Bhatia Co-Operative Housing Society
Ltd. Vs. D. C. Patel [1952] INSC 54 (5 November 1952)
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND BOSE,
VIVIAN BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
CITATION: 1953 AIR 16 1953 SCR 185
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1957 SC 344 (20) F 1958 SC 789 (8) RF 1963
SC 468 (9) D 1966 SC1024 (7) RF 1978 SC1217 (34) D 1988 SC1313 (8) D 1988
SC1531 (125) F 1991 SC 844 (14)
ACT:
Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Bates Control
Act (LVII of 1947) s. 4 (1)-Suit by lessee of premises belonging to Government
or local authority against sub-lesseeApplicability of Act-Jurisdictioin of City
Civil Court Construction of lease--Ownership of building put up by
lessee-Jurisdiction of Courts--Inherent power to decide question of
jurisdiction.
HEADNOTE:
Section 4 of the Bombay Rents, Hotel and
Lodging House Rates Control Act, 1947, which provides that the Act shall not
apply to premises belonging to the Government or a local authority applies not
only to suits between the Government or a local authority as a landlord against
the lessee, but also to suits by a lessee of the Government or a local
authority against his sublessee. The indemnity conferred is in respect of
premises belonging to the Government or a local authority.
A building site was auctioned to a person by
the City Improvement Trust of Bombay with a condition that the bidder Was to
put up a building of a certain description at a cost of not less than Rs.
50,000 and after the Completion of the building, the site and the building were
to be leased to the bidder for a period of 999 years at a fixed yearly rent.
Held, a construction of the lease-deed that
the building put up by the bidder belonged to the Trust and not to the bidder
and a suit by the lessee against his sub-lessee was not governed by the-Bombay
Rents, Hotels and. Lodging House Rates Control Act, 1947, as the premises
belonged to a local authority within the meaning of s. 4 (1) of the Act, and
the suit could accordingly be instituted in the City Civil Court of Bombay.
A civil Court has inherent jurisdiction to
decide the question of its own jurisdiction and to entertain a suit although as
a result of the inquiry it may turn out that it has no jurisdiction.
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 18 of 1952.
Appeal from the Judgment and Order dated
December 12, 1949, of the High Court of Judicature at Bombay (Weston and Shah
JJ.) in First Appeal No. 456 of 1949, arising out of Judgment and Decree dated
January 24, 1949, of the 186 Bombay City Civil Court in Civil Suit No. 106 of
1948.
M.C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India,
(S.B.Jatharwith him) for the appellant.
N. P. Engineer (E. H. Bhaba with him) for the
respondent.
1952. November 5. The Judgment of the Court
was delivered by DAS J.-This is an appeal filed with the special leave of this
Court. It is directed against the judgment and decree passed December 2, 1949,
by a Division Bench (Weston and Shah JJ.) of the Bombay High Court reversing,
the ground of absence of jurisdiction, the judgment and decree for possession
passed January 24, 1949, by the Bombay City Civil Court and directing the
return of the plaint for presentation to the proper Court.
There is no dispute as to the facts material
for the purposes of this appeal. or about April 15, 1908, the Board of Trustees
for the Improvement of the City of Bombay put up to auction plots Nos. 16, 17
and 18 of new survey Nos. 8234, 8235 and 8244 situate the Princess Street
Estate of the Board containing an area of 2235 square yards for being let
certain conditions. One Sitaram Luxman was the highest bidder and was declared
the tenant at an annual rent per square yard to be calculated at the rate of
41/2 per cent of Rs. 29 per square yard and he signed the memorandum of
agreement incorporating the conditions upon which the auction was held and by
which he agreed to be bound. He deposited the moneys in terms of clause 3 of
the conditions, and upon such payment entered into possession of the plots. By
clause 7 Sitaram Luxman agreed, within the time specified therein, to build and
complete at a cost of not less than Rs. 50,000 a building consisting of 5
floors with suitable offices, drains etc. according to plans and specifications
to be made by an approved architect and approved by the Board By clause 17 187
he agreed, so soon as the main building should be roofed in, to insure in the
joint names of the Board and of himself and, until the granting of the lease
thereinafter provided, keep insured the buildings and works the plots for the
full value thereof. Clause 18 of the conditions was as follows:"18. The
lease. Immediately after the completion within the time limited by condition 7
of the said buildings and works to the satisfaction of the Trust Engineer
testified by his certificate the Trustees will if the contract has not
previously been determined grant to the tenant or his approved nominee who
shall accept the same a lease of the said plot with buildings thereon for the
term of 999 years from the date of the auction at the yearly rent calculated in
accordance with the accepted bidding for the plot." Clause 25 gave power
to the Board, if the buildings were not completely finished within the
stipulated time and certain other contingencies, to forfeit the deposit and to
enter upon and retain possession of the plots and all buildings and works then
standing thereon.
