Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
TAYABALI JAFERBHAI TANKIWALA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S. ASHA & CO. AND ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
24/09/1969
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
SHELAT, J.M.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1971 AIR 102 1970 SCR (3) 554
1970 SCC (1) 46
ACT:
Landlord and Tenant--Notice terminating tenancy--Landlord
accepting rent--Second notice of termination treating the
tenancy as subsisting--Suit for ejectment treating the
second notice as non est--Transfer of Property Act, 1882, s.
113 illustration (b).
HEADNOTE:
A landlord gave notice to his tenant, under s. 12 of the
Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act,
1947, demanding arrears of rent due and also terminating the
tenancy on the ground that the tenant was a habitual
defaulter. The arrears of rent claimed in the notice were
paid after the expiry of one month mentioned in the notice.
The landlord gave a second notice calling upon the tenant to
deliver vacant possession of the premises which was stated
to be in his occupation as monthly tenant. In this notice
another ground, viz., that the premises were required far
personal use and occupation, was mentioned., The tenant,
thereafter, tendered the amount of arrears then due, but the
same was rejected. The landlord brought a suit for ejectment
on the ground of default in payment of arrears of rent and
for personal use and occupation. He amended the plaint by
adding that the first notice was given to the tenant
demanding arrears of rent. The Trial Judge dismissed the
suit holding that by serving a second notice .,and by
various acts and conduct the landlord showed a clear
intention to waive and condone the ground of default in
payment of arrears contained in the first notice and that
the premises were not reasonably and bona fide required by
the landlord for his own use. The Appellate Court held
the first notice invalid on different grounds and a petition
under Art. 227’before the High Court was dismissed in
limine. In appeal to this Court it was contended that since
the arrears claimed in the first notice were paid after the
expiry of the period of one month after notice referred to
in sub-s. 2 of s. 12, the court was bound to pass a decree
for eviction. Dismissing the appeal,
HELD: Under s. 113 of the Transfer of Property Act a
notice given under s. 111 cI. (h) is waived with the express
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or implied consent of the person to whom it is given by any
act on the part of the person giving it showing an intention
to treat the lease as subsisting. The section does not in
terms appear to indicate that far bringing about a waiver
under the section a new tenancy by an express or implied
agreement must come into existence. All that has to be seen
is whether any act has been proved on ’the part of the
appellant which shows an intention to treat the lease as
subsisting provided there is an express or implied consent
of the person to whom the notice is given. [557 E-F; 558 A-
C]
In the present case the serving of the second notice and
what was stated therein together with the claim as laid and
amplified in the plaint showed that the landlord waived the
first notice by showing an intention to treat the tenancy as
subsisting and that this was with the express or implied
consent of the tenant. It was not open therefore., to the
landlord to say that he did not want to rely on the second
notice: and should be allowed to base his claim for eviction
only on the first notice containing the ground of the
default in payment of arrears ’of rent. [558 C--E. F-G]
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION :Civil Appeal No. 1741 of 1966.
Appeal by special leave from the order dated March 18,
1966 of the Bombay High Court in Special Civil Application
No. 475 of 1966.
M.C. Chagla and S.S. Shukla, for the appellant.
S.T. Desai and D.N. Mishra, for respondent No. 1.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Grover J. This is an appeal by special leave from a
judgment of the Bombay High Court and arises in the
following circumstances:
The suit premises consisting; of a shed at 130,
Shuklaji Street, Bombay are the property of the appellant,
and were let out to the respondent as a monthly tenant. By
means of a notice dated June 13, 1956 the tenant was
informed by the landlord that he was in arrears of rent
since July 1, 1953 and was liable to pay to the landlord a
sum of Rs. 1,826/- being the amount of rent calculated up to
the date of the notice., As he was an habitual defaulter and
had been making illegal ,use of a passage attached to the
premises without the consent of the landlord his tenancy was
being, terminated. He was further called upon to make
PaYment of the amount of arrears. The tenant did not vacate
the premises and a second notice was sent dated October 18,
1957 calling upon him to deliver vacant possession of the
premises which were stated to be in his occupation as a
monthly tenant. In the second notice another ground was
mentioned for getting the premises vacated. It was that the
same were required for the personal use and occupation of
the landlord. It may be mentioned that prior to the
dispatch of ’the second notice the landlord had been paid
and he had received the amount of arrears which were said to
be due in the first notice. In other words the rent had been
’received upto March 1955. On October 30, 1957 the tenant
made a tender by means of a cheque of the full amount of
arrears then due but the cheque was returned by the
landlord.
