Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SUBHASH KUMAR LATA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
R.C. CHHIBA & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT23/09/1988
BENCH:
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
BENCH:
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
PATHAK, R.S. (CJ)
CITATION:
1989 AIR 458 1988 SCR Supl. (3) 241
1988 SCC (4) 709 JT 1988 (4) 65
1988 SCALE (2)790
CITATOR INFO :
R 1990 SC 325 (18)
E 1991 SC1233 (10,11,14)
RF 1992 SC1555 (2)
ACT:
Delhi Rent Control Act, 19S: Section 21--Rent
Controller--Duty of--To apply his mind before grant of
sanction-Landlord obtaining sanction by withholding
information that premises already let out--Sanction--Held
vitiated by fraud and therefore a nullity.
HEADNOTE:
Execution applications were filed by the Appellant
under section 21 of the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 for
obtaining possession of the portions in the occupation of
the respondents--Tenants. The appellant’s case was that she
obtained s motion of the Additional Rent Controller on
26/27th February, 1976 and thereafter leased out specified
portions in her property to the respondents under separate
leases for a limited period of two years commencing from
March 1, 1976. The rear portion in the ground floor was
leased out to one tenant and the first and second floor were
leased out to another tenant. Each tenant was to pay a sum
of Rs.850 per month. The execution applications were filed
by the appellant against the two respondents as they failed
to vacate the portion leased out to them at the end of the
two year period.
The two respondents put up a common defence contending,
that there was a single tenancy and not two tenancies, they
were jointly inducted into possession of the entire leased
portion in the month of December, 1975, under an oral lease
and the tenancy was therefore not referable to the sanction
given by the Additional Rent Controller on 26/27th February,
1976. They placed reliance on the payment of Rs.1,700 on
10th December, 1975 as security deposit, and three months
advance payment of rent of Rs.5,100 by means of cheque on
29th December, 1975.
The Rent Controller after inquiry and consideration of
the accepted the case of the respondents, and held that an
oral having been granted in favour of the respondents even
in the month of December, 1975 their tenancy rights were not
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governed by the sanction given by the Additional Rent
Controller under section 2l, and that sanction of the Rent
Controller was vitiated by fraud in that it was by
supressing the true facts from the notice of the Rent
Controller. The execution applications were accordingly
dismissed.
PG NO 241
PG NO 242
In the appeals preferred to the Rent Control Tribunal,
it was held that even if the respondents had been inducted
into possession in December 1975 under an oral tenancy they
must be deemed to have impliedly surrendered their earlier
tenancy the sanction granted by the Rent Controller on
2h/27th February, 1976. It was further held that the
respondents ought to have brought to the notice of the Rent
Controller without delay the fraud practised by the
appellant and since they have failed to act promptly they
were not entitled to seek nullification of the sanction of
the Rent Controller. The Tribunal allowed the appeals, held
the execution applications were maintainable, and directed
respondents to deliver possession to the appellant in a
month’s time.
Second appeals were filed by respondents to the High
Court, which were allowed. It was held that as the
respondents were already given tenancy rights they would not
be governed by the sanction given by the Rent Controller on
26/27th February, 1976, that the sanction order itself was
unenforceable as it was vitiated by fraud, and that no
question of implied surrender of the earlier tenancy would
arise, when the Rent Controller gave sanction for limited
tenancy rights. The High Court restored the order of the
Rent Controller dismissing the execution appeals.
Dismissing the appeals by the landlord, the Court,
HELD: 1. What section 21 envisages is the creation of
tenancy rights after getting the sanction of the Rent
Controller. Such being the case, the landlord should make
known to the Rent Controller, if there is already a tenant
in occupation of the premises, the factum of his possession
and the terms of the tenancy and satisfy the Rent Controller
that notwithstanding a tenant being in occupation of the
premises under an earlier tenancy he should be granted
sanction under section 21 to confer limited tenancy rights
in favour of the existing tenant himself or in favour of new
tenant. [249D-E]
2. Section 21 was not intended to obtain ’post-facto’
sanction of a tenancy that had already been created by
supressing relevant information from the Rent Controller so
as to enable the landlord to straight away recover
possession of the leased property by filing an application
under section 21 after the expiry of the period for which
permission to lease had been granted by the Rent Controller.
