Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 7385 of 2000
Special Leave Petition (civil) 554 of 2000
PETITIONER:
INDERJEET KAUR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NIRPAL SINGH
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 15/12/2000
BENCH:
D.P.Mohapatro, Shivaraj Patil
JUDGMENT:
Shivaraj V. Patil, J.
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Leave granted.
The controversy that needs to be addressed and
resolved in this appeal relates to grant of leave to the
tenant under Section 25B(5) of the Delhi Rent Control Act,
1958 (for short the ‘Act) to contest the application filed
for eviction under clause (e) of the proviso to sub-section
(1) of Section 14 of the Act.
In brief, the facts leading to the filing of the
present appeal are:
The respondent herein (the landlord) filed a petition
under clause (e) of the proviso to Section 14(1) of the Act
seeking eviction of the appellant (the tenant) from the
premises on the ground of his bona fide requirement for his
occupation as a residence for himself and other members of
the family dependent on him stating that he has come back
and permanently settled in India; his sons, daughters and
other relations who are settled in United Kingdom also visit
him but he is unable to provide them accommodation; his son
Shri Rajpal Singh has decided to return to India to settle
and was winding up his affairs at U.K. etc.
The appellant after receiving the summons under
Section 25B(4) of the Act filed an application supported by
an affidavit seeking leave to contest the application for
eviction, narrating facts in details and raising grounds in
support of his prayer for grant of leave to defend. Besides
other contentions, he raised the following:-
(1) The respondent, his son and daughter are British
citizens possessing British passports and are permanently
settled in United Kingdom. His son is a Computer Engineer
and is well-settled there and the question of winding up of
his affairs does not arise. His daughter is already married
in U.K. and living happily. Even the respondent has no
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intention to settle in India as he is comfortably settled in
U.K. The eviction petition has been filed to increase the
rent and / or to sell the premises. (2) The premises were
taken on rent for residential-cum-commercial purpose and,
therefore, the ground under clause (e) of the proviso to
Section 14(1) of the Act is not available. (3) The eviction
petition filed is bad for non-joinder of necessary parties.
(4) The assertion made in the eviction petition is that the
appellant is the tenant of two rooms and for other two rooms
a complaint is pending before the Magistrate for trespass.
Hence the Addl. Rent Controller was wrong in passing
eviction order in respect of four rooms. (5) A suit filed
by the appellant against the respondent to protect his
possession in the civil court is pending and in which order
of temporary injunction granted against the respondent is
operative.
The Addl. Rent Controller, Delhi, by an elaborate
order dated 5.3.1999 rejected the application filed by the
appellant seeking leave to defend and passed an order of
eviction against him in respect of the suit premises. The
appellant took up the matter in civil revision in the High
Court of Delhi and the same was dismissed, affirming the
order of the Addl. Rent Controller. Hence this appeal is
brought before us by special leave.
The learned counsel for the appellant urged that (1)
the facts stated and substantial grounds raised in the
affidavit filed under Section 25B(4) of the Act seeking
leave to defend clearly disclosed that the respondent would
be disentitled from obtaining an order for the recovery of
possession of the premises on the grounds specified in
clause (e) of the proviso to Section 14(1) of the Act; (2)
the approach of the Addl. Rent Controller in dealing with
the application made for grant of leave to defend was not
proper having regard to the scope of Section 25B(4) & (5) of
the Act; he refused to grant leave to defend after
discussing the contentions and documents as if he was
deciding the main eviction petition after trial; (3)
several triable issues did arise for consideration in the
light of the facts stated and rival contentions raised; (4)
the disputed facts could not be decided at the time of
considering the application for grant of leave; (5) the
High Court was also not right in simply affirming the order
of the Addl. Rent Controller when the said order suffered
with material irregularity and jurisdictional error.
The learned counsel for the respondent made
submissions supporting the impugned orders.
