Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NANAKRAM ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KUNDALRAI ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT29/04/1986
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S.
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S.
ERADI, V. BALAKRISHNA (J)
MISRA, R.B. (J)
CITATION:
1986 AIR 1194 1986 SCR (2) 839
1986 SCC (3) 83 1986 SCALE (1)916
ACT:
Landlord and tenant - Central Provinces and Berar
Letting of Houses and Rent Control Order 1949, clauses 22,
23, 24, 28 and 30 read with section 23 of the Contract Act,
1872 Whether a lease concluded between a landlord and a
tenant in contravention of clause 22 of the Rent Control
Order can be assailed by the landlord as a void transaction
in a proceeding between the parties to the lease - Whether
the Notification under clause 30 retrospective - Concurrent
findings of the Courts below cannot be interfered with under
Article 136 of the Constitution.
HEADNOTE:
Under clause 22(1) of the Central Provinces and Berar
Letting of Houses and Rent Control Order, 1949 every
landlord of a house situated in an area to which those
provisions extend is required by the statute to give
intimation of a vacancy to the Deputy Commissioner. Clause
22(1) declares that the landlord shall not let or occupy the
house except in accordance with claw e 23. Clause 22(2)
provides that no person shall occupy a house except under an
order under clause 23(1) or clause 24 or on an assurance
from the landlord that the house is being permitted to be
occupied in accordance with clause 23(2). Clause 23 provides
that the Deputy Commissioner may, within fifteen days from
the date of receipt of the intimation of a vacancy, order
the landlord to let the vacant house to any person holding
an office of profit under the Union or State Government or
to a displaced person or to an evicted person and thereupon,
notwithstanding any agreement to the contrary, the landlord
is obliged to let the house to such person and place him in
possession thereof. If the landlord states that he needs the
house for his own occupation he must satisfy the Deputy
Commissioner in that behalf. The claw e provides further
that if no order is passed and served upon the landlord
within the period mentioned in clause 23(1), it is open to
the landlord to let the vacant house to any person.
840
Clause 28 empowers the Deputy Commissioner to take or cause
to be taken such steps and use or cause to be used such
force, as may be reasonably necessary for the purpose of
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securing compliance with, or for preventing or rectifying
any contravention of, the Rent Control Order. Clause 30
empowers the State Government to exempt, by Notification in
the official Gazette, any house or class of houses or any
person or class of persons from all or any of the provisions
of the Rent Control Order. On October 24, 1968 a
Notification was issued under clause 30 exempting from all
the provisions of Chapter III of the Rent Control Order any
house used for a nonresidential purpose, if it was
constructed before January 1, 1967.
In both the Civil appeals the landlords moved
applications before the Deputy Commissioner concerned to
declare the tenancy lease entered into by them with their
respective tenants as void in as much they were created in
violation of clauses 22 and 23 of Chapter III of the Rent
Control Order. The appellant-tenants who have lost their
defence pleas have come up in appeals by special leave.
Allowing the appeals, the Court,
^
HELD: 1. Nowhere does the Central Provinces and Berar
Letting of Houses and Rent Control Order, 1949 which is pari
materia with the U.P. Act mandate that the Deputy
Commissioner must eject a person who has entered into
possession of a house in violation of clause 22. If upon a
view of the circumstances prevailing then, the Deputy
Commissioner takes no action in the matter, there is no
reason why the lease between the landlord and the tenant,
although inconsistent with clause 22, should not be binding
as between the parties thereto. It is not a void
transaction. There is nothing in the Rent Control Order
declaring it to be so. Now if the lease is not void then it
is not open to either party to avoid the lease on the ground
that it is inconsistent with clause 22. The parties would be
bound, as between them, to observe the conditions of the
lease, and it cannot be assailed by either party in a
proceeding between them. [849 G-E]
Murlidhar Agarwal and Anr. v. State of U.P. & Ors.,
[1975] 1 S.C.R. 575 followed.
841
Udhoo Dass v. Prem Prakash and Anr., A.I.R. [1964]
Allahabad 1 approved.
Waman Shrinivas Kini v. Ratilal Bhagwandas & Co.,
[1959] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 217 distinguished.
2. Ex facie the terms of the Notification are
prospective only. There is nothing to suggest that they
operate retrospectively also. It is true that they refer to
houses constructed before January 1, 1967, but that is by
way of description only, in order to define the category of
houses covered by the operation of the exemption conferred
by the Notification. Words used merely to define the subject
matter of the exemption should not be confused with the
dimension of time during which the exemption operates.