[249E-F]
PG NO 243
3. Besides what the parties say, the Rent Controller
has to apply his mind before granting sanction under s. 21
because the order passed by him has legal consequences and
will govern the rights of the parties to the tenancy that is
to follow in terms of the sanction. [251C]
S.B. Noronah v. Prem Kumari, [1980] I SCR 281; J.R.
Vohra v. Indian Export House Pvt. Ltd., [1985] 1 SCC 712 at
723; Inder Mohan Lal v. Ramesh Khanna, [1987] IV SCC 1 at
page 9; and Joginder Kumar Butan v. R.P. Oberai, [1987] (IV)
SCC page 20 at 29 referred to.
4. A statement made in contravention of facts, whether
made by one or both the contracting parties, cannot alter
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the truth of the situation or cure the lacuna of withholding
of relevant information. [249H]
In the instant case, it is inconceivable that
irrespective of the differences in the size and nature of
the two portions, the respondents would have consented to
pay the same rate of rent to the appellant for the portions
alleged to have been leased out to them. The tenancies
Granted to the two respondents are for the same period i.e.
from March 1, 1976 to 28 February. 1978. If all these
factors are taken note of the only conclusion that can be
reached is that only a single tenancy in favour of both the
respondents should have been created for the entire leased
portion and not two tenancies, one for the ground floor, and
the other for the first and second floor. The story of two
tenancies put forward by the appellant is a make-believe
affair. [248B-D]
In the instant case, when the appellant had already put
the re-spondent in possession of the property in December,
1975, she could not have bona fide made a statement before
the Rent Controller that she would not be requiring the
premises for her own occupation from 1st March 1976 onward
for a period of two years. The fact that respondent 910
appeared before the Rent Controller and gave statements in
tune with the statement made by the appellant cannot improve
the situation in any manner. [249G-H]
5. The sanction obtained from the Rent Controller under
Section 21 was vitiated by fraud and therefore a nullity. It
could therefore not be said that by reason of the
respondents having agreed to take limited ten tenancy rights
under the order of Rent Controller for a period of two years
commencing from March 1, 1976 they must be deemed to have
impliedly surrendered their earlier tenancy rights as
envisaged under clause (f) of section 111 of the Transfer of
Property Act.[252C-E]
PG NO 244
Doe d. Earl of Egrement v. Courtenay, [1843-60] All
E.R.Rep. 685, referred.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 1594-
1595 0f 1986.
From the Judgment and Order dated 23.8.1985 of the
Delhi High Court in S.A.O. No. 185 and I84 of 1983.
Avadh Behari Rohtagi, M.S. Maan and B.S. Maan for the
Appellant.
Harish N. Salve, S.K. Mehta, Vijay Makhija, R. Jaganath
Goulay, S.A. Sarin and Aman Vachhar, for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
NATARAJAN, J. Both the appeals by special leave have
been filed by the same appellant and are directed against a
common judgment delivered by the High Court of Delhi in two
connected second appeals dismissing the Execution
Applications filed by the appellant against the respondents
in the two appeals under Section 21 of the Delhi Rent
Control Act (for sho-rt ’the Act’ hereinafter). The
Execution Applications were dismissed by the Rent Controller
but on appeal by the appellant herein they were allowed and
the tenant/respondent in each of the applications was
directed to surrender possession in a month’s time. The High
Court, however, reversed the order of the Rent Control
Tribunal in the Second Appeals preferred by the respondents
a dismissed the Execution Applications. The aggrieved
appellant has preferred these appeals.
