Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
LIFE INSURANCE CORPORATION OF INDIA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
INDIA AUTOMOBILES AND CO. AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT01/08/1990
BENCH:
RANGNATHAN, S.
BENCH:
RANGNATHAN, S.
SAIKIA, K.N. (J)
CITATION:
1991 AIR 884 1990 SCR (3) 545
1990 SCC (4) 286 JT 1990 (3) 383
1990 SCALE (2)180
ACT:
Tamil Nadu Buildings Lease and Rent Control Act--Sec-
tions 4, 10(1), 10(2)(vii) and 19-- Whether Rent Controller
had jurisdiction to decide question of title.
HEADNOTE:
Two separate properties bearing Door Nos. 2 and 3 ad-
measuring 41 grounds and 2005 sq. ft., which originally
formed part of an extent of land, situate at Mount Road,
Madras belonged to several co-owners, who leased out the
same to the Respondent, by two separate lease-deeds (Ex. P-1
and P-2)--item 1 and 2 in the Schedule A to the plaint. The
property contained in Door No. 2 which comprised an area of
4 grounds and 151 sq- ft- with certain buildings was given
on rent for Rs. 150 p.m., whereas the property contained in
Door No. 3 which also had some buildings thereon was let out
for Rs.200 p.m.
The owners sold the properties to the United India Life
Assurance Co. and the New Guardian of India Life Insurance
Co. Ltd. in July 1953. In 1956, the Life Insurance Corpora-
tion of India, the appellant stepped into the shoes of the
said companies- The appellant moved two applications before
the Rent Controller for fixation of a ’fair rent’ for each
of the premises; In respect of the property in Door No. 2,
the rent claimed was Rs.2,399/03 while in respect of the
other, the rent claimed was Rs.3266/50p. The tenants claimed
that, under both the lease deeds, what had been leased out
to them was only a vacant land and since the superstructure
had been built by them, they were entitled to relief under
the Madras City Tenants’ Protection Act. It was further
contended that the Rent Controller had no jurisdiction to
fix a fair rent. The Rent Controller accepted the contention
of the tenant so far as item No. 1 (property at Door No. 2)
was concerned but with regard to the second property (Door
No. 3), he fixed the fair rent at Rs. 1451 p.m.
There were then two appeals to the Court of Small
Causes. The Small Causes Court came to the conclusion that
the buildings on the land leased vide P-1 had also been
conveyed to the appellant and that the LIC was entitled to
seek fixation of fair rent in respect of this premises also.
However the order of the Rent Controller in regard to the
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546
other property in Door No. 3 was upheld. However, in certain
earlier proceedings for fixation of fair rent etc., it had
been held by the Rent Controller that item No. (Door No. 2)
belonged to the LIC, but his order of eviction had been set
aside by the appellate court on some other ground. The Court
of Small Causes did not treat that decision as res judicata.
The tenants being aggrieved by the order of the Court of
Small Causes filed revision petitions but they were dis-
missed on 20.11.1968.
The appellant thereupon filed Civil Suit against the
tenants-respondents for recovery of arrears of rent together
with interests etc. on the basis of the fair rent fixed. The
respondents-tenants also filed a civil suit claiming protec-
tion under the Madras City Tenants’ Protection Act but this
suit and further appeals therefrom were dismissed. In the
suit for recovery of rent filed by the appellant, the ten-
ants contended that since the subject matter of the lease
under Ex. P-1 was only a vacant site, the Rent Controller
had no jurisdiction to fix the fair rent in respect thereof
and that, therefore, the claim in the suit for arrears of
rent, based on the Rent Controller’s order in respect of the
premises covered by Ex. P-1 had to fail. The trial Judge in
the High Court came to the conclusion that Ex. P-1 did not,
in law, create a valid lease between the co-owners and the
tenants. He further held that the superstructure constructed
on the land had been conveyed to the vendee under the sale
deed dated 30.7.1953 and thus vested in LIC. On this reason-
ing the High Court held that the Rent Controller had juris-
diction to fix the fair rent in respect of the premises. The
tenants filed an appeal. The appellate Bench confirmed the
decree in respect of Item 2 but as regards Item No. 1, the
Appellate Bench vacated the decree passed by the trial
Court. It held that there was a valid lease between the
owners and the tenants under Exts. P-1 and P-2. The appel-
lant Bench held that the Rent Controller had no jurisdiction
to entertain the application for fixation of fair rent in
respect of the property which was only a vacant piece of
land. Thus, the Court held that the LIC could not maintain
the suit for recovery of rent based on the order made by the
statutory tribunal under the Rent Control Act. The tenants’
appeal was accordingly partly allowed.
LIC came up in appeal to this Court against the said
order, after obtaining special leave.
Two questions arose for determination by this Court
viz., (1) Was the LIC the vendee only of a vacant land with
no title to the buildings standing on the site in Item 1,
and (2) it open for the tenants to contend that the order of
the Court of Small Causes in the earlier rent
547
control proceedings deciding to the contrary, and fixing the
fair rent of item 1 could be completely ignored as an order
passed totally without jurisdiction though it had become
final between the parties?
Dismissing the appeal, this Court,
HELD: There are clear indications in the Act and rules
that the Rent Controller does not have the jurisdiction to
decide questions of title. In a proceeding under the Act,
whether it be for fixation of fair rent or eviction, the
tenant may raise several objections. He may, inter alia,
take the point that the opposite party is not the landlord.
[561C-D]
All that the Rent Controller has to do is to satisfy
himself that the person seeking eviction or fixation of fair
rent is a ’landlord’ who has, prima facie, the right to
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receive the rent of the property in question. That the Rent
Controller’s jurisdiction on this issue is limited is clear
from the proviso to Section 10(1) of the Act. [561 F-G]
The extensive jurisdiction conferred on civil courts
under Section 9 of the Code of Civil Procedure should not be
curtailed without a specific statutory warrant or except on
some clear principle. There is nothing in the Tamil Nadu
Rent Control Act which, in any way, takes away, or narrows
down, the civil court’s jurisdiction as, for example, there
is in the Delhi Rent Control Act (Section 50). [569G-H]
Section 4 of the Rent Control Act provides only a ma-
chinery for fixation of fair rent in respect of certain
premises. It is the quantum of fair rent that arises for
determination by the Rent Controller. There is no doubt
that, since an application for this purpose cannot lie
except at the instance of a landlord or a tenant, the Rent
Controller has to deal with this incidentally but this is
not one of the direct issues before the Rent Controller. If
and only if, this relationship exists between the parties,
the Rent Controller steps in for a limited purpose--to
determine what the fair rent is-and then fades out of the
picture. Where a fair rent is fixed by a Controller, the
Rent Control Act does not provide for a machinery for recov-
ery of the amount. The amount has to be recovered by the
landlord only by recourse to a civil court. This gives an
indication that the determination of the relationship that
gives rise to the application is also not conclusive. This
is indeed made clear by the provisions relating to eviction.
[570B-E]
If the civil court in the instant case, had come to the
conclusion that there is a relationship of a landlord and a
tenant, and that the LIC
548
was entitled to recover the rent from the tenants, it will
have to pass a decree in favour of the LIC on the basis of
the fair rent fixed by the Rent Controller. It will not be
open to the civil court to re-determine the rent payable by
the tenant to the landlord because that is a matter squarely
and exclusively within the jurisdiction of the Rent Control-
ler and, therefore, impliedly excluded from the purview of
the civil court. But his decision is not final on the issue
that opens up his jurisdiction and cannot preclude an owner
from contending, in a civil court, that he should not be
asked to pay rent for his own property to some one else.
