Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
VASANTKUMAR RADHAKISAN VORA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE PORT OF BOMBAY
DATE OF JUDGMENT21/08/1990
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
SAIKIA, K.N. (J)
CITATION:
1991 AIR 14 1990 SCR (3) 825
1991 SCC (1) 761 JT 1990 (3) 609
1990 SCALE (2)297
CITATOR INFO :
D 1992 SC1075 (7)
ACT:
Presidency Small Cause Court Act, 1882 as amended by the
Maharashtra Amendment Act 1963, Amendment Act 1976 and
Amendment Act, 1984. Section 42A, 46(2) and 47--Tenancy
terminated in terms of covenant of lease by notice under
Transfer of Property Act, 1882--Whether ejectment can be
sought under Section 41 of Bombay Presidency Small Cause
Courts Act, 1882.
Major Port Trusts Act, 1963: Section 29(1)(a) & (b) read
with Section 133(2A)--Application to port of Bombay--Effect
of repeal of the Bombay Port Trust Act, 1879--Quit notice
concerning vested immovable property--Whether ejectment suit
can be filed.
Transfer of Property Act, 1882: Sections 106, 109 and
111(h) quit notice issued by assistant estate manager of
Bombay Port Trust--Filing of ejectment suit by Port Trust
Board--Whether maintainable.
General Clauses Act, 1897: Sections 6 and 17--Whether
there is any inconsistency between the Major Port Trusts
Act, 1963 and the Bombay Port Trust Act 1879 Operation,
efficacy and effectiveness of quit notice issued by assist-
ant estate manager under the State Act.
Indian Evidence Act, 1872: Section 115--Promissory
estoppel--Doctrine of--Applicability of plea against govern-
ment and municipal body--Actions of State in exercise of
legislative or statutory powers-Public authorities acting
beyond scope of authority--Inapplicability of
doctrine--Doctrine of executive necessity--Quit notice
issued by Assistant Estate Manager--Plea of promissory
estoppel by tenant-Validity of.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent a statutory body corporate constituted
under the Bombay Port Trust Act, 1879--a ’State Act’ who had
appointed an Assistant Estate Manager as their power of
attorney holder to lease out its property from time to time,
terminate the leases and to lay action for ejectment, etc.;
leased out the suit property to the appellant.
826
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The appellant was served with a notice under Section 106
read with Section 111(h) of the Transfer of Property Act,
1882 terminating the tenancy in terms of the covenants of
lease and directing delivery of possession of the demised
property giving one month’s time from 22nd January 1975. The
notice was served on the tenants on January 28, 1975 and
became effective from 28th February, 1975.
In the meanwhile, the Major Port Trust Act, 1963,--a
’Central Act’ was made applicable to the Bombay Port Trust
by operation of Section 133(2A) thereof with effect from
February 1, 1975.
After the expiry of one month from the suit notice an
ejectment application was filed under Section 41 of the
Bombay Presidency Small Cause Courts Act, 1882 as amended
under the Maharashtra 1963 Amendment Act, and a direction
was sought for delivery of possession. After the Maharashtra
Amendment Act 19 of 1976 came into force suits were laid
against the three other tenants of the demised property.
The respondent pleaded in the said suit that it was a
successor-ininterest of the Port Trust Board under the State
Act, and was entitled to eject the tenants and to take
possession of the demised portions. The appellant contended
in his written statement that the suit was not maintainable
since the State Act ceased to be operative with effect from
February 1, 1975, the quit notice issued under Section 106
read with Section 111(h) of the Transfer of Property Act
became ineffective and without determining the tenancy
afresh the suit was not validly laid. It was further submit-
ted that the respondent had promised that on deposit of a
certain amount which the appellant-tenant did, he would be
given to lease a portion in the reconstructed building, and
consequently the respondent was estopped by promissory
estoppel to have the tenant ejected.
One suit was dismissed on the ground that the tenancy
was not duly determined as per law, while the other suits
were decreed.
No appellate forum had been prescribed under the Maha-
rashtra Amendment Act of 1963 but a substantive suit on the
original side provided was available, but such a right to
appeal was incorporated by the Maharashtra Amendment Act, 19
of 1976.
The appellant filed a writ petition in the High Court
under Articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution and the other
tenants filed regular appeals to a Bench of two Judges of
the Small Causes Court, which were pending.
827
In the writ petition of the appellant-petitioner challenged
the vires of sections 2,3 and 4 of the Maharashtra Amending
Act, 1963 introducing Section 42(A) in Chapter VII of the
Presidency Small Cause Courts Act and deleting Sections 45
to 47 from the Principal Act and of amendment of SectiOn 49
thereof; as well as Section 46(2) of the Presidency Small
Cause Courts Act as amended by the Maharashtra Amendment Act
of 1976 as offending Article 14 of tile Constitution. When
the matter came up before the Single Judge of the High Court
it was referred to the Division Bench, which upheld the
constitutional validity of the said sections and remitted
the matter to the Single Judge for disposal on merits.
The Single Judge considered the matter and negatived the
two points raised by the appellant-petitioner regarding
validity of the notice terminating tile tenancy, and also
the plea of promissory estoppel, and dismissed the writ
petition.
The appellant appealed to this Court by special leave
under Article 136. It was contended on behalf of the appel-
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lant that the quit notice issued under Section 106 read with
Section III(h) of the Transfer of Property Act was invalid
and that by issue of the said notice no right accrued to the
respondents and that the termination of tenancy became
operative only on expiry of one month given thereunder i.e.
February 28, 1975, by which date the State Act became inop-
erative, as from February 1, 1975 the Central Act had come
into force; that termination of tenancy was an act inter
vivos by operation of Section 106 read with Section III(h)
of the Transfer of Property Act, and that under Section 109,
the respondent not being a living person, was not entitled
to the benefit of the quit notice as its operation was not
saved by Section 2(d) and Section 5 of the said Act. It was
also contended that the respondents were estopped from
ejecting the appellant and other tenants who were similarly
situated on the principle of promissory estoppel, as the
Estate Manager of the respondent in his letter dated April
3, 1972 directed the tenant to deposit Rs. 11,000 for grant
of tenancy after reconstruction of the flats therein and
placing reliance thereon the tenants having deposited the
amount demanded from them and acted upon the promise to
their detriment, the respondents shall be declared to be
estopped from ejecting the tenants from the demised respec-
tive portions leased out to them.
