V. Dhanapal Chettiar Vs. Yesodai Ammal
[1979] INSC 155 (23 August 1979)
UNTWALIA, N.L.
UNTWALIA, N.L.
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ) SARKARIA, RANJIT
SINGH SHINGAL, P.N.
KAILASAM, P.S.
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J) REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA
(J)
CITATION: 1979 AIR 1745 1980 SCR (1) 334 1979
SCC (4) 214
CITATOR INFO:
F 1980 SC1214 (12) RF 1980 SC1709 (3) F 1980
SC1756 (7) R 1982 SC 783 ((1)2) RF 1982 SC1043 (14) RF 1985 SC 136 (5) F 1985
SC 796 (2,12,29,31,35) E&R 1987 SC 117 (40,52) RF 1987 SC1823 (5) R 1988
SC1708 (19) R 1989 SC 758 (1,5,7,10) D 1989 SC1110 (15) E&D 1989 SC2187 (5)
D 1990 SC 879 (5) F 1991 SC 855 (42,46,66) RF 1991 SC2053 (16)
ACT:
Rent Control Acts-Provide conditions for
eviction of tenants-Notice under s. 106 Transfer of Property Act if necessary after
decree for eviction passed by Court.
HEADNOTE:
A lease between a lessor and a lessee comes
into existence by way of contract when the parties to the contract agree on the
rent, duration of tenancy and other relevant terms. Section 111 of the transfer
of Property Act provides various methods by which a lease of immovable property
can be determined. Under clause (h) of s. 111 a lease determines on the expiry
of a notice to determine the lease given by the landlord to the tenant. Once
the lease is determined by notice the lessor can enforce his right of recovery
of possession of the property. But if the lease does not stand determined under
any of the clauses (a) to (g) of s. 111 notice under s. 106, Transfer of
Property Act to determine the lease is necessary. But this section does not
impose an obligation on the landlord to spell out the grounds on which the
landlord wishes to evict the tenant.
During the postwar years all the State
Legislatures passed Building and Rent Control Acts to give protection to
tenants against unreasonable eviction by the landlords as well as to prevent
the landlords from exploiting the tenants by way of exorbitant rents. As in the
case of all social legislation which is designed for the protection of the
needy, the Rent Control Acts have brought considerable inroad on the landlord's
freedom of contract. Many Acts have brought about considerable changes in the
rights and liabilities of the lessor and the lessee and the tilt of the law is
largely in favour of the lessee. The landlord is bound to let out his premises
on rent to a person even against his wishes when the concerned authority allots
a particular premises to a person. When once the premises are so allotted, the
landlord is bound to give the premises to that person and at the rent fixed by
the authority concerned.
In the matter of determination of the tenancy
the State Rent Acts do not permit a landlord to snap his relationship with the
tenant merely by serving on him a notice to quit as is the position under the
Transfer of Property Act. The landlord can recover possession of the property
only on one or more of the grounds enacted in the relevant section of the Rent
Acts. Even after the termination of the contractual tenancy the landlord, under
the definitions of landlord and tenant contained in the Rent Acts, remains a
landlord and a tenant remains a tenant because of the express provision made in
the enactments that a tenant means "a person continuing in possession
after the termination of the tenancy his favour." It is also provided that
no landlord can treat a building to have been vacant by merely terminating the
contractual tenancy 335 as the tenant still lawfully continues in possession of
the premises. Yet another important feature of the Rent Acts is that either by
way of a non-obstante clause or by necessary implication these enactments have
done away with the law contained in s. 108 of the T. P. Act dealing with rights
and liabilities of the lessor and the lessee.
The difference between the position obtaining
under the Transfer of Property Act and the Rent Acts in the matter of
determination of a lease is that under the former Act to recover possession of
the property determination of the lease is necessary because during the
continuance of the lease the landlord cannot recover possession of the premises
while under the Rent Acts the landlord becomes entitled to recover possession
only on the fulfillment of the conditions laid down in the relevant sections.
He cannot recover possession merely by determining the tenancy. Nor can he be
stopped from doing so on the ground that he has not terminated the contractual
tenancy.
In the instant case the appellant filed an
application against the tenant under s. 10(3)(ii) of the Tamil Nadu Building
(Lease and Rent Control) Act, 1970 calling upon him to quit on the ground of
personal necessity. The Rent Controller rejected her application. The Appellate
Court, while holding that the respondent required the premises bona fide for
her personal necessity, dismissed the application on the ground that a notice
to quit was necessary and that the notice given by her was not in accordance
with law. In revision the High Court held that notice to quit under s.
106, T.P. Act was not necessary.
Dismissing the appeal,
HELD: (1) The High Court was right in its
view that no notice to quit was necessary under s. 106 of the T.P. Act to
enable the landlord to get an order of eviction against the tenant. On the
question of requirement of notice under s. 106, T.P. Act there is no scope for
taking different views on the basis of difference in phraseology of the various
Rent Acts. The difference in the language does not bring about any distinction.
[353F; 342C-D]
2. In the case of a landlord wishing to evict
his tenant under the Rent Acts determination of the lease in accordance with
the Transfer of Property Act is unnecessary.
It is a mere surplusage because the landlord
cannot get eviction of the tenant even after such determination. The tenant
continues to be a tenant even thereafter. That being so, making out a case
under the Rent Act for eviction of the tenant by itself is sufficient and it is
not obligatory to found the proceeding on the basis of determination of the
lease by issue of notice in accordance with s. 106, T.P.
