Chander Kali Bai & Ors Vs. Jagdish
Singh Thakur [1977] INSC 191 (6 October 1977)
UNTWALIA, N.L.
UNTWALIA, N.L.
SINGH, JASWANT
CITATION: 1977 AIR 2262
CITATOR INFO :
D 1977 SC2270 (4)
ACT:
Madhya Pradesh Accommodation Control Act
1961, ss. 2(1), 12 (1) (f), 13(1)-A decree for damages can be awarded not from
the date of termination of the contractual tenancy but only from the date when
an eviction decree is passed.
New plea-A plea of defence not taken at trial
stage cannot be permitted to be taken at appellate stage.
Words and phrases, "his business"
and "of his own in his occupation" occurring in s. 12(1)(f) of the
Madhya Pradesh Accommodation Control Act, 1961, meaning off.
HEADNOTE:
A shop where Bhojnalaya was being run by the
appellants- tenants was demised to their predecessors-in-interest for the said
purpose by the father of plaintiff-respondent No. 1 in the year 1951 on a
monthly rent of Rs. 50/-. The father of the plaintiff-respondent No. 1 was
running a sweetmeat shop in a rented premises, the rent of which was Rs. 225/-
per mensem. The plaintiff's father died in 1970. Sometime later the original
tenant also died. He had paid rent up to September, 1972. The plaintiff served
a notice on the defendants terminating the contractual tenancy with effect from
31-12-1972 and filed a suit an 8-3-1973 for eviction on the ground of bona fide
necessity of the plaintiff, for arrears of rent amounting to Rs. 150/- for
October, November and December 1972 and damages for the months of January and
February 1973 at Rs. 225/- per mensem as also future damages till the delivery
of the possession. The trial court dismissed the suit holding that the
plaintiff did not require the sweet-shop bona fide for his personal necessity,
On appeal by the plaintiff, the first appellate court by its judgment dated
11-8-75, taking a contrary view, decreed the suit for eviction, arrears of rent
anti also for past and future damages at Rs. 125/- per month to be payable on
and from 1-1-1973 until delivery of the vacant possession to the plaintiff. The
High Court in second appeal affirmed the decree.
Allowing the appeal by special leave in part,
the Court,
HELD : (1) Where a claim has never been made
in the defence presented, no amount of evidence can be looked into upon a plea
which was never put forward. If it could be so even at the trial stage,
undoubtedly such a new question of fact could not be entertained at in
appellate stage.
In this case, neither any issue was struck
nor was any evidence adduced by the parties on the question. The case Pr to
trial on the admitted footing that the business which the plaintiff wanted to
shift to the suit shop was his business. In such a situation it was not open to
the appellants to take a stand at a very late stage of the litigation that the
sweetmeat shop was the business of the joint family of the plaintiff and,
therefore, not the plaintiff's business to come within the meaning If clause
(f) of sub-s 1 of s. 12 of the Madhya Pradesh Accommodation Control Act, 1961.
[627H, 628A-D] Siddik Mohommed Shah v. Mt. Saran and Ors. 1930 PC 57(1);
Bhagat Singh & Ors. v. Jaswant Singh
A.I.R. 1966 SC 1861 and Bachan Singh v. Dhian Dass & Ors. AIR 1974 SC 708,
applied.
(2)A tenanted shop in mere occupation of the
landlord filing a suit for eviction against his tenant was sufficient to deny
him a decree on the ground of clause(h) of s.- 4 of the Madhya Pradesh
Accommodation Control Act 1955 where the expression used was that the landlord
"is not in occupation of any other accommodation in the city or town for
that purpose". But, under the 626 1961 Act, mere occupation of another
premises is not sufficient in view of the clear departure made by using the
phraseology in the second part of cl. (f) of s. 12(1), "the landlord has
no- other reasonably suitable non-residential accommodation of his own in his
occupation in the city or town concerned". The premises must be his own
meaning thereby that they must be owned by or belong to the landlord and he
must be in occupation of the same. In the instant case, the tenanted shop in
occupation of the plaintiff was not sufficient to deny him a decree for
eviction against his tenant u/s. 12(1) (f) of the Act.[628E-F] (3)As per the
widened definition of "tenant' in s. 2(1) of the Madhya Pradesh
Accommodation Control Act, 1961, a tenant even after the termination of his
contractual tenancy does not become an unauthorised occupant of the
accommodation but remains a statutory tenant. A person continuing in possession
of the accommodation even after the termination of his contractual tenancy is a
tenant within the meaning of the Act and on such termination his possession
does not become wrongful until and unless a decree for eviction is made. If he
continues to be in possession even after the passing of the decree, he does so
as a wrongful occupant of the accommodation. [629 A-D] Damadilal and others v.
