Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GOPAL SARAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SATYANARAYANA
DATE OF JUDGMENT20/02/1989
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
RANGNATHAN, S.
CITATION:
1989 AIR 1141 1989 SCR (1) 767
1989 SCC (3) 56 JT 1989 Supl. 21
1989 SCALE (1)497
CITATOR INFO :
F 1990 SC1208 (4)
ACT:
Rajasthan Premises (Control of Rent and Eviction) Act,
1950: Section 13(1)(e)--Tenant--Sub letting--Liability to
eviction--When arises--Tenant doing advertisement
business--Putting up hoarding-Parting with
possession--Assignment--What constitutes.
Indian Evidence Act, 1872: Sections 137 and 138--Cross
examination-Plaintiff need not be cross examined beyond
evidence given in examination in chief--Opportunity not to
be given to make out a case in cross examination.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent-Landlord filed a suit for eviction
against the appellant-tenant on 3 grounds, namely, (1) that
the tenant had parted with possession of the roof of the
shop let out to him by putting up an advertisement board,
(ii) by fixing the advertisement board on the roof of the
shop with iron angles, the tenant had caused material alter-
ation to the premises, and (iii) the tenant had defaulted in
the payment of rent. The tenant asserted that though he was
carrying on optical business in the shop he was also running
the business of advertisement by way of display of various
advertisements (hoardings) hoards at various places in the
city. The Trial Court decreed the suit on the ground of
default in payment of rent, material alteration and sub-
letting.
The appellant preferred an appeal and the District Judge
remanded the case back to the Trial Court for trial on all
issues, on the ground that the appellant had not been al-
lowed to cross-examine the respondent or to adduce evidence
in defence.
On remand, the Trial Court held that the appellant had
caused material alteration by fixing the board on the roof,
had parted with possession of the roof by such fixing of the
board, had committed default in payment of rent, and passed
a decree for eviction against the appellant for causing
material alteration and for parting with the possession of
the roof. No decree was however passed on the ground of
default, because the default was held to be the first de-
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fault.
768
The appellant filed an appeal, and the District Judge
allowed the appeal on the ground that by displaying the
advertisement board, the appellant had not caused any mate-
rial alteration of the premises and that by displaying such
advertisement board did not amount to parting with posses-
sion of the roof of the premises. With regard to default, on
an analysis of the dates of the payment, the District Judge
held that there was no default in payment of rent for six
months, but held that the default was the first default and
consequently there could be no decree for eviction.
The respondent preferred an appeal before the High
Court. The appeal was allowed only on the issue of parting
with possession, holding that the display of the advertise-
ment board amounted to parting with possession of the prem-
ises. The High Court noted that the appellant had not dis-
puted that the advertisement board was installed on the roof
of the shop and that he was getting the rent for this board,
and the document which was tendered, viz: Exhibit 6 showed
that the company Paramount Services had written a letter to
the respondent-landlord that they had installed the board on
the terrace of the shop and the site was with them for the
last six months. The High Court accordingly concluded that
there was parting with possession by the tenant, and the
landlord was therefore entitled to a decree for eviction
under section 13(1)(e) of the Act. In view of this finding
under section 13(1)(e) of the Act, the High Court held it
was unnecessary to go into the other grounds and passed a
decree for eviction.
In the appeal by the tenant to this Court on the ques-
tions: (1) Whether the appellant was carrying on his own
advertising business? (2) Whether such an act can be termed
as parting with possession of the roof or any part thereof
by the appellant in favour of the advertiser because by
putting up such hoarding, he was getting a return? (3) If it
is found that it was not a business of the appellant to
carry on the advertising, but the appellant had also an
advertising agency to put up its advertising board then
would such an act amount to parting with possession of the
roof or any part thereof by the appellant? (4) In any event
can any case or cause of action for the suit filed in 1974
on the basis of Exhibit 6 a letter dated January 20, 1977 be
maintained?
Allowing the appeal and setting aside the order of
eviction, the Court.
HELD: 1. Under the Rajasthan Premises (Control of Rent
and Eviction) Act. 1950 the tenant must be guilty either of
an assignment or
769
sub-letting or otherwise parting with possession either of
the whole or any part of the business without the permission
of the landlord. [787A]
2(a) Sub-letting means transfer of an exclusive right to
enjoy the property in favour of the third party, [787B]
2(b) The concept of parting with possession in private
contracts between the landlord and tenant was also known in
India and it means parting with legal possession to the
exclusion of the grantor himself. [787H; 788A]
Stening v. Abrahams, [1931] 1 L.R. Chancery Division
470, referred to.
Shalimar Tar Products v. H.C. Sharma & Others, [1988] 1
SCC 70; Gundalpalli Rangamanner Chetty v. Desu Rangiah, AIR
1954 Madras 182; Jackson v. Simons, [1923] 1 Ch. 373 and
Chaplin v. Smith, [1926] 1 K.B. 198, referred to.
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Gee v. Hazleton and Others, [1932] 1 King’s Bench Divi-
sion 179, distinguished.
Vishwa Nath v. Chaman Lal, AIR 1975 Delhi 117; Madras
Bangalore Transport Co. (West v. Inder Singh and Others,
[1986] 3 SCC 62; Dr. Vijay Kumar and Others v. M/s. Raghbir
Singh Anokh Singh [1973] 2 SCC 597; B.M. Lal (dead) by L.Rs.
v. Dunlop Rubber & Co. Ltd., [1968] 1 SCR 23; Rajbir Kaur v.
