Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JOGINDER KUMAR BUTAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
R.P. OBEROI
DATE OF JUDGMENT12/08/1987
BENCH:
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
BENCH:
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
CITATION:
1987 AIR 1996 1987 SCR (3) 937
1987 SCC (4) 20 JT 1987 (3) 298
1987 SCALE (2)273
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1989 SC 458 (11)
RF 1991 SC1233 (5,10)
RF 1992 SC1555 (18)
ACT:
Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958: s. 21--Limited
tenancy--Permission obtained .from Rent Controller for short
periods--Whether fraud/ wilful contravention/abuse of stat-
ute--Objections not raised during the term of the
lease--Permissibility of--Lease agreement not reduced to
writing--Validity of
Statutory Interpretation--Local statutes--Law settled by
High Court over a continuous period of time--Normally to be
adhered to-Should not be disturbed.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent, a government official, while residing in
Government quarters sought permission of the Rent Controller
under s. 21 of the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 for leasing
out a portion of his house to the appellant for residential
purposes for 18 months as he did not require it for his own
use for that period. The appellant declared before the Rent
Controller that he accepted the statement of the respondent
and that he shall vacate the premises on the expiry of the
period of 18 months. The Rent Controller, thereupon, passed
an order granting permission in terms of the declaration.
When after expiry of the stipulated period the appellant
failed to vacate the leased portion, the respondent filed an
execution application for recovering possession. The Rent
Controller as well as the Appellate Authority rendered
concurrent finding to the effect that the tenancy came into
effect only by reason of the permission granted by the Rent
Controller under s. 21 and directed the appellant to deliver
possession to the respondent.
In second appeal before the High Court it was contended
by the appellant that since the lease agreement was not
reduced to writing, as required under s. 21 of the Act, the
permission granted by the Rent Controller was not valid.
Dismissing the appeal the High Court held that in as much as
the parties had made statements before the Rent Controller
and duly signed them, there was sufficient compliance with
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the terms of s. 21 and it was not necessary that there
should be a separate agreement in writing over and above the
draft agreement and the statements rendered before the Rent
Controller.
938
In the appeal by special leave, the contention taken
before the High Court was reiterated, and in addition it was
contended for the first time that the permission obtained by
the respondent from the Rent Controller under s. 21 was in
fraud of the statute inasmuch as he had been obtaining such
permission on several occasions for short periods in order
to deprive the tenants of their rights under the Act.
Dismissing the appeal,
HELD: 1.1 A plea pertaining to fraudulent practice is a
mixed question of fact and law. Without the requisite foun-
dation on facts to prove a wilful contravention or abuse of
a provision of law a finding cannot be rendered as to wheth-
er a party has committed a fraud by abusing any legal provi-
sion. [943FG]
1.2 In the instant case, the appellant had not cross-
examined the respondent with reference to the lease granted
earlier by the respondent to other tenants nor had he ad-
duced independent evidence to prove the factum of those
leases and such leases being granted by abuse of the provi-
sions of s. 21 of the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958. In the
absence of factual material to show the abuse or misuse of
the provisions of s. 21, it cannot be said that the respond-
ent had practised fraud on the Rent Controller in obtaining
permission. Besides, even if the respondent had let out
different portions of the building to other tenants on
earlier occasions by having recourse to s. 21 he may have
done so on the basis of bona fide grounds and genuine calcu-
lations and his calculations may have gone wrong due to
factors or events beyond his control. The mere fact of
letting out of the premises once again by resort to s. 21
for a limited period should not necessarily lead to the
inference that from the very beginning the premises were
available for letting out indefinitely. [943EF, G-944A,
946A]
Dhanwanti v. D.D. Gupta, (AIR 1986 SC 1184) referred to.