The appeal was contested on behalf of the respondents by
contending that when right, title, and interest in immovable
property stood transferred by operation of law, the spirit
behind Section 109 of the
828
Transfer of Property Act will apply; and the successor-in-
interest would be entitled to the rights of the predecessor
and that as the Estate Manager had no authority to give a
promise, and that even assuming that he had such a power, it
was a conditional one, namely, approval by the Board, and
that the Board having resolved to reject the claim, and on
reconstruction decided to allot to its own employees out of
administrative necessity, the principle of promissory estop-
pel cannot be applied.
Dismissing the appeal, this Court,
HELD: 1. When right, title and interest in immovable
property stand transferred by operation of law, the spirit
behind Section 109 of the Transfer of Property Act per force
would apply and successor-ininterest would be entitled to
the rights of the predecessor. This is what the Single Judge
of the High Court has held and the view is approved as
correct. The notice terminating the tenancy of Vasantkumar
would enure to the benefit of the respondent and it could be
availed of by the respondent to lay the suit for ejectment.
[836H; 837A-B]
N.P.K. Raman Menon v. Collector of Malabar, AIR 1924
Madras 908; Trimbak Damodhar Raipurkar v. Assaram Hiraman
Patil & Ors., [1962] Suppl. 1 SCR 700; Hitkarini Sabha v.
The Corporation of City of Jabalpur & Anr., [1973] 1 SCR 493
and Lower v. Sorrell, [ 1963] 1 Queen’s Bench Division 959,
referred to.
Gurumurthappa v. Chickmunisamappa, AIR 1953 Mysore 62,
over-ruled.
Halsbury’s Laws of England, 4th Edition, Vol. 27, p.
193; Hill and Redman in Law of Landlord and Tenant, 17th
Edition Vol. I, p. 488, p. 405; Mulla--Transfer of Property
Act, 6th Edition, p. 676 and Chitaley’s Transfer of Property
Act, 4th Edn. 1969, Vol. III, Note 35, referred to.
2(i) The functionaries under both the State Act and the
Central Act are the same. The notice was issued by the
Assistant Estate Manager by virtue of his official function
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as power of attorney agent on behalf of the respondent- The
Board of Trustees have the right to terminate the lease
under Section 26 of the State Act and these rights stood
transferred and vested under Section 29(1) of the Central
Act. Therefore the termination of tenancy and laying the
action for ejectment are integrally connected with their
official capacity. There is a reasonable connection between
the impugned acts and officials duty. Thereby, they are the
acts done under the Central Act. [839C-E]
829
2(ii) The notice under Section 106 and Section III(h) of
the Transfer of Property Act is an act done or purported to
have been done in the official capacity as Power of Attorney
holder/Assistant Estate Manager on behalf of the respondent,
Board of Trustees; the right to lay the suit on expiry of
one month’s period prescribed in the notice, namely, on or
after February 28, 1975 had accrued to the respondent. It is
an act done or purported to have been done under the Central
Act in exercise of the official function. The right to lay
the suit on determination of the tenancy by notice dated
January 20, 1975 under the State Act is a transfer of inter-
est by operation of Section 29(1) of the Central Act, to the
respondent under Section 109 of the Transfer of Property
Act. Thereby the quit notice is valid. The suit laid, pursu-
ant thereto, is valid and legal. Accordingly order of eject-
ment passed by the Small Cause Court is perfectly legal and
unassailable. [840B-E]
Commissioner for the Court of Calcutta v. Abdul Rahim
Osman & Co.; Trustees of Port of Bombay v. The Premier
Automobiles Ltd. & Anr., [1974] 3 SCR 397, referred to.
3(i) The doctrine of promissory estoppel is now well
established one in the field of administrative law. This
principle has been evolved by equity to avoid injustice. It
is neither in the realm of contract nor in the realm of
estoppel. Its object is to interpose equity shorn of its
form to mitigate the rigour of strict law. This doctrine
would be displaced in a case where equity would not require
that the Government should be held bound by the promise made
by it. But the Government must be able to show that in view
of the facts as have been transpired, public interest would
not be prejudiced. Where the Government is required to carry
out the promise the Court would have to balance, the public
interest in the Government’s carrying out the promise made
to the citizens, which helps citizens to act upon and alter’
his position and the public interest likely to suffer if the
promises were required to be carried out by the Government
and determine which way the equity lies. [841B; 842G-H;
843A]
3(ii) The doctrine of promissory estoppel would equally
apply to a private individual as well as a public body like
a Municipal Council. It cannot be applied in the teeth of an
obligation or liability imposed by law. It cannot be invoked
to compel the Government to do an act prohibited by law.
There may be no promissory estoppel against exercise of
legislative functions. [843B-C]
3(iii) Promissory estoppel cannot be used for compelling the
830
Government or a public authority to carry out a representa-
tion or promise which is prohibited by law or which was
devoid of the authority or power of the officer of the
Government or the public authority to make. It being an
equitable doctrine it must yield place to the equity, if
larger public interest so requires and if it can be shown by
the Government or public authority, for having regard to the
facts as they have transpired that it would be inequitable
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to hold the Government or public authority to the promise or
representation made by it. [844B-D]
3(iv) Promissory estoppel should not be extended, though
it may be rounded on an express or implied promise stemmed
from the conduct or representation by an officer of the
State or public authority when it was obtained to play fraud
on the Constitution and the enforcement would defeat or tend
to defeat the Constitutional goals. [844D]
Union of India v. Indo Afgan Agencies, [1968] 2 SCR 366;
Century Spinning and Manufacturing Co. Ltd. v. Ulhasnagar
Municipal Council, [1970] 3 SCR 854; Motilal Padampat Sugar
Mills v. State of Uttar Pradesh, [1979] 2 SCR 641; Jeet Ram
v. State of Haryana, [1980] 3 SCR 689; Union of India v.
Godfrey Philips India Ltd., [1985] Supp. 3 SCR 123 at 144;
State of Bihar v. Usha Martin Industries Ltd., [1987] 65 STC
430 and Asstt. Commissioner of Commercial Taxes, Dharwar v.
Dharmendra Trading Co. etc. etc., [1988] 3 SCR 946, referred
to.
4. Before making the public authority responsible for
act of its subordinate, it must be established that the
subordinate officer did in fact make the representation and
as a fact, is competent to make a binding promise on behalf
of the public authority or the Government, ultra vires acts
do not bind the authority and insistence to abide by the
said ultra vires promise would amount to putting premium and
legitimacy to ultra vires acts of subordinate officers.
[847D-E]
Howell v. Falmouth Boat Construction Co. Ltd, [1951] AC
837 and Attorney General for Ceylon v.A.D. Silva, [1953] AC
461, referred to.