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It was the appellant’s case that she had obtained the
sanction of the Additional Rent Controller, New Delhi on
26/27.2.76 and there-after leased out specified portions in
her property bearing no. N-57, Panchseel Park, New Delhi to
the respondents under separate leases of a limited period of
two years commencing from 1.3.76. According to here the rear
portion in the ground floor consisting of a drawing-cum-
dining hall a bed room, a bath room and other facilities
were leased out to the tenant Maj. R.C. Chhiba (respondent
in CA No. 1594 of 1986)and the first and second floors
comprising of four bed rooms with attached bath rooms and
other facilities were leased out to the tenant Tewari
(respondent in CA 1595 of 1986) and each of the tenants was
to pay a sum of Rs.50 per month for the respective portion
PG NO 245
leased out to them. On the ground the two respondents failed
to vacate the portions leased out to them at the end of the
two years period, the appellant filed Execution Applications
under Section 21 of the Act to seek an order from- the Rent
Controller for delivery of possession of the leased
portions:
The common defence put forth by the two respondents was
that there was a single tenancy and not two tenancies and
they were jointly inducted into possession of the entire
leased portion even in the month of December 1975 under an
oral lease and as such, their tenancy was not referable to
the sanction given by the Rent Controller on 26/27.2.76. To
substantiate their contentions, the respondents placed
reliance on the payment of a sum of Rs.1,700 by them on
1;0.12.1975 as security deposit and the payment of a sum of
Rs.5,100 by means of cheque on 29.12.1975 towards advance
payment of rent for three months. They alleged that inspite
of their having been inducted into possession in December
1975 itself, the respondent mislead them by saying that the
oral tenancy required formal sanction by the Rent Controller
and hence they should appear before the Rent Controller and
have their statements recorded by him. It ws only after
giving their statements before the Rent Controller they
suspected the motives of the appellant and hence they
refused to execute lease deeds in the month of March 1976 as
desired by the appellant.
The Rent Controller. After a detailed consideration of
the evidence adduced by the parties accepted the case of the
respondents and held that an oral tenancy had been created
in favour of the respondents even in the month of December
1975 and as such their tenancy rights were not governed by
the sanction given by the Rent Controller under Section 21
of the Act and further more the sanction of the Rent
Controller was vitiated by fraud in that it was obtained by
suppressing the true facts from the notice of the Rent
Controller. It was further held that the order of sanction
of the Rent Controller suffered from an infirmity due to the
appellant failing to glove the reasons for her wanting to
let out the property for a limited period. We need not
however concern ourselves about that aspect of the matter.
The Rent Control Tribunal, in the appeals preferred to
it, however differed from the Rent Controller and held that
even if he respondents had been inducted into possession in
December 1975 under an oral tenancy, they must be deemed to
have impliedly surrendered their earlier tenancy and
consented to acquire fresh tenancy under the sanction
granted by the Rent Controller on 26/27.2.76. On the
PG NO 246
question whether the sanction of the Rent Controller was
vitiated by fraud, the Appellate Tribunal held that the
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respondents ought to have brought to the notice of the Rent
Controller without delay the fraud practised by the
appellant and since they had failed to act promptly they
were not entitled to seek nullification of the
sanction of the Rent Controller on the ground of fraud. In
accordance with its conclusions, the Tribunal allowed the
appeals preferred by the appellant and held that the
Execution Applications were maintainable and directed the
respondents to deliver possession to the appellant of the
leased portions in a month’s time.
It was then the turn of the respondents file second
appeals to the High Court against the order of the Rent
Control Tribunal. The High Court allowed the appeals holding
that since the respondents were already given tenancy rights
they would not be governed by the sanction given by the Rent
Controller on 26/27.2.76 and furthermore the sanction order
itself was unenforceable as it was vitiated by fraud. The
High Court also held that no question of implied surrender
of the earlier tenancy would arise when the Rent Controller
gave sanction for limited tenancy rights being given to the
respondents in as much as the purported new lease was void
in law and incapable of affording scope for any surrender of
a pre-existing lease. Consequently the High Court allowed
the second appeals and restored the order of the Rent
Controller dismissing the Execution Applications.
Mr. Rohtagi, learned counsel for the appellant
formulated his propositions as under to contend that the
High Court had erred in allowing the appeals and dismissing
the Execution Applications:
1. The sanction given by the Rent Controller on
26/27.2.76 to the appellant permitting her to grant limited
tenancy rights to the respondents was fully in accordance
with Section 21 of the Act and it did not suffer from any
defect or infirmity.
(2) The order of sanction was not vitiated by fraud as
the respondents were fully in the know of things and were
aware of the nature and purpose of the application made
before the Rent Controller and had willingly appeared before
the Rent Controller and solemnly declared before him that
they were willing to take the premises on lease for a
limited period of two years commencing from 1.3.1976.