1.3 The respondent was a government servant and was living
in Government quarters. He had an apprehension that the said
allotment may be cancelled because of his owning a house and
so he had to provide for any contingency resulting from such
cancellation and hence he felt he would be able to spare the
leased premises only for a limited period. There was no
material before the Rent Controller to establish or even to
arouse suspicion that the respondent was playing a fraud on
the statute. In such circumstances the order passed by the
Rent Controller cannot be said to be vitiated in any manner.
[945AB]
939
S.B. Noronah v. Prem Kumari Khanna, [1980] 1 SCR 281,
applied.
V.S. Rahi v. Ram Chambeli, [1984] 2 SCR 290, distinguished.
2. The appellant has waited for the full term of the
lease to raise objections about the respondent playing a
fraud on the statute. He has failed to put forth these
objections within a reasonable time, after the permission
was granted by the Rent Controller, to impugn the order on
the ground of the alleged fraud perpetrated by the respond-
ent,. This factor weakens the objections raised by the
appellant and denudes them of force and content. [946CD]
J.R. Vohra v. India Export House, [1985] 2 SCR 899 at
911-912, referred to.
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3. In the matter of interpretation of a local statute
the law settled by the High Court over a continuous period
of time should normally be adhered to and should not be
disturbed. The Delhi High Court has consistently held that
s. 21 of the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 is a complete Code
by itself, and a permission granted thereunder would not
become invalid either on account of the landlord failing to
disclose the reasons for non-requirement of the leased
premises for a particular period or because of the landlord
and the tenant not entering into an agreement in writing
subsequent to the grant of permission under s. 21 or on
account of the agreement of tenancy in writing not being
subsequently registered. A different view would not only
introduce an element of uncertainty and confusion but it
would also have the effect of unsettling transactions which
might have been entered into on the faith of those deci-
sions. [947B, 946H-947A, FG]
Inder Mohan Lal v. Ramesh Khanna (C.A. No. 468 of 1977)
decided on 4.8.1987; Raj Narain Pandey & Ors. v. Sant Prasad
Tewari & Ors., [1973] 2 SCR 835 and Kasturi Lal v. Shiv
Charan Das Mathur, [1976] Rent Control Reporter, Vol. 8 p.
703, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1148
1979.
From the Judgment and Order dated 4.4.1979 of the Delhi
High Court in S.A.O. No. 103 of 1979.
P.H. Parekh and A.K. Gupta for the Appellant.
940
Dr. U.R. Lalit, C.M. Oberai and D.N. Misra for the
Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
NATARAJAN, J. This appeal by special leave is directed
against a judgment of the Delhi High Court dismissing the
second appeal preferred by the appellant herein to impugn
the order passed against him in execution proceedings taken
under Section 21 of the Delhi Rent Control Act 1958 by the
Rent Controller and confirmed by the Rent Control Tribunal.
The respondent, a Government official who has since
retired from service is the owner of a house bearing number
A/15, Naraina Vihar, New Delhi. During the year 1976, the
respondent was residing in Government Quarters situated in
Kidwai Nagar, New Delhi. On June 1, 1976 the respondent and
the appellant appeared before the Rent Controller and sought
for permission of the Rent Controller for the rear portion
of the ground floor being leased out for a period of 18
months to the appellant under Section 21 of the Delhi Rent
Control Act (hereinafter referred to as the Act). Besides
filing the application, the parties gave their declarations
before the Rent Controller. The respondent declared that he
was the owner of the premises No. A-15, Naraina Residential
Scheme, Delhi, that he did not require the rear portion of
the ground floor as shown in the plan Exhibit A-1 for his
own use. that as such he wanted to let out the same to the
appellant for residential purpose at a monthly rent of
Rs.500 exclusive of water and electricity charges for a
period of 18 months with effect from June 1, 1976 as per
proposed lease deed Exhibit A-2. The appellant for his part
declared that he had heard the statement of the respondent
and he accepted the same as correct, that he wanted to take
on lease the rear portion of the ground floor of the re-
spondent’s house as marked in plan Exhibit A-I for his
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residence on a monthly rent of Rs.500 exclusive of water and
electricity charges for a period of 18 months with effect
from June 1, 1976 as per the terms contained in the draft
lease deed Exhibit A-2 and further declared that he "shall
vacate the premises on the expiry of the aforesaid period of
18 months." Thereupon the Rent Controller passed an order as
under:-
"Having regard to the averments made in the
petition and the statements of the parties
recorded above, permission under Section 21 of
the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 is granted to
the petitioner for letting out the aforesaid
por-
941
tion of the aforesaid house as detailed in the
statement of the petitioner to the respondent
for residential purpose for a period of 18
months with effect from today, the 1st of
June, 1976. File be consigned to the record
room."