Act. [353D-E]
3. Although the Rent Acts restrict the rights
which the landlord possesses either for charging excessive rents or for
evicting tenants, if within the ambit of those restricted rights the landlord
makes out his case, it is a mere empty formality, a mere surplusage, to ask him
to determine the contractual tenancy before the institution of a suit for
eviction. Such a notice under the T.P. Act is necessary because mere
determination of the lease entitles a landlord to recover possession. But under
the Rent Control Acts it becomes an unnecessary technicality to insist that the
landlord must also determine the contractual tenancy. It is of no practical use
to insist again upon a notice under s. 106, after placing 336 so many
restrictions under the Rent Acts on the landlord's right to evict the tenant.
[344H-345AB]
4. But where a landlord, by way of abundant
caution, to butteress his case, gives a notice to the tenant that he intends to
file a suit for eviction, it is not open to the tenant to say that such a notice
is compulsory or obligatory or that it must fulfill all the technical
requirements of s. 106 of the Transfer of Property Act. Once the liability to
be evicted is incurred by the tenant, he cannot turn round and say that the
contractual lease has not been determined.
The action of the landlord in instituting the
suit for eviction on the grounds mentioned in any State Rent Acts will amount
to an expression of his intention that he does not want the tenant to continue
as his lessee and the jural relationship of lessor and lessee would come to an
end on the passing of an order or a decree for eviction. [340B-D]
5. The restricted area under the various
State Rent Acts has done away to a large extent, with the requirement of the
law of contract and the Transfer of Property Act.
This being so there is no reason to impose an
unnecessary and unjustifiable formality of terminating the contractual lease.
[345C]
6. Secondly, if protection from eviction is
claimable by the tenant even after determination of the contractual tenancy
under the Rent Acts there is no reason why the law of contract engrafted in the
Transfer of Property Act should again be imported for seeking eviction of the
tenant. [346B]
7. If the termination of the contractual
tenancy by notice does not entitle the landlord to recover possession of the
premises and he becomes entitled to recover possession only if he makes out a
case under the special provisions of the State Rent Acts then termination of
the contractual relationship by notice is not necessary.
Termination comes into effect when a case is
successfully made out for eviction of the tenant under the State Rent Acts.
[347A-B] Bhaiya Punjalal Bhagwanddin v. Dave Bhagwatprasad Prabhuprasad [1963]
3 SCR 312, Mangilal v. Suganchand Rathi [1964] 5 SCR, 239, Manujendra Dutt v.
Purendu Prosad Roy Chowdhury & ors. [1967] 1 S.C.R. 475, Isha Valimohamad
& Anr. v. Haji Gulam Mohamad & Haji Dada Trust [1975] 1 SCR, 720, P. J.
Gupta & Co. v. K. Venkatesan Merchant & ors.
[1975] 2 SCR. 401, Dattanpant Gopalyarao
Devakate v. Vithabrao Maruthirao Janagavai [1975] Suppl. SCR. 67, Ratan Lal v.
Vardesh Chander & ors. [1976] 2 SCR. 906 and Sardarilal Vishwanath and Ors.
v. Pritam Singh [1978] 1 SCR.
111 not approved.
8. Where, on the other hand, over and above
the protection under the relevant Act a clause in the lease deed gives an extra
protection of getting notice to quit and vacate the premises, such a clause not
being unlawful, the extra protection given to the tenant against eviction must
be adhered to. But for this reason it is not correct to say that s. 106 of the
T.P. Act gives an extra protection to the tenant against eviction. The purpose
of this provision is merely to terminate the contract which the over-riding
Rent Acts do not permit to be terminated. [348 A-B] M/s. Raval and Co. v. K. G.
Ramachandran and others.
[1974] 2 SCR 629, Raj Krishna and another v.
S. K. Shaw and Brothers [1951] SCR 145 and 337 Puwada Venkaeswara Rao v.
Chidamana Venkata Ramana [1976] 3 SCR. 551 Approved.
Shri Hem Chand v. Shrimati Sham Devi I.L.R.
1955 Punjab, 36 approved.
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal
No. 1303 of 1977.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and
Order dated 10-12-1976 of the Madras High Court in C.R.P. No. 836/76.
K. Jayaram and K. Ramkumar for the Appellant.
M. N. Padmanabhan, T. A. Ramachandran, M. N.
Tandon and Mrs. Ramachandran for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
UNTWALIA J. This appeal by special leave at the instance of the tenant of
certain premises in the town of Vellore was heard by a larger Bench of this
Court consisting of seven Judges to resolve the cleavage of opinion between the
various High Courts in India as also between several decisions of this Court,
on the question as to whether in order to get a decree or order for eviction
against a tenant under any State Rent Control Act it is necessary to give a
notice under Section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act. We proceed to do so
in this Judgment.
The respondent filed an application against
the appellant under section 10(3)(a)(iii) of the Tamil Nadu Building (Lease and
Rent Control) Act, 1960, hereinafter referred to as the Tamil Nadu Rent Act, on
the ground of personal necessity. The Rent Controller held that the requirement
of the respondent was not genuine and he accordingly dismissed her petition. On
appeal by the landlady the Appellate Court held in her favour on the point of
her requiring the premises bona fide for her personal necessity but maintained
the dismissal of her application on the ground that a notice to quit was
necessary and the one given by her was not in accordance with law. The landlady
took up the matter in revision to the Madras High Court. A learned single Judge
of that Court following his earlier decision in K. Sukumaran Nair etc. v. S.
Neelakantan Nair by constituted attorney P. Raman Nair etc. etc. held that
notice to quit under section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act was not
necessary for seeking an eviction of a tenant under The Tamil Nadu Rent Act.
