Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 1071 of 2001
Appeal (civil) 1072 of 2001
PETITIONER:
GAYA PRASAD
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHRI PRADEEP SRIVASTAVA
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/02/2001
BENCH:
K.T. Thomas & Doraiswamy Raju.
JUDGMENT:
THOMAS, J.
Leave granted.
This case presents a sample scenario of the tormenting
plight of an average litigant who approaches the court with
all expectations of getting relief for his urgent need. But
the snail paced litigation creeping through all the tiers of
the judicial hierarchical forums would have frustrated all
his expectations, though others could admire the tenacity
with which he persisted with the cause. Twenty three years
ago, the litigant in this case wanted accommodation for his
son, who then became a medical graduate, to start a clinic
so that from the stage of a fledgling in the profession of
medicine he could fly higher up. His father who owns the
building moved for eviction of the tenant from the building
for the said purpose. Although he won the battle at all
tiers the urgently needed eviction is till now eluding him
as a mirage.
Appellant is the tenant of a shop building situate at
Khalsa Gali, Agra. In 1978, the respondent-landlord filed
an application under Section 21(1)(a) of the U.P. Urban
Buildings (Regulation of Letting, Rent and Eviction) Act,
1972 (for short the U.P. Act) on a twin need. One is
that his son who passed his medical examination wanted to
carry on medical practice and this building was needed for
housing his clinic. The other is, the landlord himself had
just retired from Railway service and he too did not want to
waste his time, talent and energy and hence he wanted to
start a radio repairing work which he thought could be
performed by using a portion of the building. The first
forum, called the Prescribed Authority, where the
application was filed, found the claim bona fide and ordered
eviction on 25.3.1982. It was further found by the said
authority that the tenant has alternative accommodation in
the same city for doing his business.
Appellant filed an appeal but it took only 3 years for
the appellate court to dismiss the appeal on 10.10.1985.
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Though three years of pendency of an appeal is too much for
a litigant it is not considered unduly long by the standards
now developed regarding the pendency position of cases in
the courts in India.
The lengthiest leap which appellant secured was
thereafter when he approached the High Court. He filed a
writ petition challenging the order of eviction before the
High Court of Allahabad in 1985 and the High Court after
entertaining the writ petition granted stay of operation of
the eviction order. With the said initial dosage
administered by the High Court at the entry stage, the
hibernated writ petition seemed to have been consigned to
records where it remained in torpidity for a record period
of 15 years. The dust stricken writ petition was taken up
and disposed of only thereafter and the High Court found no
ground to interfere with the order challenged before it.
Appellant who gained such a record time did not hesitate to
make a plea to the High Court to grant him six months time
more to vacate and that too was acceded to on a condition
that appellant should give an undertaking before original
authority that he would vacate the premises within six
months.
The appellant who lost at all levels and yet succeeded
during all these years by keeping the order of eviction at
bay, lately discovered that the landlords son, for whom the
eviction was sought, joined the Provincial Medical Service
after 12 years of the institution of the lis. On that
premise appellant ventured to move the same High Court once
again, and this time for a review of the order. However,
the review petition was dismissed by the High Court as per
its order which is also impugned now.
In the appeal petition filed in this Court appellant
stated that the son of the landlord who joined the
Provincial Medical Service is posted at a place situated 200
kilometers from Agra, whereat the building is situate, and
that he is now getting a pay of Rs.15,000/- per month.
The point sought to be urged is that, subsequent
developments may also be taken into account in eviction
proceedings, particularly when the eviction is sought by a
landlord on the ground that he bona fide needs the building
for his own use or for the use of any member of his family.
