Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 11
PETITIONER:
MOTIRAM GHELABHAI (DEAD) THROUGH L. R. MANIRAM MOTIRAM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
JAGAN NAGAR (DEAD) THROUGH LRS AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT28/02/1985
BENCH:
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
BENCH:
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
KHALID, V. (J)
CITATION:
1985 AIR 709 1985 SCR (2)1051
1985 SCC (2) 279 1985 SCALE (1)360
ACT:
Bombay Rents, hotel and Lodging House Rates Control
Act, 1947, Section 50 Suit for possession under Transfer of
Property Act-Decreed for possession-Appeal filed and
pending-Part 11 of the Act made applicable to area where
suit premises situated-Appellant whether entitled to
protection of 1947 Act-Effect of proviso para 2 of section
50 explained.
HEADNOTE:
The respondents-plaintiffs gave a lease of an open
plot lo the appellant-defendant for a period of 10 years for
the purpose of running a flour mill after making necessary
construction thereon at a yearly rent. In the lease-deed
there was a clause for the renewal of the term, and also
that if it was not renewed, the lessors were given the right
to recover vacant possession on removal of construction at
the expiry of the initial term. There was no renewal of the
term on the expiry of 10 years lease period and the
appellant-defendant was permitted to bold-over. Later by a
notice nuder s. 106 of the Transfer of Property Act the
respondent called upon the appellant-defendant to vacate and
hand-over vacant possession As the notice was not complied
with a suit in ejectment was filed against the a appellant-
defendant
The trial court negatived all the daffiness that were
raised by the appellant-defendant and decreed the suit for
ejectment in favour of the respondents-plaintiffs.
The appellant-defendant challenged the decres by an
appeal to the District Court and while the appeal was
pending the State by a Notification dated 26th March, 1980
applied Part II of the Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House
Rates Control Act, 1947 to the village where the suit
premises were situated. The appellant-defendant with the
permission of the court raised the contention in the appeal
that he was entitled to the protection of Part II of the Act
and since none of the grounds on which eviction could have
been made under Part II had been made out by the
respondents-plaintiffs they were not entitled to recover
possession. This contention was refuted ml behalf of The
respondents-plaintiffs on the ground that in view of the
proviso to s 50 of the Act and particularly the latter part
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 11
thereof Part II of the Act had no retrospective operation so
far as
1052
pending appeals were concerned and such appeals had to be
disposed of as if Part II of the Act was not applicable. The
Assistant Judge took the view that the proviso to s. 50 read
with the latter part thereof expressly enacted that pending
appeals arising out of decrees or orders passed before the
coming into operation of the Act had to be disposed of as if
the Act had not been passed and therefore the appellant
defendant was not entitled to any protection as claimed by
him and the respondents-plaintiffs were entitled to the
decree for possession and dismissed the appeal.
The second appeal of the appellant-defendant to the
High Court was summarily dismissed.
In the appeal to this Court on the question: whether a
pending appeal would be governed by the Bombay Rents, Hotel
Rates and Lodging House Rates (Control) Act, 1947 Upon the
Part II of the Act being made applicable in the area in
which the suit premises were situated during its pendency .
Dismissing the Appeal,
^
HELD: 1. Having regard to the two decisions in
Chandrasingh Manibhai and others v. Surjit lal Ladhamal
Chhaabda and others, [1951] 2 SCR 221 and Shah Bhojraj
Kuverji Oil Mills and ginning factory v, Subhash Chandra
Yograj Sinha, [1962] 2 SCR 159 it is clear that sub-secs.
