Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
OM PAL.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ANAND SWARUP (DEAD BY LRS.)
DATE OF JUDGMENT04/10/1988
BENCH:
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
BENCH:
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
PATHAK, R.S. (CJ)
CITATION:
1988 SCR Supl. (3) 391 1988 SCC (4) 545
JT 1988 (4) 46 1988 SCALE (2)1269
ACT:
East Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act, 1949: Section
13(2)(iii)--‘Acts as are likely to impair materially the
value or utility of the building’--Interpretation of--
landlord--When entitled to obtain order of eviction--The
construction by the tenant must not only be one effecting or
diminishing value of utility of building but also impairment
must be of a material nature.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant had taken on lease a room from the
respondent for running a dry-cleaning shop. The appellant
later put up a parchhati in the shop for storing clothes.
The respondent-landlord sought eviction of the tenant under
section 13(2)(iii) of the East Punjab Urban Rent Restriction
Act, 1949 on the ground that the construction of the
parchhati was an act causing material impairment to the
building. Both the Rent Controller and the Appellate
Authority upheld the contention of the respondent. The High
Court, in revision, affirmed their findings.
Before this Court, it was contended on behalf of the
appellant that (i) the respondent had not adduced any
evidence, although the burden of proof was on him, to show
that by fixing the parchhati the building had been
materially impaired so as to affect the value or utility of
the building in any manner; (ii) the Rent Controller and the
Appellate Authority had rendered their findings against the
appellant without any basis for it; (iii) the High Court had
failed to comprehend section 13(2)(iii) in its proper
perspective; and (iv) the High Court had erred in treating
the findings of the Rent Controller and the Appellate
Authority as pure findings of fact whereas they were
findings on a mixed question of law and fact.
Allowing the appeal, it was,
HELD: (1) It is not every construction or alteration
that would result in material impairment to the value or the
utility of the building. [396E]
(2) In order to attract s. 13(2)(iii) the construction
must not only be one affecting or diminishing the value or
PG NO 391
PG NO 392
utility of the building but such impairment must be of a
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material nature i.e. of a substantial and significant
nature. [396E-F]
(3) When a construction is alleged to materially impair
the value or utility of a building, the construction should
be of such a nature as to substantially diminish the value
of the building either from the commercial and monetary
point of view or from the utilitarian aspect of the
building. [396G H; 397A]
(4) The Rent Controller and the Appellate Authority had
rendered their findings without any basis for it, and the
High Court erred in accepting those findings without
applying the correct principles of law underlying section
13(2)(iii). [397B]
Govindaswamy Naidu v. Pushpalammal, AIR 1952 Mad 181;
Smt. Savitri Devi v. U. S. Bajpai, AIR 1956 Nagpur 60;
Charan Singh v . Shrimati Ananthi & Ors., [1966] 6 PLR 780;
G. Natarajan v. P. Thandavarayan, [1969] RCJ 733; Shri Anup
Chand & Ors. v. Shri Trilok Singh, [1977] 1 RCJ 752; Gobind
Ram v. Smt. Kaushalya Rani & Ors., [1983] 1 RCJ 295; Om
Prakash v. Amar Singh & Ors., [1987] 1 SCC 458 and Brijendra
Nath Bhargava & Anr. v. Harsh Wardhan & Ors., [1988] 1 SCC
454, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION Civil Appeal No 2471 of
1980.
From the Judgment and Order dated 26.9.80 of the High
Court of Punjab and Haryana in Civil Revision No 292 of 1976
Sultan Singh and T L Garg for the Appellant.
Harbans Lal, S M Ashri and Ashok Mahajan for the
Respondent.
The Judgment of the court was delivered by
NATARAJAN, J. In this appeal by special leave by a
tenant against the dismissal of his Revision under Section
l5(5) of the East Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act, 1949
(hereinafter referred to as the ‘Act’ ) by the High Court,
what falls for consideration is the manner of construing the
words "acts as are likely to impair materially the value or
utility of the building" occurring in Section 13(2)(iii) of
the Act.
PG NO 393
A parchhati put up by the tenant/appellant in a shop
taken on lease by him for running a Dry Cleaning laundry has
been construed by the Rent Controller and the Appellate
Authority as an act causing material impairment to the
building and the High Court has affirmed their findings and
dismissed the revision preferred by the appellant. The
correctness of the order of the High Court in Revision is
challenged in this appeal.
