Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
CHIMANLAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MISHRILAL
DATE OF JUDGMENT12/11/1984
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S.
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S.
MADON, D.P.
THAKKAR, M.P. (J)
CITATION:
1985 AIR 136 1985 SCR (2) 39
1985 SCC (1) 14 1984 SCALE (2)725
CITATOR INFO :
D 1988 SC 976 (18)
ACT:
"Madhya Pradesh Accommodation Control Act 1961 section
(1)(a). scope of-Notice of demand referred to in section
12(1 1(a) to be valid must inter-alia relate to the
accommodation actually rented to the tenant and not any
other accommodation-A defective notice vitiates the entire
trial as the suit itself is not maintainable-Distinction
between notice and the plaint explained-Amending the plaint
with the permission of the Court does not cure the defective
notice.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent landlord issued a notice dated October
21, 1969 to the appellant demanding arrears of rent in
respect of accommodation, which according to the respondent,
consisted of a portion of a shop and a verandah and
terminated the tenancy; and he filed a suit for eviction
under section 12(1)(a) of the Madhya Pradesh Accommodation
Act, 1961 and for payment of arrears of rent totaling Rs.
2550. The appellant after depositing the entire arrears as
required under section 13(1) of the Act contested the suit
disputing the area and portion of accommodation tenanted and
claimed expenditure incurred by him for repairs. The trial
court dismissed the suit accepting the contention of the
appellant that since the respondent has not correctly
described the extent of the premises in the notice
terminating the tenancy, the tenancy had not been validly
terminated. An appeal having been dismissed the respondent
filed a second appeal before the High Court. The High Court
granted permission to the respondent for an amendment of the
plaint and relying on the decision of the Supreme Court in
V. Dhanapal Chettair v. Yesodai Ammal [1980] 1 S C.R. 334
that no notice under section 106 of the Transfer of Property
Act was necessary, allowed the second appeal. Hence the
tenant’s appeal after obtaining Special Leave of the Court.
Allowing the Appeal, the Court
^
HELD: 1. The notice referred to in section 12(1)(a) of
the Madhya Pradesh Accommodation Control Act, 1961 must be a
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notice demanding the rental arrears in respect of
accommodation actually let to the tenant. It must be a
notice (a) demanding the arrears of rent in respect of the
accommodation let to the tenant and (b) the arrears of rent
must be legally recoverable from the tenant. There can be no
admission by a tenant that arrears of rent are due unless
they relate to the accommodation let to him. A valid notice
demanding arrears of rent relatable to the accommodation let
to the tenant from which he .
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is sought to be evicted is a vital ingredient of the
conditions which govern the maintainability of the suit, for
unless a valid demand is made no complaint can be laid of
non-compliance with it, and consequently no suit for
rejectment of the tenant in respect of the accommodation
will lie on that ground. [13 F-H; 44 A]
1: 2. It is true that amendment of the plaint in the
suit in order to relate to the accommodation asserted by the
appellant does relate back to the institution of the suit,
but it cannot amend an invalid notice earlier issued
terminating the tenancy. The notice of demand is an act
independent of the institution of the suit. 44 A-B, D]
The notice and the plaint are two distinct matters,
different by nature, designed for different purposes and
located in two different points of time. They operate in two
different planes, and are relate(l insofar only that one is
a condition for maintaining the other. [44 B-C]
1: 3. The notice of demand dated October 21, 1969
served by the respondent on the appellant was invalid and,
therefore, the suit was not maintainable. It is clear that
there is a substantial difference between the accommodation
mentioned in the notice and the accommodation let to the
appellant. It must be taken that the notice relates to
accommodation which cannot be effectively identified with
the accommodation constituting the tenancy. This is not a
case of a mere misdescription or the accommodation where
both parties knew perfectly well that the notice referred to
accommodation let to the tenant. Nor is it a case where the
discrepancy between the accommodation alleged by the
landlord and that actually let to the tenant is marginal or
insubstantial. the proceedings show that there was a serious
dispute between the parties as to the material extent of the
accommodation let be the one to the other. No congruency
between the two versions was possible. Not at least until
the respondent was compelled to seek an amendment of his
plaint in the high Court at the stage of second appeal. [43
B-E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 3356 of
1979. Appeal by special leave from the Judgment and order
dated the 12th October, 1979 of the Madhya Pradesh High
Court (Indore Bench) in Second Appeal No. 148 of 1976.
