Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 910 of 2001
PETITIONER:
BALWANT SINGH & ORS.
RESPONDENT:
ANAND KUMAR SHARMA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 28/01/2003
BENCH:
CJI, S.B. SINHA & AR. LAKSHMANAN.
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
KHARE, CJI.
The appellants herein are the tenants. The landlord brought a suit for
eviction of the tenant, inter alia on the ground of personal necessity as well
as for default in payment of rent. The trial court dismissed the suit.
However, the first appellate court allowed the appeal of landlord and thus
the suit on the ground of default was decreed. The second appeal, by the
tenants, was dismissed. The High Court held that mere acceptance of
delayed rent by the Landlord did not amount to waiver of the right which
was accrued to him under the Act and also the tenant has committed default
in payment of the rent. It is against the said judgment, the tenants preferred
present appeal by means of a special leave petition.
When the matter came up before a Bench of this Court, the Bench was
of the view that as the case may require consideration of the correctness of
the view taken by a Full Bench of Patna High Court in Raj Kumar Prasad
vs. Uchit Narain Singh [AIR 1980 Patna (FB) 242] in view two decisions
of this Court in Gowali Charan vs. Surendra Kumar Khandani and
others (1987 Suppl. SCC 578) and Satyanarain Kandu vs. Smt. Hemlata
and others (1996 PLR 110 SC) both by two-Judge Bench and as such has
referred the matter to a Bench of three Ld. Judges . It is in this way, this
matter has come up before us. Learned Counsel for the appellant urged that
view taken by the High Court is in conflict with the two decisions of this
Court and therefore the Judgment under challenge deserved to be set aside.
We do not find any merit in the argument for the reasons stated hereinafter.
Section 11(1)(d) of the Bihar Buildings (Lease, Rent & Eviction)
Control Act reads thus:
"11. Eviction of tenants (1) Notwithstanding
anything contained in my contract or law to the contrary
but subject to the provisions of the Industrial disputes
Act, 1947 (Act XIV of 1947), and to those Section 18,
where a tenant is in possession of any building, he shall
not be liable to eviction therefrom except in execution of
a decree passed by the Court on one or more of the
following grounds:
(a) .
(b) .
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(c) .
(d) Where the amount of two months rents,
lawfully payable by the tenant and due from
him is in arrears by not having been paid
within the time fixed by contract, or in the
absence of such contract, by the last day of
the month next following that for which the
rent is payable or by not having been validly
remitted or deposited in accordance with
Section 16."
The provisions of the said Act would clearly show that unlike
Rent Control Statutes of other States, the expression ’wilful default’
or ’habitual default’ has not been used therein. The words are ’is in
arrears’. In the event, rent for two months is not paid a cause of
action arises. The statute mandates that the rent should be paid within
the time fixed by the contract and in absence thereof by the last date
of the month next following. The obligation on the part of the tenant
to pay rent in the manner laid down under the Act, being a statutory
one, he must comply therewith strictly. The statute, therefore, in other
words, prescribes the period within which the rent must be rendered to
the landlord by a tenant. When the statute lays down the period
during which the rent is required to be paid or deposited, the same is
required to be complied with.
Recently, in E. Palanisamy vs. Palanisamy (dead) by Lrs.
and others (2003 (1) SCC 123), a Division Bench of this Court
observed:
". The rent legislation is normally intended for the
benefit of the tenants. At the same time, it is well settled
that the benefits conferred on the tenants through the
relevant statutes can be enjoyed only on the basis of strict
compliance with the statutory provisions. Equitable
consideration has no place in such matters"
It is also pertinent to note that the Rent Control Act is not only
a beneficial enactment for the tenant but also for the benefit of the
landlord. (See Shri Lakshmi Venkateshwara Enterprises Pvt. Ltd.
vs. Syeda Vajuninissa Begum (Smt.) and others 1994 (2) SCC
671).
Yet there is another aspect of the matter which cannot be lost
sight of. It is a well settled principle that if a thing is required to be by
a private person within a specified time, the same would ordinarily be
mandatory but when a public functionary is required to perform a
public function within a time-frame, the same will be held to be
directory unless the consequences therefor are specified. In
Sutherland, Statutory Construction, 3rd edition, Vol.3 at p. 107, it
is pointed out that a statutory direction to private individuals should
generally be considered as mandatory and that the rule is just the
opposite to that which obtains with respect to public officers. Again,
at p.109, it is pointed out that often the question as to whether a
mandatory or directory construction should be given to a statutory
provision may be determined by an expression in the statute itself of
the result that shall follow non-compliance with the provision. At
page111 it is stated as follows:
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"As a corollary of the rule outlined above, the fact that no
consequences of non-compliance are stated in the statute,
has been considered as a factor tending towards a
directory construction. But this is only an element to be
considered, and is by no means conclusive."
It is in the aforementioned backdrop the decisions of this Court
relied upon by Mr. Upadhyay are required to be considered.
In Gowali Charan vs. Surendra Kumar Khandani and
others (1987 Suppl. SCC 578), this Court did not lay down any law
within the meaning of Article 141 of the Constitution of India. The
judgment does not contain any reason. It does not set out any fact nor
did it take notice of any precedent. It is difficult to ascertain as to on
what grounds this Court observed:
"Having regard to the fact that the entire rent for
the period in question from January-February, 1967 to
January-February, 1968 had been paid to the plaintiff, we
do not think that the High Court was justified in holding
that the plea of wilful default has been established
entitling the plaintiff to a decree for eviction under
Section 11(1)(c) of the Bihar Buildings (Lease, Rent and
Eviction) Control Act, 1982."
This decision in our opinion does not lay down the correct law
and must be over-ruled.
In Satyanarain Kandu vs. Smt. Hemlata and others (1996
PLR 110 SC), this Court passed an order presumably in exercise of
its jurisdiction under Article 142 of Constitution of India. In that case,
it was categorically held that the default had taken place but the same
was held to be merely a technical one. If a cause of action arose for
the landlord to file a suit for eviction against the tenant, such a cause
of action cannot be held to be non-existent only because, in the
opinion of this Court, the default was technical one. The said decision
also does not lay down the correct view of the law and must be over-
ruled.
We, therefore, are of the opinion that the High Court has rightly
held that by reason of the said two decisions, the Full Bench decision
of the High Court cannot be said to have been over-ruled.
In C.A. No. 5077/1998, which we have decided today, we have
held that where a statute empowers the Court to extend time or further
time when a tenant fails to deposit rent within the stipulated time,
only in such cases, the Court possesses power to extend time and in no
other cases.
For aforesaid reasons, the appeal is dismissed. However, there
shall be no orders as to costs.