Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SUDARSAN CHITS (I) LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
O. SUKUMARAN PILLAI & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT16/08/1984
BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
ERADI, V. BALAKRISHNA (J)
KHALID, V. (J)
CITATION:
1984 AIR 1579 1985 SCR (1) 511
1984 SCC (4) 657 1984 SCALE (2)289
ACT:
The Companies Act, 1956 (1 of 1956), Section 446 (2)
(b)-Scope of.
Words and phrases-Meaning of "Court which is winding up
the company" -Section 446 (2)-Companies Act, 1956.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, a limited company governed by the
Companies Act, 1956 (for short, the Act) challenged before a
Division Bench of the High Court the order of the Company
Judge, winding up the appellant-company and appointing
Official Liquidator, on three petitions moved by the
creditors under s. 439 of the Act on the ground that the
appellant-company was unable to pay its debts. The appellate
Bench of the High Court disposed of the appeals after
approving the scheme of compromise and arrangement under s.
391 of the Act and directed that (i) the winding up order
passed by the Company Judge shall be held in abeyance on
certain undertakings being filed by the appellant company
within the prescribed time before the High Court to abide by
the conditions imposed in the judgment; (ii) the Official
Liquidator will be considered as appointed to function as
the provisional Liquidator on the first payment of Rs. 25
lacs being made within four weeks of the judgment; and (iii)
in case of any default the winding up order will stand
confirmed. Since then the scheme of compromise and
arrangement was being implemented meticulously. In the
course of implementation of the scheme the appellant company
moved an application before the Appellate Bench praying that
the provisional Liquidator be directed to file claim
petitions under s. 446 (2) of the Act for realising the
claims of the company which would further assist and
facilitate the implementation of the scheme of compromise
and arrangement as supervised by the Court. Respondent No. 1
opposed this application. The High Court while rejecting the
application, held that as the winding up proceeding in
respect of the appellant-company is no more pending and
there is no court which could be said to be the court
winding up the company, the claim petition on behalf of the
company which is not being wound up could not be instituted
as contemplated by s. 446 (2). Hence this appeal by special
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leave.
Allowing the appeal,
512
^
HELD : (1) It would be advantageous to notice the
historical evolution of the provision as well as its present
setting before considering the true scope and ambit of the
jurisdiction conferred on the court winding up a company by
sec. 446(2) (b) of the Act. Section 171 of the Indian
Companies Act 1913, which did not contain any provision
similar or identical to that of sec. 446(2), is re-enacted
with little modification as Sec. 446(1) of the Companies Act
1956 Since there was no specific provision in the repealed
Companies Act 1913 conferring jurisdiction on the court
winding up the company analogous to the one conferred by
sec. 446(2), the official Liquidator in order to realise and
recover the claims and subsisting debts owed to the company
had the unenviable fate of filing suits. To save the company
which is ordered to be wound up from this prolix and
expensive litigation and to keep all incidental proceedings
in winding up before the court which is winding up the
company, its jurisdiction was enlarged by sec. 446(2) to
entertain petition amongst others for recovering the claims
of the company. This was the object behind enacting s.
446(2) and therefore it must receive such construction at
the hands of the court as would advance the object and at
any rate not thwart it. [516H, 517A, B, 518A, B]
2. Section 446(1) provides that when a winding up order
has been made or the official Liquidator has been appointed
as provisional Liquidator, no suit or other legal proceeding
shall be commenced, or if pending at the date of the winding
up order, shall be proceeded with, against the company,
except by leave of the Court and subject to such terms as
the Court may impose. It envisages two situations in which
the court will have jurisdiction to make the order
thereunder contemplated. These two situations are: where a
winding up order has been made or where the official
Liquidator has been appointed as provisional Liquidator. The
first of the two situations envisages an order for winding
up of the company having been made and which is subsisting.
The second situation is where without making a winding up
order, the Court has appointed official liquidator to be the
provisional Liquidator as contemplated by Sec. 450(1).