Parashram and others [1976] Supp.
SCR 645, referred to.
(4) If a suit is filed on the ground of
non-payment of rent after termination of the contractual tenancy, the tenant
still continues to be tenant liable to pay rent not only for the past period,
but in future also. In absence of decree of eviction the person in occupation
of the accommodation continues to be a tenant and is not liable to pay any
damages as his occupation is not unauthorised or wrongful even after the
termination of the contractual tenancy.
In the instant case (i) the defendants
remained in occupation of the. accommodation on and from 1-1-1973 as a
statutory tenant under the Act. Their occupation was not unauthorised or
wrongful until a decree for eviction was passed by the first appellate court on
11-8-1975. Their occupation became unauthorised or wrongful only from that
date. They are liable to pay damages or mesne profits at Rs. 125/- per mensem
from 11-8-1975 only until the delivery of the vacant possession of the
accommodation. They are not liable to pay any damages or mesne profits for the
period commending from 1-1-1973 and ending 10-8-1975. [629 E-G, 630 G-H, 631 A]
Kikabhai Abdul Hussain v. Kamlakar and Ors. [1974] M.P. Law Journal 485,
over-ruled.
Ganga Dutt Murarka v. Kartik Chandra Das
& Ors. [1961] (3) SCR 813, distinguished.
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 110 of 1976:
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and
Order dated 28-11-75 of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Second Appeal 495 of
1975.
(Mrs) Leila Seth, A. T. Patra and Praveen
Kumar for the Appellants.
M. V. Goswami for Respondent No. 1.
G. S. Chatterjee for Respondent No. 2.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
UNTWALIA, J.---In this appeal by 'special leave the appellants and respondent
no. 2 were the defendants in a suit filed by plaintiff-respondent no. 1 for
eviction And other reliefs in respect of the suit premises. The suit was
dismissed by the Trial Court but decreed by the 627 First Appellate Court. The
second appeal filed by the defendant in the High Court of Madhya Pradesh was
dismissed.
The demised property is a shop situated at a
place in the District of Hoshangabad. It was let out by the father of the
plaintiff to the husband of defendant no. 1 and the father of the other
defendants in the year 1951 at a monthly rent of Rs. 50/-. A Bhojnalaya was
being run in the shop by the tenant. The plaintiff's father was running a
sweetmeat shop in a rented premise the rent of which was Rs. 225/per month. The
plaintiff's father died in 1970. Sometime later the original tenant, the
predecessor-in-interest of the defendants, also died. He' had paid rent up to
September, 1972. After the death of the original tenant, the defendants became
the tenants of the suit shop. The plaintiff served a notice on the defendants
terminating the contractual tenancy w.e.f. 31-12-1972. The suit for eviction
was filed on 8-3-1973 claiming therein a decree for eviction chiefly on the ground
of bona-fide personal necessity of the plaintiff, for arrears of rent amounting
to Rs. 150/- for October, November and December, 1972 and damages for the
months of January and February, 1973 @ Rs. 225/per month as also future damages
till the delivery of possession.
The Trial Court dismissed the suit holding
that the plaintiff did not require the suit shop bona-fide for his personal
necessity. On appeal by the plaintiff, the First Appellate Court by its
judgment dated 11-8-1975 took a contrary view and held in favour of the
plaintiff. It decreed the suit for eviction, arrears of rent and also for past
and future damages @ Rs. 125/- per month damages to be payable on and from
1-1-1973 until delivery of the vacant possession to the plaintiff. The High Court
has affirmed this decree.
Mrs. Leila Seth, learned counsel for the
appellants advanced a very able and succinct argument and urged only the
following three points (1) The business for which the accommodation was
required by the plaintiff was not "his business" within the meaning
of clause (f) of sub-section (1) of Section 12, of The Madhya Pradesh
Accommodation Control Act, 1961 here- in after referred to as the Act.
(2) That the rented shop in which the
business of sweetmeat and Namkin was carried on should have been held to be an
accommodation "of his own in his occupation" within the meaning of
the second part of the clause (f).
