Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MRS. M. N. CLUBWALA AND ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
FIDA HUSSAIN SAHEB AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
03/02/1964
BENCH:
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
BENCH:
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
SUBBARAO, K.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 610 1964 SCR (6) 642
CITATOR INFO :
R 1968 SC 919 (7)
R 1974 SC 396 (8)
RF 1976 SC1860 (12)
F 1988 SC1845 (13)
ACT:
Licence or Lease-Provision requiring notice to vacate-If
inconsistent with licence-Intention of parties-To be
ascertained from Agreement-Inference from circumstances and
conduct, if formal document absent-Exclusive possession if
conclusive evidence of lease.
HEADNOTE:
in disputes regarding extra fees in respect of meet-stalls
in a private market owned by the appellants, the
respondents--stall-holders filed a suit alleging that the
relationship between them and the appellants was that of
lessees and lessors; while according to the appellants, the
respondents
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were only their licensees. The stall-holders have been
executing agreements, signed by the stall-holders alone, in
which the payment is styled as rent. Though the building in
which the market is located is owned by the appellants it
could not be used as a market for the sale of meat or
comestibles without the permission of the municipal council,
and a number of duties have been imposed upon the owners
including that of closing the market and that market
functioned only within ’he stated hours. The City Civil
Court Judge finding that the respondents were bare licensees
dismissed their suit. His decision was affirmed in appeal.
On a further appeal the High Court reversed the findings of
the Courts below holding that from the general tenor of the
document the terms created only a tenancy in respect of the
stalls and not a mere licence or permissive occupation
saying that if the occupation of the stall-holders was only
permissive the condition as to the payment of rent, eviction
for default in payment of rent for more than 3 days, the
provision for annual repairs being carried out by the
landlord, the further provision that repairs that might be
occasioned by the carelessness of the respondents should be
carried out at their expense and the adequate provision for
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30 days notice for vacating the stalls if they were required
by the landlord would all seem to be inconsistent and
irrelevant. On appeal by special leave:
Held: (i) While it is true that the essence of a licence is
that it is revocable at the will of the grantor the
provision in the licence that the licensee would be entitled
to a notice before being required to vacate is not
inconsistent with a licence, and the mere necessity of
giving such a notice would not indicate that the transaction
was a lease.
Whether an agreement creates between the parties the
relationship of landlord and tenant or merely that of
licensor and licensee the decisive consideration is the
intention of the parties, which has to be ascertained on a
consideration of all the relevant provisions in the
agreement. In the absence, however, of a formal document
the intention of the parties must be inferred from the
circumstances and conduct of the parties.
(ii)The fact that a person has exclusive possession is not
conclusive evidenceof his being a lessee. If, however,
exclusive possession to which a personis entitled under an
agreement with a landlord is coupled with an interest in the
property, the agreement would be construed not as a mere
licence but as a lease.
Associated Hotels of India Ltd. v. R. N. Kapur, [1960] 1
S.C.R. 368, Errington v. Errington and Woods, [1952] 1 K. B.
290, Cobb. v. Lane, [1952] 1 All. E.R. 1199, Clove v.
Theatrical Proprietors Ltd. and Westby & Co. Ltd. [1936] 3
All. E.R. 483. Smith & Son v. The Assessment Committee for
the Parish of Lambeth, [1882-831 10 Q.B.D. 327 and vutrum
Subba Rao v. The Eluru Municipal Council, I.L.R. [1956] A.P.
515, referred to.
(iii) In view of the duties cast upon the landlord and the
circumstances of the present case the intention of the
parties was to bring into existence merely a licence and not
a lease and the word ’rent’ was used loosely for ’fee’.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 151 of 1963.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
February 17, 1959 of the Madras High Court in Second Appeal
No. 252 of 1957.
S. T. Desai and R. Ganapathy Iyer, for the appellants.
R. Gopalakrishnan, for the respondents Nos. 1-6.
February 3, 1964. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
MUDHOLKAR J.-This is an appeal by special leave from the
judgment of the High Court of Madras reversing the decisions
of the courts below and granting a number of reliefs to the
plaintiffs-respondents.
The main point which arises for consideration in this
appeal is whether the plaintiffs-respondents are the lessees
of the appellants who were defendants 4 and 5 in the trial
court or only their licensees. In order to appreciate the
point certain facts need to be stated.
