Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 7
PETITIONER:
MOTI RAM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SURAJ BHAN & OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
03/02/1960
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SUBBARAO, K.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
CITATION:
1960 AIR 655 1960 SCR (2) 896
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1963 SC 499 (6)
D 1968 SC1336 (6)
RF 1984 SC1164 (14)
RF 1988 SC1060 (6)
ACT:
Rent Control-Ejectment-Statute Permitting ejectment for
reconstruction of building-Subsequent amendment making of
Provision more stinget-Whether retrospective-Statute making
appellate order final-Before making of order statute amended
by providing revision to High Court-If amendment applies to
Pending appealed Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act, 1949
(E.P. 3 Of 949, SS. 13(3)(a)(iii) and 14(4)-East Punjab
Urban Rent Rcstriction (Amendment) Act, 1956. (Punj. 29 Of
1956). SS. 2 and 3.
HEADNOTE:
On August 28, 1956 the respondent i applied to the Rent
Controller for the eviction of the appellant from a shop
under S. I3 of the East Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act,
1949, inter alia on the ground that he wanted to reconstruct
the shop. On the date, s. 13(3) (a)(iii) of the Act
provided that a landlord may apply for the eviction of his
tenant if he required the building f or reconstruction or f
or its re placement by another building or for the erection
of other building. Section 15 provided for an appeal from
the order of the Rent Controller and sub-s. (4) Of s. 15
provided that the decision of the appellate authority, and
subject only to such decision, the order of the Controller
shall be final. By Amending Act 29 Of 1956, which came into
force on September 24, 1956, ss. 13(3)(a)(iii) and 15 were
amended; amended S. 13(3)(a)(iii) permitted ejectment if the
landlord required it to carry out any building work at the
instance of the Government or Local Authority or any
Improvement Trust under some improvement or development
scheme or if It had become unsafe or unfit for human
habitation ; and new s. 15(5) introduced by the amending
Act, gave to the High Court power to call for and examine
the records relating to any order passed under the Act for
satisfying itself as to the legality or propriety of such
order. The application for eviction was dismissed by the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 7
Rent Controller and an appeal to the appellate authority
also failed. Respondent i went to the High Court in
revision and the High Court decreed eviction holding that
the shop was required for
897
reconstruction within the meaning of the unamended s.
13(3)(a) (iii). The appellant contended that the amended
provisions of S. 15 which permitted a revision to be
filed before the High Court were inapplicable as the case
was governed by the law as it stood on the date when the
application for ejectment was made and that Respondent i was
not entitled to the decree as the case did not fall within
the provisions of amended s. 13(3)(a)( ... ) which were
retrospective and were applicable to the case.
Held, that the revision application before the High Court
was competent and the High Court had jurisdiction to
interfere. Finality could be attached to the decision of
the appellate authority only after the decision was made and
not before. But at the time when the appellate authority
decided the matter in the present case the amending section
had come into force and the appellate order could not claim
finality under the earlier provision.
Indira Sohanlal v. Custodian of Evacuee Property Delhi.
[1955] 2 S.C.R. III7, followed.
Delhi Cloth and General Mills Co. Ltd. v. Income-tax Commis-
sioner, (1924) L.L.R. 9 Lah. 284; Colonial Sugar Refining
Co. Ltd. v. Irving, (1905) A.C. 369, and Garikapatti Veeraya
v. N. Subbiah Choudhury, [1957] S.C.R. 488, referred to.
Held, further that the provisions of amended s.
13(3)(a)(iii) were not retrospective and did not apply to
the present case. The amendment was in regard to a matter
of substantive law as it affected the substantive rights of
the landlord. An amendment which affected vested rights
operated prospectively unless it was made retrospective
expressly or by necessary implication.
Ram Parshad Halwai, Ludhiana v. Mukhtiay Chand, I.L.R. 1958
Pun. 1553, approved.
JUDGMENT:
Civil Appellate Jurisdiction: Civil Appeal No. 524 of 1959.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
August 7,1959 of the Punjab High Court in Civil Revision No.
613 of 1958, arising out of the Judgment and order dated the
August 19,1958 of the District Judge, Gurgaon, in Civil
Appeal No. 14/14 of 1958.
N. S. Bindra and P. C. Aggarwala, for the appellant.
Achhru Ram and K. P. Gupta, for respondent No. 1.
1960 February 3. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.-This appeal by special leave arises from
ejectment proceedings taken by Suraj Bhan (respondent 1)
against the appellant Moti Ram in respect of a shop situated
in the urban area of
898
Gurgaon which has been in the occupation of the appellant
as a tenant for more than twenty years on a monthly
rental of Rs. 20. Respondent 1 purchased the shop on June
15, 1956, and soon thereafter he applied to the Rent
Controller for the eviction -of the appellant under s.