M/s. S. Chokosiri and Co., AIR 1988 SC 1845 and Shri Dipak
Banerjee v. Smt. Lilabati Chakroborty, 4 Judgment Today 1987
3 SC 454, referred to.
In the instant case, on the facts found, it cannot be
said or even argued that there was any assignment by the
tenant. The tenant or the sub tenant did not have any exclu-
sive possession or interest in the building or in any part
of the building nor was that right in lieu of any payment or
any compensation. Having regard to the quality, nature and
degree of the occupation of the transferee, it cannot be
said that either there was any assignment or sub-letting or
parting with possession to such a degree by permitting the
hoarding that the tenant had lost interest. He was using
this premises for his benefit. Unless the tenant has in-
fracted the prohibition of the Act, he is not liable to be
evicted. 1789B, G]
3. The question whether there is a tenancy or licence
or parting with possession in a particular case must depend
upon the quality
770
of occupation given to the licensee or the transferee. Mere
occupation is not sufficient, to infer either sub-tenancy or
parting with possession. [786A]
Associated Hotel of India Ltd. Delhi v. S.B. Sardar
Ranjit Singh, [1968] 2 SCR 548 and Smt. Krishnawati v. Shri
Hans Raj, [1974] 1 SCC 289, referred to.
4. The case rests on the express provision of the Act
and there is no scope to explore the latent purpose of the
Act. [789G]
5. The plaintiff-landlord had not subjected himself to
crossexamination in spite of the order of the court on
remand. It would, therefore, not be safe to rely on the
examination-in-chief which was not subjected to cross-exami-
nation before the remand was made. If that is so, it will
appear that there is no evidence of the plaintiff in respect
of the allegations in the plaint. There was no question of
cross-examining the plaintiff travelling beyond the evidence
of the plaintiff given in examination-in-chief and thereby
giving an opportunity to make out a case in cross-examina-
tion. It therefore, appears from the pleadings and the
evidence that the respondent did not make out any case of
the appellant parting with possession by putting up the
hoarding. [779D-G]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2747 of
1988.
From the Judgment and Order dated 23.2.1988 of the
Rajasthan High Court in S.B. Civil Second Appeal No. 77 of
1987.
Tapas Ray, S.K. Jain and P. Agarwal for the Appellant.
Mrs. Rani Chhabra for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, J. This appeal by special leave is
against the judgment and order of the Division Bench of the
High Court of Rajasthan dated 23rd February, 1988. The
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appellant is the tenant in the suit premises. The premises
in question is a shop situated outside Delhi Gate, Udaipur,
in the State of Rajasthan. In the said shop the appellant
carried on the business of opticals. This fact is undisput-
ed. He asserted that he was also running the business of
advertisement by way of display of various advertisements
(hoardings)
771
boards at various places in the city of Udaipur. The case of
the appellant was that though the appellant had taken the
premises on rent on the basis of oral tenancy on 1st August,
1971, the rent-note in fact was executed on 30th May, 1972.
The respondent had filed the suit for eviction of the ten-
ant-appellant on three grounds, namely, (i) that the
tenant-appellant had parted with possession of the roof of
the said shop-room by putting up an advertisement board;
(ii) by putting up such advertisement board, fixing the same
on the roof of the said shop-room with iron angles, the
appellant had caused material alteration to the premises;
and (iii) the appellant had defaulted in payment of rent. On
or about 20th April 1978, the trial court decreed the suit
on the ground of default in payment of rent, material alter-
ation and subletting. The appellant preferred an appeal
before the learned District Judge, Udaipur, who remanded the
case back to the trial court for trial on all the three
issues, on the ground that the appellant had not been al-
lowed to cross-examine the respondent or to adduce evidence
in defence. On remand, the trial court held that the appel-
lant had caused material alteration by fixing the board on.
the roof; had parted with possession of the roof by such
fixing of the board; and had committed default in payment of
rent. Accordingly, a decree was passed against the appellant
for causing material alteration and for parting with the
possession of the roof but no decree was passed by the trial
court on ground of default because the said default was held
by the learned Trial Judge to be the first default. The
appellant thereafter filed first appeal against the said
judgment and decree passed by the trial court on 9th Novem-
ber, 1984. By the judgment and decree dated 20th March, 1987
the learned District Judge allowed the said appeal holding,
inter alia, that by displaying the advertisement board the
appellant had not caused any material alteration of the
premises and display of such advertisements hoardings did
not amount to parting with possession of the roof of the
premises. In respect of default, on an analysis of the dates
of payment it was held that there was no default in payment
of rent for six months. The learned Trial Judge had held
that the default was the first default, therefore, there
could be no decree for eviction on this ground. So even if
the learned District Judge would have affirmed the findings
of the Trial Court on the issue of default, there could not
have been a decree in the said suit on the ground of de-
fault. The plaintiff-respondent preferred an appeal before
the High Court. The said appeal was allowed only on the
issue of parting with possession holding that the display of
the board amounted to parting with possession of the prem-
ises. Accordingly, the decree for eviction under section
13(1)(e) of the Rajasthan Premises (Control of Rent and
Eviction) Act, 1950, hereinafter mentioned as the ’Act’, was
passed.
772
Section 13 of the said Act deals with the grounds for evic-
tion of tenants. By clause (a), sub-section (1) of the said
section provides that out withstanding anything contained in
any law or contract, no Court shall pass any decree, or make
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any order, in favour of a landlord, evicting the tenant so
long as he is ready and willing to pay rent therefore to the
full extent allowable under the said Act unless it is satis-
fied, inter alia, that the tenant had neither paid nor
tendered the amount of rent due from him for six months.
Sub-clause (b) of subsection (1) of the said section makes
the tenant liable to eviction if he has willfully caused or
permitted to be caused substantial damage to the premises.
Clause (e) of sub-section (1) of section 13 under which the
decree in question, in the instant case, was passed provides
as follows:
"(e) that the tenant has assigned, sub-let or
otherwise parted with the possession of, the
whole or any part of the premises without the
permission of the landlord; or"
as mentioned hereinbefore, the decree in this case was
passed by the High Court under section 13(1)(e) of the Act
on the ground that the appellant had parted with possession.
The High Court in the judgment under appeal has noted that
the plaintiff-appellant had not disputed that the advertise-
ment board was installed on the roof of the shop. The High
Court noted that the appellant has also not disputed that he
was getting the rent for this board and the document which
was tendered viz., Exhibit 6 showed that the Paramount
Services had written a letter to the landlord-respondent
Gulam Abbas herein and the same had been accepted by the
appellant. The said Ex. 6 read as follows:
"Shri Gulam Abbas Bhalam Wala, Udaipur.
