R. Mad. 819,828.
(2) (1889) L.R. 22 Q.B.D. 577,578
505
use the word "directly"; they said the agreement or
compromise in the present case did "not directly deal with
or regulate the extent and nature of the rights and
liabilities under the decree, which stand intact and
unaffected as before." This seems to me to indicate that the
learned Judges were conscious that the compromise in this
case affected the rights and liabilities of the appellant
under the decree at least indirectly. It seems to me that
if the rule prohibits an agreement which directly affects
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the rights and liabilities of an infant under a decree,
there would be no reason to think that it would not
similarly prohibit an agreement deliberately made to affect
the same rights and liabilities indirectly. The agreement
challenged in this’ case, is, as I shall endeavour to show,
of this kind.
Turning now to the facts of this case I think the proceeding
in which the compromise was arrived at was in the course of
execution of the decree. It was a proceeding to challenge
the validity of an execution sale. It was therefore a
proceeding, a compromise in reference to which would be
governed by O. 32, r. 7 under the rule laid down in
Virupakshappa’s case(1).
It also seems to me clear that the compromise was not
concerning the conduct of the proceeding. It brought the
proceeding to an end and its result was that the appellant’s
right to question the validity of the sale was lost. He
because bound by the sale, good or bad. His liability under
the decree was reduced only by the amount of the proceeds of
the sale, however inadequate a price might have been fetched
in it., It may be that if the proceeding to set aside the
sale had been continued and not abandoned, the sale might
have been set aside and a fresh sale, if one took place,
might have fetched a larger prim and thereby diminished the
liability
(1) (1901) I.L.R 26 am. 109. ;I.
506
under the decree to a greater extent. Such a compromise
cannot be said to be one relating to the conduct of the
proceeding. It seems to me also to be one affecting
seriously the liability of the appellant under the decree
since it deprived him of his right to have that liability
reduced by a larger amount by a sale properly held. It is a
compromise which from all points of view, should have been
made with the sanction of the Court.
Before concluding I think it right to say that the decree
holder and auction purchaser can derive no assistance from
Jitendra Nath Rao v. Samarandra Nath Mitter(1). In that
case the Judicial Committee held that the agreement
contemplated by O. 32, r. 7 is one which is made with a
party to the suit or proceeding. Here the agreement was in
the execution proceeding and it was made with the decree
holder and the auction purchaser both of whom were parties
to it, the former having been a party to the suit itself out
of which the execution proceeding arose.
I think this appeal should be allowed.
J.SUBBA ’RAO, J. This appeal raises the question of the
construction of the provisions of Order XXXII, r. 7 of the
Code of Civil Procedure.
Bhushayya, the appellant, and respondents 7 and 8 herein are
the sons of one Dokka Adeyya (since died). On the basis of
a promissory note executed by Dokku Adeyya and respondent 5
in favour of one Bapayya, the latter filed C.S. No. 88 of
1929 in the Court of the Subordinate Judge, Bapatla, and
obtained a decree therein. In that suit, the appellant, who
was then a minor, was a defendent and was represented by his
maternal grandfather’ as his guardian. In execution of the
said decree, properties of Dokku Adeyya were brought
(1) (1943) L.R. 70 I.A. 68.
507
to sale and were purchased by the decree-holder’s clerk,
Bapiraju, subject to the mortgage in favour of the decree-
holder. Before the sale was confirmed, on March 29, 1932,
the appellant, represented by his maternal grandfather,
filed E.A. No. 136 of 1932 to set aside the sale under Order
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XXI, r. 90 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The said
petition was posted for inquiry to August 12, 1932. On that
day, a memorandum was filed in the court by the guardian of
the appellant to the effect that the matter was adjusted and
that the petition should be dismissed as having been
withdrawn. No sanction of the court was obtained by the
guardian for withdrawing the petition. On the said day, the
court passed an order dismissing the application.
Subsequently, the sale was confirmed. On October 9, 1944,
the appellant, who bad then attained majority, filed a suit,
O.S. No. 80 of 1944, on the file of the Subordinate Judge,
Tenali, for setting aside the order dated August 12, 1932
and to try the application for setting aside the sale on
market. It was, inter alia pleaded that the said order was
void in as much as the guardian of the appellant withdrew
the application without the sanction of the court as he
should do under Order XXXII, r. 7 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, hereinafter referred to as the Code. The
contesting defendants, some of them being the subsequent
aliences, filed written statements seeking to sustain the
validity of the said order. For the purpose of this appeal
we need not notice any other point. The learned Subordinate
Judge held that the withdrawal of the said petition and the
consequent dismissal thereof was void, as the guardian did
not obtain the sanction of the Court under Order XXXII, r. 7
of the Code. On appeal, the High Court came to the
conclusion that Order XXXII, r. 7 of the Code had not
relevance to an application for setting aside the sale in
the circumstances of the cam. Hence the appear.