(2) and (3) of s. 12 are prospective but sub-sec. (1)
thereof is retrospective in operation. [1056B]
2. By the Bombay Act 3 of 1949 three changes were made
by the legislature, (i) it deleted the words other than
execution proceedings and appeals" appearing in brackets
from the proviso and inserted a new para graph at the end of
that proviso dealing separately with execution proceedings
and appeals, (ii) it inserted the words ’or shall be
continued in such Courts as the case may be" in that
proviso, and (iii) it deleted the word "thereupon" from the
proviso. the object of amendments made at (ii) and (iii) was
to remove the judicial confusion caused by Courts taking
conducting views on the question whether the Act (1947 Act)
applied only to transferred cases and not others. By the
amendment made at i i) what war there in the body of the
proviso was relegated to a new separate paragraph and no
change was effected except that the effect of the wide
expression ’ all suits and proceedings" was re-emphsised and
further clarified by using the words "execution proceedings
and appeals arising out orders, passed before the coming
into operation of this Act" in the new paragraph. [1060G-H;
1061B-C]
3. (i) The substantive part of s. 50, the proviso
thereto and the new paragraph added at the end of the
proviso has to be read as a whole to know the true nature
and scope of the proviso. [1059B]
(ii) Under the substantive part of s. 50 on the
coming into force of 11 the Act (the 1947 Act) the two
earlier enactments (the 1939 Act and the
1053
1944 Act) stand repealed. If nothing more was said then s. 7
of the A Bombay General Clauses Act, 1904 would have come
into play and would have had the effect of saving the legal
proceedings or remedies in respect of any right, privilege,
obligation or liability acquired, accrued or incurred under
the repealed enactments. In other words, all suits and
proceedings including execution proceedings and appeals
arising therefrom which were pending on the relevant date
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 11
and which were governed by the provisions of the repealed
Acts would have been saved and the rights and obligations of
the parties thereto would have been worked out under the
relevant provisions of the repealed Acts. But the proviso
which provides for special savings clearly indicates that
pending suits and original proceedings in which decrees and
orders have not been passed alone should be governed by the
provisions of the Act and not execution proceedings and
appeals arising out of such decrees and orders passed before
the coming into operation of the Act. [1061E G; 1062A-B]
(iii) The proviso was and has been enacted to provide
for special savings which suggests that it has not been
introduced merely with a view to qualify or create
exceptions to what is contained in the substantive part of
s. 50. Secondly, it does appear that the Legislature while
framing the Act (the 1947 Act) was enacting certain
provisions for the benefit of tenants which conferred larger
benefits on them than were in fact conferred by the earlier
enactments which were repealed, this is clear if regard be
had to the wider definition of the expression tenant’
adopted in s. S (II) and therefore, the Legislature thought
it advisable that in regard to pending suits and original
proceedings of the description or categories specified
therein, in which the decrees and orders were not passed the
provisions of the Act should be made applicable. It is with
this intention that the proviso to s. 50 has been enacted in
the manner it has been done. [1062C-E]
(iv) While extending the larger benefits of the 1947
Act to tenants the Legislature has used a very wide
expression, namely, "all suits and proceedings between a
landlord and tenant" so as to include within that category
suits and proceedings filed under the repealed Acts as also
under the general law or Transfer of Property Act [1062F]
(v) The proviso read with the separate paragraph added
thereto will have to be regarded as an independent provision
enacting a substantive law of its own by way of providing
for special savings. [1062G]
Shankarlal Ramrotan v. Pandharinath Vishnu, 53 Bom. L.
R. 319, approved.
In the instant case, an appeal (arising out of a
decree passed in a suit filed under the Transfer of Property
Act) was pending when Part II of the Act was made applicable
to village Kalwada, (where the suit property was situated)
would be directly covered by the proviso read with the
separate paragraph added there(o and the appeal was liable
to be decided and disposed of as if the 1941 Act had not
been passed, that is it had to
1054
be disposed of in accordance with the law that was then
applicable to it. The Assistant Judge as well as the High
Court were therefore right in coming to the conclusion that
the appellant-defendant was not entitled to any protection
of the 1947 Act as claimed by him. [1063B-Dl
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 239 of
1985.
S.H. Sheth for the Appellant.
P.H Parekh, and Miss Indu Malhotra for the
Respondents
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
TULZAPURKAR, J. The short question raised in this
appeal is whether a pending appeal would be governed by the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 11
Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act,
1947 (for short the Act) upon the Part II of the Act being
made applicable to the area in which the suit premises were
situate during its pendency ?
The material facts giving rise to the question are
these: By a registered lease dated 3.6.1957 (Exb. 75) the
respondents-plaintiffs gave a lease of an open plot
admeasuring about 7,500 sq. ft. forming part of a non-
agricultural land bearing Survey No. 70/4/1 situated in
village Kalwada in Valsad District, Gujarat State to the
appellant-defendant for a period of 10 years for the purpose
of running a flour mill after making necessary construction
thereon at an yearly rent of Rs. 101/-. There was a clause
for the renewal of the term but if it was not renewed the
lessors were given the right to recover vacant possession on
removal of construction at the expiry of the initial term.
