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1. The plaintiff as the executrix and legal representative of her husband Nanabhaoo Mahapure deceased claims from the defendants a sum of money lent and advanced by the deceased to a business firm carried on in the name of Jamnadas Brothers in which the defendants at the date of the loan were interested as partners or as members of a joint and undivided Hindu family. Defendant No. 1 has filed no written statement and relies only on the legal defence of limitation as being a bar to the suit. Defendant No. 3 is the Official Assignee, being the assignee of the estate and effects of Lambadas Jagjivandas who has been adjudicated an insolvent, He does not defend the suit. Exhibit B shows that the monetary dealings between the plaintiff's husband and the firm of Sha. Lambadas Brothers commenced on 3 February 2, 1922, when the plaintiff's deceased husband lent and advanced to the firm a sum of Bs. 600. On May 3, 1922, he advanced to the firm a further sum of Rs. 3,000 in respect of which the firm passed to him a receipt Exhibit C. Exhibit 0 was signed in the firm's name by defendant No. 1. The firm of Sha. Lambadas Brothers issued to the plaintiff's husband a book in the nature of a Samadaskat book in which debit and credit entries were made from time to time in respect of the money dealings between the parties. Exhibit B comprises all the entries contained in this book,

2. The firm was started about thirty years ago by Jagjivandas who was the father of the defendants. In his life-time his eldest son Lambadas assisted him in the business which was that of chemists and druggists. On the death of Jagjivandas, Lambadas managed the business, his two brothers defendants Nos. 1 and 2 being then at school. Defendants Nos. 1 and 2 on leaving school joined Lambadas and were actively participating in the management of this firm. They wore members of a joint and undivided family at this date and wore conducting the joint family business as such when the loan transactions took place. It is not shown that there were any other coparceners belonging to the joint and undivided family besides the throe brothers. It is conceded that all three brothers would be personally liable in respect of the suit claim if the claim is in time.

3. By a deed of partition executed on November 23, 1922, the three brothers came to a partition among themselves. Thereafter Lambadas as sole owner continued the firm in its old name of Jaomadas Brothers. No public notice was given of the dissolution of the original firm or of the three brothers having come to a partition whereby the assets and liabilities of the original firm together with its name and goodwill were assigned to Lambadas only. Defendant No. 2 after the partition worked in the firm on a salary of Rs. 100 per mensem. On November 9, 1923, accounts were made up between the plaintiff's deceased husband and defendant No. 2 purporting to act on behalf of the firm of Jamnadas Brothers. Defendant No. 2 signed an acknowledgment as "Sha. Lambadas Brothers the handwriting of Nandlal Jagjivandas " acknowledging Rs. 3919 as being the then balance claimable on making up the accounts. This acknowledgment is part of Exhibits.

4. Mr. Bhagvati contends that the plaintiff's claim is barred by limitation and the acknowledgment signed by defendant No. 2 does not save it from being time-barred. He has urged that at the date of the acknowledgment defendant No. 2 was merely a Munim or servant of the firm and the acknowledgment binds only the then owner of the firm-Lambadas. The signature of defendant No. 2 on the acknowledgment does not state that it is on behalf of the new firm. Apart from any knowledge Nanabhaoo may have possessed regarding the partition and the new constitution of the firm there is nothing in the signature to indicate that defendant No. 2 had not executed the acknowledgment on behalf of the original firm which was then liable for the debt. It is clear, in my opinion, that at this date Nanabhaoo could not have known of the partition and the subsequent ownership of the business as being that of Lambadas alone. In that event he would probably have insisted upon defendant No. 2 signing the acknowledgment in his personal capacity in addition to that of Munim of the new firm.