Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ASHOKA MARKETING LTD. AND ANR. ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PUNJAB NATIONAL BANK AND ORS. ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT07/08/1990
BENCH:
AGRAWAL, S.C. (J)
BENCH:
AGRAWAL, S.C. (J)
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (CJ)
RAY, B.C. (J)
KANIA, M.H.
SAIKIA, K.N. (J)
CITATION:
1991 AIR 855 1990 SCR (3) 649
1990 SCC (4) 406 JT 1990 (3) 417
1990 SCALE (2)200
ACT:
Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958: Sections 14, 22, 50 and
54-Tenant of ‘Public Premises’--Tenancy terminated or ex-
pires under Public Premises (Eviction of Unauthorised Occu-
pants) Act, 1971--Whether entitled to invoke the statutory
protection of Rent Control Act, 1958.
Public Premises (Eviction of Unauthorised Occupants)
Act, 1971.’ Sections 2(e), 4(0 and 7(3)--‘Public
Premises’--Whether includes premises belonging to Nationa-
lised banks--Tenant in such premises--Tenancy expires or is
terminated--Whether can invoke protection of Delhi Rent
Control Act, 1958.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants/petitioners were tenants in the premises
belonging to the respondent Banks/Life Insurance Corporation
of India. Their tenancy had expired or had been terminated
by the respondents and eviction proceedings initiated
against them under the provisions of the Public Premises
(Eviction of Unauthorised Occupants) Act, 1971. Writ peti-
tions under Article 226 were filled by the appellants in the
High Court challenging the orders of eviction passed against
them, which were dismissed; hence these appeals. The writ
petitioners moved this Court directly under Article 32 of
the Constitution against the notices of termination of
tenancy issued to them.
The Public Premises Act of 1971 was preceded by two
enactments the Government Premises (Eviction) Act 1950, and
the Public Premises (eviction of unauthorised occupants)
Act, 1958 which were declared unconstitutional by different
High Courts.
Jagu Singh v. M. Shaukat Ali, (58 Cal. W.N. 1066);
Satish Chander & Anr. v. Delhi Improvement Trust, AIR 1958
Punjab 1; Brigade Commander, Meerut Sub Area v. Ganga Pra-
sad, AIR 1956 All. 507; P.L. Mehar etc. v. D.R. Khanna,
etc., AIR 1971 Delhi 1 and Northern India Caterers Private
Ltd. v. State of Punjab & Anr., [1967] 3 SCR 399.
650
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This led to the enactment of the Public Premises Act in
1971. The validity of this act was upheld by this Court in
Hari Singh v. The Military Estate Officer, [1973] 1 SCR 515.
Before this Court, the contentions were advanced by the
parties mainly on two questions (i) whether the provisions
of the Public Premises Act were applicable to the Premises
belonging to a nationalised bank; and (ii) whether the
provisions of the Public Premises Act override the provi-
sions of the Delhi Rent Control Act.
In regard to the applicability of the Public Premises
act, it was inter alia contended that the premises belonging
to a nationalised bank or insurance company did not fall
within the ambit of the definition of ’Public Premises’
contained in Section 2(e) of the Public Premises Act for the
reason that the nationalised bank was not a company as
defined in Section 3 of the Companies Act, 1956 and it was
also not a corporation established by or under a Central
Act. On the other hand, it was contended that the respond-
ents being nationalised bank, was a corporation established
by a Central Act, viz., the Bank Nationalisation Act, and
the premises belonging to a nationalised bank were ’public
premises’ under section 2(e)(2)(ii) of the Public Premises
Act.
In regard to the second question, each side claimed that
the enactment relied upon by it was a special statute and
the other enactment was general, and also invoked the not
obstante clause contained in the enactment relied upon. In
this connection, it was argued on behalf of the respondents
that the Public Premises Act having been enacted by Parlia-
ment in exercise of legislative power under Article 246(1)
of the Constitution in respect of matters enumerated in the
Union List would ipso-facto override the provisions of the
Rent Control Act enacted in exercise of the legislative
powers under Article 246(4) in respect of matters enumerated
in the concurrent list.
Dismissing the appeals and the writ petition, this Court,
HELD: (1) The provisions of the Public Premises Act, to
the extent they cover premises failing within the ambit of
the Rent Control Act, override the provisions of the Rent
Control Act, and a person in unauthorised occupation of
public premises under Section 2(e) of the Act cannot invoke
the protection of the Rent Control Act. [694D-E]
(2) After the second world war there has been develop-
ment of a new pattern of public corporation in England as an
instrument of plan-
651
ning in the mixed economy. The general characteristics of
such a public corporation is that it is normally created by
a special statute; it has no shares and no share holders,
either private or public, and its share holder, in the
symbolic sense, is the nation represented through Government
and Parliament; and it has the legal status of a corporate
body with independent legal personality. There has been a
similar growth of this type of public corporation in other.
countries. This trend is also evident in our country. since
Independence and a number of such public corporations have
been constituted by Acts of Parliament. [668A-C]
(3) The expression ’Corporation’ in Section 2(e)(2)(ii)
of the Public Premises Act would include public corporations
of the new pattern constituted under the Central Acts where-
in the entire paid-up capital vests in the Central Govern-
ment. [670G]
S.S. Dhanoa v. Municipal Corporation, Delhi, [1981] 3
SCR 864, distinguished.
(4) In order to constitute a corporation it is not
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necessary that there should be shareholders or members and
that in the new pattern of public corporation that has
developed there are no shareholders or members. [671G]
Bank of New South Wales & Ors. v. The Common-wealth,
[1948] 76 CLR 1 and R.C. Cooper v. Union of India, [1970] 3
SCR 530, referred to.
Oriental Bank of Commerce v. Delhi Development Authori-
ty, [1985] 55 Company Cases 81, overruled.
(5) Provisions of the Banks Nationalisation Act show
that the nationalised Bank has been constituted as a dis-
tinct juristic person by the Act and it is owned by the
Central Government. They further indicate that the nationa-
lised bank has all the attributes of the new pattern of
public corporation. [667B]
(6) The object of the legislation in enlarging the
definition of ’public premises’ in Section 2(e) of the
Public Premises Act is to make available the machinery of
the Act for evicting unauthorised occupants not only from
the premises belonging to the Central Government but also
from premises belonging to Companies, Corporation and statu-
tory bodies in which the Central Government has a substan-
tial interest. [670D-E]
652
(7) Under Section 2(e)(2)(i) premises belonging to a
company incorporated under the Companies Act, 1956, in which
not less than fifty one percent of the paid-up capital is
held by the Central Government, are to be treated as public
enterprises. It could not be the intention of Parliament
that premises belonging to public corporations whose entire
paid-up capital vests in the Central Government and who are
the instrumentalities of State would be excluded from the
ambit of the definition of ’public premises’. [670E-G]
(8) Keeping in view the provisions of the Banks Nation-
alisation Act the nationalised bank is a corporation estab-
lished by a Central Act and it is owned and controlled by
the Central Government. The premises belonging to a nationa-
lised bank are public premises under Section 2(e)(2)(ii) of
the Public Premises Act. [671 H; 672A]
(9) There is no warrant for confining the scope of the
definition of ’public premises’ contained in section 2(e) to
premises used for residential purposes only and to exclude
premises used for commercial purposes from its ambit. [672D]
Hari Singh v. Military Estate Officer, [1973] 1 SCR 515,
referred to.
(10) No distinction can be made between premises used
for residential purposes and premises used for commercial
purposes in the matter of eviction of unauthorised occupants
of public premises and the consideration which necessitate
providing a speedy machinery for eviction of persons in
unauthorised occupation of public premises apply equally to
both the types of public premises. [673B-C]
(11) The definition of the expression ’unauthorised
occupation’ contained in Section 2(g) of the Public Premises
Act is in two parts. The second part of the definition is
inclusive in nature and expressly covers continuance in
occupation by any person of the public premises after the
authority (whether by way of grant or any other mode of
transfer) under which he was allowed to occupy the premises
has expired or has been determined for any reason whatsoev-
er. The words "whether by way of grant or any other mode of
transfer" in this part of the definition are wide in ampli-
tude and would cover a lease because lease is a mode of
transfer under the Transfer of Property Act. [673F; G-H;
674B]
Brigadier K.K. Verma v. Union of India, AIR 1954 Bom
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358, distinguished.
653
Lallu Yeshwant Singh v. Rao Jagdish Singh & Ors., [1968]
2 SCR 203, and Express Newspapers Pvt. Ltd. & Ors. v. Union
of India & Ors., [1985] Suppl. 3 SCR 302, referred to.
(12) It is true that there is no requirement in the
Public Premises Act that the Estate Officer must be a person
well versed in law. But, that, by itself, cannot be a ground
for excluding from the ambit of the said Act premises in
unauthorised occupation of persons who obtained possession
of the said premises under a lease when the Public Premises
Act and the Rules framed thereunder provide for a right of
appeal of the District Judge against an order of the Estate
Officer. which shows that the final order that is passed is
by a judicial officer. [675F-H]
Maganlal Chhagganlal (P) Ltd. v. Municipal Corporation
of Greater Bombay & Ors., [1975] 1 SCR 1, referred to.
(13) As regards rent control legislations enacted by the
State legislatures, the position is well settled that such
legislation fail within the ambit of entries 6, 7 and 13 of
List III of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution. [682E]
Indu Bhushan Bose v. Rama Sundari Devi & Anr., [1970] 1
SCR 443; V. Dhanpal Chettiar’s v. Yesodai Ammal, [1980] 1
SCR 334; Jai Singh Jairam Tyagi Etc. v. Mamanchand Ratilal
Agarwal & Ors., [1980] 3 SCR 224; Accountant and Secretari-
al Services Pvt. Ltd. & Anr. v. Union of India & Ors.,
[1988] 4 SCC 324, referred to.
(14) The Rent Control Act has been enacted by Parliament
in relation to the Union Territory of Delhi in exercise of
the legislative power conferred under Article 246(4) of the
Constitution which empowers Parliament to make laws with
respect to any matter for any part of the territory of India
not included in a State notwithstanding that such matter is
a matter enumerated in the State List. [682G]
(15) The Public Premises Act deals with Government
property as well as property belonging to other legal enti-
ties mentioned in clauses (2) and (3) of Section 2(e) of the
Public Premises Act. In so far as it relates to eviction of
unauthorised occupants from premises belonging to or taken
on lease or requisitioned by or on behalf of the Central
Government, the Public Premises Act would fail within entry
32 of List I being law with respect to a property of the
Union. The property belonging to the various legal entities
mentioned in clauses (2) and (3) of Section 2(e) of the
Public Premises Act cannot be regarded as property of
654
the Union and the Public Premises Act cannot be held to have
been enacted under entry 32 of List I in respect of the said
properties. In so far as it deals with a lessee or licensee
of premises other than premises belonging to the Central
Govt; the Public Premises Act has been enacted in exercising
the legislative power in respect of matters enumerated in
the concurrent list. [682H; 683A-C]
(16) Both the statutes, viz. the Public Premises Act and
the Rent Control Act, have been enacted by the same legisla-
ture, Parliament, in exercise of the legislative powers in
respect of the matters enumerated in the Concurrent List.
[684C]
Accountant and Secretarial Services Pvt. Ltd. v. Union of
India And Ors., [1988] 4 SCC 324; Smt. Saiyada Mossarrat v.
Hindustan Steel Ltd., [1989] 1 SCC 272 and L.S. Nair v.
Hindustan Steel Ltd., AIR 1980 MP. 106, referred to.
(17) The Rent Control Act makes a departure from the
general law regulating the relationship of landlord and
tenant contained in the Transfer of Property Act inasmuch as
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it makes provision for determination of standard rent, it
specifies the grounds on which a landlord can seek the
eviction of a tenant, it prescribes the forum for adjudica-
tion of disputes between landlords and tenants and the
procedure which has to be followed in such proceedings. The
Rent Control Act can, therefore, be said to be a special
statute regulating the relationship of landlord and tenant
in the Union Territory of Delhi. [686D-F]
(18) The Public Premises Act is also a special statute
relating to eviction of unauthorised occupants from public
premises. [689E]
Jain Ink Manufacturing Company v. Life Insurance Corpo-
ration of India & Anr., [1981] 1 SCR 498, referred to.