Admittedly, there was no renewal of the term and therefore
on the expiry of 10 years the lessors became entitled to
recover vacant possession on 3.6.1967 but the appellant-
defendant was permitted to hold over. By a notice under s.
106 of the Transfer of Property Act issued on 2.12.1970 the
respondents-plaintiffs called upon the appellant-defendant
to vacate and hand over vacant possession of the suit plot
after midnight of 2.6.1971 that is to say on 3 6.1971 but as
the notice was not complied with a suit in ejectment was
filed against the appellant-defendant on 12.7.1972. Since
the suit premises were not governed by any rent legislation
eviction on the ground of determination of tenancy under
Transfer of Property Act was available to the respondents-
plaintiffs. The trial court negatived all the defenses that
were raised by the defendant
1055
appellant and decreed the suit for ejectment in favour of
the respond- A dents-plaintiffs on 28.2.19?7. On 20.61977
the appellant-defendant challenged the decree by filing an
appeal to the District Court, Navsari being Civil Appeal No.
60 of 1977.
While aforesaid appeal was pending in the District
Court the State of Gujarat by its Notification dated 26th
March, 1980 applied Part 11 of the Act to village Kalwada
where the suit premises were situated. Thereupon the
defendant-appellant with the permission of the court raised
the contention that he was entitled to the protection of
Part II of the Act and since none of the grounds on which
eviction could be had by the landlord under Part II had been
made out by the respondents-plaintiffs they were not
entitled to recover possession of the suit plot by virtue of
the decree passed by the trial court. That contention was
refuted on behalf of the respondents-plaintiffs on the
ground that in view of the proviso to s. 50 of the Act and
particularly the latter part thereof Part I I of the Act had
no retrospective operation so far as pending appeals were
concerned and such appeals had to be disposed of as if Part
II of the Act was not applicable. The learned Assistant
Judge who heard the appeal took the view that the proviso to
s. 50 read with the latter part thereof expressly enacted
that pending appeals arising out of decrees or orders passed
before the coming into operation of the Act had to be
disposed of as if the Act had not been passed and therefore
the appellant-defendant was not entitled to any protection
as claimed by him and the respondents-plaintiffs were
entitled to the decree for possession; he therefore
dismissed the appeal. The High Court confirmed the view
taken by the learned Assistant Judge by dismissing the
appellant-defendant’s second appeal summarily The appellant-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 11
defendant has challenged before us the aforesaid view taken
by the courts below in this appeal.
In support of the plea that his client’s appeal
pending in the district Court was governed by Part II of the
Act no sooner that Part was made applicable to Village
Kalwada, Counsel for the defendant-appellant raised two
contentions In the first place he urged that a section could
be prospective in one part and retrospective i n another and
that it has been so held in regard to s. 12 occurring in
Part II of the Act by this Court; he pointed out that in
Chandrasingh Manibhai and others v. Surjit Lal Ladhamal
Chhabda and others(l) this Court has taken the view that
(1) [1951] 2 S.C.R. 221.
1056
sub-secs. (2) and (3) of sec. 12 are, having regard to the
language employed therein prospective in operation and
therefore would apply to suits filed after the Act has come
into force while in Shah Bhojraj Kuverji Oil Mills and
Ginning factory v. Subhash Chandra Yograj Sinha(1) it has
been held that sub-sec. (1) of sec 12, by reason of the
words used therein, is retrospective in operation and
covered even suits pending on the date when the Act is
brought into force or is made applicable to an area and all
such pending suits would have to be decided as if the
protection afforded by sub-sec. (l) is available to the
tenants who are parties to such suits; he urged that such
protection against eviction under sec. 12 (l) of the Act
would be available to the tenant independently of sec. 50 of
the Act. Further according to the learned Counsel since an
appeal is a continuation of a suit the protection of sub-
sec. ( I ) would be available to the tenant in the pending
appeal He therefore, urged that since Civil Appeal No. 60 of
1977 was nothing but a continuation of the suit which was
pending at the time when sec. 12 was made applicable to
Village Kalwada the defendant-appellant was entitled to the
protection of sec. 12(1) of the Act and the trial court’s
decree for eviction obtained by the respondents-plaintiffs
was of no avail to them. Secondly, he contended that sec. 50
and the proviso thereto did not apply to the present case at
all; according to him that the proviso is not an independent
provision but is linked with the substantive enactment
contained in sec. 50 which deals with the repeal of two
earlier enactments, namely, Bombay Rent Restriction Act,
1939 and the Bombay Rents, Hotel Rates and Lodging House
Rates (Control) Act, 1944 and since the present suit was one
under the Transfer of Property Act and was not under either
of the two repealed Acts there would be no question of
applying the proviso to such a suit or to any appeal arising
out of a decree in such suit. According to P him such suits
and appeals arising from decrees in such suits would be
governed by sec 12(1) of the Act which has retrospective
operation, and since protection was available to his client
in the pending appeal the decree for ejectment ought to have
been set aside by the lower courts.
