07 March 1963
Supreme Court
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A. S. KRISHNAPPA CHETTIAR & ORS. Vs NACHIAPPA CHETTIAR & ORS.

Bench: MUDHOLKAR,J.R.
Case number: Appeal Civil 104-107 of 1961


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PETITIONER: A.   S. KRISHNAPPA CHETTIAR & ORS.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: NACHIAPPA CHETTIAR & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/03/1963

BENCH: MUDHOLKAR, J.R. BENCH: MUDHOLKAR, J.R. SUBBARAO, K. DAYAL, RAGHUBAR

CITATION:  1964 AIR  227            1964 SCR  (2) 241  CITATOR INFO :  R          1974 SC 968  (48)

ACT: Limitation-Suspension of limitation in cases not covered  by any  specific provision of the Act, general principles  of-- Letter    written   by   defendant   to   the    trustees-If acknowledgment of liability--Indian Limitation Act, 1908  (9 of 1908), 88. 15 (1), 19.

HEADNOTE: The plaintiff, Ramanathan Chettiar, obtained a decree in  O. S.  No.  45  of 1943 for the recovery of an  amount  due  on promissory  note  against  one  Venkatachalam  Chettiar  and assigned the decree in favour of the appellant in C. A.  105 of  1961.   The execution application filed  by  him  proved infructuous  because the first defendant was adjudicated  an insolvent  on  February 27, 1945.  On September  9,  1946  a composition of the debts due from the insolvent and his son, the  second  defendant,  was arrived at.   To  the  deed  of composition the second defendant was also a party though  he was  not  adjudicated  an insolvent.  Under  that  deed  the creditors,  including  the  four appellants  in  this  case, agreed  to  take  40% of the dues.   Under  the  composition arrangement, the entire property of the defendants, both  in India and in Burma was to vest in four trustees, one of whom was the insolvent that is, the first defendant to the  suit. Two  of the trustees were the present appellant in C A.  No. 104  of  1961 and the fourth trustee was an  outsider.   The deed  provided for the payment of the reduced amount by  the trustees  to  different  creditors from the  income  of  the properties or by sale or mortgage of those properties within tour years from April 14, 1947.  Tile deed further  provided for   the  extension  of  this  time  limit  "according   to exigencies and necessity it the discretion of the first  two trustees"  i.  e.,  the first defendant  and  the  appellant Chidambaram  Chettiar.   The  composition  contemplated  the realisation of the dues of the creditors front the income or sale  or  mortgage  of  the Barma  property,  in  the  first instance.   The  composition  scheme  was  accepted  by  the insolvency court and the adjudication of the first defendant as insolvent was annulled by the court on December 19, 1946.