Dear Sir,
We wish to write that we have taken the site
for putting up commercial board on the terrace
of the shop of Saran Optician, Udaipur. This
site is with us for the last 1/2 year.
Yours faithfully,
Paramount Serv-
ices,
Sd/-
Partner.’’
773
The High Court was of the view, that perusal of the document
indicated that Paramount Services had installed that board
on the terrace of the shop and the site was with them for
the last six months. The High Court further held that it
transpired that the terrace of that shop had been parted
away to the Paramount Services for installing the advertise-
ment board. The High Court proceeded on the basis that Ex.
6, mentioned hereinbefore, showed that the site was with the
Paramount Services and it has been admitted by the tenant-
appellant that he had charged the money for leasing out this
site to the Paramount Services. According to the High Court
two factors were relevant in this case: (1) whether the site
was with the Paramount Services for the last six months and
(2) that the defendant had admitted that he had received the
rent for this. The High Court referred to the deposition of
D .W. 1 Gopal Saran which was as follows:
"USS BOARD PAR PRACHAR KE TEEN SALL KE PARDRAH
SAU RUPAYE MAIN LETA THA JISMEN PAINTING AUR
BOARD AUR LIKHAVAT KA KHARCH MERA THA"
According to the High Court, these two factors established
that the defendant had parted with part of the terrace to
Paramount Services. This according to the High Court, was
wrong as it had been clearly prohibited in the lease-deed
Ex. 1, Clause 3 reads as under:
"DUKAN KO LIPA POTA SAPPH ACHHI HALAT MEN
RAKHUNGA AUR BAGAIR LIKHIT IJAZAT AAPKE KOI
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MAJID TAMIR NA KRAUNGA AUR NA DUSRE KISSI AUR
KO MUNTKIL KAR SAKUNGA. MAIN KHUD DUKAN PAR
BAITHUNGA."
The High Court found that the tenant-appellant had
mentioned that they would not part with the possession,
notwithstanding that the tenant-appellant had parted with
the possession which was apparent, according to the High
Court, from Ex. 6 and the statement of D.W. 1 that he had
charged rent for installing this board. These two factors
went to show, according to the High Court, that the defend-
ant had parted with the possession of the part of the ter-
race so as to enable the Paramount Services to stall the
board in the premises. The Court accepted the submission on
behalf of the respondent-landlord that there was parting
with possession and the landlord was entitled to a decree
for eviction under section 13(1)(e) of the Act. It may be
mentioned that two other submissions were urged before the
High
774
Court on behalf of the landlord-respondent, namely, that the
rent was tendered and that when it was refused by the land-
lord, the tenant had deposited the rent in the Court under
section 19-A of the Act had not been established. There was
also the finding on the issue of material alteration and
that was also not established by the respondent-landlord.
But the High Court, in view of this finding under section
13(1)(e) of the Act, as set out hereinbefore, found it
unnecessary to go into those reasons and passed a decree for
eviction. Aggrieved thereby, as mentioned hereinbefore, the
tenant has come up in appeal to this Court.
We find a certain amount of confusion as to what was the
actual state of affairs. The pleadings of the plaintiff-
respondent, the landlord in connection with the allegations
of parting with possession are set out in paragraphs 5, 6
and 8 of the plaint and these have been answered by the
appellant in paragraphs 5, 6, 8 and 9 of the written state-
ment. It may be appropriate at this stage to set out the
same both in Hindi as well as in English. Paragraph 5 is as
follows:
"Hindi Original:
"5. YEH KI PRATIVADI NE BINA VADI KO
POOCHHE AVAM VADI KI ANUMATI PRAPAT KIYE BINA
VIVADGRAST DUKAN KE UPAR CHHAT PAR ZITAR
TRAKTAR KA BOARD LAGA DIYA HAl JO CHHAT PAR
LOHE KE ANGLE MAIN FIX KIYA HUVA HAI."
"In English:
"5. Without permission and consent of the
plaintiff the defendant has put up the board
of Jitter Tractors on the roof of the disputed
shop in question which is fixed on iron angles
on the roof.’"
Paragraph 6 reads as under:
"In English:
"6. The defendant has, without the permission
and consent of the plaintiff given to the
advertising agency the Board which has been
displayed on the roof of the disputed shop
taken by the Defendant from the Plaintiff on
rent, in
775
respect of which the Defendant had no right.’
Hindi Original:
"6. YEH KI BOARD JO VIVADGRAST DUKAN JO KI
PRATIVADI KE PASS VADI KI AUR SE KIRAYE PAR
HAl, KI CHHAT PAR LAG RAHA HAl VAH VIGYAPAN
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(ADVERTISEMENT) KA BOARD HAI JISKO PRATIVADI
NE VADI KI ANUMATI PRAPAT KIYE BINA ADVERTIS-
ING AGENCY KO LAGANE DE DIYA HAl JISKA KI
PRATIVADI KO SWATEY KOYEE ADHIKAR NAHIN HAl.’
Paragraph 8 as reads as under:
In English
"8. The defendant has no right to place the
Board of the Advertising Agency on the roof of
the shop without permission of the plaintiff."
Hindi Original:
"8. YEH KI PARTIVADI KE KO BINA VADI SE
POCCHHE DUKAN KI CHHAT PAR ADVERTISING AGENCY
KO BOARD LAGANE DENE KA KOYEE ADHIKAR NAHIN
HAI."
Paragraph 5 of the Written Statement reads as follows:
In English:
"5. With regard to paragraph 5 of the Plaint
the defendant states that the Defendant had
displayed a sign board on the roof of the
disputed shop but it is false to state that
any angle has been fixed or embedded on the
wall of the shop or of the roof or on the
floor of the roof. The sign board has been
placed without damaging the walls or the floor
of the roof in any manner whatsoever. The
angles have not been embedded. In putting up
this sign board, there was no necessity of
obtaining written permission of the plaintiff.
It was within the full knowledge of the Plain-
tiff and the Plaintiff never objected to the
same, which means the
776
plaintiff had consented to the same."
