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Limitation Act: Sections 18, 19 and 20–Acknowledgment of debt–When saves limitation. Muslim Personal Law–Liability to discharge debts de- volves on heirs proportionate to their respective Shares in the estate of the deceased. = One Vellappa Rawther, deceased, had incurred debt by means of two promissory notes for Rs.25,000 and Rs.50,000. In the suits filed on the basis of the promissory notes, the Trial Court granted a decree against the estate of Vellappa Rawther in the hands of defendants 2 to 10. The High Court on appeal modified the decree reducing it to one fourth of the decreed sum and focussed the liability on defendant-Respondent No. 2 absolving others of the re- maining liability on the bar of limitation. Such view was taken as the facts established that the liability to dis- charge debts of Vellappa Rawther after his death was indi- vidually on his heirs proportionate to the extent of their share in the estate devolving on them, and since the debt had become time barred, acknowledgment of the same by de- fendant-respondent No. 2 as well as partial payment of the debt by him rendered him alone liable to meet liability to the extent of one fourth related to the share of the estate which as a Muslim heir he received from the deceased. Before this Court, it was claimed on behalf of the appellant that under sections 18 and 19 of the Limitation Act the acknowledgment and partial payment saved limitation against all and thus the entire debt could be recovered from defendant-respondent No. 2, he being in possession of the estate lying joint. Dismissing the appeal, this Court, HELD: (1) The debt of the deceased gets divided in shares by operation of Muslim Personal Law amongst the heirs proportionate to their shares in the estate. The theory of sanctity of the integrity of the 434 debt is apparently foreign in the case of a deceased muslim leaving debt and some estate both being divisible amongst his heirs. [247G] Mohd. Abdul Qadeer v. Azamatullah Khan and 8 Others, [1974] 1 Andhra Weekly Reporter 98; Vasantam Sambasiva Rao v. Sri Krishna Cement and Concrete Works, Tenali 1977 Andhra Law Times Reports at 528; N.K. Mohammad Sulaiman v.N.C. Mohammad Ismail and Others, [1966] 1 SCR 935 at 940, re- ferred to. (2) It would be right to treat it settled that muslim heirs are independent owners of their specific shares simul- taneously in the estate and debts of the deceased, their liability fixed under the personal law proportionate to the extent of their shares. [248H] Jafri Begum v. Amir Muhammad Khan, [1885] Vol. 7 ILR Allahabad series, referred to. (3) The heirs of a muslim are by themselves independent debtors; the debt having been split by operation of law. Inter se, they have no jural relationship as co-debtors or joint debtors so as to fall within the shadow of contrac- tors, partners, executors or mortgagees or in a class akin to them. They succeed to the estate as tenants-in-common in specific shares. [250D] (4) Even a signed written acknowledgment by the princi- pal or through his agent would bind the principal and not anyone else standing in jural relationship with the princi- pal in accordance with section 20(2) of the Limitation Act. The Muslim heirs inter-se have no such relationship. [250E] (5) If the debt is one and indivisible, payment by one will interrupt limitation against all the debtors unless they come within the exception laid down in section 20(2). And if the debt is susceptible of division and though seem- ingly one consists really of several distinct debts each one of which is payable by one of the obligors separately and not by the rest, section 20 keeps alive his part of the debt which has got to be discharged by the person who has made payment of interest. It cannot affect separate shares of the other debtors unless on the principal of agency, express or implied, the payment can be said to be a payment on their behalf also. [250H; 251A] Abheswari Dasya and Another v. Baburali Shaikh and Others, AIR 1937 Cal. 191, referred to. 435 (6) The property of the co-heirs supposedly in posses- sion of defendant-respondent No. 2 cannot be touched direct- ly in his hand unless the co-heirs being parties to the suit are held liable to pay their share of the debt; the debt being recoverable. [251F] =1991 AIR 720, 1990( 1 )Suppl.SCR 433, 1990( 4 )SCC 672, 1990( 2 )SCALE481 , 1991( 5 )JT 420

PETITIONER:
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P.N. VEETI NARAYANI

 Vs.

