Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
PHUL RANI & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NAUBAT RAI AHLUWALIA
DATE OF JUDGMENT14/03/1973
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
SHELAT, J.M.
CITATION:
1973 AIR 2110 1973 SCR (3) 679
1973 SCC (1) 688
CITATOR INFO :
O 1976 SC2358 (1,3,4,5,6)
ACT:
Delhi Rent Control Act--S. 14(1)(e)-Whether on the death of
the plaintiff during pendency of an ejectment application,
the cause of action would survive to his legal
representatives.
HEADNOTE:
The plaintiff after two notices to quit, filed an ejectment
application against the defendant under S. 14 (1) (e) of the
Delhi Rent Control Act 1958. The possession was sought on
the ground of personal requirement. The Additional Rent
Controller, dismissed the application on a preliminary
ground of invalid notice. During the pendency of an appeal
against that decision, the plaintiff died. Appellants 1 to
4 who are widow, son and two married daughters of the
deceased, applied for being brought on the record of the
appeal as his legal representatives. The defendant opposed
that application on the ground, that the son and daughter of
a deceased daughter of the plaintiff ought also to have been
impleaded to the application, and since that was not done,
the- appeal had abated. The Rent Control Tribunal allowed
these two, persons also to be impleded as appellants :and
remanded the ejectment application for a decision on merits.
These heirs are now appellants 5 and 6. The second appeal
filed by the ’tenant against the order of remand was
dismissed by the High Court.
As the order of remand passed by the Rent Control Tribunal
was not stayed during the pendency of the second appeal, the
Additional Rent Controller proceeded with the ejectment appli
cation and passed an order of eviction against the
tenant. The tenant appealed against that decision and
contended for the first time that the right to sue did not
survive to the heirs of the plaintiff. The Rent Control
Tribunal rejected the contention and confirmed the order of
eviction on merits. In an appeal, the High Court took the
view that the right to sue did not survive to the heirs of
the plaintiff and on that ground dismissed the ejectment
application. The correctness of that decision is challenged
by the plaintiffs heirs before this Court. The question for
decision was whether the cause of action could survive to
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his legal representatives. Dismissing the appeal,
HELD : (i) In some cases Under the rent Acts, the maxim
actio personalis moritur cum persona has been attempted to
be applied ’On the death of a necessary party to a suit or
proceeding. This oft-quoted maxim, however, is generally
misunderstood. The plain meaning of that common law maxim
is that a personal action dies with the parties to the cause of a
ction. In the present case, it is obvious that the
death of the plaintiff will not cause the ejectment
proceedings to abate if the right to sue survives. That is
the formula contained in Order 22, Rule 1 of the Code of
Civil Procedure. [681F-G, 682D]
However, from the pleadings in the ejectment application,
the plaintiff has founded his right to relief on his
personal requirement. So, if the appellants were permitted
to continue the proceedings, the lis will assume a
complexion wholly beyond the compass of the original cause
of action, and without a fundamental alteration of the
pleadings. the appellants would not be able to continue the
proceedings. Therefore, the appeal must fail. [683C]
680
Motilal Pannalal v. Kailash Narain, A.I.R. 1960 M.P. 134;
Amar Nath Bihari v. Jai Dayal Puri 1971 (7) Delhi Law.Times
363; Smt. Dhan Devi and Anr. v. Bakshi Ram and Anr., A. I.
R. 1969 Punjab & Haryana 270; Vets Dev v. Sohan Singh & Ors.
[1968] 40 Delhi Law Times 392; Dr. Muhammad Ibrahim v.
Rehamin Khan & Ors., [1947] 2 M.L.J. 419; and Rameswar Dayal
JUDGMENT:
&
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1879 of
1971.
Appeal by special leave from the Judgment and order dated
May 24, 1971 of the, Delhi High Court at New Delhi in S.A.
No. 178 of 1970.
Bishan Narain and 0. N. Mahindroo for the appellant.
P. N. Lekhi and M. K. Garg, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD, J.-The plaintiff, who in a Rent-Act application
against his tenant sought possession of certain premises on
the ground of personal requirement, died pending-the
application. The question for decision is whether the cause
of action would survive to his legal representatives or
whether, as contended by the tenant, the application must
abate.
On June 28, 1962 a flat at New Rajinder Nagar, New Delhi was
leased by the plaintiff to the defendant. On failure of
the, defendant to comply with two notices to quite plaintiff
filed an ejectment application under section 14 ( 1 ) (e) of
the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 ("the Act"). Possession
was sought from the tenant on the ground that the premises
were required by the plaintiff "for occupation as a
residence for himself and members of his family".