[570F-H]
There is no reason to hold that contract between a
person with himself and others is invalid. [571A]
Krishnamurthy v. Parthasarathy, AIR 1949 Mad. 780;
Manibhai Hathibhai v. Arbuthnot, AIR 1947 Bom. 413; Rai Brij
Raj v. Shaw, [1951] SCR 145 at 147, 150; Official Trustee v.
Sachindranath, [1969] 3 SCR 92 & 99 pp. Antulay v. Nayak,
[1988] 2 SCC 602 at 649, 677 and 700; Trideshwar Dayal v.
Maheshwar Dayal, [1989] 2 SCALE 1436 at 1437; Shiv Chander
Kapoor v. Amar Bose, [1990] 1 SCC 234 paras 22 and 23:
Palaniappa Chettiar and Ors. v. Vairavan Chettiar, [19631 76
L.W. 21; Palaniappa Chettiar v. Babu Sahib alias Sheik
Mytheen Sahib and Ors., [1964] 77 LW 551; Salay Mohamed Sail
etc. v. Jaffer Mohamed Sait’s Memorial Dispensary Charity
and Ors., [1969] 1 Andhra Weekly Reporter (S.C. 16); Bhagwan
Dayal v. Reoti Devi, [1962] 3 SCR 440; Desika Charyulu v.
State of Andhra Pradesh and Ant., AIR 1964 SC 807; Dhulabhai
v. State, [1968] 3 SCR 662; Mathura Prasad Bajoo Jaiswal and
Ors. v. Dossibai N.B. Jee jeebhoy, [1070] 3 SCR 830; Jeeth
Kaur and Ors. v. Smt. P. Rondalamma and Ant., AIR 1983 A.P.
219 and State of Tamil Nadu v. Ramalinga Samigal Madam and
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Ors., [1985] 4 SCC 10.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No 1514 of
1979.
From the Judgment and Order dated 17.6.1977 of the
Madras High Court in O.S.A. 62 of 1973.
T.S. Krishnamurthy lyer, M.J. Paul and Kailash Vasudev
for the Appellant.
K. Parasaran, P.D. Sharma, T.K. Seshadri and K. Swami
for the Respondents.
549
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RANGANATHAN, J. A very interesting question comes up for
consideration in this appeal. The question to be ultimately
decided falls within a very narrow compass but it is neces-
sary to set out the facts leading to the present appeal at
some length.
The property, which is the subject matter of the present
dispute, originally formed part of an extent of land situat-
ed on Mount Road, Madras, bearing door Nos. 2 and 3 and
measuring 41 grounds and 2005 sq. ft. It belonged to several
co-owners. These co-owners had leased out the properties
under two lease deeds in favour of M/s. India Automobiles,
which was then the sole proprietary concern of one of them-
selves, Ganshyamdas Girdhardas (G.G.), but was converted
subsequently, in 1961, into a partnership concern of G.G.
and his four sons. The firm and its partners arc hereinafter
compendiously referred to as ’the tenants’. The first lease
(Ext. P-1) was dated 22.9. 1947 and related to Door No. 2
(Item No.1 in Schedule A to the plaint). This was a property
comprising of an area of 4 grounds and 151 square feet with
certain buildings thereon. The rent for the premises was Rs.
150 per month. The second lease deed (Ext. P-2), dated 3.10.
1947 relating to Door No. 3 (Item 2 in Schedule A to the
plaint) covered an area of 8700 sq. ft. and some building
thereon. The rent as per lease deed was Rs.200 per month.
On 30.7.1953, all the co-owners of the property (includ-
ing G.G.) sold the property to the United India Life Assur-
ance Company and the New Guardian of India Life Insurance
Company Ltd. In 1956, the Life Insurance Corporation of
India (LIC) stepped into the shoes of these two insurance
companies and became the owner of the property.
On 20.7.65, the LIC moved two applications (being HRC
Nos. 3310 and 3311 of 1965) in the court of the Rent Con-
troller (Sri A. Varadarajan who later became a Judge of the
this Court) for fixation of a "fair rent" for each of the
premises. The fair rent claimed was computed at Rs.2,399.03
per month in respect of item No. 1 as against the rent of
Rs. 150 p.m. fixed under the lease deed. In respect of item
2 the fair rent claimed was Rs.3266.50 as against Rs.200
p.m. payable under the lease deed. The defendants (G.G. and
his sons) filed their objections to the above applications.
They claimed that, under both the lease deeds, what had been
leased out to them was only a vacant land and that the
superstructure had been built by them. They claimed, there-
fore, that they were entitled to relief under the Madras
550
City Tenants’ Protection Act and that the Rent Controller
Court had no jurisdiction to fix a fair rent.
The Rent Controller accepted the .above argument so far as
item was concerned. So far as item 2 was concerned, it
appears that, at the time of the hearing, it was conceded
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before the Rent Controller that the respondents were tenants
of the entire properties covered by the lease deed and that
they had not constructed any of the premises thereupon. In
view of this the Rent Controller dismissed H.R.C. 3310/ 65
relating to item No. 1 and, in H.R.C. 3311/65, fixed the
fair rent in respect of item no. 2 at Rs. 1451 p.m. The
order of the Rent Controller was dated 9.3. 1966.
There were appeals to the Court of Small Causes. In
respect of item No. 1, in H.R.A. 534/66, the Court, on a
perusal of the sale deed dated 30.7.53 filed by the LIC
before it, came to the conclusion that the buildings on the
land leased under Ex. P-1 had also been conveyed to the LIC
and that the LIC was entitled to seek fixation of fair rent
in respect of this premises also. The fair rent fixed by the
Rent Controller at Rs.994 p.m. was upheld. The order of the
Rent Controller in respect of item 2 was also upheld. It may
be mentioned here that, even in certain earlier proceedings
for fixation of fair rent and eviction (H.R.C. 867/73 and
H.R.C. 2557/64), it had been held by the Rent Controller
that item No. 1 (door No. 2) belonged to the LIC but his
order of eviction had been set aside by the appellate court
on some other ground. In the circumstances, the Court of
Small Causes, in the appeals now being referred to (H.RA.
534/66), did not treat the earlier decision as res judicata
but came independently to the same conclusion that item No.
1 belonged to the LIC. This was on 19th April, 1967. The
tenants filed revision petitions against the order of the
Court of Small Causes but these were dismissed on
20.11.1968.
After the Civil Revision Petitions by the tenant were
dismissed, the LIC filed C.S. 64/1969 on the original side
of the Madras High Court against the tenants for recovery of
arrears of rent on the basis of the fair rents fixed, which
were computed at Rs.98,250.97 in respect of the two items of
property. Further interest at the rate of 12% thereon from
date of plaint to the date of decree and at 6% thereafter
till the date of realisation was also claimed.