(3) That no decree for damages could be
awarded from the date of termination of. the contractual tenancy. It could be
awarded only from the date when an eviction decree was passed.
In our judgment the first two points of the
appellants have to be rejected but the third must succeed.
The plaintiff had clearly pleaded in
paragraph 8 of his plaint that the sweetmeat shop which he was running in the
rented premises was his business and he wanted to shift it to the accommodation
in question. The defendants did not deny the statement made in paragraph 8 of
628 the plaint-rather in paragraph 6 of their written statement- they admitted
them to be correct. In such a situation it was not open to them to take a stand
at a very late stage of the litigation that the sweetmeat shop was the business
of the joint family of the plaintiff-the karta of which was his father and on
his death it was the business not of the plaintiff alone but of his- entire
joint family. The High Court has rightly rejected this point on this ground. In
Siddik Mahomed Shah v. Mt. Saran and others(1) it has been pointed out that
where a claim has never been made in the defence presented no amount of
evidence can be looked into upon a plea which was never put forward. If it
could be so even at the trial stage, undoubtedly, such a new question of fact
could not be entertained at any appellate stage. This decision has been
followed by this Court in Bhagat Singh and others v. Jaswant Singh(2). To the
same effect is the view expressed in another decision of this Court in Bachan
Singh v. Dhian Dass and others(3). Hegde, J pointed out in paragraph 6 of the
judgment that a contention involving determination of questions of fact ought
not have been allowed to be raised for the first time in the second appeal in
the High Court. In this case we may add further that neither any issue was
struck nor was any evidence adduced by the parties on this question. The case
proceeded to trial on the admitted footing that the business which the
plaintiff wanted to 'shift to the suit shop was his business.
Apropos the second point it would be useful
to point out that the Act replaced an earlier Act of 1955 entitled as The
Madhya Pradesh Accommodation Control Act, 1955. In a similar provision as
contained in Section 4(h) of the 1955 Act, the expression used was that the
landlord "is not in occupation of any other accommodation in the city or town
for that purpose". There is a clear departure in the 1961 Act where the
phraseology is that the landlord "has no other reasonably suitable
non-residential accommodation of his own in his occupation in the cityor town
concerned", in the second part of clause (f) of Section 12(1)A tenanted
shop in mere occupation of the landlord filing a suit for eviction against his
tenant was 'sufficient to deny him a decree on the ground of clause (h) of
Section 4 of the 1955 Act. But under the 1961 Act, mere occupation of another
premises is not sufficient. The premises must be his own, meaning. thereby that
they must be owned by or belong to the landlord and he must be in occupation of
the same. It is, therefore, plain that the tenanted shop in occupation of the
plaintiff was not 'sufficient to deny him a decree for eviction against his
tenant under section 12(1) (f) of the Act.
For appreciation of the third point urged for
the appellant it would be again useful to refer to a few corresponding
provisions of the two Acts. In the 1955 Act, tenant was defined in clause (f)
of Section 3 to mean "a person by whom rent is payable or but for a
contract express or implied would be payable for any accommodation and includes
any person occupying the accommodation as a sub-tenant". In the (1) [1930]
Privy Council, 57 (1) (2) A.I.R. 1966 SC. 1861.
(3) A.I.R. 1974 S.C. 708.
629 1961 Act, however, the definition of
tenant has been widened and Section 2(i) reads thus :
"tenant" means a person by whom or
on whose account or behalf the rent of any accommodation is, or, but, for a
contract express or implied, would be payable for any accommodation and
includes any person occupying the accommodation as a sub-tenant and also, any
person continuing in possession after the termination of his tenancy whether
before or after the commencement of this Act;
but shall not include any person against whom
any order or decree for eviction has been made." On a plain reading of the
definition aforesaid it is clear that a tenant even after the termination of
his contractual tenancy does not become an unauthorised occupant of the
accommodation but remains a tenant. It has been pointed out by this Court in
Damadilal and others v. Parashram and others(1) that such a tenant is
conveniently called a statutory tenant. Whether the expression aforesaid
borrowed from the English Law is quite apposite or not, but, what is certain is
that a person continuing in possession of the accommodation even after the
termination of his contractual tenancy is,, a tenant within the meaning of the
Act and on such termination his possession does not become wrongful, until and
unless a decree for eviction is made. If he con- tinues to be in possession
even after the passing of the decree, he does so as a wrongful occupant of the accommodation.
