Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MOHAN AMBA PRASAD AGNIHOTRI & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BHASKAR BALWANT AHER (D) THROUGH LRS. C
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 01/03/2000
BENCH:
S.Rajendra Babu, S.S.M.Quadri
JUDGMENT:
SYED SHAH MOHAMMED QUADRI, J.
This appeal is directed against the judgment of the
High Court of judicature at Bombay in Writ Petition No.4188
of 1989 passed on January 13, 1997. The appellants are the
landlords of the House No. and C.T.S.No.1422, Kasba Peth
(old House No.70 Raviwar Peth), Pune, (hereinafter referred
to as the suit premises) which was leased out to the first
respondent, (Bhaskar Balwant Aher) who died during the
pendency of the proceedings. His legal representatives were
brought on record as respondents 1A to 1G. Hereinafter, the
parties will be referred to as the appellants and the
respondents. The appellants let out the suit premises
which comprised of three rooms -- two rooms on the front
side for purposes of running a motorcycle workshop and one
room on the rear side for residential purposes -- on monthly
rent of Rs.45/-. On August 30, 1985, the appellants filed
Civil Suit No.1423 of 1985 seeking eviction of respondent
No.1 from the suit premises on four grounds : (i) bona fide
personal requirement; (ii) change of user; (iii) imprudent
use causing damage to and waste of the suit premises; and
(iv) causing nuisance and annoyance. The suit was resisted
denying all the four grounds. On November 30, 1987, the
Principal Judge, Small Causes Court, Pune, found all the
four grounds in favour of the appellants and decreed the
suit for eviction of the first respondent. His appeal,
before the VIIth Additional District Judge, Pune, against
the said judgment and decree of the trial court, resulted in
dismissal on August 1, 1989. The Appellate Court confirmed
the decree of the trial court on three grounds; however,
the ground of bona fide personal requirement of the
appellants was found against them. The respondents then
filed Writ Petition No.4188 of 1989 under Articles 226 and
227 of the Constitution challenging the correctness of the
judgment and decree of the VIIth Additional District Judge,
Pune. The High Court reversed the finding of the learned
District Judge on all the three grounds and thus allowed the
writ petition on January 13, 1997, which is now under
challenge in this appeal. Mr.Uday Umesh Lalit, learned
counsel appearing for the appellants, has submitted that in
an application under Article 227 of the Constitution, the
High Court ought not to have reappreciated the evidence and
set aside the findings of facts found by the courts below
concurrently and that on this ground alone the order under
appeal is liable to be set aside. He argued the merits of
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grounds on which the findings of the courts below were upset
by the High Court. Mr. Makarand D.Adkar, learned counsel
for the respondents, submitted that the findings recorded by
the courts below were perverse and unsustainable, therefore,
the High Court was justified in interfering with the
findings of fact and allowing the writ petition. On the
first submission of Mr. Lalit, it will suffice to observe
that it is settled law that the jurisdiction of the High
Court under Article 227 is not appellate but supervisory.