It may be mentioned here that the tenant filed C.S. 87
of 1972 claiming protection under the Madras City Tenants’
Protection Act but this suit and further appeals therefrom
have been dismissed. Turn-
551
ing now to C.S. No. 54 of 1969 (which was disposed of along
with C.S. No. 87 of 72 by a common judgment dated
23.10.1972), the contention urged on behalf of the tenants
was that, since the subject matter of the lease under Ex. P-
1 was only a vacant site, the Rent Controller had no juris-
diction to fix the fair rent in respect thereof and that,
therefore, the claim in the suit for arrears of rent, based
on the Rent Controller’s order in respect of the premises
covered by Ex. P-1 had to fail. The Court addressed itself
to this question. It came to the conclusion that Ex. P- 1
did not, in law, create a valid lease between the co-owners
and the tenants. After referring to the terms of the sale
deed (Ex. P-3), the superstructure constructed on the land
was held to have been conveyed to the vendee under the sale
deed dated 30-7. 1953 and to have thus vested in the LIC.
The Rent Controller was, therefore, held to have had juris-
diction to fix the fair rent in respect of the premises. It
was, therefore, held that the plantiff’s claim in the suit
should succeed. The suit was decreed accordingly.
The tenants filed an appeal being O.S.A. No. 62 of 1973.
The Appellate Bench confirmed the decree in respect of item
No. 2 subject to certain modifications which are not here
relevant. However, so far as item No. 1 was concerned, the
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Appellate Bench vacated the decree passed by the trial
court. It held that there was a valid tease between the
quondam owners and the tenants under Exts. P-1 & P-2. Having
regard to the express recitals in Ex. P-3, the Appellate
Bench held that it was impossible to hold that the build-
ings, which admittedly belonged to the defendants and had
been constructed by them on the vacant land taken on lease
under Ex. P- 1, ever were or could be the subject matter of
the sale under Ex. p-3. In view of this finding, it was held
that the Rent Controller had no jurisdiction to entertain
the application for fixation of fair rent in respect of the
property which was only a vacant piece of land. In conse-
quence, it was held, the LIC could not maintain the suit for
recovery of rent based on the order made by the statutory
tribunal under the Rent Control Act and claim the difference
between the so called fair rent and the contract rent. The
claim of the LIC for recovery of Rs.39,224.71, as arrears of
rent, in respect of item 1 was thus held to be not maintain-
able. O.S.A. 62 of 1973 was, therefore, allowed to that
extent. The present appeal, by Special Leave granted on 3.7.
1979, is from the order of the Division Bench rejecting the
appellant’s claim for arrears of rent in respect of item No.
1 of the property set out in Schedule A to the plaint based
on the difference between the fair rent fixed by the Rent
Controller and the rent payable therefore under Ex. P- 1.
552
The questions to be decided in this appeal, on the above
facts, boil down to these: (1) Was the LIC the vendee only
of a vacant piece of land with no title to the buildings
standing on the site in item 17 (2) It is open for the
tenants to contend that the order of the Court of Small
Causes in the earlier rent control proceedings deciding to
the contrary and fixing the fair rent of item 1 at Rs.994
p.m. should be completely ignored as an order passed totally
without jurisdiction, although it has become final as be-
tween the parties? Two interesting aspects may be pointed
out in regard to these two questions. The first is that if
either question is answered in the negative, the other will
not arise for consideration and the appeal will have to be
allowed. But an affirmative answer to either question will
necessitate an answer to the other. The second is that,
though the claim in issue before us is only a money claim
for arrears of rent, any decision given by us, based, as it
will have to be, on the issue whether the LIC owns the
superstructure or not and whether the tenants are the les-
sees only of vacant land or of both land and buildings, will
have repercussions not only on the claim in this suit (which
by now has accummulated to more than Rs.3 lakhs) but also on
any other proceedings by way of ejectment or otherwise which
the LIC may have in contemplation against the tenants. The
decision in this appeal will, therefore, be of great moment
for the L.I .C.
So far as the first question is concerned, we have no
doubt that the Division Bench of the High Court has come to
the correct conclusion. In our view, the conclusion of the
learned Single Judge that the lease Ex. P- 1, executed by
the co-owners of the property in favour of one of them, was
invalid, was erroneous. S.5 of the Transfer of Property Act,
1882, clearly envisages transfers of property by a person to
"one or more living persons or to himself, or to himself and
one or more other living persons". Whatever may be the
position, in spite of this provision, in respect of a pur-
ported transfer by a person to himself alone (which is very
often the position in the case of trusts)--which was consid-
ered by the House of Lords in Rye v. Rye, [1962] A.C. 496,
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there is no reason to hold that a contract between a person
with himself and other is invalid The Division Bench, we
think, has tightly distinguished the decisions in Girish
Chandra v. Srinath, (3 C.L.J. 141) and Rye v. Rye, [1962]
A.C. 496. The observations of Lord Denning, extracted by the
learned Judges, are quite apposite to the situation in the
present case.
Once this objection is out of the way, the question is
whether the construction put upon the leased land by the
lessees formed part of the
553
property conveyed to the L.I.C. Sri Parasaran pointed out
that they did not and drew our attention to subsequent
correspondence between the parties to show that even the
L.I.C. had not claimed at any stage any rent in respect of
the superstructures (apart from the contractual rent, which
was in respect of the land) and that both parties have all
along been proceeding on the footing that the superstructure
on item 1 belonged to the lessees. This appears to be cor-
rect but it cannot be conclusive of the rights of the par-
ties. We have therefore gone carefully into the terms of Ex.
P. 1 and Ex. P-3. They clearly make out that the superstruc-
tures put up by the lessee under Ex. P-1 were not included
in the property conveyed under the terms of Ex. P-3 and
that, whatever may be the rights of the LIC to evict the
tenant with liberty to demolish the superstructure on the
termination of the lease, it had no property in the super-
structure so long as the lease subsisted. We, therefore,
answer the first question posed by us in the affirmative.
This brings us, then, to the second, the really crucial,
question posed earlier viz. whether, despite the above
conclusion, we are precluded, by principles of, or analogous
to, res judicata, from going behind the findings to the
contrary given in the earlier rent control proceedings by
the Court of Small Causes which have become final on the
dismissal of the C.R.P. filed thereagainst
Sri T.S. Krishnamurthy lyer, learned counsel for the
appellant, submitted that the Courts now are precluded from
going behind the findings of the Court of Small Causes in
the earlier proceedings. He conceded that no legal conse-
quenes can flow from a totally void order (see, Kiran Singh
v. Chaman Paswan, [1955] S.C.R. 117 @ 121). He also conceded
that there may be a difference in principle between a civil
court and a court of limited jurisdiction. While the former
has an inherent jurisdiction to decide a question raised
about its own jurisdiction and such a decision cannot be
challenged in another court after it has become final: (See:
Bhatia Cooperative Society Ltd. v. Patel, [1953] S.C.R. 185
and Nageswara v. Canesa, AIR 1942 Mad. 675), the latter is
strictly confined to the terms of the statute creating it.