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Out of the Burma assets very little was realised within  the period of four years prescribed in the composition deed  and the trustees did not extend the time. 242 The appellants, therefore, sought execution of their decrees against  the Indian assets.  The last execution  application in O. S. No. 46 of 1943 was dismissed on September 19, 1946, and  no petition was filed thereafter till ’June  13,  1952. Similarly in the other three appeals execution  applications were filed more than three years after the dismissal of  the previous   applications.    In   each   of   the   execution applications,  relief  was claimed only against  the  second defendant.  The Subordinate Judge, before whom the execution applications were filed, held that the adjustment  precluded each  of  the  appellants from executing his  decree  for  a period of four years from April 14, 1947 and, therefore, the execution  applications  were within time.  The  High  Court disagreed  with the Subordinate Judge and holding  that  the execution petitions were barred by time allowed the appeals. The main contention of the appellants in this Court was that the  principle  underlying s. 15 (1) of the  Limitation  Act applied  to  the  present case and at any  rate  the  letter written by the second defendant to the trustees operated  as an acknowledgment of liability under s. 19 of the Limitation Act. Held, that s. 15 (1) of the Limitation Act is restricted  in its  application to a case where the execution of  a  decree has  been  stayed  by  an  injunction  or  an  order.    The Limitation Act is a piece of adjective or procedural law and not  of  substantive  law.  Rules  of  Procedure  cannot  be extended  by  analogy or reference to proceedings  to  which they  do  not expressly apply or could be said to  apply  by necessary   implication.    Suspension  of   Limitation   in circumstances  of  the kind obtaining in  these  appeals  is neither explicit nor implicit in s.     15    upon     which reliance is placed by the appellants. Govind  Naik Gurunathnaik v. Basawannawa Parutappa, 1.  L.R. 1941 Bom. 435, Pulin Chandra Sen v. Amin Mia Muzaffar Ahmad, A. I.R.1933 Cal. 508, Lakhan Chunder Sen v. Madhusudan  Sen, (1907)  1.  L. R. 35 Cal. 209, Nrityamoni  Dassi  v.  Lakhan Chandra Sen, ( 1916) 1. L. R. 43 Cal. 660, Badruddin Khan v. Mahyar  Khan, I. L. R. 1939 All. 103 and Managing  Committee Sunder  Singh  Malha  Singh Rajput High  School,  Indore  v. Sunder  Sigh Malha Singh Sanatan Dharma Rajput  High  School Trust, I. L. R. 1945 Lah. 8, distinguished. Held,  further,  that in the present appeals  two  different sets of persons, the defendants and the Trustees were liable and their respective liablities were distinct.  To refer  to a liablility resting on some one else was not to acknowledge one’s own liability within the meaning of the word in s. 19. The defendant No. 2 had not even indirectly referred to the  243 decree much less to the liability arising under any of them. In  the circumstances it must be held that the letter  dated April 19, 1949, did not extend the period of limitation. Khan Bahadur Shapoor Freedom Mazda v. Durga Prosad  Ckamaria [1962] 1 S. C. R. 140, held inapplicable

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 104 to  107 of 1961. Appeals  from the judgment and order dated July 5, 1956,  of the Madras High Court in Appeal against order No. 480,  454,

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478 and 479 of 1954 respectively. A.V.  Viswanatha  Sastri  and  R.  Gopalakrishnan,  for  the appellant. K.N.  Rajagopal Sastri and M. S. Narasimhan, for  respondent No. 1. 1963.  March 7. The judgment of the Court was delivered by MUDHOLKAR  J.--This appeal and civil appeals Nos.  104,  106 and  107 of 1961 arise out of execution proceedings in  four different  suits but as they involve a common question  they were heard together by the High Court and by us.  That ques- tion  is  whether the execution applications  out  of  which these appeals arise are within time. We propose to treat C. A. No. 105 of 1961 as a typical case. The relevant facts thereof are briefly these : In  O.  S. 46 of 1943 one Ramanathan Chettiar  instituted  a suit against one Venkatachalam Chettiar in the court of  the Subordinate  Judge of Devakottai, for the recovery of a  sum of  Rs.  10,285/- due on promisory note dated  November  20, 1942 with interest thereon.  He eventually obtained a decree for the full claim.  In so far as the second defendant 244 is concerned, he was made liable for the decrctal amount  to the extent of this interest in the joint family property  of himself  and his father.  The plaintiff assigned the  decree in  favour of Chidambaram Chettiar, who is the appellant  in C.  A. 105 of 1961.  He filed an execution  application  but the   execution   proceedings  commenced   by   him   proved infructuous  because the first defendant was adjudicated  an insolvent  on  February 27, 1945.  On September  9,  1946  a composition of the debts due from the insolvent and his son, the  second  defendant.  was arrived at.   To  the  deed  of composition the second defendant was also a party though  he was  not  adjudicated  an insolvent.  Under  that  deed  the creditors,  including the four appellants before us,  agreed to  take 40% of the dues, except one creditor who was to  be paid  a little more.  The defendants, it may  be  mentioned, bad  extensive money-lending business in Burma and the  bulk of  their property was situate in that country.   Under  the composition   arrangement   the  entire  property   of   the defendants,  both in India and in Burma was to vest in  four trustees, one of whom was the insolvent, that is, the  first defendant to the suit.  Two of the trustees were the present appellants,  Chidambaram Chettiar and  Krishnappa  Chettiar, appellant  in C. A. 104 of 1961.  The fourth trustee was  an outsider.   The  total indebtedness of  the  defendants,  as ascertained  on  the  date  on  which  the  composition  was effected,  was Rs. 2,16,077/4/8/- but it was  reduced  under the   arrangement  to  Rs.  86,430-13-3.   There  are   four schedules to the composition deed.  Schedule A sets out  the names of the creditors and the amounts due to them, Schedule B sets out the properties of the defendants and Schedules  C and D set out the properties at Leiwo and Meola respectively in Burma.  The deed provides for the payment of the  reduced amount  by  the  trustees to different  creditors  from  the income  of the properties or by sale, or mortgage  of  those properties within four  245 years  from April 14, 1947.  The deed further  provides  for the  extension of this time limit "according  to  exigencies and  necessity at the discretion of the first two  trustees" i.e.,  the  first defendant and  the  appellant  Chidambaram Chettiar.   The  arrangement also provides  for  payment  of interest at 5 annas per mensem in respect of the amounts due on  the decrees and 4 annas per mensem in respect  of  other outstandings  as  from  April  14,  1947.   The  composition