5. The letter dated April 3, 1972 written by the Estate
Manager is a conditional one, namely, that on fulfilling
certain conditions indicated in that letter he would make
recommendation to the Board for grant of lease, condition
precedent being that the tenant would deposit the required
sum of about Rs. 11,000 and odd with the respondent. Un-
doubtedly, the tenants completed that part of the obliga-
tion. Thereafter it was placed before the Board, who by
resolution dated
831
September 10, 1974, considered.,it, but was rejected on the
ground that after reconstruction the building would be
required by its staff. [845C-E]
6. The Estate Manager is merely an intermediary to
collect the material between the respondent Port Trust and
its tenants and to place the material for consideration to
the Board. Thereby the Estate Manager is not clothed with
any authority much less even ostensible authority to create
a promise so as to bind the respondent, that the respondent
would allot the rooms on reconstruction to the tenants. The
promise of him is an ultra vires act, though conditional
and, therefore. it does not bind the respondent. Though the
executive necessity has not been satisfactorily established,
the doctrine of promissory estoppel cannot be extended in
favour of the appellant and other tenants. [847E-G]
7. When a constitutional question has been raised and
does arise for consideration, unless there is a fulldressed
argument addressed by either side before this Court no
satisfactory resolution could be made. Mere paraphrasing the
judgment of the High Court in particular when it relates to
the local laws is no proper decision making. [849A-B]
JUDGMENT:
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CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1348 of
1990.
From the Judgment and Order dated 23.7. 1985 of the
Bombay High Court in W.P. No. 3144 of 1981.
H .C. Tunara, J.A. Karia and M.N. Shroff for the Appellant.
Ashok H. Desai, Solicitor General, U.J. Makhija, B.S.
Bisaria. Mrs. A.K. Verma and Vivek Dholakia for the Respond-
ents.
V.N. Ganpule, V.N. Patil and A.S. Bhasime for the State
of Maharashtra.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
K. RAMASWAMY, J. 1. The respondent is a statutory body
corporate initially constituted under the Bombay Port Trust
Act, 1879 (Bombay Act 6 of 1879), for short ’State Act’.
Under Sec. 26 thereof, the Board has power to acquire and
hold movable and immovable property and also has power to
lease, to sell or otherwise convey movable and immovable
property which may have become vested in or acquired by
them. The respondent has appointed A.J. Mescarnas,
832
Assistant Estate Manager as their power of attorney holder
to lease out its properties from time to time or terminate
the leases and to lay action for ejectment, etc. The re-
spondent owns the Building bearing Old R.R. No. 941 known as
’Frere Land Estate" in which room No. 2 admeasuring 28.27
sq. meters was leased out to Vasantkumar Radhakisan Vora,
for short ’Vasantkumar’. The appellants are his legal repre-
sentatives. He was served with a notice under Sec. 106 read
with s. 111(h) of the Transfer of Property Act terminating
the tenancy in terms of the covenants of lease and was asked
to deliver possession of the demised property giving one
month’s time from 22nd January, 1975.
It was served on Vasantkumar on January 28, 1975. The
notice of termination thereby became effective from 28th
February, 1975. In the meanwhile Major Port Trust Act, 1963
(Act No. 38 of 1963), for short the "Central Act", was made
applicable to the Bombay Port Trust by operation of s. 133
(2A) with effect from February 1, 1975. After the expiry of
one month, ejectment application was filed under s. 41 of
the Bombay Presidency Small Cause Courts Act (Act 15 of
1882) as amended under 1963 Maharashtra Amendment Act,
against Vasantkumar and another for delivery of possession.
After 1976 Amendment Act 19 of 1976 came into force suits
were laid against three other tenants. It was pleaded by the
respondent that it is a successor in interest of the Board
under the State Act and were entitled to eject the tenants
and to the possession of the demised portions. The plea of
Vasantkumar in his written statement elaborated by the
learned counsel, is that the suit is not maintainable. Since
the State Act ceased to be operative with effect from Febru-
ary 1, 1975, the quit notice issued under Section 106 read
with Section 111(h) of Transfer of Property Act became
ineffective and without determining the tenancy afresh, the
suit was not validly laid. It was also pleaded that the
respondent had promised that in deposit of certain amount
which the tenant did, Vasantkumar would be given on lease of
a portion in the reconstructed building. Thereby the re-
spondent is estopped by promissory estoppel to have the
tenant ejected. It may be mentioned at this juncture that
one suit was dismissed on the ground that the tenancy was
not duly determined as per law. Other suits were decreed. No
appellate forum has been prescribed under Amendment Act of
1963 but a substantive suit on original side provided was
available. By Maharashtra Amendment Act 19 of 1976 to the
principal Act such a right to appeal was incorporated.
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Vasantkumar filed writ petition in the High Court under
Articles 226 and 227 and others filed regular appeals to a
Bench of two Judges of the Small Cause Court and are stated
to be pending.
833
2. In the writ petition the petitioner challenged the
vires of 1963 Amendment Provisions and also 1976 Amendment
Provisions to the Presidency Small Cause Courts Act. When it
came up for heating before Masodkar, J., he referred it to a
Division Bench. The Division Bench by its judgment dated
January 17/18, 1982 up-held the constitutional validity of
those sections and remitted to the learned Single Judge to
dispose of the writ petition on merits. The learned single
Judge considered and negatived two points namely, validity
of the notice terminating the tenancy; promissory estoppel
and dismissed the writ petition. Vasantkumar had leave of
this Court under Art. 136.
3. The primary contention of Mr. Turana, learned counsel
for the appellant, is that quit notice issued under Sec. 106
read with Sec. III(h) of the T.P. Act is invalid. By issue
of quit notice no right had accrued to the respondent.
Termination of tenancy became operative only on expiry of
one month given thereunder, i.e. February 28, 1975, by which
date the State Act became inoperative as from February 1,
1975 the Central Act came into force. The respondent under
the Central Act acquired, by statutory operation, the immov-
able property including the demised one in Frere Land Estate
and thereby became a new landlord. Termination of tenancy is
an act inter vivos by operation of Sec. 106 read with Sec.
III(h) of T.P. Act. Under Sec. 109 thereof, the respondent,
not being a living person, is not entitled to the benefit of
the quit notice as its operation is not saved by Sec. 2(d)
and Sec. 5 thereof. The suit, thereby, is not maintainable
admittedly no quit notice determining the tenancy was issued
after February 1, 1975. The edifice of the argument was
built up on shifting sand and when it was subjected to close
scrutiny it crumbled down traceless. Let us first deal with
the arguments on the foot of the provisions of T.P. Act.
Section 2(d) of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882 provides
saving of the previous operation of law. It states that:
" ...... nothing herein contained shall be deemed to
affect save as provided by Sec. 57 and Chapter IV of this
Act, any transfer by operation of law or by, or in execution
of, a decree or order of a court of competent jurisdiction.
