Plaintiffs, here respondents, on 21st April, 1921, presented a petition withdrawing their suit. No order was passed on it at once. But on the 29th July, 1921, the 2nd plaintiff applied to withdraw from that withdrawal. The lower Court, in the order I am asked to revise, has dismissed the first of these applications as withdrawn and presumably intends to proceed with the trial.
The argument rejected by the lower Court was generally that authority does not recognise a withdrawal from the withdrawal of a suit. On general principles there does not seem to be any reason why withdrawal of a withdrawal should not be recognised, if always there is no question of undue prejudice to any other party to the proceedings. Argument here has been based rather on what was implied in the argument before the lower Court that the original withdrawal must be regarded as terminating automatically the proceedings in the suit and involving the suit's immediate dismissal; and that therefore at the time, when the 2nd withdrawal petition was filed, there was no proceeding pending, on which it could operate and there was no previous withdrawal petition undisposed of, of which it could effect a withdrawal.
O. 23, R. 1 (1) of the present Code provides that after the institution of a suit the plaintiff may as against all or any of the defendants, withdraw his suit or abandon part of his claim and in R. 1 (3) there is provision for the plaintiff's liability for such costs as the Court may award. The existence of the second provision suggests that the withdrawal cannot be complete until the Court has made its award as to costs. It is not necessary, for reasons which will appear, to express a final opinion, on the question whether generally the plaintiff may withdraw his withdrawal at any time before the decree, including the award of costs, is passed, in case, as may well happen, he prefers continuing the litigation to complying with the Court's order as to costs. Authority in the appellants' favour consists in the judgment in Shumsher Bahadur v. Mahomed Ali but considerable doubt has been thrown on that decision by Rambhuros v. Gopee Bee Bee. On the other hand there is in favour of the respondents the judgment of Sundara Aiyar, J., Mukkammal v. Kalimuttu Pillay and Rajkumari Debi v. Nrityakali Debi. Generally therefore I should hold that the lower Court's decision is correct.
In the present case, however, the question arose in a very limited way. For the plaintiff's withdrawal was in the following terms:
“The suit is withdrawn; it may be dismissed without costs.”
Mr. Ramachandra Aiyar on behalf of the appellants has no doubt asked me to read this, as expressing by the first sentence an unconditional withdrawal, the second sentence containing merely a suggestion as to costs, which might or might not receive effect. But the petition is not in my opinion capable of that construction. I can understand the plaintiffs as meaning only that the suit is withdrawn on condition that it is dismissed without costs. This is material. For at the date of the petition, 21st April, 1921, the suit had been pending since 19th March, 1920 and majority of the defendants had had notice and had appeared by Vakils and some of them had filed written statements. In fact but for the death of a defendant and the necessity for joining his legal representatives the issues would have already been framed. It is therefore clear that an order, such as the plaintiff proposed, dismissing a suit without an order as to costs, that is, without making the plaintiffs liable for the costs of the defendants, would have been most unfair; and in fact, although Mr. Ramachandra Aiyar's clients the present petitioners now say that they do not want costs, the 10th defendant's vakil pressed for them and it is possible that other defendants also would have done so. Taking the withdrawal petition as conditional on the passing of an order regarding costs to the effect specified in it, I must hold that, unless and until the Court signified its intention to pass such an order, the petition could not operate as a termination of the suit. That being so and the suit still being pending on the date of the petition withdrawing the withdrawal, there was no obstacle to the lower Court, in the exercise of its discretion, dealing with the latter petition and dismissing the former and continuing the trial. No ground for revision has been made out. The revision petition therefore must be dismissed with costs.
S. S.Petition dismissed..

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