Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SETH BALGOPAL DAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF U.P. & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT08/04/1976
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
SINGH, JASWANT
CITATION:
1976 AIR 1800 1976 SCR (3)1092
1976 SCC (3) 394
ACT:
U.P. (Temporary) Control of Rent and Eviction Act 1947,
S.3(2) requirement of-Receipt of revision application by
Addtional District Magistrate whether validated by practice
in absence of rules or specific authorisation by
Commissioner.
HEADNOTE:
The Rent Control and Eviction officer Dehradun. granted
permission to the respondent landlady under s. 3 of the U.P.
(Temporary) Control of Rent and Eviction Act, to file a suit
for eviction of the appellant tenant, on the ground that the
accommodation was required for her personal residence. The
tenant filed a revision application under s. 3(2) of the
Act, purporting to be made to the Commissioner, Meerut
Division but actually filed before the Additional District
Magistrate who rejected it as time barred. The appellant
tenant’s further revision application, made under s. 7F of
the Act. was rejected by the State Government, and then his
petition under Article 226 was rejected by a Single Judge of
the Allahabad High Court on two grounds: Firstly that
neither the Act, nor the rules made thereunder had any
provision enabling the Additional District Magistrate to
receive the tenant’s application under s. 3(2). and secondly
that the time spent in obtaining the certified copy of the
District Magistrate order could not be excluded under s.
12(2) of the Limitation Act; 1963. The appellant’s special
appeal was summarily rejected by a Division Bench of the
High Court.
In appeal by special leave, the appellant contended
before the Court that. as a practice had grown up in
Dehradun, that the Additional District Magistrate receives
the revision applications made to the Commissioner, the
requirements of s. 3(2) should be deemed to have been
sufficiently complied with.
Dismissing the appeal, the Court,
^
HELD: There is not even a rule on this subject made by
the State Government. A wrong practice cannot possibly
modify what naturally follows from the language if s.3(2) of
the Act, that the party must apply to the Commissioner
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directly and not through some other authority or official.
For that purpose proof of at least specific authorisation by
the Commissioner, after the introduction of s. 3(2), was
required. [1094C; 1095A & F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 222 of
1975.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated the 8th August, 1973 of the Allahabad High Court in
Special Appeal No. 189 of 1972.
B. Sen, Mrs. Lela Seth, B. Mohan, Parveen Kumar and
O.P. Khaitan for the appellant.
T. S. Krishnamoorthy lyer and P. K. Pillai for
Respondent No. 4
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BEG, J. The appellant, here, by special leave, is a
tenant of premises in Dehradun in respect of which the
landlord respondent No. 4 had sought permission, under
Section 3 of the U.P. (Temporary) Control of Rent & Eviction
Act III of 1947 (hereinafter referred to as ’the
1093
Act’), to sue for his eviction. The permission was granted
by the Rent Control and Eviction officer, Dehradun, as long
ago as 11 August, 1969, and, thereafter, the suit for
ejectment of the appellant was filed on 19th November, 1969.
Section 3, sub. sec. (1) of the Act had merely imposed
a bar on suits in Civil Courts filed without the permission
of the District Magistrate except on certain grounds which
are given there. The plaintiff respondent, one Mrs. Sheila
Kalha wife of a retired army officer, was given permission
to file her suit on the ground that she required the
accommodation for personal residence. She is said to have
been living at considerable expense to her at New Delhi due
to inability to live in her own house at Dehradun as it has
been occupied by the appellant.
The tenant had applied on 19th August, 1969, for a
certified copy of the order of the Rent Control officer
granting the landlord permission to sue and got its copy on
25th August, 1969. Thereafter, the tenant filed a revision
application under section 3(2) of the Act, purporting to be
made to the Commissioner, Meerut Division, but actually
filed on 16th September, 1969, before an Additional District
Magistrate of Dehradun who had forwarded it on to the
Commissioner. The Revision Application was received in the
Commissioner’s office on 24th September, 1969. It was
rejected by the Commissioner on the ground that it was filed
beyond the time prescribed by Section 3(2) of the Act which
reads as follows:
"(2) Where any application has been made to the
District Magistrate for permission to sue a tenant for
eviction from any accommodation and the District
Magistrate, grants or refuses to grant the permission,
the party aggrieved by his order may within 30 days
from the date on which the order is communicated to him
apply to the Commissioner to revise the order."
The State Government also rejected the revision
application of the appellant tenant, filed under section 7F
of the Act, against the Commissioner’s order.
The appellant tenant then approached the Allahabad High
Court with a petition under Article 226 of the Constitution.
The petition was rejected by a learned Judge on 21st
October, 1972, on two grounds: firstly, under Section 3(2)
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of the Act; and, secondly, that the time spent on obtaining
the certified copy of the order of the District Magistrate
could not be excluded under Section 12(2) of the Limitation
Act of 1963. For the second proposition reliance was placed
upon Shyam Sunder Bajpai v. Commissioner Allahabad Division,
Allhabad & Anr.and Ram Lakhan v. Commissioner, Varanasi
Division, Varanasi & ors.