On March 31, 1958 the landlord filed a suit for
ejectment and or recovery of rent from April 1955 to
NoVember 1957 and compensation for use and occupation from
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December 1957 to February 1958 as also for a certain amount
for Vacant possession being back rent of twelve months’
rent, the total amount of all the items being Rs. 2448.12
Np. In July 1960 the plaintiff sought and was allowed to
amend the plaint by introducing the following paragraph:
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"Notice dated 13th June 1956 under section
12 of the Bombay Rent Control. Act was given
by the plaintiff’s advocates to the defendants
demanding payment of arrears of rent from 1st
July 1953 upto date 1956, which has been
’duly acknowledged. Copy of the said notice is
hereto annexed and marked Ex. ’A’."
The ejectment was claimed on the ground of default in
payment of arrears of rent and for personal use and
occupation. The learned trial judge held that by ’serving a
second notice and by various acts and conduct the landlord
showed a clear intention to waive and condone’ the ground of
default in payment of arrears contained in the first
notice. As regards the ground of persona requirement the
trial court was not satisfied that the premise were
reasonably and bona fide required by the plaintiff for his
own use. The suit for eviction was dismissed although a
decree for Rs. 1822.97 was granted. The matter was taken in
appeal of the Court of Small Causes. The appeal court held
that there was no waiver on the part of the landlord as
regards the default committed by the tenant in not paying
the arrears of rent within one month after the receipt of
the first notice. In other words. the service of a second
notice and other facts which had been found by the trial
court did not amount to a waiver of the first notice. But it
was of the view that the demand of the arrears of rent made
in the notice dated June 13, 1956 was excessive and illegal
which made the notice invalid. The other point about
personal neces city appears to have been abandoned by the
plaintiff before the appeal court. The landlord filed a
petition under Art. 227 of the Constitution in the High
Court which was dismissed in liming.
It has been contended before us on behalf of the
landlord the view of the appeal court on the effect of an
excessive deman having been made in the notice was
altogether erroneous. Ln Civil Appeal No. 387 of 1964
(RaghunathRavji Dandekar Anant Narayan Apte)(1) this Court
laid down that a notice quit under the Transfer of Property
Act would not be bad because by mistake or oversight more
was demanded in the notice under s. 12(2) of the Bombay
Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rate Control Act, 1947 (Act
LVII of 1947), hereinafter called the Act than was due. It
is urged that since the aforesaid infirmity in the notice
dated June 13, 1956 alone had prevailed with appeal court
the High Court ought to have entertained the petition under
Art. 227 and after setting aside the judgment’ of the
appeal court the-suit for ejectment should have been
decreed Reliance has been placed on s. 12(3)(a) of the Act’
according
(1) Decided on April 5, 1966.
557
which where the rent is payable by the months and there is
no dispute ’regarding the amount of ;standard rent or
permitted increases if such ’rent or increases ’are in
arrears for a period of six months or more and the tenant
neglects to make payment thereof until the expiration of
the period of one month after notice referred to in sub-s
(2), the court shall pass ’a decree for eviction in any such
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suit for recovery of possession. It’ is argued that the
notice dated June 13, 1956’ was the only notice which after
the amendment introduced in the plaint by’ paragraph 3A was
to be treated as a valid ’notice and since there had been
non-compliance with the demand’ made in that notice the
court was bound to pass a decree’ for eviction. As there
was failure to exercise jurisdiction the High Court had
the’ power and the authority to interfere in a petition
Under’ Art. 227 of the Constitution.