Therefore, the Notification cannot be construed to be
retrospective in operation and, therefore, the tenancy
created in favour of the tenant in CA 5317 of 1983 with
effect from October 1, 1968 is exempted from the operation
of clause 22 of the Rent Control Order. [850 A-C; 849 G]
3. A concurrent finding of fact that a vacancy arose in
November 1961 in Civil Appeal 1200 of 1979 and a tenancy was
created by the respondent landlord in favour of the
appellant-tenant cannot be interfered with, under Article
136 of the Constitution, by the Supreme Court. [850 D]
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 5317 of
1983.
From the Judgment and Order dated 22.11.1982 of the
Bombay High Court in Writ Petition No. 1043 of 1982.
WITH
Civil Appeal No. 1200(N) of 1979.
From the Judgment and Order dated 1/2.3.1979 of the
Bombay High Court in Writ Petition No. 1043 of 1982.
V.A. Bobde, Ms. A. Chauhan and A.K. Sanghi for the
Appellants in C.A. No. 5317 of 1983.
842
M.N. Phadke, J.D. Jain and V.N. Phadke for the
Respondent in C.A. No. 5317 of 1983.
P.H. Parekh and Ms. Lata Krishnamoorthy for the
Appellant in C.A. No 1200 of 1979.
M.N. Phadke, N.M. Ghatate and S.V. Deshpande for the
Respondent in C.A. No. 1200 of 1979.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
PATHAK J. These are two civil appeals by special leave.
The question common to these appeals is whether a lease
concluded between a landlord and a tenant in contravention
of clause 22 of the Central Provinces and Berar Letting of
Houses and Rent Control Order, 1949 (hereinafter referred to
as ’the Rent Control Order’) can be assailed by the landlord
as a void transaction in a proceeding between the parties to
the lease?
Civil Appeal No. 5317 of 1983 is concerned with a shop
described as Block No. 5 in a non-residential building
situated in Dharampeth, Nagpur. The respondent is the
landlord and the appellant is the tenant. The building was
constructed before January 1, 1967, and the appellant became
a tenant from October 1, 1968.
Clause 13 of the Rent Control Order provides that no
landlord can determine a lease except with the previous
written permission of the Controller, for which he must
apply in writing to the Controller. Clause 13(3)(vi)
provides that if after hearing the parties the Controller is
satisfied that the landlord needs the premises for himself
the Controller must grant the landlord permission to
determine the lease. On January 19, 1980 the respondent
petitioned the Controller for permission on the ground that
he required the premises occupied by the appellant as his
son wanted to commence business therein.
It may be pointed out at this stage that clause 22 in
Chapter III of the Rent Control Order requires :
"22(1) Every landlord of a house situate in an
area to which this Chapter extends, shall -
843
(a) within seven days from the date of the
extension of this chapter, if the house is vacant
on such date; or
(b) within seven days from the date on which the
landlord becomes finally aware that the house will
become vacant or available for occupation by
himself or for other occupation on or about a
specified date;
give intimation of this fact to the Deputy
Commissioner of the district in which the area is
included or such other officer as may be specified
by him, in the Form given in the Schedule appended
to this Order, and shall not let or occupy the
house except in accordance with clause 23.
(2) No person shall occupy any house in respect of
which this chapter applies except under an order
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under sub-clause (1) of clause 23 or clause 24 or
on an assurance from the landlord that the house
is being permitted to be occupied in accordance
with sub-clause (2) of clause 23."
Clause 23 provides :
"23. (1) On receipt of the intimation in
accordance with clause 22, the Deputy Commissioner
may, within fifteen days from the date of receipt
of the said intimation, order the landlord to let
the vacant house to any person holding an office
of profit under the Union or State Government or
to a displaced person or to an evicted person and
thereupon notwithstanding any agreement to the
contrary, the landlord shall let the house to such
person and place him in possession thereof
immediately, if it is vacant or as soon as it
becomes vacant :
Provided that, if the landlord has, in the
intimation given under clause 22, stated that he
needs the house of his own occupation, the Deputy
Commissioner shall if satisfied after due enquiry
that the house is so needed, permit the landlord
to occupy the same.
844
(2) If no order is passed and served upon the
landlord within the period specified in sub-clause
(1), he shall be free to let the vacant house to
any person."
Clause 30 of the Rent Control Order empowers the State
Government to exempt, by Notification in the Official
Gazette, any house or class of houses or any person or class
of persons from all or any of the provisions of the Rent
Control Order. On October 24, 1968 a Notification was issued
under the said clause 30 exempting from all the provisions
of Chapter III of the Rent Control Order any house used for
a non-residential purpose if it was constructed before
January 1, 1967.