Section 106 empowers the landlord to terminate the contract
of lease of immovable property, if it is for agricultural or
manufacturing purpose by giving six months notice and ter-
minable on the part of either lessor or lessee, by giving
fifteen days’ notice expiring with the end of the month of
the tenancy. Section ill(h) provides that, "on the expira-
tion of a notice to determine the lease, or to quit, or of
intention
834
to quit, the property leased, duly given by one party to the
other". Section 109 is Rights of lessor’s transferee:
"If the lessor transfers the property leased, or any part
thereof, or any part of his interest therein, the transfer-
ee, in the absence of a contract to the contrary, shall
possess all the rights, and, if the lessee so elects, sub-
ject to all the liabilities of the lessor as to the property
or part transferred so long as he is the owner of it; but
the lessor shall not, by reason only of such transfer cease
to be subject to any of the liabilities imposed upon him by
the lease unless the lessee elects to treat the transferee
as the person liable to
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Provisos are not necessary, hence omitted.
4. Reading of these fascicule of provisions clearly
demonstrates that a lessee of immovable property from month
to month is terminable by giving fifteen days’ notice or as
per the terms of the contract of the lessee. (In this case
the contract provides to give one month’s notice). On expiry
of one month from the date of receipt of the notice the
lease shall stand terminated. The lessor’s right on transfer
of the immovable property including the lease hold rights
created on the property sold, the transferee, in the absence
of contract to the contrary, shall possess all the rights
and if the lessee so elects, be subject to all the liabili-
ties of the lessor as to the property or part thereof so
long as he is owner of it. But by mere transfer the lessor
shall not cease to be subject to any liabilities imposed
upon him by contract of lease unless the lessee elects to
treat the transferee as the person liable to him.
5. Undoubtedly, by issuance of notice to quit automati-
cally the right created thereunder, namely, cessation of the
lease, does not become effective till the period prescribed
in the notice or in the statute i.e. Sec. 106 expires. On
expiry thereof the lease becomes inoperative and the lessor
acquires right to have the tenant ejected. When he fails to
deliver vacant possession, the lessor would be entitled to
have the tenant ejected and taken possession in due process
of law. The successor in interest whether acquires these
rights and the rights acquired by lessor would enure for his
benefit is the crucial question.
6. In Halsbury’s Laws of England, 4th Edition, Vol. 27,
paragraph 193 discussed the right accrued to the transferee
of the benefit of
835
the notice to quit issued by the predecessor in title thus:
"The notice when once given enures for the benefit of the
successors in title of the landlord or tenant giving it."
Hill and Redman in "Law of Landlord and Tenant", 17th
Edition, Vol. I, at page 488, paragraph 405 have stated to
the similar fact thus:
"The notice when once given enures for the benefit of the
successor in title of the landlord or tenant giving it."
In Mulla’s commentary on the Transfer of Property Act,
6th Edition, at page 676 it is also stated thus:
"Notice enures for the benefit of the successor in title of
the lessor or lessee giving it."
In Chitaley’s Transfer Property Act, 4th Edn., 1969:,
Vol. III, Note 35, it is stated thus:
"Where the lessor gives notice to quit and then assigns his
interest to another the assignee can take advantage of the
notice."
In N.P.K. Raman Menon v. Collector of Malabar, AIR ,1924
Madras 908 a Division Bench of the Madras High Court held
that:,
"English cases recognise that the person who is the landlord
and entitled to possession, on the date of the notice to
quit, is the proper person to give the notice and :that an
assignee within the currency of that notice can take advan-
tage of the notice sent by his assignor and rely upon it,
when he brings a suit for recovering possession.,,
7. No doubt Mr, Tunara placed strong reliance on the
decision of Trimbak Damodhar Raipurkar v. Assaram Hiraman
Patil &Ors., [1962] Suppl. 1 SCR 700. The facts therein are
that in 1943 a lease on agricultural land for five years was
created- Before the expiry thereof Bombay Tenancy Act, 1939
was made applicable to the area where the land was situated
and under Sec. 23(1)(b) of that Act the period of lease was
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statutorily extended to ten years-During the subsistence of
the contractual tenancy it was statutorily extended and the
Bombay
836
Act 67 of 1948 came into force. In March 1952 notice was
given to the tenant that the tenancy expired on March 31,
1953 and called upon the tenant to deliver possession. In
the meanwhile the Bombay Act 33 of 1952 came into force. Its
effect was that the lease automatically stood extended for
ten years from time to time, unless terminated by giving one
year’s notice averting that the land was required bona fide
by the landlord for personal cultivation and that income
would be the main source of income of the landlord. It was
contended that since 1952 Amending Act was not retrospec-
tive, the technical requirement of notice to quit do not
apply. The question was whether the landlord was entitled to
eject the tenant without complying with the statutory re-
quirement. In that context it was held by the Constitution
Bench that by operation of the statutory provisions the
period of lease of 10 years from time to time was automati-
cally extended unless the tenancy was validly terminated by
giving a notice of one year or surrender was made by the
tenant as specified in the statute. The ratio therein has
little application to the facts of this case. In Hitkarini
Sabha v. The Corporation of City of Jabalpur & Anr., [1973]
1 SCR 493 the lease was granted by the Administrator without
authority under the Statute. Therefore, the lease was held
to be void. The notice as required under T.P. Act was held
to be mandatory, but was not done. Therefore the lease was
subsisting and thereby as his land was acquired the tenant
was entitled to compensation pro rata under Section 11 of
the Land Acquisition Act. We are at a loss to understand,
how the ratio thereunder will be of any assistance to the
appellant. In Lower v. Sorreli, [ 1963] 1 Queen’s Bench
Division 959 the question therein was whether the notice to
quit was a valid notice. Admittedly, second notice was given
before the expiry of the first notice. It was held that when
such notice were issued withdrawing the first notice by
issuance of the second notice, a new tenancy has been creat-
ed for the tenant to remain in possession until the expiry
of the later notice on September 29, 1961, to which the
tenancy sections 2(1) and 23(1) of the Agricultural Holdings
Act, 1948 would apply. Accordingly it was held by the Court
of Appeal that there was no valid notice to quit. The ratio
therein also is of no avail to the appellant. No doubt in
Gurumurthappa v. Chickmunisamappa, AIR 1953 Mysore 62 a
Division Bench of Mysore High Court held that the successor
in interest is not entitled to avail the notice to quit
given by the original landlord. In the light of the above
discussion this view is not good law.