(19) Both the enactments, namely, the Rent Control Act
and the Public Premises Act, are special statutes in rela-
tion to the matters dealt with therein. Therefore, the
exception contained in the principle that a subsequent
general law cannot derogate from an earlier special law
cannot be invoked and in accordance with the principle that
the later laws abrogate earlier contrary laws, the Public
Premises Act must prevail over the Rent Control Act. [686H;
687A]
J.K. Cotton Spinning & Weaving Mills Co. Ltd. v. The
State of Uttar Pradesh, [1961] 3 SCR 185; U.P. State Elec-
tricity Board v. Hari
655
Shankar Jain, [1979] 1 SCR 355 and Life Insurance Corpora-
tion v. D.J. Bahadur, [1981] 1 SCR 1083, referred to.
(20) In the case of inconsistency between the provisions
of two enactments, both of which can be regarded as Special
in nature. the conflict has to be resolved by reference to
the purpose and policy underlying the two enactments and the
clear intendment conveyed by the language of the relevant
provisions therein. [688G]
Shri Ram Narain v. The Simla Banking and Industrial Co.
Ltd., [1956] SCR 603; Kumaon Motor Owners’ Union Ltd. v. The
State of Uttar Pradesh, [1966] 2 SCR 121 and Sarwan Singh v.
Kasturi Lal, [1977] 2 SCR 421, referred to.
(21) Keeping in view the object and purpose underlying
both the enactments viz., the Rent Control Act and the
Public Premises Act, the provisions of the Public Premises
have to be construed as overriding the provisions contained
in the Rent Control Act. [690H]
The Parliament was aware of the non obstante clauses
contained in Section 14 and 22 and the provisions contained
in Sections 50 and 54 of the Rent Control Act when it enact-
ed the Public Premises Act containing a specific provision
in Section 15 barring jurisdiction of all courts (which
would include the Rent Controller under the Rent Control
Act). This indicates that Parliament intended that the
provisions of the Public Premises Act would prevail over the
provisions of the Rent Control Act inspite of the above
mentioned provisions contained in the Rent Control Act.
[691A-B]
(23) The scope of the provisions of the Public Premises
Act cannot be cut down on the basis of an apprehension that
the corporations may be induced to earn profits by purchas-
ing property in possession of tenants at a low price and
after buying such property evict the tenants after terminat-
ing their tenancy and thereafter sell the said property at a
much higher value. Every activity of a public authority
especially in the background of the assumption on which such
authority enjoys immunity from the rigours of the Rent Act,
must be informed by reason and guided by the public inter-
est. [693F; E-G]
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M/s Dwarkadas Marfatia and Sons v. Board of Trustees of
the Port of Bombay, [1989] 3 SCC 293, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2368 of
1986 Etc.
656
From the Judgment and Order dated 30.5.1986 of the Delhi
High Court in CW No. 1295 of 1986.
K.K. Venugopal, A.K. Ganguli, Yogeshwar Prasad, P.R.
Seetharaman, S.K. Gupta and A.K. Srivastava for the Appel-
lants.
Soli J. Sorabjee, Attorney General, Kapil Sibbal, Addi-
tional Solicitor General. G.L. Sanghi, S. Ganesh, Mrs.
Sushma Suri, EMS Anam, Atul Namda. Aman Vachher, S.K. Mehta,
Kailash Vasdev and S.R. Srivastava for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
S.C. AGRAWAL, J. The common question which arises for
consideration in these appeals, by special leave, and the
writ petition filed under Article 32 of the Constitution is,
whether a person who was inducted as a tenant in premises,
which are public premises for the purpose of the Public
Premises (Eviction of Unauthorised Occupants) Act, 1971
(hereinafter referred to as the ’Public Premises Act’), and
whose tenancy has expired or has been terminated, can be
evicted from the said premises as being a person in unautho-
rised-occupation of the premises under the provisions of the
Public Premises Act and whether such a person can invoke the
protection of the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 (hereinafter
referred to as the ’Rent Control Act’). In short, the ques-
tion is, whether the provisions of the Public Premises Act
would override the provisions of the Rent Control Act in
relation to premises which fall within the ambit of both the
enactments.
Civil Appeals Nos. 2368 and 2369 of 1986 relate to the
premises which are part of a building situated at 5 Parlia-
ment Street, New Delhi. The said building originally be-
longed to Punjab National Bank Ltd., a banking company.
Ashoka Marketing Ltd. (Appellate No. 1 in Civil Appeal No.
2368 of 1986) and M/s Sahu Jain Services Ltd. (Appellant No.
1 in Civil Appeal No. 2369 of 1986) were tenants of premises
located in the said building since July 1st, 1958. As a
result of the enactment of the Banking Companies (Acquisi-
tion and Transfer of Undertakings) Act. 1970 (hereinafter
referred to as the ’Banks Nationalisation Act’), the under-
taking of the Punjab National Bank Ltd., was transferred and
vested in Punjab National Bank a body corporate constituted
under the provisions of the said Act and the aforesaid
appellants became the tenants of Punjab National Bank. By
notices dated May 18, 1971 issued under Section 106 of the
Transfer of Property Act, the tenancies of both the appel-
lants were terminated by
657
Punjab National Bank, with effect from, November, 30, 1971.
Thereafter, the said Bank initiated proceedings under the
Rent Control Act against both the appellants. In those
proceedings an objection was raised by the said appellants
that proceedings for eviction under the Rent Control Act
were not maintainable in view of the provisions contained in
the Public Premises Act. During the pendency of the said
proceedings under the Rent Control Act, proceedings were
initiated by the Estate Officer against the appellants under
the provisions of the Public Premises Act and while the said
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proceedings under Public Premises Act were pending the
earlier proceedings initiated under the Rent Control Act
were dismissed by the Additional Rent Controller, Delhi, by
orders dated August 6, 1979. In the proceedings, under the
Public Premises Act, the Estate Officer passed orders for
eviction against the appellants and the appeals filed by the
appellants against the said orders of the Estate Officer
were dismissed by the Additional District Judge. Delhi. The
appellants filed writ petitions under Article 226 of the
Constitution, in the Delhi High Court. The said writ peti-
tions were dismissed by the High Court by orders dated May
30, 1986. Aggrieved by the said orders of the High Court,
the appellants have filed these appeals after obtaining
special leave to appeal.
Civil Appeal No. 3725 of 1986 relates to an office room
in the Allahabad Bank Building situated at 17, Parliament
Street, New Delhi. The said building belongs to Allahabad
Bank, a body corporate constituted under the provisions of
the Banks Nationalisation Act. The said premises were let
out to Pt. K.B. Parsai, the appellant in this appeal, for a
period of three years with effect from, February 1, 1982.
After the expiry of the said period eviction proceedings
under the provisions of the Public Premises Act were initi-
ated to evict the appellant and in those proceedings the
Estate Officer passed an order dated March 29, 1986. The
appellant filed a writ petition under Article 226 of the
Constitution, wherein he challenged the validity of the
order passed by the Estate Officer. The said writ petition
was dismissed by the Delhi High Court by order dated August
7, 1986. The appellant has filed this appeal against the
said decision of the Delhi High Court after obtaining Spe-
cial Leave to Appeal.
Writ Petition No. 864 of 1985, relates to premises in
the building located at 10, Darya Ganj, New Delhi. The said
building originally belonged to Bharat Insurance Company
Limited, as Insurance Company which was carrying on life
insurance business. M/s Bennett Coleman & Co. Ltd., (peti-
tioner No. 1 in the writ petition) was in occupation of a
part of the said property as a tenant under M/s Bharat
658
Insurance Co. Ltd. since 1948. The life insurance business
was nationalised under the Life Insurance Corporation Act,
1956 whereby the Life Insurance Corporation was established
and the life insurance business carried on by the various
insurance companies, including M/s Bharat Insurance Company
Ltd., was nationalised and vested in the Life Insurance
Corporation. As a result petitioner No. 1 became a tenant of
the Life Insurance Corporation. The Life Insurance Corpora-
tion gave a notice under Section 106 of the Transfer of
Property Act terminating a tenancy of petitioner No. 1 with
effect from, August 31, 1953 and thereafter proceedings for
eviction were initiated against petitioner No. 1 under the
provisions of the Public Premises Act and notices dated
December 15, 1984 were issued by the Estate Officer under
Section 4(1) and Section 7(3) of the Public Premises Act.
Feeling aggrieved by these notices the petitioners have
filed the writ petition.
Before we proceed to deal with the submissions of the
learned counsel for the appellants in the appeals and for
the petitioners in the writ petition (hereinafter referred
to as ’the petitioners’) it would be relevant to advert to
the legislative history of Public Premises Act.
The Public Premises Act was preceded by two such enact-
ments. The first enactments was the Government Premises
(Eviction) Act, 1950 (hereinafter referred to as ’the 1950
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Act’) which was enacted by Parliament to provide for the
eviction of certain persons from Government premises and for
certain matters connected therewith. It was confined, in its
application, to premises (a building or a part of a build-
ing) belonging to or taken on lease or requisitioned by the
Central Government and it empowered the competent authority
tO evict a person in unauthorised occupation of such prem-
ises after issuing a notice to such person. The 1950 Act did
not define the expression "unauthorised occupation" and it
also did not prescribe the procedure to be followed by the
competent authority before passing the order of eviction.
There was a provision for appeal to the Central Government
against the order of the competent authority. The 1950 Act
was declared as unconstitutional by the Calcutta High Court
(in Jagu Singh v. M. Shaukat Ali, 58 Cal. WN 1066) and by
the Punjab High Court (in Satish Chander & Anr. v. Delhi Im-
provement Trust, Etc., AIR 1958 Punjab 1) on the ground that
it imposed unreasonable restriction on the fight of the
citizens to acquire, hold and dispose of property guaranteed
under Article 19(1)(f) of the Constitution, and by the
Allahabad High Court (in Brigade Commander, Meerut Sub Area
v. Ganga Prasad, AIR 1956 All. 507) on the ground that it
was violative
659
of the rights to equality guaranteed under Article 14 of the
Constitution.
Thereupon Parliament enacted the Public Premises (Evic-
tion of Unauthorised Occupants) Act, 1958 (hereinafter
referred to as ’the 1958 Act’). In the 1958 Act, the defini-
tion of Public Premises was enlarged to include, in relation
to the Union Territory of Delhi, premises belonging to
Municipal Corporation of Delhi, or any municipal committee
or notified area committee and premises belonging to Delhi
Development Authority. In the 1958 Act, the expression
"unauthorised occupation" was defined. It also laid down the
procedure to be followed by the Estate Officer for evicting
a person in unauthorised occupation of public premises and
it made provision for filing an appeal against every order
of the Estate Officer before the District Judge or such
other Judicial Officer in that district of not less than ten
years standing as the District Judge may designate in that
behalf. In Northern India Caterers Private Limited v. The
State of Punjab & Anr., [1967] 3 SCR 399 Section 5 of the
Punjab Public Premises and Land (Eviction and Rent Recovery)
Act, 1959 was held to be void by this Court on the ground
that the said provision conferred an additional remedy over
and above the remedy by way of suit and that by providing
two alternative remedies to the Government and in leaving it
to the unguided discretion of the Collector to resort to one
or the other and to pick and choose some of those in occupa-
tion of public properties and premises for the application
of the more drastic procedure under Section 5, the said
provision was violative of Article 14 of the Constitution.
The provisions contained in the Punjab Act were similar to
those contained in the 1958 Act. Keeping in view the deci-
sion of this Court in Northern India Caterers Private Limit-
ed’s case (supra), Parliament enacted Public Premises
(Eviction of Unauthorised Occupants) Amendment Act, 1968
whereby the 1958 Act was amended and Section 10E was intro-
duced and a bar was created to the jurisdiction of civil
court to entertain any suit or proceeding in respect of
eviction of any person in unauthorised occupation of any
public premises or the recovery of the arrears of the rent
or damages payable under the provisions of the 1958 Act. The
Delhi High Court (in P.L. Mehra etc. v. D.R. Khanna, etc.,
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AIR 1971 Delhi 1)held that whole of the 1958 Act was void
under Article 15(2) being violative of the provisions of
Article 14 of the Constitution and the amendment of 1968 was
ineffective-
This led to the enactment of the Public Premises Act by
Parliament in 1971. It was brought into effect from 16th
September, 1958,
660
the date on which the 1958 Act came into force. The provi-
sions of the Public Premises Act are similar to those con-
tained in the 1958 Act. The definition of ’public premises’
contained in Section 2(e) of the Public Premises Act has
been widened so as to include premises belonging to or taken
on lease by or on behalf of a company, as defined in Section
3 of the Companies Act, 1956, in which not less than fifty
one per cent of the paid-up capital is held by the Central
Government as well as premises belonging to or taken on
lease by or on behalf of any corporation (not being a compa-
ny, as defined in Section 3 of the Companies Act in 1956, or
a local authority) established by or under a Central Act and
owned and controlled by the Central Government. It contains
certain additional provisions, providing for offences and
penalties (Section 11), liability of heirs and representa-
tives (Section 13) recovery of rent etc. as an arrear of
land revenue (Section 14) and bar of jurisdiction of Courts
(Section 15). The validity of the Public Premises Act was
upheld by this Court in Hari Singh & Ors. v. The Military
Estate Officer & Anr., [1973] 1 SCR 5 15.