The Additional Rent Controller, Delhi, dismissed the appli-
cation on the preliminary ground that the notices to quit
were not valid. Plaintiff filed an appeal against that
decision but during its pendency he died on August 22, 1968.
Appellants 1 to 4 who are the widow, son and two married
daughters of the plaintiff applied for being brought on the
record of the appeal as his legal representatives. The
tenant opposed that application on the narrow ground that
the son and daughter of a deceased daughter of the plaintiff
ought also to have been impleaded to the application and
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since that was not done, the appeal had abated. By its
order dated December 13, 1968 the Rent Control Tribunal,
which was seized of the appeal allowed these two persons
also to be impleaded as appellants. By a further order
dated January 2, 1969 the, Tribunal set aside the decision
recorded by the Additional Rent Controller on the
preliminary issue and remanded the eject-
681
ment application for a decision on merits. These two
"heirs" are now appellant 5 and 6. Second appeal 107 of 1969
filed by the tenant against the order of remand, was
dismissed by the High Court of Delhi on February 20, 1970.
As the order of remand passed by the Rent Control Tribunal
was not stayed during the pendency of the Second Appeal, the
Additional Rent Controller proceeded with the ejectment
application and had in the meanwhile passed an order of
eviction against the tenant. By his judgment of February
14, 1969 he held that the plaintiff’s widow (appellant 1),
his son (appellant 2), the son’s wife and three. minor
daughters of that couple required the premises bona-fide for
their occupation.
The tenant appealed against that decision and contended for
the first time in appeal that the right to sue did not
survive to the heirs of the plaintiff. The Rent Control
Tribunal rejected that contention and confirmed the order of
eviction on merits.
In an appeal filed by the tenant (S.A.0. No. 178 of 1970)
the High Court of Delhi took the view that the right to sue
did not survive to the. heirs of the plaintiff and on that
ground it dismissed the ejectment application, leaving it
open to the heirs to bring a fresh proceeding founded on
their own requirements. The correctness of that decision is
challenged by the plaintiff’s heirs in this appeal special
leave.
The survival of the right to sue on the death of a plaintiff
is a problem that has often to be solved on a permutation
of several facts and circumstances. But it would be out of
place in this judgment to embark upon an abstract
disquisition of the question as to in what classes of cases,
the right to sue survives in favour of the legal
representatives. In some cases under the Rent Acts, the
maxim actio-personalis moritur cum persona has been attemp-
ted to be applied on the death of a necessary party to a
suiit or proceeding but that oft-quoted maxim is oft
misunderstood. The plain meaning of that common law maxim
is that a personal action dies with the parties to the cause
of action. Its purport. until sweeping changes were made in
the previous law by the Law Reform (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act, 1934 was that no executor or administrator
could, subject to certain exceptions, sue or be sued for any
tort committed against or by the deceased in his life-time.
The action for a tort had to be begun in the joint life-time
of the wrongdoer and the person injured. (See Salmond on the
Law of Torts 15th Edn. p 569; Halsbury Laws of England 3rd
Edn. Vol. 16 p. 483 paragraph 985).
Nor do we find relevance in the provisions of section 306 of
the Indian Succession Act, under which all demands
whatsoever and all. rights to prosecute or defend any action
or special proceed-
682
ing existing in favour of or against A person at the time of
his decease, survive to and against his executors or
administrators; except causes of action for defamation and
assault, or other personal injuries not causing the death of
the party and except also cases "where, after the death of
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the party, the relief sought could not be enjoyed" or-
granting it would be nugatory. We can duly press into
service and that too indirectly, the analogy of the first
part of-the last exception in an effort to find whether
after the death of the plaintiff in the instant case the
relief sought could not be enjoyed by his legal
representatives.
Though the plaintiff died during the pendency of the appeal,
it is as if he died during the pendency of the suit because
the suit was dismissed on a preliminary issue concerning the
validity of the notices to quit and was remanded in appeal
for trial on the merits. It is patent and would be altruism
to say that the death of the plaintiff will not cause the
ejectment proceedings to abate if the right to sue survives.
That is the formula contained in Order 22 Rule 1 of the Code
of Civil Procedure, a formula simple in its wording but not
simple in its application. The "right to sue" as said
succinctly in Saraj Chandra v. Nani Mihan(1) means ’the
right to bring a suit asserting a right to the same relief
which the deceased plaintiff asserted at the time of his
death". Thus contracts involving the exercise of special
skill like a promise to paint a picture do not bind the the
representatives of the promisor nor do they create in them a
right that can survive the death of the promisor.
