07 March 1963
Supreme Court
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LAKSHMI ACHI AND OTHERS Vs T.V.V. KAILASA THEVAR AND OTHERS

Case number: Appeal (civil) 617 of 1960


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PETITIONER: LAKSHMI ACHI AND OTHERS

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: T.V.V. KAILASA THEVAR AND OTHERS

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/03/1963

BENCH:

ACT: Debt  Relief--Agriculturist-Scaling  down  of  decree  debt- Enabling   statute   coming  into  force   pending   appeal- Application    after  appellate decree,  if  barred  by res- judicata--Madras Agriculturists Relief Act, 1938 (Mad. 4  of 1938), as amended by Madras Act 23 of 1948,,ss. 16 (iii), 19 (2).

HEADNOTE: The  appellants  had  filed a suit  on  a  mortgage  against respondent No. 1 and others as defendants and had obtained a preliminary decree in it on May, 15, 1937 and a final decree on  January  20,  1938.   Appeals  were  filed  against  the preliminary  Decree in the High Court of Madras.  While  the appeals were pending there, the Madras Agriculturists Relief Act,  1938  came into force.  The defendants  in  this  suit other  than  respondent No. 1 thereupon applied  for  relief under  this  Act.  The applications succeeded and  the  High Court  passed  a new preliminary decree on  March  25,  1942 after scaling down the amount recoverable in accordance with the Act. The  respondent  No. 1 had neither contested  the  suit  nor appeared  in the appeals nor made any application under  the Act  for relief.  The preliminary decree passed by the  High Court, therefore, confirmed as against him the decree passed by the trial Court.  Respondent No. 1 thereafter applied  to the trial Court for relief under the Act but the application was dismissed on the ground that in view of the judgment  of the  High Court the application was not maintainable in  the trial Court, Respondent No. 1 thereafter applied to the High 260 Court for setting aside the exparte decree in so far as  it. deprived  him of the right to relief under the Act but  that application was also dismissed. On  january  25, 1949, Madras Act XXIII of 1948  was  passed amending  the Act of 1938 by adding a sub-s. (2) to  s.  19. After  this  amendment  s. 19 read, "(1)  where  before  the commencement  of this Act, a court has passed a  decree  for the repayment of a debt, it shall, on the application of any judgment-debtor  who  is  an agriculturist  ....  apply  the provisions   of   this  Act  to  such   decree   and   shall notwithstanding  anything  contained in the  Code  of  Civil Procedure,  1908,  amend  the decree  accordingly  or  enter satisfaction, as the case may be. (2) The provisions of sub- section  (1)  shall  also apply to cases  where,  after  the commencement  of this Act, a Court has passed a  decree  for the  repayment  of  a debt payable  at  such  commencement." Section  16  of the amending Act provided,  "The  amendments made  by  this Act shall apply to the  following  suits  and