On September 23, 1980 the respondent submitted in
writing that the building comprising the premises in
question had been constructed for a non-residential purpose
prior to January 1, 1967 and the appellant had entered into
its tenancy from October 1, 1968, and, therefore as the
tenancy had been created in violation of Chapter III of the
Rent Control Order it was void and there was no valid
relationship of landlord and tenant. The appellant filed his
reply stating that Chapter III did not apply to buildings
constructed before January 1, 1967 and, therefore, even if
no intimation had been given as required by Chapter III the
tenancy did not become void. On October 6, 1980 the
Controller found that the premises had been constructed
prior to January 1, 1967 and the appellant had become a
tenant therein for a non-residential purpose from October 1,
1968 and that the premises were exempt from the provisions
of Chapter III. He held that the respondent’s petition for
the grant of permission was maintainable. As regards the
respondent’s submission that the tenancy was void he held
that the plea was premature and could not be sustained
without evidence being adduced on the record. Accordingly he
directed the parties to lead evidence.
Against the order of the Controller the respondent
appealed, and the Appellate Authority allowed the appeal on
February 17, 1981 holding that the Notification of exemption
operated from October 24, 1968 and the tenancy in favour of
the appellant had become void. He observed that at the time
when the tenancy was created the provisions of Chapter III
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were in operation and there was no exemption from such
845
operation. The appellant filed a review petition contending
that the appeal filed by the respondent was not maintainable
and could not be entertained by the Appellate Authority. He
also questioned the findings on the merits rendered by the
Appellate Authority in the appeal. The review petition was
rejected on March 2, 1982.
The appellant then filed a writ petition in the Bombay
High Court which was dismissed by its judgment and order
dated November 22, 1982. The High Court held that the appeal
filed by the respondent was maintainable under clause 21(1)
of the Rent Control Order, that the exemption provided by
the Notification of October 24, 1968 operated prospectively
only, that therefore clause 22 in Chapter III was in
operation at the time when the tenancy was entered into, and
consequently the Appellate Authority was justified in
holding that as no intimation was given as contemplated by
clause 22 the tenancy was invalid.
In Civil Appeal No. 1200 of 1979 the respondent is the
owner of a shop situated at Akola. He instituted a suit for
possession of the shop alleging that it was first taken on
lease by one Shamji Bhai in 1958 and during the next year it
passed into the joint possession of Shamji Bhai and the
appellant Kaku Bhai as tenants. Some time after November
1961 the appellant Kaku Bhai alone continued in possession.
The respondent contended that the lease in favour of Shamji
Bhai in 1958 and thereafter to Kaku Bhai in 1961 were
invalid and inoperative inasmuch as they were entered in
violation of clause 22 of the Central Provinces and Berar
Letting of Houses and Rent Control Order, 1949 (’the Rent
Control Order’), as no intimation was given that the
premises had fallen vacant in 1958 when let out to Shamji
Bhai nor in 1961 when let out to the appellant Kaku Bhai.
Alleging that the appellant Kaku Bhai was in possession not
as a tenant but as a mere licencee or a trespasser the
respondent claimed possession and mesne profits.The
appellant resisted the suit and inter alia pleaded that he
was a tenant of the premises, and that having accepted him
as tenant it was not open to the respondent to take the plea
that the lease was void. The Trial Court held that the lease
in favour of Shamji Bhai and also the lease in favour of the
appellant were void because intimation of the vacancy had
not been communicated to the statutory authority at the
846
relevant time and, therefore, the appellant must be treated
as being in permissive possession as a licencee. The suit
was decreed. On appeal the Bombay High Court held that the
lease in favour of Shamji Bhai and thereafter the lease in
favour of the appellant were hit by clause 22(2) of the Rent
Control Order and were, therefore, void. The appeal was
dismissed.
The point common to both the appeals is whether it is
open to a landlord in a proceeding for permission to
terminate the tenancy and for possession of the premises to
urge that the lease between the parties is void inasmuch as
it was entered in contravention of clause 22 of the Rent
Control Order.
