Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAM NARAIN ARORA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ASHA RANI & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 31/08/1998
BENCH:
A.S. ANAND, S. RAJENDRA BABU.
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
THE 31ST DAY OF AUGUST, 1998
Present:
Hon’ble Dr. Justice A.S. Anand
Hon’ble Mr. Justice S. Rajendra Babu
Ranjit Kumar, Chandra Bhushan Prasad, Ms. Binu Tamta and Ms.
Anu Mohla, Advs. for the appellant
Gopal Subramanianiam, Sr. Adv., S.K. Mathur and V.B.
Saharya, Advs. for M/s. Saharya & Co., advs. with him for
the Respondents
J U D G M E N T
The following Judgment of the Court was delivered:
Rajendra Babu, J.
This is a tenant’s appeal arising out of certain
proceedings initiated under the Delhi Rent Control Act
(hereinafter referred to as "the Act"). the respondent-
landlord filed a petition under section 14(1)(e) read with
Section 258 of the Act seeking for the possession of the
house by evicting the appellant as he required the same for
his bona fide need and occupation. The appellant before us
filed his written statement contending that the landlord has
alternate accommodation at Subzi Mandi and he has
deliberately shifted to the disputed premises with an
ulterior motive to make out a case for the eviction of the
respondent and this fact of availability of the said
premises in subzi Mandi had not disclosed in the petition.
In the course of the proceedings before the Rent
Controller a finding was recorded by him as to the bona fide
requirement of the respondent in the following terms:-
"If the accommodation in occupation
of the petitioner on the ground
floor of the house in dispute is
compared with the extent of the
family members of the petitioner
excluding of course Kisahn Sarup
Bhatnagar, the petitioner would be
said to be too short of
accommodation and if the petitioner
does not have any other suitable
residential accommodation he should
be entitled to an eviction order.
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On the question whether the respondent had disclosed
the full fats necessary for the disposal of the petition
filed by him, the Rent Controller noticed that from the
evidence recorded, the allegation of respondent No. 1 in the
written statement in respect of the accommodation in
possession and available to respondent in No. 2772, Subzi
Mandi, Delhi stands proved. And, therefore he has not come
to the Court with clean hands. He had suppressed the
information which was in his possession as to the
availability of the house at Subzi Mandi at the time of
filing of the petition and as well as filing of their
replication. He surrendered this accommodation only on
21.8.1984, that is, during the pendency of the petition. The
respondent No. 1 has alleged that the appellant shifted to
the ground floor of the house in dispute about a year prior
to 1.1.1983 and the petition was filed on 24.7.1983. he
accepted the stand of the appellant that the respondent had
done so with the mala fide intention to avict him.
Matter was carried to the High Court in Revision. The
High Court agreed with the finding of the Rent Controller as
regards bona fide requirement of the landlord-respondent. On
the controversy of the non-mentioning of the availability of
accommodation at 2772, Subzi Mandi and that there was not
true disclosure of the facts, the High court examined the
matter in detail. The High Court noticed that father of the
respondent Din Dayal Bhatnagar had rented the premises at
2772, Subzi Mandi from a Trust in the year 1944 and
thereafter he was residing in the said premises with his
family. Din Dayal Bhatnagar died in the month of August
1980. After his death, Rameshwar Sarup Bhatnagar, the
original petitioner in the eviction petition continued to
reside in that accommodation at Subzi Mandi where his father
was a tenant. Rameshwar Sarup Bhatnagar shifted from the
said accommodation to the ground floor accommodation when
the same became available to him sometime in 1982. The
landlord of Subzi Mandi property had served a notice upon
the respondent to vacate the premise in the year 1981. The
actual possession of the Subzi Mandi house was handed over
to the landlord in March 1984 as per receipt at Ex. AW1/1 to
AW1/3. The said receipts disclose the name of Din Dayal
Bhatnagar though he had demised long back and thus the
landlord did not accept or recognize the respondent
Rameshwar Sarup Bhatnagar as a tenant. For about two years
prior to the actual handing over of the possession of the
premises, the same remained locked an in possession of the
respondent, Since Rameshwar Sarup Bhatnagar had shifted to
the suit property along with his family in the year 1982.
The High Court felt that in the peculiar facts of this case
it was necessary to examine whether the said accommodation
could be said to be "other reasonably suitable residential
accommodation available to the respondent" and held firstly
that the respondent had shifted to the in the suit premises
long before filing of the present eviction petition and the
Subzi Mandi accommodation was not reasonably suitable
residential accommodation available for him and his family.
Secondly in view of the notice of eviction served on the
respondent by the landlord of the subzi Mandi property. he
was under pressure of being evicted from the said premises.
The High Court was of the view that the respondent could not
be said to have other reasonably suitable accommodation and
therefore non-disclosure thereof could not be fatal to the
petition and on that basis allowed the petition.
Shri Ranjit Kumar, learned counsel for the appellant
submitted that the landlord had not approached the Court
with the necessary candor required under law in not
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disclosing the availability of the premises. In the petition
filed before the Rent Controller by the landlord at column
No. 18, he has claimed that the suit premises is required by
him for his occupation for himself and member of his family
dependent on him and he has no other reasonably suitable
residential accommodation. Again in column No. 19 at para
(vi), the respondent states that he has no other residential
accommodation except the suit property. In the affidavit
filed by the respondent, the appellant has no answer to the
petition filed by the respondent for his eviction. He has
referred to the accommodation in house No. 2772, Gali Lala
Ram Roop, Subzimandi in the 1st floor and the 2nd floor. He
also refers to one more accommodation in Subzimandi which
the respondent has deliberately concealed from the Court. It
is claimed that in the written statement this position is
reiterated. In the Rejoinder Affidavit filed by the
respondent, he stated that it is wrong to state that he has
any residential accommodation in House No. 2772, Gali Lala
Ram Roop, Subzi Mandi as alleged and he has no portion in
his possession and he has also denied that he has any other
residential house in Subzi Mandi. The Secretary of the Trust
who own the property at No. 2772, Subzi Mandi, Delhi stated
that the property had been originally let out to Din Dayal
Bhatnagar and he died about three years back. The original
respondent was the son of Din Dayal Bhatnagar and the same
remained locked for about two years and thereafter Rameshwar
Sarup Bhatnagar delivered vacant possession to them in 1984.