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contemplated  the realisation of the dues of  the  creditors from  the income or sale or mortgage of the Burma  property, in  the  first instance.  Clause to which  deals  with  this matter runs as follow               "In case the properties of Burma firm are  not               sufficient  to  pay the amounts set  apart  as               payable  to the creditors at 40 per  cent  the               individuals  Nos. 1 and 2 Trustees shall  sell               the properties in British India and set out in               the B schedule herein and from out of the sale               proceeds   distribute   the  amount   to   the               creditors.   Similarly, after the 40 per  cent               amounts have been paid and if there should  be               any  amount of deficiency for the  payment  of               the  60 per cent amount payable to  Krishnappa               Chettiar  as described in para 6  supra,  even               for  that also, the individual Nos.  1  and  2               Trustees  shall  sell  the  aforesaid  British               India   properties  and  pay   the   aforesaid               Krishnappa   Chettiar   the   entire   balance               amount." The  composition  deed contains various other terms  out  of which it would be relevant to set out only the following two :                "Clause  8 : Until 40 per cent of the  amount               is  paid  to the creditors as  aforesaid,  the               said   Trustees,   shall  at   the   time   of               disbursement of the dividend, pay from the 1st               Chitirai of the year Sarvajith for the  annual               expenses of the               246                family, a sum of Rs. 600 per annum to indivi-               dual No. 4 Trustees Venkatachalam Chettiar and               a  sum  of  Rs.  300  per  annum  to  his  son               Nachiappa Chettiar for the aforesaid expenses.                Clause 16 : After the annulment of the  order               of adjudication herein, the aforesaid Venkata-               chalam Chettiar shall, in respect of  transfer               etc.,   of   management  of   the   properties               mentioned  in  C and D  schedules,  execute  a               general  power  of attorney in the  favour  of               individual Nos.  1 and 2 trustees and have the               same registered." The composition scheme was accepted by the insolvency  Court and the adjudication of the first defendant as insolvent was annulled by the court on December 19, 1946. Due  to  political  changes in Burma only  very  little  was realised  out of the Burma assets within the period of  four years prescribed in the composition deed.  The trustees  who were  empowered to extend the time did not extend  it.   The appellants,  therefore,  turned  to the  Indian  assets  and sought  execution  of  their  decrees  against  them.    Two contentions  were raised on behalf of the  defendants.   One was  that  the  Indian assets could not be  sold  until  the assets in Burma were completely exhausted and the other  was that the execution applications were barred by time. In  O. S. No. 46 of 1943 the last execution application  was dismissed on September 19, 1946 (E. P. No. 109 of 1946).  No execution  petition  was filed thereafter till  the  present petition  (E.  P. No. 117 of 1952).  This was filed on  June 13,  1952.   Similarly in the remaining three  appeals  also execu.  tion applications with which we are  concerned  were filed  more  than  three years after the  dismissal  of  the previous  execution applications.  It may be mentioned  that originally the appellant as well as appellants in the  other