The relevant and material provisions of the Act for
the present purpose, in order to appreciate the rival
contentions, are extracted below:-
14(1)(e) That the premises let for residential
purposes are required bona fide 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, or
for any person for whose benefit the premises are held and
that the landlord or such person has no other reasonable
residential accommodation;
Explanation For the purposes of this clause,
premises let for residential purposes include any premises
which having been let for use as a residence are, without
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the consent of the landlord, used incidentally for
commercial or other purposes;
25B(1) Every application by a landlord for the
recovery of possession of any premises on the ground
specified in clause (e) of the proviso to sub- section (1)
of section 14, or under section 14A [or under section 14B or
under section 14C or under section 14D], shall be dealt with
in accordance with the procedure specified in this section.
25B(2)
25B(3)
25B(4) The tenant on whom the summons is duly served
(whether in the ordinary way or by registered post) in the
form specified in the Third Schedule shall not contest the
prayer for eviction from the premises unless he files an
affidavit stating the grounds on which he seeks to contest
the application for eviction and obtains leave from the
Controller as hereinafter provided; and in default of his
appearance in pursuance of the summons or his obtaining such
leave, the statement made by the landlord in the application
for eviction shall be deemed to be admitted by the tenant
and the applicant shall be entitled to an order for eviction
on the ground aforesaid.
25B(5) The Controller shall give to the tenant leave
to contest the application if the affidavit filed by the@@
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tenant discloses such facts as would disentitle the landlord
from obtaining an order for the recovery of possession of
the premises on the ground specified in clause (e) of the
proviso to sub-section (1) of Section 14, or under Section
14A.
Chapter IIIA deals with summary trial of certain
applications expressly stating that every application by a
landlord for recovery of possession on the ground specified
in clause (e) of the proviso to sub- section (1) of Section
14 of the Act, or under Section 14A or 14B or 14C or 14D
shall be dealt with in accordance with the special
provisions prescribed in Section 25B of the Act. As per the
broad scheme of this Chapter a tenant is precluded from
contesting an application filed for eviction on the grounds
mentioned in the aforementioned provisions unless he obtains
leave from the Controller to contest the eviction petition.
In default of obtaining leave to defend or leave is refused
to him an order of eviction follows. It appears recourse to
summary trial is adopted having due regard to nature of the
grounds on which the eviction is sought with a view to avoid
delay so that the landlord should not be deprived or denied
of his right to immediate possession of premises for his
bona fide use.
At the same time, it is well settled and accepted
position in law that no one shall be subjected to suffer a
civil consequence like eviction from a premises resulting in
hardship to him without providing adequate and effective
opportunity to disprove the case against him and establish
his case as pleaded.
As is evident from Section 25B(4)&(5) of the Act,
burden placed on a tenant is light and limited in that if
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the affidavit filed by him discloses such facts as would
disentitle the landlord from obtaining an order for the
recovery of the possession of the premises on the ground
specified in clause (e) of the proviso to Section 14(1) of
the Act, with which we are concerned in this case, are good
enough to grant leave to defend.
A landlord, who bona fidely requires a premises for
his residence and occupation should not suffer for long
waiting for eviction of a tenant. At the same time, a
tenant cannot be thrown out from a premises summarily even
though prima facie he is able to say that the claim of the
landlord is not bona fide or untenable and as such not
entitled to obtain an order of eviction. Hence the approach
has to be cautious and judicious in granting or refusing
leave to defend to a tenant to contest an eviction petition
within the broad scheme of Chapter IIIA and in particular
having regard to the clear terms and language of Section
25B(5).
We are of the considered view that at a stage when the
tenant seeks leave to defend, it is enough if he prima facie
makes out a case by disclosing such facts as would
disentitle the landlord from obtaining an order of eviction.