It is contended for the appellants in both the appeals
that it is not open to the landlord to take such a plea
because although the lease may not be binding on the
Controller or the Deputy Commissioner it is operative as
between the parties and cannot be questioned by either in a
proceeding instituted by the one against the other. The
appellants rely on Murlidhar Agarwal and Anr. v. State of
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U.P. and Ors., [1975] 1 S.C.R. 575. That was a case arising
under the U.P. (Temporary) Control of Rent and Eviction Act,
1947 (herein after referred to as ’the U.P. Rent Act’). The
Court was concerned with the question whether a suit filed
by the appellants for recovery of possession, on the basis
that the tenancy created by the predecessor-in-interest of
the appellants in favour of the respondent had expired, was
maintainable in law inasmuch as it was instituted without
obtaining the permission of the District Magistrate under
s.3(1) of the U.P. Rent Act. The Trial Court decreed the
suit, but on appeal the High Court reversed the decree
holding that the suit was not maintainable in view of
section 3, and in the circumstances, it dismissed the suit.
On appeal to this Court, the Court repelled the plea raised
by the appellants-landlords that the respondent was not a
tenant and held that, therefore, permission was necessary in
order to maintain the suit. In taking that view this Court
referred to Udhoo Dass v. Prem Prakash and Anr., A.I.R. 1964
Allahabad 1, where a Full Bench of the Allahabad High Court
had laid down that a lease made in violation of the
provisions of s.7(2) of the U.P. Rent Act would be valid
between the parties and would create a relationship of
landlord and tenant between them although it
847
might not bind the Rent Control Officer. This Court did not
doubt the correctness of the principle propounded in that
case and held that the respondent before them was a tenant.
Learned counsel for the respondent invited our attention to
Waman Shriniwas Kini v. Ratilal Bhagwandas & Co., [1959]
Supp. 2 S.C.R. 217. That was a case under the Bombay Hotel
and Lodging Houses Rates Control Act, 1947. The appellant
was a tenant of a shop. He let it out to sub-tenants. The
respondent-landlord brought a suit for ejectment against the
appellant on the ground that s. 15 of the Bombay Hotel and
Lodging Houses Rates Control Act, 1947 prohibited sub-
letting and that as a landlord he had a right to evict the
tenant on that ground. When the matter came in appeal to
this Court, the Court held that even though the lease
between the parties recognised subletting, as the suit was
brought not for the enforcement of the agreement but to
enforce the right of eviction flowing directly from an
infraction of s.15 of the Act, the respondent was entitled
to sue for ejectment.
The provisions of clause 22 and clause 23 of Chapter
III of the Rent Control Order have been extracted earlier.
It is apparent that under clause 22(1) every landlord of a
house situated in an area to which those provisions extend
is required by the statute to give intimation of a vacancy
to the Deputy Commissioner. Clause 22(1) further declares
that the landlord shall not let or occupy the house except
in accordance with clause 23. Clause 22(2) provides that no
person shall occupy a house except under an order under
clause 23(1) or clause 24 or on an assurance from the
landlord that the house is being permitted to be occupied in
accordance with clause 23(2). Clause 23 provides that the
Deputy Commissioner may, within fifteen days from the date
of receipt of the intimation of a vacancy, order the
landlord to let the vacant house to any person holding an
office of profit under the Union or State Government or to a
displaced person or to an evicted person and thereupon,
notiwithstanding any agreement to the contrary, the landlord
is obliged to let the house to such person and place him in
possession thereof. If the landlord states that he needs the
house for his own occupation he must satisfy the Deputy
Commissioner in that behalf. The clause provides further
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that if no order is passed and served upon the landlord
within the period mentioned in clause 23(1), it is open to
the landlord to let the vacant house to any
848
person. Clause 28 empowers the Deputy Commissioner to take
or cause to be taken such steps and use or cause to be used
such force, as may be reasonably necessary for the purpose
of securing compliance with, or for preventing or rectifying
any contravention of, the Rent Control Order.
Now, in deciding Murlidhar Agarwal, (supra) this Court
approved of the proposition of the law laid down by the
Allahabad High Court in Udhoo Dass, (supra). The High Court
had the provisions of s. 7 and s. 7A of the U.P. Rent Act
before it. Section 7 required the landlord to report to the
District Magistrate if his house had fallen vacant or was
about to fall vacant, and thereupon the District Magistrate
was empowered to direct the landlord to let the premises to
a person specified in the order. The High Court dealt with
the question whether a lease between the landlord and
another person in violation of the order of the District
Magistrate would be a valid lease as between the parties
thereto. It held that such a lease would be valid between
the parties. It would not, however, be binding on the
District Magistrate. That it would not be binding on the
District Magistrate was evidenced by the power conferred
upon him under s. 7A(1) of the U.P. Rent Act to take
proceedings for the eviction of such tenant. Section 7A(1)
provided that if the vacancy of an accommodation was not
reported or a person occupied an accommodation in
contravention of an order issued under s. 7(2) the District
Magistrate could require him to show cause why he should not
be evicted from it. If he failed to show cause the District
Magistrate could direct him to vacate the accommodation and
if he failed to vacate the District Magistrate could use
force to evict him. The power conferred on the District
Magistrate to take proceedings for the eviction of such
tenant was discretionary. It was open to the District
Magistrate not to exercise the power if there was undue
delay or if for other good reason he found it inexpedient to
do so. If he did not exercise the power conferred by s.