RESPONDENT:
PATHUMMA BEEVI AND ANOTHER

DATE OF JUDGMENT13/09/1990

BENCH:
PUNCHHI, M.M.
BENCH:
PUNCHHI, M.M.
AHMADI, A.M. (J)

CITATION:
 1991 AIR 720 1990 SCR Supl. (1) 433
 1990 SCC (4) 672 JT 1991 (5) 420
 1990 SCALE (2)481

ACT:
 Limitation Act: Sections 18, 19 and 20--Acknowledgment
of debt--When saves limitation.
 Muslim Personal Law--Liability to discharge debts de-
volves on heirs proportionate to their respective Shares in
the estate of the deceased.

HEADNOTE:
 One Vellappa Rawther, deceased, had incurred debt by
means of two promissory notes for Rs.25,000 and Rs.50,000.
In the suits filed on the basis of the promissory notes, the
Trial Court granted a decree against the estate of Vellappa
Rawther in the hands of defendants 2 to 10.
 The High Court on appeal modified the decree reducing it
to one fourth of the decreed sum and focussed the liability
on defendant-Respondent No. 2 absolving others of the re-
maining liability on the bar of limitation. Such view was
taken as the facts established that the liability to dis-
charge debts of Vellappa Rawther after his death was indi-
vidually on his heirs proportionate to the extent of their
share in the estate devolving on them, and since the debt
had become time barred, acknowledgment of the same by de-
fendant-respondent No. 2 as well as partial payment of the
debt by him rendered him alone liable to meet liability to
the extent of one fourth related to the share of the estate
which as a Muslim heir he received from the deceased.
 Before this Court, it was claimed on behalf of the
appellant that under sections 18 and 19 of the Limitation
Act the acknowledgment and partial payment saved limitation
against all and thus the entire debt could be recovered from
defendant-respondent No. 2, he being in possession of the
estate lying joint.
Dismissing the appeal, this Court,
 HELD: (1) The debt of the deceased gets divided in
shares by operation of Muslim Personal Law amongst the heirs
proportionate to their shares in the estate. The theory of
sanctity of the integrity of the
434
debt is apparently foreign in the case of a deceased muslim
leaving debt and some estate both being divisible amongst
his heirs. [247G]
 Mohd. Abdul Qadeer v. Azamatullah Khan and 8 Others,
[1974] 1 Andhra Weekly Reporter 98; Vasantam Sambasiva Rao
v. Sri Krishna Cement and Concrete Works, Tenali 1977 Andhra
Law Times Reports at 528; N.K. Mohammad Sulaiman v.N.C.
Mohammad Ismail and Others, [1966] 1 SCR 935 at 940, re-
ferred to.
 (2) It would be right to treat it settled that muslim
heirs are independent owners of their specific shares simul-
taneously in the estate and debts of the deceased, their
liability fixed under the personal law proportionate to the
extent of their shares. [248H]
 Jafri Begum v. Amir Muhammad Khan, [1885] Vol. 7 ILR
Allahabad series, referred to.
 (3) The heirs of a muslim are by themselves independent
debtors; the debt having been split by operation of law.
Inter se, they have no jural relationship as co-debtors or
joint debtors so as to fall within the shadow of contrac-
tors, partners, executors or mortgagees or in a class akin
to them. They succeed to the estate as tenants-in-common in
specific shares. [250D]
 (4) Even a signed written acknowledgment by the princi-
pal or through his agent would bind the principal and not
anyone else standing in jural relationship with the princi-
pal in accordance with section 20(2) of the Limitation Act.
The Muslim heirs inter-se have no such relationship. [250E]
 (5) If the debt is one and indivisible, payment by one
will interrupt limitation against all the debtors unless
they come within the exception laid down in section 20(2).