Pursuant to this agreement the said Sitaram
Luxman erected those plots a building which has since come to be known as the
New Sitaram Building. the completion of the building, by an Indenture -of lease
made April 19, 1916, between, the Trustees for the Improvement of the City of
Bombay and one Rustomji Dhunjibhoy Sethna the receiver of the estate of Sitaram
Luxman appointed by the High Court in Suit No. 720 of 1913, the Trustees,
pursuant to the said agreement and in consideration of the monies which had
been expended in the erection of the buildings and of the rent and the
covenants thereinafter reserved and contained, demised unto the lessee all that
piece of land situate their Princess Street estate together with the buildings
erected thereon to hold the same for 999 years from April 15, 1908, paying
therefor up to January, 15, 1909, the rent of Re. I and during the remainder of
188 the term the yearly rent of Rs. 2,916 by equal quarterly payments. By the said
Indenture the lessee covenanted to pay all rates and taxes, not to use or to
permit to be used, without the lessor's consent, the portion of land not built
upon except as open space, not to pull down, add to or alter the buildings
without such consent, to keep in repair all drains sewers etc., to repair,
pave, cleanse and paint and amend all the buildings, walls etc., to permit the
lessors and their employees to enter upon the premises to inspect the
conditions thereof 48 hours' notice, to use the demised premises for
residential purposes or as offices and schools only and not as a public house
or liquor shop or for any business or trade, throughout the term to keep the
buildings insured against fire in the joint names of the lessor and the lessee
and to rebuild or reinstate and repair the building if destroyed or damaged by
fire or otherwise.
There was a proviso for re-entry for
nonpayment of rent for 30 days or for breach of any of the lessee's covenants.
In 1925 all the properties of the Trustees for
the Improvement of the City of Bombay vested in the Bombay Municipality under
and by virtue of Bombay Act XVI of 1925.
By a deed of assignment made April 26, 1948,
Shri Bhatia Co-operative Housing Society Limited, a society registered under
the Bombay Co-operative Societies Act, VII of 1921, the appellant before us,
acquired the lessee's interest in the demised premises.
June 29, 1948, the appellant served a notice
the respondent before us who was a monthly tenant in occupation of Block No.
B/2 the ground floor of the New Sitaram Building at a monthly rental of Rs.
52-5-9 to quit and vacate the same July 31, 1948. By his advocate's reply the
respondent maintained that he had been paying the rent regularly and otherwise
performing the terms of his tenancy and claimed the protection of the Bombay
Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act, 1947 (Act LVII of 1947);
189 The respondent not having vacated the
block under his occupation the expiry of the notice to quit, the appellant
filed summary Suit No. 106 of 1948 against the respondent in the City Civil
Court at Bombay for vacant possession of the said Block No. B/2 the ground
floor of the said New Sitaram Buildings and mesne profits from August 1, 1948,
until delivery of possession. After stating the material facts, the appellant
submitted that the Bombay Act LVII of 1947 did not apply to the demised
premises. The respondent filed his written statement maintaining that under
section 28 of the Bombay Act the City Civil Court had no jurisdiction to entertain
the suit. He averred that he had performed and observed all the conditions of
his tenancy and was ready and willing to do so, that the New Sitaram Building
had been constructed at the expense of the appellant's predecessor in title and
that the premises belonged to the appellant and not to the Government or a
local authority and that the respondent was entitled to the protection of the
Bombay Act LVII of 1947. Leaving out the issue as to whether the appellant was
entitled to any compensation, there were 4 issues raising in effect two points,
namely, (1) whether the Court had jurisdiction and (2) whether the Bombay Act
LVII of 1947 applied to the premises in suit.