8. It is no doubt true that per se sec. 109 of T.P. Act
does not apply to the facts of this case. It contemplates
transfer of lessor’s right inter vivos. But when right,
title and interest in immovable property
837
stand transferred by operation of law, the spirit behind
Sec. 109 per force would apply and successor in interest
would be entitled to the rights of the predecessor. This is
what the learned single Judge of the High Court in the
impugned judgment has held and we approve of the view as
correct. We, accordingly, hold that the notice terminating
the tenancy of Vasantkumar would enure to the benefit of the
respondent and it could be availed of by the respondent to
lay the suit for ’ ejectment.
9. The matter could also be gleaned through the statuto-
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ry operation as well. By operation of Sec. 26 of the State
Act, the Board of Trustees acquired and held the demised
property which includes lease hold interest therein. Section
29(1) of the Central Act interposed and from February 1,
1975 the appointed date, in relation to Bombay Port all the
movable and immovable property, assets and funds of the
predecessor Board shall vest in the Board, i.e. the respond-
ent. By operation of Clause (b) thereof all debts, obliga-
tions and liabilities incurred, all contracts entered into
and all matters and things engaged to be done, by with or
for the Central Govt., or as the case may be, the other
authority (i.e. predecessor Board under State Act) immedi-
ately before such day, for or in connection with the pur-
poses of the port, "shah be deemed to have been incurred,
entered into and engaged to be done by, with or for the
Board." It further postulates that all rates, fees, rents
and other sums of money due to the Central Govt., or as the
case may be, the other authority (i.e. the predecessor
Board) in relation to the port immediately before such day
shall be deemed to be due to the Board, i.e. the respondent.
Other clauses are not necessary. Hence omitted. Thereby by
operation of Sec. 29(1)(b) the immovable properties, i.e.
demised rooms and all contracts in relation thereto includ-
ing the lease and the right to ejectment pursuant to quit
notice stood transferred to the respondent.
Sub-section 2(A) of Sec. 133 ’Repeal’ of the Major Port
Trusts Act, 1963 states that on the application of the
Central Act to the Port of Bombay, except the provisions
thereof relating to municipal assessment of the properties
of the port of Bombay and matters connected therewith, shall
cease to have force in relation to that port. But subclause
(c) of sub-section (2D) of Sec. 133 provides that notwith-
standing anything contained in sub-section (2A) (2B) and
(2C) anything done or any action taken or purported to have
been done or taken including ....... notice ........
issued ...... shall, in so far as it is not inconsistent
with the provisions of this Act, be deemed to have been done
or taken on the corresponding provisions of this Act. By
838
operation of Sec. 29(1)(a) & (b)read with Sec. 133(2A) the
quit notice concerning the vested immovable property i.e.
the demised rooms vested in the respondent shall be deemed
to have been done or taken under Sec. 29(1) and Sec.
133(2A)(C) of the Central Act. There is no inconsistency
between the Central and the State Acts in this regard.
Section 6 of the General Clauses Act, 1897 postulates the
effect of repeal thus:
’Where this Act or any (Central Act) or regulation made
after the commencement of this Act, repeals any enactment
hitherto made or hereafter to be made, then, unless a dif-
ferent intention appears, the repeal shall not--
(b) affect the previous operation of any enactment so re-
pealed or anything duly done or suffered thereunder’ or
(c) affect any right, privilege, obligation or liability
acquired, accrued or incurred under any enactment so re-
pealed; or .....
any such investigation, legal proceedings or remedy
may be instituted, continued or enforced ....... as if the
repealing Act or Regulation had not been passed."
Section 17(1) provides under:
"In any (Central Act) or Regulation made after the commence-
ment of this Act, it shall be sufficient for the purpose of
indicating the application of a law to every person or
number of persons for the time being executing the functions
of an office, to mention the official title of the officer
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at present executing the functions of an office, or that of
the officer by whom the functions are commonly executed."
Section 17 of the General Clauses Act substitutes the func-
tionaries under the Central Act to those of the function-
aries under the State Act. Section 6 gives effect to the
previous operation of anything done or subsists the right
acquired or privilege accrued under the Repealed Act and the
legal proceedings of remedy may be instituted, continued or
enforced as if the repealing Act had not been passed. There-
fore, the operation, efficacy and effectiveness of the quit
notice issued by the power of attorney Agent of the respond-
ent i.e. the Asstt. Estate Manager has been acquired by the
respondent Board. The rights and
839
remedy accrued to the respondent under the State Act namely
termination of tenancy by issue of quit notice under Sec.
106 and 111(h) of T.P. Act and on expiry of thirty days i.e.
on February 28, 1975 the respondent Board became entitled to
institute the proceedings in the suits to have the tenants
ejected under Sec. 41 of the Provincial Small Cause Courts
Act.
10. The contention of Mr. Tunara that the Central Act
and the General Clauses Act would apply only to the acts
done under the Central Act or State Act, by exercise of the
statutory power which alone have been validated and they
have no application to bilateral acts under Central Act and
the notice under Sec. 106 of T.P. Act is not the one either
under the Central or the State Act and that the notice
issued is not saved, is devoid of force. The Board of Trus-
tees under the State Act have merely changed their hats and
stand transposed to be functionaries under the Central Act.
The functionaries under both the Acts are the same. The
notice was issued by the Asstt. Estate Manager by virtue of
his official function as power of attorney agent on behalf
of the respondent. The Board of Trustees have the right to
terminate the lease under Sec. 26 of the State Act and those
rights stood transferred and vested under Sec. 29(1) of the
Central Act. Therefore, the termination of tenancy and
laying the action for ejectment are integrally connected
with their official capacity. There is a reasonable connec-
tion between the impugned acts and official duty. Thereby,
they are the acts done under the Central Act. In Commission-
er for the Court of Calcutta v. Abdul Rahim Osman & Co.,
Sec. 142 of the Calcutta Port Act came up for interpreta-
tion. Thereunder it was contended that short delivery of the
goods was an omission and not an act done under the Act and
though the suit was laid beyond three months, it was not
barred by limitation. Section 142 enjoins that no suit shall
be brought in for anything done or purported to have been
done beyond three months. It was held that after the expiry
of three months from the day on which the cause of action
had arisen for short delivery, which was done or purported
to have been done under the Act, the suit was barred by
limitation. It was further held that in order to apply any
bar under Sec. 142 it was first to determine whether the act
which is complained of in the suit can be said to have been
within the scope of the official duty of the person or
persons who are sought to be made liable. This question can
be answered in the affirmative where there is a reasonable
connection between the act and the discharge of the official
duty. Once the scope of official duty is determined, Sec.
