Section 41 (1) of the 1932 Act is, as amended in 1936, as follows - -
" Notwithstanding anything in this Act or in the Moratorium Act,
1930, or any Act amending the same contained, where any
person has before the commencement of this Act guaranteed the
payment of any money or the performance or observance of any
obligation and such payment, performance, or observance, or such
guarantee was or is secured by a mortgage of land, the person
entitled to the benefit of the guarantee may give to the guarantor not
less than three calendar months' notice of his intention to exercise
all or any of his rights, powers, and remedies against the guarantor
or against any property mortgaged by the guarantor to secure
the guarantee, and after the expiration of the said period of notice
the person entitled to the benefit of the guarantee may, subject to
the provisions of this section, exercise such of the said rights, powers,
and remedies against the guarantor and against any property
mortgaged by the guarantor to secure the performance of the
guarantee as he would have been entitled to exercise if this Act,
and the said Act as amended, had not been passed . . . (2) Any
guarantor who has been given any such notice may within the time
limited by the notice apply to the Supreme Court for an order under
this section."