It would not be a right approach to say that unless the
tenant at that stage itself establishes a strong case as
would non-suit the landlord, leave to defend should not be
granted when it is not the requirement of Section 25B(5). A
leave to defend sought for cannot also be granted for mere
asking or in a routine manner which will defeat the very
object of the special provisions contained in Chapter IIIA
of the Act. Leave to defend cannot be refused where an
eviction petition is filed on a mere design or desire of a
landlord to recover possession of the premises from a tenant
under clause (e) of the proviso to sub-section (1) of
Section 14, when as a matter of fact the requirement may not
be bona fide. Refusing to grant leave in such a case leads
to eviction of a tenant summarily resulting in great
hardship to him and his family members, if any, although he
could establish if only leave is granted that a landlord
would be disentitled for an order of eviction. At the stage
of granting leave to defend parties rely on affidavits in
support of the rival contentions. Assertions and counter
assertions made in affidavits may not afford safe and
acceptable evidence so as to arrive at an affirmative
conclusion one way or the other unless there is a strong and
acceptable evidence available to show that the facts
disclosed in the application filed by the tenant seeking
leave to defend were either frivolous, untenable or most
unreasonable. Take a case when a possession is sought on
the ground of personal requirement, a landlord has to
establish his need and not his mere desire. The ground
under clause (e) of the proviso to sub-section (1) of
Section 14 enables a landlord to recover possession of the
tenanted premises on the ground of his bona fide
requirement. This being an enabling provision, essentially
the burden is on the landlord to establish his case
affirmatively. In short and substance wholly frivolous and
totally untenable defence may not entitle a tenant to leave
to defend but when a triable issue is raised a duty is
placed on the Rent Controller by the statute itself to grant
leave. At the stage of granting leave the real test should
be whether facts disclosed in the affidavit filed seeking
leave to defend prima facie show that the landlord would be
disentitled from obtaining an order of eviction and not
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whether at the end defence may fail. It is well to remember
that when a leave to defend is refused, serious consequences
of eviction shall follow and the party seeking leave is
denied an opportunity to test the truth of the averments
made in the eviction petition by cross-examination. It may
also be noticed that even in cases where leave is granted
provisions are made in this very Chapter for expeditious
disposal of eviction petitions. Section 25B(6) states that
where leave is granted to a tenant to contest the eviction
application, the Controller shall commence the hearing of
the application as early as practicable. Section 25B(7)
speaks of the procedure to be followed in such cases.
Section 25B(8) bars the appeals against an order of recovery
of possession except a provision of revision to the High
Court. Thus a combined effect of Section 25B(6), (7) and
(8) would lead to expeditious disposal of eviction petitions
so that a landlord need not wait and suffer for long time.
On the other hand, when a tenant is denied leave to defend
although he had fair chance to prove his defence, will
suffer great hardship. In this view a balanced view is to
be taken having regard to competing claims.
This Court in Charan Dass Duggal vs. Brahma Nand
while dealing with the question in the matter of granting
leave to defend to contest the eviction petition filed on
the ground of personal requirement, in para 5 has stated
thus:-
5. What should be the approach when leave to defend
is sought? There appears to be a mistaken belief that
unless the tenant at that stage makes out such a strong case
as would non-suit the landlord, leave to defend cannot be
granted. This approach is wholly improper. When leave to
defend is sought, the tenant must make out such a prima
facie case raising such pleas that a triable issue would
emerge and that in our opinion should be sufficient to grant
leave. The test is the test of a triable issue and not the
final success in the action (see Santosh Kumar v. Bhai Mool
Singh). At the stage of granting the leave parties rely in
support of their rival contentions on affidavits and
assertions and counter-assertions on affidavits may not
afford such incontrovertible evidence to lead to an
affirmative conclusion one way or the other. Conceding that
when possession is sought on the ground of personal
requirement, an absolute need is not to be satisfied but a
mere desire equally is not sufficient. It has to be
something more than a mere desire. And being an enabling
provision, the burden is on the landlord to establish his
case affirmatively. If as it appears in this case, the
landlord is staying at Pathankot, that a house is purchased,
may be in the name of his sons and daughters, but there may
not be an apparent need to return to Delhi in his old age, a
triable issue would come into existence and that was
sufficient in our opinion to grant leave to defend in this
case.