142 will protect the defendant not only from a claim based
on breach of the’ duty but also from a claim based upon an
omission to perform such
840
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duty. The protection cannot be held to be confined to acts
done in the exercise of a statutory power but also extends
to acts done within the scope of an official duty. This view
was upheld in Trustees of Port of Bombay v. The Premier
Automobiles Ltd. & Anr., [1974] 3 SCR 397 where there was
short delivery of one bundle out of 153 bundles consigned
from Japan and omitted to be delivered and it was held to
constitute an act done within the ambit of Sec. 87 of the
Bombay Port Trust Act, 1879 and the bar of limitation pre-
scribed thereunder would apply. Thus we have no hesitation
to hold that the notice under Sec. 106 and Sec. 111(h) of
the Transfer of Property Act is an act done or purported to
have been done in the official capacity as Power of Attorney
holder/Asstt. Estate Manager on behalf of the respondent,
Board of Trustees; the right to lay the suit on expiry of
one month’s period prescribed in the notice, namely, on or
after February 28, 1975 had accrued to the respondent. It is
an act done or purported to have been done under the Central
Act in exercise of the official function. The right to lay
the suit on determination of the tenancy by notice dated
January 20, 1975 under the State Act is a transfer of inter-
est by operation of Sec. 29(1) of the Central Act, to the
respondent under Sec. 109 of the Transfer of Property Act.
Thereby the quit notice is valid. The suit laid, pursuant
thereto, is valid and legal. Accordingly order of ejectment
passed by the Small Cause Court is perfectly legal and
unassailable.
11. The next contention of Mr. Tunara is that the re-
spondents are estopped from ejecting the appellant and other
tenants who are similarly situated on the principle of
promissory estoppel. His contention is rounded upon the fact
that the Estate Manager of the respondent in his letter
dated April 3, 1972 directed the tenant to deposit Rs.
11,000 and odd for grant of tenancy after reconstruction of
the flats therein. The tenants placing reliance thereon have
deposited the amount demanded from them and acted upon the
promise to their detriment. The respondent now shall be
declared to be estopped from ejecting them from the demised
respective portions leased out to them. The learned Solici-
tor General contended that the Estate Manager has no author-
ity to give a promise. Even assuming that he has such a
power, it is conditional one, namely, approval by the Board.
The Board in its meeting resolved to reject the claim and on
reconstruction decided to allot to its own employees out of
administrative necessity. Therefore, the promissory estoppel
cannot be applied. The principle of promissory estoppel is
that where one party has by his word or conduct made to the
other a clear and unequivocal promise or representation
which is intended to create legal relations or affect a
841
legal relationship to arise in the future, knowing or.
intending that it would be acted upon by the other party to
whom the promise or representation is made and it is in fact
so acted upon the other party, the promise or representation
would be binding on the party making it and he would not be
entitled to go back upon it, if it would be inequitable to
allow him to do so, having regard to the dealings which have
taken place between the parties. The doctrine of promissory
estoppel is now well established one in the field of admin-
istrative law. This principle has been evolved by equity to
avoid injustice. It is neither in the realm of contract nor
in the realm of estoppel. Its object is to interpose equity
shorn of its form to mitigate the rigour of strict law. In
Union of India v. Indo Afgan Agencies, Shah J., as he then
was, speaking for the Division Bench of this Court while
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upholding the application of promissory estoppel to execu-
tive acts of the ,State negated the plea of executive neces-
sity thus:
"We are unable to accede to the contention that the execu-
tive necessity releases the Government from honouring its
solemn promises relying on which citizens have acted to
theft detriment. Under our constitutional set up no person
may be deprived of his right or liberty except in due course
of and by if a member of the Executive seeks to deprive a
citizen of his right or liberty otherwise than in exercise
of power derived from the law common or statute--the Courts
will be competent to and indeed would be bound to protect
the rights of the aggrieved citizens."
It was further held in its summing up thus:
"Under our jurisprudence the Government is not exempt from
liability to carry out the representation made by it as to
its future conduct and it cannot on some undefined and
undisclosed ground of necessity or expediency fail to carry
out the promise solemnly made by it, not claim to be the
Judge of its own obligation to the citizen on an ex parte
appraisement of the circumstances in which the obligation
has arisen."
In Century Spinning and Manufacturing Co. Ltd. v. Ulhasnagar
Municipal Council, [1970] 3 SCR 854 Shah, J. again extended
this doctrine of promissory estoppel against public authori-
ties thus:
"This court refused to make distinction between a private
842
individual and a public body so far as the doctrine of
promissory estoppel is concerned."
In Motilal Padampat Sugar Mills v. State of Uttar Pra-
desh, [1979] 2 SCR 641 Bhagwati, J., as he then was, applied
the doctrine of promissory estoppel to the executive action
of the State Government and also denied to the State of the
doctrine of executive necessity as a valid defence. It was
held that in are public governed by rule of law, no-one high
or low is above the law. Everyone is subject to the law as
fully and completely as any other and the Government is no
exception. The Govt. cannot claim immunity from the doctrine
of promissory estopped. Equity will, in a given case where
justice and fairness demands, present a person from exercis-
ing on strict legal rights even where they arise not in
contract, but on his own title deed or in statute. It’ is
not necesary that there should be some pre-existing contrac-
tual relationship between the parties. The parties need not
be in any count of legal relationship before the transaction
from which the promissory estoppel takes its origin. The
doctrine would apply even where there is no pre-existing
legal relation-ship’ between the parties, but the promise is
intended to create legal relations or effect a legal rela-
tionship which will arise in nature. It was further held
that it is indeed pride of constitutional democracy and rule
of law that the Government stands on the same footing as a
private individual so far as the obligation of the law is
concerned-. The former is equally bound as the latter There-
fore, the Government cannot claim any immunity from the
doctrine of promissory estoppel and it cannot say that it is
under no obligation to act in a manner i.e. fair and just or
that it is not bound by the consi derations of honesty
and good faith. In fact, the Government should be held to
have a high standard of rectitude while dealing with its
citizens. Since the doctrine Of promissory estoppel is an
equitable doctrine, it must yield where the equity so re-
quires. If it can be shown by the Govt. that having regard
to the facts as they have transpired, it would be inequita-
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ble to hold the Govt. or public authority to the promise or
representation made by it, the Court would not raise an
equity in favour of the promise and enforce the promise
against the Government. The doctrine of promissory estoppel
would be displaced in such a case. because on the facts,
equity would’ not require that the Government should be
held bound by the promise made by it. But the Govt. must be
able to show that in view of the fact as have been tran-
spired, public interest. would not be prejudiced. Where the
Govt.is required to carry out the promise the Court would
have to balance, the public interest in the Government’s
carrying out the promise made to the citizens, which helps
citizens to act upon and alter his position
843
and the public interest likely to suffer if the promises
were required to be carried out by the Government and deter-
mine which way the equity lies. It would not be enough just
to say that the public interest’ require that the Govt.
should not be compelled to carry out the promise or that the
public interest would suffer if the Govt. were required to
honour it. In order to resist its liability the Govt. would
disclose to the Court the various events insisting its claim
to be exempt from liability and it would be for the Court to
decide whether those events are such as to render it equita-
ble and to enforce the liability against the Govt. There
fore, we are holding that the doctrine of promissory estop-
pel would equally apply to a private individual as well as a
public body like a Municipal Council. It was held that it
cannot be applied in the teeth of an obligation or liability
imposed by law. It cannot be invoked to compell the Govt. to
do an act prohibited by law. There may be no promissory
estoppel against exercise of legislative functions. Legisla-
ture can never be precluded from exercise of its legislative
functions by resorting to doctrine of promissory estoppel.