The question thus raised requires proper construction
being placed on the two relevant and connected provisions of
the Act, namely s. 12(1) and s. 50. These provisions run
thus:
(1) [1962] 2 S.C.R. 159.
1057
12. (1)- no ejectment ordinarily to be made if
tenant A pays or is ready and willing to pay standard
permitted increases. A landlord shall not be entitled
to the recovery of possession of any premises so long
as the tenant pays, or is ready and willing to pay, the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 11
amount of the standard rent and permitted increases, if
any and observes and performs the other conditions of
the tenancy, in so far as they are consistent with the
provisions of this Act.
50. Repeal. The Bombay Rent Restriction Act,
1939, and the Bombay Rents, Hotel Rates and Lodging
House Rates (Control) Act, 1944, are hereby repealed;
Provided that all suits and proceedings between a
landlord and a tenant relating to the recovery or
fixing of rent or possession of any premises to which
the provisions of Part II apply and all suits and
proceedings by a manager of a hotel or an owner of a
lodging house against a lodger for the recovery of
charges for, or possession of, the accommodation
provided in a hotel or lodging house situate in an area
to which Part III applies, which are pending in any
Court, shall be transferred to and continued before the
Courts which would have jurisdiction to try such suits
or proceedings under this Act or shall be continued in
such Courts, as the case may be, and all the provisions
of this Act and the rules made thereunder shall apply
to all such suits and proceedings.
Nothing in this proviso shall apply to execution
proceedings and appeals arising out of decrees or
orders, passed before the coming into operation of this
Act; and such execution proceedings and appeals shall
be decided and disposed of as if this Act had not been
passed.
So far as s. 12 of the Act is concerned, having regard
to the two decisions mentioned earlier it is clear that this
Court has ruled that sub-secs. (2) and (3) of s 12 are
prospective but sub-sec. (1) thereof is retrospective in
operation and in that behalf the Court in Shah Bhojraj’s
case (supra) has relied upon the difference in the language
employed in sub-sec. (2) and (3) on the one hand and sub-
sec. (1) on the other. Since sub-sec. (2) commences with the
words, "no suit for recovery of possession shall be
instituted ......." and since sub-sec. (3) as it then stood
commenced with the words "no decree for eviction shall be
passed in any such suit .. " the
1058
Court took the view that such language plainly indicated
that these provisions w re intended to operate
prospectively, that is to say would apply to suits
instituted after the coming into force of the Act. but so
tar as sub-sec (l) is concern the court pointed out that the
point of time when sub-sec. ( t) operates is when the decree
for recovery of possession has to be passed and that the
language of that sub-section, which provides that the
landlord is not entitled to recover possession if the tenant
pays or shows his willingness to pay the standard rent and
to observe the other conditions of the tenancy, is such that
it applied equally to suits pending when Part II comes into
force and those to be filed subsequently and is not limited
only to suits filed after the Act comes into force in a
particular area and in fact the Court in that case granted
the benefit of the protection of sub-sec. (1) of sec. 12 to
the tenant who was a party to a suit which was already
pending when Part II of the Act was made applicable. to the
area in which the suit premises were situated. the decision
in Shah Bhojraj’s case therefore is a clear authority for
the proposition that sec. 12(1) of the Act has retrospective
operation and would apply to a suit which is pending when
Part II comes into force or is made applicable to a
particular area where the suit premises are situated but it
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 11
must be observed that the question whether the protection of
sec. 12(1) of the Act would be available in regard to a
pending appeal when Part II is made applicable to the
particular area did not arise for consideration nor was
decided in that case. Counsel for the appellant defendant
has however, urged that on the well accepted principle that
an appeal is nothing but a continuation of the suit the
retrospective operation of s 12(i) must be extended to such
pending appeal especially as the languages thereof must
receive the same interpretation in regard to a pending
appeal. We have no doubt that by itself the provision would
apply to pending appeals but the provision has to be
considered in the light of the other provision to be found