The Public Premises Act was amended in 1980 by the
Public Premises (Eviction of Unauthorised Occupants) Amend-
ment Act, 1980, whereby the definition of ’public premises’
in Section 2(e) was amended to include premises belonging to
or taken on lease by or on behalf of certain autonomous and
statutory organisations, viz., any University established or
incorporated by any Central Act, any Institute incorporated
by the Institutes of Technology Act, 1961, any Board of
Trustees constituted under the major Port Trusts Act, 1963,
and the Bhakra Management Board and as well as premises
belonging to or taken on lease by any Company which is
subsidiary of a Company as defined in Section 3 of the
Companies Act, 1956 in which not less than fifty one per
cent of the paid-up capital is held by the Central Govern-
ment. By the said Amending Act of 1980, the total period
taken in eviction proceedings was also sought to be cur-
tailed by reducing the period for showing cause against
notice of eviction, the period within which an unauthorised
occupant should vacate the premises after eviction order has
been passed and the period for filing an appeal against the
order of an Estate Officer. By the said Amending Act of 1980
provisions were also made, by inserting Sections 5A, 5B and
5C, to deal with the squatting or spreading of goods on or
against or in front of any public premises and removal of
unauthorised constructions or encroachments on public prem-
ises. The Public Premises Act was further amended in 1984 by
the Public Premises (Eviction of Unauthorised Occupants)
Amendment Act, 1984 whereby certain further amendments were
made to provide for increased penalties and
661
making the offences under the Act cognisable and to enable
the Estate Officers to exercise their powers under the Act
effectively.
As stated in the preamble, the Public Premises Act has
been enacted to provide for the eviction of unauthorised
occupants from public premises and, for certain incidental
matters. In Section 2, various expressions have been de-
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fined. The definitions of the following expressions which
are of relevance are reproduced as under:
"(c) "Premises" means any land or any building or part of a
building and includes--
(i) the garden, grounds and out houses. if any, appertaining
to such building or part of a building, and
(ii) any fitting affixed to such building or part of a
building for the more beneficial enjoyment thereof;"
"(e) "Public Premises" means--
(1) any premises belonging to, or taken on lease or requisi-
tioned by, or on behalf of, the Central Government, and
includes any such premises which have been placed by that
Government, whether before or after the commencement of the
Public Premises (Eviction of Unauthorised Occupants) Amend-
ment act, 1980 under the control of Secretariat of either
House of Parliament for providing residential accommodation
to any member of the staff of that Secretariat;
(2) any premises belonging to, or taken on lease by, or on
behalf of,--
(i) any company as defined in Section 3 of the Companies
Act, 1956 (1 of 1956) in which not less than fifty one per
cent of the paid-up share capital is held by the Central
Government or any Company which is a subsidiary (within the
meaning of the Act) of the first mentioned company,
(ii) any corporation (not being a company as defined in
Section 3 of the Companies Act, 1956 ( 1 of 1956), or a
local authority) established by or under a Central Act and
owned or controlled by the Central Government,
662
(iii) any University established or incorporated by any
Central Act,
(iv) any Institute incorporated by the Institutes of Tech-
nology Act, 1961 (59 of 1961);
(v) any Board of Trustees constituted under the Major Port
Trusts Act, 1963 (38 of 1963);
(vi) the Bhakra Management Board constituted under Section
79 of the Punjab Recoganisation Act, 1966 (31 of 1966) and
that Board as and when renamed as the Bhakra-Beas Management
Board under Sub-section (6) of Section 80 of the Act; and
(3) in relation to the Union Territory of Delhi--
(i) any premises belonging to the Municipal Corporation of
Delhi, or any municipal committee or notified area committee
and
(ii) any premises belonging to the Delhi Development Author-
ity, whether such premises are in the possession of, or
leased out by the said Authority."
"(g) "Unauthorised Occupation", in relation to any public
premises, means the occupation by any person of the public
premises without authority for such occupation, and includes
the continuance by any person of the public premises after
the authority (whether by way of grant or any other mode of
transfer) under which he was allowed to occupy the premises
has expired or has been expired for any reason whatsoever."
Section 3 makes provision for appointment by Central Govern-
ment of gazetted officer of Government or officers of equal
rank of the statutory authority as Estate Officers. Section
4 relates to issue of show cause against order of eviction
and provides as under:
"(1) If the Estate Officer is of opinion that any persons
are in unauthorised occupation of any public premises and
that they should be evicted, the Estate Officer shall issue
in the manner hereinafter provided a notice in writing
calling
663
upon all persons concerned to show cause why an order of
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eviction should not be made.
(2) The notice shall--
(a) specify the grounds on which the order of eviction is
proposed to be made; and
(b) require all persons concerned, that is to say, all
persons who are, or may be, in occupation of, or claim
interest in, the public premises ,--
(i) to show cause, if any, against the proposed order on or
before such date as is specified in the notice, being a date
not earlier than seven days from the date of issue thereof;
and
(ii) to appear before the Estate Officer on the date speci-
fied in the notice alongwith the evidence which they intend
to produce in support of the cause shown, and also for
personal hearing, if such hearing is desired.
(3) The Estate Officer shall cause the notice to be served
by having it affixed on the outer door or some other con-
spicuous part of the public premises and in such other
manner as may be prescribed, whereupon the notice shall be
deemed to have been duly given to all persons concerned.
(4) Where the Estate Officer knows or has reasons to believe
that any persons are in occupation of the public premises,
then, without prejudice to the provisions of subsection (3),
he shall cause a copy of the notice to be served on every
such person by post or by delivering or tendering it to that
person or in such other manner as may be prescribed."
Section 5 relates to eviction of unauthorised occupants and
provides as under’
"(1) If, after considering the cause, if any, shown by any
person in pursuance of a notice under Section 4 and any
evidence produced by him in support of the same and after
personal hearing, if any, given under clause (b) of sub-
664
section (2) of Section 4, the estate officer is satisfied
that occupation of public premises is unauthorised, the
estate officer may make an order of eviction, for reasons to
be recorded therein, directing that the public premises
shall be vacated on such date as may be specified in the
order, by all persons who may be in occupation thereof or
any part thereof, and cause a copy of the order to be af-
fixed on the outer door or some other conspicuous part of
the public premises.
(2) If any person refuses or fails to comply with the order
of eviction on or before the date specified in the said
order or within fifteen days of the date of its publication
under sub-section (1) whichever is later, the estate officer
of any other officer duly authorised by the estate officer
in this behalf may after the date so specified or after the
expiry of the period aforesaid, whichever is later, evict
that person from, and take possession of the public premises
and may, for that purpose, use such force as may be neces-
sary."
Section 5A provides for removal of unauthorised construc-
tions/structures or fixtures, cattle or other animal from
public premises. Section 5B deals with demolition of unau-
thorised constructions. Section 5C empowers the Estate
Officer to seal unauthorised constructions. Section 6 pro-
vides for disposal of property left on public premises by
unauthorised occupants. Section 7 empowers the Estate Offi-
cer to require payment of rent or damages on account of use
and occupation of public premises alongwith interest by the
person found in unauthorised occupation. Section 8 lays down
that an Estate Officer shall, for the purpose of holding any
inquiry under the Act, have the same powers as are vested in
a civil court under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, when
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trying to suit in respect of certain matters, viz. summoning
and enforcing the attendance of any person and examining him
on oath, requiring discovery and production of documents;
and any other matter which may be prescribed. Section 9
provides for an appeal from every order of the Estate Offi-
cer in respect of any public premises passed under Sections
5, 5B, 5C and 7 to an appellate officer who shall be a
district judge of the district in which the public premises
are situated or such other judicial officer in the district
of not less than ten years’ standing as the district judge
may designate in this behalf. It also prescribes the period
of limitation for filing such appeals and also lays down
that the appeal shall be disposed of by the appellate offi-
cer as expeditiously as possible. Sections 10 attaches
finality to the orders
665
made by an Estate Officer or appellate officer and provides
that the said orders shall not be called in questions in any
original suit application or execution proceeding and no
injunction shall be granted by any court or other authority
in respect of any action taken or to be taken in pursuance
of any power conferred by or under the Act. Section 11
provides for offences and penalties and Section 11A lays
down mat the offences under Section 11 would be treated as
cognizable offences under the Code of Criminal Procedure,
1973. Section 15 relates to bar of jurisdiction and it
provides as under:
"No court shall have jurisdiction to entertain any suit or
proceeding in respect of--
(a) the eviction of any person who is in unauthorised occu-
pation of any such public premises, or
(b) the removal of any building, structure of fixture or
goods, cattle or other animal from any public premises under
Section 5-A, or
(C) the demolition of any building or other structure made,
or ordered to be made, under Section 5B, or
(cc) the sealing of any erection or work or of any public
premises under Section 5-C,
(d) the arrears of rent payable under sub-section (1) of
Section 7 or damages payable under sub-section (2), or
interest payable under sub-section (2-A) of that section,
(e) the recovery of--
(i) costs of removal of any building, structure or fixture
or g.gods. cattle or other animal under Section 5-A, or
(ii) expenses of demolition under Section 5-B, or
(iii) costs awarded to the Central Government or statutory
authority under sub-section (5) of Section 9, or
(iv) any portion of such rent, damages, cost of removal,
expenses of demolition or costs awarded to the Central
Government or the statutory authority."
666
In exercise of the powers conferred by Section 18 of the
Public Premises Act, the Central Government has made the
Public Premises (Eviction of Unauthorised Occupants) Rule,
1971 (hereinafter referred to as the ’Public Premises
Rules’). Rule 5 of said Rules relates to holding of in-
quiries and Rule 9 relates to procedure in appeals.
We will first deal with the contentions urged by the
learned counsel for the petitioners with regard to the scope
of the definition of the expression ’Public Premises’ con-
tained in Section 2(e) and ’unauthorised occupation’, con-
tained in Section 2(g) of the Public Premises Act.
As mentioned earlier, the appeals relate to premises
belonging to nationalised Banks, viz. Punjab National Bank
and Allahabad Bank, constituted under the provisions of the
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Banks Nationalisation Act. It has been urged by Shri Yogesh-
wer Prasad, that the premises belonging to a nationalised
bank do not fall within the ambit of the definition of
’Public Premises’ contained in Section 2(e) of the Public
Premises Act, for the reason that nationalised bank is not a
company as defined in Section 3 of the Companies Act, 1956
and it is also not a corporation established by or under a
Central Act. The submission of the learned counsel for the
respondent banks is that the nationalised bank is a corpora-
tion established by a Central Act, viz. the Banks Nationali-
sation Act, and the premises belonging to a nationalised
bank are ’public premises’ under Section 2(e)(2)(ii) of the
Public Premises Act. The question which, therefore, requires
to be considered is whether a nationalised bank is a corpo-
ration established by or under a Central Act and is owned or
controlled by the Central Government.