Hindi Original:
"5. VAD PATRA KE PAIRA 5 KE LIYE NIVEDAN HAI
KE PRATIVADI NE EK SIGN BOARD VADGRAST
DUKAN KI CHHAT PAR LAGAYA HAl PAR YEH MITHYA
HAl KI DUKAN KI ATHVA CHHAT KI DIWAR ATHVA
FARSH MAIN ANGLE LAGAYE HO VAH SIGN BOARD BINA
DUKAN KI DIWARON ATHVA CHHAT KE FARSH KO KISI
BHANTI HANI PAHUCHAE HUVE LAGAYA GAYA HAl.
GADA NAHIN GAYA HAI. IS SIGN BOARD LAGANE MAIN
VADI KO LIKHIT ANUMATI LENA AVASHAK NAHIN THA,
VIASE VADI KE PURAN GYAN MAIN YEH BOARD LAGAYA
THA TATHA AISA KARNE MAIN VADI NE KABHI APATTI
NAHIN UTHAYEE, ARTHAT VADI KI AWAKRITI NAHI
HAI."
Para 6 of the written Statement reads as follows:
"In English:
"The allegations in paragraph 6 of the Plaint
that the Board belonged to any other advertis-
ing agency is false. the defendant himself has
placed the said board in the normal course of
his carrying on the business. The defendant is
using the said disputed shop on his own right
for the purposes of carrying on his normal
business."
Hindi Original:
"6. VAD PATRA KA PAIRA 6 MAIN YEH MITHYA HAI
ICE BOARD KISI ADVERTISING AGENCY KA LAGA HUVA
HAI. PRATIVADI SWAM NE VAH BOARD LAGAYA HAl
TATHA APNA SADHARAN VAVASAYE KARTE HUVE LAGAYA
HAl. TATHA VADGRAST DUKAN KA PANE SADHARAN
VAVSAYE MAIN HI UPYOG KAR RAHA HAl AVAM SADHI-
KAR KAR RAHA HAI."
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Para 8 of the Written Statement is as follows:
777
In English:
"The Contents of para 8 of the Plaint are not
admitted. The Defendant has not allowed any-
body to put up the Board, but he has himself
put up the same."
Hindi Original:
"8. VAD PATRA KA PAIRA 8 SAVIKAR NAHIN HAl.
PRATIVADI NE BOARD, KISI KO LAGANE NAHIN DIYA
HAl APITU SWAM LAGAYA HAl."
Paragraph 9 of the Written Statement is as follows:
"In English:
"9. The defendant denies all the allegations
in paragraph 9 of the Plaint. In particular
the defendant states that the plaintiff has no
right to bring the present suit of eviction
which has been filed on false grounds. The
defendant has neither committed default in
payment of rent nor he has allowed anybody to
put up board on the shop, nor he has parted
with possession of the lease-hold property or
any part thereof to anybody. The defendant is
in full control and possession (of the disput-
ed shop). It may be mentioned that in the
plaint the plaintiff has not alleged any act
of sub-letting by the defendant."
Hindi Original
"9. VAD PATRA KA PAIRA 9 SARVATHA ASWIKAR HAl.
VADI KO KOYEE SWATAV NAHIN HAl KI VAH MITHYA
ADHARO PAR DUKAN KHALI KARVAYE NA TO PARTIVADI
NE KOYEE CHOOK KI HAl, KIRAYA DENE MAIN UAR NA
HI USNE DUKAN PAR KISI KO BOARD LAGANE DIYA
HAl AUR NA HI KOYEE MUKTI BHOG KIRAYE LI HUEE
SAMPATI KA PARTIVADI KE KISI BHI BHAG KA KISI
KO BHI HYA HAl. VAH PRATIVADI KE POORAN BHUGTI
BHOG MAIN HAl."
At the initial hearing before the trial court, namely,
before the remand the plaintiff got himself examined as
witness and the evidence
778
of plaintiff in examination-in-chief was recorded on
6.4.1979. After recording the said evidence, the trial court
recorded that the counsel for the defendant was absent and
thereupon closed the case, without, however, entering into
the question as to why the endorsement was made. Against the
decree of the trial court, the first appeal was filed before
the learned District Judge and as stated hereinbefore, at
the final hearing of the appeal, the first Appellate Court
held that the defendant was not given adequate opportunity
to either cross-examine the plaintiff or to adduce his
evidence and on that ground the order of remand was made.
The plaintiff-landlord, however, did not say in
Examination-in-chief that the board was fixed by anyone else
than the defendant or that there was parting with possession
of the roof of the shop room or any part thereof or by
putting the said angles in the wail, which was again not
admitted as correct by the appellant, any material altera-
tion was made. However, a photograph of the board was pro-
duced by the plaintiff and the same was marked as Ex. 2.
After the case was remanded, the trial court directed the
plaintiff to appear before the court and to subject himself
to cross-examination by the defendant and also to produce
his evidence, if any. In spite of several opportunities the
plaintiff did not appear before the Court and submit himself
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to cross-examination. As the plaintiff neither submitted
himself for further cross-examination nor produced any other
evidence or witness in support of the plaint the defendant
led defence evidence and got himself examined. The English
translation of the said evidence of the defendant-appellant
was filed on behalf of the appellant at the heating of this
appeal. From the said evidence it would appear, he had
stated, inter alia, as follows:
"(a) I have affixed the Board on this shop for
advertisement. The said Board is affixed in
cement pillars (should be pot) and for affix-
ing the said boards neither the roof nor the
walls of the shop were dug;
(b) The Board is affixed permanently and I
advertise the business of parties and get its
payment. I have not parted with possession of
any portion of the roof of the shop to anyone.
In 1974, I advertised for Bhatia at the Board
in which I have written that I have zeator I
have strength, a picture tractor was also made
there I used to take Rs. 1500 for 3 years for
advertisement out of which painting of Board,
writing expenditure was mine.
779
CROSS EXAMINATION:
(a) It is wrong to say that the Board is fixed
on the roof of the shop. I do not do business
of tractor, but I deal in advertising busi-
ness. Besides this I maintain 14 others boards
in the city. The above board is 10 ft. x 4 ft.
At present Hanuman Vanaspati is advertised
through the Board which was for the last 2
months prior to the Board was affixed.
