JUDGEMENT
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(1.) This is a suit against five different sets of defendants. It includes claims against the first defendant, Maniruddin, for three pieces of land in his possession, and to set aside a lease granted by one Puran to Mati Lal in 1256, Mulki, or in other words 1848; against the fourth defendant, Munshi Jowhar Ali, for one piece of land in his possession; the fifth defendant, Baboo Dhanpat Sing, for one bamboo clump in his possession; against the defendant No. 2, Kali Prasad, the son of Mati Lal Mahajan, for four kabuliyats which Mati Lal is said to have received from Puran, the husband of the third defendant, Chitan Dye. It includes claims of the most miscellaneous character against each single defendant, as for instance, to cancel a lease dated in 1862 from Mati Lal to the first defendant; to have the boundaries of the land claimed against the first defendant laid down; to re-open a passage which has been closed apparently by the first defendant. The plaint ends by stating that the cause of action arose in Bhadra 1271 (August 1865), and winds up with a claim for mesne profits from that date of all the properties, without distinguishing or attempting to distinguish the liability of the several defendants. The defendants put in their several answers. They objected that the suit was multifarious; and the first Court dismissed the suit on that ground, saying that the plaintiff could not include in one suit distinct causes of action against different persons.
(2.) This decision was reversed by the Subordinate Judge, on appeal. He says that the proper stamp fee in the plaint having been paid, even if there was a mis-joinder, the plaintiffs became entitled to the adjudication of at least one of their claims. He goes on to decide that the plaint is not multifarious. The Subordinate Judge's first observation would have had some force, if the plaintiff, on the objection being raised, had prayed for leave to withdraw his suit against all the defendants, except one, or one set of them. Had the plaintiffs done this, the first Court might, perhaps, have permitted the suit to proceed against such defendant or defendants alone, ordering the plaintiffs to pay the costs of the others. But the Court could not exercise that option for plaintiffs who insisted on their right to proceed against all the defendants.
(3.) It is clear that such a joinder of claims as exists in the present plaint is not permitted by Section 8* of Act VIII of 1859. In one case, like the present, Cazi Muzhur Hossein v. Dinobundoo Sen (Bourke, 8), Mr. Justice Phear said, "there are forty or fifty different causes of action, and it would be a perversion of all principles of justice to allow them to be included in one suit." The objection is not on the ground that the stamp is insufficient. The Chief Justice in delivering the judgment of the Full Bench, Raja Ram Tewari v. Lachman Prasad, (Case No. 228 of 1865, 7th June 1867), a case very like the present, says:-- "There is no clause which authorizes different causes of action to be joined in one suit against several parties, when each of those parties has a distinct and separate interest. It would be just as reasonable to sue four defendants on bonds given by each of them, or even to join with them a few other defendants for trespassing on the plaintiffs' lands, as it was to join all the defendants in the present suit. Such a joinder in one suit of distinct causes of action against different defendants, complicates the case before the Judge, and renders it exceedingly difficult for him, in dealing with the case of each defendant, to exclude from his consideration those portions of the evidence which may not be admissible, though admissible against one or more of the others. Moreover, it is vexatious and harassing to the different defendants. Such a procedure renders it almost compulsory on all the defendants to be present either in person or by their pleaders, whilst the case is going on against the others in respect of matters in which they are not interested; and, moreover, it is harassing and inconvenient as regards the attendance of witnesses of the several defendants, as it renders it necessary for the witnesses of each to be present and to be detained while the case of the others is being heard and determined." The Court, in that case, merely goes on to say, that Judges ought to reject plaints when brought against several defendants for causes of action which have accrued against them separately, and in respect of which they are not jointly concerned.;