It was the case of the respondent in the execution
application filed by him that pursuant to the above said
permission granted by the Rent Controller, the appellant was
inducted into possession of the leased portion on June 2,
1976, that the period of lease came to an end on November
30, 1976 and that as the appellant failed to deliver posses-
sion on December 1, 1977 as undertaken by him, he had to
file the application under Section 21 for recovering posses-
sion of the leased portion. The said execution application
was filed on December 12, 1977.
The appellant contested the application and raised a
three-fold defence as under:-
(1) He had been inducted into possession as a tenant on
May 28, 1976 itself, i.e. before the Rent Controller gave
permission to the lease transaction by his order dated June
1. 1976 and that as such the tenancy was not governed by the
order passed under section 21 of the Act by the Rent Con-
troller.
(2) Though the leased portion was taken on rent for
being used as a residence, the parties by mutual arrangement
had agreed soon after the lease to make the proprietary
concern of the appellant viz. M/s. Refaire Projects Corpora-
tion the tenant of the premises and as such the firm was the
tenant and not the appellant and hence the execution appli-
cation against the appellant was not maintainable.
3. After the period of tenancy was over, a fresh tenancy
was entered into governing not only the leased portion of
the ground floor on a higher rent of Rs.550 P.M. but also
covering a garage and servants quarters on a monthly rent of
Rs. 150 and by reason of the new tenancy the respondent was
disentitled to file an execution application.
The Rent Controller and the Rent Control Tribunal, after
a due consideration of the materials placed before the court
by the parties, rendered concurrent findings to the effect
that the tenancy came into effect only by reason of the
permission granted by the Rent Controller under Section 21,
that the several pleas of the tenant viz. a tenancy
942
coming into existence even prior to the order of the Rent
Controller, a subsequent modification of the tenancy so as
to make the firm the tenant and a fresh tenancy being creat-
ed so as to cover an additional area and on revised rental
terms were all untenable and baseless contentions. Both the
authorities therefore allowed the execution application and
directed the appellant to deliver possession of the leased
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premises.
Before the High Court, in the second appeal preferred by
the appellant, the question of a fresh tenancy on revised
terms of lease was again sought to be canvassed but the High
Court very rightly declined to examine the matter as the
exercise would call for appraisal of evidence on factual
matters which is in the domain of the Trial Court and the
first Appellate Court and would also necessitate sitting in
judgment over concurrent findings of facts rendered by the
courts below. It was then urged before the High Court that
there was no agreement in writing as required under Section
21 of the Act and hence the permission granted by the Rent
Controller was not a valid one on the strength of which an
execution application can be filed. The High Court rejected
this contention stating that inasmuch as the parties had
made statements before the Rent Controller and duly signed
them, there was sufficient compliance with the terms of
Section 21 and it was not necessary that there should be a
separate agreement in writing over and above the draft
agreement and the statements rendered before the Rent Con-
troller. The High Court also briefly went into the question
whether the proprietary concern of the appellant had become
the tenant and whether thereby the use of the premises had
been changed from residential to non-residential purpose and
found the contentions of the appellant to be wholly devoid
of merit. The High Court therefore dismissed the second
appeal and hence the present appeal by special leave by the
tenant.