And if the debt is susceptible of division and though seem-
ingly one consists really of several distinct debts each one
of which is payable by one of the obligors separately and
not by the rest, section 20 keeps alive his part of the debt
which has got to be discharged by the person who has made
payment of interest. It cannot affect separate shares of the
other debtors unless on the principal of agency, express or
implied, the payment can be said to be a payment on their
behalf also. [250H; 251A]
 Abheswari Dasya and Another v. Baburali Shaikh and
Others, AIR 1937 Cal. 191, referred to.
435
 (6) The property of the co-heirs supposedly in posses-
sion of defendant-respondent No. 2 cannot be touched direct-
ly in his hand unless the co-heirs being parties to the suit
are held liable to pay their share of the debt; the debt
being recoverable. [251F]JUDGMENT:
 CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 229 of
1976.
 From the Judgment and Order dated 6.9.1974 of the Kerala
High Court in A.S. No. 76 of 1974.
 S. Padmanabhan, K. Prasonthi and N. Sudha-Karan for the
Appellant.
 Ms. Shyamla Pappu, G. Vishwanathan lyer, V.B. Saharya
and Mrs. Sarla Chandra for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
 PUNCHHI, J. This appeal by special leave is against the
judgment and decree dated 6.9. 1974 passed by the High Court
of Kerala in A.S. No. 76 of 1974 whereby the High Court
reduced the decree of the trial court to one fourth disal-
lowing the remaining three-fourth on the ground that the
same was barred by limitation. The plaintiff-appellant
hereinbefore us ventures to have the decree of the trial
court restored. Since defendant-respondent No. 2, Santu
Mohammed Rawther is to meet the established liability, there
is an effort on his behalf, though quite belated, to seek
leave to cross-object to the partial decree of the suit.
 The facts giving rise thereto were indeed diverse and
varied which got involved in four suits disposed by the
trial court by a common judgment, in the first instance, in
April, 1967. Four appeals, were filed by the aggrieved
parties before the High Court out of which three were dis-
posed of by a common judgment on 11-9-1972. The fourth
appeal arising from O.S. No. 141 of 1965 was allowed grant-
ing permission to the plaintiff-appellant herein to amend
the plaint so as to base his money suit on the basis of two
promissory notes with the aid of acknowledgments contained
in some documents. The trial court in pursuance of the order
of remand granted a decree against the defendants for a sum
of Rs.56,769.80, with interest thereon at 6-1/4 per cent
from 11-11-1964 till 31-7-1955 and thereafter at 6 per cent
per annum till payment, with proportionate costs against the
estate of
436
Vellappa Rawther in the hands of defendants 2 to 10; and
another personal decree for a certain sum against the first
defendant-respondent which presently is not in dispute. The
High Court on appeal preferred by defendant-respondents No.
2 and 4-10 in Original Suit No. 141 of 1965 (the only one
surviving) modified the decree reducing it to the one fourth
of the decreed sum and focussed the liability on defendant-
respondent No. 2 absolving others of the remaining liability
on the bar of limitation. Such view was taken on the facts
established that the liability to discharge debts of Vellap-
pa Rawther deceased incurred by means of two promissory
notes dated 23-11-1960 and 5-1-1961 for Rs.25,000 and
Rs.50,000 respectively, after the death of Vellappa Rawther
on 26-6-1962, was individually on his heirs proportionate to
the extent of their share in the estate devolving on them
and since the debt had become time barred, acknowledgment of
the same by defendant-respondent No. 2 as well as partial
payment of the debt by him rendered him alone liable to meet
liability to the extent of one fourth related to the share
of the estate which as a Muslim heir he received from the
deceased. In this appeal it is claimed on behalf of the
plaintiff-appellant that the acknowledgment and partial
payment afore-referred to saved limitation against all and
thus the entire debt could be recovered from defendant-
respondent No. 2, he being in possession of the estate lying
joint, and thus the High Court was in error in upsetting the
decree of the trial court.