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proceedings, namely :...... (iii) all suits and  proceedings in which the decree or order passed has not been executed or satisfied   in   full  before  the  commencement   of   this Act..  .  . . . . ". Respondent No. 1 again applied  to  the trial  Court  for  relief  under the  Act  in  view  of  the amendment but this application was rejected.  Respondent No. 1 then appealed to the High Court which granted relief under the  Act.  The appellants thereupon appealed to the  Supreme Court. Held,  that  the  decree  passed  by  the  trial  Court  was superseded  by  the preliminary decree passed  by  the  High Court  on March 25, 1942.  The final decree on the basis  of this preliminary decree was passed by the District judge  on September  25, 1943, and this was the only operative  decree in  the case.  Hence s. 19 (2) of the Act of 1938 read  with s.  16  (iii)  of the amending Act created a  new  right  in favour of defendant No. 1. Jowad  Hussain  v. Gendan Singh, A. I. R. (1926) P.  C.  93, Gajadhar Singh v. Kishan Jiwan Lal, (1917) I. L. R. 39  All. 641,  The Collector of Customs Calcutta v. The  East  Indian Commercial Co. Ltd. [1963] 2 S. C. R. 563, referred to. In the Act the word "debt" includes a decretal debt. Narayanan Chettiar v. Ammamalai Chettiar, [1959] Supp.  I S. C. R. 237, followed. Clause  (iii) of s. 16 of the amending Act applies  to  this case because the final decree had not been satisfied in full before  261 the  commencement  of the amending Act and  that  created  a fresh right in defendant No. 1 to the benefit of sub-s.  (1) of S. 19. Defendant No. I cannot be deprived of the new right given by the  amending Act by reason of the dismissal of his  earlier applications  for  reliefs  under the Act  which  were  made before the creation of the right.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE          JURISDICTION         Civil  Appeal No. 617 of 1960. Appeal  by special leave from the judgment and order  dated’ December  2, 1955 of the Madras High Court in C. M.  A.  No. 355 of 1951. A.V.   Viswanatha  Sastri,  R.  Ganapathi  Iyer  and   G. Gopalakrishnan for the appellants. M.K.  Ramamurthi,  D.  P. Singh, R. K.  Garg  and  S.  C. Agarwala, for respondent No. 1. 1963.  March 7. The judgment of the Court was delivered by S.K.  DAS  J.-This is an appeal by special  leave  from  the judgment  and order of the Madras High Court dated  December 2,  1955 by which the said Court set aside the order of  the learned District judge of East Tanjore dated August 30, 1950 passed on an application made by the 1st respondent  herein, unders.  19 of the Madras Agriculturists Relief Act (Act  IV of  1938), hereinafter called the principal Act, as  amended by the Madras Agriculturists Relief (Amendment) Act of  1948 (Act XXIII of 1948).  By the said order the learned District judge  dismissed  the application as unsustainable  in  law. The  High Court set aside that order on the ground that  the respondent’s application for the scaling down of the  decree passed against him should not have been dismissed in  limine and  the  learned District judge should have gone  into  the question whether the respondent was an agriculturist 262

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entitled  to the benefit of the principal Act as amended  in 1948. The  material  facts are not very much in  controversy,  but this  is one of those cases in which a long history must  be stated  for the appreciation of a very short point  involved in  the  case.   The short point involved  is,  whether  the application  made  by  the  1st  respondent  herein  to  the District  judge of East Tanjore in O. S. No. 30 of  1934  on December 6, 1950 was unsustainable in law. We may now state the long history.  The appellants before us are  the representatives of the original plaintiffs  who  as mortgagees instituted a suit (being O. S. No. 30 of 1934) in the  court  of  the District judge,  East  Tanjore  for  the enforcement  of , a mortgage against respondent No.  1,  who was defendant No. 1 in the suit, and six other persons.  The mortgage  bond upon which the suit was brought was  executed by  defendant  No.  1 for himself and  his  minor  undivided brother,  defendant No. 2, and also as authorised  agent  on behalf of defendants 3 to 7, who were interested in a  joint family  business.   The  suit  was  contested  by  all   the defendants, except defendant No. I against whom it proceeded ex  parte.  A preliminary decree was passed on May 15,  1937 by which a sum of Rs. 1,08,098/- was directed to be paid  by defendant  No. 1 and defendants 3 to 7, in default of  which the  plaintiffs were declared entitled to apply for a  final decree  for sale of the mortgaged property and the suit  was dismissed  as against defendant No. 2. Against this  decree, two  appeals  were taken to the Madras High  Court,  one  by defendants  3  to  7  (being Appeal  No.  48  of  1938)  who contended  that the mortgage was not binding on them  or  on their shares in the joint family property ; and the other by the   plaintiffs  (being  Appeal  No.  248  of  1938),   who challenged the propriety of the judgment of the trial  judge in so far as it dismissed their claim 263 against defendant No. 2. During the pendency of   these appeals the    principal    Act   came   into   force    and applications were made by defendants 2 to 7 to the     High Court  prayingthat  in the event of a decree   being  passed against  them,  the decretal debt might be  scaled  down  in accordance  with  the  provisions  of  the  principal   Act. Defendant  No.  I  who did not appeal at any  stage  of  the proceedings  did  not make any such application.   The  High Court  forwarded these applications to the lower  court  for enquiry and asked for a finding on the question whether  the applicants were agriculturists and if so, to what extent the decretal  dues  should be scaled down.  The  District  Judge made the necessary  enquiry and submitted a finding that the applicants were agriculturists and that the debt, if  scaled down  would amount to Rs. 49, 255/with interest  thereon  at six  percent  per annum from October 1,  1937  exclusive  of costs.  On receipt of this finding the appeals were set down for final hearing and by their judgment dated March 25, 1942 the  learned  judges of the Madras High Court  accepted  the finding  of the court below and held that defendants 2 to  7 were  entitled  to  have the debt scaled down,  but  as.  no application had been made on behalf of defendant No.1 he was held  entitled  to  no relief under the  principal  Act.   A decree  was drawn up in accordance with this judgment.   The amount  due  by  defendants  2 to 7 was  stated  to  be  Rs. 49,255/-  with interest thereon at six per cent  per  annum, while so for as defendant No. 1 was concerned the decree  of the   trial   judge  was  affirmed  subject  to   a   slight modification regarding the rate of interest.  Defendant  No. 1  thereupon  filed  an  application in  the  court  of  the

