Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DULAREY LODH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE IIIRD ADDL. DISTRICT JUDGE, KANPUR & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT03/05/1984
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
VARADARAJAN, A. (J)
CITATION:
1984 AIR 1260 1984 SCR (3) 743
1984 SCC (3) 99 1984 SCALE (1)793
ACT:
U.P. Urban Buildings (Regulation of Letting, Rent and
Eviction Act 1972, Section 9 & U.P. Urban Buildings
(Regulation of Letting Rent and Eviction) (Amendment Act
1976-Decree of eviction passed against tenant under 1972
Act-Executing court holding decree inexecutable-1976
Amendment Act making section 9 of 1972 Act applicable with
retrospective effect-Decree of eviction whether revived and
becoming operative and executable-Doctrine of eclipse-
Applicability of.
Interpretation of Statutes-Doctrine of eclipse-
Applicability of-When arises.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent landlord filed a suit for ejectment in
the year 1971 and obtained a decree for ejectment against
the appellant-tenant. By virtue of the provisions of the
U.P. Urban Buildings (Regulation of Letting, Rent and
Eviction) Act, 1972, the case was transferred to the court
of the Judge, Small Causes, who tried the case and passed a
decree in favour of the respondent. No appeal or revision
was filed against the said judgment. Thereafter, the decree-
holders filed an execution petition. The appellant, raised a
jurisdictional objection on the basis of the judgment of the
Allahabad High Court, (K.K. Saksena v. S.N. Misra 1975 ALR
360) to the effect that the transfer of the suit before
conferment of the jurisdiction to the Judge, Small Causes
Court was not competent and therefore, the decree was not
executable. The respondent’s counsel contended that the suit
would have to be tried all over again and the Court held
that the decree was without jurisdiction. Tho decree
remained inexecutable, but by virtue of the U.P. Urban
Buildings (Regulation of Letting, Rent and Eviction)
(Amendment) Act, 1976 s. 9 of the 1972 Act was made
applicable with retrospective effect to remove The injustice
and remedy the mischief which had been caused to the decree-
holders. As a result of the amendment, the aforesaid
judgment of the Allahabad High Court stood over ruled and
effaced.
In view of the aforesaid amendment, the respondents
filed an application before the Executing Court for revival
of the suit and the decree, which was accepted by the Court,
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and a Civil Revision filed against the said order was
dismissed by the High Court.
744
In the appeal to this Court, it was contended on behalf
of the appellant, that in view of the Allahabad High Court
decision and the 1972 Act, the decree stood set aside and
could not be received or made executable even by the 1976
Amendment Act.
Dismissing the appeal,
^
HELD: 1. The courts below have rightly decided that
after the 1976 Amendment Act the decree became legally
executable. [747A]
2. By virtue of the 1972 Act the decree could not have
been set aside or invalidated and the only consequence which
would ensue is that the decree would be lying dormant and
could not be executed. Once the bar placed by the 1972 Act
is removed, by virtue of the doctrine of eclipse the decree
will revive and become at once operative and executable.
[750H; 751A]
3 Even if the 1972 Act were to apply, the utmost
consequence would be that the decree would remain
inexecutable but could not be struck off from the records of
the case. This is clear case where the doctrine of eclipse
would apply, and in view of the 1976 Amendment Act, the
decree will revive and become executable. This principle has
been applied by this Court in several cases and flows from
the well-known doctrine of eclipse which has been enunciated
not only in India but in other countries also. [747G-H]
Bhikaji Narain Dhakras & Ors. v. Stats of Madhya
Pradesh & Anr; [1955] 2 SCR 589, Deep Chand v. State of U.P
JUDGMENT:
of Uttar Pradesh & Ors; [1963] 1 Supp. SCR 912, S. Anbalagan
v. B. Devarajan; [1984] 2 SCC 91, Kailash Sonkar v. Smt.
Maya Devi; [1984] 2 SCC 91, referred to.
&
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1574 of
1980.
Appeal by Special leave from the Judgment and Order
dated the 27.7.1979 of the Allahahad High Court in C.M.W.