508
The only question that arises in this appeal is whether the
withdrawal of the said petition by the guardian was in
contravention of Order XXXII, r. 7 of the Code. Before
construing the provisions of the said Order, it would be
convenient to notice what exactly were the terms of the
agreement. The High Court in its judgment summarised the
factual position on that date thus:
"The agreement is that the guardian-adlitem
should give up the contentions regarding the
invalidity of the auction sale and should
withdraw the petition to set aside the sale
and also deliver up possession of the pro-
perties purchased, to the auction-purchaser
and that the decree-holder and auction-pur-
chaser should give up their claim for costs o
f
the said petition. It was in pursuant of this
agreement that the petition was withdrawn and
dismissed (no costs being given)".
This is the correct petition, and we need not elaborate
further on it. Order XXXII, r. 7, clauses (1) and (2) read
as follow:
Clause (1) "No next friend or guardian for the
suit shall, without the leave of the Court
expressly recorded in the proceedings, enter
into any agreement or compromise on behalf of
a minor with reference to the suit in which he
acts as next friend or guardian.
Clause (2). "Any such agreement or compromise
entered into without the leave of the Court so
recorded shall be voidable against all parties
other than the minor."
In Madras, there is also another clause, viz., cl. (1-A)
introduced by an amendment made in 1910 and it reads-
"Where an application is made to the Court for
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leave to enter into an agreement or
509
compromise or for withdrawal of a suit in
pursuance of a compromise or for taking any
other action on behalf of a minor or other
person under disability and such minor or
other person under disability is represented
by counsel or pleader, the counsel or pleader
shall file in Court with the application a
certificate to the effect that the agreement
or compromise or action proposed is in his
opinion for the benefit of the minor or other
person under disability. A decree of other
for the compromise of a suit, appeal or matter
to which a minor or other person under
disability is a party shall recite the
sanction of the Court thereto and ’shall set
out the terms of the compromise as in Form No.
24 in Appendix to this schedule."
Under this Order, no guardian shall enter into an agreement
or compromise on behalf of a minor with reference to a suit
in which he acts as next friend or guardian. The short
question is, what is the meaning to be given to the words
"an agreement or compromise with reference to the suit" ?
Mr. Viswanath Sastri, learned counsel for the appellant,
raised two contentions, namely : (1) That the execution
proceedings are proceedings with reference to the suit and
therefore any compromise or agreement entered into or
effected by a guardian of a minor in execution proceedings
affecting his rights procedural or substantive, whether in
issue in the suit or declared by the decree or not would
require the sanction of the court and an agreement entered
into without that sanction would be void. (2) An application
to set aside a sale is a proceeding with. in the meaning of
s. 141 of the Code’ and, therefore, O. XXXII, r. 7, as far
as it can be made applicable, would apply to such
proceeding; as the compromise was entered into by the
guardian in such a proceed without the leave of the Court,
the said com-
510
promise as well as the order made pursuant thereto was void.
On the other hand, Mr. Bhimasankaram, learned counsel for
the respondents, while supporting the test laid down by the
High Court, namely, that an agreement to fall within the
mischief of the said Order shall be such as deals directly
with the rights and liabilities involved in the suit or
defined by the decree, attempted to abridge the scope of the
test further by trying to make a distinction between an
agreement relating to rights conferred by the decree and
th%t only relating to liabilities imposed thereunder.
Order XXXII, r. 7, is one of the provisions designed to
safeguard the interests of a minor during the pendency of a
suit against hostile, negligent or collusive acts of a
guardian. The scope of the provisions is implicit in the
phraseology used therein. The crucial words are "any
agreement or compromise ... with reference to the suit".
The words "with reference", if taken out of the context, are
of the widest import. They may take in’ every procedural
step in the conduct of a suit, such as adjournment,
admission of documents, inter locutories, inspection etc.,,
and obviously it could not have been the intention of the
Legislature that agreements in respect of such procedural
steps should conform to the requirements of the rule. If
that be not so, the rule instead of protecting the interests
of a minor would easily become a major obstacle in disposing
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of suits in which a minor is ranged as party on one side or
the other. So consistent with the purpose of the rule the
words "’with reference to the suit" must be limited to the
rights put in issue in the suit.
