Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAFAT ALL V.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SUGNI BAI AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 18/11/1998
BENCH:
S. SAGHIR AHMAD, K.T. THOMAS.
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
Thomas J.
Leave granted.
A building situate at Mahboob Gunj, Hyderabad
belonged to one Babu Lal. He leased it out to the appellant
in 1970 wherein appellant has been running a business by
name M/s Royal Agro Industries. Lathe and machinery have
been installed therein for the purpose of the business.
Babu Lal died leaving behind him the present respondents as
his legal heirs who are his widow and children. In the year
1988 respondents/landlords launched a litigation against the
appellant for evicting him from the leased premises. Though
the respondents failed in the Rent Control court as well as
in the Appellate Authority they succeeded in the High Court
of Andhra Pradesh, where in a revision the concurrent
findings were reversed and an order of eviction was granted
in favour of the landlords. Hence, appellant has filed this
appeal by special leave.
Three distinct grounds have been set up by the
respondents in their petition filed under the provisions of
Andhra Pradesh Buildings (Lease, Rent and Eviction) CONTROL
Act, 1960 (For short ’the Act’). They are: (1) that the
tenant had committed default In paying rent of the building
from 1.11.1986 to 30.4.986, (2)thatthe tenant committed acts
or waste by which damage has been caused to the building.
(3) that the tenant has been committing acts of nuisance to
other occupants of the buildings in the neighbour-hood.
All the three grounds were found against the
respondent by the Rent Control Court which dismissed the
petition for eviction. When respondents filed appeal under
Section 20 of the Act. the Appellate Authority also found,
in concurrence with the findings of the Rent Control Court,
that the landlord failed to make out any one of the grounds.
The appeal was accordingly dismissed. It was when
repondents moved the High Court in revision under Section 22
of the Act that they succeeded as a learned single Judge
Interfered with the concurrent findings regarding all the
three grounds.
Learned single judge has stated as follows in the
concluding part of the impugned order.
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"The findings of the Courts below are
quite arbitrary, perverse and capricious.
The orders under challenge cannot be said
as free from legal lacunae. The Courts
failed to take into consideration the
events started subsequent to leasing out
the premises, namely, causing nuisance
prior lo the filing of eviction petition.
The evidence given clearly establishes
that the tenant was a defaulter, had
caused damage to the premises and causing
nuisance to the landlords and other
occupiers. Having found that the orders
under challenge suffer from illegality,
the same deserves to be set aside.
Accordingly, the CRP is allowed and the
orders under challenge are set aside and
consequently, the eviction sought by the
landlords is granted."
It is contended before us that learned single judge
made those observations without considering the reasoning of
the fact finding courts and without adverting to the
evidence and without keeping within the bounds of revisional
jurisdiction conferred by Section 22 of the Act. Learned
counsel for the respondents, on the other hand, made an
endeavour to show that the revisional powers under the Act
are not so limited as in other similar enactments and that
the High Court has wide powers to interfere even with the
concurring findings of fact, and looking from that angle the
High Court has not acted beyond its jurisdiction.
Section 22 of the Act reads:
"22. Revision:-(1) The High Court may, at
any time, on the application of any
aggrieved party, call for and examine the
records relating to any order passed or
proceeding taken under this Act by the
Controller in execution under Section 15
or by the appellate authority on appeal
under Section 20, for the purpose of
satisfying itself as to the legality,
regularity or of propriety of such order
or proceeding, and may pass such order in
reference thereto as it thinks fit.
(2) The costs of and incident to all
proceedings, before the High Court under
sub-section (1), shall be in its
discretion."
The appellation given to the Section makes it
unmistakably clear that the power conferred thereunder is
revisional which means, it is a power of supervision. It is
well neigh settled that a revisional Jurisdiction cannot be
equated with appeal powers in all its parameters. The power
to call for and examine the records is for the purpose of
the High Court to satisfy itself as to the "legality,
regularity or propriety" of the order of the lower
authority. Even such a widely worded frame of the Section
may at best indicate that the revisional powers are not so
restricted as in the enactments wherein the words are not so
widely framed. Nonetheless, they remain in the realm of
Supervisory jurisdiction. in a recent decision we had
occasion to consider the scope of revisional jurisdiction
under certain Rent Control enactments vide Sarla Ahuja vs.
United India Insurance Company Limited JT 1998(7) SC 297.
