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Issues:
1. Application by a creditor of a bank appealing against the decision of the Official Liquidator. 2. Claim of the Official Liquidator to appropriate the creditor's fixed deposit against the liability on a guarantee. 3. Applicant's argument regarding the Limitation Act and its impact on the debt and set-off. Analysis: 1. The judgment deals with an appeal by a creditor of a bank, challenging the decision of the Official Liquidator in a winding-up process. The creditor had a fixed deposit with the bank and submitted a proof of his claim as a creditor. The Official Liquidator acknowledged the creditor's status but asserted that the creditor was also a guarantor for another client's overdrawn account, creating a liability exceeding Rs. 2,000. The Official Liquidator sought to set off the creditor's fixed deposit against this liability, invoking the mutual credit section of the Provincial Insolvency Act. 2. The creditor raised two points in response. Initially, he argued that since the Official Liquidator had not exhausted all remedies against the principal debtor of the overdrawn account, there was no liability on his part to set off against. However, the creditor abandoned this argument. The second point raised by the creditor related to the Limitation Act. He contended that if successful in a separate suit where he planned to rely on the Act's defense, it would prove that no debt was due on the specified date for the set-off to be valid. The court dismissed this argument by clarifying that the Limitation Act does not extinguish the debt but only bars the remedy, allowing the debt to persist. 3. The judgment elucidates the distinction between the right of set-off exercised by the Official Liquidator under the Companies Act and the set-off available to defendants in civil suits under the Civil Procedure Code. It emphasizes that the conditions for set-off under the two statutes differ significantly. The Official Liquidator's authority to set off debts is derived from the Companies Act and not the Civil Procedure Code, highlighting the unique nature of the set-off in insolvency proceedings. The court's reference to a previous case further underscores the principle that the existence of a debt is distinct from the ability to enforce it within the limitations prescribed by law. In conclusion, the court dismissed the appeal, affirming the Official Liquidator's right to appropriate the creditor's fixed deposit to offset the liability arising from the guarantee, despite the creditor's arguments based on the Limitation Act and the nature of set-off in insolvency proceedings.
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