The next limitation is that the. protection is only during
the pendency of the suit. When does a Suit come to an end
It has been held that for the
511
purpose of the said rule an execution proceeding is a
continuation of a suit: see Virupakshappa v. Shidappa and
Basappa(1), Arunachellam Chetty v. Ramanadhan Chetty(2), and
Muthalakkammal Chetty v. Narappa Reddiar(3). If it was a
continuation, the rule would also apply to an agreement or
compromise with reference to the said execution proceeding.
But, just like in the case of a suit, in the case of execu-
tion proceedings also, the agreement or compromise shall be
one affecting rights or liabilities ascertained or declared
by the decree put in execution. As in the case of a suit,
so also in the case of an execution of a decree, mere
procedural steps not affecting the rights or liabilities so
declared are not governed by the provision. The guardian
may agree to an adjournment of a sale, to a waiver of a
fresh proclamation, to a reduction of upset price etc. It
could not have been the intention of the Legislature that
every time such a step is taken, the procedure laid down in
Order XXXIII, r. 7, of the Code should be complied with.
The next limitation is that the agreement or compromise
shall be entered into with a party to a suit or his legal
representative. The rule does not provide for dealings of a
guardian with persons not parties to a suit. The question
directly arose in a case which went up to the Privy Council,
viz., in Jitendra Nath Roy v. Samarandra Nath Mitter(4).
There, a decree obtained in favour of a minor, represented
by his guardian, was assigned by the guardian for
consideration to another without obtained the leave of the
court. Advertising to the question of validity of such an
assignment, Lord Atkin observed
"They (the Judges of the High Court) took the
view that, in the rule in the phrase,
"agreement or compromise... with reference
(1) (1901) I.L.R. 26 Bom. 110.(2) (1906) I.L.R. 29 Mad.
309.
(3) (1939) I.L.R. 56 Mad. 430.(4) (1949) L.R. 70 I.A. 68.
72.
512
to the suit" the words mean agreement with a
party to the suit and do not cover a transfer
of a decree to someone then unconnected with
the suit, even assuming that such transfer
could properly be described as an agreement.
They expressed their agreement on this point
with a decision of the Full Bench of the Mad-
ras High Court in Katneni Venkatakrishnayya
Garapati China Kanakayya(1), which is preci-
sely in point. It appears to their Lordships
that it cannot have been intended to require
the leave of the court to an agreement, for
example, made with a non-party.to finance a
suit, whether with a stipulation to receive
part of the proceeds or not. The Conjunction
of the word "agreement" with the word "com-
promise" appears to indicate the kind of
agreement intended."
We agree with these observations. The result is that Order
XXXII, r. 7, of the Code will apply to only to an agreement
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or compromise entered into by a guardian of a party to the
suit, who is a minor with another party thereof during the
pendency of the suit and the execution proceedings.
The next question is whether the application for setting
aside a sale is a proceeding in execution of a decree.
Order XXI of the Code prescribes, among others, the
different modes of execution, one of them being execution
against the property of a judgraent-debtor. The Order also
prescribes a procedure for sale of the said property and for
setting aside a sale obtained by fraud or material
irregularity. Under Order XXI, r. 92, where no application
is made under r. 89, r. 90, or r. 91 to set aside a sale or
where the application is made and disallowed, the Court
shall make an order confirming the sale, and thereupon the
sale shall become abso-
(1) I.L.R. 1938 Mad. 814.
513
lute; under sub-r. (3) of r. 92 of the said Order, "No suit
to set aside an order made under this rule shall be brought
by any person against whom such order made." It is,
therefore, clear that Order XXI provides a self-contained
machinery for executing a decree and for deciding disputes
that may arise in connection with the execution. The
execution is not closed till the decree is discharged or
barred by limitation. In this view, we must hold that an
application filed by a judgment-debtor to set aside a sale
is an application in execution of a decree.
Even so, as we have already indicated, to attract Order
XXXII, r. 7, of the Code the agreement or compromise entered
into between the guardian and the auction-purchaser shall be
an agreement or a compromise affecting the rights or
liabilities declared by the decree. Can it be said that in
the present case the agreement affected any such right or
liability ? The suit was on the basis of a promissory note
executed by the father and the brother of the appellant.