[518D, 519E, F]
Sub-Sec. (2) of Sec. 446 confers jurisdiction on the
Court which is winding up the company to entertain and
dispose of proceedings set out in clauses (a) to (d). The
expression ’court which is winding up the company’ will
comprehend the Court before which a winding up petition is
pending or which has made an order for winding up of the
company and further winding up proceedings are continued
under its directions. Undoubtedly, looking to the language
of Sec. 446(1) and (2) and its setting in Part VII which
deals with winding up proceedings would clearly show that
the jurisdiction of the Court to entertain and dispose of
proceedings set out
513
in sub-cls. (a) to (d) of sub-sec. (2) can be invoked in the
court which is winding up the company. [520B-C]
(3) Where a winding up petition is pending meaning
thereby that an official Liquidator is appointed as
provisional Liquidator which is a stage in the process of
winding up, the court before which such proceeding is
pending can be styled as a court winding up of the company
and ipso facto it would have jurisdiction to entertain the
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proceeding enumerated in clauses (a) to (d) of sub-sec. (2)
of sec. 446. If the winding up petition fails the
proceedings pending in the court may have to be transferred
to the court which can entertain the proceeding. But if the
petition praying for winding up the company ends in a
winding up order the proceedings intimated under sub-sec.
(2) will have to be proceeded with till they are finally
disposed of because winding up order will relate back to the
date of the presentation of the winding up petition. In this
view of the matter no anomalous situation can ever arise.
Therefore, the apprehension of the High Court that if such
jurisdiction is conferred on the court at a stage anterior
to the winding up order being made but subsequent to the
appointment of official Liquidator as provisional Liquidator
an anomalous situation would arise is not well founded.
[513B, C]
(4) It is now well settled that a winding up order once
made can be revoked or recalled but till it is revoked or
recalled it continues to subsist. Now, it the winding up
order is subsisting the court which made that order or the
court which kept it in abeyance will have jurisdiction to
give necessary directions to the provisional Liquidator to
take recourse to s. 446(2). [522B-C]
(5) In the instant case. The winding up order made by
the learned Company Judge in respect of the appellant-
company has neither been quashed set, aside, cancelled
revoked nor recalled. Therefore, the winding up order was
effectively subsisting but inoperative for the time being,
having all the potentiality of being rejuvenated or being
brought back to life. The High Court was in error in
rejecting the application, since its approach in giving a
restricted meaning to the expression ’court which is winding
up the company’ under sub sec. (2) by restricting it to the
first situation under section 446(1) overlooks the objects
and purpose sought to be achieved by introducing sub-section
(2) in section 446. [521G, H, 522A, F]
Official Liquidator v. Kadir and Ors. (1977) Kerala Law
Times 30 and Faridabad Cold Storage and Allied Industry v.
Official Liquidator, Amonia Supplies Corporation P. Ltd. 48
Company Cases; over-ruled.
514
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 2528 of
184.
From the Judgment and Order dated the 18th August, 1983
of the Karnataka High Court in CMP. No. 14913 of 1983 in
MFA. No. 518-20 of 1981.
S. N. Kacker and Shiv Pujan Singh for the Appellant.
K. M. K. Nair for the Respondent.
Gobind Bharathan and E. M. S. Anam for Intervener.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DESAI, J. Sudarsan Chits (India) Ltd.-appellant herein,
(’Company’ for short) is governed by the Companies Act,
1956. Three petitions being Company Petitions Nos. 9/81,
8/81 and 49/81 were moved by the creditors of the Company
under Sec. 439 of the Companies Act praying for winding up
of the Company on the ground that it was unable to pay its
debts. The learned Company Judge passed an order winding-up
the Company and appointed official Liquidator to be the
Liquidator of the Company. This order was challenged in MFA
Nos. 578, 579 and 520 of 1981 which came up for hearing
before a Division Bench of the Kerala High Court. The
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judgment of the Division Bench is reported in Sudarsan Chits
(India) Ltd. v. G. Sukumaran Pillai.(1) The appeals were
disposed of after approving the scheme of compromise and
arrangement under Sec. 391 of the Companies Act directing
that the winding-up order shall be held in abeyance on
certain undertakings to be filed by the Company before the
court within the prescribed time to abide by the conditions
imposed in the judgment and if there be any default in the
matter of performing of the conditions so imposed, and/or
undertaking is not filed as directed therein, the winding-up
order made by the learned Judge will stand confirmed. A
further direction in this behalf given by the court is
material and may be extracted:
"On the first payment of Rs. 25,00,000 being made
within four weeks from this date the winding up order
will be held in abeyance and thereupon the official
Liquidator will be considered as appointed to function
as the
515
Provisional Liquidator subject to such restrictions on
his powers and privileges as we may indicate here."