13 of the East Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act, 1949 (3 of
1949) (hereinafter called the Act). This application was
based on four grounds. it was urged that the appellant was
a habitual defaulter and was in arrears of rent, that the
return of the money invested by respondent 1 in the purchase
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 7
of the shop was not adequate, that respondent 1 apprehended
that the godown and the shop of which he was in possession
as a tenant would be sold off and he may be dispossessed
therefrom, that is why he would require the shop in the
present proceedings for his personal use and that respondent
I wanted to reconstruct the shop for which necessary
sanction had been obtained by him from the Municipal
Committee of Gurgaon and the plan prepared in that behalf
had been duly approved. This claim was resisted by the
appellant who disputed the correctness and the validity of
all the pleas taken by respondent 1. The Rent Controller
upheld the contentions of the appellant and rejected all the
pleas made by respondent 1. In regard to the plea that the
respondent wanted to reconstruct the shop the Rent
Controller found that the evidence adduced by respondent 1
in support of the said plea "had been created as a
camouflage and that the said plea was a false pretext to
obtain the eviction of the appellant. On these findings the
application made by respondent I for evicting the appellant
was dismissed.
Respondent I then appealed to the District Court against the
said decision. His appeal, however, failed since the
appellate court confirmed all the findings made by the Rent
Controller. In respect of the last plea raised by respondent
I about the rebuilding of the shop the appellate court
observed that respondent I had got the plan approved and had
also got the sanction from the Municipal Committee to re-
construct the building so as to be able to make a
899
ground for getting the appellant ejected from the shop.
This appellate decision was challenged by respondent I by
his revisional application in the High Court of Punjab at
Chandigarh. The High Court confirmed the findings of the
courts below on the first three pleas raised by respondent
1. The last plea raised by respondent 1, however, was upheld
by the High Court with the result that the revisional
application preferred by respondent I was allowed and his
claim for evicting the appellant was decreed. It is this
decree which is challenged before us by the appellant in the
present appeal.
Before dealing with the contentions raised by Mr. Bindra on
behalf of the appellant it is necessary to mention one
material fact. The application for ejectment was made on
August 28, 1956. Before the written statement was filed by
the appellant on November 14, 1956, the Act was amended by
amending Act 29 of 1956 on September 24, 1956. In the
present appeal we are concerned with amendments made in ss.
13 and 15 of the Act. Section 13(1) provides inter alia
that a tenant in possession of a building shall not be
evicted therefrom except in accordance with the provisions
of this section, or in pursuance of an order made under s.
13 of the Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act, 1947 as
subsequently amended. Section 13, sub-s. (2) provides for
an application to be made by a landlord who seeks to evict
his tenant for a direction in that behalf. It then proceeds
to prescribe conditions on the satisfaction of which a
decree for ejectment can be passed in favour of the
landlord. We are not concerned with these conditions in the
present appeal. Section 13(3)(aXiii) as it stood at the
date of the application made by respondent I provided that a
landlord may apply to the Controller for an order directing
the tenant to put the landlord in possession in the case of
any building if he requires it for the reconstruction of
that building or for its .replacement by another building or
for the erection of-other buildings. By the amending Act
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 7
this proviision -has, been substantially. modified. Section
13(3)(a) (iii))as amended reads thus "In the casee of any
900
building or rented land, if he requires it to carry out any
building work at the instance of the Government or Local
Authority or any Improvement Trust under some improvement or
development scheme or it has become unsafe or unfit for
human habitation." One of the questions which we have to
consider in this appeal is whether this amended provision
applies to the present proceedings.
The other relevant section is s. 15, sub-s. (4). Under s.
15, sub-s. (4) as it stood on the date when the application
was filed provided that the decision of the appellate
authority, and subject only to such decision, an order of
the Controller shall be final and shall not be liable to be
called in question in any court of law whether in a suit or
any other proceeding by way of appeal or revision. This has
been subsequently amended by deleting the last clause in
sub-s. (4) and substituting in its place the words "except
as provided in sub-s. (5) of this section." Sub-s. (5) which
has been added reads thus:
"The High Court may, at any time, on the application of any
aggrieved party or on its own motion,, call for and examine
the records relating to any order passed or proceedings
taken under this Act for the purpose of satisfying itself as
to the legality or propriety of such order or proceedings
and may pass such order in relation thereto as it may deem
fit."
On behalf of the appellant it is urged before us that this
amended provision which permits a revisional application to
be filed before the High Court is inapplicable to the
present proceedings.