Section 21(1) of the U.P. Act deals with proceedings
for release of building under occupation of tenant. Clause
(a) of the sub-section alone is germane in the present
proceedings. The said clause is, therefore, extracted
below:
The prescribed authority may, on an application of the
landlord in that behalf, order the eviction of a tenant from
the building under tenancy or any specified part thereof if
it is satisfied that any of the following grounds exists
namely-
(a) required either in its existing form or after
demolition and new construction by the landlord for
occupation by himself or any member of his family, or any
person for whose benefit it is held by him, either for
residential purposes or that the building is bona fide for
purposes of any profession, trade or calling, or where the
landlord is the trustee of a public charitable trust, for
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the objects of the trust;
We have no doubt that the crucial date for deciding as
to the bona fides of the requirement of the landlord is the
date of his application for eviction. The antecedent days
may perhaps have utility for him to reach the said crucial
date of consideration. If every subsequent development
during the post petition period is to be taken into account
for judging the bona fides of the requirement pleaded by the
landlord there would perhaps be no end so long as the
unfortunate situation in our litigative slow process system
subsists. During 23 years after the landlord moved for
eviction on the ground that his son needed the building,
neither the landlord nor his son is expected to remain idle
without doing any work, lest, joining any new assignment or
starting any new work would be at the peril of forfeiting
his requirement to occupy the building. It is a stark
reality that the longer is the life of the litigation the
more would be the number of developments sprouting up during
the long interregnum. If a young entrepreneur decides to
launch a new enterprise and on that ground he or his father
seeks eviction of a tenant from the building, the proposed
enterprise would not get faded out by subsequent
developments during the traditional lengthy longevity of the
litigation. His need may get dusted, patina might stick on
its surface, nonetheless the need would remain intact. All
that is needed is to erase the patina and see the gloss. It
is pernicious, and we may say, unjust to shut the door
before an applicant just on the eve of his reaching the
finale, after passing through all the previous levels of the
litigation, merely on the ground that certain developments
occurred pendente lite, because the opposite party succeeded
in prolonging the matter for such unduly long period.
We cannot forget that while considering the bona fides
of the need of the landlord the crucial date is the date of
petition. In Remesh Kumar vs. Kesho Ram [1992 Suppl. (2)
SCC 623] a two-Judge Bench of this Court (M.N.
Venkatachalia, J., as he then was, and N.M. Kasliwal, J.)
pointed out that the normal rule is that rights and
obligations of the parties are to be determined as they were
when the lis commenced and the only exception is that the
court is not precluded from moulding the reliefs
appropriately in consideration of subsequent events provided
such events had an impact on those rights and obligations.
What the learned Chief Justice observed therein is this:
The normal rule is that in any litigation the rights and
obligations of the parties are adjudicated upon as they
obtain at the commencement of the lis. But this is subject
to an exception. Wherever subsequent events of fact or law
which have a material bearing on the entitlement of the
parties to relief or on aspects which bear on the moulding
of the relief occur, the court is not precluded from taking
a cautious cognizance of the subsequent changes of fact
and law to mould the relief.
This Court reiterated the same principle in Kamleshwar
Prasad vs. Pradumanju Agarwal [1997 (4) SCC 413] that the
crucial date normally is the date of filing the petition.
In that case, a two-Judge Bench (K. Ramaswamy and G.B.
Pattanaik, JJ) has held that even the subsequent event of
death of the landlord who wanted to start a business in the
tenanted premises is not sufficient to dislodge the bona
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fide need established by him earlier. This is what
Pattanaik J. has observed for the Bench:
That apart, the fact that the landlord needed the
premises in question for starting a business which fact has
been found by the appellate authority, in the eye of law, it
must be that on the day of application for eviction which is
the crucial date, the tenant incurred the liability of being
evicted from the premises. Even if the landlord died during
the pendency of the writ petition in the High court the bona
fide need cannot be said to have lapsed as the business in
question can be carried on by his widow or any other son.