But, he submitted, even the decision of a Tribunal or a
Court of limited jurisdiction cannot be called in question
so long as it acts within the scope of the jurisdiction
conferred on it by the relevant statutes. He, therefore,
invited us to peruse the provisions of the Tamil Nadu Build-
ings (Lease and Rent Control) Act, 1960 (hereinafter re-
ferred to as the Rent Control Act). Under the said Act, he
pointed out, a petition for fixation of fair rent under S. 4
could be filed by either a landlord or a tenant: (Raval &
Co. v. Rarnachandran, [1974] 1 SCC 424). This is
554
what the LIC purported to do when it filed H.R.C. Nos. 3310
and 33 11/64. When a petition under S. 4 is filed, the Rent
Controller, on the language of S. 4 has to decide: (1)
whether the applicant is a tenant in, or landlord of, the
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building and (2) what the fair rent of the premises should
be in accordance with the provisions of the Act. In the
present case both the points had been put in issue. The
respondents denied that the L.I.C. was the landlord or they
the tenants in respect of the property. They claimed to be
the owner of the superstructure and admitted tenancy only in
respect of the site. The Rent Controller and, on appeal, the
Court of Small Causes were therefore, called upon to give
their decision on this question which was completely within
their statutory jurisdiction and this decision certainly
constitutes res judicata between the parties: see also,
Explanation VIII to S. 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure. At
any rate, it is not open to one of the parties to contend
that the decision given by the Court of Small Causes, which
has become final between the parties, is a total nullity
which can be completely ignored. It was, therefore, not open
to the High Court to entertain a collateral attack on the
validity of binding nature or correctness of the order of
the Court of Small Causes and to consider and determine
afresh the issue as to whether the L.I.C. is the owner of
the premises as claimed or not.
In support of his contention, counsel referred to Krish-
namurthy v. Parthasarathy, AIR 1949 Madras 780 reversing the
decision in the same case reported in AIR 1949 Madras 387.
The appellant landlord had filed an eviction petition under
the Rent Control Act without giving notice under s. 111(h)
of the Transfer of Property Act (which, in those days, was
considered to be a condition precedent even to the filing of
an eviction petition under the Rent Control Act) and ob-
tained an order of eviction. In these proceedings no conten-
tion had been raised by the tenant on the non-issue of the
notice under the Transfer of Property Act. An appeal by the
tenant also failed but here again the above point was not
taken. Thereafter the tenant filed a suit for a declaration
that the order of the Rent Controller was ultra vires in
that no notice to quit had been given as required by law.
This plea was upheld by the learned Single Judge but was
rejected in appeal. The Division Bench observed:--
" ..... We agree with the learned Judge that this Court
can entertain a suit to set aside an order of the Rent
Controller if the Rent Controller exceeded the powers con-
ferred on him. A Court or tribunal can, however, be said to
have no jurisdiction to entertain a suit or application only
if it has
555
no jurisdiction with regard to the subject-matter of the
suit or application ..... But even these rules are subject
to the qualification that, if the jurisdiction of the Court
depends upon the ascertainment of facts and the Court, upon
the facts found, holds that it has jurisdiction, then the
decree of that Court cannot be ignored or set aside in
collateral proceedings."
After reference to certain other decisions of the Court, it
was observed:--
"If a lessor brings a suit for eviction, he is to prove the
existence of a lease, the relationship of lessor and lessee
between himself and the defendant and the determination of
the lease. If he fails to prove this, the plaint is not
returned because the suit is one which the Court has no
jurisdiction to entertain; but the suit is dismissed as
revealing no cause of action ..... In a suit by a landlord
against his tenant for eviction, the determination of the
tenancy is merely one of the constituents of the cause of
action that the landlord has to prove against his tenant in
order to succeed in the suit. We are of opinion that a
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tenant can waive notice to quit; but even if he cannot,
notice has not to be proved as a condition precedent to the
institution of the suit ..... Mr. Srinivasa Ayyangar
concedes that if a landlord filed a suit in ejectment and
failed to say that the tenancy had been determined, the
Court would dismiss the suit and not return the plaint. In
the same way, the Rent Controller would have to dismiss the
application if it were not alleged in the affidavit that
notice had been given or if it found, upon hearing the
parties and considering the evidence, that notice had not
been given. It would follow from this, therefore, that if
notice to quit was necessary it would be merely one of the
issues to be decided by the Rent Controller and would not in
any way affect his jurisdiction to entertain the applica-
tion. That being so, if the Rent Controller did not decide
that question properly, the matter would have to be raised
in appeal to the Court of Small Causes and would give this
Court no jurisdiction to entertain a suit by the defeated
party; for such a suit would be barred by S. 12(4) of the
Act.
Again, in Manibhai Hathibhai v. Arbuthnot, AIR 1947 Bom. 413
556
a writ petition was filed to challenge the validity of an
order passed by the Rent Controller on the ground that the
circumstances for the invocation of S. 13(b) of the Bombay
Rent, Hotel .Rates and Lodging House Rates (Control) Act,
1944 had not been fulfilled. It is sufficient for our
present purposes to extract the observations in paragraph 16
of the judgment:--
"16. It was sought to be argued on behalf of the petitioners
that the respondent had no jurisdiction to determine the
question as to whether the premises were at one time let out
as a whole and then let out in parts as was sought to be
contended by the applicants ..... The jurisdiction of the
Rent Controller, (xxx) is a statutory jurisdiction which is
vested in the Rent Controller by the terms of the Act it-
self. A regular tribunal is established by the Act which
functions in those cases where. the standard rent of the
premises as laid down in S. 3 of the Act exceeds Rs.80 per
month. The tribunal owes its existence to the Act and not to
any act of the parties, and it has, therefore, jurisdiction
to determine what are the cases which fail within its juris-
diction. If there is any dispute which arises between the
parties as to whether the particular application falls
within the jurisdiction of the tribunal, it is the tribunal
which is competent to decide that dispute and determine
whether the particular matter falls within its jurisdiction.
If the tribunal decided it wrongly, there is an appeal
provided against its decision. It cannot, therefore, be
contended, as the petitioners have done, that the respondent
has no jurisdiction to determine the question as to whether
the premises were at one time let out as a whole and then
let out in parts as contended by the applicants."
Shri Iyer submits that the appellants’ case here is on a
stronger footing than in the two decisions cited above
because here, in the earlier proceedings before the Rent
controller and the Court of Small Causes, a specific point
had been taken that the tenant was only a tenant of the land
and not of the premises (which belonged to him) and that
this contention had been specifically over-ruled by the
appellate court after a consideration of the relevant mate-
rial. Sri Krishnamoorthy Iyer also contended that even if it
may be an arguable question as to whether the decision in
the earlier petitions constitutes res judicata or not and it
may plausibly be argued that it does not constitute res
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judicata, the question for our consideration really is
whether the order passed in the
557
earlier eviction petition can be treated as a nullity being
passed by a court totally without jurisdiction. He submitted
that if the tenants had filed a suit for declaration that
the order passed in the earlier proceedings as a nullity
that would have been bound to fail. Shri Iyer also relied on
certain observations of this Court in the decisions reported
as Rai Brij Raj v. Shaw, [1951] SCR 145 @ 147, 150; Official
Trustee v. Sachindranath, [1969] 3 SCR 92 @ pp. 99, 100;
Antulay v. Nayak, [1988] 2 SCC 602 at pp. 649, 677 and 700;
Trideshwar Dayal v. Maheshwar Dayal, [1989] 2 SCALE 1436 at
p. 1437 and Shiv Chander Kapoor v. Amar Bose, [1990] 1 SCC
234, paras 22 and 23.
Shri K. Parasaran, appearing for the respondents, sought
to support the High Court’s judgment on various grounds. He
contended that, even if the arguments on behalf of the
appellant were to be accepted, the appellants were not
entitled to succeed, for the following reason. He drew our
attention to the reference in the 1967 order of the Court of
Small Causes to H.R.C. 867/63, an earlier petition filed by
the L.I.C. The Court had said:
"7. The Corporation had formerly filed a petition H.R.C.
