The document summarizes a court case regarding joint promisors under Section 43 of the Contract Act of 1872. The key points are:
1) The case involved multiple judgment debtors who had jointly executed an acknowledgement receipt for a loan. Under Section 43, any one of the joint promisors can be compelled to perform the whole of the promise made.
2) The trial court had directed the judgment debtors to pay only their share of the decretal amount. However, the appellate court overturned this, noting that under Section 43, one of the joint promisors can be made to pay the entire amount, and then seek contribution from the others.
3) Prior cases were cited where it
2. Joint promise
It allows the promisee to sue any one of
the person from a joint promise
Minority of one doesn‘t affect the liability
One person is sued and he compels to
satisfy the debt
He can only call for debt to his co-
promisors not for the costs of suit
3. Section 43:
Any one of joint promisors may be compelled to perform
43. When two or more persons make a joint promise, the promisee
may, in the absence of express agreement to the contrary, compel
any one or more of such joint promisors to perform the whole of
the promise.
4. Cont.
Each of two or more joint promisors may compel every other joint
promisor to contribute equally with himself to the performance of
the promise, unless a contrary intention appears from the contract.
If any one of two or more joint promisors makes default in such
contribution, the remaining joint promisors must bear the loss
arising from such default in equal shares.
7. Case: 1997 CAL, C 1339 (KARACHI)
• Before HAMID ALI MINA (J)
• SHAIKH ABDE ALI , TAYYAB ALI LOTIA . Petitioner
VS
• SHABBIR and others
• Civil revision application number 49 of 1993 and revision application no.
279, decided on 27th February, 1996.
8. M. Zia Qureshi for Petitioner. Ghulam Abbas
Pishori for Respondents.
Date of hearing: 27th February, 1996.
• This is a Civil Revision Application under section 115 of Code of Civil
Procedure directed against an order dated 27-2-1993 passed by learned IIIrd
Senior Civil Judge, Karachi-South, in Execution Application No. 28 of 1992,
Suit No. 5027 of 1985, Shaikh Abdeali v. Shabbir and others whereby an
application moved by respondents/judgments-debtors Nos. 2, 3 and 4 was
allowed with the direction to them to deposit the decretal amount according
to their share out of the total decretal amount, hence the present Revision.
9. Civil procedure code (V of 1908)
• S 43. Execution of decree
• Debtors were directed to deposit decretal amount according to their share out of total
decretal amount.
• Validity: anyone of the decree holder could recover entire decretal amount from any one of
judgment debtor .
• Claim of the decree: holder was based on acknowledgement receipt jointly executed by
judgment
• Debt and liability would be incurred jointly and liability of each would be for the whole
amount under S 43
10. Main facts of the case
• The amount of Rs. 1,00,000 was passed against the respondents – debtors
jointly who had executed the receipt for the sum of Rs. 1,00,000 as friendly
loan payable jointly by the signori ties, therefore the debt and liability having
been incurred jointly.
• If any one of two or more joint promisor makes defaults in such
contribution, the remaining joint promisiors must bear the loss arising from
such defaults in equal shares
11. Precedents
• In KANNAYYA REDDI VS MUTHU REDDI case it was held that when
the claim was based on the joint decree, one partner had to pay the entire
amount under due the decree.
• In such a case the law of partnership does not prohibit a claim for
contribution against the other partners and the other partners.
• One partner paying whole decretal amount can claim contribution by suit
against others
12. Judgement
• In the light above cited case that was based on the claim of partners against co-
partners
• In instant case One decree holder could recover the entire amount from any of the
judgment debtors who is turn could recover amount from others.
• In view of the above reasoning and case-law the finding of the learned Senior Civil
Judge is legally erroneous which is hereby set aside, consequently revision
application is allowed with no order as to costs.
Revision accepted.