 It has been urged on behalf of the appellant that the
integrity of the two debts of Rs.25,000 and Rs.50,000 creat-
ed by two promissory notes Exhibits B 14 and B 15 could not
be broken on the footing that the liability to discharge
those debts stood devolved on the heirs of the deceased
debtor, proportionate to their shares known to Mahomedan
Law. It has also been urged on behalf of the appellant that
the acknowledgment of liability made by defendant-respondent
No. 2 would under section 18 of the Limitation Act save
limitation not only against him but as against other heirs
as well, since he is supposed to have acted as a representa-
tive, agent or partner on their behalf. Further, it has been
urged on behalf of the appellant that part payment made by
defendant-respondent No. 2 would save limitation under
section 19 of the Limitation Act against the other co-heirs
of the deceased Mahomedan debtor. The view taken by a
learned Single Judge of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in
Mohd. Abdul Qadeer v. Azarnatullah Khan and 8 Others, [1974]
1 Andhra Weekly Reporter 98 has been pressed into service to
contend that though under the Mahomedan Law each heir is
liable for the debts of the deceased to the extent only of a
share of the debts, proportionate to his share of the es-
tate, but so far as the cre-
437
ditor is concerned, the identity and integrity of the debt
remains unimpaired by the death of the original promisor,
and no several debts emerge in place of one debt.
 However, in all fairness it was in the next breath
pointed out to us that another Single Judge of the same High
Court in Vasantarn Sambasiva Rao v. Sri Krishna Cement and
Concrete Works, Tenali, [1977] Andhra Law Times Reports at
528 doubted the view in Mohd. Abdul Qadeer's case (supra) on
the basis of a division bench case of that Court taking the
view that section 19 of the Limitation Act emphasised not
the identity or integrity of the debt, but the due authori-
sation by one of the debtors or the other to make part-
payment towards debt due from them, and further that the
concept of identity and integrity of the debt due from
several heirs was foreign to sections 19 and 20.
 Before we proceed any further it would be apposite to
clearly recapitulate and re-state the principles of Mahome-
dan Law on the subject. A five-judge bench of this Court in
N.K. Mohammad Sulaiman v. N.C. Mohammad Ismail and Others,
[1966] 1 SCR 935 at page 940 culled out certain well-settled
and well accepted principles. Some of these are as under:
"The estate of a muslim dying intestate devolves under the
Islamic Law upon his heirs at the moment of his death i.e.,
the estates vests immediately in each heir in proportion to
the share ordained by the personal law and the interest of
each heir is separate and distinct. Each heir is under the
personal law liable to satisfy the debts of the deceased
only to the extent of the share of the debt proportionate to
his share in the estate."
 It is plain from the afore-quotation that the debt of
the deceased gets divided in shares by operation of Muslim
Personnal Law amongst the heirs proportionate to their
shares in the estate. The theory of sanctity of the integri-
ty of the debt is apparently foreign in the case of a de-
ceased muslim leaving debt and some estate both being divis-
ible amongst his heirs.
 A.A.A. Fyzee in his Outlines of Muhammadan Law (4th
Edition) at page 385 quotes Mulla to say:
"Proceeding logically, the first principle to be borne in
438
mind is that each heir is liable for the debts of the de-
ceased in proportion to the share he receives of the inheri-
tance. For instance, a Muslim dies leaving three heirs, who
divide the estate amongst themselves in accordance with
their rights. A creditor of the deceased sues two of the
heirs and not the third; the two heirs sued will each be
liable to pay a part of the debt proportionate to his own
share of the inheritance, and they will not be made to pay
the whole of the debt, either jointly or severally (h)."
 In Principles of Mahomedan Law by Mulla, 17th Edition,
sections 43 and 46 provide:
 "43. Extent of liability of heirs for debts--Each
heir is liable for the debts of the deceased to the extent
only of a share of the debts proportionate to his share of
the estate (d).