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District  judge,  East Tanjore, claiming  relief  under  the principal Act alleging that he too was an agriculturist  and hence entitled to the benefits of the Act.  This application was  dismissed on February 25, 1943 on-the ground that as  a decree had already been passed by the High Court  definitely negativing his claim to any relief under the 264 principal Act, such application was not entertainable by the lower court.  The next step taken by defendant No. I was  to file  an  application in the High Court itself  praying  for setting  aside the ex parte decree which excluded  him  from the  benefits  of the principal Act.  This  application  was rejected  by  the High Court on December 13,  1943.   As  no payment  was made in accordance with the preliminary  decree passed  by  the High Court, a final decree in terms  of  the same was passed by the District Judge on September 25, 1943. Proceedings for execution of this final decree were  started on  August 16, 1944 when an execution petition was filed  in the court of the District judge, East Tanjore.  Some of  the mortgaged properties were sold and purchased by the  decree- holders  for  a total sum of Rs. 12,005/-  and  part  satis- faction  of the decree was entered for that amount.  In  the course of these proceedings certain terms of settlement were offered by the judgment-debtors.  The estate of the  decree- holders  was  then  in the hands of the  receivers,  and  it appears that the receivers agreed, with the sanction of  the court  to  receive Rs. 24,000/- only from or  on  behalf  of defendant  No. 2 and release him and his share of the  mort- gaged  property  from  the decretal  charge.   Likewise  the receivers  agreed to receive Rs. 48,000/- from defendants  3 to  7  and  to release them and their  properties  from  the decretal  debt.   With regard to defendant No.  I  also  the receivers  agreed to accept Rs. 37,500/- and it  was  agreed that  if  one  Yacob  Nadar paid the  amount  on  behalf  of defendant  No.  1  on consideration of  the  decree  against defendant  No. 1 being assigned to him, the receivers  would accept the same.  No such payment was however made on behalf of  defendant No. 1. But a sum of Rs. 24,000/- was  paid  on behalf of defendant No. 2 and his properties were exonerated from  the decree. -Defendants 3 to 7 also paid a sum of  Rs. 48,000/and  odd  in two instalments in  discharge  of  their decretal debt.  The three amounts paid by defendants  265 2 to 7 totalled Rs. 72,610-12-0.  On March 6, 1947 defendant No.  1 deposited in court a sum of Rs. 3215/- and put  in  a petition under s.47 and Order XXI r. 2 C. P. C. praying that the  amount  deposited by him together  -with  the  payments already  made by defendants 2 to 7 completely wiped off  the amount due under the decree as scaled down by the High Court in favour of defendants 2 to 7; defendant No. 1 prayed  that as the decree was one and indivisible, full satisfaction  of the  decree  should be recorded  exonerating  the  mortgaged property  and also defendant No. I himself from any  further liability  in  respect of the decretal debt.   The  position taken  up  by  defendant No. 1 in  substance  was  that  the mortgage  debt  was  one and  indivisible  and  even  though different amounts were mentioned as payable by two groups of defendants  in  the decree, the  decree-holders  were  bound under  the  terms  of  the  decree  to  release  the  entire mortgaged property even on payment of the amount directed to be  paid by defendants 2 to 7. This contention of  defendant No. I was negatived by the District Judge, but was  accepted by the High Court on appeal which allowed the application of defendant  No.  1 and directed that the court  below  should enter full satisfaction of the mortgage decree.  The decree-