The learned City Civil Court Judge in a
well-considered and careful judgment answered the issues in favour of the
appellant and decreed the suit. The respondent appealed to the High Court. The
High Court reversed the decision of the trial Judge and holding that the Bombay
Act LVII of 1947 did apply to the premises and consequently that the City Civil
Court, by virtue of section 28 of that Act, had no jurisdiction to entertain
the suit, directed that the plaint, be returned to the appellant for being
filed in the proper Court. The High Court having declined to grant leave to the
appellant to appeal to this Court, the appellant applied for and obtained
special leave 190 of this Court to prefer this appeal and filed this appeal
pursuant to such leave.
Learned counsel for the respondent took a
preliminary objection, founded the provisions of section 28 of the Bombay Act,
that the City Civil Court had no jurisdiction to entertain the suit, for that
section clearly states that in Greater Bombay the Court of Small Causes alone
shall have jurisdiction to entertain and try any suit between a landlord and a
tenant relating to the recovery of rent or possession of any premises to which
any of the provisions of that Part of the Act applied and to decide any
application made under the Act and to deal with any claim or question arising
out of the Act and no other Court should have jurisdiction to entertain any
suit or proceeding or to deal with such claim or question. If, as contended for
by the appellant, the Act does not apply to the premises, then section 28 which
is an integral part of the Act and takes away the jurisdiction of all Courts
other than the Small Causes Court in Greater Bombay cannot obviously be invoked
by the respondent. The crucial point, therefore, in order to determine the
question of the jurisdiction of the City Civil Court to entertain the suit, is
to ascertain whether, in view of section 4 of the Act, the Act applies to the
premises at all. If it does, the City Civil Court has no jurisdiction but if it
does not, then it has such jurisdiction. The question at once arises as to who
is to decide this point in controversy. It is well settled that a Civil Court
has inherent power to decide the question of its own jurisdiction, although, as
a result of its enquiry, it may turn out that it has no jurisdiction over the
suit.
Accordingly we think, in agreement with the
High Court, that this preliminary objection is not well founded in principle or
authority and should be rejected.
The main controversy between the parties is
as to whether the Act applies to the demised premises. The solution of that
controversy depends upon a true construction of section 4 (1) of the Bombay Act
LVII of 1947, Which runs as follows:191 "4. (1) This Act shall not apply
to any promises belonging to the Government or a local authority or apply as
against the Government to any tenancy or other like relationship created by a
grant from the$ Government in respect of premises,taken lease or requisitioned
by the Government;
but it shall apply in respect of premises let
to the Government or a local authority." It is clear that the above
sub-section has three parts, namely(1) This Act shall not apply to premises
belonging to the Government or a local authority, (2) This Act shall not apply
as against the Government to any tenancy or other like relationship created by
grant from the Government in respect of premises taken lease or requisitioned
by the Government, (3) This Act shall apply in respect of premises lot out to
the Government or a local authority.
The contention of the appellant Society is
that the demised premises belonged to the Trustees for the improvement of the
City of Bombay and now belong to the Bombay Municipality both of which bodies
are local authorities and, therefore, the Act does not apply to the demised
premises. Learned counsel for the respondent, however, urges that the object of
the Act, as recited in the preamble, is inter alia, to control rent. It
follows, therefore, that the object of the legislation was that the provisions
of the Act would be applicable only as between the landlord and tenant. Section
4 (1) provides for an exemption from or exception to that general object. The
purpose of the; first two parts of section 4 (1) is to exempt two cases of
relationship of landlord and tenant from the operation of the Act, namely, (1)
where the Government or a local authority lets out premises belonging to it,
and (2) where the Government lets out premises taken on lease or requisitioned
by it. It will be observed that the second part of section 4 (1) quite clearly
exempts "any tenancy or other like relationship" created by the
Government but the first part makes no 192 reference to Any tenancy or other
like relationship at all but exempts the premises belonging to the Government
or a local authority. If the intention of the first -#part were as formulated
in item (1), then the first part of section 4 (1), like the second part, would
have run thus: This Act shall not apply to any tenancy or other like relationship
created by Government or local authority in respect of premises belonging to
it.