 46. Suit by creditor against heirs--If there be no
executor or administrator, the creditor may proceed against
the heirs of the deceased, and where the estate of the
deceased has not been distributed between the heirs, he is
entitled to execute the decree against the property as a
whole without regard to the extent of the liability of the
heirs inter se (h)."
 The question whether the ownership of a Muhammadan
intestate devolves immediately on his heirs, and such devo-
lution is not contingent upon, and suspended till, payment
of such debts was answered authoritatively almost a century
ago by a Full Bench of the Allahabad High Court in Jafri
Begam v. Amir Muhammad Khan, [1885] Vol. 7 ILR--Allahabad
Series in the negative. Rather it was authoritatively set-
tled (see page 843 of the Report) that Muhammadan heirs are
independent owners of their specific shares, and if they
take their shares subject to the charge of the debts of the
deceased, their liability is in proportion to the extent of
their shares.
 These observations in Jafri Begam's case (supra) are
prime roots of the theory as to the divisibility of the debt
in the hands of heirs of a Muslim intestate. So it would be
right to treat it settled that muslim heirs are independent
owners of their specific shares simultaneously in the estate
and debts of the deceased, their liability fixed under the
Personal Law proportionate to the extent of their shares. In
this state
439
of law it would be unnecessary to refer to other decisions
of various High Courts touching the subject. So we proceed
on the footing that as many heirs, as are defending this
cause, there are debts in that number.
 Now it is time to advert to Exhibits B7 and B51. Exhibit
B7 is a letter by defendant-respondent No. 2 to the plain-
tiff-appellant stating that he will pay off all the amounts
due to the plaintiff and to everyone else within two months.
The trial court construed this to be an acknowledgment of
the debt. The High Court agreed with that finding that the
document contained an acknowledgment in writing. Practically
nothing was said against this finding before the High Court.
Then we have Exhibit B51 which is styled as a consent-deed,
executed by defendant-respondent No. 2 authorising the first
defendant-respondent to dispose of two motor cars for a sum
of Rs. 13,000 and discharge the liabilities of his deceased
father arising out of the two promissory notes Exhibit B 14
and B 15 aforesaid. The trial court found that Exhibit B51
created an agency in favour of defendant-respondent No.1
within the meaning of section 19 of the Limitation Act. The
High Court agreed with the view of the trial court and came
to the conclusion that the deed Exhibit B51 contained an
acknowledgment and the two endorsements made on the respec-
tive promissory notes Exhibit B 14 and B 15 coupled by a
payments of sums towards the debt by the duly authorised
agent of defendant-respondent No. 2 could well be regarded
as payments attracting extension of limitation under section
19 of the Limitation Act. Having recorded that finding the
High Court directed itself to the question whether payments
thus made would extend limitation as against the other heirs
also and held in the negative. The conclusion is that ac-
knowledgment Exhibit B7 and endorsements on Exhibits B 14
and B 15 on the authority of Exhibit B51 were held to have
extended the period of limitation only against defendant re-
spondent No. 2. Though we have been addressed to take a
contrary view on reinterpretation of these documents but,
having heard learned counsel in that behalf we are inclined
to agree with the High Court and leave the matter undis-
turbed denying ourselves treading in the field of facts.
 Sub-section (1) of section 18 of the Limitation Act
(corresponding section 19 of the repealed Act IX of 1908)
provides as follows:
"Where, before the expiration of the prescribed period of a
suit or application in respect of any property or right, an
acknowledgment of liability in respect of such property or
440
right has been made in writing signed by the party against
whom such property or right is claimed, or by any person
through whom he derives his title or liability, a fresh
period of limitation shall be computed from the time when
the acknowledgment was so signed."
 Sub-section (2) of section 20 (corresponding to section
21 of the repealed Act IX of 1908) says that nothing in the
said sections (being sections 18 and 19) renders one of
several joint contractors, partners, executors or mortgagees
chargeable by reason only of a written acknowledgment signed
by, or of a payment made by, or by the agent of, any other
or others of them.