(b) 14 Boards of Paramount Services are fixed
prior to the year 1988 which are being main-
tained by me. Ex. 6 is the letter of the said
service. I charge M/s Paramount Services
Rs.500 per year."
On the basis of the aforesaid, it was contended that it
was the definite case of the defendant in Examination-in-
chief, that the board belonged to him and that the defendant
was carrying on his own business and that there was no
dispute as to the same by the plaintiff. It may be mentioned
that the plaintiff had not subjected himself to crossexami-
nation in spite of the order of the Court after the remand,
therefore, it would not be safe to rely on the examination-
in-chief recorded which was not subjected to cross-examina-
tion before the remand was made. If that is so, it will
appear that there is no evidence of the plaintiff in respect
of allegations in the plaint. This position appears estab-
lished from the facts on record. When the plaintiff appeared
for evidence in rebuttal he could have been cross-examined
on these points. It was submitted that in rebuttal the
plaintiff had stated only with regard to the default in
payment of rent but the Plaintiff had not chosen to support
his plaint case, before the defendant went to the witness
box. There was no question of cross-examining the plaintiff
travelling beyond the evidence of the plaintiff given in
examinationin--chief and thereby giving an opportunity to
make out a case in crossexamination. It, therefore, appears
from the pleadings and the evidence that the respondent did
not make out any case of the appellant parting with posses-
sion by putting up the hoarding. In examinationin-chief also
he did not make out such a case and on the contrary his case
was that it was that it was the defendent-appellant who had
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put up the hoarding. The plaintiff did not allege that the
defendant-appellant was not carrying on also advertising
business. It was submitted on behalf of the appellant that
having refused to submit to crossexamination the plaintiff
has made the evidence in examination-in-chief non est. It
was the case of the defendant that he was carrying on
780
the business of advertisement by putting up the hoardings of
different parties. The board was made by him, paintings and
writings were also done by him and for putting the hoarding
the charged from his customers. Therefore, it appears to us
that there are no clear findings that anybody was given
lease or anybody was given the right to put up the hoarding
and there was parting of possession in favour of anyone
else. It was, however, argued that even if the appellant had
put the advertisement board hoarding he was earning a huge
amount by the same and this was a factor which would indi-
cate that there was parting of possession by him. It was,
however, submitted on behalf of the appellant that when the
shop had been let out to the defendantappellant for carrying
on business it was the fight of the defendantappellant to
carry on the business. It was legally permissible to use the
said shop room and also use the roof thereof and earn as
much as could be done and as such it is not parting with
possession.
In the premises, it appears to us that for the purpose
of disposal of this appeal it is necessary to consider: (i)
whether the appellant was carrying on his own advertisement
business? (ii) Even if so, whether such an act can be termed
as parting with possession of the roof or any part thereof
by the appellant in favour of the advertiser because by
putting up such hoarding he is getting a return otherwise?
(iii) The next question that arises is that if it is found
that it was not a business of the appellant to carry on the
advertising but the appellant had allowed up advertising
agency to put up its advertising hoarding, then would such
an act amount to parting with possession of the roof or any
part thereof by the appellant? (iv) In any event, can any
case or cause of action for the suit filed on 1974 on the
basis of Ex. 6, namely, the letter dated January 20, 1977 of
M/s. Paramount Services be maintained?
On behalf of appellant it was contended by Shri Tapash
Ray, counsel for the appellant, that the judgment and order
of the High Court could not be sustained and in the facts
and circumstances of the case, there could not be any evic-
tion order passed against the appellant by virtue of section
13(1)(e) of the Act. Undisputedly the appellant was a ten-
ant. Therefore, in terms of Section 13(1) of the Act, not-
withstanding anything contained in any law, no decree for
eviction can be passed except on the grounds mentioned in
the said section. To sustain any order of eviction, it must
be rounded only on one of the grounds mentioned in the said
section. Therefore, it has to be found out whether the
respondent had been able to make out any of the grounds
mentioned in Section 13 of the Act.
781
It was contended on behalf of the appellant that the
advertisement board had been put up by the appellant as part
of his business and he had charged certain expenses in
respect of the same and that, it was urged, was the finding
of the courts below and the High Court was in error in
holding that there was any parting with the possession. It
was submitted that simply the display of advertisement board
on the disputed premises did not amount to parting with
possession of the premises. The High Court was wrong, it was
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urged, in accepting the plea of the respondent of parting
with possession only on the basis of the letter dated 20th
January, 1977 (Ex. 6). The learned District Judge in the
first appeal had accepted that there was no parting of
possession. The High Court, on the other hand, in the judg-
ment in appeal relying on Ex. 6 came to the conclusion that
the appellant was getting rent for this board and the appel-
lant had accepted document Ex. 6 which Paramount Services
had written to the appellant. The High Court was wrong, it
was submitted on behalf of the appellant, that Ex. 6 clearly
showed that Paramount Services had installed this board on
the terrace of the shop and the shop was with them for six
months. The learned District Judge on an analysis of the
evidence came to the conclusion that there was no parting
with possession. The High Court on an analysis of the same
evidence came to the conclusion that there was. It is,
therefore, necessary as the learned District Judge did, to
consider what was the evidence before the trial court. The
plaintiff had given a statement before the trial court that
a board of Paramount Advertising Agency was fixed over the
disputed shop which was installed without asking him and
that was of the size of 10’ x 8’. At the time of filing the
suit there was board of Zitter and now it is of Maharaj
Vanaspati. After making holes in the wall, it had been fixed
with cement with the help of iron angles. On the other hand,
the defendant, Gopal Sharan, had stated that he had fixed
the board of advertisement over the disputed shop which was
fixed with cement by boring holes. For fixing the board the
walls had not been dug. The board had been fixed on a tempo-
rary place on which he used to make advertisement of the
business of the parties on payment. It was the definite case
in defence of the tenant that roof of the disputed shop has
not been given to anyone. In cross-examination, he admitted
that in 1974 advertisement of Shri Bhatia was done on the
board and for the advertisement of board he took Rs. 1500
for three years. The expenses towards the painting and
fixing the board and writing were met by him. The board of
his shop was fixed below the front of his shop in the name
of Sharan Optician, the photo of which is Ex. 2. The tenant
had given the receipt of Rs. 1500 to Bhatia. It was the
definite case of the tenant that he dealt with the business
of advertisement and there were 14 more boards in
782
the city run by him. It was stated that he took Rs.500 per
year for 15 boards from Paramount Services. In the photo-
graph, Ex. 2, one board of the defendant was fixed in the
name of Sharan Optician on the disputed shop and above it
there was advertisement board which was of a tractor and
fixed in front of the roof. The tenant had clearly stated
that while fixing the board he did not bore the roof and the
same had been fixed with the help of cement. On the other
hand, it was stated by the landlord that it was fixed in the
wall with the help of angles but this fact has not been
supported by any other evidence. The learned District Judge
came to the conclusion that the board was fixed to the front
of the side of the roof of the disputed shop. The roof of
the disputed shop had not been bored nor any holes had been
made in the wall. In these circumstances, the learned Dis-
trict Judge came to the conclusion that there was no altera-
tion of the premises or damage. The learned DistriCt Judge
considered the question and the arguments that the defend-
ant-appellant was not doing the work of advertisement and he
had the business of spectacles and he had let out the space
on rent for fixing the board on the roof and that he had got
a board fixed there from which it was clear that he had
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parted with the possession of the space on the roof and he
had further given it on rent. Emphasis was laid on behalf of
the respondent-landlord on Ex. 6. Ex. 6, it may be men-
tioned, is subsequent to the accrual to the cause of action.