It cannot interfere with a finding of fact recorded by lower
court/tribunal unless there is no evidence to support the
finding or the finding is perverse. One of the three
grounds on which the courts below recorded the finding in
favour of the appellants is change of user of the suit
premises by the respondents. It has already been noticed
above that the front rooms, which were let out for business
purposes, were being used for residential purposes and the
rear room which was let out for residential purposes, was
being used partly for storing spare parts of the
motor-cycle. This finding was reversed relying on the
judgment of this Court in Gurdial Batra Vs. Raj Kumar Jain
[1989 (3) SCC 441] wherein it was held that the premises let
out for running a cycle and rickshaw repair shop was also
being used for selling television sets. The Court held that
it did not amount to change of user. The view taken by the
High Court is supported by the decisions of this Court in
Sant Ram Vs. Rajinder Lal and Ors. [1979 (2) SCC 274] and
Kisan Dayanu Mano Vs. Vithal Vishnu Mohandalo [1990 (Supp)
SCC 654]. The second ground on which concurrent finding was
recorded by the courts below is nuisance and annoyance. The
High Court disturbed that finding on the ground that one of
the landlords (Sharad) who lived in the vicinity was
examined as a witness but he did not say a word about
nuisance and annoyance, so there is no evidence to support
that ground. Our attention was invited to the photographs
and the report of the Commissioner. Inasmuch as a copy of
the statement of Sharad was not filed in this Court, we
cannot examine the reason on which the High Court interfered
so we decline to go into this aspect. We are left with the
ground of imprudent use of the suit premises by respondent
No.1. The courts below recorded concurrent finding that the
first respondent was guilty of imprudent use, causing
damage and waste to the property. This is one of the
grounds to seek eviction of a tenant under Section 13(1)(a)
of the Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control
Act, 1947 (for short the Act), which reads as follows:-
13. (1)(a) that the tenant has committed any act contrary
to the provision of clause (o) of Section 108 of the
Transfer of Property Act, 1882;
It, in turn, provides that violation of clause (o) of
Section 108 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882 will be a
ground for seeking eviction of the tenant. It has,
therefore, become necessary to look to clause (o) of Section
108 of the Transfer of Property Act which runs thus :- 108.
Rights and liabilities of lessor and lessee
(a) to (n) *
(o) the lessee may use the property and its products
(if any) as a person of ordinary prudence would use them if
they were his own; but he must not use, or permit another
to use, the property for a purpose other than that for which
it was leased, or fell or sell timber, pull down or damage
buildings belonging to the lessor, or work mines or quarries
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not open when the lease was granted, or commit any other act
which is destructive or permanently injurious thereto.
A plain reading of the provision shows that it
contains various rights and liabilities of a lessee. Among
them is that he shall use the premises as a person of
ordinary prudence as if they were his own and that he shall
not damage the demised building. The Trial Court as well as
the Appellate Court found that the use of the premises by
the first respondent was imprudent which caused damage to
the suit premises. The High Court set aside that finding.
Though the High Court noted that the respondents had stored
the spare parts of the motor-cycles in the backyard, in the
passage and also on the roof which amounted to imprudent use
of the suit premises having noticed the photographs of the
suit premises and perused the report of the Commissioner,
which mentions that the tenants placed spare parts of the
motor-cycles and old motor-cycles in the backyard and on the
roof, it, however, commented that no evidence was produced
to show that it had resulted in any injury or damage to the
property and that the appellants had not examined any
witness for this purpose. It may be pointed out that in
para 7 of the plaint (Annexure A) the appellants stated,
By keeping the material on the tin-roof of the outhouse the
defendant has damaged the same and hence the tins are
broken. Though repeatedly informed to remove the said old
material from the tin the defendant has not removed the
same. The defendant had denied keeping the waste material
over the premises in his written statement. The first
appellant was examined as P.W.1. He stated, inter alia,
that the defendant had kept spare parts (unserviceable
motor-cycle and motor-scooter tyres, tubes, etc.) on the
roof at the rear portion and that on account of storing the
articles on the roof, tin-sheets had been broken. He has
also marked the photograph of the tin-sheets of the roof
(Annexure D). The High Court failed to notice both the
pleadings and the proof on the aspect of damage to the
property and erroneously came to the conclusion that the
finding was not supported by any evidence and set aside the
same on a non-existent ground. This reason is sufficient to
set aside the order of the High Court and restore the decree
of eviction of the respondents passed by the Trial Court and
confirmed by the Appellate Court. Accordingly, we set aside
the impugned order of the High Court and restore the order
of eviction passed by the lower courts on the said ground by
allowing the appeal. In view of the fact that the
respondents are having their business and residence in the
suit premises and they are having a large number of family
members, we consider it just and appropriate to grant time
to vacate the suit premises till December 31, 2000, subject
to their furnishing usual undertaking within two weeks from
today in this Court and we order accordingly. The parties
are directed to bear their respective costs.