 The heirs of a muslim dying intestate on whom falls the
liability to discharge the debt, proportionate to their
respective shares in the estate devolved, can hardly be
classified as joint contractors, partners, executors or
mortgagees. As held above they are by themselves independent
debtors; the debt having been split by operation of law.
Inter se they have no jural relationship as co-debtors or
joint debtors so as to fail within the shadow of contrac-
tors, partners, executors or mortgagees or in a class akin
to them. They succeed to the estate as tenants in-common-in
specific shares. Even a signed written acknowledgment by the
principal or through his agent would bind the principal and
not anyone else standing in jural relationship with the
principal in accordance with section 20(2). The Muslim heirs
inter-se have no such relationship. In this view of the
matter, we take the view that the High Court was right in
confining the acknowledgment of the debts only to respondent
No. 2 and not extending the acknowledgment to the other co-
heirs for their independent position.
 Section 19 of the Limitation Act, (corresponding to
section 20 of the repealed Act IX of 1908). so far as is
relevant for our purpose, provides that where payment on
account of debt or of interest on a legacy is made before
the expiration of the prescribed period by the person liable
to pay the debt or legacy or by his agent duly authorised in
this behalf, a fresh period of limitation shall be computed
from the time when the payment was made.
 In the context, if the debt is one and indivisible,
payment by one will interrupt limitation against all the
debtors unless they come within the exception laid down in
section 20(2) which has been taken note of earlier. And if
the debt is susceptible of division and though seemingly one
consists really of several distinct debts each one of which
is pay-
441
able by one of the obligors separately and not by the rest,
section 20 keeps alive his part of the debt which has got to
be discharged by the person who has made payment of inter-
est. It cannot affect separate shares of the other debtors
unless on the principal of agency, express or implied, the
payment can be said to be a payment on their behalf also.
See in this connection Abheswari Dasva and Another v. Babu-
rali Shaikh and Others, AIR 1937 Cal. 191. The payment made
on account of debt by defendant-respondent No. 2 as an
independent debtor, and not as an agent, express or implied,
on behalf of other co-heirs could hardly, in the facts
established, here be said to be a payment on behalf of all
so as to extend period of limitation as against all. We are
thus of the considered view that the High Court was right in
confining the extension of limitation on payment of a part
of debt only against defendant-respondent No. 2, proportion-
ate to his share of the estate devolved on him which was one
fourth. We are further of the view that the High Court was
right in holding the suit against other co-heirs to be
barred by limitation relating to their shares of the debt.
 Lastly it was urged by learned counsel for the appellant
that even though the debts of the deceased be taken to be
divisible and devolving separately on the heirs in propor-
tion to their shares, the plaintiff still could proceed to
recover the entire debt from defendant-respondent No. 2
since he was still continuing in possession of the estate
and had not parted with it by means of partition to the
other co-heirs. This argument cannot sustain for a moment in
view of the clear statement of law made by the Allahabad
High Court in Jafri Begam's case (supra) at pages 841-42.
Such a question has been driven therein to the realm of
procedural law and held to be not part of substantive law
constituting any rule of inheritance. The property of the
co-heirs supposedly in possession of defendant-respondent
No. 2 cannot be touched directly in his hand unless the co-
heirs being parties to the suit are held liable to pay their
share of the debt; the debt being recoverable. But here it
involves a factual aspect on which there is not enough
material on the record or the matter having been examined by
the court below. We decline to take up this issue at this
stage.
 For the reasons aforesaid we find no merit in this
appeal and dismiss it. We equally find no merit in the
belated cross-objection of defendant-respondent No. 2, leave
of which was sought during the course of the hearing of the
appeal. We decline to entertain the request. There shall be
no order as to costs.
R.S.S. Appeal dismissed.
442

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