Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JAI SINGH MORARJI & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/s SOVANI PVT. LTD. & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT09/10/1972
BENCH:
RAY, A.N.
BENCH:
RAY, A.N.
PALEKAR, D.G.
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
DWIVEDI, S.N.
CITATION:
1973 AIR 772 1973 SCR (2) 603
1973 SCC (1) 197
CITATOR INFO :
R 1981 SC1956 (1)
D 1985 SC 507 (11,15)
ACT:
Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging, House Rates Central Act,
Section 15(2)--Validation of sub-letting by 1959 amending
Ordinance--Protection only to transfers, assignments, or
sub-leases by tenants--Sub-lease must be in possession when
amending Ordinance came into force.
HEADNOTE:
The owner let out the premises to one Occhhavlal in 1952.
Occhhavlal sub-let the premises to one Sovani. About 1952,
Sovani assigned his business with the possession of the suit
premises to a private Company of which he became the
Director. Rent was paid to the landlord upto 1966 by
Occhhavlal. The owner obtained the possession of the suit
premises in execution of a decree obtained against
Occhhavlal for non-payment of rent and sub-letting. The
assignee, private company, made an application for a relief
against the dispossession under Order XXI, Rule 100 of the
Code of Civil Procedure. The Trial Court granted the
relief,. but the same was reversed by the appellate
authority on the revision application filed by the owner.
On the writ petition filed by the private company, the
Bombay High Court allowed the Writ Petition holding that the
private company was a tenant entitled to the protection of
So. 15(2) of the Bombay Rent Act. Allowing the appeal filed
by the owner,
HELD : Sec. 15(2) of the Act protects only sub-leases or
assignments or transfer by the tenants, but does not protect
subsequent assignments or transfers by assignees of
transferees. The proviso and explanation to Sec. 15(1) of
the Act protects transfer of interest in notified lease or
class of lease to assignees or transferees as well as
subsequent assignments or transfers. The assignments in
favour of the private company was not covered by any
notification issued u/s 15 (1) of the Act. The assignment
to the private company was not made by the tenant but sub-
tenant. When the Ordinance of 1959 came into force, Sovani
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did not continue in possession. It was the private company
which was in possession. Therefore the private company is
not entitled to protection u/s 15 (2) of the Act.
Section 108 (2) of the Transfer of Property Act notices
distinction between sub-lease by a lessee and transfer by
sub-lessee of his interest by subsequent transfer. [607C, F]
N. W. Nayak v. Chhotalal Harirain, 69 Bom. LR. 551,
approved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 2669 of
1972.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order- dated
January 28, 1972 of the Bombay High Court in Special Civil
Application No. 2108 of 1971.
604
V. M.Tarkunde D. N. Misra, J. B. Dadachanji, O. C. Mathur
and Ravinder Narain, for the appellants.
D. V. Patel, S. S. Javali, D. N. Hungund and Vineet Kumar
for the respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RAY, J.--This is an appeal by special leave from the judg-
ment dated 28 January 1970 of the High Court at Bombay.
The High Court in a writ petition under Article 227 of the
Constitution quashed an order of the Court of Small Causes,
Bombay.
A trust known as Padamsi Bhanji Trust of Bombay owned a
godown at 8 Mugbhat Lane, Girgaum, Bombay. The tenant of
the property before 1952 was Ochhavlal. The property there-
after came into possession of S. V. Sovani. Sovani carried
on the business of preparation and sale of scientific
apparatus. About 1952 Sovani became Director of Sovani
Private Limited Company referred to as the Private Company.
The Private Company went into possession of the godown as
also the business which was carried on by Sovani. Rent was
paid up to the year 1966 in the name of Ochhavlal. Rent
receipts were also in the name of Ochhavlal. In the year
1966 the trust employee who collected rent refused to accept
rent. Thereafter rent was sent by money order to the
trustees. The trustees did not accept the money orders.
The trustees in the year 1970 filed suit possession.
Ochhavlal was the defendant in the suit. The grounds for
eviction of Ochhavlal were first that he was a defaulter in
the payment of rent from 1966, and, secondly, he was guilty
of sub-letting. The suit was decreed ex-parte in the month
of March, 1971. On 8 April, 1971 the, trustees obtained
possession.
Thereafter an application was made under Order XXI rule 100
of the Code of Civil Procedure by the Private Company for
relief against dispossession in execution of the decree.
The trial Court accepted the, contention of the private
Company that they became sub-tenants.
Against that Order an application in revision was filed by
the trustees. The Small Causes Court set aside the order
passed by the trial Court.