The facts are not in controversy and may briefly be
stated as under. For running a dry-cleaning shop the
appellant had taken on lease a room from the respondent on a
monthly rent of Rs.30. The appellant put up a parchhati in
the shop for storing the clothes before and after dry
cleaning. The parchhati has been made to rest on the walls
by means of wooden balas inserted in the wall through holes
made therein.
The appellant did not dispute the construction of the
parchhati but contended that the alteration had been made
several years ago and that too with the consent of the
respondent and secondly the parchhati did not weaken or
impair the utility or value of the shop in any manner. In
support of his contentions, the appellant examined the
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neighbouring shop owners to prove that the parchhati had
been in existence for long and a retired engineer by name
Amril Lal as PW-3 to speak about the parchhati being only a
temporary construction and the said construction not
affecting the structural soundness or the utility of the
shop in any manner Notwithstanding the appellant s
contentions and the evidence of the expert, the Rent
Controller and the Appellate Authority rendered findings
against him and the High Court accepted those findings in
the following manner:
"However in the case on hand, it is not a minor
alteration but a substantial structural change in the
building Again. the fact that the wooden balcony has been
constructed with the support of nuts and bolts would also
not make any difference to the position. With modern
technique, the construction of even a multi-storeyed
building has been made possible by the use of fabrication
with steel material, including nuts and bolts. Moreover, the
two Authorities below have come to a concurrent finding
after considering the evidence produced by the parties, that
the balcony in question tantamounts to material impairment
of the value and utility of the premises."
PG NO 394
Arguing for the appellant, Mr. Sultan Singh, learned
counsel stated that while the Rent Controller and the
Appellate Authority have rendered their findings against the
appellant without there being any basis for it, the High
Court has failed to comprehend Section 13(2)(iii) in its
proper perspective and this has led to miscarriage of
justice. It was urged that while the appellant had examined
an expert PW-3 Amrit Lal to prove that the Parchhati was
only a temporary wooden fixture which could be easily
removed at any time without any damage being caused to the
walls of the building, the respondent had no adduced any
contra evidence, although the burden of proof was on him to
show that by fixing the parchhati the building has been
materially impaired so as to affect the value or utility of
the building in any manner and attracting Section 13(2)(iii)
to the facts of the case. The learned counsel further
contended that since the High Court has erred in treating
the findings of the Rent Controller and the Appellate
Authority as pure findings of fact whereas they were
findings on a mixed question of law and fact, the order of
the High Court in Revision suffers from a serious flaw and
it needs correction by this Court.
In elaboration of his argument, Mr. Sultan Singh stated
that the words "materially impaired" have a distinct
connotation and as such any and every alteration made in a
building will not necessarily constitute material impairment
to the building. The counsel referred to the definition of
the word ’impair" in the Law Lexicon by P. Ramanatha Aiyar
(Reprint Edition) 1987 at page 548
’Impair. To diminish in quality value excellence or
strength of a thing.
The word ‘impair’ means to make worse; to weaken; to
unfeeble To make or become worse or less; to lessen reduce
or diminish the quantity or quality."
The learned counsel also referred to several decisions
of High Courtsand of this Court where the same question has
been considered by the courts. The decisions are to the
following effects.
Every act of waste by the tenant will not entitle the
landlord to obtain an order of eviction under the provisions
of Section 7 (Madras Buildings Lease and Rent Control Act),
1946 1I cannot be laid down as a rule of law that a
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demolition of a wall in a building must necessarily be
deemed to be an act of waste which is likely to impair
materially the value or the utility of the building "
Govindaswamy Naidu v. Pushpalammal, AIR 1952 Madras 181.
PG NO 395
"A landlord, in order to be entitled to the grant of
permission to terminate the tenancy, is required not only to
prove an act of waste on the part of the tenant but also to
prove that the said act is likely to impair materially the
value or the utility of the house," Smt. Savitri Devi v.
U.S. Bajpai, AIR t956 Nagpur 60 and Charan Singh v. Shrimati
Ananthi & Ors., [1966] 6 PLR 780.
"Drilling of a hole to let out smoke by the tenant who
had taken the building for hoteliering business and removal
of a portion of parapet wall for temporarily accommodating
the hotel employees housed in the adjacent building cannot
be said to be acts which would impair the utility of the
building or its value." G. Natarajan v. P. Thandavarayan,
[1969] RCJ 733.