Since then the scheme of compromise and arrangement as
set out in the judgment of the Division Bench is being
implemented and we were informed that an amount of Rs. 2.40
crores has already been disbursed amongst the
claimants/creditors of the company. We were also informed
that the scheme of compromise and arrangement is being
meticulously implemented under the supervision of the court
as directed by the Appellate Bench.
In the course of implementation of the scheme, it
became necessary to recover certain debts and claims due in
favour of the Company. For this purpose Civil Misc.
Application No. 14913 of 1983 was moved before the Appellate
Bench praying for a direction that the provisional
Liquidator be directed to file claim petitions under Sec.
446 (2) of the Companies Act in the Company Court for
realising the claims of the Company, which would further
assist and facilitate the implementation of the scheme of
compromise and arrangement as supervised by the court. One
G. Sukumaran Pillai was impleaded as the first respondent
and the provisional Liquidator was impleaded as the second
respondent.
It appears to have been contended before the court that
as there was no winding up proceeding pending before the
Company Judge or the Appellate Bench and as the Company is
being managed under the scheme of compromise and
arrangement, the Company Court will have no jurisdiction to
entertain the claim petition under Sec. 446 (2) of the
Companies Act. This contention found favour with the
Appellate Bench and the Civil Misc. Petition was rejected.
Relying upon the decision in Official Liquidator v. Kadir
aud Ors.(1) and Faridabad Cold Storage and Allied Industry
v. Official Liquidator, Ammonia Supplies Corporation P.
Ltd.(2) the court concluded that the right to avail of the
remedy by filing a claim petition conferred by Cl. (b) of
Section 446 (2) can be availed of only in a court which is
winding up the company. Hence this appeal by special leave.
After the special leave was granted, a notice was
served upon the provisional Liquidator informing him that
the appeal will be
516
listed for final hearing on August 1, 1984. Even after the
intimation the provisional Liquidator did not choose to
appear at the hearing.
C. M. P. No. 6062 of 1984 was moved on behalf of All
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India Subscribers Association of Chits through its Secretary
Mr. S. K. Jain seeking intervention in the matter.
Intervention was permitted.
Upon its true construction, what is the scope and ambit
of the jurisdiction conferred on the court winding up a
company by Sec. 446 (2) (b) is the only question of law that
arises in this appeal and may be answered in the facts and
circumstances of the case.
Sec. 446 (2) reads as under:
"446 (2) : The Court which is winding up the
company shall, notwithstanding anything contained in
any other law for the time being in force, have
jurisdiction to entertain, or dispose of-
(a) any suit or proceeding by or against the
company;
(b) any claim made by or against the company
(including claims by or against any of its
branches in India);
(c) any application made under Section 391 by or
in respect of the company;
(d) any question of priorities or any other
question whatsoever, whether of lay or fact,
which may relate to or arise in course of the
winding up of the company;
whether such suit or proceeding has been
instituted or is instituted, or such claim or question
had arisen or arises or such application has been made
or is made before or after the order for the winding up
of the company, or before or after the commencement, of
the Companies (Amendment) Act, 1960."
Before we advert to the question of construction of
Sec. 446 (2) (b), it would be advantageous to notice the
historical evolution of the provision as well as its present
setting. Sec. 171 of the Indian Companies Act, 1913, the
predecessor of Sec. 446 (1) did
517
not contain any provision similar or identical to that of
Sec. 446 (2). Sec. 171 only provided for stay of suits and
proceedings pending at the commencement of winding up
proceeding, and embargo against the commencement of any suit
or other legal proceedings against the company except by the
leave of the court. This provision with little modification
is re-enacted in Sec. 446 (1). There was no specific
provision conferring jurisdiction on the court winding up
the company analogous to the one, conferred by Sec. 446 (2).