The suit was filed in 1974. Ex. 6 is dated 20th January,
1977. Considering the aforesaid contentions and the position
in law, the learned District Judge came to the conclusion
that by Ex. 6 no portion of the disputed shop was given to
the exclusive possession of the advertising agency or the
defendant had not divested itself of any part of the roof.
Simply by displaying the advertisement board on any portion
of the roof, it could not be said that the possession had
been delivered to the company to which the board belonged,
according to the learned District Judge. He further held
that the tenant continued to be in possession thereof. In
such circumstances, it cannot be proved on the basis of the
record, the learned District Judge came to the conclusion,
that the tenant had parted with the possession.
In this connection, it may be appropriate to refer to
the deposition of Gopal Saran, the defendant-appellant
before the trial court. He had stated that he had put up his
board on the shop for advertisement purpose. The board had
been put in cement pillars and by putting up the said board
neither the roof nor the wall had been dug. The board it was
stated was permanently fixed and the tenant asserted that:
"I advertise the business of the parties from time to time
on payment. I have not parted with the possession of the
shop or of the roof or any
783
part thereof." The tenant further stated that in "1974 I
advertised for Bhatia on this board in which I had written
that I have zeator I have strength, a picture tractor was
also made there. I used to take Rs. 1500 for three years for
advertisement out of which painting of board, writing ex-
penditure was mine. The board of my shop as Sharan Opticals
is fixed on the front of the shop". It appears on an analy-
sis of the evidence that the correct position in law, as
established before the learned District Judge, was that the
tenant used to carry on apart from opticals business, the
business of advertising and for that he used to charge in
the manner indicated therein. He used to charge certain
amount of money. The question is whether by so doing, the
tenantappellant has assigned, sub-let or otherwise parted
with the possession of the whole or any part of the premises
without the permission of the landlord. It is undisputed
that whatever has happened has happened without the permis-
sion of the landlord.
On the facts found, it cannot be said or even argued
that there was any assignment by the tenant, "Assignment",
it has been stated in Black’s Law Dictionary, Special Deluxe
Ed., p. 106, "is a transfer or making over to another of the
whole of any property, real or personal, in possession or in
action, or of any estate or right therein". It has further
been stated as "The transfer by a party of all its rights to
some kind of property, usually intangible property such as
rights in a lease, mortgage, agreement of sale or partner-
ship." It has to be examined whether there was sub-letting
or otherwise parting with possession in terms of Sec.
13(1)(e) of the Act.
In this connection, it may be appropriate to refer to
the deposition of the tenant, wherein he had stated:
"USS BOARD PAR PRACHAR KE TEEN SALL KE PANDRAH
SAU RUPAYE MAIN LETA THA JISMEN PAINTING AUR
BOARD AUR LIKHAVAT KA KHARCH MERE THA."
The above, in our opinion, indicates that the board was
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used for publicity and paintings and other expenses were of
the tenant. Therefore, it was the tenant who was carrying on
the business. The learned trial Judge has noted the evidence
on this. The learned trial Judge in his judgment at page 96
of the paper-book had observed that the defendant in his
written statement had admitted about the fixation of sign-
board on the shop. But the board had been displayed by not
fixing anything on the wall or any angles on the roof. The
plaintiff-landlord
784
had not submitted any evidence but the defendant-tenant in
his evidence had admitted that he had fixed the board in the
wails of the cement which was fixed permanently, and he
fixed the board time to time during the course of his busi-
ness of advertisement. The defendant further admitted that
in 1974, he had advertised the board of Bhatia in which he
had written that he had a tractor and the picture of tractor
was made on the board. These in the learned trial Judge’s
Judgment as well as the deposition of the tenant-appellant,
in our opinion, conclusively, establish that it was the
tenant who was carrying on the business of advertisement by
advertising the advertisements of different traders. If that
is the position, then in this situation, can it be said that
there was either any assignment, sub-letting or otherwise
parting with possession.
