Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 8
PETITIONER:
WAMAN SHRINIWAS KINI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RATILAL BHAGWANDAS & CO.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
16/02/1959
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
DAS, S.K.
CITATION:
1959 AIR 689 1959 SCR Supl. (2) 217
CITATOR INFO :
R 1973 SC 921 (10)
D 1985 SC 507 (13)
RF 1986 SC1194 (10)
RF 1987 SC 117 (27)
RF 1991 SC 744 (12)
ACT:
Landlord and Tenant-Ejectment- Agreement of lease allowing
sub-letting--Sub-letting prohibited by statute-Landlord’s
suit for ejectment-Right of ejectment under statute-Equal
Participant in illegality-Plea of Waiver-Agreement to waive
an illegality-Bombay Hotel and Lodging Houses Rates Control
Act, 1947 (Bom. 57 of-1947), ss. 13(1)(e),15-Indian Contract
Act, 1872 (9 of 1872), s. 23.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was a tenant originally in the old building
but after it was purchased by the respondent he vacated it
and became a tenant under the respondent in the new
premises. In the old building the appellant had sub-
tenants, who shifted to the new premises along with the
appellant when the latter occupied those premises. One of
the terms of the lease which were contained in a letter
dated June 7, 1948, written by the respondent to the
appellant provided: " In the shops in the old chawl which
are with you, you have kept sub-tenants. We are permitting
you to keep sub-tenants in the same manner, in this place
also." On April 20, 1949, the respondent brought a suit for
ejectment against the appellant on the ground, inter alia,
that s. 15 of the Bombay Hotel and Lodging Houses Rates Con-
trol Act, 1947, prohibited sub-letting and under s. 13(1)(e)
of the Act the landlord has the right to evict the tenant on
account of sub-letting. The appellant’s defence was (1)
that s. 15 of the Act was confined to "any other law ", that
it did not apply to contracts between the landlord and
tenant and therefore it did not preclude an agreement
between the parties as to sub-letting, (2) that the parties
were in pari delicto and therefore the respondent could not
succeed, and (3) that the right of the respondent to sue for
ejectment on the ground of sub-letting being a personal
right for his benefit, he must be taken to have waived it as
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 8
he had allowed the appellant to sub-let and, consequently,
he could not evict him under s. 13(1)(e) of the Act.
Held : (1) that the non-obstante clause " Notwithstanding
anything contained in any law " in s. 15 of the Bombay Hotel
and Lodging Rates Control Act, 1947, applies to contracts
also as they would fall under the provisions of the law
relating to contracts;
(2) that the respondent was entitled to sue for ejectment,
though the agreement recognised sub-letting, as the suit was
brought not for the enforcement of the agreement but to
enforce the right of eviction which flowed directly from an
infraction of the provisions of s. 15 of the Act and for
which the Act itself
28
218
provided a remedy. The section is based upon public policy,
and where public policy demands, even an equal participant
in an illegality is allowed relief by way of restitution or
rescission, though not on the contract; and,
(3) that the plea of waiver which the appellant relied on
cannot be sustained because as a result of giving effect to
that plea the court would be enforcing an illegal agreement
and thus contravene the statutory provisions Of s. 15 Of the
Act. An agreement to waive an illegality is void on grounds
of public policy and would be unenforceable.
Case law reviewed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 674 of 1957.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
August 10, 1955, of the Bombay High Court in C. R.
Application No. 1213 of 1953, arising out of the judgment
and decree dated April 25, 1953, of the Assistant Judge,
Thana, in C. A. No. 97 of 1952, against the judgment and
decree dated January 31, 1952, of the Court of the Civil
Judge, J. D. Kalyan, in Suit No. 153 of 1949.
Purshottam Tricumdas, Rameshwar Nath and S. N. Andley, for
the appellant.
H. J. Umrigar, Ratnaparkhi Anant Govind and W. P. Oka,
for the respondent.
1959. February 16. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
KAPUR, J.-This is an appeal by special leave against the
judgment of the High Court of Bombay confirming the order of
ejectment passed by the Assistant Judge, Thana. The tenant
who was the defendant in the suit is the appellant and the
landlord who was the plaintiff is the respondent.