The appellants are the owners of a private market situate in
Madras known as Zam Bazar Market. There are about 500 odd
stalls in that market and meat, fish, vegetables, etc., are
sold in that market. The practice of the appellants has
been to farm out to contractors the right to collect dues
from the users of the stalls. Defendants 1 to 3 to the suit
were the contractors appointed by the appellants for
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collecting rent at the time of the institution of the suit.
Two of these persons died and their legal representatives
have not been impleaded in appeal as they have no interest
in the subject-matter of litigation. The third has been
transposed as respondent No. 7 to this appeal. They were,
however, alive when the special leave petition was filed and
were shown as appellants 1 to 3, but two of them were struck
out from the record after their death and the third trans-
posed as Respondent No. 7. Though the building in which the
market is located is owned by the appellants it cannot
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be used as a market for the purpose of sale of meat or any
other article of human consumption without the permission of
the municipal council under s. 303 of the Madras City
Municipal Act, 1919 (hereafter referred to as the Act).
Before such a permission is granted the owner has to obtain
a licence from the Municipal Commissioner and undertake to
comply with the terms of the licence. The licence granted
to him would be for one year at a time but he would be
eligible for renewal at the expiry of the period. Section
306 of the Act confers power on the Commissioner to require
the owner, occupier or farmer of a private market for the We
of any animal or article of food to do a number of things,
for example to keep it in a clean and proper state, to
remove all filth and rubbish therefrom, etc. Breach of any
condition of the licence or of any order made by the
Commissioner would result, under s. 307, in suspension of
the licence and thereafter it would not be lawful for any
such person to keep open any such market. Section 308 of
the Act confers powers on the Commissioner to make.
regulations for markets for various purposes such as fixing
the days and hours on and during which any market may be
held or kept for use, requiring that in the market building
separate areas be set apart for different classes of
articles. requiring every market building to be kept in a
clean and proper state by removing filth and rubbish
therefrom and requiring the provision of proper ventilation
in the market building and of passages of sufficient width
between the stalls therein for the convenient use of the
building. We are told that regulations have been made by
the Commissioner in pursuance of the powers conferred upon
him by S. 308 of the Act. Thus as a result of the Act as
well as the regulations made thereunder a number of duties
appear to have been placed upon the owners of private
markets. It would also appear that failure to comply with
any of the requirements of the statute or the regulations
would bring on the consequence of suspension or even
cancellation of the licence. We are mentioning all this
because it will have some bearing upon the interpretation of
the documents on which the plaintiffs have relied in support
of the contention that the relationship between them and the
appellants is that of tenants and landlord.
646
The suit out of which this appeal arises came to be filed
because disputes arose between the plaintiffs and the
defendants 1 to 3 who became the contractors for collection
of rent as from February 9, 1956. These disputes were with
regard to extra carcass fees and extra fees for Sunday Gutha
which were claimed by the contractors. The respondents
further alleged that the relationship between them and the
appellants was, as already stated, that of lessees and
lessors while according to the appellants, the respondents
were only their licensees. The respondents further
challenged the extra levies made by the contractors, i.e.,
the original defendants 1 to 3 who are no longer in the
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picture. The reliefs sought by the respondents were for an
injunction against the appellants and the defendants 1 to 3
restraining them from realising the extra levies and for
further restraining them from interfering with their
possession over their respective stalls as long as they
continued to pay their dues. The First Additional City
Civil Court Judge before whom the suit had been filed found
in the respondents’ favour that the extra fees sought to be
levied by the contractor were sanctioned neither by the
provisions of the Municipal Act nor by usage but upon the
finding that the respondents were bare licensees dismissed
their suit.
The appellate bench of the City Civil Court before whom the
respondents had preferred an appeal affirmed the lower
court’s decision. The High Court reversed the decision of
the courts below and in the decree passed by it pursuant to
its judgment granted a number of reliefs to the respondents.
Here we are concerned only with reliefs (ii) (e), (f) and
(g) since the appellants are not interested in the other
reliefs. Those reliefs are :
"(ii) that the respondents defendants, in
particular defendants 1 to 3 (respondents 1 to
3) be and hereby are restrained from in any
manner interfering with the appellants-
plaintiffs 1 to 4, 6 and 7 carrying on their
trade peacefully in their respective stalls at
Zam Bazar Market, Rovapettah, Madras and
imposing any restrictions or limitations upon
their absolute right to carry on business as
mentioned hereunder
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(e) Interfering with the possession and
enjoyment of the respective stalls by the
appellants plaintiffs 1 to 4, 6 and 7 so long
as they pay the rents fixed for each stall;
(f) increasing the rents fixed for the
appellants-plaintiffs’ 1 to 4, 6 and 7 stalls
under the written agreements between the said
plaintiffs and defendants 4 and 5;
(g) evicting of the appellants-plaintiffs 1
to 4, 6 and 7 or disturbing the plaintiffs and
their articles in their stalls by defendants 1
to 3."