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holders  then  came up to this court in appeal (C.   A.  No. 32/1950)  and the judgment of this court is reported  in  V. Ramaswami  Ayyangar  and others v. T. N. V.  Kailasa  Thavar (1).    This  court  held  that  though  the   general   law undoubtedly   is  that  a  mortgaged  decree  is   one   and indivisible, exceptions to the rule arc admitted in  special circumstances  where the integrity of the mortgage has  been disrupted  at the instance of the mortgagee  himself.   This court  further held that there was nothing wrong in  law  in scaling  down  a mortgage decree in, favour of  one  of  the judgment debtors while as regards the others the decree  was kept  intact; the principal Act was a special statute  which aimed at giving relief not to debtors in general (1)  [1951] S. C. R. 292. 266 but only to a specified class of debtors, namely, those  who are agriculturists as defined by the Act and to this  extent it  trenched  upon  the  general law.   The  result  of  the decision of this court was that the decree stood unscaled as against  the 1st defendant.  When the appeal in the  Supreme Court was pending, the amending Act of 1948 was enacted  and it came into force on January 25, 1949.  We shall  presently read  the provisions of this amending Act.  On the  strength of  these  provisions defendant No. I  made  an  application again to scale down the decretal debt.  This was application No.  79 of 1950.  It was this application which the  learned District judge held to be unsustainable in law.  On  appeal, the High Court held that the application was sustainable and an  enquiry  should be made whether defendant No.  1  is  an agriculturist within the meaning of the principal Act.   The present  appeal is directed against this order of  the  High Court. Now before we proceed to consider the questions which  arise in  this  appeal  it is necessary to set  out  the  relevant provisions of the principal Act and the amending Act of 1948 of which defendant No. 1 (respondent No.1 herein) claims the benefit.   We  must first read s. 19 of the  principal  Act. That section is in these terms :               "19. (1) Where before the commencement of this               Act,  a  court  has passed a  decree  for  the               repayment   of  a  debt,  it  shall,  on   the               application  of any judgment-debtor who is  an               agriculturist  or in respect of a Hindu  joint               family debt, on the application of any  member               of  the  family  whether  or  not  he  is  the               judgment-debtor  or on the application of  the               decree  holder, apply the provisions  of  this               Act to such decree and shall,  notwithstanding               anything  contained  in  the  Code  of   Civil               Procedure, 1908, amend the decree  accordingly               or enter satisfaction, as the case may be                967               Provided  that  all payments made  or  amounts               recovered,   whether  ’before  or  after   the               commencement  of this Act, in respect  of               any such decree shall first be applied in pay-               ment of all costs as originally decreed to the               creditor.               (2)   The provisions of sub-section (1)  shall               also apply cases where, after the commencement               of  this Act, a Court has passed a decree  for               the  repayment  of  a  debt  payable  at  such               commencement." It  is worthy of note that s. 19 as it originally  stood  in the  principal Act was renumbered as subs. (1) of s. 19  and

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sub-s.  (2) was added by s. 10 of the amending Act of  1948. We  may also set out here s. 16 amending Act of 1948.   That section is in these terms :               "16.   The amendments made by this  Act  shall               apply  to the following suits and  proceedings               namely:-               (i)   all  suits  and  proceedings  instituted               after the commencement of this Act ;               (ii)  all  suits  and  proceedings  instituted               before the commencement of this Act, in  which               no  decree  or order has been  passed,  or  in               which  the  decree  or order  passed  has  not               become final, before, such commencement ;               (iii) all  suits and proceedings in which  the               decree  or order passed has not been  executed               or satisfied in full before  the  commencement               of this Act               Provided   that   no    creditor   shall    be               required to refund any sum which has               268               been  paid to or realised by him,  before  the               commencement of this Act." Respondent No. I claimed that he was entitled to the benefit of  sub-s. (2) of s. 19 read with cl. (iii) of s. 16 of  the amending Act of 1948.  The learned District judge  negatived this claim on the following three grounds :               (i)   He  held that in O. S. No.  30/1934  the               preliminary  decree was originally  passed  on               May  15, 1937 and the final decree on  January               28, 1938 and both these dates were anterior to               the  coming into force of the  principal  Act.               The principal Act, it may be stated here, came               into force on March 22, 1938.  Therefore  sub-               s. (2) of s.    19   did  not  apply  to   the               present case.                (ii) Secondly, he held that sub-s. (2) of  s.               19 applied to those cases only where there was               a debt payable on the date of the commencement               of  the principal Act; in the  present  case.,               however, there was no debt payable on the date               of the commencement of the principal Act,  the               debt  having ripened into a decree;  therefore               sub-s. (2) of s. 19 was not applicable.               (iii) Thirdly.,  he  held that  the  claim  of               defendent No. 1 to have the decree against him               scaled down having been decided against him by               the District judge in I. A. No. 104 of 1942 on               February  25, 1943 and the same  claim  having               been negatived by the High Court in subsequent               proceedings.. it was not open to defendant No.               1 to make a fresh claim under sub-s. (1) of s.               19 because though sub-s. (1) of s. 19 used the               expression "notwithstanding anything contained               in  the  Code of Civil  Procedure",  that  ex-               pression related to the provision of the                269               Code in the matter of amendment of decrees and               entering of satisfaction of decree but did not               include  the  principle  of  res  judicata,  a               principle   which   is   more   general    and               comprehensive  in character than what is  laid               down in s. 11 of the Code. The High Court apparently proceeded on the footing that  the present case was one in which a decree had been passed after the  commencement of the principal Act and therefore  sub-s.