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appeals had sought the execution of their  247 respective  decrees for the fall amount.  But  they  amended their petitions later on pursuant to the orders of the court and  restricted their claims to 40 per cent of  the  amounts due under their decrees.  The appellant Chidambaram filed an affidavit along with the execution petition and set out  the following  grounds  in support of his  contention  that  the execution application was within time.               "The trustees were able to realise some of the               assets of the defendants in Burma and to pay a               dividend  of 10 per cent to the creditors.   I               was  paid  a  sum of Rs.  562-4-0  by  way  of               dividend  for this decree on August 10,  1949.               As  the  rest  of  the  Burma  assets  of  the               defendant   could  not  be  realised  by   the               trustees on account of the civil war in  Burma               and the land legislations passed there and  as               there was no prospect of their being  realised               in  the  near  future  myself  and  A.  S.  K.               Krishnappa  Chettiar  aforesaid  as   managing               trustees under the said composition offered to               extend  the period of management by  one  year               provided the defendants would consent to their               Indian  assets being realised and  distributed               among the creditors.  But the defendants  were               not  willing thereto and hence we thought  fit               to  extend the period of our  management.   We               have filed a petition in I. A. No. 87 of  1951               in  the suit I. P. No. 1 of 1945 to  have  the               said composition scheme set aside and the  1st               defendant re-adjudged as insolvent.  The  said               petition is pending.               7.    I   am   advised  that   as   the   said               composition arrangement has failed on  account               of  the  assets of the  defendants  not  being               realised  and the debts discharged within  the               four year period mentioned therein I am in law               and  in equity entitled to recover the  entire               amount   due  to  me  under  this  decree   by               executing it.               248               8.    The  said  composition  provides  for  a               maintenance  allowance of Rs. 600 and  Rs.  30               annually  being  given  to  the  1st  and  2nd               defendant   respectively   at  the   time   of               distribution  of  the dividends.   In  respect               thereof  a  notice  was  issued  by  the   2nd               defendant  on April 19, 1949 to myself and  A.               S.  K. Krishnappa Chettiar  aforesaid  wherein               there  is  an acknowledgment of  liability  in               respect of the several debts mentioned in  the               said composition.  Further the trustees  have,               acting  under the authority given to  them  by               the  defendants  under the  said  composition,               paid me Rs. 562-4-0 on August 10, 1949 by  way               of  dividend  for this decree  and  have  duly               entered the same in the accounts maintained by               them.  Moreover I could not execute the decree               during  the four years from April 14, 1947  or               any extended period during which the  trustees               had  to  manage, realise  and  distribute  the               assets of the defendants.  There is  therefore               no question of limitation.". Similar grounds were set out in the affidavits filed by  the