Further we are concerned in this case only with the
relationship between the meat vendors occupying and using
some of the stalls in the market (as the plaintiffs-
respondents belong to this category) and the appellants-
landlords. What relationship subsists or subsisted between
the appellants and other stall-holders vending other
commodities is not a matter which can be regarded as
relevant for the purpose of deciding the dispute between the
appellants and the respondents.
It is common ground that under the licence granted by the
Municipal Corporation, the market is to remain open between
4 A.m. and II P.m. and that at the end of the day the stall-
holders have all to leave the place which has then to be
swept and disinfected and that the gates of the market have
to be locked. None of the stall-holders or their servants
is allowed to stay in the market after closing time. In
point of fact this market used to be opened at 5 A.M. and
closed, at 10 P.m. by which time all the stall-holders had
to go away. It is also common ground that the stalls are
open stalls and one stall is separated from the other only
by a low brick wall and thus there can be no question of a
stall-holder being able to lock up his stall before leaving
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the market at the end of the day. The stall-holders were
required to remove the carcasses brought by them for sale by
the time the market closed. Meat being an article liable to
speedy decay the stall-holders generally used to finish
their
648
business of vending during the afternoon itself and remove
the carcasses. They, however, used to leave in their stalls
wooden blocks for chopping meat, weighing scales, meat
choppers and other implements used by them in connection
with their business. These used to be left either in boxes
or almirahs kept in the stall and locked up therein.
It is also an admitted fact that some of the stall-holders
have been carrying on business uninterruptedly in their
stalls for as long as forty years while some of them have
not been in occupation for more than five years. It is in
evidence that these stall-holders have been executing fresh
agreements governing their use and occupation of stalls and
payment of what is styled in the agreements as rent whenever
a new contractor was engaged by the appellants for
collecting rents.
The next thing to be mentioned is that the agreements
referred to the money or charges payable by the stall-
holders to the landlords as ’rent’ and not as ’fee. It has,
however, to be noted that the dues payable accrue from day
to day. Thus in Ex.A- 1 the rent of Re. 1 /- is stid to be
payable every day by 1.00 P.m. In all these agreements there
is a condition that in case there is default in payment of
rent for three days the stall-holder was liable to be
evicted by being given 24 hours’ notice. A further
condition in the agreements is that a stall-holder may be
required by the landlord to vacate the stall after giving
him 30 days’ notice. There is a provision also regarding
repairs in these agreements. The liability for the annual
repairs is placed by the agreement upon the landlord and
these repairs are ordinarily to be carried out in the month
of June every year. Where, however, repairs became
necessary on account of the carelessness of a stall-holder
they were to be carried out at the expense of that stall-
holder. It may be also mentioned that these agreements are
obtained by the contractors from the stall-holders in favour
of the landlord and bear the signatures only of the stall-
holder,.;.
It was contended before us by Mr. R. Gopalakrishnan that in
order to ascertain the relationship between the appellants
and the respondents we must look at the agree-
649
ments alone and that it was not open to us to look into
extraneous matters such as the surrounding circumstances.
It is claimed on behalf of the respondents that the lease in
their favour is of a permanent nature. But if that were so,
the absence of a registered instrument would stand in their
way and they would not be permitted to prove the existence
of that lease by parol evidence. From the fact, however,
that with every change in the contractor a fresh agreement
was executed by the stall-holders it would be legitimate to
infer that whatever the nature of the right conferred by the
agreement upon the stall-holders, it could not be said to be
one which entitled them to permanent occupation of the
stalls. It could either be a licence as contended for by
the appellant or a tenancy from month to month. In either
case there would be no necessity for the execution of a
written agreement signed by both the parties. Here, the
agreements in question are in writing, though they have been
signed by the stall-holders alone. All the same, oral
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evidence to prove their terms would be excluded by s. 92 of
the Evidence Act. To that extent Mr. Gopalakrishnan is
right. Though that is so, under the 6th proviso to that
section the surrounding circumstances can be taken into
consideration for ascertaining the meaning of the word
’rent’ used in the agreements. Indeed, the very
circumstance that rent is to fall due every day and in
default of payment of rent for three days the stall-holder
is liable to be evicted by being given only 24 hours’ notice
it would not be easy to say that this ’rent’ is payable in
respect of a lease. On the other hand, what is called rent
may well be only a fee payable under a licence. At any rate
this circumstance shows that there is ambiguity in the
document and on this ground also surrounding circumstances
could be looked into for ascertaining the real relationship
between the parties. Indeed, the City Civil Court has gone
into the surrounding circumstances and it is largely on the
view it took of them that it found in favour of the
appellants.