He stated that he has no personal knowledge of the
accommodation available in the suit premises.
In the course of the affidavit of Rameshwar Sarup
Bhatnagar, it was stated that he was not in possession of
any part of the property and Din Dayal Bhatnagar was a
tenant of the property which he has vacated on 21.3.1984.
His father was a tenant of the first floor and the barsati
on the second floor. Three rooms with kitchen and bath were
in tenancy of his father and he cannot say that the size of
one room was 14" x 18" and that the barsati was a pucca room
and had a door. The trust has given a notice to him to
vacate the premises in 1981.
Shri Ranjit Kumar, learned counsel for the appellant
contended that under Section 25B(8) proviso, the powers of
revision of the High Court were limited and would not extend
to the re-examination of findings of fact in the case and
suppression of the fact as to the availability of the
premises was one such finding. The rent Controller also
found that with a mala fide intention to evict the appellant
from the suit premises he shifted the suit premises from
Subzi Mandi. In support of his contention he relied upon the
decision in Hari Shankar vs. Rao Girdhari Lal Chowdhury 1962
(Supp- 1) SCR 933, and Sushila Devi and Others vs. Avinash
Chandra Jain and Others (1987) 2 SCC 219. He submitted that
unless the findings are manifestly unjust the High Court
could not have interfered in the matter.
Shri Gopal Subramaniam, learned Senior Advocate in his
reply submitted that the power of revision includes
correction of errors of law and on occasions would include
intervention of findings of facts where the right of a party
is involved which is conferred on a party; that when the
bona fide requirement of the landlord was established, the
fact that there was suppression of certain fact becomes
extraneous; that the trial court having taken into
consideration the accommodation available in Subzi Mandi
premises came to the conclusion that the requirement of the
landlord was bona fide, but even so it came to the
conclusion that the suppression would not affect the case at
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all; that pleas are raised in order to put the other party
to notice and when the other party is already in the
knowledge of such information, the relevance of the lack of
pleadings is of no effect; that ascertainment of facts for
the purpose of finding are requirement whether bona fide or
not is a matter of detail and that exercise has been done in
this case. Therefore, he submitted relying on the decisions
in Meenal Eknath Kshirsagar (Mrs) vs. Traders & Agencies and
another (1996) 5 SCC 344, and Ram Dass vs. Ishwar Chander
and Others (1988) 3 SCC 131, that the view taken by the High
Court must be upheld.
Section 141(1) (e) of the Act reads as follows : -
" Sec. 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 reasonably suitable
residential accommodation:
In making a claim that the suit premises is required
bona fide for his own occupation as a residence for himself
and other members of his family dependent on him and that he
has no other reasonably suitable accommodation is a
requirement of law before the Court can state whether the
landlord requires the premises bona fide for his use and
occupation. In doing so, the Court must also find out
whether the landlord or such other person for whose benefit
the premises is required has no other reasonably suitable
residential accommodation. It cannot be said that the
requirement of the landlord is not intermixed with the
question of finding out whether he has any other reasonably
suitable accommodation. If he has other reasonably suitable
accommodation, then necessarily it would mean that he does
not require the suit premises and his requirement may not be
bona fide. In such circumstances further inquiry would be
whether that premises is more suitable than the suit
premises. Therefore, the questions raised before the Court
would not necessarily depend upon only the pleadings. It
could be a good defence that the landlord has other
reasonably suitable residential accommodation and thereby
defend the claim of the landlord.
There cannot be a pedantic or a dogmatic approach in
the matter of analysis of pleadings or of the evidence
adduced thereto. It is no doubt true that if the pleadings
are clearly set out, it would be easy for the Court to
decide the matters. But if the pleadings are lacking or
vague and if both parties have understood what was the case
pleaded and put forth with reference to requirement of law
and placed such material before the court, neither party is
prejudiced. If we analyses from this angle, we do not think
that the High Court was not justified in interfering with
the order made by the Rent Controller.
It is no doubt true that the scope of revision petition
under Section 25B(8) proviso of the Delhi Rent Control Act
is very limited one, but even so in examining the legality
or propriety of the proceedings before the Rent Controller,
the High Court could examine the facts available in order to
find out whether he had correctly or on firm legal basis
approached the matters on record to decide the case. Pure
findings of fact may not be open to be interfered with, but
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in a given case the finding of fact is given on a wrong
premise of law, certainly it would be open to the revisional
court to interfere with such a matter. In this case, the
Rent Controller proceeded to analyses the matter that non-
disclosure of a particular information was fatal and,
therefore, dismissed the claim made by the landlord. It is
in these circumstances it became necessary for the High
Court to re-examine the matter and then decide the entire
question. We do not think that any of the decisions referred
to by the learned counsel decides the question of the same
nature with which we are concerned. Therefore, detailed
reference to them is not required.
In the result, this appeal stands dismissed, but in the
circumstances of the case, parties shall bear their own
costs.
In the facts and circumstances of the case. it would be
appropriate that the appellant be allowed time to vacate the
premises till 31st of May, 1999 subject to his furnishing
the usual undertaking in the Court within four weeks from
today.