(3) In any event the respondents are dis-entitled under
law to set up a plea of fraud to seek nullification of the
PG NO 247
sanction granted by the Rent Controller because the
respondents had not only failed to bring forthwith to the
notice of the Rent Controller the fraud committed by the
appellant but on the other hand they had availed of the
benefit of the permission given by the Rent Controller for
the full period of two years and thereby they had lost their
power of avoidance of the transaction.
(4) Even if the order of sanction was vitiated by
fraud, the tenancy created thereunder was only a voidable
transaction and not a void one and, as such, by reason of
the respondents having failed to avoid the contract and
instead having availed the benefit of it for the full period
of two years, they were not entitled to refute the validity
or the binding nature of the sanction granted by the Rent
Controller for creation of limited tenancy rights in their
favour.
(5) Even if it were to be held that the respondents had
already been inducted into possession of the leased premises
on an oral tenancy in the month of December 1975 itself,
they must be deemed to have impliedly surrendered their
tenancy rights under the oral lease when they agreed to
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accept the limited tenancy rights given to them in pursuance
of the sanction of the Rent Controller.
Before we examine the contentions of Mr. Rohtagi, we
may appositely advert to certain facts emerging from the
evidence and the inferences resulting therefrom. The
relevant factors requiring mention are as follows.
The two respondents are not stranger but are brothers
and they have been inducted into possession on one and the
same day, i.e. on 10th December 1975. Though the appellant
would say that different portions of the house were leased
out to them under separate tenancies, the fact remains that
a sum of Rs.1,700 had been paid by them towards security
deposit on 10.12.1975. The appellant has no doubt
acknowledged the payment under two receipts but both the
receipts have been typed on the same paper. The receipts
would read as if a sum of Rs.850 had been received
separately from each one of them but the recital is of no
consequence because the respondents have paid the appellant
a sum of Rs.5,100 by means of a single cheque towards
advance rent for a period of three months at the rate of
Rs.1,7)0 per month. The appellant has tried to explain away
the payment by saying that the payment represented a sum of
PG NO 248
Rs.2,550 given by each of the respondents for meeting the
expenses of white-washing, colour washing and for effecting
repairs to the premises. It has, how-ever, been found that
no such works were carried out. There is the further fact
that while the ground floor portion leased out consisted of
only a drawing-cum-dining hall, one bed room and one
bathroom, the first and second floors consisted of four bed
rooms together with bathrooms etc. It is inconceivable that
irrespective of the difference in the size and nature of the
two portions the respondents would have consented to pay the
same rate of rent to the appellant for the portions alleged
to have been leased out to them. It is also worthy of note
that the tenancies said to have been granted to the two
respondents are for the same period, i.e. from 1.3.76 to
28.2.78. If all these factors are taken note of, the only
conclusion that can be reached is that only a single tenancy
in favour of both the respondents should have been created
for the entire portion leased out and not two tenancies,
viz. one for the ground floor and the other for the first
and second floors and that the story of two tenancies put
forward by the appellant is a make-believe affair It is in
this background the appellant’s contentions have to be
examined.
It is true that the appellant as well as the
respondents appeared before the Rent Controller on
26/27.2.76 and gave statements to the effect that the
appellant did not require the use of the leased premises for
a period of two years commencing from 1.3.76 and that the
respondents were willing to take the respective portions
marked in the plan Ex. A- I produced by the appellant for a
limited period but even so the question would arise whether
the order passed by the Rent Controller can be deemed a
valid and legal sanction given under Section 21. The answer
has to be clearly in the negative because the appellant had
already let out the premises to the respondents and as such
there was no question of the appellant not being in need of
the leased portion for a period of two years from 1.3.76.
It has been held in Inder Mohan Lal v. Ramesh Khanna, l
l987] IV SCC 1 at page 9 that in order to attract Section 21
four conditions must be fulfilled. The relevant portion
reads as follows:
"Therefore the first condition must be that the
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landlord must not require the premises either in whole or
part of any premises for a particular period. Secondly, the
landlord must obtain the permission of the Controller
in the prescribed manner. Thirdly, letting of the whole or
part of the premises must be for residence. Fourthly, such
letting out must be for such period as may be agreed in
writing."