The High Court, however, has based itself upon the
agreements themselves. To start with it pointed out-and, in
our opinion rightly-that the use of the word ’rent’ in, Ex.
A-1 did not carry the respondents’ case far. The reasons.
650
given by it for coming to the conclusion that the
transaction was a lease, are briefly as follows :
(1) Notice was required to be given to the
stallholder before he could be asked to vacate
even on the ground of non-payment of rent;
(2) the annual repairs were to be carried
out by the landlord only in the month of June;
(3) the stall-holder was liable to carry out
the repairs at his own expense when they are
occasioned by his carelessness;
(4) even if the landlord wanted the stalls
for his own purpose he could obtain possession
not immediately but only after giving 30 days’
notice to the stall-holder;
(5) the possession of the stalls by the
respondents had been continuous and unbroken
by virtue of the terms of the agreement and
that the terms of the original agreement were
not shown to have been substituted by fresh
agreements executed by the respondents.
The High Court, therefore, held that from the general tenor
,of the documents it is fairly clear that as between the
appellants and the respondents the terms created only a
tenancy in respect of the stalls and not a mere licence or
permissive occupation. After saying that if the occupation
of the stall-holders was only permissive the condition as to
payment of rent, eviction for default in payment of rent for
more than 3 days, the provision for annual repairs being
carried out by the landlord, the further provision that
repairs that might be occasioned by the carelessness of the
respondents should be carried out at their expense and the
adequate provision for 30 days’ notice for vacating the
stalls if they were required by the landlord would all seem
to be inconsistent and irrelevant, it observed :
"As a matter of fact, there is no evidence
whatsoever to show that any of these
plaintiffs were at any time turned out of
their possession of their
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stalls at the will of the landlords or for
default of any of the terms and conditions
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stipulated in the agreements. The specific
provision for 30 days’ notice for vacating and
delivering possession seems to be conclusive
of the fact that the plaintiffs were to occupy
the stalls as permanent tenants and not as
mere licensees. The terms of the agreements
further disclose that the plaintiffs were to
be in exclusive possession of these stalls for
the purpose of their trade as long as they
comply with the terms and until there was a
notice of termination of their tenancy in
respect of the shops held by them. The very
tenor of the agreements, the intention behind
the terms contained in the agreements and the
measure of control established by the terms of
the agreements, all point only to the fact
that the plaintiffs were to be in undisturbed
and exclusive possession of the stalls as long
as they paid the rent and until there was a
valid termination of their right to hold the
stalls as such tenants."
While it is true that the essence of a licence is that it is
revocable at the will of the grantor the provision in the
licence that the licensee would be entitled to a notice
before being required to vacate is not inconsistent with a
licence. In England it has been held that a contractual
licence may be revocable or irrevocable according to the
express or implied terms of the contract between the
parties. It has further been held that if the licensee
under a revocable licence has brought property on to the
land, he is entitled to notice of revocation and to a
reasonable time for removing his property, and in which to
make arrangements to carry on his business elsewhere. (See
Halsbury’s Laws of England 3rd edn. vol. 23, p. 431). Thus
the mere necessity of giving a notice to a licensee
requiring him to vacate the licensed premises would not
indicate that the transaction was a lease. Indeed, s. 62(c)
of the Indian Easements Act. 1882 itself provides that a
licence is deemed to be revoked where it has been either
granted for a limited period, or
652
acquired on condition that it shall become void on the
performance or non-performance of a specified act, and the
period expires, or the condition is fulfilled. In the
agreements in question the requirement of a notice is a
condition and if that condition is fulfilled the licence
will be deemed to be revoked under s. 62. It would seem
that it is this particular requirement in the agreements
which has gone a long way to influence the High Court’s
finding that the transaction was a lease. Whether an
agreement creates between the parties the relationship of
landlord and tenant or merely that of licenser and licensee
the decisive consideration is the intention of the parties.