The nationalised banks have been established under the
Banks Nationalisation Act, wherein the nationalised banks
have been described as ’corresponding new bank’. In sub-
section (i) of Section 3 of the Banks Nationalisation Act,
it has been provided that on the commencement of the said
Act, there shall be constituted such corresponding new banks
as are specified in the First Schedule. In subsection (2) of
Section 3, it is laid down that the paid-up capital of every
corresponding new bank constituted under sub-section (1)
shall, until any provision is made in this behalf in any
scheme made under Section 9, be equal to the paid-up capital
of the existing bank in relation to which it is the corre-
sponding new bank. Sub-section(3) of Section 3 provides that
the entire capital of the new bank shall stand vested in,
and allotted to the Central Government. Sub-section (4) of
Section 3 lays down that every corresponding new bank shall
be a body corpo-
667
rate with perpetual succession and a common seal with power,
subject to the provisions of the said Act, to acquire, hold
and dispose of property, and to contract, and may sue and be
sued in its name. From the aforesaid provisions contained in
Section 3 of the Banks Nationalisation act it is evident
that the nationalised banks have been established under the
provisions of the said Act and the same are distinct juris-
tic persons with perpetual succession and the power to
acquire, hold and dispose of property and to contract and
having the right to sue and be sued in their own name and
further that the entire capital of the said banks is vested
in the Central Government, meaning thereby, that the said
banks are owned by the Central Government.
Shri Yogeshwer Prasad has pointed out that, in view of
Section 3(4) of the Banks Nationalisation Act, the nationa-
lised bank is a body corporate and not a corporation and
that there is a distinction between a body corporate and a
corporation inasmuch as a body corporate includes bodies,
such as companies, co-operative societies, etc., which are
not corporations. Reliance has been placed in this regard on
the decision of Delhi High Court in Oriental Bank of Com-
merce and Another v. Delhi Development Authority and Anoth-
er, [1985] 55 Company Cases 81. We find no substance in this
contention.
In English law a corporation has been defined as "a body
of persons or an office which is recognised by the law has
having a personality which is distinct from the separate
personalities of the members of the body or the personality
of the individual holder for the time being of the office in
question." (See Halsbury’s Laws of England, Fourth Edition,
Volume 9, Para 1201). Generally speaking, corporations are
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of two kinds; corporation aggregate and corporation sole. A
corporation aggregate has been described as an incorporated
group of co-existing persons and a corporation sole as an
incorporated series of successive persons, (Salmond on
Jurisprudence, 12th Edition P 308. The distinctive feature
of a corporation are that it has the capacity of continuous
existence and succession, notwithstanding changes in its
membership and it possesses the capacity of taking, holding
and conveying property, entering into contracts. suing and
being sued, and exercising such other powers and priviledges
conferred on it by law of its creation just as a natural
person may (See S.S. Dhanoa v. Municipal Corporation, Delhi
& Ors., [1981] 3 SCR 864. Corporations aggregate may be
public or private. A public corporation is a corporation
formed for a public purpose e.g. local government authori-
ties, and it is usually incorporated by a public general Act
of Parliament. A private corporation is a corporation formed
for profit
668
e.g. a limited company, and it is usually incorporated under
a statutory enactment. After the second world war there has
been development of a new pattern of public corporations in
England as an instrument of planning in the mixed economy.
The general characteristics of such a public corporation is
that it is normally created by a special statute; it has no
shares and no shareholders either private or public, and its
shareholder, in the symbolic sense, is the nation represent-
ed through Government and Parliament; the responsibility of
the public corporation is to the Government, represented by
the competent Minister and through the Minister to Parlia-
ment; the administration of the public corporation is en-
tirely in the hands of a board which is appointed by the
competent Minister; and it has the legal status of a corpo-
rate body with independent legal personality. (See W. Fried-
man: The New Public Corporations and the Law [1947] 12 Mod.
LR 234-236.) There is a similar growth of this type of
public corporation in other countries. This trend is also
evident in our country since independence and a number of
such public corporations have been constituted by Acts of
Parliament.
The distinction between such a public corporation and a
corporation generally known in law has been explained in the
following observations of Denning L.J., as he then was:--
"The Transport Act, 1947, brings into being the British
Transport Commission, which is a statutory corporation of a
kind comparatively new to English law. It has many of the
qualities which belong to corporations of other kinds to
which we have been accustomed. It has, for instance, defined
powers which it cannot exceed; and it is directed by a group
of men whose duty it is to see that those powers are proper-
ly used. It may own property, carry on business, borrow and
lend money, just as any other corporation may do, so long as
it keeps within the bounds which Parliament has set. But the
significant difference in this corporation is that there are
no shareholders to subscribe the capital or to have any
voice in its affairs. The money which the Corporation needs
is not raised by the issue of shares but by borrowings and
its borrowing is not served by debentures; but is guaranteed
by the Treasury. If it cannot repay, the loss falls on the
Consolidated Fund of the United Kingdom; that is to say, on
the taxpayer. There are no shareholders to elect the direc-
tors or to fix their remuneration. There are no profits to
be made or distributed." (Tamfin v. Hannaford, [1950] 1 KB
18).
669
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Reference has already been made to the provisions of the
Banks Nationalisation Act which show that the nationalised
bank has been constituted as a distinct juristic person by
the Act and it is owned by the Central Government. There are
other provisions in the Banks Nationalisation Act which show
that the general superintendence, direction and management
of the affairs of the business of the bank is vested in a
Board of Directors constituted by the Central Government and
the Central Government has the power to remove a person from
the membership of the Board of Directors (Section 7(2) &
7(3) and in the discharge of its functions the Bank is to be
guided by such directions in regard to matters of policy
involving public interest as the Central Government may,
after consultation with the Governor of the Reserve Bank,
give (Section 8). This indicates that the nationalised bank
has all the attributes of the new pattern of public corpora-
tion.
Merely because the expression ’body corporate’ has-been
used in relation to the nationalised banks in Section 3(4)
of the Banks Nationalisation Act and the expression ’corpo-
ration’ has not been used, does not mean that the nationa-
lised bank is not a corporation. The expression ’body corpo-
rate’ is used in legal parlance to mean a ’public or private
corporation’ (Black’s Law Dictionary p. 159).
Shri Yogeshwer Prasad has urged that in order to consti-
tute a corporation there must exist persons, i.e. members,
composing it, and that this element is missing in the natio-
nalised banks inasmuch as the Banks Natiolisation Act does
not provide for any membership to these banks. This conten-
tion is without any merit because, as noticed earlier, in
the new pattern of public corporations which have developed,
there are no shares and no shareholders, either public or
private, and its shareholder, in the symbolic sense, is the
nation represented through Government and Parliament. A
similar contention was raised before the High Court of
Australia in the Bank of New South Wales & Ors. v. The
Commonwealth, [1948] 76 C.L.R. 19 in relation to the Common-
wealth Bank established as a body corporate by the Common-
wealth Bank Act, 1945. While rejecting this contention,
Latham C.J. has observed:
"The Commonwealth Parliament has declared that the bank is a
corporation and the Court must on this, as on many previous
occasions, accept that the bank (though it has no corpora-
tors) exists as a new kind of juristic person." (p. 227)
670
Similarly Dixon J. has observed:
"Although the Commonwealth Bank is declared to be a body
corporate there are no corporators. I see no reason to doubt
the constitutional power of the Federal Parliament, for a
purpose within its competence, to create a juristic person
without identifying an individual or a group of natural
persons with it, as the living constituent or constituents
of the corporation. In other legal systems an abstraction or
even an inanimate physical thing has been made an artificial
person as the object of rights and duties." (p. 36 1)
It may also be mentioned that in R.C. Cooper v. Union of
India, [1970] 3 SCR 530 this Court, while referring to
nationalised banks constituted under the provisions of the
Banking Companies (Acquisition and Transfer of Undertakings)
Ordinance, 1969, has treated the nationalised banks as
corporations.
While construing the expression ’corporation’ in Section
2(e) (2)(ii) of the Public Premises Act it cannot be ignored
that the object of the legislation in enlarging the defini-
tion of ’public premises’ in Section 2(e) is to make avail-
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able the machinery of the Act for evicting unauthorised
occupants not only from the premises belonging to the Cen-
tral Government but also from premises belonging to Compa-
nies, Corporations and statutory bodies in which the Central
Government has a substantial interest. Under Section
2(e)(2)(i) premises belonging to a company incorporated
under the Companies Act, 1956, in which not less than fifty
one per cent of the paid-up capital is held by the Central
Government, are to be treated as public premises. It could
not be the intention of Parliament that premises belonging
to public corporations whose entire paid-up capital vests in
the Central Government and who are the instrumentalities of
State would be excluded from the ambit of the definition of
’public premises’. In our opinion,. therefore, the expres-
sion ’corporation’ in Section 2(e)(2)(ii) of the Public
Premises Act would include public corporations of the new
pattern constituted under the Central Acts wherein the
entire paid-up capital vests in the Central Government.
Shri Yogeshwere Prasad has placed reliance on the deci-
sion of this Court in S.S. Dhanoa’s case (supra) wherein
this Court has considered the question whether the Co-opera-
tive Store Ltd., a cooperative society registered under the
Bombay Co-operative Societies
671
Act, 1925 is a corporation established by or under a Cen-
tral, Provincial or State Act, for the purposes of clause
Twelfth of Section 21 of the Indian Penal Code. This Court
has observed that a corporation established by or under an
Act of legislature could only mean a body corporate which
owes its existence and not merely its corporate status to
the Act and a distinction has been drawn between a corpora-
tion established by or under an Act and a body incorporated
under an Act. It has been held that the Co-operative Store
Ltd., which is a society registered under the Bombay Co-
operative Societies Act, 1925, is not a statutory body
because it is not created by a statute and that it is a body
created by an act of a group of individuals in accordance
with the provisions of a Statute. This decision does not
lend any assistance to the contention of Shri Yogeshwer
Prasad.
In Oriental Bank of Commerce’s case (Supra) the over-
ruled question for consideration was, whether the Chairman
of a nationalised bank is a public servant and sanction
under Section 197 of Code of Criminal Procedure was neces-
sary to prosecute him. M.L. Jain, J. has held that the
nationalised bank is a body corporate and not a corporation
within the meaning of clause Twelfth of Section 21 I.P.C.
and, therefore, the Chairman of the nationalised bank is not
a public servant under Section 21 I.P.C. The learned Judge
has further held that even if the nationalised bank is a
corporation, the Chairman of the said bank is not in the
service or pay of the bank and further (in the facts of the
case) it could not be said that the Chairman was acting or
purporting to act in the discharge of official duty. Sachar,
J. did not consider it necessary to deal with the question,
as to whether the nationalised bank is a corporation because
he was of the view that Section 197 Cr. P.C. was not at-
tracted. For the reasons mentioned earlier, the judgment of
Jian, J. insofar as it draws a distinction between a ’body
corporate’ and a ’corporation’ and laws down that the natio-
nalised bank, though a ’body corporate’ is not a corpora-
tion, cannot be upheld. The other reason given by Jain, J.
is that the nationalised bank is merely a personified insti-
tution having no members and is, therefore, not a corpora-
tion. This view also cannot be sustained. We have already
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pointed out that in order to constitute a corporation it is
not necessary that there should be shareholders or members
and that in the new pattern of public corporation that has
developed there are no shareholders or members.
Keeping in view the provisions of the Banks Nationalisa-
tion Act we are of the opinion that the nationalised bank is
a corporation established by a Central Act and it is owned
and controlled by the
672
Central Government. The premises belonging to a nationalised
bank are public premises under Section 2(e)(2)(ii) of the
Public Premises Act. We are, therefore, unable to accept the
contention of Shri Yogeshwar Prasad that premises belonging
to a nationalised bank do not fall within the ambit of the
definition of ’public premises’ contained in Section 2(e) of
the Public Premises Act.
Shri Yogeshwer Prasad has also urged that ’public prem-
ises’ as defined in Section 2(e) of the Public Premises Act,
must be confined to premises let out for residential pur-
poses only and should not cover premises let out for commer-
cial purposes and that if premises let out for commercial
purposes are included, Section 2(e) would be rendered uncon-
stitutional as being violative of the provisions of Articles
14, 19(1)(g) and 21 read with Articles 39 and 41 of the
Constitution. The submission of Shri Yogeshwer Prasad is
that a construction which would sustain the constitutionali-
ty of the provisions of Section 2(e) should be preferred
over a construction which would render them constitutional.
We find no force in this contention.
There is no warrant for confining the scope of the
definition of ’public premises’ contained in Section 2(e) to
premises used for residential purposes only and to excluded
premises used for commercial purposes from its ambit. In
Hari Singh v. Military Estate Officer, (Supra) a similar
contention was advanced and it was argued that the expres-
sion ’premises’ in Public Premises Act would not apply to
agricultural land. This Court rejected that contention with
the observation:
"The word ’premises’ is defined to mean any land. Any land
will include agricultural land. There is nothing in the Act
to exclude the applicability of the Act to agricultural
land."