Hence this appeal by the tenant.
338 We do not think it necessary to decide in
this appeal whether the notice to quit given to the appellant was a valid
notice in accordance with section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act. The
controversy before us centered round the question whether such a notice was at
all necessary to be given.
We shall presently refer to the various
decisions of the High Courts and this Court taking contrary views. But before
we do so we may make some general observations. It is well-known that after the
second world war to give protection to a tenant against unnecessary, undue or
unreasonable eviction and in the matter of being exploited for payment of
exorbitant rent all States in India at one time or the other passed Building
and Rent Control Acts.
Amendments in them were brought about from
time to time. The language and the scheme of the Acts varied and differed from
State to State. Even though there was no basic or fundamental difference in
regard to the law of eviction of a tenant in any of the State Statutes,
different constructions were put in regard to them and principles were culled
out in varying manners to arrive at the conclusions in some cases that a notice
to quit in accordance with section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act was necessary
and in some it was held that it was not necessary. The gravamen of the
underlying principles seems to have been over-looked in many cases.
Under the Transfer of Property Act the
subject of "Leases of Immovable Property" is dealt with in Chapter V.
Section 105 defines the lease, the lessor,
the lessee and the rent. Purely as a matter of contract, a lease comes into
existence under the Transfer of Property Act. But in all social legislations
meant for the protection of the needy, not necessarily the so-called weaker
section of the society as is commonly and popularly called, there is
appreciable inroad on the freedom of contract and a person becomes a tenant of
a landlord even against his wishes on the allotment of a particular premises to
him by the authority concerned. Under section 107 of the Transfer of Property
Act a lease of immovable property from year to year, or for any term exceeding
one year, or reserving a yearly rent, can be made only by a registered
instrument. None of the State Rent Acts has abrogated or affected this
provision. Section 108 deals with the rights and liabilities of lessors and
lessees. Many State Rent Acts have brought about considerable changes in the
rights and liabilities of a lessor and a lessee, largely in favour of the
latter, although not wholly. The topic of Transfer of Property other than
agricultural land is covered by Entry 6 of List III in the Seventh Schedule to
the Constitution. The subject being in the Concurrent List, many State Rent 339
Acts have by necessary implication and many of them by starting certain
provisions with non-obstante clause have done away with the law engrafted in
section 108 of the Transfer of Property Act except in regard to any matter
which is not provided for in the State Act either expressly or by necessary
implication.
Section III deals with the question of
determination of a lease, and in various clauses (a) to (h) methods of
determination of a lease of immovable property are provided.
Clause (g) deals with the forfeiture of lease
under certain circumstances and at the end are added the words "and in any
of these cases the lessor or his transferee gives notice in writing to the
lessee of his intention to determine the lease." The notice spoken of in
clause (g) is a different kind of notice and even without the State Rent Acts
different views have been expressed as to whether such a notice in all cases is
necessary or not. We only observe here that when the State Rent Acts provide
under what circumstances and on what grounds a tenant can be evicted, it does
provide that a tenant forfeits his right to continue in occupation of the
property and makes himself liable to be evicted on fulfillment of those
conditions. Only in those State Acts where a specific provision has been made
for the giving of any notice requiring the tenant either to pay the arrears of
rent within the specified period or to do any other thing, such as the Bombay
Rent Act or the West Bengal Rent Act, no notice in accordance with clause (g)
is necessary. A lease of immovable property determines under clause (h):-
"On the expiration of a notice to determine the lease, or to quit, or of
intention to quit, the property leased, duly given by one party to the
other." It is this clause which brings into operation the requirement of
section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act.
Without adverting to the effect and the
details of waiver of forfeiture, waiver of notice to quit, relief against
forfeiture for non-payment of rent etc. as provided for in sections 112 to 114A
of the Transfer of Property Act, suffice it to say that under the said Act no
ground of eviction of a tenant has to be made out once a contractual tenancy is
put to an end by service of a valid notice under section 106 of the Transfer of
Property Act. Until and unless the lease is determined, the lessee is entitled
to continue in possession. Once it is determined it becomes open to the lessor
to enforce his right of recovery of possession of the property against him. In
such a situation it was plain and clear that if the lease of the immovable
property did not stand determined under any of the clauses (a) to (g) of
section 111, a notice to determine it un- 340 der section 106 was necessary.
But when under the various State Rent Acts, either in one language or the other,
it has been provided that a tenant can be evicted on the grounds mentioned in
certain sections of the said Acts, then how does the question of determination
of a tenancy by notice arise? If the State Rent Act requires the giving of a
particular type of notice in order to get a particular kind of relief, such a
notice will have to be given. Or, it may be, that a landlord will be well
advised by way of abundant precaution and in order to lend additional support
to his case, to give a notice to his tenant intimating that he intended to file
a suit against him for his eviction on the ground mentioned in the notice. But
that is not to say that such a notice is compulsory or obligatory or that it
must fulfil all the technical requirements of section 106 of the Transfer of
Property Act. Once the liability to be evicted is incurred by the tenant, he
cannot turn round and say that the contractual lease has not been determined.
