Calcutta High Court
Dwarka Nath Mitter (As Shebait Of The ... vs Tara Prosunna Roy And Ors. on 22 July, 1889
Equivalent citations: (1890)ILR 17CAL160
JUDGMENT
Prinsep and Hill, JJ.
1. We think that the judgment of the District Judge is correct, and that this appeal must be dismissed.
2. The plaintiffs, as some of a body of persons entitled to a balance of arrears of rent, have brought this suit making their co-sharers defendants. They state that they have made them defendants because they are residents of a distant place; from which it may be inferred that they would have had some difficulty in obtaining their consent; and, no doubt, this is true, because it would seem that the suit has been brought on the very last day of the period prescribed by the law of limitation.
3. An objection as to the form of the suit was, as stated by the District Judge, pressed from the very first by the defendants. We have no doubt that it is only when the plaintiffs can show that those entitled to join with them have refused to join or have otherwise acted prejudicially to their interests, that they are entitled to sue alone and to make the reluctant or refusing co-sharers defendants in the suit, As authority for this we may refer to the case of Luke v. South Kensington Hotel Co. L.R. 11 Ch. D. 121 also to the cases of Patiharipat Krishnan Unni Nambiar v. Chekur Manakkal Nilakandan Bhattathiripad I.L.R. 4 Mad. 141 and Kalidas Kevaldas v. Nathu Bhagvan I.L.R. 7 Bom. 217; and we may further refer to Ramsebuk v. Ramlall Koondoo I.L.R. 6 Cal. 815. In the case of Prem Chund Luskur v. Mokshoda Debi I.L.R. 14 Cal. 201 it was expressly stated that the co-sharers of the plaintiffs had refused to join in the suit. On these grounds, therefore, we think that the suit was rightly dismissed, and that this appeal must be dismissed with costs.