867/1963 in respect of these two buildings for fixation of
fair rent. In that petition the tenant disputed the title of
the Corporation in respect of the buildings. So, the Corpo-
ration immediately filed an application H.R.C. 2557/64 for
eviction on the ground of wilful denial of title. The peti-
tion for fixation of fair rent was dismissed by the learned
First Additional Rent Controller on the ground that the
lease has been taken under two separate deeds and that a
single petition was not maintainable. In the other petition
he ordered eviction on the ground that the denial was not
bona fide. He gave an express finding that the building No.
2. Mount Road belongs to the Corporation. In the appeal the
appellate court set aside the order of eviction on the
ground that there was no denial of title prior to the insti-
tution of the petition. Of course, the finding in that case
that the building belongs to the Corporation cannot operate
as res judicata because the tenant had no opportunity to
file an appeal against that finding since the application
for eviction had ultimately been dismissed. On this point I
find that the building belongs to the petitioner."
(Emphasis added)
He submitted that the Court erred in thinking that no fur-
ther proceed-
558
ings had been taken in the earlier matter, The fact was that
a Civil Revision Petition (C.R.P. 1839/66) had been filed
against the order of the appellate court (H.R.A. 1162/64).
The C.R.P. had been allowed and the matter remitted back for
fresh disposal. When the matter came back to the Court of
Small Causes, the learned Judge, in his order dated 9.4.69,
went into the issue at length and came to the conclusion
that the superstructure belonged to Indian Automobiles and
had not been conveyed to the L.I.C He held, therefore, that
the claim by India Automobiles in the eviction petition of
title to the superstructure would amount to a denial of
title but that the denial was bona fide. He, therefore,
allowed the appeal and set aside the order of eviction
passed against the tenants. Sri Parasaran, therefore, sub-
mitted that the question of title had already been decided
in these earlier proceedings which we shall briefly refer to
as the ’first set of proceedings’. If at all, he says, it
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was this decision that constituted res judicata and the
Court of Small Causes, in H.R.A. 534/66 arising out of
H.R.A. 3310/64 (which we shall refer to as the ’second set
of proceedings’) could not have considered the issue again
or taken a different view.
Sri Parasaran also sought to explain the reasons why the
respondents did not prefer any appeal or revision from the
order of the Court of Small Causes in H.R.A. 534/66 He
submitted that the law then prevalent in Tamil Nadu as laid
down in the decisions of the Madras High Court in Palaniappa
Chettiar and Others v. Vairavan Chettiar, [1963] 76 L.W. 21
and Palaniappa Chettiar v. Babu Sahib alias Sheik Mytheen
Sahib and Others, [1964] 77 L.W. 551, was that the Rent
Control Act would apply even in cases where the landlord had
leased out only a vacant site and the tenant had put up his
own construction thereon. It was only in Salay Mohamed Sait
etc. v. Jaffer Mohamed sait’s Memorial Dispensary Charity
and Others, [1969] 1 Andhra Weekely Reporter (S.C.) 16, that
this view was disapproved. At that stage, therefore, the
respondents could not have hoped to succeed even if their
stand that they were the owners of the superstructure had
been accepted.
We do not think mat these contentions have any force. So
far as the first contention is concerned, it may be pointed
out, firstly, that an answer to it is furnished by the terms
of S. 19 of the Act (set out a little later) which does not
contain a reference to S. 4. The application under S. 4
could not, therefore, have been summarily rejected even
assuming that the question of title could be said to have
been substantially in issue and decided in the previous
proceedings. Secondly, the order now relied upon was passed
in April 1969 and was not in exist-
559
ence when the Court of Small Causes passed its order in the
second set of proceedings. Thirdi.v, even assuming ’the
argument of learned counsel to be correct, all that can be
said is that, in the second set of proceedings, the tenants
could have contended that it was not open to the Court of
Small Causes to go into the question of title in view of the
decision in the first set of proceedings. But no such plea
was taken before it with the result that the court discussed
the matter and arrived at a decision. In deciding whether
the decision constitutes res judicata or not, we are not
entitled to go into the correctness of that decision. Right
or wrong, the second decision has become final and the same
issue, says the appellant, cannot be gone into again. Last-
ly, the 1969 decision of the Court of Small Causes was only
concerned with the question whether there was denial of the
L.I.C.’s title by the tenants and, if so, whether it was
bona fide. It was only this limited aspect-eviction on the
ground of non-bona fide denial of title--that was under
consideration of the Court under S. 10(2)(vii) of the Act
read with the proviso to S. 10(1) and the Court’s observa-
tions on the question of title were one on a collateral
issue. We do not, therefore, think that the 1969 decision
can be an effective answer to the appellant’s contention
based on the 1967 decision. The second argument, explaining
why the respondents did not challenge the 1967 order in
further appeal or revision, is also of no avail in consider-
ing the issue raised by the counsel for the appellant.
But we think Sri .Parasaran is right in the third con-
tention urged by him before us which goes to the root of the
matter. His argument is that a Rent Controller and, on
appeal from him, the Court of Small Causes, is not competent
to go into a question of title to immovable property and
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that a civil court cannot be barred from examining a claim
of title merely because the question may have had to be
considered by the Rent tribunals as a collateral issue in
deciding certain applications before them. He contended that
it is a basic proposition, well-settled by authority, that a
tribunal of limited jurisdiction like the Rent Controller
(this expression will, hereinafter, also include a Court of
Small Causes disposing of an appeal from him) cannot be
clothed with jurisdiction to decide far-reaching questions
of title to immovable property. This, he said, is a proposi-
tion that is borne out on general principles as well as on
the provisions of the Rent Control Act. Taking up the provi-
sions of the Act, he referred us to the provisions of Ss. 10
and 19 which read thus:
S. 10(1)--Eviction of tenants. A tenant shall not be evicted
whether in execution of a decree or otherwise except in
560
accordance with the provisions of this section or sections
14 to 16:
Provided that nothing contained in the said sec-
tions shall apply to a tenant whose landlord is the Govern-
ment:
Provided further that where the tenant denies the
title of the landlord or claims right of permanent tenancy,
the Controller shall decide whether the denial or claim is
bona fide and if he records a finding to that effect, the
landlord shall be entitled to sue for eviction of the tenant
in a Civil Court and the Court may pass a decree for evic-
tion on any of the grounds mentioned in the said sections,
notwithstanding that the Court finds that such denial does
not involve forfeiture of the lease or that the claim is
unfounded.
S. 19--Decisions which have become final not to be reo-
pened--Any application under section 3-A or section 12, and
any application under sub-section (2) or subsection (3) or
sub-section (3-A) of section 10 or under sections 14, 15 or
16, shall be summarily rejected by the authorized officer or
the Controller. as the case may be. if such application
raises between the same parties or between parties under
whom they or any of them claim. substantially the same
issues as have been finally decided or as purport to have
been finally decided in a former proceeding--
(i) under this Act, or
(ii) under any other law from time to time in
force before the date of the commencement of this Act and
relating to matters dealt with in this Act.
counsel contended that S. 10 makes it clear beyond doubt
that the Rent Controller is precluded from deciding any
issue regarding title to the property and that, if any such
question arises, he should leave it to be decided by ordi-
nary civil courts in appropriate proceedings. The procedure
to be adopted by him in disposing of the applications before
him is a summary one hardly conducive to a satisfactory
disposal of such complicated questions. Under Rule 12(2) he
is required to decide applications by recording a brief note
of the evidence of parties and
561
witnesses and decide matters after giving the parties an
opportunity to state their case: more or less, in the manner
in which a Court of Small Causes decides cases before it.
