Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 3
CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 6973-6974 of 2004
PETITIONER:
M/s. Aero Traders Pvt. Ltd.
RESPONDENT:
Ravinder Kumar Suri
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 27/10/2004
BENCH:
CJI R. C. Lahoti, G. P. Mathur & P.P. Naolekar
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(Arising out of S.L.P.(Civil) Nos. 2725-2726 of 2004)
G. P. MATHUR, J.
1. Leave granted.
2. These appeals, by special leave, have been preferred against the
judgment and order dated 9.9.2003 of Delhi High Court by which the writ
petition filed by respondent no.1, Ravinder Kumar Suri, under Article 227 of
the Constitution was allowed, the order dated 22.5.2001 of the Additional
Rent Control Tribunal was set aside and the order dated 19.3.2001 of the
Rent Controller was restored by which the defence of the appellant was
struck off. By the same order the writ petition filed by the tenant-appellant
was dismissed.
3. The appellant is a tenant of a commercial premises situate in Karol
Bagh, New Delhi on a rental of Rs.30/- per month. The landlord, Ravinder
Kumar Suri, filed a petition for eviction of the appellant under Section
14(1)(a) of Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 (for short "the Act") on the
ground, inter alia, that the appellant was in arrears of rent. The Rent
Controller passed an order under Section 15(1) of the Act on 20.12.1999
directing the appellant to deposit or pay to the landlord within one month the
entire arrears of rent w.e.f. 1.6.1996 and to continue to pay the future rent by
15th of each succeeding month. The landlord (respondent no.1) moved an
application under Section 15(7) of the Act for striking off the defence of the
appellant (tenant) on the ground that he did not comply with the order. The
appellant claimed that he had complied with the order and had sent the rent
by cheques but the landlord did not encash the same. The Rent Controller
held that the appellant had neither paid the rent to the landlord nor had
deposited the amount in court. Accordingly, he passed an order on
19.3.2001 by which the application filed by the landlord was allowed and
the defence of the appellant was struck off. The appellant preferred an
appeal before the Rent Control Tribunal which was disposed of by the
judgment and order dated 22.5.2001 with a direction to the appellant to
deposit the whole arrears of rent along with penalty of the same amount
within 30 days, failing which his defence shall stand struck off as directed
by the Rent Controller. The landlord challenged the order passed by the Rent
Control Tribunal by filing a writ petition under Article 227 of the
Constitution before the Delhi High Court. The appellant also filed a petition
for quashing of certain findings which were recorded against him by the
Rent Controller. The High Court allowed the writ petition filed by the
landlord, set aside the order passed by the Rent Control Tribunal and
restored that of the Rent Controller. The writ petition filed by the appellant
was dismissed.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 3
4. In order to establish his case, the appellant placed on record a letter
dated 3.1.2000 sent by its counsel to the landlord, wherein it was mentioned
that the rent at the rate of Rs.30/- per month w.e.f. 1.6.1996 to 31.12.1999
amounting to Rs.930/- was being sent by cheque. The landlord seriously
disputed the fact that any cheque was sent to him. The appellant did not
lead any evidence whatsoever to establish that any cheque for Rs.930/- was
in fact sent to the landlord on 3.1.2000. Even otherwise, the arrears of rent
which were required to be sent were Rs.1260/- and not Rs.930/-. The
appellant also placed on record another letter dated 30.6.2000, wherein it
was mentioned that rent for the period 1.2.2000 to 31.12.2000 was being
sent through cheque. This was also disputed by the landlord. The
appellant did not lead any evidence to establish the fact that the amount as
claimed in this letter was actually sent to the landlord. The direction in the
order 20.12.1999 was that the appellant shall either pay or deposit the future
rent by 15th of every succeeding month. Even assuming the version of the
appellant to be correct, he failed to either pay or deposit the rents for the
months of January to May 2000 by the 15th day of each succeeding month.