The facts giving rise to this litigation shortly stated are
that the appellant was a tenant for about 20 years in the
premises known as " Fida Ali Villa " in Kalyan. This
building was purchased by the respondent who gave notice to
the appellant to vacate, as he wanted to construct a new
building on the site of the old building. The appellant
agreed to vacate and the respondent let to him a portion of
his new building which
219
was riot far from " Fida Ali Villa ". The appellant had four
sub-tenants, three of them also shifted to the new premises
which were let to the appellant by the respondent. Although
it was disputed, the courts below have found that they
occupied the same position qua the appellant. The 4th, a
Bohri, was fixed up by the respondent in some other place.
There was some dispute as to the date when these new
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 8
premises were let to the appellant, the appellant alleging
that they were let on July 1, 1948, and the respondent that
they were let on June 1, 1948. The trial Court found that
they were let on June 1, 1948. The terms of the lease are
contained in a document dated June 7,1948, which is a letter
in Marathi written by the respondent to the appellant and
contains the following terms as to sub-tenancy:
" In the shops in the old chawl which are with you you have
kept sub-tenants. We are permitting you to keep sub-tenants
in the same manner, in this place also ".
The parties were not agreed as to the correctness of the
translation of this term. The submission of the appellant
was that the word ’sub-tenant’ should be in the plural and
of the respondent that it should be in the singular but
whether it is in the singular or plural it does not make any
difference to the principal argument advanced in this Court.
On January 3, 1949, the respondent gave notice to the
defendant to vacate the premises on the ground of nonpayment
of rent and sub-letting which it was alleged had resulted in
the termination of the tenancy.
On April 20, 1949, the respondent brought a suit for
ejectment on the ground of non-payment of rent and sub-
letting of the premises. The defence of the appellant was
that under the terms of the lease he had the right to sub-
let the premises. As to the claim on the ground of non-
payment of rent be deposited the arrears of rent in court.
The trial Court held that subletting was lawful in spite of
s. 15 of Bombay Hotel and Lodging Houses Rates Control Act,
1947 (Bom. 57 of 1947). He also held that the appellant did
not occupy the premises on the same terms and conditions on
which he occupied the old premises in " Fida Ali
220
Villa". He passed a decree for Rs. 445 on account of rent
remaining due and dismissed the respondent’s suit for
ejectment. On appeal the Assistant Judge at Thana reversed
the decree holding that s. 15 of the Act completely
prohibited sub-letting and under s. 13(1)(e) of the Act the
landlord bad the right to evict the tenant on account of
sub-letting. The appellant then went in revision to the
High Court of Bombay, but it affirmed the order of
ejectment. The appellant has come to this Court by special
leave.
Counsel for the appellant urged that there was no new
tenancy after the coming into force of the Act and therefore
ss. 13(1)(e) and 15 of the Act did not apply; (2) that the
tenant had not sub-let the premises to the sub-tenants and
they were merely licensees of the landlord; (3) that no new
sub-tenancy had been created ; (4) that s. 15 was confined
to ’any other law’; it did not apply to contracts between
the landlord and tenant and therefore it did not preclude an
agreement between the parties as to sub-letting; (5) that
the parties were in pari delicto and therefore the plaintiff
-respondent could not succeed. He also raised a new ground
which had not been raised in the courts below or in the
grounds of appeal or in the statement of case in this Court,
that the respondent had waived his right in regard to the
prohibition against sub-tenancy and the provision in s.
13(1)(e) was for the protection of his rights which he was
entitled to waive.
The courts below have held that the tenancy by the letter of
June 7,1948, was a new tenancy and not a continuation of the
old and that the sub-tenants were tenants of the appellant
and not licensees of the respondent and in this Court no
serious argument was addressed on these points. The
previous tenancy was of a different building called I Fida
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 8
Ali Villa’ which came to an end when the appellant vacated
those premises and entered into a new agreement of lease in
regard to the premises in dispute. There ",as no privity
between the respondent and the sub-tenants of the appellant
and they could not be termed his licensees. These
contentions are without substance and have rightly been
rejected.