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other appellants also. It   may  be  mentioned  that  in  each  of   the   excution applications  relief  was claimed only  against  the  second defendant  because  in insolvency petition No.  87  of  1951 filed  by  some of the creditors the  first  defendant,  was readjudicated  an insolvent by the court on August 3,  1954. The execution application was, as already stated, opposed by the second defendant firstly on the ground that the composi- tion  arrived at between him and his father on the one  hand and the creditors on the other was still in force, that  the arrangement  was  irrevocable  and operated  as  a  complete discharge  of the liability of the defendants for all  time. The  second  ground was that the execution  application  was barred by time.  249 The   precise  pleas  of  the  second  defendant   regarding limitation were as follows :               (a)   that  the adjudication of his father  as               an  insolvent and the pendency  of  insolvency               proceedings  against  him  would  not   affect               limitation in so far as he was concerned;               (b)   that  the receipt by the  appellant  and               other   creditors   of  certain   amounts   as               dividends in August, 1949 would not extend the               period    of    limitation    for    execution               proceedings;               (c)   that  the acknowledgment relied upon  is               "’wholly wrong, misconceived and untenable." According  to him there was no acknowledgement of  liability of any kind in the notice referred to in the affidavit  much less the liability of the second defendant to discharge  the decree which had in fact become extinguished and effaced  by reason of the composition arrived at on September 9, 1946. In the course of the arguments before the executing court it was urged on behalf of the appellants in those appeals  that the  four years within which the trustees were  required  to realise  the Burma properties and pay off the debts  of  the creditors  must  be regarded as a period  during  which  the execution of the decrees was stayed and that consequently on the  principles  underlying s. 15 of the  Indian  Limitation Act, 1908, that period should be deducted from computing the period of limitation for preferring execution  applications. The  Subordinate judge, before whom the  execution  applica- tions  were filed, upheld this contention and held that  the execution applications were within time.  He also held  that the  execution applications arrived at between  the  parties operated as an adjustment 250 of  the  decree on the date on which  that  composition  was effected  or  from the date on which  the  adjudication  was arrived  at  and that though the composition  could  not  be certified  to the executing court under 0. XXI, r. 2, C.  P. C.  within the time permitted by law, it could be  certified even now at the instance of the decree-holder because it was open  to the decree holder to certify an adjustment  at  any time he liked.  According to the learned Subordinate  judge, the  adjustment  precluded each of the appellants  from  ex- cuting his decree for a period of four years from April  14, 1947 and, therefore, the execution applications were  within time.    The  High  Court,  however,  disagreed   with   the Subordinate  judge on both the grounds and holding that  the execution petitions were barred by time allowed the appeals. It may be mentioned that neither of the two courts below has considered the contention of the appellants in these appeals that  the  letter dated April 19, 1949 sent  by  the  second

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defendant   to   two  of  the  trustees   operated   as   an acknowledgment of their liability or that dividends paid  to the  appellants by the trustees in August, 1949 operated  to extend the time of limitation. Mr.  Viswanatha  Sastri, who appears for the  appellants  in these  appeals, has raised only two contentions.  The  first is that the principle underlying s. 15 (1) of the Limitation Act  is  applicable  to  a  case  of  this  kind  and  that, therefore, the execution applications are within time.   The second is that at any rate the letter dated April 19,  1949, written by the second defendant to the trustees operates  as an acknowledgment of liability under s. 19 of the Limitation Act  and, therefore, saves the limitation in respect of  all the execution applications except the one out of which C. A. No.  104  of  1961  arises.  According  to  Mr.  Sastri  the composition  of  a  decretal  debt does  not  amount  to  an adjustment  or  satisfaction  of a  decree  until  the  acts required to be  251 done  thereunder have been performed.  Here the  composition scheme required payment of 40 per cent of the decretal debts by  the trustees to the craditors.  According to him,  until that  condition was fulfilled the original decree cannot  be said  to  have  been satisfied.  Since  the  decrees  herein involved could not be regarded as having been satisfied they are  still  alive.  Then, according to Mr. Sastri,  where  a composition  scheme  prescribes the period  during  which  a condition has to be performed, till the expiry of theperiod or performance of the condition the operationof     the decrees must be deemed to have been stayed. For,     during this period it would be incompetent to the decree-holders to execute  their  decrees.   Such period  could  therefore  be deducted by applying the principles underlying s. 15 (1)  of the  Limitation Act from computing the period of  limitation for filing a fresh execution application.  He concedes  that here the composition scheme not having been certified to the execution court, the defendants would not have been able  to resist an execution application if made within the period of four  years specified in the deed of composition.   But  the composition being binding on the appellants, they would have laid themselves open to suits for damages at the instance of the  defendants  if  they had  proceeded  to  execute  their decrees   within  this  period.   Section  15  (1)  of   the Limitation Act runs thus :               "15  (1)  : In computing the period  of  limi-               tation prescribed for any suit or  application               for the execution of a decree, the institution               or  execution  of  which has  been  stayed  by               injunction   or   order,  the  time   of   the               continuance  of the injunction or  order,  the               day  on which it was issued or made,  and  the               day  on  which  it  was  withdrawn,  shall  be               excluded." It  is  clear from its terms that it is  restricted  in  its application to a case where the execution of a decree 252 has been stayed by an injunction or an order.  By no stretch of  imagination  can it be said that the acceptance  by  the insolvency  court of the composition operated as a  stay  of execution  of  the  decrees for the  period  of  four  years referred  to in the deed or as an injunction.  Further,  the second   defendant  was  not  a  party  to  the   insolvency proceedings and could, therefore, not have been entitled  to the  benefit of the order of the court accepting the  scheme of composition.