Sub-sec. (2) was introduced to enlarge the jurisdiction of
the court winding up the company so as to facilitate the
disposal of winding up proceedings. The provision so enacted
probably did not meet with the requirement with the result
that the Committee appointed for examining comprehensive
amendment to the Companies Act in its report recommended
that ’a suit’ by or against a company in winding up should
notwithstanding any provision in law for the time being be
instituted in the court in which the winding up proceedings
are pending.(1) ’To give effect to these recommendations,
sub-sec. (2) was suitably amended to bring it to its present
from by Companies (Amendment) Act, 1960. The Committee
noticed that on a winding up order being made and the
Official Liquidator being appointed a Liquidator of the
company, he has to take into his custody company property as
required by Sec. 456. Sec. 457 confers power on him to
institute or defend any suit, prosecution, or other legal
proceeding, civil or criminal, in the name and on behalf of
the company. Power is conferred upon him to sell the
properties both movable and removable of the company and to
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realise the assets of the company and this was to be done
for the purpose of distributing the assets of the company
amongst the claimants. Now at a stage when a winding up
order is made the company may as well have subsisting claims
and to realise these claims the Liquidator will have to file
suits. To avoid this eventuality and to keep all incidental
proceedings in winding up before the court which is winding
up the company, its jurisdiction was enlarged to entertain
petition amongst others for recovering the claims of the
company. In the absence of a provision like Sec. 446 (2)
under the repealed Indian Companies Act, 1913, the official
Liquidator in order to realise and recover the claims and
subsisting debts owed to the company had the unenviable fate
of filing suits. These suits as is not unknown, dragged on
through the trial court and Courts of appeal resulting not
only in multiplicity of proceedings but would hold up the
progress of the winding up proceedings. To
518
save the company which is ordered to be wound up from this
prolix and expensive litigation and to accelerate the
disposal of winding up proceedings, the parliament devised a
cheap and summary remedy by conferring jurisdiction on the
court winding up the company to entertain petitions in
respect of claims for and against the company. This was the
object behind enacting Sec. 446 (2) and therefor, it must
receive such construction at the hands of the court as would
advance the object and at any rate not thwart it.
The fasciculus of sections included in Part VII of the
Companies Act bears the heading ’Winding up’. Sec. 443 sets
out the circumstances in which a company may be wound up by
the court. Sec. 444 provides that where the court makes an
order for the winding up of a company, the Court shall
forthwith cause intimation thereof to be sent to the
official Liquidator and the Registrar. Sec. 446(1) provides
that when a winding up order has been made or the official
Liquidator has been appointed as provisional liquidator, no
suit or other legal proceeding shall be commenced, or if
pending at the date of the winding up order, shall be
proceeded with, against the company, except by leave of the
Court and subject to such terms as the court may impose.
Then comes sub-sec. (2) of Sec. 446. It specifies the
contours of the jurisdiction of the court which is winding
up the company. It confers special jurisdiction on the Court
which is winding up the company to do things that are set
out in the various sub-clauses notwithstanding anything
contained in any other law for the time being in force. Sec.
446 (2) thus conferred special jurisdiction on the court
winding up the company which otherwise it may not have
enjoyed. The court in the Companies Act is defined in Sec. 2
(11) to mean with respect to any matter relating to a
company (other then any offence against this Act), the Court
having jurisdiction under the Act with respect to that
matter relating to that company, as provided in Section 10.
Section 10 provides that the court having jurisdiction under
the Act shall be the High Court having jurisdiction in
relation to the place at which the registered office of the
company concerned is situate, except to the extent to which
jurisdiction has been conferred on any District Court or
District Courts subordinate to that High Court in pursuance
of sub-sec. (2). The winding up petition has thus to be
presented in the High Court before the Judge who is assigned
the work under the Companies Act. Therefore, the Court which
is winding up the Company will be the court to whom the
petition for
519
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winding up was presented and which passed the order for
winding up the Company. In this case, the order was made by
the learned Company Judge in the Kerala High Court directing
winding up the company. An appeal lies against the order for
winding up the Company under section 483 to the same court
to which and in the same manner in which and subject to the
same conditions under which, appeals lie from any order or
decision of the court in cases within its ordinary
jurisdiction. In exercise of this Appellate jurisdiction,
the Appellate Bench entertained the appeals and directed
that the winding up order shall be held in abeyance till the
scheme is implemented and if any default is committed the
winding up order made by the learned Company Judge would be
revived.