The Private Company thereupon made an application under
Article 227 of the Constitution in the High Court. The High
605
Court held that the Small Causes Court in revision committed
an error in applying section 15(2) of the Bombay Rent Act
1947. The High Court held that the Private Company was a
tenant within the meaning of the Bombay Act.
This appeal turns entirely on the provisions contained in
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section 15 of the Bombay Rent Act referred to as the Act.
Section 15(1) of the Act is as follows
"Notwithstanding anything contained in any
law, but subject to any contract to the
contrary, 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.
The present sub-section (1) was numbered as sub-section (2)
by Bombay Ordinance No. 111 of 1959 published on 21 May,
1959. This was subsequently enacted in Bombay Act No. 49 of
1959. Prior to the renumbering with the exception of tile
words "but subject to, any contract to the contrary" the
body of the section was the same.
There is a proviso to sub-section (1) which
runs thus
"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."
There is also an explanation to sub-section (1). This ex-
planation was added by Maharashtra Act No. 17 of 1968. The
explanation is that leases or class of leases shall include
and shall be deemed always to have included within their
meaning assignments and other transfers of the leases or
class of leases, and accordingly notwithstanding any
judgment, decree or order of any Court, provisions in any
notification under the proviso-which purports to permit
assignments and transfers by lessees shall include and shall
always be deemed to have included assignments and transfers
of the leasehold, made on or after 12 May 1948, and whether
made by the original lessees or their assignees or trans-
feree-, or any subsequently assignees or transferees. The
net effect of the explanation is that where leases or class
of leases are specified in the Government notifications
assignments and transfers by original lessees on or after 12
May 1048 and subsequent assignments and transfers by
assignees and transferees are all protected.
606
One of the Government notifications permitted transfer or
assignment incidental to the sale of a business as a going
concern together with the stock-in-trade and the goodwill
thereof, provided that the transfer or assignment is of the
entire interest of the transferor or assignor in such
leasehold premises together with the business and the stock-
in-trade and goodwill thereof. There were other
notifications under the proviso to section 15 (1) whereby
the Government of Bombay permitted in all areas to which
Part 11 of the Act extends several types of transfers and
assignments by lessees of their interests in leasehold
premises as, and to the extent specified in the
notifications. The present assignment is not covered by any
of the specified types mentioned in the Government
notifications.
The relevant provision for the purpose or the present appeal
is sub-section (2) of section 15 of the Act. Broadly
stated, the first limb of the sub-section is that the
prohibition against subletting by the tenant of whole or any
part of the premises and against the assignment or transfer
in any other manner of the interest of the tenant therein,
contained in sub-section (1), shall, subject to the
provisions of sub-section (2), be deemed to have had, no
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effect before the commencement of the Bombay Rents, Hotel
and Lodging House Rates Control (Amendment) Ordinance 1959
on 21 May 1959 in any area in which this Act or the
provisions were in operation before the commencement. Sec-
tion 15(2) of the Act was inserted on 21 May 1959 by Bombay
Ordinance No. III of 1959. It was later deemed to have been
substituted on 21 May, 1959 for the original by Maharashtra
Act No. 38 of. 1962. Prior to the Bombay Ordinance 1959
section 15 as it originally stood prohibited sub-letting by
any tenant or assignment or transfer of his interest
therein. This prohibition against sub-letting or assignment
or transfer by the tenant of his interest contained in sub-
section (1) shall be deemed to have had no effect before the
Ordinance. Therefore, the ban against subletting by a
tenant or assignment or transfer of his interest therein
prior to the Ordinance of 1959 is removed.
The matter does not rest there because of the second limb of
sub-section (2) of section 15 of the Act. It is provided
there that any such sub-lease, assignment or transfer or any
such purported sub-lease assignment or transfer in favour of
any person who has entered into possession before 1959 and
has continued to be in possession shall be deemed to be
valid and effective. Therefore, the subletting before 1959
by a tenant is valid under sub-section (2) provided such
sub-lessee entered into possession and continued in
possession at the commencement of the Ordinance. Such sub-
letting is rendered valid notwithstanding anything contained
in any contract or any decree or order of Court. The Act is
a corollary also introduced the measure that
607
any tenant who has sub-let shall not be liable to eviction
under section 13(1) (a) of the Act.
The proviso and the explanation to section 15(1) of the Act
protect transfer of interest in notified leases or class of
leases to assignees or transferees as well as- subsequent
assignees or transferees. Section 15 (2) of the Act
protects only sub-lease or assignment or transfer by the
tenant but does not protect subsequent assignments or
transfers by assignees or transferees.
