Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MOHAMMAD SWALLEH & ORS. v.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
IIIRD ADDL. DISTRICT JUDGE, MEERUT & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT04/11/1987
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
OZA, G.L. (J)
CITATION:
1988 AIR 94 1988 SCR (1) 840
1988 SCC (1) 40 JT 1987 (4) 291
1987 SCALE (2)971
ACT:
U. P. Urban Buildings (Regulation of Letting, Rent and
Eviction) Act, 1972;s. 43(2)(rr) U.P. (Temporary) Control of
Rent and Eviction Act, 1947: s. 3-Permission for eviction
granted under s. 3 of the old Act becoming final-First suit
dismissed on technical ground Application for eviction filed
under s. 43(2)(rr) of the new Act-Whether maintainable.
Constitution of India, Arts. 226 & 136: Absence of
provision in Statute for appeal-Erroneous order of
Prescribed Authority set aside by District Judge-
Jurisdiction of Court to interfere with.
HEADNOTE:
%
Sub-section (1) of s. 3 of the U.P. (Temporary) Control
of Rent and Eviction Act, 1947 barred suits without the
permission of the District Magistrate against tenants for
eviction except on the grounds mentioned therein. Sub-
section (2) provided for revision to the Commissioner, and
sub-section (4) made the order of the Commissioner final.
Section 7-F empowered the State Government to interfere with
such orders. That Act was repealed by the U.P. Urban
Buildings (Regulation of Letting, Rent and Eviction) Act,
1972.
Section 43(2)(rr) of the new Act, inserted therein by
U.P. Act 37 of 1972, provided that where any permission
obtained under s. 3 of the old Act had become final either
before the commencement of the Act or in accordance with the
provisions of the sub-section after the commencement of the
Act, the landlord may apply to the Prescribed Authority for
tenant’s eviction. This section was against amended in 1976
by insertion of the words "whether or not a suit for the
eviction of the tenant has been instituted", and giving it
retrospective operation. The order of the Prescribed
Authority in such cases was made final.
The landlord’s application under s. 3 of the 1947 Act
for eviction ’of the tenants-appellants was granted by the
Commissioner in April, 197I. The revision preferred by them
was rejected by the State Government in February, 1972 and
the permission became final. In pursuance
841
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Of the said permission the landlord filed a suit for
eviction of the appellants. Thereafter in 1973 he filed an
application for withdrawal of the said suit on the ground
that as the 1972 Act had been amended, he would file an
application for enforcement of the permission.
The Court of Small Causes found that as the cause of
action on which the suit had been filed was rendered
infructuous, the suit was liable to be dismissed. The
application filed by the landlord under s. 43(2)(rr) of the
new Act for eviction of the appellants, was rejected by the
Prescribed Authority on the ground that since permission
obtained under s. 3 of the old Act had been exhausted, the
application was not maintainable. An appeal against that
order was allowed by the District Judge.
In the writ petition filed by the appellants-tenants
under Art. 226 of the Constitution it was contended that the
permission obtained by the landlord having been utilised by
filing the suit, another proceeding on the basis of the said
permission could not be initiated, and that no appeal lay
from the decision of the Prescribed Authority to the
District Judge. The High Court held that the landlord had
right to file the second application. It took the view that
dismissal of the first action taken by the landlord after
obtaining permission under the old Act did not preclude him
from taking the second action under s. 43(2)(rr) of the Act.
It further held that since the first suit was not decided on
merits subsequent action was not precluded.
Dismissing the appeal by special leave,
^
HELD: 1. Section 43(2)(rr) of the U.P. Urban Buildings
(Regulation of Letting, Rent and Eviction) Act, 1972 as it
stood in 1973, permitted a landlord to file an application
for the enforcement of the permission obtained by him under
s. 3 of the 1947 Act. After the aforesaid provision was
amended in 1976, the landlord was not required to file a
suit to avail of the permission. The amendment was
retrospective in operation. [844G-H]
2. The Prescribed Authority was in error in taking the
view that as the previous suit had been filed by the
landlord on the basis of permission and the same had been
dismissed, the application under s. 43(2)(rr) of the 1972
Act was not maintainable. Such a view would frustrate the
very purpose of the express provision of the section which
conferred a right on a landlord who had obtained permission
under the old Act and has filed an application under the new
provision, to get the
842
tenant evicted. More so, when the permission granted had not
been exhausted because the suit was dismissed on a technical
plea and not on the merit of the contentions. [846C-D; 845C]
Pahlad Das v. Ganga Saran and Another, AIR 1958
Allahabad 774, approved.
3.1 Finality of order in judicial proceeding is one of
the essential principles which the scheme of the
administration of justice must strive for. [846D]
D.K. Soni v. P.K. Mukherjee & Ors. C.A. No. 6626 of
1983 decided on October 27, 1987. referred to.