Mr. Parekh, learned counsel for the appellant, realising
the futility of canvassing once over again the unsuccessful
defences raised before the courts below and the High Court,
sought to assail the judgment of the High Court and the
order in the Execution Application on two grounds alone viz.
(1) the permission obtained by the respondent from the Rent
Controller under Section 21 was in fraud of the statute and
(2) an important condition prescribed by Section 21 was not
fulfilled. It has to be mentioned even here that these
contentions had not been raised before the Rent Controller
and the Appellate Tribunal or even before the High Court.
943
In so far as the first contention is concerned, the
appellant has alleged in the special leave petition that the
respondent had been obtaining permission from the Rent
Controller under Section 21 on several occasions for leasing
out different portions in the ground floor as well as the
first floor of the house to different tenants for short
periods in order to deprive the tenants of their rights
conferred by the Act and also to get higher rent from each
successive tenant. The respondent has controverted these
averments in his counter-affidavit. Mr. Parekh submitted
that the appellant was not setting up a new case because he
had given the details of the names of the previous tenants
and the portions occupied by them and the periods for which
short term leases were granted to them after obtaining
permission from the Rent Controller under Section 21 of the
Act and as such there were enough materials before the Court
to show that the respondent had been abusing the provisions
of Section 21 and playing a fraud upon the statute and
obtaining permission for leasing out portions of the house
to several tenants for limited durations and as such the
permission granted by the Rent Controller in this case is
vitiated by the fraud committed by the respondent and hence
the execution application filed by the respondent was not at
all maintainable. It is true we find that in the objections
filed by the appellant to the execution application, he has
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given some particulars regarding the names of some tenants
to whom the other portions of the building had been let out
by the respondent after obtaining permission from the Rent
Controller under Section 21. But significantly enough, the
appellant had not pursued the matter and substantiated the
charge of fraud levelled by him. He has not cross-examined
the respondent with reference to the leases granted earlier
by him to other tenants nor has he adduced independent
evidence to prove the factum of those leases and such leases
being granted by abuse of the provisions of Section 21. In
the absence of factual materials to show the abuse or misuse
of the provisions of Section 21, it is not possible for us
to sustain the contention of the appellant’s counsel that
the respondent had practised fraud on the Rent Controller
and obtained permission under Section 21 to lease out a
portion of the house to the appellant because a plea per-
taining to fraudulent practice is a mixed question of fact
and law. Without the requisite foundation on facts to prove
a wilful contravention or abuse of a provision of law a
finding cannot be rendered as to whether a party has commit-
ted a fraud by abusing any legal provision. Besides, it has
to be borne in mind that even if the respondent had let out
the ground floor portions and the first floor of the build-
ing to other tenants on earlier occasions by having recourse
to Section 21 of the Act, the respondent may have done so on
the basis of bona .fide grounds and
944
genuine calculations and his calculations may have gone
wrong due to factors or events beyond his control.