in s 50 and the proviso thereto read with the latter part
thereof which expressly deals differently with the aspect of
applicability of the Act especially Part II thereof to
pending suits and original proceedings on the one hand and
pending execution proceedings and appeals on the other. That
is why counsel for the appellant-defendant raised the second
contention that s. 50 and the proviso thereto read with the
latter part thereof did not apply to the present case at all
and in that behalf urged that the proviso M together with
the latter part thereof is not an independent provision
1059
but is linked with the substantive enactment contained in s
50 that A is to say the proviso has been inserted merely
with a view to qualify or create an exception to what is
state in the main provision . The manner in which the two
contentions were put forward by counsel for the appellant-
defendant clearly showed that he realized that unless the
present case was taken out of the purview of s 50 and the
proviso thereto read with the latter part thereof his client
would not be able to claim the benefit of the protection of
s. 12(1) of the Act. Therefore, the two contentions being
inter-dependent it will be desirable to deal with the second
contention first. Of course, we shall also deal with his
contention that the defendant. appellant would be entitled
to the protection of s. 12(1) independently of and
irrespective of whether his client’s case is covered by s.
50 and the proviso thereof read with the latter part thereof
or not.
Turning then to the second contention of counsel for
the appellant-defendant it is obvious that the question
whether the present case falls within or outside the purview
of the proviso to s. 50 depends upon what is true nature and
scope of the proviso introduced at the end of s 0 ? Is it
introduced merely with a view to quality or create
exceptions to what is contained in the main provision of s.
50) or does it g;- beyond that purpose and enact a
substantive law of its own by way of providing for special
savings following upon the repeal of the two earlier
enactments, the 1939 Act and the 1944 Act ? That a proviso
could be of either type was not disputed before us by
counsel for the appellant-defendant. In fact in Shah
Bhojraj’s case (supra) this is Court after referring to two
English decisions and a passage in Caries on Statute Law
(5th edition) at page 166 of the Report has observed thus:
"The law with regard to provisos is well-
settled and well-understood As a general rule, a
proviso is added to enactment to qualify or create an
exception to what is in the enactment and ordinarily a
proviso is not interpreted as stating a general rule
But provisos are often added not as exceptions or
qualifications to the main enactment but as savings
clauses, in which cases they will not be considered as
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 11
controlled by the section."
The question is in which category the instant proviso
together with latter part thereof fall . It may be stated
that this very question-
1060
Was hotly debated before the Court in that case but was not
decided and kept open because of the view taken by the Court
on the contention pertaining to proper interpretation of s
12(1) of the Act and since the Court held that s. 12(1) is
retrospective in operation and covers suits pending on the
date when Part II was applied to the particular area it
granted relief to the tenant-appellant against eviction. We
might observe, however, that the same result would have
obtained even if the case were considered under the proviso
to s 50 because under it suits and proceedings pending at
the date when Part II is made applicable are required to be
decided by applying the 1947 Act to them. Since the question
raised before us relates to the applicability of the 1947
Act to a pending appeal we shall have to decide the question
pertaining to the true nature and scope of the proviso to
sec. 50 in this case.
Before we deal with that question we might indicate
that the said proviso to s. 50 as it originally stood has
undergone certain amendments effected by Bombay Act 3 of
1949. The proviso as it originally stood ran thus (omitting
unnecessary parts):
"Provided that all suits and proceedings (other
than execution proceedings and appeals between a
landlord and a tenant relating to recovery or fixing of
rent or possession of any premises to which the
provisions of part II apply ............. which are
pending in any Court, shall be transferred to and
continued before the Courts which h would have
jurisdiction to try such suits or proceedings under
this Act; and thereupon all the preprovisions of this
Act and the Rules made thereunder shall apply to all
such suits and proceedings."