We are also unable to hold that the inclusion of prem-
ises used for commercial purposes within the ambit of the
definition of ’public premises’, would render the Public
Premises Act as violative.of the right to equality guaran-
teed under Article 14 of the Constitution or right to free-
dom to carry on any occupation, trade or business guaranteed
under Article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution or the right to
liberty guaranteed under Article 21 of the Constitution. It
is difficult to appreciate how a person in unauthorised
occupation of public premises used for commercial purposes,
can invoke the Directive Principles under Article 39 and 41
of the Constitution. As indicated in the
673
statement of Objects and Reasons the Public Premises Act has
been enacted to provide for a speedy machinery for the
eviction of unauthorised occupants of public premises. It
serves a public purpose, viz. making available, for use,
public premises after eviction of persons in authorised
occupation. The need to provide speedy machinery for evic-
tion of persons in unauthorised occupation cannot be con-
fined to premises used for residential purposes. There is no
reason to assume that such a need will not be there in
respect of premises used for commercial purposes. No dis-
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tinction can, therefore, be made between premises used for
residential purposes and premises used for commercial pur-
poses in the matter of eviction of unauthorised occupants of
public premises and the considerations which necessitate
providing a speedy machinery for eviction of persons in
unauthorised occupation of public premises apply equally to
both the types of public premises. We are, therefore, unable
to accept the contention of Shri Yogeshwer Prasad that the
definition of public premises contained in Section 2(e) of
the Public Premises Act should be so construed as to exclude
premises used for commercial purposes from its ambit.
Shri A.K. Ganguli, has urged that a person who was put
in occupation of the premises as a tenant and who was con-
tinued in such occupation after the expiry or the termina-
tion of his tenancy cannot be regarded as a person in unau-
thorised occupation under Section 2(g) of the Public Prem-
ises Act. The submission of Shri Ganguli is that, the occu-
pation of a person who was put in possession as a tenant is
juridical possession and such an occupation cannot be re-
garded as unauthorised occupation. In support of this sub-
mission, Shri Ganguli has placed reliance on the decision of
the Bombay High Court in Brigadier K.K. Verma & Anr. v.
Union of India & Anr., A.I.R. 1954 Bombay 358 which has been
approved by this Court in Lallu Yeshwant Singh v. Rao Jag-
dish Singh & Ors., [1968] 2 S.C.R. 203.
The definition of the expression ’unauthorised occupa-
tion’ contained in Section 2(g) of the Public Premises Act
is in two parts. In the first part the said expression has
been defined to mean the occupation by any person of the
Public premises without authority for such occupation. It
implies occupation by a person who has entered into occupa-
tion of any public premises without lawful authority as well
as occupation which was permissive at the inception but has
ceased to be so. The second part of the definition is inclu-
sive in nature and it expressly covers continuance in occu-
pation by any person of the public premises after the au-
thority (whether by way of grant or any other mode of trans-
fer) under which he was allowed to occupy the premises has
674
expired or has been determined for any reason whatsoever.
This part covers a case where a person had entered into
occupation legally under valid authority but who continues
in occupation after the authority under which he was put in
occupation has expired or has been determined. The words
"whether by way of grant or any other mode of transfer" in
this part of the definition are wide in amplitude and would
cover a lease because lease is a mode of transfer under the
Transfer of Property Act. The definition of unauthorised
occupation contained in Section 2(g) of the Public Premises
Act would, therefore, cover a case where a person has en-
tered into occupation of the public premises legally as a
tenant under a lease but whose tenancy has expired or has
been determined in accordance with law.
Brigadier K.K. Verma & Anr. v. Union of India & Anr.
(Supra) was decided under the provisions of the Government
Premises (Eviction) Act, 1950, which did not contain the
definition of the expression ’unauthorised occupation’. In
that case it has been held that under the Indian law, the
possession of a tenant who has ceased to be a tenant is
protected by law and although he may not have the right to
continue in possession, after the termination of the tenan-
cy, his possession is juridical and that possession is
protected by statute, and therefore, an erstwhile tenant can
never become a trespasser and his possession cannot be
regarded as unauthorised occupation. The learned Judges have
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also observed that unless the legislature had given indica-
tion of a clear intention that by the expression ’unautho-
rised occupation’ it meant not only person who had no title
at all but also persons who are titled at the inception and
whose title came to an end, it would not be proper to give
an interpretation to the expression ’unauthorised occupa-
tion’ which would run counter to the principles of law which
have been accepted in this country. After this decision the
legislature intervened and introduced the definition of the
expression ’unauthorised occupation’ in the Public Premises
(Eviction of Unauthorised Occupants) Act, 1958, which defi-
nition has been reproduced in Section 2(e) of the Public
Premises Act and in the said definition the legislature has
taken care to make an express provision indicating that the
expression ’unauthorised occupation’ includes the continu-
ance in occupation by any person of the public premises
after the authority (whether by way of grant or any other
mode of transfer) under which he was allowed to occupy the
premises has expired or has been determined for any reason
whatsoever. In the circumstances the petitioners cannot
derive any assistance from the decision of the Bombay High
Court in Brigadier K.K. Verma’s case (supra).
675
Shri Ganguli has placed reliance on the decision of A.P.
Sen, J. in Express Newspapers Pvt. Ltd. & Ors. v. Union of
India & Others, [1985] Suppt. 3 S.C.R. 382 and has submitted
that in that case the learned Judge has held that cases
involving relationship between the lessor and lessee fall
outside the purview of the Public Premises Act. We have
carefully perused the said decision and we are unable to
agree with Shri Ganguli. In that case A.P. Sen, J. has
observed that the new building had been constructed by the
Express Newspapers Pvt. Ltd. after the grant of permission
by the lessor, and, therefore, the Express Newspapers Pvt.
Ltd. was not in unauthorised occupation of the same within
the meaning of Section 2(g) of the Public Premises Act. It
was also held by the learned Judge that the Express Building
constructed by the Express Newspapers Ltd. with the sanction
of lessor on plots Nos. 9 and 10 demised on perpetual lease
can, by no process of reasoning, be regarded as public
premises belonging to the Central Government under Section
2(e) of the Public Premises Act, and therefore, there was no
question of the lessor applying for eviction of the Express
Newspapers Pvt. Ltd. under the provisions of the Public
Premises Act. The aforesaid observations indicate that the
learned Judge did not proceed on the basis that cases in-
volving relationship of lessor and lessee fall outside the
purview of the Public Premises Act. On the other hand the
said observations show that the learned Judge has held that
the provisions of the Public Premises Act could not be
invoked in the facts of that case.
Another submission that has been urged by Shri Ganguli
is that the question whether a tease has been determined or
not involves complicated questions of law and the estate
officer, who is not required to be an officer well versed in
law, cannot be expected to decide such question and, there-
fore, it must be held that the provisions of the Public
Premises Act have no application to a case when the person
sought to be evicted had obtained possession of the premises
as a lessee. It is true that there is no requirement in the
Public Premises Act that the estate officer must be a person
well versed in law. But, that, by itself, cannot be a ground
for excluding from the ambit of the said Act premises in
unauthorised occupation of persons who obtained possession
of the said premises under a lease. Section 4 of the Public
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Premises Act requires issuing of a notice to the person in
unauthorised occupation of any Public Premises requiring him
to show cause why an order of eviction should not be made.
Section 5 makes provisions for production of evidence in
support of the cause shown by the person who has been served
with a notice under Section 4 and giving of a personal
hearing by the estate officer. Section 8 provides that an
estate
676
officer, shall, for the purpose of holding any enquiry under
the said Act have the same powers as are vested in a civil
court under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, when trying a
suit in respect of the matters specified therein namely:
(a) summoning and enforcing the attendance of any person and
examining him on oath;
(b) requiring discovery and production of documents; and
(c) any other matters which may be prescribed.
Rule 5(2) of the Public Premises (Eviction of Unautho-
rised Occupants) Rules, 1971, requires the estate officer to
record the summary of evidence tendered before him. Moreover
Section 9 confers a right of appeal against an order of the
estate officer and the said appeal has to be heard either by
the district judge of the district in which the public
premises are situate or such other judicial officer in that
district of not less than ten years’ standing as the dis-
trict judge may designate in that behalf. In shows that the
final order that is passed is by a judicial officer in the
rank of a district judge.
A similar contention was raised before this Court in
Maganlal Chhagganlal (P) Ltd. v. Municipal Corporation of
Greater Bombay & Others, [1975] 1 SCR 1 wherein the validity
of the provisions of Chapter VA of the Bombay Municipal
Corporation Act,’ 1888 and the Bombay Government Premises
(Eviction) Act, 1955 were challenged before this Court and
the said contention was negatived. Aligiriswami, J. speaking
for the majority, has observed as under:
"Even though the officers deciding these questions would be
administrative officers there is provision in these Acts for
giving notice to the party affected, to inform him of the
grounds on which the order of eviction is proposed to be
made, for the party affected to file a written statement and
produce documents and be represented by lawyers. The provi-
sions of the Civil Procedure Code regarding summoning and
enforcing attendance of persons and examining them on oath,
and requiring the discovery and production of documents are
a valuable safeguard for the person affected. So is the
provision for appeal to the Principal Judge of the City
Civil Court in the city of Bombay, or to a District Judge in
the district who has got to deal with the
677
matter as expeditiously as possible, also a sufficient
safeguard as was recognised in Suraj Mail Mehta’s case."
Having dealt with the submissions of learned counsel for
the petitioners on the applicability of the provisions of
Public Premises Act, we may come to the main question in-
volved in these matters, namely, whether the provisions of
the Public Premises Act override the provisions of the Rent
Control Act. For appreciating the submissions of the learned
counsel on this question it is necessary to examine the
provisions of both the enactments. The relevant provisions
of the Public Premises Act have already been set out. We may
briefly refer to the provisions of the Rent Control Act.
The Rent Control Act has been enacted by Parliament to
provide for the control of rents and evictions and of rate
of hotels and lodging houses and for the lease of vacant
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premises to Government, in certain areas in the Union Terri-
tory of Delhi. It extends to the areas included within the
limits of the New Delhi Municipal Committee and the Delhi
Cantonment Board and to such urban areas within the limits
of the Municipal Corporation of Delhi as are specified in
the First Schedule to the Act (Section 1(2). The expression
’premises is defined in Section 2(i) as under:
"Premises means any building or part of a building which is
or, is intended to be, let separately for use as a residence
or for commercial use or for any other purpose, and in-
cludes:
(i) the garden, grounds and outhouses, if any,, appertaining
to such building or part of the building;
(ii) any--furniture supplied by the landlord for use in such
building or part of the building;
but does not include a room in a hotel or lodging house."
Section 3, which excludes the applicability of the Act
to certain premises, provide as under:
"Nothing in this Act shall apply:
(a) to any premises belonging to the Government;
(b) to any tenancy or other like relationship created by a
678
grant from the Government in respect of the premises taken
on lease, or requisitioned, by the Government
Provided that where any premises belonging to Government
have been or are lawfully let by any person by virtue of an
agreement with the Government or otherwise, then, notwith-
standing any judgment, decree or order of any court or other
authority, the provisions ’of this Act shall apply to such
tenancy.
(c) to any premises, whether residential or not, whose
monthly rent exceeds three thousand and five hundred rupees;
or
(d) to any premises constructed on or after the commencement
of the Delhi Rent Control (Amendment) Act, 1988, for a
period of ten years from the date of completion of such
construction."
Chapter II (Sections 4 to 13) contains provisions re-
garding rent including fixation of standard rent. Chapter
III (Sections 14 to 25) contains provisions for control of
eviction, of tenants. Section 14 gives protection to tenants
against eviction and provides that an order for eviction of
a tenant can be passed only on one or more of the grounds
mentioned in clauses (a) to (1) of sub-section (1). Special
provisions have been made for recovery of immediate posses-
sion of premises in Sections 14A to 14D in respect of cer-
tain classes of landlords. Section 22 contains a special
provision for recovery of possession of premises where the
landlord is a company or a body corporate or a local author-
ity or a public institution if the premises are required for
the use of employees of such landlord or, in the case of a
public institution, for the furtherance of its activities.
In Chapter IIIA (Sections 25-A to 25-C) provisions have been
made for summary trial of certain applications for eviction
on the ground of bona fide requirement of the landlord.