The solution to the problem whether the ’appellants can con-
tinue the proceedings in their capacity as the legal
representatives of the plaintiff lies in the pleadings of
the plaintiff for those alone can reveal the true nature of
the right asserted to the plaintiff in the ejectment
proceedings. In column 18(a) of the ejectment application
the ground for evicting the tenant is stated thus
"The premises are required bonafide by the
petitioner for occupation as a residence for
himself and members of his family and that the
petitioner has no other reasonable suitable
residential accommodation."
In column 19, the "other relevant information" is stated to
be that the plaintiff had a large family consisting of his
wife, son, daughter-in-law and 3 minor grand-daughters, and
that the family had only 2 rooms in its possession, which
were wholly inadequate for its requirements.
Thus, the requirement pleaded in the ejectment application
and on which the plaintiff has founded his right to relief
is his requirement, or to use an expression which will
effectively bring
(1) 36 cal. 799 at p. 801.
683
out’ the real point, his personal requirement. If the
ejectment application succeeds-we will forget for a moment
that the plaintiff is dead-the premises, in the possession
of the tenant may come, to be occupied by the plaintiff and
the members of his family but that does not make the
requirement pleaded in the application any the less a
personal requirement of the plaintiff. That the members of
his family must reside with him is his requirement, not
theirs. Such a personal cause of action must perish with
the plaintiff .
If the appellants were permitted to continue the
proceedings, the lis will assume a complexion wholly beyond
the compass of the original cause of action. Indeed, it is
difficult to see how, without a fundamental alteration of
the pleadings, appellants could continue the proceedings.
Such an alteration will fall beyond the scope of amendment
of pleadings, permissible under a most liberal
interpretation of order 6, Rule 17 of the Code of Civil
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procedure. Plaintiff, who owned the premises, was entitled
under section 14(1) (e) of the Act to ask for possession
thereof on the ground that his wife and the other members of
his family dependent on him must live with him but that
there was not enough space at his disposal to accommodate
them. Section 14(1)(e) provides to the extent material for
the present purposes, that the Controller may make an order
for possession on the ground "that the premises let for
residential purposes are required bonafide by the landlord
for occupation as a residence for himself or for any member
of his family dependent on him, if he is the owner
thereof........ and that the landlord........ has no other
reasonably suitable residential accommodation". If the
plaintiff were alive, the main issues for determination in
the ejectment proceedings would have been : (1) whether the
plaintiff requires the premises for his occupation and for
the occupation of his wife, son, daughter-in-law and 3
grand-children; (2) whether the aforesaid requirement is
bonafide and (3) whether the plaintiff has no other
reasonably suitable residential accommodation. The
appellants’ emergence in the proceedings will require the
determination of wholly different and distinct issues.
Their requirements, not that of the plaintiff, and the
availability to them-not to the plaintiff-of other
reasonably suitable residential accommodation will now form
the centre of conflict. It is relevant on this aspect to
remember that amongst the appellants are 2 married daughters
of the deceased plaintiff and 2 children of a deceased
daughter of his. Their requirement would be basically
different from that of the plaintiff and an examination of
facts and circumstances in regard thereto will open up a new
vista of inquiry. The plaintiff’s right to sue will
thereafter not survive to the appellants and they cannot
glean the benefit of the original right to sue.
684
Several decisions were cited before us but those falling
within the following categories are to be distinguished
(i) cases in which the death of the plaintiff
occurred after a decree for possession was
passed in his favour; say, during the pendency
of an appeal filed ’by the unsuccessful
tenant;
(ii) cases in which the death of the decree-
holder landlord was pleaded as a defence in
execution proceedings; and
(iii) cases in which, not the plaintiff but
the defendant-tenant died during the pendency
of the proceedings and the tenant’s heirs took
the plea that the ejectment proceedings cannot
be continued against them.
Cases of the first category are distinguishable because the
decisions therein are explicable on the basis, though-not
always so expressed, that the estate is entitled to the
benefit which, under a decree, has accrued in favour of the
plaintiff and therefore the legal representatives are
entitled to defend further proceedings, like an appeal,
which constitute a challenge to that benefit.
In Motilal Pannalal v. Kailash Narain, (1) for example
the .landlord who had obtained a decree for possession on
the ground of personal necessity under section 4(g) of the
Madhya Bharat Control of Accommodation Act, 1955 died during
the pendency of the appeal filed by the tenant. It was held
that the decree would ensure for the benefit of his son and
widow. In Amar Nath Bihari v. Jai Dayal Puri(2) the death
of the landlord occurred after the Rent Control Tribunal had
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held in appeal, reversing (the judgment of the Controller,
that the premises were required by the landlord for the use
of himself and his wife under section 14 (1) (e) of the Act.