Let us first deal with the point about the competence of the
revisional application. The appellant’s case is that under
s. 15, sub-s. (4) as it stood at the time when the present
proceeding commenced, the decision of the appellate
authority was final, and it could not be questioned in suit
or other proceedings by way of appeal or revision. In other
words, a revisional application against the appellate
decision was expressly excluded. If at the time when the
present proceedings commenced the decision of the appellate
authority was final in the eyes of law the
901
subsequent amendment by which a revisional application has
been allowed cannot affect that position. It was the
appellant’s right as a party to the proceedings to claim the
benefit of the finality of the appellate order so far as the
present proceedings are concerned. Put in a different form
the contentions that the provision for a revisional
application which has now been made by the amending Act
cannot retrospectively affect the proceedings which were
pending at the time when the amending Act was passed.
Unfortunately for the appellant this point is concluded by
the decision of this Court in the case of Indira Sohanlal v.
Custodian of Evacuee Property, Delhi (1). In that case the
appellant who was a displaced person from Lahore was the
owner of a house there and had arranged to have it exchanged
with certain lands in a village in the State of Delhi
belonging to an evacuee ’M’. On February 23, 1948, the said
owner made an application to the Additional Custodian of
Evacuee Property (Rural) Delhi for the confirmation of the
transaction of exchange under s. 5-A of the East Punjab
Evacuees’ (Administration of Property) Act, 1947 as amended
in 1948 and applied to the State of Delhi. Under s. 5 of
the said Act an order if passed by the Custodian or
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 7
Additional Custodian was not subject to appeal or revision
and was to become final and conclusive. However, the
application in question was not disposed of until March 20,
1952, on which date the Additional Custodian passed an order
confirming the exchange. Meanwhile the relevant provisions
of the law had been amended and ultimately Central Act XXXI
of 1950 was passed which, among other things, conferred
revisional powers on the Custodian-General by s. 27. In
exercise of these revisional powers the Custodian-General
after hearing the parties set aside the order of
confirmation and directed that the matter should be
reconsidered by the Custodian. The appellant urged before
this Court that the order of confirmation originally passed
was not open to revision on the ground that at the date when
she filed the application in 1948 she got a vested right to
have it deter-
(1) [1955) 2 S.C.R. 1117,
902
mind under s. 5-A with the attribute of finality and
conclusiveness under s. 5-B attaching such determination.
Her argument was that the subsequent repeal and reenactment
of the said provisions cannot affect such a right in view of
s. 6 of the General Clauses Act and s. 58(3) of Act XXXI of
1950. This contention was rejected and the revisional order
impugned by the appellant was confirmed. It is true that
the decision of this court was founded on two grounds. The
first of these related to the effect of the provisions of s.
6 of the General Clauses Act read in the light of s. 58(3)
of Act XXXI of 1950. The other ground, however, was one of
general importance and it is clear that it is on this latter
ground that this Court based its decision. According to
this decision then the finality prescribed by s. 5-B came
into operation after the order in question was made and not
before. " Even if there be in law any such right at all ",
observed Jagannadhadas J., who delivered the unanimous
opinion of the Court, " it can in no sense be a vested or
accrued right. It does not accrue until the determination
is in fact made when alone the right to finality becomes an
existing right as in Delhi Cloth and General Mills Co. Ltd.
v. Income tax Commissioner (I-). We are, therefore, of the
opinion that the principle of Colonial Sugar Refining Co.
Ltd. v. Irving (2) cannot be invoked in support of the case
of the kind we are dealing with ". Having regard to this
decision it is impossible to accede to Mr. Bindra’s argument
that the finality of the appellate decision could be invoked
by the appellant before the said appellate decision was
actually recorded. If no finality could be claimed at an
earlier stage it is clear that at the time when the
appellate authority decided the matter the amending section
had come into force and when the appellate order was
actually passed it could not claim the finality under the
earlier provision. We may incidentally point out that the
said principle laid down in the case of Indira Sohanlal (3)
has been cited by this Court in Garika_patti Veeraya v. N.
Subbiah Choudhury (4) and it has been observed that the
question which was left open by the court on the earlier
occasion fell to be considered in the case of
(1) (1927) I.L.R. 9 Lah 284.
(3) [1955) 2 S.C.R. 1117
(2) (19O5) A.C. 369
(4) [19571 S.C.R. 488
903
Garikapatti Veeraya (1) and was in fact considered and
decided. Mr. Achru Ram, for the respondent, has suggested
that the very passage in the case of Indira Sohanlal (2)
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 7
which enunciated the principle appears to have been cited
with approval. However that may be, we are bound by the
decision of this Court in the case of Indira Sohanlal (2 )
and that decision is clearly against the contention of the
appellant that the amended provision in respect of
revisional jurisdiction of the High Court was inapplicable.