Reference was then made to a decision wherein words used
under Section 25 of the Tamil Nadu Buildings (Lease and Rent
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Control) Act 1960 were considered [vide Sri Raj Lakshmi
Dyeing Works vs Rangaswamy 1980 (4) SCC 259]. A two judge
bench has observed therein that "despite wide language
employed in the Section, the High Court quite obviously
should not interfere with the findings of fact merely
because it does not agree with to the finding of the
subordinate authority." After adverting to it we have stated
in Sarla Ahuja:
"The High Court in the present case has
re-assessed and re-appraised the evidence
afresh to reach a different finding as
though it was exercising appellate
jurisdiction. No doubt even while
exercising revisional jurisdiction, a
re-appraisal of evidence can be made, but
that should be for the limited purpose to
ascertain whether the conclusion arrived
at by the fact finding court is wholly
unreasonable."
Coming back to the impugned order it is pertinent to
notice that the Rent Control Court, while dealing with the
first ground i.e. default in payment of rent from 1.11.1986
to 30.4.1986 has pointed out the averments of the landlords
in their petition that rent of the building was Rs.250/- per
month till 30.10.19^5 and thereafter the rent was enhanced
to Rs.650/- per month from 1.11.1985 onwards and that the
tenant committed default in paying rent at the enhanced rate
from 1.11.1986. Petition for eviction was filed by the
landlords on 4.5.1988. Appellant repudiated the case of the
landlord regarding such enhancement. According to him the
rent remained Rs.250/- per month and he paid it without
default till March 19. 1988, and when he tendered rent for
the next month (April) the landlord refused to accept as
they wanted the tenant to vacate the building. He was then
compelled to issue a notice to the landlords on 30.4.1988
complaining of such refusal. It was while replying to the
said notice that the landlords have mentioned, for the first
time, that rent of the building was Rs.650/- and that it was
not paid from 1.11.1986 onwards.
Rent Control Court has considered the evidence on
record regarding that dispute in detail. The reasoning of
the Rent Controller that if there was enhancement of monthly
rent to Rs.650/from 1-11-1985 the landlords would have
mentioned that fact in the Ext. R-73 reply which they sent
to the appellant on 6-5-1988. The absence of such a fact in
the said reply notice when taken along with the fact that
landlord amended the original petition claiming rent at the
enhanced rate only after a lapse of one year from the date
of institution thereof persuaded the Rent Control Court to
conclude that it was an afterthought. The court also relied
on Ext. R-74 to R-82 (assessment orders and the tax returns
under the Income Tax Act, 1961 for the period starting from
1985-86) supported by the certified copies of statements of
income and expenditure account in which monthly rent of
Rs.250/was mentioned for the relevant period. The appellate
authority has also adverted to the above materials. The
counterfoils (P-1 to P-5) produced by the landlords did not
give a good impression as to its genuineness on both the
authorities. The appellate authority felt that they were
concocted for the purpose of evicting the tenants.
For interfering with the findings made on the above
reasoning learned Single Judge has. unfortunately, used
only one sentence which is the following:
"If we compare the evidence adduced in
this case and wading of the same by both
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the courts below, it can be said without
hesitation that the courts below are not
justified in ignoring the evidence
available which warrants this court to
hold that the tenant was a defaulter and
he had caused nuisance."
Learned Single Judge has committed a jurisdictional
error in upsetting the concurrent finding in such a manner
as it has been done. Of course in that sweep learned Single
Judge covered the nuisance aspect also.
It is clause (iv) of section 10(2) of the Act that
makes nuisance as a ground for eviction. It is worded like
this:
"That the tenant has been guilty of such acts and
conduct which are a nuisance to the occupiers of other
portions in the same binding or buildings in The
neighbourhood."
Though the word "nuisance" is not defined it can be
inferred from the context that what is meant therein is the
actionable nuisance which is recognized Common Law.
Nuisance as understood in law is broadly divided into two
classes public nuisance and private nuisance. The former
consists of some acts or omissions which result in violation
of rights which one enjoys in common with other members of
the public. But the fatter i.e. private nuisance, is one
which interfere with a person’s use and enjoyment of
immovable property or some right in respect of it.
In Halsbury’s Laws of England (vol.34 of the fourth
edition at page 102)essentials of common law of nuisance arc
mentioned as under
"309: Both unlawful act and damage
necessary. In order to constitute
nuisance there must be both (1) an
unlawful act, and (2) damage, actual or
presumed. Damage alone gives no right
action, the mere fact that an act causes
loss to another does not make that act a
nuisance.
For the purposes of the law of
nuisance an unlawful act is the
interference by act or omission with a
person’s use or enjoyment of land or some
right over or in connection with land."
