Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAJENDRA SALES CORPN.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
INDERMULL MIMTAJI
DATE OF JUDGMENT08/04/1994
BENCH:
PUNCHHI, M.M.
BENCH:
PUNCHHI, M.M.
BHARUCHA S.P. (J)
CITATION:
1994 SCC (2) 286
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
ORDER
1. This appeal is directed against the judgment of the
High Court of Madras in the second appeal filed by the
appellant before us. The appellant is the sublessee of
premises belonging to the Pasumarthy Rukmani Ammal Charity,
which has been held to be a public charitable trust and
which is not disputed in this appeal. The respondent is the
lessee of the said premises. The suit was filed by the
respondent against the appellant for eviction from the said
premises upon the ground that the sub-lease of the appellant
had been terminated by the respondent. The suit was filed
upon the basis that the said premises were exempt from the
provisions of the Tamil Nadu Buildings (Lease and Rent
Control) Act, 1960 read with GO No. 2000 dated August 16,
1976 issued by the Governor of Tamil Nadu under the
provisions of Section 29 of the said Act. The suit was
dismissed by the trial court but was decreed in the first
appeal. The second appeal before the High Court was
dismissed.
2. The only contention raised before us is that the
appellant, as sublessee of the said premises, is entitled to
the protection of the said Act and that the said GO has no
application.
3. Section 29 empowers the Government to exempt any
building or class of buildings from all or any of the
provisions of the said Act. By the said GO all buildings
owned by Hindu, Christian and Muslim religious trusts and
public charitable trusts are exempted from all the
provisions of the said Act.
4. By virtue of Section 29 the Government is entitled to
exempt any building or class of buildings from the
provisions of the said Act and what has been exempted by the
said GO are all buildings owned by public religious and
charitable trusts of Hindus, Christians and Muslims. The
exemption, therefore, attaches to the buildings. The said
premises, being owned by a trust of the kind stipulated, are
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exempt from the provisions of
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the said Act and a sublessee thereof cannot claim the
protection of the provisions of the said Act.
5. Our attention was drawn by learned counsel for the
appellant to the judgment of this Court in S. Kandaswamy
Chettiar v. State of T. N. I wherein it was held that public
religious and charitable endowments and trusts constitute a
well-recognised distinct group inasmuch they not only serve
public purposes but the disbursement of their income is
governed by the objects with which they were created and
buildings belonging to such endowments or trusts clearly
fall into a distinct class different from buildings owned by
private landlords and, as such, their classification into
one group by the State Government while issuing the said GO
had to be regarded as being based on an intelligible
differentia. It was also observed that the objectives of
the said Act were to control rents and to prevent
unreasonable eviction and these objectives were
interrelated. It was obvious that if the trustees of public
religious trusts and public charities were to be given
freedom to charge the normal market rent then to make that
freedom effective it was necessary to arm the trustees with
the right to evict tenants for non-payment of such market
rent. The State Government, on the materials before it, had
come to the conclusion that the ’fair rent’ fixed under the
said Act was unjust in the case of such buildings and it was
necessary to permit the trustees of such buildings to
recover from their tenants reasonable market rent and, if
that were so, non-eviction when reasonable market rent was
not paid would be unreasonable. Relying upon these
observations, it was submitted that it was only the lessor
trust which was entitled to take proceedings dehors the said
Act against the lessee and not the lessee against the
sublessee. It was submitted that the whole rationale of the
finding that the said Section 29 and GO did not contravene
Article 14 was that these provisions were necessary in the
interest of the lessor trust and the lessee, therefore,
could not utilise these provisions against the sublessee.
6. In our view, the reasoning adopted in Kandaswamy
Chettiar case1 must be carried to its logical conclusion.
Public religious and charitable trusts are given freedom to
charge the normal market rent. To make that freedom
effective, it is necessary to arm the trustees with the
right to evict tenants for non-payment of such market rent.
Such eviction cannot in fact be obtained where the tenants
have created sub-tenants unless the sub-tenants are also
liable to eviction without the protection of the said Act.
The provisions, therefore, of the said Section 29 and GO
attach to the buildings owned by the religious and public
charitable trusts and the protection of the said Act is not
available both to lessees and sublessees thereof.
7. In this view of the matter, the appeal fails and is
dismissed with no order as to costs.
8. We have heard learned counsel for the parties. We
direct that the appellant shall not be evicted from the said
premises for a period of 6 months from today provided he
files an undertaking in this Court that he
1 (1985) 1 SCC 290
shall, on or before the expiry of six months, hand over to
the respondent vacant possession of the said premises. The
undertaking shall be filed within two weeks.
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