By the Bombay Act 3 of 1949 three changes were made by
the legislature. (i) it deleted the words "other than
execution proceedings and appeals" appearing in brackets
from the proviso and inserted a new paragraph at the end of
that proviso dealing separately with executions proceedings
and appeals, (ii) it inserted the words "or shall be
continued in such Courts as the case may be" in the proviso
and (iii) it deleted the word "thereupon" from the proviso.
The object of amendments made at (ii) and (iii) was to
remove the judicial confusion caused by Courts taking
conflicting views on the question whether the Act ( 1947
Act) applied only to transferred cases and not others-
Previously the proviso stated that all suits and proceedings
of a certain category mentioned there.
1061
in "shall be transferred to and continued" before the Courts
which A would have jurisdiction to try them under the Act
and "thereupon" the provisions of the Act shall apply to
them and therefore some Courts took the view that the
provisions of the Act (1947 Act) will apply only to suits
and proceedings which were so transferred and continued and
others held to the contrary. ’This conflict was set at rest
by these amendments. By the amendment made at (i) what was
there in the body of the proviso was relegated to a new
separate paragraph and no change was effected except that
the effect of the wide expression "all suits and
proceedings" was re-emphasised and further clarified by
using the words "execution proceedings and appeals arising
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 11
out of decrees and orders, passed before the coming into
operation of this Act" in the new paragraph.
Bearing in mind the aforesaid legislative amendments
we shall proceed to consider the question as to what is the
true nature and scope of the proviso. For that purpose it
will be necessary to read as a whole the entire provision,
namely, the substantive part of s. 50. the proviso thereto
and the new paragraph added at the end of the proviso. So
read, two aspects stand out very clearly. In the first
place, it is clear that under the substantive part of s. 50
on the coming into force of the Act (the 1947 Act) the two
earlier enactments (1939 Act and the !944 Act) stand
repealed. If nothing more was said then s. 7 of the Bombay
General Clauses Act, 1904 would have come into play and
would have had the effect of saving the legal proceedings or
remedies in respect of any right, privilege, obligation or
liability acquired, accrued or incurred under the repealed
enactments. In other words, all suits and proceedings
including education proceedings and appeals arising
therefrom which were pending on the relevant date and which
were governed by the provisions of these respective repealed
Acts would have been saved and the rights and obligations of
the parties thereto would have been worked out under the
relevant provisions of the repealed Acts. But here a clear
intention to deviate from the normal rule which applies to
the repeal of enactments is clearly evinced by the
Legislature by the manner in which the proviso w-s enacted
initially or as it now stands after the amendments. Either
under the proviso as it originally stood or under the new
separate paragraph enacted by way of an amendment the
legislative intent was and is quite clear that only suits
and original proceedings between a landlord and a tenant (of
the description or categories specified
1062
therein) which were pending on the relevant date are
required to be decided and disposed of by applying the
provisions of the 1947 Act while execution proceedings and
appeals arising out of decrees or orders passed before the
coming into operation of the Act are denied the benefits of
the provisions of the Act and have been directed to be
decided and disposed of as if this Act had not been passed,
that is to say, such execution proceedings and appeals would
be continued to be governed by and shall be disposed of in
accordance with the law that was then applicable to them In
other words, it is clear that the proviso was and has been
enacted to provide for special savings which suggests that
it has not been introduced merely with a view to qualify or
create exceptions to what is contained in the substantive
part of s. 50. Secondly, it does appear that the Legislature
while framing the Act (the 1947 Act) was enacting certain
provisions for the benefit of tenants which conferred larger
benefits on them than were in fact conferred by the earlier
enactments which were repealed, (and this would be clear if
regard be had to the wider definition of the expression
’tenant’ adopted in s. 5(11) of the Act) and therefore, the
legislature thought it advisable that in regard to pending
suits and original proceedings also (of course of the
description or categories specified therein) in which the
decrees and orders were not passed to provisions of the Act
should be made applicable. It is with this intention that
the proviso to s. 50 has been enacted in the manner it has
been done. What is more, while so extending the larger
benefits of the Act (the 1947 Act) to tenants the
Legislature has used a very wide expression, namely, "all
suits and proceedings between a landlord and a tenant" so as
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 11
to include within that category suits and proceedings filed
under the repealed Acts as also under the general law or
Transfer of Property Act. Deliberate use of such wide
expression clearly shows that the benefit of the Act was
intended to be given to all tenants who were parties to all
suits and proceedings filed either under the repealed Acts
or under the general law or Transfer of Property Act and
were pending at the relevant date. It is therefore, clear
that the proviso read with the separate paragraph added
thereto will have to be regarded as an independent provision
enacting a substantive law of its own by way of providing
for special savings and (Counsel’s contention that the same
has been added merely with a view to qualify or to create an
exception to what is contained in the main provision of s.