The action of the landlord in instituting a suit for eviction on the ground
mentioned in any State Rent Act will be tantamount to an expression of his
intention that he does not want the tenant to continue as his lessee and the
jural relationship of lessor and lessee will come to an end on the passing of
an order or a decree for eviction. Until then, under the extended definition of
the word 'tenant' under the various State Rent Acts, the tenant continues to be
a tenant even though the contractual tenancy has been determined by giving a
valid notice under section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act. In many cases
the distinction between a contractual tenant and a statutory tenant was alluded
to for the purpose of elucidating some particular aspects which cropped up in a
particular case. That led to the criticism of that expression in some of the
decisions. Without detaining ourselves on this aspect of the matter by any
elaborate discussion, in our opinion, it will suffice to say that the various
State Rent Control Acts make a serious encroachment in the field of freedom of
contract. It does not permit the landlord to snap his relationship with the
tenant merely by his act of serving a notice to quit on him. Inspite of the
notice, the law says that he continues to be a tenant and he does so enjoying
all the rights of a lessee and is at the same time deemed to be under all the
liabilities such as payment of rent etc. in accordance with the law.
In Sukumaran Nair's case (supra) the learned
Judge has pointed out the difference of opinion expressed in the various
decisions of the Madras High Court from time to time in regard to notice to
quit under section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act. In Parthasarthy and
another v. Krishnamoorthy and another a learned single Judge of 341 that Court
held that a notice to quit was necessary. A contrary view was expressed by a
Division Bench of the High Court in R. Krishnamurthy v. S. Parthasarthy and
another.
Difference of opinion in Madras High Court
continued in many other cases and then came the Full Bench decision in the case
of M/s Raval and Co. v. K. G. Ramachandran and others.
This decision was approved in the majority
decision of this Court in Raval & Co. v. K. G. Ramachandran & Ors.
Raval's case was not directly a case in relation to section 106 of the Transfer
of Property Act but some observations made therein did tend to show that notice
would not be necessary.
In spite of the Full Bench decision of the
Madras High Court in Raval's case a Division Bench of that Court in B. Kalyanasundaram
v. A. R. Nataraian stuck to the view that notice was necessary. The Punjab High
Court in Shri Hem Chand v. Shrimati Sham Devi had expressed the view that
notice was not necessary. The Full Bench of the Punjab and Haryana High Court
in Bhaiya Ram Haroo Lal v. Mahavir Parshad Murari Lal Mahajan took a contrary
view. After the majority view of the Full Bench of the Patna High Court in
Niranjan Pal and another v. Chaitanyalal Ghosh and another it has been
consistently held in the Patna High Court that a notice is necessary. A Special
Bench of the Calcutta High Court in Surya Properties Private Ltd. and other v. Bimalendu
Nath Sarkar and others has taken the view that over and above the notice
required to be given under the State Act a notice under section 106 of the
Transfer of Property Act is also necessary. To the same effect is the view
expressed in Chhotelal Banshidhar v. Abdullabhai Abdul Gaffor; Shambhooram
& another v. Mangal Singh & another Siddappa Adivappa v. Venkatesh
Raghavendra Hubballi Batoo Mal v. Rameshwar Nath and others and Parshotam Lal
v. Kalayan Singh and another. As against this, and specially after some
decisions of this Court, the preponderance of recent view in the High 342
Courts of Andhra Pradesh, Madras, Kerala, Karnataka and Punjab and Haryana is
that no notice under section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act is necessary.
These cases are Ulligappa etc. v. S. Mohan Rao, minor by guardian Changamma,
etc.; K. Sukumaran Nair and others v. S. Neelakantan Nair and others; Lalitha
v. Avissumma; Govindaswamy R. v. Pannalal C. S. and Vinod Kumar v. Harbans
Singh Azad. Such a cleavage of opinion cropped up in the various High Courts
because of some observations of this Court in some decisions which will be
presently alluded to. It was so on an erroneous assumption, if we may say so
with great respect, that the difference in the phraseology of the different
State Rent Acts justifies this difference of views. In our considered judgment
on the question of a requirement of a notice under section 106 of the transfer
of Property Act there is no scope for taking different views on the basis of
the difference in the phraseology of the various Rent Acts.
In this regard the difference in the language
does not bring about any distinction. In all the States the law should be
uniform viz. that either a notice is necessary or it is not.
It was high time, therefore, that this larger
Bench was constituted to lay down a uniform law for the governance of the whole
country and not permit the unjustified different trend of decisions to
continue.
Before we embark upon a review of some of the
decisions of this Court we think it necessary and advisable to briefly refer to
the provisions of some of the State Rent Acts in support of the observations
made by us above that on the question of notice no different result is possible
on the language of any State Act. Section 10 of The Tamil Nadu Rent Act says :-
"A tenant shall not be evicted whether in execution of a decree or
otherwise except in accordance with the provisions of this section or sections
14 to 16." In other words if a case is made out for his eviction in
accordance with the provisions aforesaid, he can be evicted.
Even after the termination of the contractual
tenancy under the definition of the landlord in clause (6) and of the tenant
under clause (8) of section 2 the landlord remains a landlord and the tenant
remains a tenant as clause (8) expressly says that tenant means "a person
continuing in possession after the termination of the tenancy in his
favour." Section 3 indicated that no landlord can treat the building to
have become vacant by 343 merely terminating the contractual tenancy as the
tenant still lawfully continues in possession of the premises. The tenancy
actually terminates on the passing of the order or decree for eviction and the
building falls vacant by his actual eviction. The giving of the notice,
therefore, is a mere surplusage and unlike the law under the Transfer of
Property Act it does not entitle the landlord to evict the tenant.
Adverting to the provisions of the Bombay
Rents, Hotels and Lodging House Rents Control Act, 1947 it would be found from
the definition section 5 that any person remaining in the building after the
determination of the lease is a tenant within the meaning of clause (11).
