Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
LACHHMAN DASS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SANTOKH SINGH
DATE OF JUDGMENT12/05/1995
BENCH:
FAIZAN UDDIN (J)
BENCH:
FAIZAN UDDIN (J)
ANAND, A.S. (J)
CITATION:
1995 SCC (4) 201 JT 1995 (7) 437
1995 SCALE (3)704
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
THE 12TH DAY OF MAY,1995
Present:
Hon’ble Dr.Justice A.S.Anand
Hon’ble Mr.Justice Faizan Uddin
Mr.Sarwa Mitter, (Mr.Sujit Bhattacharya,) Adv. for M/s.
Mitter & Mitter Co., for the appellant
Mr.K.G.Bhagat, Mr.Kamal Baid, Ms.Kusum Choudhary, Advs. for
the Respondent
J U D G M E N T
The following Judgment of the Court was delivered:
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 5752 OF 1995
(Arising out of SLP (C) No.20025 of 1991)
Lachhman Dass .....Appellant
versus
Santokh Singh .....Respondent
J U D G M E N T
Faizan Uddin, J.
1. Leave granted.
2. This appeal under Article 136 of the Constitution
of India has been directed against the judgment dated 19th
February, 1991, passed by a learned Single Judge of the High
Court of Punjab and Haryana at Chandigarh in Civil Revision
No.1076 of 1987 reversing the judgment and order of eviction
passed against the tenant-respondent herein by the Rent
Controlling Authority, Karnal in Rent Case Nos.41/2 of 1984
(21/2 of 1982) and affirmed by the Appellate Authority,
Karnal in Rent Appeal No.1 of 1986 decided on 11th March,
1987.
3. The present appellant brought the suit seeking
the eviction of his tenant, the respondent herein, from the
House No.372, situated in Ward No.7, Sadar Bazar, Karnal
consisting of two rooms, one varandah and kitchen and an
open courtyard on the grounds set out hereunder :-
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I THAT the respondent was a defaulter in respect of
payment of arrears of rent from 1-8-1979 to 31-7-1982
at the rate of Rs.20/- per month amounting to Rs.720/-
and House Tax to Rs.90/-:
II THAT the respondent had started tethering cattle
and putting dung cakes on walls of demised premises
diminishing its value and utility;
III THAT the respondent had ceased to occupy the
tenanted premises for more than a year without
reasonable cause and;
IV THAT the respondent-tenant has shifted his
residence to his own residential House No.351/7, Sadar
Bazar, Karnal having purchased in the name of his wife
which is reasonably sufficient for himself and his
family members.
It may be pointed out here that the afore-mentioned grounds
of eviction fall under Sections 13(2) (1), 13(2) (iii),
13(2)(v) and 13(3)(a) (iv) respectively of the Haryana Urban
(Control of Rent and Eviction) Act, 1973 [hereinafter
referred to as the ‘Act’].
4. The respondent-tenant contested the said eviction
proceedings by controverting the material averments made by
the appellant-landlord. The respondent, inter-alia, pleaded
that the appellant was not the only owner and landlord of
the suit premises and, therefore, he was not competent to
file the suit for his eviction. He pleaded that the arrears
of rent were duly tendered by him. He also pleaded that the
house purchased by his wife consists of two small rooms and
that since he has strained relations with his wife, she was
living separate from him. He further pleaded that he and his
married son and his children and the wife of his son are
living in the house in dispute and on these pleadings he
made a prayer for the dismissal of the eviction suit.
5. The Rent Controller after framing the necessary
issues and recording the parties evidence came to the
conclusion that the appellant alone was competent to
initiate eviction proceedings and since the tenant-
respondent had paid the arrears of rent, house tax and
interest on 18-1-1983, therefore, the ground is eviction
under Section 13(2)(1) of the Act became non-existent. As
regards the second ground, the Rent Controller found that
there was no cogent and reliable evidence to prove that the
respondent had committed any act diminishing the value or
the utility of the suit premises. As regard the third and
fourth grounds mentioned above, the Rent Controller on a
minute and detailed discussion of the parties evidence on
record, took the view that the respondent-tenant had ceased
to occupy the demised premises for a continuous period of
more than four months without any reasonable cause and had
in fact shifted his residence with his wife and children in
September, 1981 in House No.351, Ward No.7, Sadar Bazar,
Karnal which he had purchased in the name of his wife and
the same is reasonably sufficient for his requirements. The
Rent Controller, therefore, passed an order of eviction of
the respondent from the suit premises on the ground
contained in Section 13(2)(v) and 13(3)(a)(iv) of the Act.