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(2)  of s. 19, added by the amending Act of  1948,  applied. The High Court said that no serious attempt was made  before it  on behalf of the decree-holders to support the  view  of the learned District judge that the debt in the present case was  not  a  debt within the meaning of  the  principal  Act because   it  had  ripened  into  a  decree  prior  to   the commencement  of  the principal Act.  The  High  Court  then referred  to  s.  16  of -the amending  Act  and  held  that defendant No. 1 was entitled to the benefit of sub-s. (2) of s. 19 read with cl. (iii) of s. 16 of the amending Act, 1948 and  the circumstance that the claim of defendant No.  1  to the benefits of the principal Act prior to its amendment  in 1948  had been negatived by the District Judge and the  High Court  did  not  deprive  him of the  new  right  which  the amending  Act  had given him provided he was able  to  prove that  he  was  an agriculturist within the  meaning  of  the Principal Act. Learned  counsel  on  behalf of the  appellants  has  argued before  us that the view expressed by the High Court is  not correct.   He has contended that the present case  does  not come  under sub-s. (2) of s. 19 because this was a  case  in which a decree was passed for the repayment of a debt before the commencement of the principal Act, namely, before  March 22, 1938.  He has pointed out that so far as defendant No. 1 is concerned, a preliminary decree was passed against him on May 15, 1937 and a final decree on January 270 28,  1938.  He has also referred us to the decree passed  in the High Court on March 25, 1942.  In cl. (6) of that decree it  was stated that so for as defendant No. 1 was  concerned the  direction  made by the learned District  judge  in  the decree  passed  on  May  15,  1937  would  stand  confirmed. Therefore, the argument before us is that the only provision of which defendant No. I was entitled to claim benefit is s. 19 as it stood before its amendment in 1948 which applied to cases  where a decree was passed before the commencement  of the  principal Act and in as much as the claim of  defendant No.  I under that provision had been negatived both  by  the District  judge and the High Court on previous  applications made  by  defendant No. 1, it was not open to  him  to  make fresh  claim under the same provision.  Learned counsel  has also submitted that the provisions of the amending Act, 1948 have no application in the present case and therefore no new right has been given to defendant No. 1. The  crucial  point  for decision  in  connection  with  the arguments stated above is whether the decree in the  present case  is  a  decree passed before the  commencement  of  the principal Act or after its commencement.  It is indeed  true that  the District judge passed a preliminary decree on  May 15,  1937  and a final decree on January  28,  1938.   These decrees, however, were superseded by the preliminary  decree which  the  High Court passed on March 25,  1942.   As  this court  pointed out in Ramaswami Ayyangar’s case  (supra),  a preliminary  decree  was  drawn up in  accordance  with  the judgment  of  the High Court by which the  amount  due  from defendants 2 to 7 was scaled down while so far as  defendant No.  I  was  concerned, the decree of the  trial  Judge  was affirmed subject to a slight modification regarding the rate of  interest.   The decree passed on March 25,  1942  was  a preliminary decree in as much as it directed that in default of the payment of the amounts directed  271 to be paid by the decree, the mortgaged properties would  be sold.   When  no  payments  were made  as  directed  by  the preliminary decree of the High Court a final decree in terms