No. Nil of 1979.
Anil Dev Singh, S.L. Aneja and K.L. Taneja for the
Appellant.
M.C. Manchanda, Mrs. Shobha Dikshit and Pramod Swarup
for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
FAZAL ALI, J This appeal by special leave against a
judgment of the Allahabad High Court unfolds a tell-tale
plight of an unfortunate litigant who, after obtaining a
decree for ejectment, was driven from pillar to post to get
the said decree executed. His attempts to get the said
decree executed were stalled sometimes by objections filed
by the tenant-appellant and sometimes by amendments made
745
in the law with the result that even after 13 years of
litigation the landlord respondent was not able to get
possession of the premises. This was because of a statutory
amendment which made the decree obtained by him inexecutable
and was, therefore, Lying dormant and ineffective.
The legislature having realised the hardship of such
landlords came to their rescue by an amendment in 1976 to
the U.P. Urban Buildings (Regulation of Letting, Rent and
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Eviction) Act 1972 (for short, to be referred to as the
’1972 Act’) which was expressly given retrospective
operation so as to revive the decrees which had become
inexecutable.
When the appeal was heard and the arguments were
concluded the respondents had made a good gesture in
agreeing to allow the tenant two years’ time to vacate the
premises on giving the usual undertaking and accordingly we
adjourned the case to enable the parties to come to a
settlement. However, we were informed by counsel for the
parties that no settlement could be reached; hence we have
now to decide the case on merits.
And now to the facts of the case. The respondent-
landlord filed a suit for ejectment in the year 1971 and
obtained a decree for ejectment against the appellant-
tenant. By virtue of the provisions of 1972 Act, the case
was transferred to the court of the Judge, Small Causes who
tried the case and passed a decree in favour of the
respondent on 4.4.1973. It may be noted that the tenant did
not object to the jurisdiction nor did he prefer and appeal
or revision against the said judgment dated 4.4.73 and the
same became final.
Thereafter, the decree-holders filed an execution
petition being Execution Case No. 4 of 1973. The appellant,
however, raised a jurisdictional objection on the basis of a
judgment of the Allahabad High Court reported in 1975 A.L.R.
360 that the transfer of a suit before conferment. Of
jurisdiction to the Judge, Small Causes Court was not
competent and, therefore, the decree was not executable.
Counsel for the respondents under some misconception
conceded that the suit would have to be tried all over again
and the Execution Case was, therefore, disposed of by an
order dated 31.1.1976 passed by the Executing Court. The
Court held that the decree was without jurisdiction. The
respondents, however, took the stand that a concession on a
point of law was not binding on him nor was his Advocate
authorised to make such a concession. However, the decree
746
remained inexecutable but by virtue of the U.P. Urban
Buildings (Regulation of Letting, Rent and Eviction)
Amendment) Act, 1976 (hereinafter referred to as the ’1976
Amendment Act’), section 9 of the 1972 Act was made
applicable with retrospective effect to remove the injustice
and remedy the mischief which had been caused to the decree-
holders. The relevant portion of the said amendment may be
extracted thus:
"26. Transitory Provision
XX XX XX
(6) The provision of section 9 of the Uttar
Pradesh Civil Laws Amendment Act, 1972 shall apply and
shall be deemed always to have applied in relation to
suits of the nature referred to therein which before
the commencement of that Act had been transferred to a
competent court and were pending immediately before the
date of commencement of that Act in such transferee
court as they apply in relation to suits which were
pending in the court in which they were instituted:
Provided that any such suit decided by the
transferee court between the commencement of the said
Act and the commencement of this Act on the assumption
that the said Section 9 did not apply to such suits
shall be deemed to have been validly decided as if the
said section did not apply to such suits."
As a result of the amendment extracted above, the
judgment of the Allahabad High Court reported in 1975 A.L.R.
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360 stood overruled and effaced.
In view of this amendment, the respondents filed an
application before the Executing Court for revival of the
suit and the decree which was accepted by the court and a
civil revision filed against the said order was dismissed by
the High Court; hence this appeal by special leave in this
Court.