Chapter IV (Sections 26 to 29) contains provisions relating
to deposit of rent. Chapter V (Sections 30 to 34) contains
provisions relating hotels and lodging houses. Chapter VI
(Sections 35 to 43) contains provisions relating to appoint-
ment of controllers and their powers and functions and
appeals. Section 42 makes provisions for execution of orders
passed by the Controller or in appeal, as a decree of civil
court. Section 43 attaches finality to the order passed by
the Controller and the order passed in appeal. Chapter VII
(Sections 44 to 49) contains provisions regarding special
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obligations of landlords and
679
penalties. Chapter VIII (Sections 50 to 57) contains miscel-
laneous provisions. Under Section 50 jurisdiction of civil
courts is barred in respect of matters specified therein.
Section 54 saves the operation of certain enactments, name-
ly, Administration of Evacuee Property Act, 1950, the Slum
Areas (Improvement and Clearance) Act, 1956 and the Delhi
Tenants (Temporary Protection) Act, 1956.
On a comparison of the provisions of the Public Premises
Act and the Rent Control Act it will be found that:
1. By virtue of Section 1(2) of the Public Premises Act,
the said Act is applicable throughout the territory of
India, whereas, view of Section 1(2) of the Rent Control
Act, the said Act is confined in its application to areas
included within the limits of the New Delhi Municipal Com-
mittee and the Delhi Cantonment Board and to such urban
areas within the limits of the Municipal Corporation of
Delhi as are specified in the First Schedule and any other
urban area included within the limits of the Municipal
Corporation of Delhi to which provisions of the said Act are
extended by the Central Government by notification in the
Official Gazette.
(2) Under Clauses (c) of Section 2 of the Public Premises
Act, the expression ’premises’ has a wider connotation and
it includes open land as well as building or part of a
building. Under the Rent Control Act the expression ’prem-
ises’ as defined in clause (i) of Section 2 has a narrower
connotation to mean any building or a part of building and
it does not cover open land.
3. In view of the definition of the expression ’public
premises’ contained in clause (e) of Section 2 of the Public
Premises Act, the said Act, in addition to the premises
belonging to or taken on lease or requisitioned by, or on
behalf of, the Central Government, is applicable to premises
belonging to or taken on lease by or on behalf of the compa-
nies and statutory bodies mentioned in clauses (2) and (3)
of Section 2(e). The Rent Control Act, on the other hand, is
applicable to all premises except premises belonging to the
Government or to any tenancy or other like relationship
created by a grant from the Government in respect of the
premises taken on lease, or requisitioned, by the Government
(Section 3). In view of the amendment introduced in Section
3 by the Delhi Rent Con-
680
trol Act is not applicable to premises, whether residential
or not, whose monthly rent exceeds three thousand and five
hundred rupees and premises constructed on or after the
commencement of the said Amendment Act, for a period of ten
years from the date of completion of such construction.
4. The provisions of the Public Premises Act are applica-
ble to Public Premises in occupation of a person having no
authority for such occupation, including a person who was
allowed to occupy the public premises under a grant or any
other mode of transfer and who has continued in occupation
after the authority under which he was allowed to occupy
that premises has expired or has been terminated. The provi-
sions of the Delhi Rent Control Act are applicable only to
persons who have obtained possession of the premises as
tenants and whose tenancy is continuing as well as persons
who after the expiration or termination of the tenancy have
continued in occupation of the premises.
As a result of this comparison it can be said that
certain premises, viz. building or parts of buildings lying
within the limits of the New Delhi Municipal Committee and
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the Delhi Cantonment Board and in urban areas within the
limits of the Municipal Corporation of Delhi, which belong
to or are taken on lease by any of the companies or statuto-
ry bodies mentioned in clauses (2) and (3) of Section 2(e)
of the Public Premises Act and which are in occupation of a
person who obtained possession of the said premises as a
tenant and whose tenancy has expired or has been terminated
but who is continuing in occupation of the same, would ex-
facie fall within the purview of both the enactments. The
question which, therefore, arises is whether the occupant of
such premises can seek the protection available under the
provisions of Rent Control Act and he can be evicted from
the premises only in accordance with the said provisions and
proceedings for eviction of such a person cannot be initiat-
ed under the provisions of the Public Premises Act.
Shri Venugopal and other learned counsel representing
the petitioners have urged that the Rent Control Act is a
self-contained code providing for regulating the relation-
ship of landlords and tenants and it makes comprehensive
provisions with regard to control of rents as well as evic-
tion of tenants and that the provision of the Rent Control
Act, being special in nature insofar as lease-hold proper-
ties in Delhi are concerned, would prevail over the provi-
sions of the Public
681
Premises Act which are in the nature of general provisions
relating to eviction of unauthorised occupants from Govern-
ment premises in the whole country.. In support of this
submission the learned counsel for the petitioners have
placed reliance on Sections 22 and 54 and the non-obstante
clause contained in Section 14(1) of the rent Control Act.
It has also been urged by the learned counsel for the peti-
tioners that the Public Premises Act does not contain any
machinery for the termination of the tenancy and that in
view of the decision of this Court in V. Dhanapal Chettiar
v. Yesodai Ammal, [1980] 1 SCR 334, the jural relationship
of landlord and tenant can come to an end only on the pass-
ing of an order of eviction by a competent court in accor-
ding with the provisions of the Rent Control Act and that in
the absence of an order of eviction under the provisions of
the Rent Control Act no proceedings can be initiated against
a person who came into occupation of the premises as a
tenant and who is continuing in occupation of the said
premises after the contractual tenancy has expired or has
been terminated.
The learned Attorney General and Shri G.L. Sanghi,
appearing on behalf of the respondents in the appeals, have
urged that the Public Premises Act is in the nature of a
special enactment making provision for speedy and expedi-
tious recovery of possession of public premises from persons
in unauthorised occupation of the same whereas the Rent
Control Act is general enactment regulating the relationship
of landlord and tenant and since the Public Premises Act is
a special enactment it would override the provisions of the
Rent Control Act. It has also been urged that the Public
Premises Act is a later enactment, having been enacted in
1971, whereas the Rent Control Act was enacted in 1958, and,
therefore, the Public Premises Act would prevail over the
Rent Control Act. It has been urged that Section 15 of the
Public Premises Act which bars the jurisdiction of other
Courts is in the nature of a non obstante clause which gives
overriding effect to the provisions of the Public Premises
Act.
The learned Addl. Solicitor General, appearing for the
respondents in the writ petitions, has adopted a different
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line of argument. He has contended that the Public Premises
Act had been enacted by Parliament in exercise of its legis-
lative power under Article 246(1) read with entries 32, 95
and 97 of List I of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution
whereas the Rent Control Act has been enacted by Parliament
in exercise of its legislative power under Article 246(4)
read with entries 6, 7 and 13 of List III of the Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution and since the Public Premises
Act has been enacted in
682
exercise of the legislative power under Article 246(1) of
the Constitution, it would prevail over the Rent Control Act
enacted in exercise of legislative power under Article
246(4) of the Constitution.
At this stage, it may be mentioned that in Jain Ink
Manufacturing Company v. Life Insurance Corporation of India
& Another, [1981] 1 SCR 498 decided by a bench of three
Judges, it has been held that the Public Premises Act over-
rides the provisions of the Delhi Rent Control Act. In that
case it has been observed that the scope and object of the
Public Premises Act is quite different from that of Rent
Control Act and while the Public Premises Act operates in a
very limited field in that it applies only to a limited
nature of premises belonging only to particular sets of
individuals, a particular set of juristic persons like
Companies, Corporations or the Central Government, whereas
the Rent Control Act is of much wider application and it
applies to all private premises which do not fall within the
limited exceptions indicated in Section 2 of the Public
Premises Act and the object of the Rent Control Act is to
afford special protection to all the tenants or private
landlords or landlords who are neither a Corporation nor
Government or Corporate Bodies. It was, therefore, held that
the Public Premises Act is a special Act as compared to the
Rent Control Act and it overrides the provisions of the Rent
Control Act. The learned counsel for the petitioners have
assailed the correctness of the said decision and have
submitted that it needs reconsideration.
As regards rent control legislation enacted by the State
legislatures the position is well settled that such legisla-
tion fall within the ambit of entries 6, 7 and 13 List III
of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution (See: Indu
Bhushan Bose v. Rama Sundari Devi & Another, [1970] 1 SCR
443; V Dhanpal Chettiar’s case (supra); Jai Singh Jairam
Tyagi etc. v. Mamanchand Ratilal Agarwal & Others, [1980] 3
SCR 224 and Accountant and Secretarial Services Pvt. Ltd. &
Another v. Union of India & Others, [1988] 4 SCC 324.
The Rent Control Act has been enacted by Parliament in
relation to the Union Territory of Delhi in exercise of the
legislative power conferred under Article 246(4) of the
Constitution which empowers Parliament to make laws with
respect to any matter for any part of the territory of India
not included in a State notwithstanding that such matter is
a matter enumerated in the State List.
The Public Premises Act deals with Government property
as well as property belonging to other legal entities men-
tioned in clauses (2)
683
and (3) of Section 2(e) of the Public Premises Act. In so
far as it relates to eviction of unauthorised occupants from
premises belonging to or taken on lease or requisitioned by
or on behalf of the Central Government the Public Premises
Act would fall within entry 32 of List I being law with
respect to a property of the Union. The property belonging
to the various legal entities mentioned in clauses (2) and
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(3) of Section 2(e) of the Public Premises Act cannot be
regarded as property of the Union and the Public Premises
Act cannot be held to have been enacted under entry 32 of
List I in respect of the said properties. In Accountant and
Secretarial Services Pvt. Ltd. and Another v. Union of India
and Others, (supra) this Court has held that the Public
Premises Act, in relation to properties other than the
properties belonging to the Central Government has been
enacted under the concurrent list. The learned Additional
Solicitor General has placed reliance on the decision of
this Court in Smt. Saiyada Mossarrat v. Hindustan Steel
Ltd., [1989] 1 SCC 272 wherein it has been held that with
regard to the subject matter of speedy eviction of unautho-
rised occupants from properties belonging to a Government
company, wherein the Central Government has more than fifty
one per cent of the paid-up capital, the source of authority
can be traced to entry 97 read with entry 95 of Union List
(List 1). This Court has, however, affirmed the decision of
the Division Bench of Madhya Pradesh High Court in L.S. Nair
v. Hindustan Steel Ltd., AIR 1980 MP 106 wherein it has been
held that insofar as the Public Premises Act deals with a
lessee or licence of premises belonging to a Government
company, the subject matter of the Act would be covered by
entries 6, 7 and 46 of List III. After quoting the observa-
tions of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in this regard, this
Court has observed:
"Learned counsel for the petitioner has not been able to
show that there is any infirmity in the reasoning of the
High Court."
This shows that the decision of this Court is rounded on the
view mentioned above. Since the Act was held to be covered
by entries 6, 7 and 46 of List III, it was not necessary to
invoke the residuary power of legislation under entry 97 of
List I. The observations made by this Court that the source
of authority in the matter of speedy eviction of unautho-
rised occupants from properties belonging to a Government
company wherein the Central Government has more than fifty
one per cent of the paid-up share capital can, in any case,
be traced to entry 97 read with entry 95 of List I are
obiter in nature only. There is, therefore, no inconsistency
between the decisions of this Court in Accoun-
684
tant and Secretarial Services Pvt. Ltd. (supra) and Smt.
Saiyada Mossarrat case (supra) inasmuch as in both the
decisions it is held that the Public Premises Act insofar as
it deals with a lessee or licencee of premises other than
premises belonging to the Central Government has been enact-
ed in exercise of the legislative powers in respect of
matters enumerated in the Concurrent List. We are in agree-
ment with this view.
This means that both the statutes, viz. the PubLic
Premises Act and the Rent Control Act, have been enacted by
the same legislature, Parliament, in exercise of the legis-
lative powers in respect of the matters enumerated in the
Concurrent List. We are, therefore, unable to accept the
contention of the learned Additional Solicitor General that
the Public Premises Act, having been enacted by Parliament
in exercise of legislative powers in respect of matters
enumerated in the Union List would ipso-facto override the
provisions of the Rent Control Act enacted in exercise of
the legislative powers in respect of matters enumerated in
the Concurrent List. In our opinion the question as to
whether the provisions of the Public Premises Act override
the provisions of the Rent Control Act will have to be
considered in the light of the principles of statutory
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interpretion applicable to laws made by the same legisla-
ture.