Shri Tapash Ray, counsel for the appellant submitted
that there was not. Shri Rajinder Sachhar, on behalf of the
landlord submitted that there was. Reliance was placed by
Shri Tapash Ray on the observations of Farwell, J. of Eng-
land in Stening v. Abrahams, [1931] 1 L.R. Chancery Division
470. There the Chancery Division of the High Court of Eng-
land was concerned in that case whereby the lessee’s cove-
nant was not to "part with the possession of the demised
premises or any part thereof’ and it was held that it was
broken only if the lessee entirely excluded himself from the
legal possession of the part of the premises. In the facts
of that case a seven years’ exclusive licence to erect an
advertisement board against the front wall of the lessee’s
house followed by its erection was held not to be a breach
of the above covenant. Farwell, J. in his judgment at page
473 of the report considered the question as to whether the
defendants had broken the covenant against parting with
possession of any part of the premises. The plaintiffs
therein had stated that by giving the A.A. Company "the
right to use the front of the wall for an advertisement
hoarding", the defendants had "parted with the possession of
that front and 3-inch stratum of air outside it." The
learned Judge noted that it was difficult to define the
meaning of parting with possession generally. It must always
be a question of fact and the construction of the particular
agreement in each case and it cannot be determined by look-
ing at the document alone. The learned Judge after disclaim-
ing any attempt to define the meaning of parting with pos-
session generally and reiterating that it must always be a
question of fact and construction of the particular argument
in each case observed in an instructive passage at page 473
of the report as follows:
"But in my view a lessee cannot be said to
part with the
785
possession of any part of the premises unless
his agreement with his licensee wholly ousts
him from the legal possession of that part. If
there is anything in the nature of a right of
concurrent user there is no parting with
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possession. Retention of a key may be a nega-
tive indicium, and the authorities on the
whole show that nothing short of a complete
exclusion of the grantor or licensor from the
legal possession for all purposes amounts to a
parting with possession. The fact that the
agreement is in form a licence is immaterial,
as a licence may give the licensees exclusive
a right to the legal possession as to amount
to a parting with possession.
How does the present licence exclude
the defendants from any part of the premises?
It no doubt gives the licensees the exclusive
right to use the wall for an advertisement
hoarding. No one, including the defendants,
can use the wail for that purpose. On the
other hand the defendants remain to a large
extent in possession of the wall."
It was contended in that case that the front of the wall
was wholly in the control of the licensees. That is not
wholly the true view, Justice Farwell observed. The right of
the licensees to put up their advertisement hoarding did not
prevent the defendants from using the wall so long as they
did not interfere with their licensees. Merely giving the
licensees a right to use the wall for a particular purpose
was not parting with possession within the covenant, in that
case it was held.
On the other hand, on behalf of the landlord Sree Ra-
jinder Sacchar, referred to the decision of the King’s Bench
Division of the High Court of England in Gee v. Hazleton and
Others, [1932] 1 King’s Bench Division 179. There a statuto-
ry tenant of a dwelling house and land had granted a licence
for seven years at an annual rent to a bill-posting company
to erect advertisement hoarding on part of the land. The
company was granted free and uninterrupted access to "the
advertising position" for bill-posting, etc., purposes. It
was held in appeal from the County Court decision that
although the document did not constitute the grant of a
sub-lease, but only of a licence, the said part of the
tenant’s premises had ceased to be within the protection of
the Rent Restriction Act because it was used for the busi-
ness purposes by the other statutory tenant of the whole and
the landlord was entitled to possession of that part. It may
be stated that the principle of the aforesaid decision of
Gee v. Hazleton (supra) is not quite
786
relevant for the present purpose. In that case, the subject
matter was a dwelling house with huge land around it let out
for residential purpose. There the tenant had let out a part
of the land to an advertising agency for carrying on commer-
cial activities and the tenant was charging an amount which
was by far more than the total amount which she was paying
as rent for the entire premises to the landlord. This factor
was taken with the main factor that the portion of the land
given to the advertising agency in that case was a grant of
licence by the tenant in favour of the advertising agency
giving the advertising agency exclusive possession in that
land to the exclusion of the tenant. Therefore, in that
case, the Court held that there was parting with legal
possession in favour of the advertising agency not because
of realization of amount by the tenant more than the rent
paid by her but really because on the fact it was found that
exclusive possession was given to the said advertising
agency of a portion of the residential unit to use for
commercial activity. In that case, possession given to the
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advertising agency was exclusive with the right to include
advertising agency and also the right to exclude others
including the tenant herself. The proposition of law laid
down in Stening v. Abrahams (supra) was approved in Gee v.
Hazleton (supra). In this connection, a reference may be
made to the observations of Lord Justice Scrutton at page
185 of the report, where the learned Lord Justice had ob-
served as follows:
"I can conceive in some advertising cases,
cases of advertising boards, that different
views may be taken when the advertising sta-
tion consists of a board put on a dwelling-
house. There the paramount use of the wall is
as the wall of the dwelling-house; and there
is also a difficulty in defining what one gets
possession of when the possession granted is
that of an advertising station attached to a
wall. Here there is no difficulty of that
sort."
Lord Justice Slesser at page 192 of the report referring to
the Stening v. Abrahams (supra) noted the view that the
exclusive right to legal possession could amount to parting
of possession. It is interesting to note in that case before
the court Mr. A.T. Denning, as Lord Denning then was, had
appeared for the landlord and had contended that if the
defendant had herself used this portion of the premises for
bill posting she would have been within the protection of
the Rent Restriction Acts but the defendant had let it for
business purposes to some one else and as such she would not
be protected as to that portion. That is not the position
here. Furthermore, under the Rajasthan Act, such kind of
user does not take away tenant’s rights. Under the said Act,
787
the tenant must be guilty either of an assignment or sub-
letting or otherwise parting with possession either of the
whole or any part of the business without the permission of
the landlord.
In this, there was no assignment. Sub-letting means
transfer of an exclusive right to enjoy the property in
favour of the third party. In this connection, reference may
be made to the decision of this Court in Shalimar Tar
Products v. H.C. Sharma & Others, [1988] 1 SCC 70 where it
was held that to constitute a sub-letting, there must be a
parting of legal possession, i.e., possession with the right
to include and also right to exclude others and whether in a
particular case there was sub-letting was substantially a
question of fact. In that case, a reference was made at page
77 of the report to the Treatise of Foa on Landlord and
Tenant, 6th Edition, at page 323, for the proposition that
the mere act of letting other persons into possession by the
tenant, and permitting them to use the premises for their
own purposes, is not so long as he retains the legal posses-
sion himself, a breach of covenant. In paragraph 17 of the
report, it was observed that parting of the legal possession
means possession with the right to include and also right to
exclude others. In the last mentioned case, the observations
of the Madras High Court in Gundalpalli Rangamannar Chetty
v. Desu Rangiah, AIR 1954 Madras 182 were approved by this
Court in which the legal position in Jackson v. Simons,
[1923] 1 Ch. 373 were relied upon. The Madras High Court had
also relied on a judgment of Scrutton L.J. in Chaplin v.