The appellant was also a party to the suit. The decree was
for recovery of the amount covered by the promissory note
with interest. It did not in any way affect the title of
the appellant to the entire or to any part of the property
of the family sold in execution of the decree. The
appellant, by his guardian, filed an application to set
aside the sale on the ground of fraud and material
irregularity in the conduct of the sale. The guardian
agreed to withdraw the said application on certain
conditions. The agreement also did not in any way affect
the rights or liabilities declared under the decree. Not
with stand. ing the agreement, the decree was left intact.
It is said that if the sale was set aside, the decree would
have to be executed afresh, but as it was not aside on the
basis of the said agreement, the sale price in discharge of
the decree; therefore, the argu. ment proceeds, the
agreement affected the discharge
514
of the decree. The father of appellant could have sold the
family property out of court and could have out of the sale
proceeds, discharged the decree. In that event it could not
be said that the sale affected the rights or liabilities
decree. If so, the sale of property through court cannot
equally affect any such rights or liabilities declared by
the decree. We? therefore, hold that the agreement or
compromise entered into by the guardian in respect of such a
sale did not affect the rights ascertained and declared by
the decree, and, therefore, the leave of court under Order
XXXII, r. 7, of the Code was not necessary.
Before leaving this part of the case, we should make it
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clear that it is not our intention to lay down that under no
circumstances an, agreement or compromise entered into by a
guardian to withdraw an application filed for setting aside
a sale would be governed by Order XXXII, r. 7, of the Code.
There may be arrangements or compromises in respect of such
a petition whereunder the rights declared by decrees are
affected. We also assumed for the purpose of this ease that
the auctionpurchaser was a party to the suit, as there was
some controversy on the question whether he was a benamidar
for the decree-holder.
Lastly it was contended that by reason of s. 141 of the
Code, the procedure provided under Order XXXII, r. 7, should
be extended to an agreement or a compromise entered into by
a guardian in respect of an application to set aside a sale
under Order XXI, r. 90, of the Code. The argument is that
an application under Order XXI, r. 90, is an independent
proceeding, and as the agreement for withdrawing the said
proceeding affects the right created by the sale, it falls
within the meaning of the said rule. Section 141 of the
Code reads :
"The procedure provided in this Code in regard
to suits shall be followed, as far as it
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can be made applicable, in all proceedings in
any Court of civil jurisdiction.
The corresponding is. 646 of the Code of 1882 read as
follows:
"The procedure herein prescribed shall be
followed, as far as it can be made applicable,
in all proceedings in any Court of civil
jurisdiction other than suits and appeals".
There was a conflict on the question whether the said
section applied to proceedings in execution. To steer clear
of the conflict the following Explanation was added to the
section by the Civil Procedure Code Amendment Act 6 of, 1892
"Explanation:-This section does not apply to applications
for the execution of decrees which are proceedings in
suits": But the section was construed by the Privy Council
even without the said of the Explanation in Thakur Prasad v.
Sheikh FakirUllah (1), wherein it observed :
"It is not suggested that s. 373 of the Civil
Procedure Code (Order XXIII, r. I of the
present Code) would of its own force apply to
execution proceedings. The suggestion is that
it is applied by force of s. 647 (s. 141 of
the present Code). But the whole of Chapter
XIX of the Code. consisting of 121 sections,
is devoted to’ the procedure in executions,
and it would be surprising if the framers of
the Code had intended to apply another
procedure, mostly unsuitable, by saying in
general terms that procedure for suits should
be followed as far as applicable. Their
Lordships think that the proceedings spoken of
in 8. 647 include original matters in the
nature of suits such as
(1) [1894] L.R. 22, 1. A. 44, 49.
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proceedings in probates, guardianships, and so
forth, and do not include executions."
This view has ever since been followed. We have already
held that the application by the judgmentdebtor to get aside
the sale is a proceeding in execution’ and, therefore, s.
141 of the Code will not apply for two reasons, namely, (1)
as execution proceedings were continuation of suit within
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the meaning of Order XXXII, r. 7 of the Code, and as the
Code provided specifically for suits, s. 141 could not be
invoked; and 2) as we have held, an application by a
judgment-debtor to get aside a sale is a proceeding in
execution and therefore s. 141, which applies only to
original proceedings, does not apply to such proceedings.
In the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs
of the contesting respondent.
By COURT. In accordance with the opinion of the majority
the appeal is dismissed with costs of the contesting
respondents.
517