Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ANANDI D.JADHAV (DEAD) BY LRS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NIRMALA RAMCHANDRA KORE & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/04/2000
BENCH:
S.N.Hegde, S.S.M.Quadri
JUDGMENT:
SYED SHAH MOHAMMED QUADRI,J.
This appeal raises an interesting question : whether
on respondents 2 and 3, sons of the first respondent
(tenant), building a house the appellants-landlords can seek
eviction of the first-respondent under clause (l) of Section
13(1) of the Bombay Rents, Hotels and Lodging House Rates
Control Act, 1947. The appellants are the legal heirs of
the landlord subsequent owner of premises consisting of one
room admeasuring 10 x 10 in City Survey No.2349, E.Ward,
District Kolhapur (referred to as the suit premises). The
suit premises was let out to the first respondent on a
monthly rent of Rs.100/- by the erstwhile owner in 1987.
Respondents 2 and 3 lived with their mother till they built
a bungalow in R.S.No.690/B, Sambhajinagar, (hereinafter
referred to as ’the house’). The said owner filed the suit,
out of which the appeal arises, under Section 13(1)(l) of
the Bombay Rents, Hotels and Lodging House Rates Control
Act, 1947 (referred to in this judgment as the Act)
against the respondents for their eviction on the ground
that the respondents had built the house and thus have
alternate suitable accommodation for their residence. They
contested the suit stating that the first respondent had
been in occupation of the suit premises for the last 30
years and that she has no concern with the house, built by
respondents 2 and 3, which is not a bungalow as alleged by
the appellants. It is stated that initially the monthly
rent of the suit premises was Rs.50/- which was enhanced to
Rs.100/- and that the suit was filed only to harass her.
The trial court found that respondents 2 and 3 had
constructed the house which could not be said to be a
suitable residence of the first respondent and dismissed the
suit on January 1, 1997. On appeal, the IInd Additional
District Judge at Kolhapur held that though respondents 2
and 3 had built the house, a two storeyed building
consisting of eight rooms, in which they were residing, yet
respondent No.1 could be said to have acquired suitable
alternative accommodation. Thus, the suit was decreed by
allowing the appeal with costs. The first respondent
challenged the validity of that order of the Appellate Court
dated December 20, 1997 in Writ Petition No.167 of 1998
before the High Court. Holding that the alternate
accommodation stood in the name of respondents 2 and 3 and
the consideration for it was not provided by the first
respondent the High Court opined that she could not be said
to have a suitable alternate residence and accordingly set
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aside the order of the District Judge by allowing the writ
petition on January 27, 1998. It is against that order of
the High Court that the present appeal is filed by special
leave. Mr.A.M.Khanwilkar, learned counsel appearing for the
appellants, vehemently contended that the first respondent
and her sons lived in the suit premises as members of the
family for over 30 years and the newly built house is a
family house even if it was built by her sons; in any event
she had acquired alternate accommodation. The High Court,
submitted the learned counsel, took into consideration
irrelevant matters to non-suit the appellants; he argued
that under the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956 the
first respondent had a right to be maintained by her sons
and, therefore, she was entitled to live in their house and
so a suitable alternate accommodation was available to her.
Mr.A.S.Bhasme, learned counsel appearing for the
respondents, contended that the first respondent had no
interest in the house; she was visiting that house as a
guest and had no right to live in the house so no case under
Section 13(1)(l) of the Act was made out and as such the
High Court rightly allowed the writ petition. It will be
useful to quote Section 13(1)(l) of the Act here : 13(1).
Notwithstanding anything contained in this Act but subject
to the provisions of sections 15and 15A, a landlord shall be
entitled to recover possession of any premises if the Court
is satisfied
(l) that the tenant after the coming into operation of
this Act has built, acquired vacant possession of or been
allotted a suitable residence.
A plain reading of the above provision shows that
under clause (l) a landlord is entitled to recover
possession of a premises from any tenant provided the Court
is satisfied that after coming into operation of the Act,
the tenant has built or has acquired vacant possession of or
has been allotted a suitable residence. From the scheme of
the provision it is discernible that it is only when the
tenant gets a right to reside in a house other than the
demised premises on the happening of any one of the three
alternatives mentioned therein, namely, either by building
or by acquiring vacant possession of or by allotment of a
house, that the landlord can seek recovery of possession of
the demised premises from the tenant. The learned counsel
placed before us two judgments of this Court dealing with a
similar provision in the Delhi Rent Control Act. Ganpat Ram
Sharma & Ors. Vs. Gayatri Devi [1987 (3) SCC 576] is a
case arising under Section 14(1)(h) of the Delhi Rent
Control Act, 1958, which provides that if the tenant has
built, acquired possession of or been allotted a residence,
the landlord may seek his eviction. This Court has laid
down that the burden to prove that any of the alternatives
mentioned in the Section is on the landlord and it is only
when he establishes this that the burden will shift on the
tenant to show that it is not a suitable alternative
accommodation. B.R.Mehta vs. Atma Devi & Ors. [1987 (4)
SCC 183] also arose under Section 14(1)(h) of the Delhi Rent
Control Act, 1958. There the wife of the tenant, a
Government employee, was allotted accommodation by the
Government wherein she was living separately as the
relations between the husband and the wife were strained.