In our opinion, the subsequent events to overshadow the
genuineness of the need must be of such nature and of such a
dimension that the need propounded by the petitioning party
should have been completely eclipsed by such subsequent
events. A three-Judge Bench of this Court in Pasupuleti
Venkateswarlu vs. Motor and General Traders [1975 (1) SCC
770] which pointed to the need for re-moulding the reliefs
on the strength of subsequent events affecting the cause of
action in the field of rent control litigation, forewarned
that cognizance of such subsequent events should be taken
very cautiously. This is what learned Judges of the Bench
said then:
We affirm the proposition that for making the right or
remedy claimed by the party just and meaningful as also
legally and factually in accord with the current realities,
the court can, and in many cases must, take cautious
cognizance of events and developments subsequent to the
institution of the proceedings provided the rules of
fairness to both sides are scrupulously obeyed.
The next three-Judge Bench of this Court, which approved
and followed the above decision, in Hasmat Rai vs.
Raghunath Prasad [1981 (3) SCC 103] has taken care to
emphasise that the subsequent events should have wholly
satisfied the requirement of the party who petitioned for
eviction on the ground of personal requirement. The
relevant passage is extracted below:
Therefore, it is now incontrovertible that where
possession is sought for personal requirement it would be
correct to say that the requirement pleaded by the landlord
must not only exist on the date of the action but must
subsist till the final decree or an order for eviction is
made. If in the meantime events have cropped up which would
show that the landlords requirement is wholly satisfied
then in that case his action must fail and in such a
situation it is incorrect to say that as decree or order for
eviction is passed against the tenant he cannot invite the
court to take into consideration subsequent events.
(Emphasis supplied)
The judicial tardiness, for which unfortunately our
system has acquired notoriety, causes the lis to creep
through the line for long long years from the start to the
ultimate termini, is a malady afflicting the system. During
this long interval many many events are bound to take place
which might happen in relation to the parties as well as the
subject matter of the lis. If the cause of action is to be
submerged in such subsequent events on account of the malady
of the system it shatters the confidence of the litigant,
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despite the impairment already caused.
Of course a two-Judge Bench (K. Ramaswamy and D.P.
Wadhwa, JJ) pointed out in another case Ansuyaben Kantilal
Bhatt vs. Rashiklal Manilal Shah [1997 5 SCC 457] that the
pendency of a lis for a record period of thirty one years
has transformed a middle aged landlord to advanced stage of
gerenry and at that stage he could not start a new business
venture. After lamenting over the system which caused a
whopping delay of thirty-one years the Bench made two
directions. The first was that the son of the landlord who
by that time had four and a half years more to go for
reaching the superannuation age could consider starting the
business in the tenanted premises after retirement. The
second was that in the meanwhile the rent for the building
would stand enhanced from Rs.101/- to Rs.3500/- per month.
Considering all the aforesaid decisions, we are of the
definite view that the subsequent events pleaded and
highlighted by the appellant are too insufficient to
overshadow the bona fide need concurrently found by the fact
finding courts.
We wish to add, as an epilogue, that this case can
provide a catalytic agent for the High Courts to evolve some
concrete schemes for winching to the fore similar long
pending matters, lying in torpidity at the bottom of the
crammed list of pending cases in the High Courts after
passing the initial orders, keeping the operative part of
decrees in abeyance. It is worth considering whether a cell
can be set up in each of such High Courts where the piles of
backlog are a stirring problem, to pick out such cases to be
brought to the notice of the Chief justice of the High Court
concerned so that he could take appropriate steps in the
matter.
The above is not an advice, but only a suggestion. If
any alternative suggestion would appear better the same can
be resorted to. The time is running out for doing something
to solve the problem which has already grown into monstrous
form. If a citizen is told that once you resort to legal
procedure for realisation of your urgent need you have to
wait and wait for 23 to 30 years, what else is it if not to
inevitably encourage and force him to resort to extra legal
measures for realising the required reliefs. A Republic,
governed by rule of law, cannot afford to compel its
citizens to resort to such extra legal means which are very
often contra legal means with counter-productive results on
the maintenance of law and order in the country.
We dismiss these appeals.