R.K. Garg, S.K. Gambhir, Mrs. Ashok Mahajan and Mrs.
Sunita Kirplani for the Appellant.
V.K. Jain, B.P. Singh and Anjeet Kumar for the
Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
PATHAK, J. This is a tenant’s appeal, by special leave,
against a decree of the High Court of Madhya Pradesh
allowing the landlord’s second appeal in a suit for
eviction.
The respondent, as landlord, filed a suit for the
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eviction of the appellant tenant on the ground that the
appellant had neither paid nor
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tendered the arrears of rent legally recoverable from him.
The plaint A recited that the appellant had taken a portion
of a shop and a verandah on the ground floor on rent at Rs.
l SO per month for the purpose of his cloth business, that
the appellant had not paid the arrears of rent totaling Rs.
2,550 for the period June 26, 1968 to October 11, 1969, and
that he was, therefore, liable to eviction on the ground set
forth in section 12(1)(a) of the Madhya Pradesh
Accommodation Control Act, 1961.
In his written statement the appellant pleaded that the
respondent had described the tenanted premises incorrectly,
that in fact the premises consisted of an entire shop, a
kotha behind the shop and a verandah in front of the shop,
that the expenditure on repairs to the premises undertaken
by the appellant had to be adjusted against the arrears of
rent and that the notice dated October 21,1969 terminating
the tenancy was invalid.
On receiving the writ of summons in the suit, the
appellant deposited the arrears of rent in compliance with
s. 13(1) of the Act, but further compliance with s. 13(1)
was not effected in as much as the rent which should have
been deposited regularly from month to month was not
deposited for several months.
The trial court found that the expenditure claimed by
the appellant on repairing the premises had not been proved.
It found further that the appellant was not entitled to the
benefit of s. 13(1) of the Act as he had failed to deposit
the monthly rent regularly during the pendency of the suit.
But it agreed with the appellant that the respondent had not
correctly described the extent of the premises in the notice
terminating the tenancy, and holding that the tenancy had
not been validly terminated it dismissed the suit. The
respondent filed an appeal, and that appeal was dismissed.
The respondent then preferred a second appeal, and during
the pendency of the appeal the High Court permitted the
respondent to amend the plaint so that references to the
tenanted premises now included the entire accommodation
claimed by the appellant In consequence, the suit now
related to that accommodation. Thereafter, the High Court,
by its judgment and decree dated October 12, 1979 allowed
the second appeal. It held that no notice under section 106
of the Transfer of Property Act terminating the tenancy was
required in view of the decision of this Court in V.
Dhanapal Chettiar v. Yeshodai Ammal,(l) and it affirmed the
finding of the subordinate courts that the appellant had
failed to prove payment for repairing the premises.
(1) [1980] 1 S.C.R. 334
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On a conspectus of the entire proceeding it would
appear that the only ground on which the subordinate courts
dismissed the suit is that the notice dated October 21, 1969
did not validly terminate the tenancy as it referred to a
part only of the tenanted premises, while the High Court, in
second appeal, proceeded on the view that no notice
terminating the tenancy was required at all and, therefore,
after permitting the respondent to amend his plaint in order
to bring the entire tenanted premises within the purview of
the suit, it decreed the suit.
S. 12(1)(a) of the Madhya Pradesh Accommodation Control
Act, 1961 provides:
" 12. Restriction on eviction of tenants,-(l ) Not
with standing anything to the contrary contained in any
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other law or contract, no suit shall be filed in any
Civil Court against a tenant for his eviction from any
accommodation except on one or more of the following
grounds only, namely:
(a) that the tenant has neither paid nor tendered the
whole of the arrears of the rent legally
recoverable from him within two months of the date
on which a notice of DEMAND for the arrears of
rent has been served on him by the landlord in the
prescribed manner."
S. 12(3) prohibits the court from making an order of
eviction on the ground specified in s. 12(1)(a) if the
tenant makes payment or deposit as required by s. 13. And s.
