Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NAGJI VALLABHJI & COMPANY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MEGHJI VIJPAR & COMPANYMEGHJI VIJPAR (DECEASED)THROUGH HIS L
DATE OF JUDGMENT04/05/1988
BENCH:
KANIA, M.H.
BENCH:
KANIA, M.H.
PATHAK, R.S. (CJ)
CITATION:
1988 AIR 1313 1988 SCR (3) 906
1988 SCC (3) 68 JT 1988 (2) 534
1988 SCALE (1)997
ACT:
Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates (Control)
Act, 1947-sub-section (4)(a) of section 4-Interpretation of-
Dispute between sub-tenant and tenant regarding eviction of
sub-tenant from premises in occupation of sub-tenant.
HEADNOTE:
This appeal raised a short question as to the
interpretation of sub-section (4)(a) of section 4 of the
Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates (Control) Act,
1947 ("the Bombay Rent Act").
The appellants were the sub-tenants of the respondent
No. 1 Firm in respect of the premises called Gala No. 4 in a
godown. Respondent No. 1 Firm were the tenants of the said
godown, having taken a lease of the building from the Bombay
Port Trust. The appellants were in occupation of the said
Gala under written agreements executed from time to time for
one year each. The last such agreement expired on 19th
October, 1971. The respondent No. 1 Firm served a notice on
the appellants on 13th January, 1972 to hand over possession
of the said gala on the ground that the period of lease had
expired. By notice dated February 3, 1972, the respondent
No. 1 Firm terminated the tenancy of appellants and then
filed a suit in the City Civil Court against the appellants
to recover possession of the premises in dispute inter alia
on the ground that the period of lease had expired. The
appellants took up the contention that they were not liable
to be evicted as they were entitled to protection under the
provisions of the Bombay Rent Act. The City Civil Court
decreed the suit. On appeal by the appellants, the High
Court (Single Judge,) holding that the notice of termination
of tenancy dated 3rd February, 1972, was a valid notice and
the provisions of the Bombay Rent Act did not apply to the
premises in question, upheld the decree of eviction passed
by the City Civil Court. Letters Patent appeal against this
judgment was dismissed by a Division Bench of the High
Court. The appellants then moved this Court for relief by
special leave.
Dismissing the appeal, the Court,
907
^
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HELD: The only submission made by the appellants before
the Court was that the said premises, viz, Gala No. 4, were
entitled to the protection of the provisions of the Bombay
Rent Act and the respondent No. 1 Firm was not entitled to a
decree for eviction as no grounds for eviction under the Act
had been made out. [910G]
The question raised was whether the protection of the
sub-section (4)(a) of section 4 of the Bombay Rent Act was
available to the sub-lessee in a building leased by the
lessee from the Government or a local authority or put up by
a lessee of the land belonging to the Government or a local
authority but not under any building lease or pursuant to
any obligation imposed on the lessee to put up a building.
In this case, the entire building in which the premises in
question, namely, Gala No. 4 were situated, belonged to the
Bombay Port Trust. It was nowhere contended at any stage by
the appellants that the building in which the said premises
were situated was put up by the respondent No. 1 Firm. The
Court was, therefore, not directly concerned with the
position of a sub-lessee in a building put up by a lessee of
the land taken from the Government or a local authority
without being under any obligation to do so. [913D-F]
A plain reading of sub-section (1) of section 4 of the
Bombay Rent Act makes it clear that the provisions of the
Bombay Rent Act are not applicable to premises belonging to
the Government or a local authority. Sub-section (4)(a) only
takes out from the scope of the exemption conferred by
section 4(1) "a building erected on any land held by any
person from the Government or a local authority under an
agreement, lease, licence or other grant, although having
regard to the provisions of such agreement, lease, licence
or grant the building so erected may belong or continue to
belong to the Government or the local authority, as the case
may be". If this provision were to be as including any
building put up or erected on land held by any person from
the Government or a local authority, the result would be
that such protection would be available even against the
Government or a local authority and the provision of sub-
section (1) of section 4 may be rendered largely nugatory.