3.2 In the instant case, through no appeal lay before
the District Judge, the High Court came to the conclusion
that the order of the Prescribed Authority was invalid and
improper. On that ground it declined to interfere with the
order of the District Judge in exercise of its jurisdiction
under Art. 226 of the Constitution. Since justice has been
done by setting aside the improper order of the Prescribed
Authority, no exception can be taken to the order of the
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High Court. There is, therefore, no scope for interference
under Art. 136 of the Constitution. [847A-B]
1 Shri Bhagwan and Anr. v. Ram Chand and Anr., [1965] 3
SCR 218, inapplicable.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2 107 of
1979.
From the Judgment and order dated 22.9. 1978 of the
Allahabad High Court in C.M.W. No. 3857 of 1978.
Gobinda Mukhoty, Ali Ahmad, Mrs. Jayshree Ahmad,
Tanveer Ahmad, S S Hussain for the appellants.
R.K. Garg and D.K. Garg for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, J. This is a tenant’s appeal by
special leave. After perusing the judgment impugned and
grounds urged, we are of the opinion, that there is no
substance in this appeal
843
On merit, though there are one or two technical breaches.
This is certainly not a decision which should be interfered
with in the exercise of jurisdiction under Article 136 of
the Constitution by this Court. The appeal arises from the
judgment and order dated 22nd September, 1978 of the High
Court of Allahabad The respondent No. 2 herein, Smt. Murtaza
Begum filed an application under section 3 of the U.P
Temporary) Control of Rent and Eviction Act, 1947 being U.P.
Act No. 3 of 1947, hereinafter called the old Act, against
the appellants Section 3 of the said Act provides that
subject to any order passed under sub-section (3) of that
section, no suit shall, without the permission of the
District Magistrate be filed in any court against any tenant
for his eviction from any accommodation except on the
grounds mentioned therein. Sub-section (2) of section 3
provided for revision to the Commissioner against the order
of the District Magistrate Subsection (3) of section 3
empowered the Commissioner to hear the application and if he
was not satisfied as to the correctness, legality or
propriety of the order passed by the District Magistrate or
as to regularity of proceedings held before him, alter or
reverse his order or make such other order as might be just
and proper. By sub-section (4) of section 3 the order of the
Commissioner has been made final subject to any other order
passed by the State Government under section 7 of the said
Act. Section 7-F of the said Act empowered the State
Government to call for the record of any case granting or
refusing to grant permission for the filing of a suit for
eviction referred to and authorised him to make such order
as appeared to it necessary for the ends of justice. The
application for eviction was granted by the Commissioner in
this case on the 17th April, 1971. The appellants went in
revision to the State Government. The revision was, however,
rejected by the State Government on 7th February, 1972 The
permission thereafter became final.
In pursuance of the aforesaid permission the
respondent-landlord filed a suit being suit No 464 of 1972
in the court of Judge, Small Causes, Meerut for eviction of
the appellants Thereafter in 1973 the landlord filed an
application for withdrawal of the suit on the ground that as
U P Urban Buildings (Regulation of Letting Rent and
Eviction) Act of 972 being U P Act no 3 of 972. hereinafter
called the New Act, had been amended, he would file an
application for the enforcement of the permission obtained
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under section 3 of the old Act. On that application the
court found that as the cause of action on which the suit
had been filed was rendered infructuous, the suit was liable
to be dismissed. After the suit was dismissed, the landlord
being respondent no 2 herein filed an application under
844
section 43(2)(rr) of the New Act for eviction of the
appellants from the premises in question. It was resisted on
the ground that the permission had been dismissed and the
application under section 43(2)(rr) was not maintainable.
The Prescribed Authority upheld the said objection of the
appellants and rejected the application filed by the
landlord on the ground that since permission obtained by the
landlord under section 3 of the U.P. Act has been exhausted,
the application filed by the landlord was not maintainable.
It appears to us that the Prescribed Authority was clearly
in error in so holding because the permission granted had
not been exhausted because the suit as dismissed on a
technical plea and not on the merit of the contentions
Reference may be made to the observations in the decision of
the Allahabad High Court in the case of Pahlad Das v. Ganga
Saran and Another, AIR 1958 Allahabad 774, where the
division bench of that court held that the obvious purpose
of the permission under section 3 of the old Act was to
enable the plaintiff, the landlord to evict the tenant from
the premises and as long as that purpose was not fulfilled,
the permission could not obviously exhaust itself Where it
was not shown that the permission was granted to file a
single suit or that it had been specified in it that a
second suit could not be filed, the permission could not
exhaust itself simply because the first suit filed on its
basis was dismissed on some technical ground and the
permission obtained could be availed of for filing the
second suit. In that view, the High Court affirmed the
previous decision of that court.
It appears, however, that an appeal was filed against
the order of the Prescribed Authority and the appeal was
allowed by the order of the District Judge dated 28th April,
1978. Aggrieved thereby the tenants filed a writ petition
before the High Court. The controversy in the High Court was
whether the application filed by the landlord under section
43(2)(rr) of the New Act was not maintainable. The basis of
the claim of the tenant was that as the permission had been
utilised by filing the suit, another proceeding on the basis
of the said permission could not be initiated The High Court
noted that section 43(2)(rr) was added by U.P. Act no. 37 of
1972. By the addition of the new provision, the legislature
conferred a right on a landlord who had obtained permission
under the old Act and had filed an application under new
provision to get the tenant evicted. Section 43(2)(rr) of
the New Act was again amended by the U.P. Act No. 28 of
1976. By that amendment the words "whether or not a suit for
the eviction of the tenant has been instituted" were
inserted. The amending Act laid down that the amendment in
the provision shall be deemed to have always been
substituted. In other words, the amendment caused amendment
to be retrospective in operation.