The Legislature was familiar with this form
of expression, for it adopted it in the second part and yet it did not use that
form in the first. The conclusion is, therefore, irresistible that the
Legislature did not by the first part intend to exempt the relationship of
landlord and tenant but intended to confer the premises belonging to Government
an immunity from the operation of the Act.
Learned counsel for the respondent next
contends that the immunity given by the first part should be held to be
available only to the Government or a local authority to which the premises
belong. If that were the intention then the Legislature would have used
phraseology similar to what it did in the second part, namely, it would have
expressly made the Act inapplicable "as against the Government or a local
authority". This it did not do and the only inference that can be drawn
from this circumstance is that this departure was made deliberately with a view
to exempt the premises itself.
It is said that if the first part of the section
is so construed as to exempt the premises from the operation of the Act, not
only as between the Government or a local authority the one hand and its lessee
the other, but also as between that lessee and his subtenant, then the whole
purpose of the Act will be frustrated, for it is well known that most of the
lands in Greater Bombay belong to the Government or one or other local
authority, e.g., Bombay Port Trust and Bombay Municipality and the greater
number of tenants will not be able to avail themselves of the benefit and
protection of the Act. In the first place, the 193 preamble to the Act clearly
shows that the object of the Act was to consolidate the law relating to the
control of rents and repairs of certain premises and not of all premises.
The Legislature may well have thought that an
immunity given to premises belonging to the Government or a local authority
will facilitate the speedy development of its lands by inducing lessees to take
up building leases terms advantageous to the Government or a local authority.
Further, as pointed out by Romer L. J. in
Clark v. Downes(1), which case was approved by Lord Goddard C.J. in Rudler v.
Franks(1) such immunity will increase the value of the right of reversion
belonging to the Government or a local authority. The fact that the Government
or a local authority may be trusted to act fairly and reasonably may have
induced the Legislature all the more readily to give such immunity to premises
belonging to the Government or a local authority but it cannot be overlooked
that the primary object of giving this immunity was to protect the interests of
the Government or a local authority. This protection requires that the immunity
should be held to attach to the premises itself and the benefit of it should be
available not only to the Government or a local authority but also to the
lessee deriving title from it. If the benefit of the immunity was given only to
the Government or a local authority and not to its lessee as suggested by
learned counsel for the respondent and the Act applied to the premises as
against the lessee, then it must follow that under section 15 of the Act it
will not be lawful for the lessee to sublet the premises or any part of it. If
such were the consequences, nobody will take a building lease from the
Government or a local authority -and the immunity given to the Government or a
local authority will, for all practical purposes and in so far at any rate as
the building leases are concerned, be wholly illusory and worthless and the
underlying purpose for bestowing such immunity will be rendered wholly
ineffective. In our opinion, therefore, the consideration of the (I) [1931] 145
L.T. 20.
(2) [1947] 1 K.B. 530.
194 protection of the interests of the
sub-tenants in premises belonging to the Government or a local authority cannot
override the plain meaning of the preamble or the first part of section 4 (1)
and frustrate the real purpose of protecting and furthering the interests of
the Government or a local authority by conf erring its property an immunity
from the operation of the Act.
Finally, learned counsel for the respondent
urges that the words "belonging to" have not been used in a technical
sense and should be read in their popular sense. It is pointed out that it was
the lessee who erected the building at his own cost, he is to hold it for 999
years, he has the right of subletting the building in whole or in part rent and
terms to be fixed by him, of ejecting sub-tenants, and of assigning the lease.