The provisions of sub-section (4)(a) were never intended to
take away the immunity conferred upon the premises belonging
to the Government or a local authority, and if the
provisions of section 4(4)(a) were to be construed as urged
by the appellants, this immunity would be rendered
practically nugatory. A plain reading of the provisions of
sub-section (4)(a) in the context clearly shows that there
is no intention therein to take a building put up by the
Government or a local authority from the scope of the
exemption conferred by sub-section (1) of section
908
4. The language of sub-section (4)(a) and sub-section (1) of
section 4 of the Bombay Rent Act, read together, suggests
that it was only in respect of a building put up by the
lessee on the Government land or the land belonging to a
local authority under a building agreement that the sub-
lessees were taken out of the exemption contained in sub-
section (1) of section 4 and allowed the benefit of the
provisions of the Bombay Rent Act. It was significant that
the exemption granted under the earlier part of sub-section
(1) of section 4 is in respect of the premises and not in
respect of the relationship. In order to confer the
protection of the provisions of the Bombay Rent Act on the
sub-lessees occupying the premises in any building erected
on the government land or the land belonging to a local
authority irrespective of the question who has put up the
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building as against the lessees of the land but without
affecting the immunity conferred on the government or local
authorities as contemplated by sub-section (1) of section 4
of the Bombay Rent Act, the Court would have to practically
rewrite the provisions of section 4, and it was not open to
the Court to do that. The argument of the appellants,
therefore, could not be accepted. The learned Judge of the
High Court was right in coming to the conclusion that the
premises in question were not entitled to the benefit of the
provisions of the Bombay Rent Act. [914A-H;915A]
The decision of this Court in Kanji Manji v. The
Trustees of the Port of Bombay, [1962] Suppl. 3 S.C.R. 461
cited by the appellants was of no assistance to the case
before the Court, and the decision of this Court in Maneklal
and Sons v. Trustees of Port of Bombay and Others, [1984] 4
S.C.C. 733 cited by the appellants, far from supporting the
submission of the appellants, militated against it. [916D]
There was no merit in the appeal and it must fail.
Taking the facts and circumstances of the case into
consideration, the Court directed that the appellants would
not be evicted from the premises in question until December
31, 1988. [916E]
The Court observed that if the intention of the
legislature was that the protection should be given to the
sub-lessee against the lessee in a building taken on lease
by the lessee from the government or a local authority, it
was for the legislature concerned to make appropriate
amendments in the Bombay Rent Act and it was not open for
the Court to re-write the provisions of sub-section (4)(a)
of section 4 of the Bombay Rent Act on the ground of any
such intention as suggested by Dr. Chitale counsel for the
appellants. [916F]
909
Bhatia Co-operative Housing Society Ltd. v.D.C. Patel,
[1953] 4 S.C.R. 185; Kanji Manji v. The Trustees of the Port
of Bombay, [1962] Suppl. 3 S.C.R. 461; Maneklal and Sons v.
Trustees of Port of Bombay and Others, [1984] 4 S.C.C. 733
and Ram Bhagwandas v. Municipal Corporation of the City of
Bombay, AIR 1955 Bom. 364, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 4248 of
1986.
From the Judgment and Order dated 22.9.86 of the High
Court of Bombay in L.P.A. No.66/86.
Dr. Y.S. Chitale, Kailash Vasudev and A.J. Dholakia for
the Appellants.
S.A. Dave, E. Maqbool and Mrs. M. Karanjawala for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KANIA, J. This Appeal, by Special Leave granted under
Article 136 of the Constitution, raises a short but
interesting question as to the interpretation of sub-section
(4)(a) of Section 4 of the Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging
House Rates (Control) Act, 1947 (hereinafter referred to as
"the Bombay Rent Act").
As the only point canvassed before us is a point of
law, the relevant facts can be shortly stated.
The Appellants are the sub-tenants of Respondent No. 1
Firm in respect of Gala No. 4 or Bay No. 4 in a godown
situated at the Grain Market at Dana Bunder in Bombay.
Respondent No. 1 Firm were the tenants of the said premises,
namely, the said godown in which the said Gala is situated,
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having taken a lease of the building in which it is situated
along with the land on which the building stands from the
Bombay Port Trust under a written agreement. The Appellants
were in occupation of the said Gala under written agreements
executed from time to time for a period of one year each.
The last such agreement was executed on 7th November, 1970
and was to expire on 19th October, 1971, that is, at the end
of Samvat year 2827. Respondent No. 1 Frim served a notice
through their advocate on the Appellants on 13th January,
1972 to hand over the possession of the said premises,
namely, the said Gala (referred to hereinafter as "the said
premises")
910
inter alia on the ground that the period of the lease had
expired. In their reply dated 14th January, 1972, the
Appellants contended that they were lawful sub-tenants of
Respondent No. 1 Firm in respect of the said premises and
were entitled to the protection of the Bombay Rent Act.
Respondent No. 1 Firm in their reply denied that the
Appellants were entitled to protection under the said Act.