On the aforesaid facts, the Rent Controller held that the order dated
20.12.1999 had not been complied with. He also noted that even by the
time he had passed the order under Section 15(7) of the Act, the appellant
was in arrears of rent and had not paid or deposited the rent w.e.f. 1.6.1996.
He accordingly held that it was a fit case where the defence of the appellant
should be struck off. The Rent Control Tribunal, in the appeal preferred by
the appellant, confirmed the findings recorded by the Rent Controller
regarding non-payment of rent and in fact held that the intention of the
appellant was not bona fide and rather he acted in a mischievous manner and
had tried to show that he had sent the rent by way of cheques. However, he
held that Section 15(7) of the Act confers a discretion whether to strike off
the defence or not and since this discretion had not been exercised in
accordance with the basic principles of equity, justice and good conscience,
the order passed by the Rent Controller required modification. He
accordingly directed the appellant to deposit the whole arrears of rent along
with penalty of same amount within 30 days and if the same was done, the
order of the Rent Controller shall stand set aside. The High Court in the writ
petition preferred by the landlord held that the appellant had shown a willful
and contumacious default and had set up a palpably false plea about
compliance of the order and consequently he was not entitled to any
indulgence from the Court. The High Court accordingly set aside the order
of the Rent Control Tribunal and restored that of the Rent Controller.
5. The provisions of Section 15(7) of the Act have been examined by a
Three Judge Bench of this Court in Jain Motor Car Co. v. Swayam Prabha
Jain AIR 1996 SC 2951, where, after examining the earlier decisions
rendered in Hem Chand v. Delhi Cloth & General Mills Co. Ltd. AIR 1977
SC 1986, Shyamcharan Sharma v. Dharamdas AIR 1980 SC 587, Ram
Murty v. Bhola Nath AIR 1984 SC 1392 and Kamla Devi v. Vasdev 1995
(1) SCC 356, it was held that the section confers a discretionary power on
the Rent Controller to strike out the defence of the tenant and the said power
should not be exercised mechanically without any application of mind to the
facts of the case.
6. The question which, therefore, requires consideration is whether the
appellant has made out any ground for exercising discretion in his favour of
not striking out his defence. According to Black’s Law Dictionary "judicial
discretion" means the exercise of judgment by a judge or court based on
what is fair under the circumstances and guided by the rules and principles
of law; a court’s power to act or not act when a litigant is not entitled to
demand the act as a matter of right. The word "discretion" connotes
necessarily an act of a judicial character, and, as used with reference to
discretion exercised judicially, it implies the absence of a hard-and-fast rule,
and it requires an actual exercise of judgment and a consideration of the
facts and circumstances which are necessary to make a sound, fair and just
determination, and a knowledge of the facts upon which the discretion may
properly operate. (See 27 Corpus Juris Secundum page 289). When it is said
that something is to be done within the discretion of the authorities that
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 3
something is to be done according to the rules of reason and justice and not
according to private opinion; according to law and not humour. It only
gives certain latitude or liberty accorded by statute or rules, to a judge as
distinguished from a ministerial or administrative official, in adjudicating on
matters brought before him.
7. In the present case, the finding of the Rent Controller and also of the
Rent Control Tribunal is that the appellant set up a totally false plea of his
having sent the rent through cheques to the landlord. Apart from pleading
that he had sent the amount through cheques, he pleaded no other fact which
could be taken into consideration by the Rent Controller for exercising
discretion in his favour. It may be noted that the premises are commercial
and are situate in Karol Bagh, which is a prime business area of Delhi and
the rent is a paltry sum of Rs.30/- per month. But the appellant did not pay
even this small amount of rent, which is virtually a pittance, and has
remained in arrears for a long period of time. There is absolutely no ground
on which any discretion could be exercised in his favour. The High Court
was, therefore, perfectly justified in setting aside the order passed by the
Rent Control Tribunal and restoring that of the Rent Controller.
8. For the reasons discussed above, the appeals are dismissed with costs,
which we quantify at Rs.10,000/-.