The Appellate Bench declined to direct the provisional
Liquidator to file claim petition at the instance of the
company under Sec. 446 (2) (b) on the sole ground that such
a petition at the instance of the Liquidator would be
maintainable in the course of winding up of proceedings
which means that the winding up proceedings are pending.
Undoubtedly, Sec. 446 (1) manifests the legislative
intention that the procedure thereunder prescribed could be
availed off when the winding up order has been made or where
the official Liquidator is appointed as the provisional
Liquidator. Sec. 446 (1) invisages two situations in which
the court will have jurisdiction to make the order
thereunder contemplated. These two situations are: where a
winding up order has been made or where the official
Liquidator has been appointed as provisional Liquidator. The
first of the two situations envisages an order for winding
up of the Company having been made and which is subsisting.
The second situation is where without making a winding up
order, the court has appointed official Liquidator to be the
provisional Liquidator. Sec. 450 (1) of the Companies Act
confers power on the Company Court to appoint official
Liquidator to be provisional Liquidator at any time after
the presentation of the winding up petition and before
making of the winding up order. The Court before which a
winding up petition is presented has power to appoint
official Liquidator as provisional Liquidator of the Company
even before making the winding up order. If ultimately
winding up order is made, the official Liquidator acts as
such. And let it be remembered that where a winding up order
is made, it relates back to the date when petition for
winding up is presented. Referring to Sec. 446 (1) it
becomes clear that the court will have jurisdiction to make
the order therein contemplated, where a winding up order has
been made or prior to the making up of the winding up order,
official
520
Liquidator has been appointed as provisional Liquidator as
contemplated by Sec. 450 (1).
Sub-sec. (2) of Sec. 446 confers jurisdiction on the
court which is winding up the company to entertain and
dispose of proceedings set out in clauses (a) to (d). The
expression ’court which is winding up the company’ will
comprehend the court before which a winding up petition is
pending or which has made an order for winding up of the
company and further winding up proceedings are continued
under its directions. Undoubtedly, looking to the language
of Sec. 446 (1) and (2) and its setting in Part VII which
deals with winding up proceedings would clearly show that
the jurisdiction of the court to entertain and dispose of
proceedings set out in sub-cls. (a) to (d) of sub-sec. (2)
can be invoked in the court which is winding up the company.
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Reverting to the facts of this case, the Appellate
Bench held that as the winding up proceeding in respect of
the appellant company is no more pending, and there is no
court which could be said to be the court winding up the
company and therefore, the claim petition on behalf of the
company which is not being wound up could not be instituted
as contemplated by Sec 446 (2). In reaching this conclusion,
the Appellate Bench gave a restricted meaning to the
expression ’court which is winding up the company’ in sub-
sec. (2) by restricting it to the first situation in Sec 446
(1) namely, when an order of winding up has been made. The
Appellate Bench appeared to be of the view that where the
official Liquidator has been appointed as the provisional
Liquidator which implies that no winding up order has been
made, jurisdiction under Sec. 446 (2) cannot be invoked. The
Court felt that an anomalous situation would arise if claim
petitions are moved under Sec. 446 (2) (b) at a stage when
no winding up order has been made because if ultimately the
winding up order is not made, the proceedings initiated
under Sec. 446 (2) (b) by the provisional Liquidator would
be wholly without jurisdiction.