Respondent No. 1 terminated the tenancy of the Appellants by
their notice dated February 3, 1972. In the correspondence
ensued thereafter between the parties, they repeated their
respective stands. Respondent No. 1 filed a suit in the
Bombay City Civil Court to recover possession of the said
premises. The Appellants in their written statement took up
the contention that they were not liable to be evicted as
they were entitled protection under the provisions of the
Bombay Rent Act. The Bombay City Civil Court decreed the
suit of Respondent No. 1. On an appeal by the Appellants, a
learned Single Judge of the Bombay High Court remanded the
suit to the Bombay City Civil Court for recording findings
on two questions, namely, (1) as to who were lessors of the
defendants whose monthly tenancy commenced in the year 1957
and (2) whether that tenancy was legally and validly
terminated. On remand the Bombay City Civil Court held that
the lessors of the Appellants in 1957 were one Maghji and
Kanji and that the tenancy of the Appellants was not validly
terminated. Thereafter the Appeal of the Appellants came up
for hearing before a learned Single Judge of the Bombay High
Court. He held that the notice of termination of tenancy
dated 3rd February, 1972 was a valid notice terminating the
Appellants’ tenancy and that the provisions of the Bombay
Rent Act did not apply to the premises in question. The
learned Single Judge upheld the decree of eviction
originally passed by the Bombay City Civil Court. A Letters
Patent Appeal was preferred against this judgment to a
Division Bench of the Bombay High Court but the same was
dismissed by a short order. This Appeal is directed against
the judgment and order of the Division Bench of the Bombay
High Court.
The only submission made before us by Dr. Chitale,
learned Counsel for the Appellants, was that the impugned
judgment was erroneous and liable to be set aside as the
said premises, namely, the said Gala No. 4, were entitled to
the protection of the provisions of the Bombay Rent Act and
Respondent No. 1 Firm was not entitled to a decree for
eviction as none of the grounds for eviction under that Act
had been made out.
It may be mentioned here that for the purpose of this
Appeal we intend to proceed on the assumption that
Respondent No. 1 Firm has
911
not made out any ground which would entitle him to a decree
for eviction under Section 13 of the Bombay Rent Act.
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Section 12 of the Bombay Rent Act provides that a landlord
shall not be entitled to the recovery of possession of any
premises so long as the tenant pays or is ready and willing
to pay the amount of the standard rent and permitted
increases, if any, and observes and performs the other
conditions of the tenancy, in so far as they are consistent
with the provisions of the Bombay Rent Act. Section 13
provides that notwithstanding anything contained in the
Bombay Rent Act but subject to the provisions of Section 15
and 15A, a landlord shall be entitled to recover possession
of any premises if the court is satisfied with any of the
grounds set out in that section is made out. Sub-section (1)
of Section 4 of the Act which deals with the Exemptions
reads as follows:
"4. Exemptions.-
(1) This Act shall not apply to any premises
belonging to the Government or a local authority
or apply as against the Government to any tenancy,
licence or other like relationship created by a
grant from or a licence given by the Government in
respect of the premises requisitioned or taken on
lease or on licence by the Government, including
any premises taken on behalf of the Government on
the basis of tenancy or of licence or other like
relationship by, or in the name of any officer
subordinate to the Government authorised in this
behalf; but it shall apply in respect of premises
let, or given on licence, to the Government or a
local authority or taken on behalf of the
Government on such basis by, or in the name of,
such officer."
Sub-section (4)(a) to Section 4 which was introduced
into the Bombay Rent Act by the Bombay Act 4 of 1953 runs as
follows:
"18(4)(a). The expression "premises belonging to
the Government or a local authority" in sub-
section (1) shall notwithstanding anything
contained in the said sub-section or in any
judgment, decree or order of a court, not include
a building erected on any land held by any person
from the Government or a local authority under an
agreement, lease, licence or other grant, although
having regard to the provisions of such agreement,
lease, licence or grant the building so erected
may belong or continue to belong to the Government
or the local authority, as the case may be".
912
It was contended by Dr. Chitale that although the
building in which the said premises are situated belonged to
the Bombay Port Trust which is admittedly a local authority
as contemplated in Section 4 of the Bombay Rent Act, the
said premises were excluded from the scope of the exemption
provided by sub-section (1) of Section 4 of the Bombay Rent
Act as the case fell within the scope of sub-section (4)(a)
of Section 4 of the Bombay Rent Act. It was urged by him
that the said building was erected on land belonging to a
local authority, namely, the Bombay Port Trust and hence the
said premises must be considered to be outside the scope of
the exemption provided by subsection (1) of Section 4 and
covered by the provisions of the Bombay Rent Act although
the building might belong to the Bombay Port Trust.