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In support of his contention that the principles  underlying s. 15 (1) are applicable to a case like the present one, Mr. Sastri  has  strongly relied on the decision  in  Govindnaik Gurunathnaik v. Basauannawa Parutappa (1).  There,  Beaumont C. J., has observed at P. 437 :               "Section 15 of the Act recognizes the  princi-               ple that in computing the period of limitation               prescribed   for   an  application   for   the               execution of a decree, any period during which               the  execution of the decree has  been  stayed               must be excluded; and it would certainly  seem               right   to  apply  a  similar   principle   to               applications in a suit which has been  stayed;               in  terms.,  however,  the  section  does  not               apply.   The only authority on the  point,  to               which  we  have been referred, and  which  was               referred  to  in the lower  Courts,  is  Pulin               Chandra Sen v. Amin Mia Muzffar Ahmad (2)." Saying  that this decision had stood for some years and  had not been dissented from the learned Chief justice observed               "I would rather base the appellant’scase               on the ground that the right to appear  for               a final    decree was suspended duringthe               period in  which the suit was stayed.     Sucha               principle  was applied by the CalcuttaHigh               Court               (1) I.L.R, 1941 Bom. 435.               (2) A.I.R. 1933 Cal. 508.               253               in  Lakhan Chunder Sen v. Manhusudan  Sen  (1)               affirmed  by the Privy Council  in  Nrityamoni               Dassi v. Lakhan Chandra Sen (2)." It  would thus appear that the learned Chief  Justice  based his decision really on s. 14 of the Limitation Act.  In both the  cases  referred  to by the learned  Chief  Justice  the provisions of s. 14 of the Limitation Act were applied. In  Pulin Chandra Sen’s case(3), the facts were  these:  The next  friend of it minor instituted a suit upon  a  mortgage but  died after the preliminary decree was passed.   No  new next friend was, however, appointed in his place.  The minor made  an  application for passing a final  decree  within  3 years  after attaining majority, but three years  after  the period  of grace fixed by the preliminary decree.  The  High Court, while holding that though the erstwhile minor was not entitled to claim the benefit of s. 6 of the Limitation Act, held  that  the execution application must  be  regarded  as within  time since it had been made within three years  from the  date  when  the right to apply accrued to  him  on  his attaining  majority.   No  doubt, this is a  case  where  in effect the court has applied the principles underlying s.  6 though it was clearly of opinion that s. 6 in terms did  not apply.   There  is no discussion of the point  at  all  and, therefore,  we  do not think that this is a  decision  which needs to be considered. The  next  two  decisions relied on are  Badruddin  Khan  v. Mahvar  Khan (4) and Managing Committee Sundar  Singh  Malha Singh Rajput High School, Indora v. Sundar Singh Malha Singh Sanatan Dharma Rajput High School Trust (5).  In both  these cases  the  court  applied what according  to  it  were  the general  principles underlying s. 15 of the Limitation  Act, though the facts of these cases do not strictly fail  within the purview of that section.  The question (1)(1907) 1 L.R. 35 Cal. 209. (3)A.1 R. 1933 Cal, 508. (2)  (1916) I.L R. 43 Cal. 660,