Indeed, in the Presidency Town, he is subordinate to the
Court of Small Causes which has been notified as the author-
ity to hear appeals from his orders and it is a well settled
proposition that the Court of Small Causes is not competent
to adjudicate on questions of title. For these reasons,
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learned counsel submits, the decision of the Court of Small
Causes in the earlier proceedings cannot fetter a civil
court from adjudicating upon all the issues arising before
it in a civil suit.
We think that this contention is well founded. There are
clear indications in the Act and rules that the Rent Con-
troller does not have the jurisdiction to decide questions
of title. In a proceedings under the Act, whether it be for
fixation of fair rent or eviction, the tenant may raise
several objections. He may, inter alia, take up the point
that the opposite party is not the "landlord". The defini-
tion of "landlord" under the Act is very wide and encompass-
es not only an owner but also persons "receiving or entitled
to receive the rent of the building which has been let out
or would be entitled to receive the rent of the building if
it were let out to a tenant" in one of several capacities.
Denial of title of the landlord is itself one of the grounds
on which eviction can be sought [S. 10(2)(vii) ]. Sri Krish-
namurthy Iyer is, therefore, certainly right in contending
that the Act requires the Rent Controller to consider this
issue, among others, while disposing the applications before
him. But, we think, Sri Parasaran is right in saying that,
since the Rent Controller has no jurisdiction to entertain
an application except by a landlord or a tenant, the ques-
tion of title to the property is one on which his very
jurisdiction depends. It cannot be described as a matter
that is squarely and directly in issue in these proceedings
to which any finality can be attached, as the Rent Control-
ler, by deciding the issue wrongly, cannot clothe himself
with jurisdiction where none exists. All that the Rent
Controller has to do is to satisfy himself that the person
seeking eviction or fixation of fair rent is a "landlord"
who has, prima facie,’ the right to receive the rents of the
property in question. That the Rent Controller’s jurisdic-
tion on this issue is limited is clear from the proviso to
S. 10(1) of the Act. In order to decide whether the denial
of the landlord’s title by the tenant is bona fide, the Rent
Controller may have to go into the tenant’s contentions on
the issue but he is not to decide the question finally. He
has only to see whether the tenant’s denial of the land-
lord’s title is bona fide in the circumstances of the case.
He may reach a conclusion, on the merits, that the landlord
has title; yet he cannot order eviction if the tenant’s
action in
562
denying the title was bona fide. Per contra, he may reach
the conclusion on the materials before him that the landlord
has no title; yet, it seems, if he finds that the applicant
is otherwise a landlord and that the grounds on which the
tenant’s denial was based were not bona fide, he will have
to order eviction. So also, in an application under S. 4,
the jurisdiction of the Rent Controller is to determine a
fair or standard rent for the premises. He has no doubt to
ensure that the person applying for the fair rent is the
tenant or the landlord. He has also no doubt to satisfy
himself as to the extent of the premises qua which the
relationship of landlord and tenant exists and in respect of
which rent is receivable or payable. For deciding these
issues, he may have no doubt also to consider the oral and
documentary evidence adduced by the parties. Yet, having
regard to the manner in which he is required to come to this
conclusion and having regard to the fact that at least in
the Presidency Town an appeal from his order goes to the
Court of Small Causes, it is difficult to escape the conclu-
sion that the jurisdiction to be exercised by him is a
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limited and a prima facie one. It will be anomalous to hold
that where an owner of property seeks to evict his tenant
under s. 10(2)(vii) but the Rent Controller refuses to pass
the order of eviction--though satisfied about his
title--because the tenant had acted bona fide, it would be
open to the owner to seek eviction by having his title
adjudicated upon in a civil court but that the owner cannot
have a similar right in the matter of recovery of rent which
is basically a relief for which he has to approach a civil
court. A question of title may be a complex one involving
difficult issues. For instance, the "owner" may claim title
under an adoption or a will or a trust deed or a gift deed
and there may be contentious claims among several persons
which it will not be possible for the Rent Controller to
decide. It is important to remember that when an owner files
a suit for arrears of rent, it is open to the tenant, under
the general law, to plead that no rent is payable in respect
of the premises as, indeed, it belongs to him. The right to
raise this issue cannot be taken away without a specific
statutory provision. The terms of s. 11 C.P.C., including
Explanation VIII, are not comprehensive enough to cover the
case.
The limited nature of the jurisdiction of a Tribunal
like the Rent Controller and the Court of Small Causes has
been considered in a number of cases by this Court as well
as other courts:
(1) We may start with an early Full Bench decision of
the Madras High Court: Venkatarama Rao & Ors. v. Musunuru
Venkayya and Ors., AIR 1954 Madras 788. It arose under the
Madras Estates Land Act (1 of 1908). In that case, the
Revenue Divisional Officer, in
563
certain earlier proceedings, had held that a particular
village was not an "estate" and this had been confirmed by
the District Collector and the High Court. Later on, the
plaintiffs filed suits against the tenants in possession of
holdings in the village for an injunction restraining them
from removing the paddy heaps standing on the suit lands
until a due division was made of the crop and until the rent
in kind payable to the plaintiffs was paid by the tenants.
The tenants wanted to contend in reply that the village in
question was an "estate" within the meaning of the Act and
they had occupancy rights therein. The plaintiffs, however,
objected that this plea was not open to the tenant in view
of the earlier decision of Revenue Divisional Officer.
Negativing the plea of the plaintiffs, the Court pointed
out:
(8) xxx xxx xxx
If a particular matter is one which does not fall
within the exclusive jurisdiction of the revenue court, then
a decision of a revenue court on such a matter, which might
be incidentally given by the revenue court, cannot be bind-
ing on the parties in a civil court. One practical test
would be to determine if that particular matter would not be
a matter in respect of which the civil court would have
jurisdiction. To give an obvious instance, suppose in a suit
under S. 55 for the grant of a patta instituted by a person
claiming to be the adopted son of the ryot who was a patta-
dar, the landlord raises a plea that he is not entitled to
the patta because his adoption is not valid, it may be that
the revenue court would have to summarily go into the ques-
tion whether the person suing is or is not the validly
adopted son of the previous ryot. Can it possibly be said
that the finding of the revenue court on the issue of adop-
tion is binding on the parties in a subsequent suit in a
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civil court in which the validity of the adoption might fall
to be decided? There can be no doubt about the answer.
That is because the dispute as to the validity of
the adoption is not a dispute in respect of which a revenue
court has exclusive jurisdiction. Such a dispute is a matter
well within the jurisdiction of a civil court. Thereafter,
it cannot be within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Reve-
nue court, and the decision of such a dispute by a revenue
court cannot be binding in a civil court.
564
Incidentally it may be pointed out, this decision has been
cited with approval by this Court in Bhagwan Dayal v. Reoti
Devi, [1962] 3 SCR 440.
(2) Desika Charyulu v. State of Andhra Pradesh and
another, AIR 1964 S.C. 807 was a decision under the Madras
Estates (Abolition and Conversion into Ryotwari) Act, 1948.
In that case it was held, on a construction of section 9(1)
of the Act, that the property in question being an "inam
village" is assumed as a fact on the existence of which the
competence of the Settlement Officer to determine the mat-
ters within his jurisdiction rests and that, as there are no
words in the statute empowering him to decide finally the
former, he cannot confer jurisdiction on himself by a wrong
decision on this preliminary condition to his jurisdiction.