In order to understand the implication of the 1976
Amendment Act, it may be necessary to peruse s. 26(5) of the
said Amendment, which is extracted thus:
747
"(5) Notwithstanding any judgment, decree or order
of any court or authority, the provisions of Rule 16 of
the Uttar Pradesh Urban Buildings (Regulation of
Letting, Rent and Eviction) Rules, 1972 shall be deemed
to have been made under the provisions of the principal
Act as amended by this Act as if this Act were in force
on all material dates."
A close analysis of the above reveals that the
intention of the legislature was to remove the injustice
done to the landlords whose decrees became inexecutable. The
logical consequence which flows from an interpretation of
clauses (5) and (6) of s. 26 of the 1976 Amendment Act would
be that all decrees which hitherto had been Lying dormant
would revive and the landlord could get the decree executed.
The Executing Court as also the High Court upheld the
contention of the respondents and directed execution of the
decree.
The sheet-anchor of the arguments of the counsel for
the appellant was that in view of the Allahabad High Court
decision (supra) and the 1972 Act, the decree stood set
aside and could not be revived or made executable even by
the 1976 Amendment Act. It is, however, impossible for us to
accept this contention because the dominant purpose of the
1976 Amendment Act was to remedy the injustice done to the
landlords by the 1972 Act.
Another flaw in the argument of the counsel for the
appellant is that it presumes that the decree became
completely without jurisdiction and stood set aside. That,
however, could not be the position in law. Even if the 1972
Act were to apply, the utmost consequence would be that the
decree would remain inexecutable but could not be struck off
from the records of the case. This is a clear case where the
doctrine of eclipse would apply and in view of the 1976
Amendment Act, the decree will revive and become executable.
This principle has been applied by this Court in several
cases and flows from the well-known doctrine of eclipse
which has been enunciated not only in India but in other
countries also. In Sutherland Statutory Construction by
Horack (Vol. I, 3rd Edn.), the following passages may be
noted:
"In a majority of the jurisdictions the courts
recognise
748
the mistake of the legislature and try to determine and
give effect to its intent. If the legislature has
expressed its purpose intelligibly in the amendatory
act and provided fully upon the subject considered, a
majority of courts hold that it is a reasonable
conclusion that the legislature did not intend to make
the enforcement of the statute contingent on the
continued existence of the repealed statute....
(p. 329)
The unconstitutional act physically exists in the
official statutes of the state and is there available
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for reference, and as it is only unenforceable, the
purported amendment is given effect. If the law as
amended is constitutional, it will be enforced."
(p. 335)
It is true that the American Constitution as also the
American courts have been most reluctant to apply the
doctrine of eclipse but this Court has pointed out in more
than one case that the American view cannot be applied to
our Constitution. The matter first came up for consideration
before this Court in Bhikaji Narain Dhakras & Ors. v. State
of Madhya Pradesh & Anr. where in a similar situation the
doctrine of eclipse was fully applied and the court observed
thus:
"The true position is that the impugned law
became, as it were, eclipsed, for the time being, by
the fundamental right. The effect of the Constitution
(First Amendment) Act, 1951 was to remove the shadow
and to make the impugned Act free from all blemish or
infirmity.. Such laws were not dead for all purposes.
They existed for the purposes of pre-Constitution
rights and liabilities and they remained operative,
even after the Constitution, as against non-citizens.
In our judgment, after the amendment, of clause (6) of
Article 19 on the 18th June 1951, the impugned Act
ceased to be unconstitutional and became revivified and
enforceable against citizens as well as against non-
citizens. But after the amendment of clause (6) the
impugned Act immediately became fully operative even as
against the citizens."