One such principle of statutory interpretation which is
applied is contained in the latin maxim: leges posteriors
priores conterarias abrogant, (later laws abrogate earlier
contrary. laws). This principle is subject to the exception
embodied in the maxim: generalia specialibus non derogant,
(a general provision does not derogate from a special one).
This means that where the literal meaning of the general
enactment covers a situation for which specific provision is
made by another enactment contained in an earlier Act, it is
presumed that the situation was intended to continue to be
dealt with by the specific provision rather than the later
general one (Benion: Statutory Interpretation p. 433-34).
The rationale of this rule is thus explained by this
Court in the J.K. Cotton Spinning & Weaving Mills Co. Ltd.
v. The State of Uttar Pradesh & Others, [1961] 3 SCR 185:
"The rule that general provisions should yield to specific
provisions is not an arbitrary principle made by lawyers
Judges but springs from the common understanding of man and
women that when the same person gives two directions
685
one covering a large number of matters in general and anoth-
er to only some of them his intention is that these latter
directions should prevail as regards these while as regards
all the rest the earlier directions should have effect." (p.
94)
In U.P. State Electricity Board & Ors. v. Hari Shankar
Jain & Ors., [1979] 1 SCR 355 this Court has observed:
"In passing a special Act, Parliament devotes its entire
consideration to a particular subject. When a General Act is
subsequently passed, it is logical to presume that Parlia-
ment has not repealed or modified the former Special Act
unless it appears that the Special Act again received con-
sideration from Parliament." (p. 366)
In Life Insurance Corporation v.D.J. Bahadur, [1981] 1
SCR 1083 Krishna Iyer, J. has pointed out:
"In determining whether a statute is a special or a general
one, the focus must be on the principal subject matter plus
the particular perspective. For certain purposes, an Act may
be general and for certain other purposes it may be special
and we cannot blur distinctions when dealing with liner
points of law." (p. 1127)
The Public Premises Act is a later enactment, having
been enacted on 23rd August, 1971, whereas the Rent Control
Act was enacted on 31st December, 1958. It represents the
later will of Parliament and should prevail over the Rent
Control Act unless it can be said that the Public Premises
Act is a general enactment, whereas the Rent Control Act is
a special enactment and being a special enactment the Rent
Control Act should prevail over the Public Premises Act. The
submission of learned counsel for the petitioners is that
the Rent Control Act is a special enactment dealing with
premises in occupation of tenants, whereas the Public Prem-
ises Act is a general enactment dealing with the occupants
of Public Premises and that insofar as public premises in
occupation of tenants are concerned the provisions of the
Rent Control Act would continue to apply and to that extent
the provisions of the Public Premises Act would not be
applicable. In support of this submission reliance has been
placed on the non obstante clauses contained in Section 14
and 22 of the Rent Control Act as well as the provisions
contained in Sections 50 and 54 of the said Act. On the
686
other hand the learned counsel for the respondents have
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urged that the Rent Control Act is a general enactment
dealing with the relationship of landlord and tenant gener-
ally, whereas the Public Premises Act is a special enactment
making provision for speedy recovery of possession of Public
Premises in unauthorised occupation and that the provisions
of the Public Premises Act, a later Special Act, will,
therefore, override the provisions of the Rent Control Act
in so far as they are applicable to Public Premises in
occupation of persons who have continued in occupation after
the lease has expired or has been determined. The learned
counsel for the respondents have placed reliance on Section
15 of the Public Premises Act which bars the jurisdiction of
all courts in respect of the eviction of any person who is
in unauthorised occupation of any Public Premises and other
matters specified herein. It has been submitted that the
said provision is also in the nature of a non obstante
clause which gives overriding effect to the provisions of
the Public Premises Act. Thus each side claims the enactment
relied upon by it is a special statute and the other enact-
ment is general and also invokes the non obstante clause
contained in the enactment relied upon.
The Rent Control Act makes a departure from the general
law regulating the relationship of landlord and tenant
contained in the Trnasfer of Property Act inasmuch as it
makes provision for determination of standard rent, it
specifies the grounds on which a landlord can seek the evic-
tion of a tenant, it prescribes the forum for adjudication
of disputes between landlords and tenants and the procedure
which has to be followed in such proceedings. The rent
Control Act can, therefore, be said to be a special statute
regulating the relationship of landlord and tenant in the
Union Territory of Delhi. The Public premises Act makes
provision for a speedy machinery to secure eviction of unau-
thorised occupants from public premises. As opposed to the
general law which provides for filing of a regular suit for
recovery of possession of property in a competent Court and
for trial of such a suit in accordance with the procedure
laid down in the Code of Civil procedure, the Public Prem-
ises Act confers the power to pass an order or eviction of
an unauthorised occupant in a public premises on a designat-
ed officer and prescribes the procedure to be followed by
the said officer before passing such an order. Therefore,
the Public Premises Act is also a special statute relating
to eviction of unauthorised occupants from public premises.
In other words, both the enactments, namely, the Rent Con-
trol Act and the Public Premises Act, are special statutes
in relation to the matters dealt with therein. Since, the
Public premises Act is a special statute and not a general
enactment the
687
exception contained in the principle that a subsequent
general law cannot derogate from an earlier special law
cannot be invoked and in accordance with the principle that
the later laws abrogate earlier contrary laws, the Public
Premises Act must prevail over the Rent Control Act.
We arrive at the same conclusion by applying the princi-
ple which is followed for resolving a conflict between the
provisions of two special enactments made by the same legis-
lature. We may in this context refer to some of the cases
which have come before this Court where the provisions of
two enactments made by the same legislature were found to be
inconsistent and each enactment was claimed to be a special
enactment and had a non obstante clause giving overriding
effect to its provisions.
In Shri Ram Narain v. The Simla Banking and Industrial
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Co. Ltd., [1956] SCR 603 this Court was considering the
provisions contained in the Banking Companies Act, 1949 and
the Displaced Persons (Debts Adjustment) Act, 1951. Both the
enactments contained provisions giving overriding effect to
the provisions of the enactment over any other law. This
Court has observed:
"Each enactment being a Special Act, the ordinary principle
that a special law overrides a general law does not afford
any clear solution in this case" (p. 613)
"It is, therefore, desirable to determine the overriding
effect of one or the other of the relevant provisions in
these two Acts, in a given case, on much broader considera-
tions of the purpose and policy underlying the two Acts and
the clear intendment conveyed by the language of the rele-
vant provisions therein." (p. 615)
Similarly in Kumaon Motor Owners’ Union Ltd. and Another
v. The State of Uttar Pradesh, [1966] 2 SCR 12 1 there was
conflict between the provisions contained in Rule 131(2)(gg)
and (i) of the Defence of India Rules, 1962 and Chapter IV-A
of the Motor Vehicle Act, 1939. Section 68-B gave overriding
effect to the provisions of Chapter IV(A) of the Motor
Vehicle Act whereas Section 43 of the Defence of India Act,
1962, gave overriding effect to the provisions contained in
the Defence of India Rules. This Court held that the Defence
of India Act was later than the Motor Vehicles Act and,
therefore, if there was anything repugnant, the provisions
of the later
688
Act should prevail. This Court also looked into object
behind the two statutes, namely, Defence of India Act and
Motor Vehicles Act and on that basis also it was held that
the provisions contained in the Defence of India Rules would
have an overriding effect over the provisions of the Motor
Vehicles Act.
In Sarwan Singh & Another v. Kasturi Lal, [1977] 2 SCR
421, the question for consideration was, whether the provi-
sions of Section 14A and Chapter IIIA of the Rent Control
Act will prevail over those contained in Sections 19 and 39
of the Slum Areas (Improvement and Clearance) Act, 1956.
Section 14A and 25A of the Rent Control Act contained non
obstante clauses but in Section 54 of the Rent Control Act
it was expressly provided that nothing in the said Act shall
effect the provisions of the Slum Areas (Improvement and
Clearance) Act, 1956. Moreover in Section 19 of the Slum
Areas (Improvement and Clearance) Act, 1956 mere was non-
obstante clause and Section 39 of the said Act gave overrid-
ing effect to the provisions of the said enactment over any
other Jaw. This Court has observed:
"When two or more laws operate in the same field and each
contains a non-obstante clause stating that its provisions
will override those of any other law, stimulating and inci-
sive problems of interpretation arise. Since statutory
interpretation has no conventional protocol, cases of such
conflict have to be decided in reference to the obeject and
purpose of the laws under consideration." (p. 433)
After examining the special and specific purpose under-
lying the enactment of Section 14A and Chapter IIIA of the
Rent Control act and the fact that the Rent Control Act was
a later enactment this Court held that the provisions of the
Rent Control Act would prevail over those contained in the
Slum Areas (Improvement and Clearance) Act, 1956.
The principle which emerges from these decisions is that
in the case of inconsistency between the provisions of two
enactments, both of which can be regarded as Special in
nature, the conflict has to be resolved by reference to the
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purpose and policy underlying the two enactments and the
clear intendment conveyed by the language of the relevant
provisions therein. We propose to consider this matter in
the light of this principle.
The statement of objects and reasons for the enactment of
the
689
Rent Control Act, indicates that it has been enacted with a
view:
(a) to devise a suitable machinery for expeditious adjudica-
tion of proceedings between landlords and tenants;
(b) to provide for the determination of the standard rent
payable by tenants of the various categories of premises
which should be fair to the tenants, and at the same time,
provide incentive for keeping the existing houses in good
repairs, and for further investment in house construction;
and
(c) to give tenants a larger measure of protection against
eviction.
This indicates that the object underlying the Rent Control
Act is to make provision for expeditious adjudication of
disputes between landlords and tenants, determination of
standard rent payable by tenants and giving protection
against eviction to tenants. The premises belonging to the
Government are excluded from the ambit of the Rent Control
Act which means that the Act has been enacted primarily to
regulate the private relationship between landlords and
tenants with a view to confer certain benefits on the ten-
ants and at the same time to balance the interest of the
landlords by providing for expeditious adjudication of
proceedings between landlords and tenant.
As mentioned earlier, the Public Premises Act has been
enacted with a view to provide for eviction of unauthorised
occupants from public premises. In the statement of objects
and reasons for this enactment reference has been made to
the judicial decisions whereby by the 1958 Act was declared
as unconstitutional and it has been mentioned:
"The court decisions, referred to above, have created seri-
ous difficulties for the Government inasmuch as the proceed-
ings taken by the various Estate Officers appointed under
the Act either for the eviction of persons who are in unau-
thorised occupation of public premises or for the recovery
of rent or damages from such persons stand null and void. It
has become impossible for Government to take expeditious
action even inflagrant cases of unauthorised occupation of
public premises and recovery of rent or damages for such
unauthorised occupation. It is, therefore, considered imper-
ative to restore a speedy machinery for the eviction of
persons who are in unauthorised occupation
690
of public premises keeping in view at the same time the
necessity of complying with the provision of the Constitu-
tion and the judicial pronouncements, referred to above."
This shows that the Public Premises Act has been enacted to
deal with the mischief of rampant unauthorised occupation of
public premises by providing a speedy machinery for the
eviction of persons in unauthorised occupation. In order to
secure this object the said Act prescribes the time period
for the various steps which are enquired to be taken for
securing eviction of the persons in unauthorised
occupation.. The object underlying the enactment is to
safeguard public interest by making available for public use
premises belonging to Central Government, Companies in which
the Central Government has substantial interest, Corpora-
tions owned or controlled by the Central Government and
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certain autonomous bodies and to prevent misuse of such
premises.
It would thus appear that, while the Rent Control Act is
intended to deal with the general relationship of landlords
and tenants in respect of premises other than government
premises, the Public Premises Act is intended to deal with
speedy recovery of possession of premises of public nature,
i.e. property belonging to the Central Government, or Compa-
nies in which the Central Government has substantial inter-
est or Corporations owned or controlled by the Central
Government and certain corporations, institutions, autono-
mous bodies and local authorities. The effect of giving
overriding effect to the provisions of the Pubic Premises
Act over the Rent Control Act, would be that buildings
belonging to Companies Corporations and Autonomous bodies
referred to in Section 2(e) of the Public Permises Act would
be excluded from the ambit of the Rent Control Act in the
same manner as properties belonging to the Central Govern-
ment. The reason underlying the exclusion of property be-
longing to the Government from the ambit of the Rent Control
Act, is that Government while dealing with the citizens in
respect of property belonging to it would not act for its
own purpose as a private landlord but would act in public
interest. What can be said with regard to Government in
relation to property belonging to it can also be said with
regard to companies, corporations and other statutory bodies
mentioned in Section 2(e) of the Public Premises Act. In our
opinion, therefore, keeping in view the object and purpose
underlying both the enactments viz., the Rent Control Act
and the Public Premises Act, the provisions of the Public
Premises Act have to be construed as overriding the provi-
sions contained in the Rent Control Act.
