Technicians Studio Private Ltd. Vs.
Lila Ghosh & ANR [1977] INSC 176 (19 September 1977)
GUPTA, A.C.
GUPTA, A.C.
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
CITATION: 1977 AIR 2425 1978 SCR (1) 516 1977
SCC (4) 324
CITATOR INFO :
R 1980 SC 226 (15)
ACT:
Transfer of Property Act (Act IV) 1882, sec.
53A- Doctrine of Part Performance-Scope of West Bengal Premises Tenancy Act
1956-Appellant coming into possession of the premises as aresult of a
compromise decree in the court-Terms of compromise decree not registered and no
lease deed executed subsequently Whether payment and acceptance of rent creates
a monthly tenancy entitling protection available under West Bengal Premises
Tenancy Act 1956.
HEADNOTE:
In terms of the compromise petition filed in
the High Court in an earlier ejectment suit, it was agreed by the
predecessors-in-title of the respondent that the appellant would become "a
direct tenant under the first respondent's husband and his brother who were
then the owners of the property at a monthly rent of Rs. 1000/- and that the
lease would be for a period of 16 years from May 19, 1954 with option to the,
appellant to terminate the lease earlier on giving 60 days' notice on the
lessors." No deed of lease was ever executed nor the petition of
compromise containing the terms of settlement was registered and the
appellant's possession from May 19, 1954 was on the basis of the compromise.
Respondent No. 1 after the expiry of the said period of lease served a notice
on the appellant to quit and vacate the premises and thereafter filed a title
suit No. 59 of 1970 on May 22, 1970 in the Third Court of the Subordinate Judge
at Ali pore for recovery of possession and mesne profits. The defence of the
appellant was that by payment and acceptance of rent a monthly tenancy has been
created in their favour which was continuing even after the expiry of the said
period. The trial court found that to be effective as a lease for 16 years the
petition of compromise required registration and this not having been done it
could not create any interest in favour of the appellant in the premises though
they were entitled to protect their pos- session for a period of 16 years under
s. 53A of the Transfer of Property Act. It also held that payment and
acceptance of rent made in terms. Of the unregistered, compromise petition did
not give rise to a right of tenancy and on the expiry of the said period, they
had no- protection against eviction and thus decreed the suit. Both the first
appellate court and the High Court in second appeal affirmed the findings of
the trial court.
Dismissing the appeal by special leave, the
Court,
HELD : (1) Section 53A confers no active
title on the transferee in possession. It only imposes statutory bar on the
transferor. A person who is let into possession on the strength of a void lease
does not acquire any interest in the property but gets under s. 53A only a
right to defend his possession. In the instant case under the petition of
compromise the appellant had to pay a monthly sum of Rs. 1000/- as rent during
the period of intended lease which the appellant did. These monthly payments
brought the appellant under the coverage of section 53A but from this fact
alone that the appellant had performed his part of the contract it is not
possible to conclude that a tenancy was brought into existence. Acceptance of
the payments tendered as rent is not decisive of a tenancy. [520 A-C] Probodh
Kumar Das and Ors. v. Danymara Tea Co. Ltd. and Ors.
66 I.A. 293 and State of Punjab v. British
India Corporation Ltd. [1964] (2) SCR 114(123), referred. to.
(2) Whether the relationship of landlord and
tenant exists between the parties depends on whether the parties intended to
create a tenancy and the intention has to be gathered from the facts and
circumstances of the case. It is possible to find on the facts of a given case
that payment made by a transferee in possession were really not in terms of the
contract but independent of it and this might justify an inference of tenancy
in his favour. In the instant case the payment of a monthly sum as rent by the
appellant to the plaintiff- respondent who accepted the same did not create any
tenancy.
The question is ultimately one of fact: [520
E-F] Ram Kumar Das v. Jagadish Chandra Deb & Anr. [1952] SCR 269, held not
applicable.
(3) Part performance in this country does not
give rise to an equity as in England but to a statutory right which is
comparatively a restricted right in that it is available only as a defence.
Section 53A of the Transfer of Property Act is only a partial importation in
the statute law of India of the English doctrine of part performance. [519 H,
520 A] Sheth Maneklal Mansukhbhai v. M/s. Hormusji Jamshedii Ginwalla and sons.
[1950] SCR 75, reiterated.
(4) The petition of compromise seeking to
create a lease for 16 years was required to be registered and not being
registered it did not affect the immovable property to which it relates and
could not be received as evidence of any ,transaction affecting the, property
though it was admissible as evidence of- part performance of a contract for the
purpose of s. 53A of the Transfer of Property Act or as evidence of any
collateral transaction not required to be effected by registered instrument.