PG NO 249
Applying the above tests, it may be seen that in this
case the very first condition has not been fulfilled. When
the appellant had already parted with her possession of the
leased portions by inducting the respondents into possession
in December 1975 itself, the statement of the appellant
before the Rent Controller on 26/27.2.76 made as if she was
in possession of the house and she would not be needing the
house for her occupation for a period of two years from 1.3.
]976) was a meaningless statement besides being a subversive
statement as well. As pointed out in S.B. Noronah v. Prem
Kumari, [1980] l SCR 281 Section 2 I has been provided in
the Act to offer a pragmatic compromise formula to satisfy
the ever increasing demand of rental accommodation by non-
owners of houses on the one hand and the reluctance of the
owners of houses due to genuine apprehension entertained by
them on the other in letting out their houses in whole or in
part even when they were not in need of the house or portion
of it lest the tenants should set up statutory tenancy
rights and refuse to vacate the premises at the end of the
lease period. What the Section envisages is the creation of
tenancy rights after getting the sanction of the Rent
Controller. Such being the case the landlord should make
known to the Rent Controller, if there is already a tenant
in occupation of the premises, the factum of his possession
and the terms of the tenancy and satisfy the Rent
Controller, that notwithstanding a tenant being in
occupation of the premises under an earlier tenancy he
should be granted sanction under section I to confer
limited tenancy rights in favour of the existing tenant
himself or in favour of .I new tenant. Section ’ I was not
intended to obtain post-facto sanction of a tenancy that had
already been created by suppressing relevant information
from the Rent Controller so as to enable the landlord to
straightaway recover possession of the leased property by
filling an application under Section 2l of the Act after
the expiry of the period for which permission to lease had
been granted by the Rent Controller. Such being the case
when the appellant had already put the respondents in
possession of the property in December 1975 she could not
have bona fide made a statement before the Rent Controller
that she would not be requiring the premises for her own
occupation from l.3.1976) onwards for a period of two years.
he fact that the respondents also appeared before the Rent
Controller and gave statements in tune with the statement
made by the appellant cannot improve the situation in any
manner because a statement made in contravention of
facts. whether made by one or both the contracting parties,
cannot alter the truth of the situation or cure the lacuna
of withholding of relevant information from the Rent
PG NO 250
Controller. We cannot therefore accept the contention of the
appellant’s counsel that the order passed by the Rent
Controller on 26/27.2.76 granting sanction to the appellant
to confer limited tenancy rights on the respondents did not
suffer from any defect or infirmity.
As regards the next contention of Mr. Rohtagi that the
appellant had not committed any fraud when she sought for
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and obtained sanction from the Rent Controller to grant
limited tenancy rights to the respondents and that in any
event the respondents were fully in the know of things and
were therefore estopped from raising a plea of
fraud to resist the Execution Applications, the argument is
based on a misconception of the real perspective from which
the matter Should be viewed. What is of relevance is not
whether the appellant had committed any fraud upon the
respondents but whether the appellant had fraudulently
suppressed relevant materials from the notice of the Rent
Controller and had thereby obtained an order of sanction
from the Rent Controller to lease out the property for a
period of two years from 1.3.1976. There is no denying the
fact that the appellant had failed to disclose to the Rent
Controller that she had already inducted the respondents
into possession and inspite of it she was seeking permission
under Section 21 in order to restrict the tenancy rights of
the respondents to a period of two years with effect from
1.3.1976. Had she disclosed the real state of affairs it is
doubtful whether the Rent Controller would have given his
approval to the appellant to restrict the tenancy rights of
the respondents, who were already in possession, to a period
of two years in substitution of the rights available to
them as statutory tenants under the Act. We do not however
rule out the possibility of a Rent Controller granting
sanction under Section 21 to a landlord to let out his
premises in whole or in part for a limited period to a
tenant even if the tenant had already been inducted into
possession but such sanction has to be obtained after a full
an-i frank disclosure of all factors including the
circumstances under which the tenant had been put in
possession even before the Rent Controller’s sanction was
obtained and before an agreement in writing was entered into
between the parties in terms of the sanction. It could be
that the tenant may have been in urgent need of the premises
and could not afford to wait to take possession of the house
till the legal and procedural formalities were gone through