Mrs. Seth in support of her argument rightly
pressed into service a few other provisions of the Act. Section 13(1) giving
protection against eviction on the ground of default in payment of rent
provides therein that even after the institution of the suit if he clears off
the amount of rent due within a period specified in the section and thereafter
"continue to deposit or pay, month by month, by the 15th of each
succeeding month a sum equivalent to the rent at that rate" calculated at
the rate of rent at which he was paying earlier, no decree for eviction can be
passed. The conclusion is inevitable, therefore, that if a 'suit is filed on
the ground of non-payment of rent after termination of the contractual tenancy,
the tenant still continues to be a tenant liable to pay rent not only for the
past period but in future also. In absence of a decree of eviction the person
in occupation of the accommodation continues to be a tenant and is not liable
to pay any damages as his occupation is not unauthorised or wrongful even after
the termination of the contractual tenancy. In Damadilal's case (supra). Gupta,
J delivering the judgment of this Court has said at page 653 with reference to
the definition of tenant in 'section 2(1) of the Act "The definition makes
a person continuing in possession after the determination of his tenancy a
tenant unless a decree or order for eviction has been made against him, thus
putting him on par with a person whose contractual tenancy (1)[1976] Suppl.
S.C.R. 645.
630 stiff subsists. The incidents of such
tenancy and a contractual tenancy must therefore be the same unless any
provision of the Act conveyed a contrary intention. That under this Act such a
tenant retains an interest in the premises, and not merely a personal right of
occupation, will also appear from section 14 which contains provisions
restricting the tenant's power of subletting." In Kikabhai Abdul Hussain
v. Kamlakar and others(1) a Bench of the Madhya Pradesh High Court seems to
have opined even with reference to the 1961 Act that if a person continues to
be in occupation after the termination of the contractual tenancy then on the
passing of the decree for eviction he becomes a wrongful occupant of the
accommodation since the date of termination. It seems a theory akin to the
theory of "relation back" has been applied in the sense that if no
decree for eviction is passed then the person is not in unlawful occupation but
on the passing of such a decree his possession becomes unlawful not from the
date of the decree but such a decree makes his occupation unlawful from the
date of the termination of the contractual tenancy.
Whatever could be said with reference to the
provisions of 1955 Act it is clear to us that the law so enunciated by the High
Court with reference to 1961 Act is not correct.
Mr. Goswami, appearing for the plaintiff
respondent relied upon the decision of this Court in Ganga Dutt Murarka v. Kartik
Chandra Das and others(2) In our opinion the said decision is of no help to the
respondent. The question for determination there was a different one. With
reference to the provisions of, the West Bengal Premises Rent Control Act the
argument advanced before this Court was that if after the determination of the
tenancy by , efflux of time or by a notice to quit the tenant continued in
possession of the premises and the landlord accepted rent from him because no
decree for eviction could be made in view of the subsequent Control Acts it was
tantamount to holding over within the meaning of Section 116 of the Transfer of
Property Act.
This argument was repelled. Whether a new
contractual tenancy would come into existence by acceptance of rent by the
landlord in such a situation is a different matter. But this case does not lay
down that the occupation of the premises by the tenant whose tenancy has been
terminated by efflux of- time or by notice to quit becomes unauthorised or
wrongful.
For the reason stated above it is manifest
that the defendants remained in occupation 'of the accommodation on and from
1-1-1973 as a tenant, conveniently to be called statutory tenant, under the
Act. Their occupation was not unauthorised or wrongful until a decree for
eviction was passed by the First Appellate Court on 11-8-75. Their occupation
became unauthorised or wrongful only from that date. They are not therefore,
liable to pay any damages or mesne profits for (1) [1974] Madhya Pradesh Law
Journal, 485. (2) [1961] 3 S.C.R. 814.
631 the period commencing from 1-1-1973 and
ending on 10-8-1975.
Decree for damages either in respect of the
two months prior to the institution of the suit or for the subsequent period
must therefore be set aside. The defendant-appellants will be liable to pay
damages or mesne profits @ Rs. 125/ per month (the rate of damages could not be
and was not challenged before us) from 11-8-1975 only, until the delivery of
the vacant possession of the accommodation, In the result the appeal is allowed
in part only to the extent stated above. In the circumstances, we shall make no
order as to costs in this Court.
S.R. Appeal allowed in part.
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