The plea of executive necessity, though was rejected, its
rigour was mellowed down to the above extent indicated
above. The doctrine of promissory estoppel, though doubted
in Jeer Ram v. State of Haryana, [1980] 3 SCR 689 was af-
firmed and reiterated by a Bench of three Judges in Union of
India v. Godfrey Philips India Ltd., [1985] Supp. 3 SCR 123
at 144 Bhagwati, the Chief Justice, while; reiterating the
law laid down in Motilal ’P’ Sugar Mills’ case (supra) made
it clear thus:
"there can be no promissory estoppel against the legislature
in the exercise of its legislative functions nor can the
Govt. or public authority be debarred by promissory estoppel
from enforcing a statutory prohibition. It is equally true
that promissory estoppel Cannot be used to compel the Gov-
ernment or a public authority to carry out a representation
or promise which is contrary to law or which was outside the
authority or power of the officer of the Government or of
the public authority to make. We may also point out that the
doctrine of promissory estoppel being an equitable doctrine,
it must yield when the equity so requires; if it can be
shown by the Government or public authority that having
regard to the facts: as they have transpired, it would be
inequitable to hold the Government or public authority to
the promise or representation made by it, the Court would
not raise an equity in favour of the person to whom the
promise or representation is made and enforce the promise or
representation against the Government or public authority."
844
Doctrine of Promissory Estoppel was reiterated by another
Bench of three Judges in State of Bihar v. Usha Martin
Industries Ltd., [1987] (65) STC 430 and Asstt. Commissioner
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of Commercial Taxes, Dharwar Dharmendra Trading Co., etc.
etc., [1988] 3 SCR 946.
12. It is equally settled law that the promissory estop-
pel cannot be used to compel the Government or a public
authority to carry out a representation or promise-which is
prohibited by law or which was devoid of the authority or
power of the officer of the Government or the public author-
ity to make. We may also point out that the doctrine of
promissory estoppel being an equitable doctrine, it must
yield place to the equity, if larger public interest so
requires, and if it can be shown by the Government or public
authority, for having regard to the facts as they have
transpired that it would be inequitable to hold the Govern-
ment or public authority to .the promise or representation
made by it. The Court on satisfaction would not, in those
circumstances raise the equity in favour of the persons to
whom a promise or representation is made and enforce the
promise or representation against Government or the public
authority. Equally Promissory estoppel should not be extend-
ed, though it may be rounded on an express or implied prom-
ise stammed from the conduct or representation by an officer
of the State or public authority when it was obtained play
fraud on the constitution and the enforcement would defeat
or tend to defeat the constitutional goals. For instance a
fight to reservation either under Art. 15(4) or 16(4) in
favour of the Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes or backward
classes was made with a view to ameliorate their status
socially, economically and educationally so as to assimilate
those sections into the main stream of the society. The
persons who do not belong to those classes, but produce a
certificate to mask their social status and secure an ap-
pointment to an office or post under the State or public
employment or admission into an educational institution
maintained by the State or receiving aid from the State, on
later investigation, though belated, was found that the
certificate produced was false and the candidate was dis-
missed from the post or office or debarred or sent out from
the institution or from the balance course of the study, the
plea of promissory estoppel would always be found favour
with the courts and being easily extended in favour of the
candidate or party that played fraud on the Constitution. It
would amount not only putting a premium on the fraud on the
Constitution, but also a denial to a reserved candidate and
the general candidate as well. Therefore, the plea of prom-
issory estoppel should not be extended to such areas.
845
Though Executive necessity is not always a good defence,
this doctrine cannot be extended to legislative acts or to
acts prohibited by the statute.
13. When it seeks to relieve itself from its application
the Government or the public authority are bound to place
before the Court the material, the circumstances or grounds
on which it seeks to resile from the promise made or obliga-
tion undertaken by insistence of enforcing the promise, how
the public interest would be jeopardised as against the
private interest. It is well settled legal proposition that
the private interest would always yield place to the public
interest. The question, therefore, is whether promise, in
fact, was made by the Estate Manager on behalf of the re-
spondent and whether the Estate Manager is competent to make
such a promise and whether it binds the respondent. The
letter dated April 3, 1972 written by the Estate Manager is
a conditional one, namely, that on fulfilling certain condi-
tions indicated in that letter he would make recommendation
to the Board for grant of lease, condition precedent being
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that the tenant would deposit the required sum of about Rs.
11,000 and odd with the respondent. Undoubtedly, the tenants
completed that part of the obligation. Thereafter admittedly
it was placed before the Board, who by resolution dated
September 10, 1974 which is at page 228 to 237 of the paper
book, considered it, but was rejected on the ground that
after reconstruction the building would be required to its
staff. Therefore, the decision has stemmed from its execu-
tive necessity, but that ground by itself would not be
sufficient unless it is shown to the satisfaction of the
Court that as against the interest of the private tenants
the interest of its employees is of such as absolute impor-
tance that without allotment of the quarters to the staff
the work of the Port Trust cannot be carried out. No such
material has been placed before us. But the crucial circum-
stance would be whether an unequivocal promise in fact was
made and the Estate Manager was competent to make promise.