The approach of the High Court, with respect, overlooks
the object and purpose sought to be achieved by introducing
sub-sec. (2) in Sec. 446 by Amending Act 65 of 1960. As
noted earlier, winding up proceedings dragged on far decades
with no end in sight and with no benefit to the creditors
and contributories of the Company. To accelerate the process
of winding up so as to bring
521
them to an end, this sub-section was amended in its present
form in 1960 conferring jurisdiction on the court winding up
the company to entertain amongst others any suit or
proceeding by or against the company or any claim made by or
against the company. If therefore, a winding up petition is
pending meaning thereby that an official Liquidator is
appointed as provisional Liquidator which is a stage in the
process of winding up, the court before which such
proceeding is pending can be styled as a court winding up of
the company and ipso facto it would have jurisdiction to
entertain the proceeding enumerated in clauses (a) to (d) of
sub-sec. (2) of Sec. 446. The apprehension of the High Court
that if such jurisdiction is conferred on the court at a
stage anterior to the winding up order being made but
subsequent to the appointment of official Liquidator as
provisional Liquidator an anomalous situation would arisen
has left us unimpressed. If the winding up petition fails
the proceedings pending in the court may have to be
transferred to the court which can entertain the proceeding.
But if the petition praying for winding up the company ends
in a winding up order the proceedings initiated under sub-
sec. (2) will have to be proceeded with till they are
finally disposed of because winding up order will relate
back to the date of the presentation of the winding up
petition. In this view of the matter no anomalous situation
can ever arise.
However, the narrow question which is required to be
considered in this appeal is: whether the winding up
proceedings were pending or had come to an end when the
Appellate Bench froze the winding up order by keeping it in
abeyance ? Let it be made at once clear that the winding up
order made by the learned Company Judge in respect of the
appellant Company has neither been quashed, set aside,
cancelled revoked nor recalled. On the contrary after
directing that the winding up order shall be held in
abeyance, the Appellate Bench directed that official
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Liquidator shall continue to act as provisional Liquidator
as provided by Sec. 450 and that itself is a stage in the
winding up proceedings. When winding up order is kept in
abeyance it is in a state of suspended animation. The fact
that the Appellate Bench directed that pending the
implementation of the scheme as sanctioned by the High
Court, the winding up order will be kept in abeyance itself
without anything more shows that the order was neither
cancelled nor recalled nor revoked nor set aside. It
continued to exist but was inoperative. Any default on the
part of the Company in carrying out its obligation under the
scheme by itself without anything more would revive the
winding up order. Therefore, the winding up order was
effectively sub-
522
sisting but inoperative for the time being, Having all the
potentiality of being rejuvenated or being brought back to
life.
Now if the winding up order was merely held in abeyance
i.e. it was not operative for the time being, but it had not
ceased to exist, the winding up proceedings are in fact
pending and the court which made the winding up order would
be the court which is winding up the Company. It is now
well-settled that a winding up order once made can be
revoked or recalled but till it is revoked or recalled it
continues to subsist. That is the situation in this case. If
the winding up order is subsisting the court which made that
order or the court which kept it in abeyance will have
jurisdiction to give necessary directions to the provisional
Liquidator to take recourse to Sec. 446(2).
In passing it was stated that the Company sought the
direction from the Appellate Bench and not from the Court
which was winding up the Company i.e. the court of the
Learned Company Judge which made the winding up order. That
of course is true but even taking a very technical view of
the matter, the appellant was perfectly justified in moving
the petition before the Division Bench because it was the
Division Bench which was supervising the implementation of
the scheme of compromise and arrangement and it was the
Division Bench in the appeal before it against the order of
winding up that had kept the winding up order in abeyance.
The direction was rightly therefore, sought from the
Appellate Bench.
Having thus examined the matter from all angles, we are
of the view that the High Court was in error in rejecting
the application made on behalf of the appellant-Company for
directing the provisional Liquidator to prefer claims
petitions on the materials and expenses to be furnished by
the Company. The amounts realised by the provisional
liquidator on filing claim petitions shall be handed over to
the Company and the appellant-Company is under an obligation
to use, spend, and appropriate them in the implementation of
the scheme under the supervision of the court.
This appeal accordingly succeeds and is allowed and the
order of the High Court under appeals is set aside. The
application for the directions to the provisional Liquidator
made by the appellant Company is granted and directions in
terms of the prayer are hereby made. The appellant shall
bear its own costs.
M.L.A. Appeal allowed.
523