691
As regards the non obstante clauses contained in Sec-
tions 14 and 22 and the provisions contained in Sections 50
and 54 of the Rent Control Act, it may be stated that Par-
liament was aware of these provisions when it enacted the
Public Premises Act contained a specific provision in Sec-
tion 15 barring jurisdiction of all courts (which would
include the Rent Controller under the Rent Control Act).
This indicates that Parliament intended that the provisions
of the Public Premises Act would prevail over the provisions
of the Rent Control Act inspite of the above mentioned
provisions contained in the Rent Control Act.
It has been urged by the learned counsel for the peti-
tioner that there is no conflict between the provisions of
the Rent Control Act and the Public Premises Act and that
both the provisions can be given effect to without one
overriding the other. In this regard, it has been pointed
out that since no provisions has been made in the Public
Premises Act for the termination of the lease, the provi-
sions of the Rent Control Act can be held applicable upto
the stage of termination of the lease, and thereafter,
proceedings can be initiated for eviction under the provi-
sions of the Public Premises Act. In support of this submis-
sion, reliance has been placed on Dhanpal Chettiar’s case
(supra), wherein it has been held that in view of the spe-
cial provisions contained in the State Rent Control Acts, it
is no longer necessary to issue a notice under Section 106
of the Transfer of Property Act to terminate the tenancy
because inspite of the said notice the tenant is entitled to
continue in occupation by virtue of the provisions of the
said Acts. In the said case, it has been further laid down
that the relationship between the landlord and tenant con-
tinues till the passing of the order of eviction in accord-
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ance with the provisions of the Rent act, and therefore, for
the eviction of the tenant in accordance with the law, an
order of the competent Court under the Rent Control Act is
necessary. This would mean that in order to evict a person
who is continuing in occupation after the expiration or
termination of his contractual tenancy in accordance with
law, two proceedings will have to be initiated. First, there
will be proceedings under Rent Control Act before the Rent
Controller followed by appeal before the Rent Control Tribu-
nal and revision before the High Court. After these proceed-
ings have ended they would be followed by proceedings under
the Public Premises Act, before the Estate Officer and the
Appellate Authority. In other words, persons in occupation
of public premises would receive greater protection than
tenants in premises owned by private persons. It could not
be the intention of Parliament to confer this dual benefit
on persons in occupation of public premises.
692
It has also been urged that in Section 22 of the Rent
Control Act, special provision has been made for recovery of
possession of premises belonging to a company or other body
corporate or any local authority or any public institution
and that premises belonging to companies, corporations and
autonomous bodies mentioned in clauses (2) and (3) of Sec-
tion 2(e) of the Public Premises would be covered by the
said provision and that in view of this special provision it
is not necessary to have a further provision in the Public
Premises Act for the recovery of possession belonging to
those bodies, and therefore, the provisions of the Public
Premises Act should be confined in their application to
premises other than premises covered by the Rent Control
Act. Section 22 of the Rent Control Act provides as under:
"Where the landlord in respect of any premises is any compa-
ny or other body corporate of any local authority or any
public institution and the premises are required for the use
of employees of such landlord or in the case of a public
institution for the furtherance of its activities, then,
notwithstanding anything contained in Section 14 or any
other law, the Controller may, on an application made to him
in this behalf by such landlord, place the landlord in
vacant possession of such premises by evicting the tenant
and every other person who may be in occupation thereof, if
the Controller is satisfied--
(a) that the tenant to whom such premises were let for use
as a residence at a time when he was in the service or
employment of the landlord, has ceased to be in such service
or employment; or
(b) that the tenant has acted in contravention of the terms,
express or implied, under which he was authorised to occupy
such premises; or
(c) that any other person is in unauthorised occupation of
such premises; or
(d) that the premises are required bona fide by the public
institution for the furtherance of its activities.
Explanation--For the purpose of this section, "public in-
stitution" includes any educational institutional, library,
hospital and charitable dispensary but does not include any
693
such institution set up by any private trust."
The said special provision shows that, it enables recov-
ery of possession or premises of which the landlord is a
company or other body corporate or any local authority or
any public institution in certain circumstances viz., if the
premises are required for the use of the employees or such
landlord. In the case of public institutions possession can
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also be obtained under this provision if the premises are
required for the furtherance of its activities. In other
words, recovery of possession is permissible under this
provision only in certain circumstances and for certain
purposes. Inspite of this provision Parliament has consid-
ered it necessary tO extend the Public Premises Act to
premises belonging to companies, corporations and statutory
bodies mentioned in Clauses (2) and (3) of Section 2(e) by
widening the definition of the expression "public premises"
in Section 2(e) of the Public Premises Act. The scope and
ambit of the aforesaid power conferred under the Public
Premises Act cannot be restricted by reference to the provi-
sion contained in Section 22 of the Rent Control Act.
It has been urged by the learned counsel for the peti-
tioners that many of the corporations referred to in Section
2(e)(2)(ii) of the Public Premises Act, like the nationa-
lised banks and the Life Insurance Corporation, are trading
corporations and under the provisions of the enactments
whereby they are constituted these corporations are required
to carry on their business with a view to earn profit, and
that there is nothing to preclude these corporations to buy
property in possession of tenants at a low price and after
buying such property evict the tenants after terminating the
tenancy and thereafter sell the said property at a much
higher value because the value of property in possession of
tenants is much less as compared to vacant property. We are
unable to cut down the scope of the provisions of the Public
Premises Act on the basis of such an apprehension because as
pointed out by this Court in M/s Dwarkadas Marfatia and Sons
v. Board of Trustees of the Port of Bombay, [1989] 3 SCC
293:
"Every activity of a public authority especially in the
background of the assumption on which such authority enjoys
immunity from the rigour of the Rent Act, must be informed
by reason and guided by the public interest. All exercise of
discretion or power by public authorities as the respondent,
in respect of dealing with tenants in respect of which they
have been treated separately and distinctly from other
landlords on the assumption that they would not act
694
as private landlords, must be judged by that standard."
These observations were made in the context of the provi-
sions of the Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging Houses Rates
(Control) Act, 1947 whereby exemption from the provisions of
the Act has been granted to premises belonging to the Bombay
Port Trust. The consequence of giving overriding effect to
the provisions of the Public Premises Act is that premises
belonging to companies and statutory bodies referred to in
Clauses (2) and (3) of Section 2(e) of the Public Premises
Act would be exempted from the provisions of the Rent Con-
trol Act. The actions of the companies and statutory bodies
mentioned in Clauses (2) and (3) of Section 2(e) of the
Public Premises Act while dealing with their properties
under the Pubic Premises Act will, therefore, have to be
judged by the same standard.
For the reasons aforesaid, we are unable to accept the
contention of the learned counsel for the petitioners that
the provisions contained in the Public Premises Act cannot
be applied to premises which fall within the ambit of the
Rent Control Act. In our opinion, the provisions of the
Public Premises Act, to the extent they cover premises
falling within the ambit of the Rent Control Act, override
the provisions of the Rent Control Act and a person in
unauthorised occupation of public premises under Section
2(e) of the Act cannot invoke the protection of the Rent
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Control Act.
In Civil Appeal No. 3723 of 1966, Shri Yogeshwer Prasad
sought to raise contentions relating to the particular facts
of that case, namely, that the termination of the lease of
the appellant is vitiated by mala fides and that the said
appellant could not be held to be a person in unauthorised
occupation of the premises and further that the proceedings
have not been taken in accordance with the provisions of the
Public Premises Act. We find that in this case the appellant
filed a writ petition in the High Court directly against the
order passed by the Estate Officer without filing an appeal
against the said order before the Appellate Authority. The
High Court has held that the question of mala fides is a
disputed question of fact and the same could not be gone
into in proceedings under Article 226 of the Constitution.
We are in agreement of the said view of the High Court. As
regards the other contentions we are of the view that the
appellant cannot be permitted to agitate matters which could
be agitated by him in appeal before the Appellate Authority.
In Civil Appeals Nos. 2368 and 2369 of 1986 the learned
counsel
695
for the respondents have raised a preliminary objection with
regard to the maintainability of these appeals on the ground
that the appellants, on account of their conduct, are not
entitled to invoke the jurisdiction of this Court under
Article 136 of the Constitution. The submission of the
learned counsel is that before initiating proceedings under
the provisions of the Public Premises Act the respondent
Bank, viz. the Punjab National Bank, had initiated proceed-
ings under the Rent Control Act for the eviction of the
appellants had in those proceedings the appellants had filed
an objection with regard to the maintainability of the
eviction proceedings under the Rent Control Act before the
Additional Rent Controller and thereupon the Respondent Bank
initiated proceedings for eviction of the appellants under
the Public Premises Act and thereafter the proceedings
initiated by the respondent Bank under the Rent Control Act
were dismissed by the Additional Rent Controller by orders
dated the 6th August, 1989. The learned counsel of the
respondents have urged that the appellants, having raised
the objection against the maintainability of the proceedings
for eviction under the Rent Control Act on the ground that
proceedings could only be maintained under the provisions of
the Public Premises Act and having got them dismissed,
cannot turn round and raise an objection that the proceed-
ings for eviction under the Public Premises Act are not
maintainable and the proceedings can only be taken under the
Rent Control Act. The learned counsel for the appellants
have submitted that special leave to appeal was granted by
this Court after notice to the respondents and at that stage
the respondents had raised this objection but this Court
granted special leave and it is not permissible for the
respondents to agitate this question now. The orders dated
the 6th August, 1989 which were passed by the Additional
Rent Controller in the proceedings for eviction initiated by
the respondent Bank under Rent Control Act against the
appellants in these appeals have been placed on record by
the respondents and from the said orders it appears that in
the proceedings initiated under the Rent Control Act the
appellants had raised a plea that the premises in question
had been declared public premises under the Public Premises
Act and in view of that the proceedings under the Rent
Control Act were not competent. The said orders also show
that the Additional Rent Controller dismissed the proceed-
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ings for eviction under the Rent Control Act on the view
that the Public Premises Act is applicable to premises in
question and his jurisdiction was excluded. This would show
that the proceedings which were initiated by the Respondent
Bank for the eviction of the appellants under the Rent
Control Act were dismissed as not maintainable on the ground
that the Rent Control Act was not applicable to the premises
and the premises are governed by the provisions of the
696
Public Premises Act. This finding was recorded by the Addi-
tional Rent Controller in view of the objection raised by
the appellants with regard to the maintainability of those
proceedings. In other words, the appellants succeeded in
those proceedings on the basis of their plea that the prem-
ises were not governed by the Rent Control Act and were
governed by the provisions of the Public Premises Act.
Having got the proceedings under the Rent Control Act dis-
missed the appellants are now raising the plea that the
proceedings under the Public Premises Act are not maintain-
able and that the only remedy available is under the Rent
Control Act. This conduct of the appellants would have
disentitled them from invoking the jurisdiction of this
Court under Article 136 of the Constitution. Since we are of
the view that the appellants cannot succeed on the merits,
we do not propose to dismiss the appeals on this preliminary
ground.
In the result the appeals and the writ petition are
dismissed. There will be no order as to costs.
The appellants in Civil Appeals Nos. 2368 and 2369 of
1986 had been dispossessed from the premises in their occu-
pation after the dismissal of their appeals by the Addition-
al District Judge. During the pendency of these appeals
interim orders were passed by this Court whereunder posses-
sion of a part of the premises was restored to the appel-
lants. Since these appeals have been dismissed the appel-
lants in both the appeals are directed to handover the
possession of the portion of the premises in their occupa-
tion to the Respondent Bank within one month.
In Civil Appeal No. 3725 of 1986 and Writ Petition No.
864 of 1985, this Court had passed interim orders staying
the eviction of the petitioners in those matters. Since the
appeal and the writ petition are being dismissed the said
interim orders shall stand vacated.
R.S.S. Petitions
dismissed.
697