It seems to us that on the facts which have been
established the landlord was bound to fail. It is
abundantly clear that he had, in the second notice dated
October 18, 1957, treated the tenancy as subsisting and not
only the respondent was described as a monthly tenant but
also in the plaint, even after the amendment had been
allowed, rent was claimed upto November 1957; thereafter the
amount due was described as compensation for use and
Occupation. The plaintiff was thus fully alive to the
distinction between rent and damages for use and occupation
and it cannot be said that he had abandoned the second
notice and asked for the same to be treated as non-est or
that he had relied solely on the first;notice dated June
1’3, 19’56. Under s. 113 of the Transfer of Property Acts
notice given under s. 111, el. (h) is waived with the
express or implied consent of the person to whom it is given
by any act on the part of the person giving it showing an
intention to treat the lease as Subsisting. Illustration (b)
is in the following terms.
"(b) A, the lessor, gives B, the lessee,
notice to quit the property leased. The notice
expires, and B remains in possession. A gives
to B as lessee a second notice to quit. The
first notice is waived".
If only the language of the illustration were to be
considered as soon as the second notice was given the first,
notice- would stand waived. Counsel for the appellant has
relied on the observation of Denning, J., (as he then was)
in Lowenthal v. Vanhoute(1) that where a tenancy is
determined by a notice to quit it is not revived by
anything short of a new tenancy and in order to create a new
tenancy there must be an express or implied agreement to
that effect and further that a subsequent notice to quit is
of no effect unless, with other circumstances, it is the
basis for inferring
(1) [1947] 1 K.B.D. 342.
558
an intention to create a new tenancy after the expiration of
the first. The Privy Council in Harihctr Banerji & Ors. v.
Ramsashi Roy & Ors.(1) had said’ that the principles
governing a notice to quit under s. 106 of the Transfer of
Property Act were the same in England as well as in India.
For the purpose of the present case it is wholly unnecessary
to decide whether for bringing about a waiver under s. 113
of the Transfer of Property Act a new tenancy by an express
or implied agreement must come into existence. All that
need be observed is that s. 113 in terms does not appear to
indicate any such requirement and all that has to be seen is
whether any act has been proved on the part of the present
appellant which shows an intention to treat the lease as
subsisting provided there is an express or implied consent
of the person to whom the notice is given.
In the present case there can ’be no doubt that the
serving of the second notice and what was stated therein
together with the claim as laid and amplified in the plaint
showed that the landlord waived the first notice by showing
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an intention to treat the tenancy as subsisting and ,that
this was with the express or implied consent of the
tenant to whom the first notice had been given because he
had even made payment of the rent which had been demanded
though it was after the expiration of the period of one
month given in the notice.
It further appears that the rent Was sent by the_tenant
treating the tenancy as subsisting and not as having come to
an end by virtue of the first notice. There is another
significant fact which shows that it was the second notice
which was considered by the landlord to be the effective
notice. It was in the notice :sent in October 4957 ,that
the landlord, for the first time, raised the ground of
personal necessity. In the suit requirement of personal
necessity was made one of the main grounds on which eviction
was sought. In the first notice which was sent in June 1956
no such requirement or ground had been mentioned. It was
not open, therefore to the landlord to say that he did not
,want to rely on the second notice and should be-allowed to
base his action for eviction only on the first notice
containing the ground of the default in payment of arrears
of rent.’ We are satisfied that the suit of the landlord was
rightly dismissed though we have sustained it.’ dismissal on
different reasoning.
The appeal, therefore, fails and it is dismissed with costs.
y.p. Appeals dismissed
(1) 45 I.A. 222.
559