Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
LIFE INSURANCE CORPORATION OF INDIA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHIVA PRASAD TRIPATHI & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 18/01/1996
BENCH:
PUNCHHI, M.M.
BENCH:
PUNCHHI, M.M.
VENKATASWAMI K. (J)
CITATION:
JT 1996 (2) 713 1996 SCALE (1)541
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
O R D E R
Leave granted.
This is an appeal against the judgment and order of a
Division Bench of the Bombay High Court dated 21-2-1995
passed in Civil Writ Petition No.276 of 1995 whereunder
certain directions have been made towards conferral of
jurisdiction on the Small Causes Court, Bombay which, prima
facie, it is debarred to have.
The respondent - Shiva Prasad Tripathi - was an
employee of the appellant- Life Insurance Corporation of
India and on that basis was allotted the premises owned and
possessed by it. On expiry of the tenure of his service, the
respondent was required to vacate the premises. When he
refused to do so, the Estate Officer of the Corporation was
brought into action in issuing a notice to the respondent to
show cause why appropriate orders under Section 7 of the
Public Premises (Eviction of Unauthorised Occupants) Act,
1971 [for short ’the Act’] be not passed against him. The
cause shown by the respondent did not appeal to the Estate
Officer and thus an order of eviction was passed. The said
order was unsuccessfully challenged in appeal by the
respondent before the City Civil Court at Bombay. The plea
of the respondent before the appellate court that he was a
tenant in the disputed premises, having security of tenure,
was not entertained and the matter was left at large.
The respondent then moved the High Court in Writ
Jurisdiction so as to challenge the orders of the Estate
Officer as also that of the appellate authority. Though the
respondent could not demolish the grounds for eviction in
the High Court, he clung to the plea of despair that if he
were to enter the Small Causes Court to establish his
tenancy rights, his possession in the interregnums would not
be protected by the Small Causes Court due to Section 10 of
the Act, which reads as follows:
"10. Save as otherwise expressly
provided in this Act, every order made
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by an estate officer or appellate
officer under this Act shall be final
and shall not be called in question 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 this Act."
The respondent was given a lee-way by the High Court on
taking the view that the question of tenancy pertains to
property, which plea was adjudicable before a court or a
competent authority, and that court or authority could issue
an injunction or an interim direction, and no bar could be
erected to stop it towards the grant thereof. It is in these
circumstances that the High Court directed that the Judge,
Small Causes Court, shall adjudicate on the question of
tenancy when raised by the respondent in the suit and such
court, in that event, would be able to issue any interim
order or injunction which the respondent may be found
entitled to. In addition to that the High Court also ordered
that the impugned orders of the Estate Officer and the
appellate authority would remain suspended till the decision
of the application for an interim relief was filed before
the Court of Small Causes. This has raised the instant
challenge.
We regret to say that the orders of the High Court are
bereft of any reasoning in giving a complete go-by to the
bar erected under section 10 of the Act. Section 10 had not
to be viewed in isolation but had to be understood in the
context of the other provisions of the Act standing in
support thereof. Clearly, a suit for injunction to negate
the orders of those two authorities stood barred under
Section 10. The legislative mandate was that the court by
order cannot obstruct the execution of the orders passed by
the Estate Officer and the appellate authority. The court’s
power, otherwise, to adjudicate on the question whether a
person was a tenant or not, in no way, has been taken away
by Section 10. The adjudication however would be declaratory
in nature and may sexually end up in a consequence. Nothing
interim however is obtainable. We therefore do not agree
with the High Court that whatever stood achieved by the
appellant under the Act, would suffer deprival just because
the plea of the respondent being a tenant is debatable in
the court. We, therefore, upset the impugned order of the
High Court and dismiss the Writ Petition preferred by the
respondent before the High Court.
Learned counsel for the respondent, however, has been
successful in persuading us to grant him a two-fold relief,
namely, (i) the respondent shall not immediately be
disturbed and would get six months’ time for vacating the
premises; of course, on his executing the usual undertaking
before this Court to vacate the premises, within a period of
four weeks from today, the quantum of rent/damages payable
not forming part of, or made reference of in that
undertaking; and (ii) within a period of two months, the
appellant shall be duty bound to clear the retrial dues of
the respondent such as Provident Fund, gratuity etc., as are
legally due to him, so that he has enough funds in his hands
to seek an alternate accommodation in the meantime.
The appellant is, accordingly, directed.
The question of rent/damages is left open. The
appellant has gracefully given out that should the
respondent make a representation to the appellant for
waiving of rent/damages for the period for which those would
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be payable, the appellant undertakes to consider that
representation sympathetically. It is so ordered.
In light of the above, this appeal stands allowed. For
the respondent however, this matter stands concluded finally
because of the individual reliefs we have granted to him. No
costs.