221
It was then argued that under s. 15 of the Act there is no
prohibition against a contract of sub-letting, the non-
obstante clause being confined to other laws. The section
when quoted runs as follows:-
" Notwithstanding anything contained in any law it shall not
be lawful after the coming into operation of this Act for
any tenant to sub-let the whole or any part of the premises
let to him or to assign or transfer in any other manner his
interest therein:
Provided that the (State) Government may, by notification in
the Official Gazette, permit in any area the transfer of
interest in premises held under such leases or class of
leases and to such extent as may be specified in the
notification ".
This section prohibits sub-letting and makes it un-lawful
for a tenant to assign or to transfer his interest in the
premises let to him. The non-obstante clause would mean
that even if any other law allowed subletting, e. g., s. 108
of the Transfer of Property Act, the sub-letting would,
because of s. 15, be unlawful. This would appy to contracts
also as all contracts would fall under the provisions of the
law relating to contracts, i. e., Contract Act. An
agreement contrary to the provisions of that section (s. 15)
would be unenforceable as being in contravention of the
express provision of the Act which prohibits it. It is not
permissible to any person to rely upon a contract the making
of which the law prohibits (s. 23 of the Contract Act).
Counsel for the appellant contended that the view of the
Bombay High Court in P. D. Aswani v. Kavashah Dinshah Mulla
(1) was erroneous and that the correct rule was laid down by
that Court in Cooper V. Shiavax Cambatta (2). That was a
case under s. 10 of Bombay Rents, Hotel Rates and Lodging
Houses Rates (Control) Act (Bom. VII of 1944) which in ex-
press terms allowed sub-letting as follows :-
" Notwithstanding anything to the Contrary in any law for
the time being in- force, a tenant may sublet any portion of
his premises to a sub-tenant, provided be forthwith
intimates in writing to his landlord
(1) (1953) 56 Bom. L.R. 467.
(2) A.I.R. 1949 Bom. 131.
222
the fact of his having so sub-let the premises and also the
rent at which they have been sub-let ".
It was contended that the non-obstante clauses in s. 10 of
Act VII of 1944 and of s. 15 of the Act being similar in
language must be similarly interpreted. The non-obstante
clause has to be read in conjunction with the rest of the
section. Section 10 of the Act of 1944 permitted sub-
letting on certain conditions. By s. 9 of that Act
provision was made for a Contract between the landlord and
the tenant prohibiting sub-letting and in Cooper v. Shiavax
Cambatta (1) the two provisions were reconciled by saying
that, a contract under s. 9 prevailed over the permission
given by s. 10. But s. 15 expressly prohibits subletting
and therefore a contract to the contrary cannot neutralise
its prohibitory effect. The non-obstante clause of the two
sections, s. 10 of the Act of 1944 and of s. 15 of the Act
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 8
therefore cannot be said to have the same effect.
The respondent’s suit for ejectment was brought under s.
13(1)(e) which provides:
" Notwithstanding anything contained in this Act (but
subject to the provisions of section 15), a landlord shall
be entitled to recover possession of any premises if the
Court is satisfied
(e) that the tenant has, since the coming into operation of
this Act, sub-let the whole or part of the premises or
assigned or transferred in any other manner his interest
therein ; ".
It was contended that s. 13(1)(e) had to be read separately
and not in conjunction with s. 15 of the Act. The section
itself makes it quite clear that it is subject to the
provision of s. 15 and the two sections must therefore be
read together. The appellant pleaded that under the
agreement between him and the’ respondent he was entitled to
sub-let the premises. Such an agreement, in our opinion is
void because of the provisions of s. 15 of the Act and s. 23
of the Contract Act and enforcement of the agreement would
produce the
(1) A.I.R. 1949 Bom. 131.
very result which the law seeks to guard against and to
prevent and by sustaining the plea of the appellant the
Court would be enforcing an agreement which is prohibited
and made illegal.