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(4)  I.L.R. 1939 All 103 (5) I. L. R. 1943 Lah. 8. 254 is whether there is any well-recognized principle whereunder the period of limitation can be regarded as being  suspended because  a  party is prevented under  certain  circumstances from  taking  action  in  pursuance  of  his  rights.    The Limitation  Act  is  a consolidating  and  amending  statute relating  to  the limitation of suits, appeals  and  certain types  of  applications to courts and  must,  therefore,  be regarded as an exhaustive Code.  It is a piece of  adjective or  procedural  law and not of substantive  law.   Rules  of procedure,  whatever they may be, are to be applied only  to matters   ’to  which  they  are  made  applicable   by   the legislature  expressly  or by necessary  implication.   They cannot be extended by analogy or reference to proceedings to which they do riot expressly apply or could be said to apply by  necessary  implication.   It would,  therefore,  not  be correct to apply any of the provisions of the Limitation Act to matters which do not strictly fall within the purview  of those provisions.  Thus, for instance, period of  limitation for  various  kinds of suits, appeals and  applications  are prescribed  in the First Schedule.  A proceeding which  does not  fall under any of the articles in that  schedule  could not be said to be barred by time on the analogy of a  matter which  is  governed by a particular article,  For  the  same reasons  the  provisions of ss. 3 to 28  of  Limitation  Act cannot  be  applied to situations which fall  outside  their purview.   These  provisions do not  adumbrate  any  general principles  of  substantive  law  nor  do  they  confer  any substantive rig, its on litigants and, therefore, cannot  be permitted to have greater application than what is  explicit or   implicit   in  them.   Suspension  of   limitation   in circumstances  of  the kind obtaining in  these  appeals  is neither  explicit nor implicit in s. 15 upon which  reliance is  placed on behalf of the appellants.  We are,  therefore, unable to accept the first argument of Mr. Sastri. Coming  to  the second argument of Mr. Sastri  it  would  be useful to reproduce the relevant portion  255 of  the letter dated April 1.9, 1949, on which  reliance  is placed :               "The properties of our client’s family and his               father,  Venkatachalam  Chettiar’s  share   of               properties have vested in you in the  capacity               of  Trustees as per the composition scheme  of               arrangement effected on September 9, 1946  and               you are managing the same, and you have to pay               Rs.  300  per  annum to our  client  from  1st               Chitrai of Sarvajit year (April 14, 1947)  for               his family expenses as provided in the  scheme               of  composition and you have paid Rs. 300  and               for  the  year Sarvajit and  have  obtained  a               receipt therefor from my client.  You have not               paid  the  sum  of Rs. 300 due  for  the  year               Sarwadhari  to our client though  he  demanded               you   many  times.   As  it  is  learnt   that               individual No. 2 out of you, are raising  non-               maintainable objections and the sum of Rs. 300               due for the year Virodhi, still remains to  be               paid, I have been given instructions to demand               the  total amount of Rs. 600 payable  for  the               aforesaid years.  So you should pay the amount               to  my client and obtain a  receipt  therefore               within  one  week after the  receipt  of  this

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             notice.   Further you have till now  collected               Rs.  17,500 as per the scheme  of  arrangement               and  though you have received the amount  long               time  ago, you have not paid to the  creditors               their  dividend amounts, you are bound by  law               and  equity to pay interest to  the  aforesaid               amounts  You are hereby informed that  as  you               have  not paid to the creditors  the  dividend               amounts  my client is put to a heavy loss  and               that you are               bound  to  bear  all the losses  that  may  be               caused thereby and make good the losses ;  you               should  immediately pay off the creditors  the               dividends  and in default my client will  have               to launch               256               proceedings  against  you  and  seek   reliefs               through Court." This  letter  was  written  by  the,  vakil  of  the  second defendant   to  the  Trustees  demanding  payment   of   the maintenance  allowance  due to the  second  defendant.   The second object of this letter was to require the trustees  to pay  out  of the funds in their hands dividends due  to  the various creditors under the composition scheme.  Mr.  Sastri contends  that this letter contains a definite admission  of the jural relationship between the defendant on the one hand and  the creditors on the other i. e., the  relationship  of creditor and debtor and, therefore, this is an admission  of liability  under the decrees.  Relying upon the decision  of this  Court in Khan Bahadur Shapoor Freedom Mazda  v.  Durga Prosad  Chamria (1), he says that the essential  requirement for  sustaining a plea of acknowledgment under s. 19 of  the Limitation  Act is that the statement on which it is  sought to  be  founded  must  relate  to  a  subsisting  liability, indicate  the  existence of jural relationship and  must  be intended,  either expressly or implied, to admit that  jural relationship.   Where  such jural relationship  is  admitted expressly or impliedly, he contends, that the mere fact that the  precise nature of the liability is not mentioned  would not  prevent the acknowledgment from falling within  s.  19. That  was a case in which the mortgagor had written  to  his creditor a letter to the following effect               "My dear Durgaprosad.               Chandni Bazar is again advertised for sale  on               Friday the 11th inst.  I am afraid it will  go               very  cheap.   I had a private  offer  of  Rs.               2,75,000  a few days ago but as soon  as  they               heard it was advertised by the Registrar  they               withdrew.   As you are interested why  do  you               not take up the whole.  There is only               (1)   (1962] 1 S.C.R. 140.                257               about 70,000 due to the mortgagee-a payment of               10,000 will stop the sale.               Yours sincerely,                           Sd/- J. C. Galstaun." The q qestion to be considered was whether this amounted  to an acknowledgment of the mortgagee’s right.  This Court held that it did amount to an acknowledgment and observed thus :               "It  is  thus  clear  that  acknowledgment  as               prescribed  by  s. 19 merely renews  debt;  it               does not create a new right of action.  It  is               a  mere  acknowledgment of  the  liability  in               respect of the right in question ; it need not               be  accompanied  by a promise  to  pay  either