"Mere construction of a false roof which is only wooden
or the setting of a wooden stair or making of a few holes in
the roof for letting out the smoke from the hotel, cannot be
held to be such material alterations which may result in
changing the character or nature of the premises. " Shri
Anup Chand & Ors. v . Shri Trilok Singh, [1977] I RCJ 752.
"A wooden parchhati constructed by a tenant (tailor
master) within the demised shop for the purpose of providing
more accommodation to his employees and the opening up of a
ventilator for that purpose and the putting up of a wooden
staircase to reach1 the parchhati would not constitute a
material alteration atracting the operation of Section
13(2)(iii) of the Act.‘Gobind Ram v. Smt. Kaushalya Rani &
Ors., [1983] 1 RCJ 295.
In Om Prakash v. Amar Singh & Ors., [1987] l SCC 458 it
was held that the raising of a temporary wall of 6 feet
height in a hall in the demised premises, without digging
any foundation in the floor of the hall so as to convert the
hall into two portions for convenient use without the
consent of the landlord and the extension of a pre-existing
tin shed on the open land adjacent to the accommodation by
constructing a wall made by bricks or mud and enclosing it
by bamboo tatters would not amount to making of any
structural change of a substantial character either in the
form or structure of the accommodation and as such the
construction did not materially alter the accommodation It
was observed that "the expression ’materially alter’ means a
substantial change in the character, form and the structure
of the building without destroying its identity." It was
PG NO 396
further pointed out in the decision that the findings of the
court regarding constructions would be findings of fact but
the question whether the constructions materially altered
the accommodation is a mixed question of fact and law which
should be determined on the application of the correct
principles. In a recent case Brijendra Nath Bhargava & Anr.
v. Harsh Wardhan & Ors., [1988]1 SCC 454 the tenant had
constructed a wooden structure inside the showroom making
the showroom a cabin and a balcony or dochhati on the roof
of the cabin with a wooden staircase inside the cabin to go
to the balcony. The Court held that the constructions would
not constitute in law material alterations to the tenanted
premises so as to give a cause of action to the landlord for
filing a suit for eviction.
Though these decisions construed the words ‘materially
alter’ we are of the view that the reasoning adopted for
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construing those words would logically be attracted for
construing the words "materially impaired? with which we are
concerned.
In the light of these decisions, if we examine the
present case we find that the Rent Controller and the
Appellate Authority as well as the High Court have obviously
failed to construe Section 13(2)(iii) in its proper
perspective and they have failed to apply the correct legal
tests for judging the nature of the constructions made by
the appellant As has been repeatedly pointed out in several
decisions it is not every construction or alteration that
would result in material impai modation" and as such the
construction of a chabutra, almirah, opening of window or
closing a verandah by temporary structure or replacing of a
leaking roof or placing partition in a room or making minor
alterations for the convenient use of the accommodation
would not materially alter the building. It would therefore
follow that when a construction is alleged to materially
impair the value or utility of a building, the construction
should be of such a nature as to substantially diminish the
value of the building either from the commercial and
PG NO 397
monetary point of view or from the utilitarian aspect of the
building.
Having regard to the nature of the temporary
construction put up by the appellant and the evidence of the
expert witness examined by him which remains uncontroverted
by any expert’s evidence on the respondent’s side, we find
no difficulty in holding that the lower courts had rendered
their findings without any basis for it and the High Court
has erred in accepting those findings without applying the
correct principles of law underlying Section 13(2)(iii).
The learned counsel for the respondent had no effective
answer for the contentions of the appellant’s counsel except
to say that the High Court was justified in affirming the
concurrent findings rendered by the Rent Controller and the
Appellate Authority and hence there is no need or
justification for this Court to interfere with the order of
the High Court We are unable to countenance this argument
because the High Court has failed to apply the correct
principles of law while exercising its Revisional Powers.
In the light of our conclusions, the appeal succeeds and
is accordingly allowed. The order of the High Court in civil
revision as well as the order of eviction passed by the Rent
Controller and the Appellate Authority are set aside and the
respondent’s petition for eviction will stand dismissed.
There will, however, be no order as to costs.
R.S.S. Appeal allowed