on account of some exigency such as immediate requirement of
the house to celebrate a wedding or for a family member to
undergo treatment or for the confinement of a daughter or
daughter-in-law etc. but in all such cases the parties must
place all the materials before the Rent Controller while
PG NO 251
seeking his sanction under Section 21. The fact that the
respondents had also appeared before the Rent Controller and
agreed to take the property on lease for a limited period of
two years without demur cannot obliterate or nullify the
fraud committed on the statute. This position has been
succinctly pointed out in S.B. Noronah v. Prema Kumari,
(supra) at page 287 in the following words:
The fact that a landlord and a potential tenant together
apply, setting out the formal ingredients of Section 21,
does not relieve the Controller from being vigilant to
inquire and satisfy himself about the requisites of the
landlord’s non-requirement "for a particular period" and the
letting itself being "as a residence"
Therefore, besides what the parties say, the Rent
Controller has to apply his mind before granting sanction
under Section 21 because the order passed by him has legal
consequences and will govern the rights of the parties to
the tenancy that is to follow in terms of the sanction. This
is the proper perspective from which the matter should be
viewed. Forgetting this position, Mr. Rohtagi based his
arguments on the footing that what has been held against the
appellant was her perpetration of a fraud on the respondents
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and the respondents being the sufferers thereby. It was
proceeding on those lines Mr. Rohtagi argued that the
respondents were not illiterate but highly educated persons,
that they were fully aware of the nature of the transaction
and that they had willingly consented to the creation of
limited tenancy rights in their favour and it was only after
deriving full benefit under the tenancy rights given to them
for two years, they were brazenly setting forth a plea of
fraud and refusing to deliver possession of the leased
premises. The argument does not merit consideration because
we have already pointed out that the relevant factor for
consideration is not whether the respondent were victims of
a fraud but whether the appellant by herself or in collusion
with the respondents had fraudulently suppressed the truth
from the Rent Controller and induced him to give his
sanction under Section 21 so as to restrict the tenancy
rights already conferred upon the respondents to a period of
two years and to enable the appellant to initiate execution
proceedings straightaway against the respondents at the
expiry of the lease period and have them evicted through
process of court from the leased premises.
What is now left is the further contention of the
appellant’s counsel regarding the failure of the respondents
to have speedily brought to the notice of the Rent
Controller the fraud committed by the appellant and to have
PG NO 252
sought for an annulment of the permission granted under
Section 21. The appellant’s counsel placed reliance on the
observations of this Court in three cases viz. J.R. Vohra v.
Indian export House Pvt. Ltd., [1985] I SCC 712 at 723,
Inder Mohan Lal’s,case (supra) para 28 page 17 and Joginder
Kumar Butani v. R.P. Oberai, [ 1987] IV SCC 20 at 29 which
are all to the effect that the delay on the part of the
tenant to impugn the permission granted under Section 21 by
the Rent Controller on the ground of fraud is a relevant
factor to be taken into consideration by the Court while
determining the question whether a tenant should not be
summarily evicted under Section 21. The observations in
those cases cannot be of any assistance to the appellant for
in none of those cases was it found that the sanction
granted by the Rent Controller under Section 21 was vitiated
by fraud and was therefore a nullity. None of the decisions
lay down that where a sanction granted by the Rent
Controller under Section 21 is rendered void by reason of a
fraud practised upon the statute, the delay on the part of
the tenant in seeking annulment of the order of sanction
will cure the order of its voidness.
Turning now to the last of the contentions of the
appellant’s counsel viz. that by reason of the respondents
having agreed to take limited tenancy rights under the order
of the Rent Controller for a period of two years commencing
from 1.3.1976 they must be deemed to have impliedly
surrendered their earlier tenancy rights as envisaged under
Clause (f) of Section 111 of the Transfer of Property Act,
it has no merit in it because, the High Court has rightly
pointed out after referring to Does d. Earl of Egrement v.
Courtenay, [1843-60 All. E.R. Rep. 685] and some decisions
of the High Courts, that when a new lease does not pass are
interest according to the contract the acceptance of it will
not operate as a surrender of the former lease; that, in the
case of a surrender implied by law from the acceptance of a
new lease,the condition ought also to be understood as
implied by law, making void the surrender in case the new
lease should be made void."
For all the aforesaid reasons,the appeals have to fail
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and will accordingly stand dismissed but there will to no
order as to costs.
N.V.K. Appeals dismissed.