Section 12 of the Bombay Act says that the landlord shall not be entitled to
the recovery of possession of any premises so long as the conditions mentioned
in sub-section (1) are fulfilled nor any suit for recovery of possession shall
be instituted by a landlord against a tenant on the happening of the events
mentioned in sub-section (2) until the expiration of one month next after the
notice is served on the tenant in the manner provided in section 106 of the
Transfer of Property Act, as required by the said sub-section. Section 13
provides that a landlord may recover possession on certain grounds. Is it not
plain then that on the happening of the events or on the fulfillment of the
conditions mentioned in sections 12 and 13 etc. the landlord becomes entitled
to recover possession from the tenant, otherwise not. It will bear repetition
to say that under the Transfer of Property Act in order to entitle the landlord
to recover possession determination of the lease is necessary as during its
continuance he could not recover possession, while under the State Rent Act the
landlord becomes entitled to recover possession only on the fulfillment of the
rigour of law provided therein. Otherwise not. He cannot recover possession
merely by determination of tenancy. Nor can he be stopped from doing so on the
ground that he has not terminated the contractual tenancy. Under the State Rent
Control Acts the concept of the contractual tenancy has lost much of its
significance and force. Identical is the position under the Bihar Act. The
definition section permits the tenant to continue as a tenant even after the
determination of the contractual tenancy. Section 11 gives him protection
against eviction by starting with a non- obstante clause and providing further
that he shall not be liable to eviction from any building except in execution
of a decree passed by the Court for one or more grounds mentioned in section
11. Does it not stand to reason to say that a decree can be passed if one or
more of the grounds exist and such a decree can be passed against an existing
tenant within the meaning of the State Rent Act? Similar is the position under
the Kerala Lease and Rent Control Act, 1965 and the East Punjab Urban 344 Rent
Restriction Act, 1949. We shall refer to the provisions of the Madhya Pradesh
and Andhra Pradesh State Rent Acts when we come to review the decisions of this
Court in relation to those Acts.
A Constitution Bench of this Court in Rai
Brij Raj Krishna and another v. S. K. Shaw and Brothers in a different context
dealing with section 11 of the Bihar Rent Act observed at page 150:-
"Section 11 is a self-contained section, and it is wholly unnecessary to
go outside the Act for determining whether a tenant is liable to be evicted or
not, and under what conditions he can be evicted. It clearly provides that a tenant
is not liable to be evicted except on certain conditions, and one of the
conditions laid down for the eviction of a month to month tenant is non-payment
of rent..................The Act thus sets up a complete machinery for the
investigation of those matters upon which the jurisdiction of the Controller to
order eviction of a tenant depends, and it expressly makes his order final and
subject only to the decision of the Commissioner." It was on that account
held that the decision of the Controlling authority was final and it was not
open to the Civil Court to take a different view of the matter on the question
of non-payment of rent. It was not a case where a question of notice arose for
determination.
The first decision of this Court which is
necessary to be noticed on the point of notice is the case of Bhaiya Punjalal
Bhagwanddin v. Dave Bhagwatprasad Prabhuprasad. The case related to Bombay Rent
Act. Raghubar Dayal J. speaking on behalf of the Division Bench of this Court
expressed the view at page 318 thus:- "We are therefore of opinion that
where a tenant is in possession under a lease from the landlord, he is not to
be evicted for a cause which would give rise to a suit for recovery of
possession under s. 12 if his tenancy has not been determined already. It
follows that whenever a tenant acts in a way which would remove the bar on the
landlord's right to evict him it is necessary for the landlord to serve him
with a notice determining his tenancy and also serve him with a notice under
sub-s.(2) of s.12 of the Act." It is true that the Rent Act is intended to
restrict the rights which the landlord possessed either for charging excessive
rents or for evicting tenants. But if within the ambit of those restricted
rights he makes out 345 his case it is a mere empty formality to ask him to
determine the contractual tenancy before institution of a suit for eviction. As
we have pointed out above, this was necessary under the Transfer of Property
Act as mere termination of the lease entitled the landlord to recover possession.
But under the Rent Control Acts it becomes an unnecessary technicality to
insist that the landlord must determine the contractual tenancy. It is of no
practical use after so many restrictions on his right to evict the tenant have
been put. The restricted area under the various State Rent Acts has done away
to a large extent with requirement of the law of contract and the Transfer of
Property Act. If this be so why unnecessarily, illogically and unjustifiably a
formality of terminating the contractual lease should be insisted upon? In
Bhaiya Punjalal's case, if we may say so with very great respect, the principle
of law laid down by this Court in Rai Brij Raj Krishna's case (supra) and by
the Punjab High Court in Hem Chand's case was wrongly distinguished. After
quoting the passage from the former it was said at page 322:- "In the
present case, s.12 of the Act is differently worded and cannot therefore be
said to be a complete Code in itself. There is nothing in it which overrides
the provisions of the Transfer of Property Act." The difference in the
wordings of section 11 of the Bihar Act and section 12 of the Bombay Act does
not justify the conclusion that the provisions of the Transfer of Property Act
have not been overridden by section 12 of the Bombay Act reading it with
section 13 etc. This was the ground given for distinguishing Hem Chand's case
also by erroneously pointing out the distinction between section 13(1) of the
Delhi and Ajmer Merwara Rent Control Act, 1952 and the Bombay Act. In our
considered judgment Bhaiya Punjalal's case was not correctly decided.