The appellant relied on the maxim in pari delicto potior est
conditio posidentis to support his plea that the respondent
could not enforce his right under s. 13 (1)(e). But this
maxim " must not be understood as meaning that where a
transaction is vitiated by illegality the person left in
possession of goods after its completion is always and of
necessity entitled to keep them. Its true meaning is that,
where the circumstances are such that the Court will refuse
to assist either party, the consequence must, in fact,
follow that the party in possession will not be disturbed ".
(Per Du Parcq, L. J., in Bowmakers Ltd. v. Barnet
Instruments Ltd. (1). The respondent in the present case
did not call upon the Court to enforce any agreement at all.
When the instrument of lease was executed and possession
given and sub-letting done it received its full effect; no
aid of the Court was required to enforce it. The
respondents’ suit for ejectment was not brought for the
enforcement of the agreement which recognised sub-letting
but he asked the Court to enforce the right of eviction
which flows directly from an infraction of a provision of
the Act (s. 15) and for which the Act itself provides a
remedy. There is thus a manifest distinction between this
case where the plaintiff asked the Court to afford him a
remedy against one who by contravening s. 15 of the Act has
made himself liable to eviction and those cases where the
Court was called upon to assist the plaintiff in enforcing
an agreement the object of which was to do an illegal act.
The respondent is only seeking to enforce his rights under
the statute and the appellant cannot be permitted to assert
in a Court of justice any right founded upon or growing out
of an illegal transaction. Gibbs & Sterret Manufacturing
Co. v. Brucker (2). In our opinion s. 15 of the Act is
based on public policy and it has been hold that if public
policy demands it even an equal participant in the
(1) [1945] I K.B. 65, 72.
(2) (1884) III U.S. 597; 28 L. Ed. 534.
224
illegality is allowed relief by way of restitution of res-
cission, though not on the contract.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 8
It was next contended that s. 13(1)(e) is a provision for
the protection of private rights of the landlord and unless
there is in the Act itself any provision to the contrary
such rights as far as they were personal rights may be
parted with or renounced by the landlord. In other words
the right of the respondent to sue for ejectment on the
ground of subletting being a personal right for his benefit,
the landlord must be taken to have waived it as by an
express contract he had allowed the tenant to sub-let and
consequently he could not evict the appellant under s.
13(1)(e) of the Act.
The plea of waiver was taken for the first time in this
Court in arguments. Waiver is not a pure question of law
but it is a mixed question of law and fact. This plea was
neither raised nor considered by the courts below and
therefore ought not to be allowed to be taken at this stage
of the proceedings. But it was argued on behalf of the
appellant that according to the law of India the duty of a
pleader is to set up the facts upon which he relied and not
any legal inference to be drawn from them and as he had set
up all the circumstances from which the plea of waiver could
be inferred lie should be allowed to raise and argue it at
this stage even though it had not been raised at any
previous stage not even in the statement of case filed in
this Court and he relied upon Gouri Dutt Ganesh Lal Firm v.
Madho Prasad (1). Assuming that to be so and proceeding on
the facts found in this case the plea of waiver cannot be
raised because as a result of giving effect to that plea the
Court would be enforcing an illegal agreement and thus
contravene the statutory provisions of s. 15 based on public
policy and produce the very result which the statute
prohibits and makes illegal. In Surajmull Nargoremull v.
Triton Insurance Co. (2), Lord Sumner said:-
" No Court can enforce as valid that which competent
enactments have declared shall not be valid, nor is
obedience to such an enactment a thing from
(1) A.I.R. 1943 P. C. 147.
(2) (1924) L.R. 52 I. A. 126.