In Deep Chand v. State of U.P. & Ors. similar
observations
749
were made by this Court which may be extracted thus:
"As, however, our learned Brother has thought fit
to embark upon a discussion of these questions, we
desire to guard ourselves against being understood as
accepting or acquiescing in the conclusion that the
doctrine of eclipse cannot apply to any post-
Constitution law. A post-Constitution law may infringe,
either a fundamental right conferred on citizens only
or a fundamental right conferred on any person, citizen
or non-citizen. In the first case the law will not
stand in the way of the exercise by the citizens of
that fundamental right and, therefore, will not have
any operation on the rights of the citizens, but it
will be quite a effective as regards non-citizens. In
such a case, the fundamental right will, qua the
citizens, throw a shadow on the law which will
nevertheless be on the Statute Book as a valid law
binding on non-citizens and if the shadow is removed by
a constitutional amendment, the law will immediately be
applicable even to the citizens without being re-
enacted. In other words, the doctrine of eclipse as
explained by this Court in Bhikaji Narain Dhakras v.
The State of Madhya Pradesh [1955 (2) SCR 589] also
applies to a post-Constitution law of this kind.
A pre-Constitution law, stating in the words of
Das, J., as he then was, exists notwithstanding that it
does not exist with respect to the future exercise of
the fundamental rights. That principle has been
extended in this decision, by invoking the doctrine of
eclipse. As the law existed on the statute book to
support pre-Constitution acts, the Court held. that the
said law was eclipsed for the time being by one or
other of the fundamental rights and when the shadow was
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removed by the amendment of the Constitution, the
impugned Act became free from all blemish or
infirmity."
(Emphasis ours)
In Mahendra Lal Jaini v. The State of Uttar Pradesh &
Ors. this Court held as follows:
"The pre-Constitution laws which were perfectly
valid when they were passed and the existence of which
is recognised in the opening words of Art. 13(1) revive
by the removal of the inconsistency in question. This
in effect is
750
the doctrine of eclipse, which, if we may say so with
respect, was applied in Bhikaji Narain’s case
So far as pre-Constitution laws are concerned, the
amendment of the Constitution which removes the
inconsistency will result in the revival of such laws
by virtue of the doctrine of eclipse, as laid-down in
Bhikaji Narain’s case, for the pre-existing laws were
not still-born and would still exist though eclipsed on
account of the inconsistency to govern pre-existing
matters." (Emphasis supplied)
In two recent decisions, this Court has applied the
doctrine of eclipse in similar situations. In S. Anbalagan
v. B. Devarajan the following observations were made:
"Unless the practice of the caste makes it
necessary no expiatory rites need be performed and,
ordinarily, he regains his caste unless the community
does not accept him. The practice of caste however
irrational it may appear to our reason and however
repugnant it may appear to our moral and social sense,
is so deep-rooted in the Indian people that its mark
does not seem to disappear on conversion to a different
religion. If it disappears, it disappears only to
reappear on reconversion." (Emphasis ours)
Similarly, in the case of Kailash Sonkar v. Smt. Maya
Devi, to which one of us (Fazal Ali, J.) was a party, this
Court made the following observation:
"In our opinion, when a person is converted to
Christianity or some other religion the original caste
remains under eclipse and as soon as during his/her
life-time the person is reconverted to the original
religion the eclipse disappears and the caste
automatically revives."
Thus, applying the rule of law laid down by this Court,
there would be no difficulty in upholding the judgments of
the courts below in this particular appeal. By virtue of the
1972 Act, the decree could not have been set aside or
invalidated and the only consequence which would ensue is
that the decree would be lying dormant and could not be
executed. Once the bar placed by the 1972 Act is
751
removed, by virtue of the doctrine of eclipse the decree
will revive and become at once operative and executable. The
courts below have rightly decided that after the 1976
Amendment Act the decree became legally executable.
Some other arguments were also advanced on behalf of
the appellant but in view of the express language of the
1976. Amendment Act and the doctrine of eclipse, they seem
to be futile.
For the reasons given above, we uphold the decree for
ejectment passed by the courts below against the appellant
and dismiss the appeal with costs. As the litigation has
taken more than a decade, it is not possible for us to give
any time to the tenant for a vacating the premises and the
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decree may now be executed forthwith and the landlord put
into possession.
N.V.K. Appeal dismissed.
752