In another decision of this Court in Vora
Abbasbhai Ali Mohamed v. Haji Gulamnabi Haji Safibhai, in relation to the
Bombay Rent Act again there are some lines at page 162 wherein it has been
observed thus:- "The clause applies to a tenant who continues to remain in
occupation after the contractual tenancy is determined: it does not grant a
right to evict a contractual tenant without determination of the contractual
tenancy." But the above observation is followed by the words:-
"Protection from eviction is claimable by the tenant even after
determination of the contractual tenancy so long as he 346 pays or is ready and
willing to pay the amount of the standard rent and permitted increases and
observes and performs the other conditions of the tenancy consistent with the
provisions of the Act." In our view if "protection from eviction is
claimable by the tenant even after, determination of the contractual
tenancy" then why import the contractual law engrafted in the Transfer of
Property Act for seeking eviction of the tenant? The decision of this Court in
the case of Mangilal v.
Suganchand Rathi, being a decision of a
Constitution Bench consisting of five learned and eminent Judges of this Court
requires careful consideration. Therein it was held at page 244 with reference
to section 4 of the Madhya Pradesh Accommodation Control Act, 1955 thus:-
"The Accommodation Act does not in any way abrogate Ch. V of the Transfer
of Property Act which deals with leases of immovable property. The requirement
of s. 106 of the Transfer of Property Act is that a lease from month to month
can be terminated only after giving fifteen days' notice expiring with the end
of a month of the tenancy either by the landlord to the tenant or by the tenant
to the landlord. Such a notice is essential for bringing to an end the
relationship of landlord and tenant. Unless the relationship is validly
terminated the landlord does not get the right to obtain possession of the premises
by evicting the tenant. Section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act does not
provide for the satisfaction of any Additional requirements. But then, s. 4 of
the Accommodation Act steps in and provides that unless one of the several
grounds set out therein is established or exists, the landlord cannot evict the
tenant." Section 4 of the Madhya Pradesh Rent Act, 1955 provided that no
suit could be filed in any Civil Court against a tenant for his eviction for
any accommodation except on one or more grounds set out in that section. The
corresponding provision in Madhya Pradesh Accommodation Act of 1961 is
contained in Section 12 which starts with a non-obstante clause also but the
definition of the tenant as in other State Acts includes "any person
continuing in possession after the termination of his tenancy". How then
is it correct to say that a notice is essential for bringing to an end the
relationship between the landlord and the tenant? The notice does not bring to
an end such a relationship because of the protection given to the tenant under
the Rent Act. If that be so then it is not necessary for the landlord to
terminate the 347 contractual relationship to obtain possession of the premises
for evicting the tenant. If the termination of the contractual tenancy by
notice does not, because of the Rent Act provisions, entitle the landlord to
recover possession and he becomes entitled, only if he makes out a case under
the special provision of the State Rent Act, then, in our opinion, termination
of the contractual relationship by a notice is not necessary. The termination
comes into effect when a case is successfully made out for eviction of the
tenant under the State Rent Act. We say with utmost respect that on the point
of requirement of a notice under section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act
Mangilal's case was not correctly decided.
In Manujendra Dutt v. Purendu Prasad Roy
Chowdhury & Ors., the question of notice came to be considered with
reference to the Calcutta Thika Tenancy Act, 1949 and in that connection it was
said at page 480:- "The Thika Tenancy Act like similar Rent Acts passed in
different States is intended to prevent indiscriminate eviction of tenants and
is intended to be a protective statute to safe-guard security of possession of
tenants and therefore should be construed in the light of its being a social
legislation. What section 3 therefore does is to provide that even where a
land-lord has terminated the contractual tenancy by a proper notice such
landlord can succeed in evicting his tenant provided that he falls under one or
more of the clauses of that section." For the reasons already stated we do
not agree, and we say so with respect, with the above enunciation of law. This
apart there is scope for distinguishing Manujendra's case because clause 7 of
the lease deed therein ran as follows:- "Provided always and it is hereby
agreed and declared that if it be required that the lessee should vacate the
said premises at the end of the said term of 10 years the lessee will be served
with a 6 months notice ending with the expiry of the said term and it is
further agreed that if the lessee is permitted to hold over the land after the
expiry of the said term of 10 years the lessee will be allowed a six months
notice to quit and vacate the said premises." Over and above the
protection under the Thika Tenancy Act clause 7 of the lease deed gave an extra
protection of getting six months 348 notices to quit and vacate the premises.
In that event one can say that such a clause being not unlawful and giving an
extra protection to the tenant against eviction must also be adhered to. But it
is not correct to say that section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act merely
providing for termination of a lease either by the lessor or the lessee by
giving the requisite notice is an extra protection against eviction. The
purpose of this provision is merely to terminate the contract which the
overriding Rent Acts do not permit to be terminated.
In Raval's case (supra) the question for
consideration was whether section 4 of the Tamil Nadu Rent Act providing for an
application for fixation of fair rent was available both to the tenant and the
landlord. The majority speaking through Alagiriswami J. took the view that it
was so. A contrary view was expressed by Bhagwati J. speaking for the minority.