The respondent-tenant challenged the said finding in appeal
under Section 15(2) of the Act before the Appellate
Authority. The Appellate Authority re-examined the entire
evidence and the material on record and after such
reassessment of evidence affirmed the conclusions recorded
by the Rent Controller and, therefore, dismissed the appeal
filed by the respondent, maintaining the order of eviction.
The respondent-tenant then prefarred Civil Revision under
sub-section (6) of Section 15 of the Act before the High
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Court of Punjab and Haryana and the learned Single Judge by
the impugned judgment set aside the concurrent findings of
the two courts below by holding that it was not established
that the respondent-tenant has acquired or is in possession
of reasonably sufficient accommodation which renders him
liable to be evicted from the demised premises.
6. Learned counsel appearing for the landlord-
appellant strenuously urged that the learned Single Judge of
the High Court committed a grave and serious error in
interferring with the well reasoned judgment and findings of
fact recorded by the two courts below after proper
appreciation of evidence on record and took contrary view on
extraneous facts and circumstances by ignoring the relevant
evidence and material on record which has resulted into
miscarriage of justice. The learned counsel for the
appellant submitted that there is cogent and convincing
evidence indicating that the respondent had shifted to new
residential house which he had acquired in the name of his
wife and had absolutely ceased to occupy the tenanted
premises in question. It was urged that the learned Single
Judge totally ignored the fact that respondent-tenant had
come forward with a false defence that he had strained
relations with his wife and, therefore, he was living
separate in the demised premises with his son and his family
while his wife was living separate from him in House No.351,
which defence has been found to be entirely false by the two
courts below on a thorough marshalling of evidence on
record. It was also urged that the learned Single Judge made
out a case for respondent-tenant that his family consisted
of about 14 persons and, therefore, the house acquired by
him was not reasonably sufficient for the whole family which
is against the evidence on record. After hearing the learned
counsel for the parties and on perusal of the judgment of
the High Court as well as the judgments of the two
subordinate courts and other material on record we find that
there is much substance in the store-mentioned submissions
made by the learned counsel for the appellant.
7. The first question that arises for our
consideration is whether the learned Single Judge of the
High Court was justified in re-assessing the value of the
evidence and substitute his own conclusions in respect of
the concurrent findings of fact recorded by the two courts
below, in exercise of his revisional powers vested in the
High Court under Section 15(6) of the Act. In the present
case as discussed earlier the Rent Controller passed the
order of eviction against the respondent on the ground
mentioned under Section 13 of the Act against which the
respondent preferred an appeal under sub-section (2) of
Section 15 of the Act and the Appellate Authority affirmed
the order of eviction passed by the Rent Controller. Here it
may be noted that the Act does not provide a second appeal
against the order passed in appeal by the Appellate
Authority under sub-section (2) of Section 15. The Act,
however, under sub-section (6) of Section 15 makes a
provision for revision to the High Court against any order
passed or proceedings taken under the Act. Thus, the
Legislature has provided for a single appeal against the
order passed by the Rent Controlling Authority and no
further appeal has been provided under the Act. The
Legislature has, however, made a provision for discretionary
remedy of revision which is indicative of the fact that the
Legislature has created two jurisdictions different from
each other in scope and content in the form of an appeal and
revision. That being so the two jurisdictions - one under an
appeal and the other under revision cannot be said to be one
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and the same but distinct and different in the ambit and
scope. Precisely stated, an appeal is a continuation of a
suit or proceedings wherein the entire proceedings are again
left open for consideration by the appellate authorities
which has the power to review the entire evidence subject,
of course, to the prescribed statutory limitations. But in
the case of revision whatever powers the revisional
authority may have, it has no power to reassess and
reaporeciate the evidence unless the statute expressly
confers on it that power. That limitation is implicit in the
concept of revision. In this view of the matter we are
supported by a decision of this Court in State of Kerala vs.
K.M. Charia Abdullah and Co. [1965 (1) SCR 601 at 604 ].
8. This Court in the case of Hari Shankar vs. Rao
Girdhari Lal Chowdhury [ 1962 Suppl (1) SCR 933 = AIR 1963
SC 698 ] had an occasion to consider the question of
distinction between an appeal and a revision and
Hidayatullah, J. (as he then was ) speaking for the Court
observed at page 939 of the report as follows :-
"The distinction between an appeal and revision is
a real one. A right to appeal carries with it right of
re-hearing on law as well as fact, unless the statute
conferring the right to appeal limits the re-hearing in
some way as we find has been done in second appeal
arising under the Code of Civil Procedure. The power to
hear a revision is generally given to a superior court
so that it may satisfy, itself that a particular case
has been decided according to law."