Suffering of damage must be proved in a case of
nuisance unless it can be presumed by law to exist. But the
damage to amount to actionable nuisance must be substantial
or at-least of some significance. In other words. If the
damage is insignificant or evanescent or trivial it would
not be actionable nuisance. The following passage in para
312 of the same volume in Halsbury’s Laws of England is
worth extracting in this context:
"312. Damage essential. Damage, actual,
prospective or presumed, is one of the
essentials of nuisance. Its existence
must be proved, except in those cases in
which it is presumed by law to exist.
The damage need not consist of pecuniary
loss, but it must be material or
substantial, that is, it must not be
merely sentimental, speculative or
trifling, or damage that is merely
temporary, fleeting or evanescent."
It is clear from clause (iv) of Section 10(2) of the
Act that what is envisaged therein is only private nuisance
and not public nuisance. This can be discerned from the
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words "nuisance to the occupiers of other portions in the
same building or buildings in the neighborhood" Perhaps in a
wide sense any industrial activity may create some sound
while such activities are in operation. Such sound may be
uncomfortable to those who are over sensitive to such noise.
But then care must be taken because every inconvenience
cannot become actionable nuisance. To make it actionable
the nuisance must be of a reasonably perceptible degree as
pointed out earlier.
Rent Control Court considered landlords’ case
regarding nuisance Landlords said that the tenant was
quarreling with them "whenever they go for collection of
rents." They have also alleged that appellant was running
machines late in the night and thereby causing nuisance to
the other occupiers of the building. As the appellant was
running high business with the same machines right from the
beginning, Rent Control Court was not inclined to treat such
noise as amounting to nuisance. Appellate authority pointed
out that there was no complaint prior to the filing of the
eviction petition at any time against the tenant that he
caused damage to the building." On the other hand, the Rent
Control Court noticed that machinery was installed in this
building way back in 1970 and the same is under operation
even now. On the above reasoning both the authorities
uniformly concluded that tenant has not committed any act of
nuisance to attract the ground of eviction. But the High
Court upset such a finding in a very casual manner unmindful
of the inherent limitations of the revislonal jurisdiction.
The third ground for eviction is related to causing
damage to the building. For damage to the building to
amount to a ground for eviction, its proportion must be as
delineated in clause (iii) of Section 10(2) of the Act:
"That the tenant has committed such acts
of waste as are likely to impair
materially the value or utility of the
building."
All acts of waste do not amount to a ground for
eviction. It is only those acts of waste which would very
probably impair the value of the building or its utility.
The word "likely" in the above clause must be understood as
a condition which is reasonably probable that such acts
would cause impairment to the value or utility of the
building. However, it is not enough that some impairment
has been caused to the building. The value of the building
or utility thereof should have been lessened in a reasonably
substantial degree. Then only it can be said that the acts
of waste are likely to impair the value or utility of the
building "materially". In Om Pal vs. Anand Swarup 1988 (4)
SCC 545 the Court, while considering a similarly worded
clause in another Rent control enactment, has observed thus:
"In order to attract Section 13(2)(iii)
the construction must not only be one
affecting or diminishing the value or
utility of the building but such
impairment must be of a material nature
i.e. of a substantial and significant
nature. When a construction is alleged to
materially impair the value or utility of
a building, the construction should be of
such a nature as to substantially diminish
the value of the building either from the
commercial and monetary point of view or
from the utilitarian aspect of the
building. The burden of proof of such
material impairment is on the landlord."
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An Advocate-Commissioner visited the building and
pointed out the following features in his report regarding
the damage noticed by him: "There is only concrete flooring
with uneven surface. Due to the use of machinery there is a
hole in the flooring on the eastern side and it was meant
for inserting pipe. There was no damage to the roof and
walls. Some nail-holes were also noticed. When the lathe
machines were operated the advocate commissioner noticed
that there was no vibration either on the ground floor or on
the walls of the main building, though very slight vibration
was noticed on the parapet walls of the first floor."
Both the fact finding courts found that the above
items of damage are only trivial and will not affect the
building. But the High Court found that "the landlords
proved that the tenant caused damage to the demised premises
by causing holes and leaving spaces between the shutter and
the wall as seen from the Commissioner’s report." It was not
open to the High Court to substitute the findings of the
lower courts with its own findings so easily as that while
exercising the limited supervisory jurisdiction.
For the aforementioned reasons we are unable to
sustain the impugned judgment of the High Court which has
manifestly crossed.
its jurisdiction. We, therefore, allow this appeal
and set aside the impugned judgment.