13 provides:
"13. When tenant can get benefit of protection
against eviction-(1) on a suit or proceeding being
instituted by the landlord on any of the grounds
referred to in section 12, the tenant shall, within one
month of the service of writ of summons on him or
within such further time as the Court may, on an
application made to it, allow in this behalf, deposit
in the Court or pay to the landlord an amount
calculated at the rate of rent at which it was paid for
the period for which the tenant may have made default
including the period subsequent thereto up to the end
of the month previous to that in which the deposit or
payment is . made, and shall thereafter continue to
deposit or pay, month by month, by the 15th of each
succeeding month a sum equivalent to the rent at that
rate."
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It is urged by the appellant that an essential
condition of the A maintainability of the suit IS non-
compliance by the tenant with a valid notice demanding the
rental arrears, and the notice to be valid must inter alia,
relate to the accommodation rented to the tenant and not any
other accommodation. [t is pointed out that in the present
case the notice dated October 21, 1969 did not relate to the
entire accommodation let to the appellant but only to a
lesser part of it. There is substance in the contention. The
notice dated October 21, B 1969 is a notice demanding the
arrears of rent in respect of accommodation which, according
to the respondent, consisted of a portion of a shop and a
verandah. The appellant, on the other hand, pleaded that he
had been let the entire shop, the verandah and also a kotha.
The subordinate courts held, on the evidence, that the
appellant was right. It is apparent, therefore, that there
is a substantial difference between the accommodation
mentioned in the notice and the accommodation actually let
to the appellant. It must be taken that the notice relates
to accommodation which cannot be electively identified with
the accommodation constituting the tenancy. l his is not a
case of a mere misdescriptlon of the accommodation where
both parties knew perfectly well that the notice referred to
accommodation let to the tenant. Nor is it a case where the
discrepancy between the accommodation alleged by the
landlord and that actually let to the tenant is marginal or
insubstantial. The proceedings show that there was a serious
dispute between the parties as to the material extent of the
accommodation let by the one to the other. No congruency
between the two versions was possible. Not at least until
the respondent was compelled to seek an amendment of his
plaint in the High Court at the stage of second appeal.
Learned counsel for the respondent points out that there was
no dispute that the rent for the accommodation was Rs. 150
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per month, and urges that is the amount of the arrears of
rent is admitted between the parties that is all that
matters. To our mind, that is not sufficient. The notice
referred to in s. 12(1)(a) must be a notice demanding the
rental arrears in respect of accommodation actually let to
the tenant. It must be a notice (a) demanding the arrears of
rent in respect of the accommodation let to the tenant and
(b) the arrears of rent must be legally recoverable from the
tenant. There can be no admission by a tenant that arrears
of rent are due unless they relate to the accommodation let
to him. A valid notice demanding arrears of rent relatable
to the accommodation let to the tenant from which he is
sought to be evicted is a vital ingredient of the conditions
which govern the maintainability of the suit, for unless a
valid demand is made no complaint can be laid of non-
compliance with it. and consequently no Suit for
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ejectment of the tenant in respect of the accommodation will
lie on that ground.
It is contended by learned counsel for the respondent
that the plaint in the suit was amended in order to relate
to the accommodation asserted by the appellant and that the
amendment relates back to the institution of the suit. The
submission can be of no assistance to the respondent. We are
concerned here not with the subject matter of the suit but
with the validity of the notice which is a prior condition
of the maintainability of the suit. The notice of demand is
an act independent of the institution of the suit. The
notice and the plaint are two distinct matters, different by
nature, designed for different purposes and located in two
different points of time. They operate in two different
planes, and are related insofar only that one is a condition
for maintaining the other.
Accordingly, we hold that the notice of demand dated
October 21, 1969 served by the respondent on the appellant
was invalid and therefore the suit was not maintainable. In
the circumstances, we consider it unnecessary to enter upon
the other points raised before us on behalf of the
appellant.
In the result, we allow the appeal, set aside the
judgment and order of the High Court and dismiss the suit.
In the circumstances of the case. there is no order as to
costs.
S.R. Appeal allowed.
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