9. In the case of State of Kerala vs. K.M. Charia
Abdulla & Co. [1965 (1) SCR 601] this Court expressed the
view that when the Legislature confers a right to appeal in
one case and a discretionary remedy of revision in another,
it may be deemed to have created two jurisdictions different
in scope and content. Again in the case of Neta Ram and
others vs. Jivan Lal and another [ AIR 1963 SC 499 ]
Hidayatullah, J. (as he then was) speaking for the Court
observed that the revisional jurisdiction of the High Court
do not include the power to reverse concurrent findings,
without showing how those findings are erroneous.
10. In the present case sub-section (6) of Section 15
of the Act confers revisional power on the High Court for
the purpose of satisfying itself with regard to the legality
or propriety of an order or proceeding taken under the Act
and empowers the High Court to pass such order in relation
thereto as it may deem fit. The High Court will be justified
in interfering with the order in revision if it finds that
the order of the appellate authority suffers from a material
impropriety or illegality. From the use of the expression
"Legality or propriety of such order or proceedings"
occurring in sub-section (6) of Section 15 of the Act, it
appears that no doubt the revisional power of the High Court
under the Act is wider than the power under Section 115 of
the Code of Civil Procedure which is confined to
jurisdiction, but it is also not so wide as to embrace
within its fold all the attributes and characteristics of an
appeal and disturb a concurrent finding of fact properly
arrived at without recording a finding that such conclusions
are perverse or based on no evidence or based on a
superficial and perfunctory approach. If the High Court
proceeds to interfere with such concurrent findings of fact
ignoring the aforementioned well recognised principles, it
would amount to equating the revisional powers of the High
Court as powers of a regular appeal frustrating the fine
distinction between an appeal and a revision. That being so
unless the High Court comes to the conclusion that the
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concurrent findings recorded by the two courts below are
wholly perverse and erroneous which manifestly appear to be
unjust there should be no interference. In the present case
the two courts below have thoroughly examined and
appreciated the parties evidence and have recorded a
definite finding, entirely based on the evidence on record
that the respondent-tenant has ceased to occupy the demised
premises since after September 1981 and had, in fact,
alongwith his wife and family started living in the House
No.351, Ward No.7, Karnal, having been acquired by him in
the name of his wife.
11. It may be noticed that the learned Single Judge
has himself stated in the impugned judgment that it is not a
matter of dispute that both the accommodations i.e. the
demised premises and the house acquired by the tenant-
respondent, in the name of his wife, both have almost the
same capacity, yet the learned Single Judge took the view
that the house acquired by the respondent was not reasonably
sufficient for his requirements. If both the houses are
almost of the same capacity it is difficult to accept the
finding that the house acquired by the respondent is a
reasonably not sufficient for his requirements. The
observation of the learned Single Judge that the
respondent’s family consists of about 14 persons is neither
here nor there, as admittedly, all those 14 persons are not
living at Karnal with the respondent and, particularly, in
the demised premises or in the house acquired by the
respondent. The learned Single Judge has himself further
observed in the impugned judgment that "though it is also in
evidence that some of the sons are either posted or working
outside Karnal yet it is patent that they keep on visiting
the petitioner." Thus, the learned Single Judge included the
occasional visitors of the respondent also to be the members
of the family which by no stretch of imagination could be
accepted to be a sound reasoning, to set aside the
concurrent findings of fact. It is also not the case of
respondent-tenant that 14 persons of his family are living
with him in the house. On the contrary from the evidence it
is clear that at the most the respondent’s family consist of
six members including his wife who have been living in the
demised premises and all of them have shifted in the house
acquired by the respondent in the name of his wife. This
fact is sufficiently established from the oral and
documentary evidence on record. But surprisingly enough the
learned Single Judge ignored this part of the evidence and
disturbed concurrent findings for no good reasons, resulting
into miscarriage of justice.
12. In the facts and circumstances discussed above we
are satisfied that there were no reasons muchless cogent
reasons for the learned Single Judge to interfere with the
findings of fact recorded by the two courts below.
Consequently we set aside the impugned judgment and order of
the High Court and restore the orders of the two courts
below with costs of Rs.1000/-.