225
which a Court can be dispensed by the consent of the
parties, or by a failure to plead or to argue the point at
the outset: Nixon v. Albion Marine Insurance Co. (1). The
enactment is prohibitory. It is not confined to affording a
party a protection of which he may avail himself or not as
he pleases. It is not framed solely for the protection of
the revenue and to be enforced solely at the instance of the
revenue officials, nor is the prohibition limited to cases
for which a penalty is exigible
In the instant case the question is not merely of waiver of
statutory rights enacted for the benefit of an individual
but whether the Court would aid the appellant in enforcing a
term of the agreement which s. 15 of the Act declares to be
illegal. By enforcing the contract the consequence will be
the enforcement of an illegality and infraction of a
statutory provision which cannot be condoned by any conduct
or agreement of parties. Dhanukudhari Singh v. Nathima Sahu
(2). In Corpus Juris Secundum, Vol. 92, at p. 1068, the law
as to waiver is stated as follows:-
"............ a waiver in derogation of a statutory right
is- not favoured, and a waiver will be inoperative and void,
if it infringes on the rights of others, or would be against
public policy or morals............... In Bowmakers Limited
v. Barnet Instruments Ltd. (3) the same rule was laid down.
Mulla in his Contract Act at page 198 has stated the law as
to waiver of an illegality as follows:-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 8
" Agreements which seek to waive an illegality are void on
grounds of public policy. Whenever an illegality appears,
whether from the evidence given by one side or the other,
the disclosure is fatal to the case. A stipulation of the
strongest form to waive the objection would be tainted with
the vice of the original contract and void for the same
reasons. Wherever the contamination reaches, it destroys ".
This, in our opinion, is a correct statement of the law and
is supported by high authority. Field, J., in
(1) (1867) L.R. 2 Ex. 338. (2) (1907) 11 C. W. N. 848, 852.
(3) [1945] 1 X.B. 65, 72.
29
226
Oscanyan v. Winchester Arms Company (1) quoted with approval
the observation of Swayne, J., in Hall v. coppell (2)-
" The principle is indispensable to the purity of its
administration. It will not enforce what it has forbidden
and denounced. The maxim Ex dolo malo non oritur actio, is
limited by no such qualification. The proposition to the
contrary strikes us as hardly worthy of serious refutation.
Wherever the illegality appears, whether the evidence comes
from one side or the other, the disclosure is fatal to the
case. No consent of the defendant can neutralise its
effect. A stipulation in the most solemn form, to waive the
objection, would be tainted with the vice of the original
contract, and void for the same reasons. Wherever the
contamination reaches, it destroys ".
Waiver is the abandonment of a right which normally
everybody is at liberty to waive. A waiver is nothing
unless it amounts to a release. It signifies nothing more
than an intention not to insist upon the right. It may be
deduced from acquiescence or may be implied. Chitty on
Contract, 21st Ed., p. 381 : Stackhouse v. Barnston (3).
But an agreement to waive an illegality is void on grounds
of public policy and would be unenforceable.
In Mytton v. Gilbert(4) Ashurst, J., said:-
" Besides, there is still further reason why the trustees
should not be estopped ; for this is a public Act of
Parliament, and the Courts are bound to take notice that the
trustees under this Act had no power to mortgage the toll-
houses. This deed therefore cannot operate in direct
opposition to an Act of Parliament, which negatives the
estoppel ".
Vaughan Williams, L. J., in Norwich Corporation v. Norwich
Electric Tramways Company(5) said :-
" The case is not like that of a provision in an agreement
which is for the benefit of one of the parties and which he
may waive. This is a provision in an Act of Parliament,
which, though to some extent
(1) (1881 103 U.S. 261 ; 26 L. Ed. 539. (2) 7 Wallace 542.
(3) (1805) 10 Ves. 453; 32 E.R. 921.
(4) (1787) 2 T.R. 171 ; 100 E.R. 91. (5) [1906] 2 K.B. 119,
124.
227
it may be for the benefit of the parties to the difference,
must be regarded as inserted in the interest of the public
also
In that case there was a provision made by the Legislature
that disputes mentioned in the section of the Act were to be
determined by an Expert nominated by the Board of Trade and
it was contended that though not in the strict technical
sense estoppel, it was a waiver of the provisions introduced
into the Statute for the benefit of private rights. No
doubt that was a case which proceeded on a question of
jurisdiction but the judgment proceeded on the principle of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 8
waiver of a statutory provision inserted in public interest.
Thus the plea of waiver is unsustainable.
In our opinion, therefore, the judgment of the High Court is
sound and the appeal must therefore be dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.