It was held that the wife was a member ,of the landlord’s
family and as "the need of the landlord for the premises was
assessed to be both for himself and his wife", the cause of
action consisted of the need of both and therefore it sur-
vived to the widow. The judgment of the High Court in the
instant case was cited before the learned single Judge but
was distinguished by him on the ground that the requirements
of the legal representatives here were not determined by the
Controller, prior to the death of the plaintiff. The point
of distinction could be that the decree for possession
passed in favour of the landlord could be defended by his
legal representatives for the benefit of his estate.
In Smt.Dhan Devi and Anr. v. Bakhshi Ram and Anr.(3) an
application for ejectment was filed by the landlord under
the
(1) A.I.R. 1960 M.P. 134.
(2) 1971 (7) Delhi Law Times 363.
(3) A.I.R. 1969 Pb. & Haryana 270.
685
East Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act, 1949. The ground on
which possession was sought by the landlord was that he
required the land for his own use as he wanted to construct
a building for the purpose of his office. The Rent
Controller allowed the application and the appeal filed by
the tenant against that decision was dismissed by the
District and Sessions Judge. The tenant then filed a
REvisional ’application to the High Court, during the pen-
dency of which the landlord died. On the
tenant’s,application the widow and an adopted son of the
landlord were brought on the record but it was urged on
behalf of the tenant that the ground of ejectment was
personal to the landlord and therefore the application for
ejectment had abated on his death. This Contention was
rejected on the ground that the word "landlord" in the East
Punjab Act includes his successors-in-interest and that the
rights of a laNdlord-decree-holder under an order of
eviction obtained by him are heritable and devolve after his
death on his leGal representatives.
Cases of the second category are distinguishable because the
decisions therein are, by and large, based on the principle
that an executing court has no jurisdiction to go behind the
decree. It must execute the decree as it finds it, save in
exceptional cases as, for example, where the decree on the
face of it is without jurisdiction.
In Vas Dev v. S. Sohan Singh & Ors.(1) a case under section
14 (1) (e) of the Delhi Rent Control Act, the landlord
obtained an order of eviction on the ground of personal
requirement but, he died before the order for eviction could
be executed. His sons and daughters filed an execution
application, to which the tenants raised an objection that
the order of eviction being personal to the landlord, was
incapable of execution after his death. It was held by a
learned single Judge that the provisions of section 14(1)
(e) have to be satisfied at the time of the passing of the
order OF eviction and that the executing court had no right
to go behind the decree in order to find out whether the
requirement continue at the time of execution. A contrary
decision in Dr. Muthammad Ibrahim v. Rahiman Khan and Ors.
(2) may be said to turn on the peculiar language of the
particular provision of the Madras House Rent Control Order,
1945.
Cases of the third category are governed by totally
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different considerations. The landlord’s right to evict the
tenant on the grounds available under the Rent Act does not
come to an end with the death of the tenant. That right is
enforceable against those in whom the tenant’s interest
resides for the time being. In Rameshwar Dayal and Anr. v.
(Smt. Mohania Died) After her
(1) 1968 (4) Delhi Law Times 391.
(2) 1947 (2) M.L.J.
686
Sri Sohan Lal and Anr. (1) which was a case under the U.P.
(Temporary) Control of Rent and Eviction Act, 1947 the
landlords obtained permission under section 3 of that Act to
bring a suit for ejectment on the ground that the shops in
possession of the tenant were in a dilapidated condition and
required reconstruction. The landlords thereafter brought a
suit, during the pendency of which the tenant died. The
tenant’s son and widow were then brought on the record but
the suit was dismissed on the ground that the notice to quit
was defective. The landlords brought another suit against
the son and widow without obtaining a fresh permission under
section 3. It was held that the suit could be filed against
the heirs on the basis of the permission obtained against
the tenant. Clearly, :the permission to evict related to
the condition of the premises which did not change with the
death of the tenant.
We have referred to some of the decisions in the three Cate-
gories, not with a view to determining their correctness but
only in order to show that they rest on different principles
or could be explained in reference to such principles. We
are concerned with a matter not involving the application of
any of those principles. For reasons already stated, we are
of the view that considering the nature of the claim made in
the instant case and the bundle of facts which constitute
the plaintiff’s cause of action, his right to sue will not
survive to his legal representatives.
In the result, the appeal fails but there will no order of
costs.
S.C. Appeal dismissed.
(1) 1963 A.L.J. 198.
687