[519 A-B]
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION Civil Appeal No.
352 of 1977.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and
order dated 6- 5-1976 of the Calcutta High Court in Appeal from Appellate
Decree No. 1557 of 1973.
K. Sen, Sankar Ghosh and Rathin Das for the
Appellant.
Lal Narain Sinha, Tapash Chandra Ray, S. C.
Agarwal, V. J. Francis, Sunil Kumar Bhattacharyya and Umma Prasad Mukherjee for
the Respondent No. 1.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
GUPTA, J. This is an appeal by special leave from a judgment of the Calcutta
High Court disposing of a second appeal which arose out of a suit for recovery
of possession instituted against the appellant by the first respondent.
The property in dispute consists of land
measuring, 11 bighas 17 kathas and 17 sq. ft. with structures thereon, being
premises No. 1, Babu Ram Ghosh Road, Calcutta, previously numbered as premises
Nos. 2, 3 and 4, Babu Ram Ghosh Road. Earlier, in 1952 the
predecessors-in-interest of the first respondent had brought a suit for
ejectment of the lessees of the property impleading the appellant, a private
limited company who were the sub-lessees, also as a defendant. That suit was
decreed against all the defendants some time in 1954. The appellant applied for
review of the judgment decreeing the suit. The review petition having been
dismissed, the appellant moved the High Court in revision. The revision case
was ultimately disposed of in terms of a petition of compromise. The relevant
terms of the compromise were- (i) the appellant would become a direct tenant
under the first respondent's husband and his brother, who were 518 then the
owners of the property, at a monthly rent of Rs. 1000/-;
(ii) the lease would be for a period of
sixteen years from May 19, 1954 with option to the appellant to terminate the
lease earlier on giving sixty days' notice on the lessors.
No deed of lease was however executed, nor
the petition of compromise containing the terms of settlement was registered.
There is some dispute as to whether the appellant had been dispossessed in
execution of the ejectment decree or continued in possession, but it is clear
that their possession on and from May 19, 1954 was on the basis of the
compromise.
The property ultimately devolved on the first
respondent as sole owner who on the expiry of the period of the lease mentioned
in the compromise petition served a notice on the appellant to quit and vacate
the premises. As the appellant did not comply with the notice, the first
respondent instituted title suit No. 59 of 1970 on May 22, 1970 in the Third
Court of the Subordinate Judge at Alipore for recovery of possession and mesne
profits on a declaration that the appellant were trespassers and in wrongful
occupation of the premises after the period mentioned in the petition of
compromise had expired. The appellant's case in their written statement was that
by payment and acceptance of rent a monthly tenancy had been created in their
favour which was continuing even after the expiry of the said period. The trial
court found that to be effective as a lease for sixteen years the petition of
compromise required registration, and this not having been done it could not
create any interest in favour of the appellant in the premises though they were
entitled to protect their possession for a period of sixteen years under
section 53A or the Transfer of Property Act. It was further held that payment
and acceptance of rent made in terms of the unregistered compromise petition
did not give rise to a right of tenancy and on the expiry of the said period
they had no-protection against eviction. The trial court accordingly decreed
the suit. The first appellate court having dismissed the appeal preferred
against this decision, the appellant took a second appeal to the High Court.
The High Court dismissed the second appeal affirming the findings of the courts
below.
The contention of the appellant in this Court
'also is that as the first respondent and her predecessors-in-interest before
her had accepted the rent paid month by month duly granting receipts, a monthly
tenancy had been created in favour of the appellant independent of the
protection they had under section 53A of the Transfer of Property Act' It is
claimed that this was a tenancy governed by the West Bengal Premises Tenancy
Act, 1956 which protected them against eviction, Was the High Court wrong on
the facts found by the courts below in rejecting this contention ? Admittedly
there was an ejectment decree against the appellant before the petition of
compromise was filed in the High Court. By the compromise the decree was not
set aside but a lease for sixteen 519 years was sought to be Created in favour
of the appellant.