Smith, [1926] 1 K.B. 198 at page 211 of the report where it
was said:
"He did not assign, nor did he underlet. He
was constantly on the premises himself and
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kept the key of them. He did business of his
own as well as business of the company. In my
view he allowed the company to use the prem-
ises while he himself remained in possession
of them."
This position was also accepted in Vishwa Nath v. Chaman
Lal, AIR 1975 Delhi 117 wherein it was observed that parting
with possession is understood as parting with legal posses-
sion by one in favour of the other by giving him an exclu-
sive possession to the ouster of the grantor. If the grantor
had retained legal possession with him it was not a case of
parting with possession. In this connection, reference may
be made to the observations of this Court in Madras Banga-
lore Transport Co. (West) v. Inder Singh and Others, [1986]
3 SCC 62 wherein the observations of the Delhi High Court
had been approved. The concept of parting with possession in
private contracts between
788
the landlord and tenant was also known in India and it means
parting with legal possession to the exclusion of the gran-
tor himself. In this connection, the observations of this
Court in Dr. Vijay Kumar and Others v. M/s Raghbir Singh
Anokh Singh, [1973] 2 SCC 597 may be referred to. There the
Rent Controller had found that the appellants had parti-
tioned the shop in question in two portions. The two por-
tions were demarcated by a wooden partition wall. In one
portion there was the clinic of the first appellant land in
the other portion, the other appellant was carrying on the
business of sale and purchase of motor cars. The wooden
partition wail had divided the single shop into two parts so
that there were now two doors, one in the portion in the
occupation of the first appellant, and the other portion in
occupation of the other appellant. One could not go directly
from one portion to the other on account of the wooden
partition wail. The first appellant locked his portion. On
these findings, the Rent Controller had held that the second
and third appellants were in exclusive possession of their
portions. Hence he came to the conclusion that the first
appellant had parted with the possession of his portion to
them. The Rent Controller did not accept the plea of the
appellants that the business which was being carried on in
their portion was the joint business of the appellants. The
first appellant was assessed to income tax. He had never
shown the income from the motor business in his income-tax
returns. The appellants did not produce the account-books.
The Rent Controller accordingly held that the plea of joint
business had not been established. It was argued before this
court that the first appellant being the father of the other
two appellants established them in business and permitted
them to occupy a half portion of the shop for that purpose.
As a father, it was submitted, it was natural for him to
establish his sons in life. In short, the argument was that
the second and third appellants were occupying the half
portion with his permission. This Court held that that was a
plausible argument but they were unable to entertain this at
a later stage in the Supreme Court and further held that the
new plea was not a pleading of law but was a plea in fact.
In B.M. Lall (dead) by L.Rs. v. Dunlop Rubber & Co.
Ltd., [1968] 1 SCR 23 a distinction between the lease and
licence was emphasised. See the observations at page 27 of
the report. There was in the facts and circumstances of the
case no grant of interest in land in favour of the advertis-
er.
In Rajbir Kaur v. M/s. S. Chokosiri and Co. (AIR 1988 SC
1845) it was emphasised that it was the operative intention
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which is important.
789
In Shri Dipak Banerjee v. Smt. Lilabati Chakroborty, 4
Judgment Today 1987 3 SC 454 it was reiterated that in order
to prove tenancy or sub-tenancy two ingredients had to be
established, firstly, the tenant must have exclusive right
of possession or interest in the premises or part of the
premises in question and secondly, the right must be in lieu
of payment of some compensation or rent. In this case, the
tenant or the sub-tenant did not have any exclusive posses-
sion or interest in the building or in any part of the
building nor was that right in lieu of any payment or any
compensation, on the basis of the facts as indicated herein-
before.
From the aforesaid, it appears to us that the question
whether there is a tenancy or licence or parting with pos-
session in a particular case must depend upon the quality of
occupation given to the licensee or the transferee. Mere
occupation is not sufficient, in our opinion, to infer
either sub-tenancy or parting with possession. In Associated
Hotel of India Ltd., Delhi v. S.B. Sardar Ranjit Singh,
[1968] 2 SCR 548 it was held on the question whether the
occupier of a separate apartment in a premises is a licensee
or a tenant, the test is whether the landlord retained
control over the apartment. Similarly, it was held by this
Court in Smt. Krishnawati v. Shri Hans Raj, [1974] 1 SCC289
that sub-letting like letting, is a particular type of
demise of immovable property and is distinct from permissive
user like that of a licensee. If two persons live together
in a house as husband and wife and one of them who owns the
house allows the other to carry on business in a part of it,
it will be in the absence of any other evidence, a rash
inference to draw that the owners has let out that part of
the premises. Sree Sachhar sought to argue that in consider-
ing the question of eviction it has to be borne in mind that
the purpose of the Rent Restriction Act is to protect dwell-
ing house and not to protect a person who is not the resi-
dent of dwelling house but is making money by sub-letting
it.
In our opinion, however, having regard to the quality,
nature and degree of the occupation of the transferee and
the facts found, it cannot be said that either there was any
assignment or sub-letting or parting with possession to such
a degree by permitting the hoarding that the tenant had lost
interest. He was using this premises for his benefit. Unless
the tenant has infarcted the prohibition of the Act, he is
not liable to be evicted. The case rests on the express
provision of the Act and there is no scope to explore the
latent purpose of the Act.
In the premises, the High Court’s order of eviction
cannot be upheld. As no question of non-payment has been
found by the trial
790
court and the learned District Judge and there is no finding
of any material alteration, in our opinion, the order for
eviction cannot be sustained. The appeal, therefore, must be
allowed.
The appeal is allowed and the order for eviction is set
aside. In the facts and the circumstances of the case,
however, the parties will pay and bear their own costs.
N.V.K. Appeal al-
lowed.
791
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