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             expressly   or  even  by   implication.    The               statement on which a plea of acknowledgment is               based  must  relate to  a  present  subsisting               liability  though  the  exact  nature  or  the               specific  character of the said liability  may               not be indicated in words.  Words used in  the               acknowledgment  must,  however,  indicate  the               existence  of jural relationship  between  the               parties  such as that of debtor and  creditor,               and it must appear that the statement is  made               with   the  intention  to  admit  such   jural               relationship.  Such intention can be  inferred               by   implication  from  the  nature   of   the               admission and need not be expressed in  words.               If  the  statement is fairly  clear  then               the intention to admit jural relationship  may               be implied from it.  The admission in question               need  not  be  express but  must  be  made  in               circumstances  and  in words  from  which  the               court  can  reasonably infer that  the  person               making  the admission intended to refer  to  a               subsisting  liability  as at the date  of  the               statement.   In construing words used  in  the               statements made in               258               writing  on  which a  plea  of  acknowledgment               rests   oral  evidence  has   been   expressly               excluded  but  surrounding  circumstances  can               always be considered.  Stated generally courts               lean  in favour of a liberal  construction  of               such  statements though it does not mean  that               where  no  admission  is made  one  should  be               inferred.,  or  where  a  statement  was  made               clearly   without  intending  to   admit   the               existence of jural relationship such intention               could   be  fastened  on  the  maker  of   the               statement   by  an  involved  or   far-fetched               process of’ reasoning.  Broadly stated that is               the   effect   of  the   relevant   provisions               contained  in  s. 19, and there is  really  no               substantial difference between the parties  as               to the true legal position in this matter.’ In  our  opinion,  this case is not  of  assistance  co  the appellants.   In  the appeals before us though there  was  a personal  liability  on  the defendants  under  the  various decrees,   their   liability  which  was  created   by   the composition  deed was only on properties in which they  had, consequent on the creation of a trust under the  composition deed, only a beneficial interest.  This new liability had to be discharged by the trustees in whom the legal title to the property  vested  Thus  there were  two  different  sets  of persons who were liable, the defendants and the Trustees and their  respective  liabilities  were  distinct.   What   the defendant  No.  2  has referred to is the  libility  of  the Trustees arising under the terms of the deed of  composition and  could  be enforced only against them.  To  refer  to  a liability  resting  on someone else is  not  to  acknowledge one’s own liability within the meaning of the word in s. 19. The defendant No. 2 has not even indirectly referred to  the decree much less to the liability arising under any of them. In the circumstances we must hold that this letter does  not extend the period of limitation.  For these reasons  259 we uphold the decision of the High Court and dismiss each of these appeals with costs.  There will, however, be only  one

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hearing fee. Appeals dismissed. 259