50 has to be rejected. We might refer to a Bombay High Court
decision in Shankarlal
1063
Ramratan v. Pandharinath Vishnu(1) where a similar view of
the proviso to s. 50 of the Act has been taken and we
approve the same.
Having regard to the aforesaid conclusion which we
have reached on the true nature and scope of the proviso to
s. 50 of the Act it would be clear that the present case, in
which an appeal (arising out of a decree passed in a suit
filed under the Transfer of Property Act) was pending when
Part II of the Act was made applicable to village Kalwada,
would be directly covered by the proviso read with the
separate paragraph added thereto and the appeal was liable
to be decided and disposed of as if the 1947 Act had not
been passed, that is to say, had to be disposed of in
accordance with the law that was then applicable to it In
this view of the matter, we are of the opinion that the
learned Assistant Judge as well as the High Court were right
In coming to the conclusion that the appellant-plaintiff was
not entitled to any protection of the 1947 Act as claimed by
him.
Counsel for the appellant-defendant however, faintly
urged before us that his client would be entitled to the
protection of s. 12(1 ) of the Act, (which has been held to
be retrospective in operation) independently of and
irrespective of whether his case was covered by the proviso
to s. 50 read with the latter part thereof or not. It is
impossible to accept this contention for the simple reason
that 8. 12(1) of the Act would unquestionably be a general
provision whereas the proviso to s. 50 read with the new
paragraph added thereto, which has now been held to be an
independent provision enacting substantive law in itself and
which expressly deals with pending matters (suits and other
proceedings in contradistinction with execution proceedings
and appeals) would be a special provision contained in the
Act and obviously under the normal rule of interpretation
the special provision must prevail over the general and
therefore if a case is covered by the special provision the
general provision will not be attracted to it The Contention
has therefore to be rejected-
Before parting with the case we would like to point
out that Chandrasingh Manibhai’s case (supra) was also a
case dealing
(1) 53 Bom. L.R- 319
1064
with an appeal (arising out of a decree passed on a date
prior to the coming into force of the 1947 Act in a suit
filed under the Transfer of Property Act) which was pending
at the relevant date and the question was whether on the
principle that the appeal was in the nature of a rehearing
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 11
of the suit the same should be decided in accordance with
the provisions of the 1947 Act which had come into force
during its pendency and this Court took the view that having
regard to the proviso to s. 50 as it originally stood the
Act was given retrospective operation only to a limited
extent and execution proceedings and appeals were excluded
from this effect and were to be governed by the law in force
at the time when the decrees were passed and therefore, the
tenant was not entitled to the protection of the 1947 Act
and was liable to be evicted.
Really speaking this decision had concluded the point
raised before us in the present appeal- But since in Shah
Bhojraj’s case (supra) a distinction was made between sub-
sec. (1) of s. 12 on the one hand and sub-secs. (2) and (3)
on the other and it was held that the former provision was
retrospective in operation and the latter prospective,
Counsel for the appellant-defendant made valiant attempt to
brings his client’s case within the purview of s. 12(1) by
putting forward the plausible contention that his case was
not covered by the proviso to s. 50 read with the separate
paragraph added thereto at all on the ground that the said
proviso together with the new separate paragraph added
thereto was not an independent provision enacting any
substantive law therein but was linked with the main
provision contained in s. 50 and had been introduced merely
with a view to qualify or create an exception to what is
contained in the main provision but that attempt has failed
in view of our conclusion on the true nature and scope of
the said proviso read with the Dew separate paragraph added
to it.
In the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed but
in the circumstances there will be no order as to costs.
N.V.K. Appeal dismissed.
1065