While discussing this question the relevant passage from the decision of this
Court in Rai Brij Raj Krishna's case was quoted at page 634 and reference was
made to the decision of the Punjab High Court in Hem Chand's case. Thereafter
the observation of this Court in Bhaiya Punjalal's case to the effect that
"Rent Acts are not ordinarily intended to interfere with contractual
leases and are Acts for the protection of tenants and are consequently
restrictive and not enabling, conferring no new rights of action but
restricting the existing rights either under the contract or under the general
law," were held not to apply to all Rent Acts irrespective of the scheme
of those Acts and their provisions. This observation given with reference to
the dictum of this Court in Bhaiya Punjalal's case concerned with the question
of notice under section 106. It enabled certain High Courts to make a firm
departure and take the view with reference to the scheme of their respective
State Acts to say that a notice was not necessary. This happened in Madras,
Andhra Pradesh, Kerala, Karnataka and Punjab & Haryana. Alagiriswami J. at
page 635 after having made that observation with reference to Bhaiya Punjalal's
case has said-"Be that as it may, we are now concerned with the question
of fixation of a fair rent." In our opinion the majority decision with
regard to section 4 was undoubtedly correct and the minority stretched the law,
if we may say so with respect, too far to hold that section 4 was not available
to the landlord. It should be remembered, as we have said above, that the field
of freedom of contract was encroached upon to a very large extent by the State
Rent Acts. The encroachment was not entirely and wholly one sided. Some
encroachment was envisaged in the interest of the landlord also and equity and
justice demanded a fair play on the part of the legislature not to completely
ignore the helpless situation of 349 many landlords who are also compared to
some big tenants sometimes weaker section of the society. As for example a
widow or a minor lets out a family house in a helpless situation to tide over
the financial difficulty and later wants a fair rent to be determined. Again
suppose for instance in a city there is an apprehension of external aggression,
severe internal disturbances or spread of epidemics. A man in possession of his
house may go to another town letting out his premises to a tenant financially
strong and of strong nerves at a rate comparatively much lower than the prevailing
market rates.
Later on, on the normalization of the
situation as against the agreed rate of rent he approaches the Building
Controller for fixing a fair rent in accordance with a particular State Rent
Act. Why should she or he be debarred from doing so. The statute gives him the
protection and enables the Controller to intervene to fix a fair rent as
against the term of contract between the parties. In a large number of cases it
is the tenant who gets this protection.
But in some as in the case of Raval the
landlord needs and gets the protection. But this is not a direct authority on
the point of notice.
In Isha Valimohmmad & Anr. v. Haji Gulam
Mohamad & Haji Dada Trust, Mathew J. speaking for a Division Bench of this
Court had to consider the question with reference to the Saurashtra Rent
Control Act, 1951. In that connection it was observed at page 726 that the High
Court was right in the assumption that a notice under the Transfer of Property
Act was necessary to terminate the tenancy on the ground that the appellants
had sublet the premises. Says the learned Judge further that the landlord could
not have issued a notice under any of the provisions of the Transfer of
Property Act to determine the tenancy on the ground of sub- letting by the
tenant. It is not correct to assume that a notice under section 106 of the
Transfer of Property Act as required by clause (h) of section 111 needs a
ground to be made out for the termination of the tenancy. Such a view could be
taken only under clause (g). Beg J. as he then was in P. J. Gupta & Co. v.
K. Venkatesan Merchant & Ors.
speaking for himself and Krishna Iyer J.
following Raval's case observed at page 403:- "In other words, the special
procedure provided by the Act displaces the requirements of the procedure for
eviction under the Transfer of Property Act and by an ordinary civil suit.
Therefore, we need not concern ourselves with the provisions of Transfer of
Property Act.....A tenancy is 350 essentially based on and governed by an
agreement or contract even when a statute intervenes to limit the area with in
which an agreement or contract operates, or, subjects contractual rights to
statutory rights and obligations." In Dattopant Gopalyarao Devakate v.
Vithabrao Maruthirao Janagavai one of us (Untwalia J.) speaking on behalf of
himself and Krishna Iyer J. said at page 71:- "We do not think that the
alternative argument put forward by Mr. Chitaley that no notice was necessary
in this case is correct. The appellant was a contractual tenant who would have
become a statutory tenant within the meaning of clause (r) of section 2 of the
Act if he would have continued in possession after the termination of the
tenancy in his favour. Otherwise not. Without termination of the contractual
tenancy by a valid notice or other mode set out in Section 111 T.P. Act it was
not open to the landlord to treat the appellant as a statutory tenant and seek
his eviction without service of a notice to quit." On a careful
consideration and approach of the matter in the instant case we think that we
cannot approve of the view expressed in the passage extracted above. In Ratan
Lal v. Vardesh Chander & Ors Krishna Iyer J. delivered the Judgment on
behalf of a Bench of this Court consisting of himself, Chandrachud J., as he
then was and Gupta J. The case related to a building in Delhi. The Court was
concerned with clause (g) of section 111 of the Transfer of Property Act.
Tracing the history of the legislation it was pointed out by the Court at page
918 that the requirement as to written notice provided in section 111(g) cannot
be said to be based on any general rule of equity and therefore forfeiture of
lease brought about in terms of section 111(g) of the Transfer of Property Act
not by notice but on the application of justice, equity and good conscience was
held to be good determination of the lease. Quoting from Manujendra's case it
was said at page 911:- "We are inclined to hold that the landlord in the
present case cannot secure an order for eviction without first establishing that
he has validly determined the lease under the T.P. Act." Why this dual
requirement? Even if the lease is determined by a forfeiture under the Transfer
of Property Act the tenant continues to be a tenant, that is to say, there is
no ferfeiture in the eye of law.
351 The tenant becomes liable to be evicted
and forfeiture comes into play only if he has incurred the liability to be
evicted under the State Rent Act, not otherwise. In many State statutes
different provisions have been made as to the grounds on which a tenant can be
evicted and in relation to his incurring the liability to be so evicted. Some
provisions overlap those of the Transfer of Property Act.