We may at this stage notice the legislative history in
connection with sub-section (4)(a) of Section 4. The
exemption granted under Section 4(1) of the Bombay Rent Act
came up for consideration before the Supreme Court in the
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case of Bhatia Co-operative Housing Society Ltd. v. D. C.
Patel, [1953] 4 S.C.R. 185. The facts in that case were that
the building site was auctioned to a person by the City
Improvement Trust of Bombay with a condition that the bidder
was to put up a building thereon of a certain description at
a cost of not less than Rs.50,000 and after the completion
of the building, the site and the building were to be leased
to the bidder for a period of 99 years at a fixed yearly
rent. It was held that the building belonged to the
Improvement Trust and not to the bidder and a suit by the
lessee of the Improvement Trust against his sub-lessee was
not governed by the Bombay Rent Act as the premises belonged
to a local authority within the meaning of Section 4(1) of
that Act. In analysing Section 4(1) of that Act, the Court
pointed out that the sub-section has three parts, namely,
(1) This Act shall not apply to premises belonging to the
Government or a local authority, (2) this Act shall not
apply as against the Government to any tenancy or other like
relationship created by grant from the Government in respect
of premises taken on lease or requisitioned by the
Government and (3) this Act shall apply in respect of
premises let out to the Government or a local authority. The
Court observed that the conclusion was, therefore,
irresistible that the Legislature did not by the first part
intend to exempt the relationship of the landlord and tenant
but intended to confer on the premises belonging to
Government an immunity from the operation of the Act. The
contention of the counsel for the sub-lessee that the
immunity given by the first part should be held to be
available only to the Government or a local authority to
which the premises belonged was
913
rejected. It was held that if the benefit of the immunity
was given only to the Government or a local authority and
not to its lessee and the Act applied to the premises as
against the lessee, it must follow that under Section 15 of
that Act, it would not be lawful for the lessee to sublet
the premises or any part of it and that if such were the
consequences, nobody would take a building lease from the
Government or a local authority and the immunity given to
the Government or a local authority would, for all practical
purposes, and in so far as at any rate as the building
leases are concerned, be wholly illusory and worthless and
the underlying purpose for bestowing such immunity will be
rendered wholly ineffective. As a result of this decision,
the sub-lessees in a building put up by a lessee from the
Government or a local authority under a building lease did
not get any protection from being evicted at the sweet-will
of the lessee and were denied the benefit of the provisions
of the Bombay Rent Act. In order to obviate this hardship of
sub-lessees, sub-section (4)(a), set out earlier, was
introduced into the provisions of the Bombay Rent Act. The
question, however, is whether the protection of that sub-
section is available to the sub-lessee in a building leased
by the lessee from the Government or a local authority or
put up by a lessee of the land belonging to the Government
or a local authority but not under any building lease or
pursuant to any obligation imposed on the lessee to put up a
building. We may make it clear in this connection that in
the present case, the factual position emerging from the
record appears to be that the entire building in which the
said premises, namely, Gala No. 4 is situated belonged to
the Bombay Port Trust. That is clear from the contents of
clause (ii) of Paragraph (2) of the Special Leave Petition
preferred by the Appellants as well as the other material on
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record. It has nowhere been contended at any stage by the
Appellants that the building in which the said premises are
situated was put up by Respondent No. 1 Firm. We are,
therefore, not concerned with the position of a sub-lessee
in a building put up by a lessee of the land taken from the
Government or a local authority without being under any
obligation to do so.