The entire question in the present appeal is whether the
Private Company is a sub-lessee protected under section
15(2) of the Act.
The answer to the question is whether the respondent Private
Company was a sub-tenant prior to 1959 and continued in pos-
session at the commencement of the Ordinance in 1959.
Ochhavlal in the present case gave the sub-lease to Sovani
before the Ordinance. It is an indisputable feature in the
present case that Sovani did not continue in possession at
the commencement of the Ordinance of 1959. Sovani became a
Director of the Private Company. It is the Private Company
which claims to be a sub-leasee. The Private Company was in
the first place not a sublessee of the tenant but a
subsequent assignee from the sub-lessee. Secondly Sovani
who was the sub-lessee was not in possession on the date of
the Ordinance on 21 May 1959. It was the Private Company
which was in possession. Therefore, the Private Company is
not within the protection of section 15(2) of the Act.
Section 108 of the Transfer of Property Act provides that a
lessee may transfer absolutely by way of mortgage or sub-
lease the whole or any part of his interest in the property,
and any transferee of such interest or part may again
transfer it. This provision contained in section 108(j) of
the Transfer of Property Act notices the distinction between
the sub-lease by a lessee and transfer by such sub-lessee of
his interest by a subsequent transfer. Section 15 of the
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Bombay Act. dealt with only sub-letting by the tenant. That
sub-letting by the tenant is no longer unlawful provided the
conditions in section 15(2) are fulfilled. It is only the
sub-lease by the tenant which is mentioned in subsection (1)
and rendered valid in sub-section (2) of section 15 of the
Act. The Bombay Rent Act does not in section 15(2) protect
any further lease or transfer by the sub-lessee.
The Bombay High Court in a Bench decision in N. M. Nayak v.
Chhotalal Hariram 69 Bom. L.R. 551 tightly held that
section 15(2) of the Act validated only sub-letting,
transfer and assignments by tenants and no further sub-
letting or further derivative transfer or assignment by such
sub-lessees, transferees or assignees.
608
The word ’tenant’ in section 15 of the Bombay Act means the
contractual tenant. In Anand Nivas (P.) Ltd. v. Anandji
[1964] 4 S.C.R. 892 this Court said that the expression
"tenant" in section 15 (1) of the Act means the contractual
tenant and not the statutory tenant. The legislature by the
Ordinance-of 1959 intended to confer protection on sub-
tenants of contractual tenants. The Ordinance did not
confer any protection on further transfer or further sub-
letting by sub-lessees of the contractual tenants.
Section 5(ii) of the Act defines "Tenant". to include sub-
tenants or other persons as have derived title under a
tenant before the Ordinance of 1959. After the decision of
the Bombay High Court in Nayak’s case (supra) sub-clause
(aa) was introduced to clause (ii) in section 5 of the Act.
The Amendment was as follows:-
"Any person to whom interest in premises has
been assigned or transferred as permitted, or
deemed to be permitted, under section 15".
The amendment was introduced into the Act by the Maharashtra
Act No. 17 of 1968 with retrospective effect as from 12 May
1948. The amendment was brought into existence as a result
of the decision of the Bombay High Court in Nayak’s case
(supra). The High Court held in that case that a person
seeking to claim protection by the provisions contained in
the notification issued under the proviso to section 15 (1 )
of the Act must establish that his transferor was a lessee
of the premises transferred or assigned. The decision was
to the effect that the only persons who were entitled to
transfer or assign the interest of the premises were to
satisfy the character of a lessee as defined in section 105
of the Transfer of Property Act. The assignee of a lessee
was held not to be a lessee as defined by the Transfer of
Property Act. In this context, the explanation to section
15(1) of the Act as well as sub-clause (aa) in clause (ii)
of section 5 of the Act were introduced to confer protection
on the successive transfer by original lessees in regard to
leases or class of leases notified under the proviso to
section 15(1) of the Act.
A faint attempt was made by counsel for the respondents to
suggest that the respondents would be protected by the
explanation to section 15 (1) of the Act. There is no
foundation for such a case in the High Court. There are no
materials to support such a plea. This contention cannot
therefore be entertained.
The learned Single Judge of the High Court was clearly in
error in holding that the respondent Private Company was
protected by section 15(2) of the Act. The appeal is,
therefore,
609
allowed, The judgment of the High Court is set aside. The
appellants will be entitled to costs.
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S.B.W. Appeal allowed.
610