A Division Bench of the Allahabad High Court had
rejected the tenant’s Special Appeal summarily. This Court,
however, granted special leave to appeal under Article 136
of the Constitution on 20th
1094
July, 1975. We need not express any opinion on the
correctness of the second proposition here if we agree with
the High Court’s view on the first point because, in that
case, the tenant’s application would be time barred even if
the time spent in obtaining the copy was excluded.
The only contention, put forward by Mr. B. Sen on
behalf of the tenani-appellant, on the first point, is that
there is a practice in Dehradun, acting on some instruction
of the Commissioner, Meerut Division, to receive revision
applications to the Commissioner through an Additional
District Magistrate of Dehradun, who has, therefore, the
Commissioner’s authority to receive these applications. It
was urged that the filing of the Revision application before
an Additional District Magistrate should be deemed, in these
circumstances, to be sufficient compliance with the
requirements of Section 3(2) of the Act which provides, as
it clear from a bare look at it, that the revision
application lies before the Commissioner.
It is difficult to see how a practice could possibly
modify the provisions of the Act. There is not even a rule
on this subject made by the State Govt. under the provisions
of Section 17 of the Act which authorises the Govt. to "make
rules to give effect to the purposes of this Act." There are
rules on other matters but not on such a matter.
Mr. B. Sen relied on a Division Bench decision of the
Allahabad High Court in T. C. Pasricha & Anr. v. The State
of U.P.where it was held:
"It appears that the Commissioner had authorised
the District Magistrate to receive revisions meant for
him. By so authorising, the Commissioner was only
indicating the place and, the manner of representation
of the revisions. Since the Rent Control Act did not
either by itself or rules framed under it lay down the
precise procedure in regard to the presentation of the
revision, the Commissioner who was the authority
entitled to entertain and decide the revisions was
within his rights to prescribe the procedure in respect
of rep resentation of the revisions. The direction
given by the Commissioner in 1946 with regard to the
presentation of revision was valid and enforceable".
In Pasrich’s case (supra), the Single Judge decision in
Seth Bal Gopal Das v. State of U.P. on the case now before
us, was noticed by the Division Bench and distinguished on
the ground that there was no evidence here to prove that
there was any such practice. Both Pasricha’s case (supra)
and the case now before us come from the Dehradun District.
We think it is difficult to reconcile the Division Bench
decision in Pasricha’s case, decided on 5th April, 1973,
with the summary rejection of the Special Appeal No. 180 of
1973 on 8th August, 1973, which is under appeal before us,
although we find that one of the learned Judges is common to
both the Division Benches.
1095
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We prefer the reasoning of the learned Single Judge in
Seth Bal Gopal Das v. State of U.P. (supra) to the reasoning
of the Division Bench in Pasricha’s case (supra). A wrong
practice cannot possibly modify what naturally and logically
follows from the language in Section 3(2) of the Act. This
provision says that the party aggrieved must "apply to the
Commissioner to revise the order". The natural inference is
that the party must apply to the Commissioner directly and
not through some other authority or official.
It is true that Section 3(2) does not prescribe the
manner and place of presentation of applications. But,
unless there is some rule made to confer authority, upon the
District Magistrate or the Additional District Magistrate
concerned or his office, to act as the agent of the
Commissioner, or a clear and specific authorisation by the
Commissioner is proved, we fail to see how filing a revision
application before the Additional District Magistrate can be
deemed to amount to making the application to the
Commissioner.
In Pasricha’s case (supra), the Division Bench had gone
to the extent of holding that some communication made by the
Commissioner in 1946 to the District Magistrate of Dehradun,
even a copy of which was not placed before the Court, could
be shown by means of an affidavit of a party, to have been
both established and to be enough to confer an authority on
an Additional District Magistrate of Dehradun to receive
applications on behalf of the Commissioner under the
provisions of Section 3(2) of the Act which were introduced
after 1946 according to the statement of facts in Pasricha’s
case (supra) itself. Primafacie, an authorisation cannot
relate to a power or right conferred by a provision which
could not be present to the mind of the Commissioner at all
at the time when he is supposed to have made some
communication to the District Magistrate as the provision
for a revision in such a case did not even exist then. We,
therefore, think that the reasoning of the Division Bench in
Pasricha’s case (supra) is unacceptable. The alleged
practice cannot be held to have been even established. And,
in any event, such a practice was not enough to confer
authority to receive petitions on behalf of the
Commissioner. For that purpose, proof of at least specific
authorisation by the Commissioner, after the introduction of
the new provision, was required.
The result is that we are unable to find any merit in
the case of the appellant who has been able to hold up
proceedings for his eviction long enough in respect of
accommodation which, on the allegations made on behalf of
the landlord (this term includes the "land-lady"), has been
required to meet the landlord’s dire personal needs since at
least 1969. We hope that the trial of the suit in such a
case will not be delayed now.
We dismiss this appeal with costs throughout.
M.R. Appeal dismissed.
1096