Any determination by him of this question, therefore, is
(subject to the result of an appeal to the tribunal) binding
on the parties only for the purpose of the proceedings under
the Act, but no further. The correctness of that finding may
be questioned in any subsequent legal proceeding in the
ordinary courts of the land where the question might arise
for decision. However, if the property is an inam village,
whether the "inam village" is an "inam estate" is, within
his exclusive jurisdiction and in regard to it the jurisdic-
tion of the Civil Courts is clearly barred.
(3) Dhulabhai v. State, [1968] 3 SCR 662 was concerned
with the interpretation of the provision in the Madhya
Bharat Sales Tax Act barring the jurisdiction of civil
courts in matters entrusted to the jurisdiction of the
special tribunals created under the Act. It is unnecessary
to refer in detail to this case except to set out a passage
from pages 682-3 where Hidayatullah, C.J., speaking for the
Constitution Bench, reviewed all earlier cases on the sub-
ject and enunciated the principles emerging therefrom, of
which the following are relevant here:
"The result of this inquiry into the diverse views expressed
in this Court may be stated as follows,:--
(1) Where the statute gives a finality to the
orders of the special tribunals, the Civil Courts’ jurisdic-
tion must be held to be excluded if there is adequate remedy
to do what the Civil Courts would normally do in a suit.
Such provision, however, does not exclude those cases where
the provisions of the particular Act have not been complied
with or the statutory tribunal has not acted in conformity
565
with the fundamental principles of judicial procedure.
(2) Where there is an express bar of the jurisdic-
tion of the court, an examination of the scheme of the
particular Act to find the adequacy or the sufficiency of
the provided may be relevant but is not decisive to sustain
the jurisdiction of the civil court.
Where there is no express exclusion the examination
of the remedies and the scheme of the particular Act to find
out the intendment becomes necessary and the result of the
inquiry may be decisive. In the latter case it is necessary
to see if the statute creates a special right 0r a liability
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and provides for the determination of the right or liability
and further lays down that all questions about the said
right and liability shall be determined by the tribunals so
constituted, and whether remedies normally associated with
actions in Civil Courts are prescribed by the said statute
or not.
XXX XXX
XXX
(4) in Mathura Prasad Bajoo Jaiswal & Ors. v. Dossibai
N.B. Jeejeebhoy, [1970] 3 SCR 830, the appellant had ob-
tained lease of an open land for construction of buildings.
After putting up the buildings, he applied for determination
of standard rent under the Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging
House Rates Control Act, 1947. The application was rejected
holding that the provisions of the Act did not apply to open
land let for construction. This view was confirmed by the
High Court. Sometime thereafter in another case the High
Court held that the question whether the provisions of the
Act applied to any particular lease must be determined on
its terms and a building lease in respect of an open plot
was not excluded from the provisions of the Act solely
because open land may be used for residence or educational
purposes only after a structure is built thereon. Relying
upon this judgment, the appellant filed a fresh application
for determining the standard rent. The trial Judge rejected
the application holding that question of the applicability
of the Act was res judicata since it had been finally decid-
ed by the High Court between the same parties in respect of
the same land in the earlier proceeding for fixation of
standard rent. The order was confirmed by the first appel-
late court and on fur*her appeal by the High Court. The
Supreme Court, however, reversed the judgment of the High
Court. The Court observed:
566
"A question relating to the jurisdiction of a Court cannot
be deemed to have been finally determined by an erroneous
decision of the Court. If by an erroneous interpretation of
the statute the court holds that it has no jurisdiction, the
decision will not, operate as res judicata. Similarly by an
erroneous decision if the Court assumes jurisdiction which
it does not possess under the statute, the decision will not
operate as res judicata between the same parties, whether
the cause of action in the subsequent litigation is the same
or otherwise."
(5) Gangabai v. Chhabubai, [1982] 1 SCR 1176, related to
the jurisdiction of the Court of Small Causes. In that case
the respondent, being in need of money, entered into an
agreement with the appellant for a loan of Rs.2,000 and it
was simultaneously decided that she should execute a nominal
document of sale and rent note of her house. These documents
were executed on January 7, 1953, but the respondent contin-
ued in the possession of the house property throughout. The
appellant was attempting to enforce the document as a sale
deed by filing suit in the Court of Small Causes for recov-
ery of rent and the said suits had resulted in decrees. The
respondent thereupon filed a suit for a declaration that she
was and continued to be owner of the house property, alleg-
ing that the documents executed on 7th January, 1953, were
never intended to be acted upon. The appellant in defence
maintained that the sale deed represented a genuine transac-
tion and ownership of the house property had passed to her.
It was pleaded that the decrees passed by the Court of Small
Causes operated as res judicata barring the respondent from
pleading that the sale deed was merely a nominal transac-
tion. Reliance was also placed on section 92 of the Indian
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Evidence Act. The High Court held that the sale deed and
rent note were sham documents, that the decrees of the Court
of Small Causes did not operate as res judicata and that
section 92 of the Indian Evidence Act did not preclude the
respondent from establishing the true nature of the transac-
tion. The Supreme Court dismissed the appeal. In regard to
this contention it was urged on behalf of the appellant that
the High Court erred in applying the statutory provisions of
section 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure and that it should
have invoked the general principles of res judicata. It was
submitted that it was necessary to find out whether the
Court of Small Causes was competent to try the two earlier
’suits and decide the issues arising therein. After refer-
ring to various decisions cited on behalf of the parties,
the Court observed:
567
"It seems to us that when a finding as to title to immovable
property is rendered by a Court of Small Causes res judicata
cannot be pleaded as a bar in a subsequent regular civil
suit for the determination or enforcement of any right or
interest in immovable property. In order to operate as res
judicata the finding must be one disposing of a matter
directly and substantially in issue in the former suit and
the issue should have been heard and finally decided by the
court trying such suit. A matter collaterally or incidental-
ly in issue for the purposes of deciding the matter which is
directly in issue in the case cannot be made the basis of a
plea of res judicata. It has long been held that a question
of title in a Small Cause suit can be regarded as incidental
only to the substantial issue in the suit and cannot operate 8as
res judicata in a subsequent suit in which the question of title
is directly raised ..... Our attention has been drawn to Expla-
nation VIII to section 11 in the Code of Civil Procedure recently
inserted by the Code of Civil Procedure (Amendment) Act, 1976.
Section 97(3) of the Amendment Act declares that the new provi-
sion applies to pending suits, proceeding, appeals and applica-
tions. In our opinion the Explanation can be of no assistance,
because it operates only where an issue has been heard and final-
ly decided in the earlier suit."
(6) We may next refer to Jeeth Kaur and Ors. v. Smt. P.