In the same judgment, in para 7 it is further
observed:-
7. The genesis of our procedural laws is to be
traced to principles of natural justice, the principal
amongst them being that no one shall suffer civil or evil or
pecuniary consequence at his back without giving him an
adequate and effective opportunity to participate to
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disprove the case against him and provide his own case.
Summary procedure does not clothe an authority with power to
enjoy summary dismissal. Undoubtedly wholly frivolous
defence may not entitle a person leave to defend. But
equally a triable issue raised, enjoins a duty to grant
leave. Maybe in the end the defence may fail. It is
necessary to bear in mind that when leave to defend is
refused the party seeking leave is denied an opportunity to
test the truth of the averments of the opposite party by
cross- examination and rival affidavits may not furnish
reliable evidence for concluding the point one way or the
other. It is not for a moment suggested that leave to
defend must be granted on mere asking but it is equally
improper to refuse to grant leave though triable issues are
raised and the controversy can be properly adjudicated after
ascertainment of truth through cross-examination of
witnesses who have filed their affidavits. Burden is on the
landlord to prove his requirements and his assertion is
required to be tested more so when it is shown that for long
he is staying outside Delhi, that he has a building albeit
standing in the names of his sons and daughters where he is
staying and at which place he receives his normal
correspondence. If in such a situation one can say that a
triable issue is not raised, one is at a loss to find out
where, when and in what circumstances such an issue would
arise. We are, therefore, satisfied that this is a case in
which triable issues were raised and both the learned Rent
Controller and the High Court were in error in refusing to
grant the leave.
This decision is also referred to, reiterating the
same view, in a latter decision of this Court in the case of
Precision Steel & Engineering Works vs. Prem Deva Niranjan
Deva Tayal .
With this background, we now turn to the facts of the
case in hand. It is clear from the reading of the order of
the Addl. Rent Controller that he has taken pains to write
an elaborate order as if he was writing an order after a
full-dressed trial of eviction petition; he has considered
merits of the respective contentions at the stage of
granting leave to defend under Section 25B(5) without
keeping in mind the scope of the provisions and statutory
duty cast on him. He exceeded the jurisdiction vested in
him in refusing leave to defend to the appellant. It
appears to us that he did not focus his attention to the
scope and content of Section 25B(5). Having regard to the
facts stated and grounds raised in the affidavit filed by
the appellant seeking leave to defend which we have already
narrated above, it is not possible to take a view that no
triable issue arose for consideration. The facts stated in
the affidavit of the appellant in support of his application
seeking leave to defend prima facie do disclose that the
respondent would be disentitled to obtain an order for the
recovery of possession of the premises from the appellant
particularly when other cases are pending between the
parties and defence does not appear to be frivolous or
untenable on the face of it. The Addl. Rent Controller has
acted with material irregularity and committed a manifest
error in accepting the case of the respondent-landlord when
the facts were seriously disputed and the correctness or
otherwise of the documents required to be examined. Whether
the suit premises was used for residential-cum-commercial
purposes from the inception and whether the respondent and
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his son and other members of the family are permanently and
confortably settled in U.K. and whether the requirement of
the premises by the respondent was bona fide, are the
matters which could not be adjudicated as has been done by
the Addl. Rent Controller at the stage of dealing with the
application to grant leave to defend. In this view of the
matter, we have no hesitation to say that the order passed
by the Addl. Rent Controller refusing leave to defend to
the appellant cannot be sustained. Unfortunately, the High
Court also has affirmed it without taking into consideration
the correct legal position indicated above having regard to
the facts of the case. We are of the view that the Addl.
Rent Controller and the High Court both were in error in
refusing to grant leave to the appellant to contest the
eviction petition.
Hence we allow this appeal, set aside the order of the
Addl. Rent Controller as well as of the High Court and
grant leave to defend to the appellant-tenant and remand the
matter to the learned Rent Controller for disposal according
to law. No costs.