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of  the  same was passed by the District  judge  himself  on September  25, 1943.  This was the decree which was  put  in execution.  It is well settled that where an appeal has been preferred against a preliminary decree the time for applying for final decree runs from the date of the appellate decree; see Jowad Hussain v. Gendan Singh (1).  In that decision the Privy   Council   quoted   with   approval   the   following observations of Benerjee, J.  made  in  Gajadhar  Singh   v. Kishan Jiwan Lal (2).               "It  seems  to  me  that  this  rule-the  rule               regulating  application  for final  decree  in               mortgage  actions-contemplates the passing  of               only one final decree in a suit for sale  upon               a  mortgage.  The essential condition  to  the               making of a final decree is the existence of a               preliminary decree which has become conclusive               between the parties.  When an appeal has  been               preferred,  it is the decree of the  appellate               Court which is the final decree in the cause." The  principle  that the appellate order  is  the  operative order after the appeal is disposed of, which is the basis of the  rule that the decree of the lower court merges  in  the decree  of  the appellate court, has been approved  by  this court  in  The Collector of Customs, Calcutta  v.  The  East India  Commercial  Co.. Ltd., We are therefore of  the  view that  the  operative  decree in the  present  case  was  the preliminary decree made by the High Court on March 25,  1942 which was made final on September 25, 1943.  That being  the position, the present is a case to which sub-s. (2) of S. 19 is attracted as also the provisions of s. 16 of the amending Act of 1948.  Sub-s. (2) of s. 19 read with cl. (iii) of  s. 16  entitles  defendant No. I (respondent No. I  herein)  to claim  the  benefit of the principal Act,  even  though  his earlier applications prior to (1) A.I.R. 1926 P.C. 93. (2) (1917) I.L.R, 39 AR, 641. (3) [1963] 2 S, C, R, 563. 272 the amending Act of 1948 were rejected.  Sub-s. (2) of s. 19 read with s. 16 creates a new right in favour of  respondent No. 1 and that right cannot be defeated on the principle  of res  judicata.   The  true scope and effect  of  s.  16  was considered by this court in Narayanan Chettiar v.  Annamalai Chettiar Referring to cl. (iii) of s. 16 this court said :               "Clause  (iii), it seems clear to us,  applies               to  suits and proceedings in which the  decree               or order passed had become final, but had  not               been  executed  or satisfied  in  full  before               January  25, 1949 : this means that  though  a               final  decree  or order for repayment  of  the               debt had been passed before January 25,  1949,               yet  an agriculturist debtor can claim  relief               under the Act provided the decree has not been               executed  or  satisfied  in  full  before  the               aforesaid  date.  It should be  remembered  in               this connection that the word debt’ in the Act               has  a  very  comprehensive  connotation.   It               means  any liability in cash or kind,  whether               secured    or   unsecured,   due    from    an               agriculturist, whether payable under a  decree               or  order  of  a civil  or  revenue  court  or               otherwise  etc.  It is, therefore, clear  that               the word ’debt’ includes a decretal debt." In  the  case before us cl. (iii) of s. 16  clearly  applies because  the final decree which was passed on September  25,

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1943 had not been satisfied in full before, the commencement of the amending Act, 1948, that is, before January 25, 1949. Therefore, by reason of cl. (iii) s. 16 of the amending  Act of 1948 respondent No. I was entitled to the benefit of sub- s.  (2) of s. 19, and he cannot be deprived of that  benefit because prior to the new right given to him by the  amending Act  of 1948 his applications for getting relief  under  the principle Act had been rejected. (1)  [1959] Supp. 1 S.C.R. 237.  273 We  have,  therefore, come to the conclusion that  the  view expressed  by  the  High  Court  is  the  correct  view  and respondent No. 1 is entitled to the benefit of sub-s. (2) of s.  19 read with cl. (iii) of s. 16 of the amending  Act  of 1948,  provided he establishes that he is  an  agriculturist within  the  meaning  of  the  principal  Act.   The  appeal therefore fails and is dismissed with costs. Appeal dismissed. 273