845
It is, therefore, apparent as the High Court in our
opinion in the judgment under appeal rightly held that
section 43(2)(rr) i.e. in 1973 permitted the landlord to
file an application for the enforcement of the permission
obtained by him. After the aforesaid provision was amended,
the landlord was not required to file a suit to avail of the
permission. The High Court in the judgment under appeal
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rejected the contention that once an application for
permission had been filed, the second application would not
lie. The High Court held that where the first suit was not
decided on merits subsequent action was not precluded. The
High Court noted that merits of the case were not examined
by the Court. The Court in this appeal on this occasion did
not find that the permission obtained by the landlord was
invalid or illegal. The judgment of dismissal was thus on
technical ground and not on merits. The High Court held that
the landlord had right to file the second application. In
our opinion, the High Court was right for the reasons
mentioned hereinbefore.
It is next contended that since the suit was dismissed
on the ground that the cause of action did not survive to
the landlord, it should be held that the landlord had no
right left to file an application under section 43(2)(rr).
This was, in our opinion, rightly rejected by the High
Court. The High Court negatived the contention of the tenant
that dismissal of the first action taken by the landlord
after obtaining permission under the old Act precluded the
landlord from taking the second action under section
43(2)(rr) of the Act.
We are of the opinion that the High Court was right. It
will be appropriate at this stage to refer to the provisions
of section 43(2)(rr) or the New Act which are as follows:
"Where any permission referred to in Section 3 of
the old Act has been obtained on any ground
specified in subsection (1) or sub-section (2) of
Section 21, and has become final, either before
the commencement of this Act, or in accordance
with the provisions of this sub-section, after the
commencement of this Act, (whether or not a suit
for the eviction of the tenant has been
instituted), the landlord may apply to the
prescribed authority for his eviction under
Section 21, and thereupon the prescribed authority
shall order the eviction of the tenant from the
building under tenancy, and it shall not be
necessary for the prescribed authority to satisfy
itself afresh as to the existence of any ground as
aforesaid, and such order shall be final and shall
846
not be open to appeal under Section 22:
Provided that no application under this clause.
shall be maintainable on the basis of a permission
granted under Section 3 of the old Act, where such
permission became final more than three years
before the commencement of the Act:
Provided further that in computing the period of
three years, the time during which the applicant
has been prosecuting with due diligence any civil
proceeding whether in a court of first instance or
appeal or revision shall be excluded.
In view of the aforesaid, we are of the opinion that the
Prescribed Authority was clearly in error in upholding the
objection of the tenant that as the previous suit had been
filed by the tenant on the basis of permission and the same
had been dismissed, the application under section 43(2)(rr)
of the Act 13 of 1972, was not maintainable. It was clearly
erroneous contention. It would frustrate the very purpose of
the express provision of section 43(2)(rr). Finality of
order in judicial proceeding is one of the essential
principles which the scheme of the administration of
justice, must strive for. See in this connection the
observations of D.K Soni v. P.K. Mukherjee & Ors., (Civil
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Appeal No. 6626/83 Judgment dated 27. 10. 1987).
It was contended before the High Court that no appeal
lay from the decision of the Prescribed Authority to the
District Judge. The High Court accepted this contention. The
High Court finally held that though no appeal lay before the
District Judge, the order of the Prescribed Authority was
invalid and was rightly set aside by the District Judge. On
that ground the High Court declined to interfere with the
order of the learned District Judge. It is true that there
has been some technical breach because if there is no appeal
maintainable before the learned District Judge, in the
appeal before the learned District Judge, the order of the
Prescribed Authority could not be set aside. But the High
Court was exercising its jurisdiction under Article 226 of
the Constitution. The High Court had come to the conclusion
that the order of the Prescribed Authority was invalid and
improper. The High Court itself could have set it aside.
Therefore in the facts and circumstances of the case justice
has been done though, as mentioned hereinbefore, technically
the appellant had a point that the order of the District
Judge was illegal and improper. If we reiterate the order of
847
the High Court as it is setting aside the order of the
Prescribed Authority in exercise of the jurisdiction under
Article 226 of the Constitution then no exception can be
taken. As mentioned hereinbefore, justice has been done and
as the improper order of the Prescribed Authority has been
set aside, on objection can be taken.
In the premises there is no scope for interference
under Article 136 of the Constitution. Our attention was
drawn to certain observations of this Court about the power
of the State Government under section 7-F of the old Act in
Shri Bhagwan and Anr. v. Ram Chand and Anr., [ 1965] 3 SCR
218. In the view, we have taken of the facts of this case,
it is not necessary to deal with this decision in any
detail.
In the aforesaid view of the matter, this appeal must
fail and is accordingly dismissed. In the facts and
circumstances of the case, we however, make no order as to
costs.
P.S.S. Appeal dismissed.
848