Some are new which are mostly in favour of
the tenants but some are in favour of the landlord also. That being so the
dictum of this Court in Raj Brij's case comes into play and one has to look to
the provisions law contained in the four corners of any State Rent Act to find
out whether a tenant can be evicted or not. The theory of double protection or
additional protection, it seems to us, has been stretched too far and without a
proper and due consideration of all its remifications.
Beg J., as he then was, speaking for the
Court in the case of puwada Venkateswara Rao v. Chidamana Venkata Ramana had to
deal with the question as to whether a notice to quit was necessary for seeking
an order for eviction under the Andhra Pradesh Building (Lease, Rent and
Eviction) Control Act, 1960. The Andhra Pradesh High Court had relied upon the
decision of that Court in Ulligamma & Ors. v. S. Mohan Rao & Ors for
taking the view that a notice under section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act
was not necessary. Gopal Rao Ekbote J., delivering the judgment on behalf of a
Bench of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Ulligappa's case reviewed several
decisions of the High Courts and this Court and considered the special
provisions of the Andhra Pradesh Rent Act. The view expressed by him that no
notice was necessary under section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act was
approved by this Court. We find no justification for saying that because of
some special provisions contained in the Andhra Act a different view was
possible to be taken.
This is exactly the reason why we have
thought it fit to review all the decisions and lay down a uniform law for all
the States. Section 10 (1) of the Andhra Pradesh Act provided that "A
tenant shall not be evicted whether in execution of a decree or otherwise
except in accordance with the provisions of this section or sections 12 and 13."
A special provision in the Andhra Act was contained in section 10(7) which
says:- "Where an application under sub-section (2) or sub-section (3) for
evicting a tenant has been rejected by the Controller, the tenancy shall,
subject to the provisions of this Act, be deemed to continue on the same terms
and 352 conditions as before and shall not be terminable by the landlord except
on one or more of the grounds mentioned in sub-section (2) or sub-section
(3)." This special provision is provided by way of abundant precaution
only. Even without this a tenant continuing in possession after the termination
of the contractual tenancy and until an eviction order is passed against him
continues on the same terms and conditions as before and he cannot be evicted
unless a ground is made out for his eviction according to the State Rent Act.
The said provision by itself did not justify a departure from the view
expressed by this Court in Mangilal's case. Beg J., followed the decision of
this Court in Raval's case and of the Punjab High Court in Hem Chand's case.
For the reasons stated by us, we approve of his view not on the ground that the
Andhra Pradesh State Act is a different one but because in respect of any State
Act that is the correct view to take.
Lastly our attention was drawn to the
decision of this Court in Firm Sardarilal Vishwanath and Ors v. Pritam Singh.
The lease in that case had come to an end by
efflux of time.
A tenant continued in possession and became a
so-called statutory tenant. The argument put forward before this Court that a
fresh notice under section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act was necessary
was rejected on the ground:- "Having examined the matter on authority and
precedent it must be frankly confessed that no other conclusion is possible on
the first principle. Lease of urban immovable property represents a contract
between the lessor and the lessee. If the contract is to be put to an end it
has to be terminated by a notice to quit as envisaged under s. 106 of the
Transfer of Property Act. But it is equally clear as provided by s. 111 of the
Transfer of Property Act that the lease of immovable property determines by
various modes therein prescribed. Now, if the lease of immovable property
determines in any one of the modes prescribed under s. 111 the contract of
lease comes to an end, and the landlord can exercise his right of re-entry.
This right of re-entry is further restricted and fettered by the provisions of
the Rent Restriction Act. Nonetheless the contract of lease had expired and the
tenant lessee continues in possession under the protective wing of the Rent
Restriction Act until the lessee loses protection. But there is no question of
terminating the contract because the contract comes to an end 353 once the
lease determines in any one of the modes prescribed under s. 111. There is,
therefore, no question of giving a notice to quit to such a lessee who
continued in possession after the determination of the lease, i.e. after the
contract came to an end under the protection of the Rent Restriction Act. If
the contract once came to an end there was no question of terminating the
contract over again by a fresh notice." If we were to agree with the view
that determination of lease in accordance with the Transfer of Property Act is
a condition precedent to the starting of a proceeding under the State Rent Act
for eviction of the tenant, we could have said so with respect that the view
expressed in the above passage is quite correct because there was no question
of determination of the lease again once it was determined by efflux of time.
But on the first assumption we have taken a different view of the matter and
have come to the conclusion that determination of a lease in accordance with
the Transfer of Property Act is unnecessary and a mere surplusage because the
landlord cannot get eviction of the tenant even after such determination. The
tenant continues to be so even thereafter. That being so, making out a case
under the Rent Act for eviction of the tenant by itself is sufficient and it is
not obligatory to found the proceeding on the basis of the determination of the
lease by issue of notice in accordance with section 106 of the Transfer of
Property Act.
For the reasons stated above we hold that the
High Court was right in its view that no notice to quit was necessary under
section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act in order to enable the
landlady-respondent to get an order of eviction against the tenant-appellant.
But we were told by learned counsel for the appellant that he had some more points
to urge before the High Court to challenge the order of eviction. We do not
find from the judgment of the High Court that the appellant was prevented from
supporting the orders of the courts below in his favour by urging any other
point. No point of substance could be indicated before us which was worth
consideration after a clear and definite finding by the Appellate Court that
the respondent required the premises bona fide for a personal necessity. We do
not think it advisable to delay the proceeding any further and send back the
case to the High Court on this account. We accordingly dismiss the appeal but
in the circumstances direct the parties to bear their own costs throughout.
P.B.R. Appeal dismissed.
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