This intention has to be ascertained on a consideration of
all the relevant provisions in the agreement. In the
absence, however, of a formal document the intention of the
parties must be inferred from the circumstances and conduct
of the parties. (lbid p. 427). Here the terms of the
document evidencing the agreement between the parties are
not clear and so the surrounding circumstances and the
conduct of the parties have also to be borne in mind for
ascertaining the real relationship between the parties.
Again, as already stated, the documents relied upon being
merely agreements executed unilaterally by the stall-holders
in favour of the landlords they cannot be said to be formal
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agreements between the parties. We must, therefore, look at
the surrounding circumstances. One of those circumstances
is whether actual possession of the stalls can be said to
have continued with the landlords or whether it had passed
on to the stall-holders. Even if it had passed to a person,
his right to exclusive possession would not be conclusive
evidence of the existence of a tenancy though that would be
a consideration of first importance. That is what was held
in Errington v. Errington and Woods(1) and Cobb v. Lane(1).
These decisions reiterate the view which was taken in two
earlier decisions: Close v.Theatrical Properties Ltd. and
Westby & Co. Ltd.,(1) and Smith & Son v. The Assessment
Committee for the Parish of Lambeth(1). Mr. S. T. Desai
appearing for the appellants also relied on the decision of
the High Court of
(1) [1957] 1 K.B. 290. (2) [1952] 1 All. E.R. 1190.
(3) [1936] 3 All. E.R.483. (4) (1882-83) 10 Q.B.D. 327 at
330.
653
Andhra Pradesh in Vurum Subba Rao v. The Eluru Municipal
Council (1) as laying down the same proposition. That was a
case in which the High Court held that stall-holders in the
municipal market who were liable to pay what was called rent
to the municipality were not lessees but merely licensees.
The fact, therefore, that a stall-holder has ,exclusive
possession of the stall is not conclusive evidence of his
being a lessee. If, however, exclusive possession to which
a person is entitled under an agreement with a landlord is
coupled with an interest in the property, the agreement
would be construed not as a mere licence but as a lease.
(See Associated Hotels of India Ltd. v. R. N. Kapoor(2). In
the case before us, however, while it is true that each
stall-holder is entitled to the exclusive use of his stall
from day to day it is clear that he has no right to use it
as and when he chooses to do so or to sleep in the stall
during the night after closure of the market or enter the
stall during the night after 11-00 P.m. at his pleasure. He
can use it only during a stated period every day and subject
to several conditions. These circumstances, coupled with
the fact that the responsibility for cleaning the stalls,
disinfecting them and of closing the Market in which the
stalls are situate is placed by the Act, the regulations
made thereunder and the licence issued to the landlords, is
on the landlords, would indicate that the legal possession
of the stalls must also be deemed to have been with the
landlords and not with the stall-holders. The right which
the stall-holders had was to the exclusive use of the stalls
during stated hours and nothing more. Looking at the matter
in a slightly different way it would seem that it could
never have been the intention of the parties to grant
anything more than a licence to the stall-holders. The
duties cast on the landlord by the Act are onerous and for
performing those duties they were entitled to free and easy
access to the stalls. They are also required to see to it
that the market functioned only within the stated hours and
not beyond them and also that the premises were used for no
purpose other than of vending comestibles. A further duty
which lay upon the landlords was to guard the entrance to
the market. These duties
(1) I.L.R. [1956] A.P. 515 at pp. 520-4.
(2) [1960] 1 S.C.R. 368.
654
could not be effectively carried out by the landlord by
parting with possession in favour of the stall-holders by
reason of which the performance by the landlords of their
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duties and obligations could easily be rendered impossible
if the stall-holders adopted an unreasonable attitude,. If
the landlords failed to perform their obligations they would
be exposed to penalties under the Act and also stood in
danger of having their licences revoked. Could, in such
circumstances, the landlords have ever intended to part with
possession in favour of the stall-holders and thus place
themselves at the mercy of these people? We are, therefore,
of the opinion that the intention of the parties was to
bring into existence merely a licence and not a lease and
the word rent’ was used loosely for ’fee.
Upon this view we must allow the appeal, set aside the
decree of the High Court and dismiss the suit of the
respondents inso far as it relates to reliefs (ii) (e), (f)
and (g) grantedby the High Court against the appellants
are concerned. So far as the remaining reliefs granted by
the High Court are concerned, its decree will stand. In the
result we allow the appeal to the extent indicated above but
in the particular circumstances of the case we order costs
throughout will be borne, by the parties as incurred.
Appeal partly allowed.