JUDGEMENT
Roxburgh, J. -
(1.) This is a Rule against a decree of the Munsif at Bishnupur decreeing the Plaintiffs' claim for the recovery of Rs. 116-6 as a fair and equitable sum due on account of the use and occupation of the plaint lands by the Defendants. The Plaintiffs and the Defendants are the shebaits of a certain deity. The suit lands formed a tenancy under the deities landlords and the shebaits used to collect their share of the rent separately. The Plaintiffs' case is that there was a separate arrangement for such collection. The Defendants shebaits in fact sued the tenants for their share of the rent and in execution of the decree purchased as shebaits the tenancy. The Plaintiffs now claim their proportionate share of the produce of the suit lands.
(2.) The Defendants take various, not to say inconsistent, defences. The principal point urged here and supported by reference to Narendra Nath Kumar v. Atul Chandra Banerjee (27 C. L. J. 605 ) and Baraboni Coal Concern, Ltd, v. Gokulananda Mohanta Thakur (61 I. A. 85 : s. o. 88 CWN 325 (1938) ) is that co-shebaits must all sue for rent and that they cannot act separately as co-sharers and sue for their own share of the rent. This contention is put forward as challenging the Plaintiffs' case but entirely overlooks the fact that the contention serves to point out that the Defendants' own suit for their separate share of rent was not maintainable. In that suit the present Plaintiffs were parties and no objection was raised by any one on the basis that that suit was not maintainable and it does not seem to me, therefore, that in the present case it is open to the Plaintiffs in that suit, now Defendants in the present suit, to raise that point.
(3.) In any case, we are here concerned with the case of amicable arrangement between the co-shebaits and their liabilities as between each other. The lower Appellate Court, it is true, appears to find the suit justified by the provisions of section 22 (2) of the Bengal Tenancy Act. It cannot be said that co-shebaits are in fact co-sharers to whom this provision directly applied but in the present case it is clear that the tenancy was purchased by the present Defendants as shebaits that is to say, on behalf of the deity, and that they are not in khas possession of the land, and it seems to me that the Plaintiffs are, therefore, entitled in view of the previous arrangement for separate collection of shares of rent now to obtain from the Defendants shebaits who are on behalf of the deity in full possession of the lands of the former tenancy, their share of the produce thereof.;
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