While pointing out that the aims and objects of the Act are
to control unreasonable evictions and to ensure that in an
atmosphere of acute shortage of accommodation there is
proper enjoyment of available spaces by those who want and
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deserve and that the rationale behind the scheme of Section
14(1)(h) of the Act is that if for all practical and real
sense the tenant has acquired or built or has been allotted
another residence then his need for the old tenanted
residence goes and the tenant loses his right to retain his
tenanted premises, it was emphasised that to attract the
provision the tenant should have domain of the alternative
accommodation so as to use it as a substitute for the place
which he is using in the tenancy. It was held that in view
of the strained relations between the husband and the wife,
the alternative accommodation ceased to be a matrimonial
home and the tenant could not use it as a substitute for the
demised premises. The judgment of the Court of Appeal in
Strandingford vs. Probert [1949 (2) All.E.L.R. 861] relied
upon by the learned counsel has absolutely no relevance.
There the question was whether alternative accommodation was
suitable for the tenant. It was held that the alternative
accommodation must fulfil the requirement of the tenant and
his family which included his married sons. That was
because of a specific provision in the English Act that
accommodation shall be deemed to be suitable if in the
opinion of the Court it is reasonably suitable to the needs
of the tenant and his family as regards proximity to place
of work etc. There is no such provision in the Act in
question. Therefore, the judgment in the above case would
be of no assistance to the appellants. Now the question
arises what is the ambit of the term tenant in Section
5(11) of the Act. Insofar as it is relevant for our
purpose, it reads thus : 5(11). tenant means any person
by whom or on whose account rent is payable for any premises
and includes
(a) such sub-tenants and other persons as have derived
title under a tenant before the 1st day of February 1973;
(aa)
(b)
(bb)
(bba)
(c)(i) in relation to any premises let for residence,
when the tenant dies, whether the death has occurred before
or after the commencement of the Bombay, Rents, Hotel and
Lodging House Rates Control (Amendment) Act, 1978, any
member of the tenants family residing with the tenant at
the time of his death, or, in the absence of such member,
any heir of the deceased tenant, as may be decided in
default of agreement by the Court;
(c)(ii) The definition of
tenant is too exhaustive to include any member of the
family residing with him. Such members of his family who
were residing with the tenant at the time of his death, or
in their absence any heir of the deceased tenant, as may be
decided in default of agreement by the court, would become
tenant only on his death. It is true that the first
respondent and her sons, respondents 2 and 3, were let into
possession of the suit premises about 30 years before the
institution of the suit but the first respondent alone was
the tenant and respondents 2 and 3 were there as members of
her family. They were, therefore, not tenants of the suit
premises. The concurrent findings of the courts below are
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that respondents 2 and 3 built the house for which the first
respondent did not contribute any money; she did not shift
her residence to the said house though she was visiting that
house off and on. Inasmuch as the first respondent did not
build any house and respondents 2 and 3 are not the tenants,
the first of the three alternatives, referred to above, is
not available to the appellant to seek eviction of the first
respondent. Now with regard to the second alternative,
namely, whether the first respondent acquired vacant
possession of the house built by respondents 2 and 3, the
learned counsel for the appellants has submitted that she is
entitled to claim maintenance from them under Section 20 of
the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act which imposes an
obligation on a son/daughter to maintain his/her infirm
parents or the unmarried daughters who are unable to
maintain himself/herself and, therefore, she acquired a
right to live in the said house. The submission though
attractive lacks substance. The first respondent being aged
mother undoubtedly has a right to be maintained by
respondents 2 and 3 but that does not mean that she is
entitled to live along with her sons families. The
expression acquired vacant possession, in the context, in
our view, means acquisition of vacant possession of a
suitable accommodation in which one has a right to reside.
It must be a legally enforceable right. The first
respondent does not have any such legal right to reside in
the house of respondents 2 and 3. Though, it cannot be
disputed that respondents 2 and 3 had for a period of 30
years before building their own house lived with the first
respondent as her sons and morally they are obliged to take
care of the aged mother by accommodating her in their house,
yet in law we cannot enlarge that obligation to legal duty
to provide her residence in the house along with their
family. Thus, the second alternative will also have no
application. Admittedly the third alternative is not
attracted to the facts of this case. From the above
discussion, it follows that the requirements of clause (l)
of Section 13(1) of the Act are not satisfied. The judgment
of the High Court, under appeal, does not suffer from any
illegality to warrant interference. The appeal is dismissed
but in the facts and circumstances of the case without
costs.