Thus whatever interest the appellant may have
had in the property was extinguished after the passing of the decree and even
if they, continued in possession after the decree was passed the subsequent possession
in order to be valid must be referable to the compromise. Clearly, the petition
of compromise seeking to create a lease for sixteen years was required to be
registered and not being registered it did not affect the immovable property to
which it relates and could not be received as evidence of any transaction
affecting the 'property though it was admissible as evidence of part
performance of 'a contract for the purposes of section 53A of the Transfer of
Property ,Act or as evidence of any collateral transaction not required to be
effected by registered instrument. In order to be entitled to the protection of
section 53A, the transferee must perform or must be willing to perform his part
of the contract. In this case one of the terms in the petition of compromise
was that the appellant would pay a monthly rent of Rs. 1000/- and there is no
dispute that this sum was paid every month for the period of sixteen years. It
has not been found or even claimed that any such sum was paid and accepted
after the expiry of that period. Mr. A. K. Sen appearing for the appellant
contends that as a result of these monthly payments not Only the protection
under section 53A was available to the appellant, but a monthly tenancy also
came into existence which subsisted after the period of sixteen years mentioned
in the petition of compromise had expired.
In support of his contention Mr. Sen relies
mainly on their decision of this Court in Ram Kumar Das v. Jagadish Chandra Deb
Dhabal Deb and another.(1) We do not think that Ram Kumar's case is an
authority for the proposition Mr. Sen was contending for that in every case
where a person enters into possession on the strength of an invalid lease and
the landlord accepts 'rent' in terms of that invalid lease, a monthly tenancy
is created by implication of law. In Ram Kumar's case it was admitted that in
the beginning there was a relationship of landlord and tenant between the
parties, and the only question that arose for decision was whether the
defendant was in fact a monthly tenant under the plaintiff at the date when the
notice to quit was served upon him. The Court speaking through Mukherjea J.
came to the conclusion that "on the facts of this case, it would be quite
proper to hold that the. tenancy of the defendant was one from month to month
since its inception in 1924". It is not necessary to refer to the other
cases cited by Mr. Sen;
these are the decisions of several High
Courts which are either based on an incorrect reading of Ram Kumar's case or in
which the contention Mr. Sen has raised here did not arise for consideration.
If Mr. Sen's contention were correct, then it was unnecessary to enact section
53A.
Mr. Sen has also referred to the law in
England according to which a tenancy at will is implied when a person enters
into possession under a void lease. But part performance in this country does
not give rise to an equity as in England but to a statutory right which is
comparatively a restricted right in that it is, available only as a defence. It
has, been held that section 53A is only a partial importation in the 520
statute law of India of the English doctrine of part performance. see Sheth
Maneklal Mansukhbhai v. Messrs Hormusji Jamshedii Ginwalla and sons(1). It is
well settled that section 53A confers no active title on the transferee in
possession, it only imposes a statutory bar on the transferor. (see Probodh
Kumar Das and others v. Dantmara Tea Company Limited and others (2). Thus a
person who is let into possession on the strength of a void lease does not
acquire any interest in the property but gets under section 53A only a right,
to defend his possession. As the section says, this right is subject to the
condition that the transferee has performed or is willing to perform his part
of the contract. In this case under the petition of compromise the appellant
had to pay a monthly sum of Rs.
1000/as rent during the period of the
intended lease which the appellant did. These monthly payments brought the
appellant under the coverage of section 53A, but from this fact alone that the
appellant had performed his part of the contract, it is not possible to
conclude that a tenancy was brought into existence. Even the acceptance of
these payments tendered as rent is not decisive of a tenancy. "In its
wider sense rent means any payment made for the use of land or buildings. In
its narrower sense it means payment made by tenant to landlord for property
demised to him." (State of Punjab v. British India Corporation Ltd.) (3).
Here the payments can be explained, as the courts
have done, as evidence of the appellant's willingness to perform their part of
the contract. This does not mean however that there cannot be a relationship of
landlord and tenant in any case where the transferee has taken possession of
the property under a void lease or in part performance of a contract and is
entitled to protection under section 53A of the Transfer of Property Act. Such
a view would be incorrect and encourage attempts to circumbet the protection of
the Rent Acts given to the tenants. Whether the relationship of landlord and
tenant exists between the parties depends on whether the parties intended to
create a tenancy, and the intention has to be gathered from the facts and
circumstances of the case. It is possible to find on the facts of a given case
that payments made by a transferee in possession were really not in terms of
the contract but independent of it, and this might justify an inference of
tenancy in his favour. The question is ultimately one of fact. In the present
case the High Court has found in agreement with the courts below that the
"payment of rent by the appellant to the plaintiff respondent who accepted
the same did not create any tenancy in favour of the appellant inasmuch as the
said payments were made in part performance of the said contract of lease
contained in the compromise petition". We cannot go behind this finding of
fact on which the appeal turns. The appellant's plea of tenancy cannot
therefore be accepted.
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
S.R.
Appeal dismissed (1) [1950] S.C.R.75. (2) 66
I.A. 293.
(3) [1964] 2 S.C.R. 114,123.
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