Learned counsel invited our attention to the decisions
rendered in S.P. Noronah v. Prem Kumari Khanna, [1980] 1 SCR
28 1 and V.S. Rahi v. Ram Chambeli, [1984] 2 SCR 290 and
argued that the respondent had suppressed material facts
from the Rent Controller when he asked for permission under
Section 21 of the Act to lease out the premises in question
to the appellant for eighteen months, and furthermore the
Rent Controller had passed his order granting permission
under Section 21 without the application of mind. Similar
contentions were raised before us in the case of Inder Mohan
Lal v. Ramesh Khanna (C.A. No. 468 of 1977) in which judg-
ment has been rendered by us on 4.8. 1987. The whole gamut
of Section 21, the object underlying the provision, the
field of its operation and the correct ratio to be applied
in dealing with cases pertaining to Section 21 have been
elaborately considered by us in the light of the earlier
decisions of this Court and some of the decisions rendered
by the Delhi High Court. We have pointed out therein that in
order to attract Section 21 four conditions have to be
satisfied viz. (1) the landlord does not require the whole
or part of any premises for a particular period, (2) the
landlord must obtain the permission of the Controller in the
prescribed manner, (3) the letting of the whole or part of
the premises must be for residential purposes only; and (4)
such letting out must be for such period as may be agreed to
in writing. After analysing the decision in Noronah’s case
the resultant position emerging under law has been summa-
rised as follows:-
"An analysis of this judgment which has been
applied in the various cases would indicate
that Section 21 only gives sanction if the
landlord makes a statement to the satisfaction
of the court and the tenant accepts that the
landlord does not require the premises for a
limited period, this statement of a landlord
must be bona fide. The purpose must be for
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residence. There must not be any fraud or
collusion. There is a presumption of regulari-
ty. But it is open in particular facts and
circumstances of the case to prove to the
satisfaction of the executing court that there
was collusion or conspiracy between the land-
lord and the tenant and the landlord did not
mean what he said or that it was a fraud or
that the tenant agreed because the tenant was
wholly unequal to the landlord."
945
Viewed in this light it may be seen that the respondent
herein has satisfied all the tests prescribed in Noronah’s
case. The respondent was a Government servant and was living
in Government quarters allotted to him. He had an apprehen-
sion that the allotment of the Government quarters may be
cancelled because of his owning a house and so he had to
provide for any contingency resulting from the cancellation
of the allotment of Government quarters to him, and hence he
felt he would be able to spare the leased premises only for
a limited period. There was no material before the Rent
Controller to establish or even to arouse suspicion that the
respondent was playing a fraud on the statute. In such
circumstances the order passed by the Rent Controller cannot
be said to be vitiated in any manner. It would also be
pertinent to point out in this context that if the Rent
Controller had reason to suspect the bona fides of the
respondent’s application under Section 21, the Rent Control-
ler could only have declined to grant his permission for the
lease transaction and, if he had done so, the lease transac-
tion would not at all have come to pass through. The Rent
Controller could not have compelled or directed the respond-
ent to give the premises on lease to the appellant for an
indefinite period of time so as to enable the appellant to
have the benefit of the statutory protection afforded by the
Act against eviction except on one or more of the grounds
set out in Section 14. In so far as Rahi’s case (supra) is
concerned, the facts therein were totally different and they
were instrumental for the court declining to sustain the
landlady’s application under Section 21 for eviction of the
tenant. The evidence in the case established that the land-
lady had previously let out the identical portion of the
house to other tenants but still she had made a false decla-
ration before the Rent Controller that she had never let out
the portion to any one earlier. Furthermore her statement
that after the lease period was over her mother would be
joining her and the leased portion would be required for her
was found to be false because the lady in question was not
her mother but an aunt whom the landlady claimed to be her
foster mother. It was therefore a case where the permission
under Section 21 had been obtained on the basis of false
declarations and statements. In the present case no such
false declaration had been made by the respondent when he
sought the permission of the Rent Controller under Section
21. On the other hand we are inclined to agree with the
argument of the respondent’s counsel that the facts of the
case call for the court taking the view which it had taken
in the case of Dhanwanti v. D.D. Gupta, (AIR 1986 SC 1184).
In that case it was observed that there may be certain cases
where the owner, after obtaining permission under Section 21
of the Act had let out the premises for a limited period and
after the expiry of the said
946
period he may have again found it necessary to obtain per-
mission to let out the premises for another limited period
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due to genuine causes and therefore, the mere fact of let-
ting out of the premises once again by having resort to
Section 21 of the Act for a limited period should not neces-
sarily lead to the inference that from the very beginning
the premises were available for letting out indefinitely. In
the instant case there is no evidence except the averment of
the appellant that the respondent had let out the leased
portion on earlier occasions also for limited periods by
having resort to Section 21. However even if that statement
is true there cannot be an automatic inference that the
permission granted by the Rent Controller pertaining to the
lease of the premises to the appellant had been obtained by
fraudulent means by the respondent.