That takes us to the other contention that the amended
provision of s. 13(3) (a) (iii) applies. There is no doubt
that if this amended provision applied to the present case
respondent I would not be entitled to obtain an order of
ejectment. It is plain that by the amendment Legislature
has imposed rigorous limitations on a landlord’s right to
recover possession in the case of any building or rented
land. The question is whether this amendment can be said to
be retrospective in operation. It is clear that the amend-
ment made is not in relation to any procedure and cannot be
characterized as procedural. It is in regard to a matter of
substantive law since it affects the substantive rights of
the landlord. It may be conceded that the Act is intended
to provide relief to the tenants and in that sense is a
beneficial measure and as such its provision should be
liberally construed; but this principle would not be
material or even relevant in deciding the question as to
whether the new provision is retrospective or not. It is
wellsettled that where an amendment affects vested rights
the amendment would operate prospectively unless it is
expressly made retrospective or its retrospective operation
follows as a matter of necessary implication. The amending
Act obviously does not make the relevant provision
retrospective in terms and we see no reason to accept the
suggestion that the retrospective operation of the relevant
provision can be spelt out as a matter of necessary
implication. We ought to add that Mr. Bindra has not argued
that the initial provision in s. 13(1) which is
retrospective is
(1) [1957] S.C.R. 448. (2) [1955] S.C.R. 1117.
I15
904
attracted in interpreting the amended provision in s. 13(3)
(a) (iii). Stich a contention would of course be wholly
untenable.
There is another consideration to " which reference may be
made. If the new provision is held to be
retrospective in its operation what would be the consequence
? Inevitably all pending actions in which landlords may have
applied for possession of their buildings let out to the
tenants under the provisions of s. 13(3) (a) (iii) as it
stood before the amendment would automatically fail because
they would not satisfy the tests imposed by the amended
provision. If such a drastic consequence was really
intended by the Legislature it would certainly have made
appropriate provisions in express terms in that behalf.
Where the Legislature intends to rriake substantive
provisions of law retrospective in operation it generally
makes its intention clearly expreress provisions in that
behalf. We are, therefore satisfied that s. 13(3) (a) (iii)
as amended cannot apply to proceedings which were pending
either before the Controller or the appellate authority at
the time when the, amendment was made. In this connection
we ought to add that when the revisions application was
argued the High Court it was admitted by the appellant that
it was the old law which was in force before the date of the
amendment that applied to the case. Even so we have allowed
Mr. Bindra to raise the point before us but we see no
substance in it. This point has been considered by the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 7
Punjab High Court in Ram Parshad Halwai Ludhiana v. Mukhtiar
Chand (1) and it appears that the Punjab High Court has
taken the same way about the effect of the amendment made in
s. 13(3) (a) (iii).
There is one more point which remains to be considered. Mr
Bindra has argued that the High Court was in error in coming
to its own conclusion as to whether the retirement of s
13(3) (a) (iii) has been satisfied. As we have already
pointed out the finding of the Rent Controller- and the
appellate authority was that the claim made by respondent I
that lie
(1) I.L.R, (1958) Punjab 1553
905
required the shop for the purpose of reconstuction was not
bona fide. The High Court has reversed this conclusion and
Mr. Bindra challenges the correctness or the propriety of
the said conclusion. The revisional power conferred upon
’the High Court under s. 15(5) is wider than that conferred
by s.115 of the Code of Civil Procedure, Under s. 15(5) the
High Court has jurisdiction to examine the legality or
-propriety of the order under revision and that would
clearly justify the examination of the propriety or the
legality of the finding made by the authorities in the
present case about the requirement of the landlord under s.
13(3)(a) (iii). The High Court no doubt has accepted the
appellant’s argument that the requirement in question must
be bona fide but it has observed that there was no legal
evidence on which it could be said that the landlord’s
requirement was not bona fide. Indeed it is obvious that
the tests applied both by the Rent Controller and the
appellate authority in dealing with the question were based
on the assumption that the amended provision of s. 13(3)(a)
(iii) applied to the present proceedings. Otherwise it was
irrelevant to enquire whether the property in question had
become unsafe or unfit for human habitation as they have
done. All the relevant evidence available on the record on
this point clearly sustains the view taken by the High Court
that the -case made by the landlord under s. 13(3) (a) (iii)
was bona fide. Soon after he purchased the house he decided
to reconstruct the building, moved the Municipality with his
plan and obtained its sanction. It is difficult to
understand how on these facts it would be permissible to
hold that the landlord is acting mala fide. That is the
view which the High Court took and we see no substance in
the argument that in ’taking the said view the High Court
has acted either irregularly or improperly.
In the result the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed,
906