14. In Howell v. Falmouth Boat Construction Co. Ltd.
[1951] A.C. 837 the facts are that ship repairers in a naval
vessel carried out certain work in contravention of para 1
of the Restriction of Repairs of Ships Order, 1940, the
Admiralty acting under regulation 55 of the Defence (Gener-
al) Regulations, 1939 directed that repairs or alteration of
ships would not be carried out except under the authority of
a licence granted by the Admiralty. The defence was that
work was carried out with the oral permission of the licenc-
ing authority officer of the Admiralty. In the Court of
Appeal Lord Denning, laid the rule of promissory estoppel
that whenever Government Officers in the deal-
846
ings with the subject, take on themselves to assume authori-
ty in a matter with which he is concerned the subject is
under entitlement to rely on their having the authority
which they assume. He does not know and cannot be expected
to know the limits of their authority and he ought not to
suffer if they exceed it. On further appeal the House of
Lords while reversing the view, Lord Simonds stated thus:
"I know of no such principle in our law nor was any authori-
ty for it cited. The illegality of an act is the same wheth-
er or not the actor has been misled by an assumption of
authority on the part of a Government officer however high
or law in the hierarchy. I do not doubt that in criminal
proceedings it would be a material factor that the actor had
been thus misled if knowledge was a necessary element of the
offence, and in any case it would have a bearing on the
sentence to be imposed. But that is not the question. The
question is whether the character of an act done in face of
a statutory prohibition is affected by the fact that it has
been induced by a misleading assumption of authority. In my
opinion the answer is clearly No. Such an answer may make
more difficult the task of the citizen who is anxious to
walk in the narrow way, but that does not justify a differ-
ent answer being given."
Lord Normand stated at page 849 thus:
"But it is certain that neither a minister nor any subordi-
nate officer of the Crown can by any conduct or representa-
tion bar the Crown from enforcing a statutory prohibition or
entitle the subject to maintain that there has been no
breach of it."
In Attorney General for Ceylon v. A.D. Silva, [1953]
A.C. 461 the Privy Council was called upon to consider
whether the Collector of Custom was authorised to create a
promise as against the crown. Considering that question at
page 479 it was held that:
"All "ostensible" authority involves a representation by the
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principal as to the extent of the agent’s authority. No
representation by the agent as to the extent of his authori-
ty can amount to a "holding out" by the principal. No public
officer, unless he possesses some special power, can hold
out on behalf of the Crown that he or some other public
847
officer has the right to enter into a contract in respect of
the property of the Crown when in fact no such right
exists.. Their Lordships think, therefore that nothing done
by the Principal Collector or the Chief Secretary amounted
to a holding out by the Crown that the Principal Collector
had the right to enter into a contract to sell the goods
which are subject matter of this action."
In Administrative Law by Wade, 6th Edition at page 385 it is
stated thus:
"If the force of law is given to a ruling from an official
merely because it is wrong, the official who has not legal
power is in effect substituted for the proper authority ,
which is forced to accept what it considers a bad decision.
To legitimate ultra vires acts in this way cannot be sound
policy, being a negation of the fundamental cannons of
administrative law."
Thus we have no hesitation to hold that before making
the public authority responsible for acts of its subordi-
nate, it must be established that the subordinate officer
did in fact make the representation and as a fact. is compe-
tent to make a binding promise on behalf of the public
authority or the Government, ultra vires acts do not bind
the authority and insistence to abide by the said ultra
vires promise would amount to putting premium and legitimacy
to ultra vires acts of subordinate, officers. It is seen
from the record that the Estate Manager is merely an inter-
mediary to collect the material between the respondent Port
Trust and its tenants and to place the material for consid-
eration .to the Board. Thereby the Estate Manager is not
clothed with any authority much less even ostensible author-
ity to create a promise so as to bind the respondent, that
the respondent would allot the rooms on reconstruction to
the tenants. The promise by him is an ultra vires act,
though conditional and, therefore, it does not bind the
respondent. Though the executive necessity has not been
satisfactorily established, we hold that the doctrine of
promissory estoppel in the light of the above facts cannot
be extended in favour of the appellant and other tenants.
16. Sri Tunara further submitted that the tenant did not
derive title, namely, lease-hold right from the respondent
Port Trust under the Central Act. That the tenant disputed
the title and it is a sufficient defence under the explana-
tion to section 43 to non suit the respondent
848
in the summary proceeding. It was open to the respondent to
file a regular suit. The Small Cause Court ought to have
rejected the application on that ground and the High Court
would have gone into the question. It being a pure question
of law, this court may permit the appellant to argue on the
point for the first time in this Court. It is undoubtedly
true as held by catena of decisions of this Court that a
pure question of law, untraveled by questions of fact, which
goes to the roots of the jurisdiction. could be permitted to
be raised for the first time in an appeal under Art. 136 of
the Constitution. We are afraid. we cannot permit the appel-
lant to raise this point for the following reasons:
Firstly, except making a bald averment in the written
statement that the "suit is not maintainable" nothing has
been pleaded in detail in the written statement. Admittedly
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this point was neither taken in the writ petition nor argued
in the High Court. It is not even raised in the grounds of
appeal in this Court nor even in points raised in the synop-
sis of the case, It is stated that remotely it was raised in
the rejoinder. Since it is a mixed question of facts and law
and not being a pure question of law, we cannot permit to
raise the point for the first time, that too, when it would
prejudice the respondent of their case at this stage. We
accordingly decline to go into the question. We would also
straighten the record and state that the appellants raised
in the writ petition the vires of Sections 2, 3 and 4 of the
Maharashtra Amending Act, 1963 introducing Sec. 42(A) in
Chapter VII of the Presidency Small Cause Courts Act and
deleting Sections 45 to 47 from the Principal Act and of an
amended Sec. 49 thereof as well as Sec. 46(2) of the Presi-
dency Small Cause Courts Act as amended by Maharashtra
Amendment Act of 1976 as offending Art. 14 of the Constitu-
tion, and unsuccessfully argued before the Division Bench of
the High Court same point was raised in the grounds of
appeal in this court. Though the appeal was argued for three
days, Mr. Tunara did not argue this point across the Bar,
nor we had the advantage of hearing the learned Solicitor
General. Even in a written brief running into 44 pages
submitted by the counsel, he did not deal with this point.
The counsel, after arguing the two points dealt with earli-
er, has devoted his time on the question of jurisdiction of
the trial court under Sec. 41, despite our repeatedly re-
minding him that this point was neither raised, nor argued
in the High Court, At the end he stated that he had elabo-
rately argued the point of vires before the Single Judge and
the Division Bench and except repetition of the same once
over, he could do no better by-further arguing here. There-
fore, this Court could go through the judgment and deal with
the point. We deprecate
849
this practice. When a constitutional question has been
raised and does arise for consideration, unless there is a
full-dressed argument addressed by either side before this
court no satisfactory resolution could be made. Mere para-
phrasing the judgment of the High Court in particular when
it relates to the local laws is no proper decision making.
Therefore, after giving our anxious consideration, we, with
great anguish. decline to go into the point. Except these.
no other points have been argued. Accordingly we do not find
any merit in the appeal.
17. The appeal is dismissed. but in the circumstances with-
out costs.
N.V.K. Appeal dismissed.
850