Kondalamma and another, AIR 1983 AP 2 19. In that case, the
tenant filed a petition under the relevant Rent Control Act
for permission to deposit rents in court. The landlady
denied any relationship of tenant and landlord between the
applicant and herself. This contention was upheld by the
appellate court and the High Court. In a subsequent suit
filed by the tenants in the civil court as tenants of the
suit building, the landlady contended that the earlier
decision operated as res judicata, but this contention was
negatived. The Court observed:
"The main relief sought for by.the tenants was for deposit-
ing the rents on the ground that the landlord refused to
receive the same. In order to give that relief, the Rent
Control Court must first have jurisdiction as it can adjudi-
cate disputes only between a landlord and a tenant. Since
the relationship is denied by the landlord, the Rent Con-
troller had decided that question incidentally. This is not
the main relief for which the application is filed. In fact,
it is not a dispute which is exclusively triable by the
Tribunals
568
under the Act. The dispute has to be decided as incidental
to the granting of the main reliefs. The necessary condition
for exercise of jurisdiction by the Rent Controller is the
existence of relationship of landlord and tenant. The rent
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authorities have no power to decide a dispute which is not
between a landlord and tenant. Therefore, the decision on
the question whether the relationship of landlord and tenant
exists is a decision regarding jurisdictional facts and such
a decision is neither conclusive nor final. In such circum-
stances, the jurisdiction of the Civil Court to entertain a
suit in which the question of jural relationship of the
landlord and tenant arises is not ousted. Since the said
decision is not final it can never operate as res judicata
between the parties. In fact if we examine the provisions of
the Act, there are only five reliefs that can be granted
under the Rent Control Act. One is fixation of fair rent and
increase thereof under sections 4, 5 and 6; the second is
permission to deposit rents in the court under section 8
(5); the third is to order eviction under section 10; the
fourth is to direct recovery of possession by the landlord
for repairs under section 12; and the fifth is to order
restoration of amenities when they are unjustly withheld,
under section 14 of the Act. The rent authorities cannot
grant the reliefs of declaration of occupancy rights.
(7) We may lastly refer to the decision of this Court in
State of Tamil Nadu v. Ramalinga Samigal Madam and Ors.,
[1985] 4 SCC. In that case the plaintiff-respondent claimed
title to the suit land on the basis of its long and uninter-
rupted possession since prior to 1938 as also under an order
of assignment of 1938 issued in its favour by the Zamindar
whereby the right to cultivate in respect of that land was
granted to it subject to the payment of certain amounts. In
1953 the plaintiff applied for a ryotwari patta in respect
of this land after abolition of the Estate but the Addition-
al Settlement Officer, by order dated 25th June, 1954, took
a decision that land was not a ryoti land but had been
registered as a poramboke (village communal land) and,
therefore, no one was entitled to ryotwari patta in respect
of that land. The plaintiff thereupon filed a suit for a
declaration of as title and right to continue in possession
and enjoyment of the suit land subject to payment of ryot-
wari or other cess to be imposed by Government without any
interference from the Government. The State Tamil Nadu
resisted the suit on merits by contending that the suit land
was communal land and that the assignment or grant by the
zamindar
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in favour of plaintiff was invalid. It also took a technical
plea that the decision of the Additional Settlement Officer
that the suit land was poramboke and not ’ryoti’ land was
final and the Civil Court’s jurisdiction to decide that
question was barred under section 64-C of the Tamil Nadu
Estates (Abolition and Conversion into Ryotwari) Act, 1948,
which ran as follows:
"64-C. Finality of orders passed under this Act--(1) Any
order passed by the Government or other authority under this
Act in respect of matters to be determined for the purposes
of this Act shall, subject only to any appeal or revision
provided by or under this Act, be final.
(2) No such order shall be liable to be questioned in any
court of law.
The State Government’s plea was rejected by the High Court.
In appeal, the State contended before this Court that every
refusal of a ryotwari patta by a Settlement Officer in an
inquiry under section 11 involves a decision on his part
that either the applicant is not a ryot or the land is not
ryoti land; in the instant cases it was the latter and such
decision on the nature or character of the land has been
given a finality under section 64-C which cannot be ques-
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tioned in a court of law. Therefore, it was urged that the
civil court’s jurisdiction to adjudicate upon the nature or
character of the suit lands must be held to have been ex-
cluded or ousted. After discussing several decisions in
regard to the exclusion of a civil court’s jurisdiction as
well as the provisions of the Act, the Court pointed out
that the terms of section 64-C a1one will not be decisive on
the point of ouster of the civil court’s jurisdiction. The
observations made by the Court in paras 13 and 14 have
relevance to the present case and need not be set out here
in extenso.
We are of opinion, in the light of the decided cases
referred to above, that the contention on behalf of the
respondents has to be accepted. We are concerned with the
jurisdiction of a civil court. The extensive jurisdiction
conferred on civil courts under s. 9 of the Code of Civil
Procedure should not be curtailed without a specific statu-
tory warrant or except on some clear principle. There is
nothing in the Tamil Nadu Rent Control Act which, in any
way, takes away, or narrows down, the civil court’s juris-
diction as, for example, there is in the Delhi Rent Control
Act (s. 50). As to principle, whether we look at it on the
analogy of res judicata or adopt the approach of Sri Iyer as
to whether the order in the earlier proceedings is to be
treated as an
570
order that is null and void or merely one that is valid
until set aside, the answer has to turn on the true nature
and scope of the jurisdiction conferred on the Rent Control-
ler under the Act. It is possible, we have to ask ourselves,
having regard to the context, scheme and terms of the legis-
lation, that the statute could have envisaged the Rent
Controller (and the authorities to whom appeal or revision
could be preferred from his orders) to be final authorities
to adjudicate on issues of title also? The answer, in our
opinion, has to be in the negative. Section 4 of the Rent
Control Act, as already pointed out, provides only a machin-
ery for fixation of fair rent in respect of certain prem-
ises. It is the quantum of fair rent that arises for deter-
mination by the Rent Controller. There is no doubt that,
since an application for this purpose cannot lie except at
the instance of a landlord or a tenant, the Rent Controller
has to deal with this incidentally but this is not one of
the direct issues before the Rent Controller. If, and only
if, this relationship exists between the parties, the Rent
Controller steps in for a limited purpose--to determine what
the fair rent is--and then fades out of the picture. Where a
fair rent is fixed by a Controller, the Rent Control Act
does not provide for a machinery for recovery of the amount.
The amount has to be recovered by the landlord only by
recourse to a civil court. This gives an indication that the
determination of the relationship that gives rise to the
application is also not conclusive. This is indeed made
clear by the provisions relating to eviction. We have al-
ready referred to the effect of the provisions of s. 10
(2)(vii) read with the proviso to S. 10(1) and pointed out
how jurisdiction to decide questions of title is denied to
the Rent Controller. The position cannot be different under
S. 4. Having regard to the much narrower scope of S. 4, it
would be anomalous to read a wider jurisdiction to the Rent
Controller thereunder than under S. 10. In our opinion, on a
proper construction of the Rent Control Act, the question on
which the jurisdiction of the civil court is excluded is
only the determination as to the fair rent of the premises.
If the civil court in this case had come to the conclusion
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that there is a relationship of a landlord and a tenant and
that the LIC was entitled to recover the rent from the
tenants, it will have to pass a decree in favour of the LIC
on the basis of the fair rent fixed by the Rent Controller.
It will not be open to the civil court to re-determine the
rent payable by the tenant to the landlord because that is a
matter squarely and exclusively within the jurisdiction of
the Rent Controller and, therefore, impliedly excluded from
the purview of the civil court. But his decision is not
final on the issue that opens up his jurisdiction and cannot
preclude an owner from contending, in a civil court, that he
should not be asked to pay rent for his own property to some
one else.
571
For the reasons mentioned above, we are of the opinion
that the High Court reached the correct conclusion and that
this appeal has to fail. The appeal is therefore, dismissed.
In the circumstances, however, we make no order as to costs.
Y. Lal Appeal dismissed.
572