7A(1), the lease between the landlord and the other person
would continue to subsist and that other person would
continue to enjoy the status of a tenant. It would be a
valid lease. It could not be regarded as a void lease. In a
case under the Rent Control Order, with which these appeals
are concerned, the position appears to be materially
similar. The landlord is prohibited by clause 22(1) from
occupying the house or granting a lease except in
849
accordance with clause 23. There is a prohibition under
clause 22(2) on any other person seeking to occupy the
house, except again in accordance with clause 23. In clause
23 it is the Deputy Commissioner who will order the landlord
to let the vacant house to a person indicated by him, a
person who falls in one of the categories specified in the
clause or, if he is satisfied, he may permit the landlord
himself to occupy the house. As was the position under the
U.P. Rent Act, so also under the Rent Control Order, the
Deputy Commissioner has power under clause 28 to take steps
and use force for the purpose of securing compliance with,
or for preventing or rectifying, any contravention of the
Rent Control Order. Clause 28 speaks of a power conferred on
the Deputy Commissioner in that behalf. Nowhere does the
Rent Control Order mandate that the Deputy Commissioner must
eject a person who has entered into possession of a house in
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violation of clause 22. If upon a view of the circumstances
prevailing then the Deputy Commissioner takes no action in
the matter, there is no reason why the lease between the
landlord and the tenant, although inconsistent with clause
22, should not be binding as between the parties thereto. It
is not a void transaction. There is nothing in the Rent
Control Order declaring it to be so. Now if the lease is not
void then it is not open to either party to avoid the lease
on the ground that it is inconsistent with clause 22. The
parties would be bound, as between them, to observe the
conditions of the lease, and it cannot be assailed by either
party in a proceeding between them.
On this view alone both the appeals must be allowed.
In Civil Appeal No. 5317 of 1983 an alternative point
has been raised on behalf of the appellant. It is urged that
although the Notification dated october 24, 1961 exempts
from the provisions of Chapter III of the Rent Control Order
a house used for a non-residential purpose if it is
constructed before January 1, 1967 the Notification must be
construed to be retrospective in operation, and that,
therefore, the tenancy created in favour of the appellant
with effect from October 1, 1968 is exempted from the
operation of clause 22 of the Rent Control Order. In other
words, because of the exemption the tenancy could not be
regarded as violating the provisions of clause 22 and no
question could arise of the tenancy being void on that
account. It is not possible to
850
accept the contention. Ex facie the terms of the
Notification are prospective only. There is nothing to
suggest that they operate retrospectively also. It is true
that they refer to houses constructed before January 1,
1967, but that is by way of description only, in order to
define the category of houses covered by the operation of
the exemption conferred by the Notification. Words used
merely to define the subject matter of the exemption should
not be confused with the dimension of time during which the
exemption operates. This point must fail.
In Civil Appeal No. 1200 of 1979 another point raised
on behalf of the appellant is that no vacancy of the
premises took place in 1961 when the appellant was in
possession as a tenant. The case is that the appellant was
in joint possession with Shamji Bhai before that, and the
tenancy continued on Shamji Bhai surrendering his tenancy
rights in November 1961. The Trial Court and the High Court
have concurrently held as a finding of fact that a vacancy
arose in November 1961 and a tenancy was created by the
respondent in favour of the appellant on that occasion. We
do not propose to interfere with the finding.
In the result, on the view taken by us on the first
point in each of the two appeals, the appeals are allowed.
In Civil Appeal No. 5317 of 1983, we set aside the appellate
order dated February 17, 1981 of the Appellate Authority
under the Rent Control Order and the judgment and order of
the Bombay High Court in the writ petition filed by the
appellant insofar as they proceed on the finding that the
lease is void. In Civil Appeal No. 1200 of 1979 we set aside
the judgment and decree of the Bombay High Court and dismiss
the suit filed by the respondent. The paries in each appeal
will bear their costs.
S.R. Appeals allowed.
851