Therefore, it may fairly be said that the premises or, at any rate, the
building belongs to the lessee and the rights reserved by the lease to the
lessor are only by way of security for the preservation of the building which,
the expiry or sooner determination of the lease, will vest in the lessor. This
line -of reasoning has found favour with the High Court which has held that
although in form the building belongs to the Bombay Municipality who are the
successors in interest of the lessors, in substance the building belongs to the
appellant, the assignee of the lessee, and not to the Bombay Municipality. We
are unable to accept this reasoning, for we see no reason to hold, in the
circumstances of this case, that the substance does not follow the form. By the
operative part of the lease the demise is not only of the land but also of the
building standing thereon. This demise is 'certainly an act of ownership
exercised by the lessor over the land as well as the buildings. Under section
105 of the Transfer of Property Act a lease is a transfer only of a right to
enjoy the demised, premises, but there is no transfer of ownership or interest
in the demised promises to the lessee such as there is in a sale (section 54)
or a mortgage (section 58). In the present case, the lessee cannot, his 195 own
covenant, use the buildings in any way he likes. He has to use the game only as
offices or schools or for residential purposes and cannot, without the lessor's
consent, use them for purposes of any trade or, business.
He cannot pull down the buildings or make any
additions or alterations without the lessor's consent. He cannot build upon the
open space. He must, if the premises are destroyed by fire or otherwise,
reinstate it. The lessor has the right to enter upon and inspect the premises
at any time giving 48 hours' notice. All these covenants clearly indicate that
the lessor ha$ the dominant voice and the real ownership. What are called
attributes of ownership of the lessee are only the rights of enjoyment which
are common to all lessees under well drawn leases, but the ownership, in the
land and in the building is in the lessor. It is true that the lessee erected
the building a this own cost but he did so for the lessor and the lessor's land
agreed terms. The fact that the lessee incurred expenses in putting up the
building is precisely the consideration for the lessor granting him a lease for
999 years not only of the building but of the land as well at what may, for all
we know, be a cheap rent which the lessor may not have otherwise agreed to do.
By the agreement the building became the property of the lessor and the lessor
demised the land and the building which, in the circumstances, in law and in
fact belonged to the lessor. The law of fixtures under section 108 of the
Transfer of Property Act may be different from the English law, but section 108
is subject to any agreement that the parties may choose to make. Here, by the
agreement the building became part of the land and the property of the lessor
and the lessee took a lease that footing. The lessee or a person claiming title
through him cannot now be heard to say that the building does not belong to the
lessor. Forfeiture does not, for the first time, give title to the lessor.
forfeiture he re-enters upon what has all along been his own property. Said
Lord Macnaghten in Heritable Reversionary Company v. Mullar(1):-(I) (1892] A.C.
598 at 021, 196 "The words 'Property' and 'belonging to' are not technical
words in the law of Scotland. They are to be understood, I think, in their
ordinary signification. They are in fact convertible terms; you can hardly
explain the one except by using the other. A man's property is that which is
his own, that which belongs to him. What belongs to him is his property."
In our opinion the interest of the lessor in the demised premises cannot
possibly be -described as a contingent interest which will become vested the
expiry or sooner determination of the lease, for then the lessor could not have
demised the premises including the building as he did or before the determination,
of the lease exercise any act of ownership or any control over it as he
obviously has the right to do under the covenants referred to above. The truth
is that the lessor, after the building was erected, became the owner of it and
all the time thereafter the demised premises which include the building have
belonged to him subject to the right of enjoyment of the lessee in terms of the
lease. If it were to be held that the building belonged to the lessee by reason
of his having put it up at his own cost and by reason of the attributes of
ownership relied by learned counsel, then as between the local authority (the
lessor) and the lessee also the building must for the same reason founded
what,have been called the attributes of ownership be held to belong to the
lessee and the Act will apply. Surely that could not possibly be the case, for
it would mean that the Government or a local authority will always be bound by
the Act in respect of the building put up by the lessee under building leases
granted by it in respect of land belonging to it. In that case the immunity
given to the Government or a local authority will be wholly illusory and
worthless. In' our view in the case before us the demised premises including
the building belong to a local authority and are outside the operation of the
Act. This Act being out of the way, the appellants were well within their 197
rights to file the suit in ejectment in the City Civil Court and that Court had
jurisdiction to entertain the suit and to pass the decree that it did.
I The result, therefore, is that we allow
this appeal, set aside the judgment and decree of the High Court and restore
the decree passed by the City Civil Court. The appellant will be entitled to
costs throughout in all Courts.
Appeal allowed.
Agent for the appellant: P. G. Gokhale. Agent
for the respondent: S. P. Varma.
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