Apart from these things there is also another factor
which weakens the objections raised by the appellant and
denudes them of force and content. He has waited for the
full term of the lease to raise objections about the re-
spondent playing a fraud on the statute. He has failed to
put-forth these objections within a reasonable time after
the permission was granted by the Rent Controller to impugn
the order on the ground of the alleged fraud perpetrated by
the respondent. It was observed by this Court in J.R.. Vohra
v. India Export House, [1985] 2 SCR 899 at 911-912 that the
remedy available to a tenant in a case where there was only
a ritualistic observance of the procedure while granting
permission for the creation of a limited tenancy or where
such permission was procured by fraud practised by the
landlord or was a result of collusion between the strong and
the weak, would be for the tenant approaching the Rent
Controller during the currency of the limited tenancy itself
for adjudication of his pleas as soon as he discovers facts
and circumstances that tend to vitiate ab initio the initial
grant of permission and not to wait till the landlord makes
his application for recovery of the premises after the
expiry of the period fixed under Section 21.
We are, therefore, unable to sustain the first ground of
attack of the appellant’s counsel to assail the judgment of
the High Court.
In so far as the second ground is concerned, this aspect
of the matter also has been considered by us and dealt with
in a detailed manner in Inder Mohan Lal’s case. After notic-
ing the decisions of the Delhi High Court which have held
the field all along declaring that Section 21 is a complete
Code by itself and that a permission granted under Section
21 would not become invalid either on account of the
947
landlord failing to disclose the reasons for non-requirement
of the leased premises for a particular period or because of
the landlord and the tenant not entering into an agreement
in writing subsequent to the grant of permission under
Section 21 or on account of the agreement of tenancy in
writing not being subsequently registered, this Court af-
firmed the decisions of the Delhi High Court laying down the
above ratio in observance of the settled judicial policy
that in the matter of interpretation of a local statute the
law settled by the High Court over a continuous period of
time should be normally adhered to and should not be dis-
turbed. The relevant passage in the judgment reads as fol-
lows:-
"Learned counsel for the appellant also
stressed before us that Section 21 of the Rent
Act was a complete Code by itself. The order
was under section 21 of the Rent Act. No
further question of lease or registered lease
arose thereafter.
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This question has been settled by
series of decisions of the Delhi High Court
upon which people have acted for long. See the
decision in Kasturi Lal v. Shiv Charan Das
Mathur, [1976] Rent Control Reporter Vol. 8-
703 where at pages 708-709 Misra J. of the
Delhi High Court had clearly indicated numer-
ous cases where it was held that Section 21
was a Code by itself. The order of the permis-
sion is itself an authority; no lease was
necessary and if that is the state of law in
Delhi, it is too late in the day to hold
otherwise. See the observations of this Court
in Raj Narain Pandey and others v. Sant Prasad
Tewari & others, [1973] 2 SCR 835 where this
Court observed that in the matter of the
interpretation of a local statute, the view
taken by the High Court over a number of years
should normally be adhered to and not to be
disturbed. A different view would not only
introduce an element of uncertainty and confu-
sion but it would also have the effect of
unsettling transactions which might have been
entered into on the faith of those decisions.
In Delhi, transactions have been completed on
the basis of permission and it was never
doubted that there was any requirement of any
lease or any agreement subsequent to the order
and the same required registration.
There is therefore, no merit in the second contention of
the appellant’s counsel that since the lease transaction was
not reduced to
948
writing in terms of Exhibit A-2 subsequent to the grant of
permission by the Rent Controller, the terms of Section 21
are not fulfilled and hence the execution application under
Section 21 would not lie.
In the light of our conclusions the appeal has to fail
and it will accordingly stand dismissed with costs to the
respondent.
P.S.S Appeal dis-
missed.
949