It was urged before us by Dr. Chitale that, if the sub-
lessee in a building put up by a lessee on land leased from
the Government or a local authority under a building lease
is entitled to the protection of the Bombay Rent Act under
the provision of Section 4(4)(a) thereof, there is no reason
why such protection should be denied to a sub-lessee in any
building belonging to the Government or a local authority
and taken on lease by a private party regardless of the
question as to who has put up the building. That may or may
not be so but what we have to examine is whether the
intention to confer such protection can be
914
imputed to the legislature on the language of the said sub-
section read in the context of the relevant provisions of
the Bombay Rent Act. The plain reading of sub-section (1) of
Section 4 makes it clear that the provisions of the Bombay
Rent Act are not applicable to premises belonging to the
Government or a local authority. Sub-section (4)(a) only
takes out from the scope of the exemption conferred by
Section 4(1) "a building erected on any land held by any
person from the Government or a local authority under an
agreement, lease, licence or other grant, although having
regard to the provisions of such agreement, lease, licence
or other grant, although having regard to the provisions of
such agreement, lease, licence or grant the building so
erected may belong or continue to belong to the Government
or the local authority, as the case may be". If this
provision were to be construed as including any building put
up or erected on land held by any person from the Government
or a local authority, the result would be that such
protection would be available even against the Government or
a local authority and the provisions of sub-section (1) of
Section 4 may be rendered largely nugatory. It is not
disputed by Dr. Chitale that the provisions of sub-section
4(a) were never intended to take away the immunity conferred
upon the premises belonging to the Government or a local
authority and if the provisions of Section 4(4)(a) were to
be construed as urged by Dr. Chitale this immunity would be
rendered practically nugatory. In fact, a plain reading of
the provisions of sub-section (4)(a) in the context clearly
shows that there is no intention therein to take out a
building put up by the Government or a local authority from
the scope of the exemption conferred by sub-section (1) of
Section 4. In fact, the language of sub-section (4)(a) and
sub-section (1) of Section 4 of the Bombay Rent Act read
together suggests that it was only in respect of a building
put up by the lessee on the Government land or land
belonging to a local authority under a building agreement
that the sub-lessees were taken out of the exemption
contained in sub-section (1) of Section 4 and allowed the
benefit of the provisions of the Bombay Rent Act. It is
significant that the exemption granted under the earlier
part of sub-section (1) of Section 4 is in respect of the
premises and not in respect of the relationship. In order to
confer the protection of the provisions of the Bombay Rent
Act to the sub-lessees occupying the premises in any
building erected on Government land or on land belonging to
a local authority irrespective of the question who has put
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up the building as against the lessees of the land but
without affecting the immunity conferred to the Government
or local authorities as contemplated by sub-section (1) of
Section 4 of the Bombay Rent Act, we would have to
practically rewrite the provisions of Section 4 and it is
not open to us to do that. We are, therefore, unable to
accept the argument of Dr. Chitale and we are of the view
that the
915
learned Judge of the High Court of Bombay was right in
coming to the conclusion that the premises in question were
not entitled to the benefit of the provisions of the Bombay
Rent Act.
Before parting with the matter we may take note of some
of the other decisions cited before us.
In Kanji Manji v. The Trustees of the Port of Bombay,
[1962] Suppl. 3 S.C.R. 461 this Court took the view that if
the Government or a local authority wants to evict a person
from land belonging to the Government or a local authority,
the provisions of the Bombay Rent Act do not come in the
way. For the same reason, the suit for ejectment does not
have to be filed in the Court of Small Causes as required by
the Rent Control Act but in the City Civil Court. If the
original lessees took on lease not only the land but also
the building, it is not open to their assignees to claim
that the ownership of the Government extended only to the
land and not to the buildings. This decision is of no
assistance to the case before us.
In Maneklal and Sons v. Trustees of Port of Bombay and
Others, [1984] 4 S.C.C. 733 the facts, very briefly stated,
were that Respondent No. 1 being the Trustees for the Port
of Bombay were the owners of a plot of land situated in
Bombay. In 1945, the trustees granted lease of the said plot
of land to one Mustafa Husein for the purpose of erecting a
godown for carrying on commercial activities. The godown was
erected by Mustafa Husein in 1946 and in 1958 he granted a
lease of the said godown to the petitioners in that case.
The Trustees of the Port of Bombay filed a suit against
Mustafa Husein for eviction. The lease granted to Mustafa
Husein stood terminated. The ground of eviction was the
termination of Tenancy. The Trustees obtained a decree
against the heirs of Mustafa Husein. A warrant of possession
in execution of decree was sought to be executed against the
petitioners. The petitioners obstructed the execution of the
decree. Thereupon, the Trustees took out a Chamber Summons
in the High Court of Bombay for removal of obstruction. The
petitioners contended that they were the lessees under the
said Mustafa Husein and were entitled to the protection of
the Bombay Rent Act. This Court pointed out that the word
"premises" in sub-section (1) could mean the land or the
buildings or both. Sub-section (4)(a) of the Bombay Rent Act
dealt only with the buildings and did not deal with the land
because it used the word "buildings" and not the more
general word "premises". The import of sub-section (4)(a) of
Section 4 was thus limited to buildings and did not extend
to land. The sub-section, however, was drafted
916
somewhat inartistically and the obscurity of the language
resulted in some difficulty. After considering the decision
of the Bombay High Court in Ram Bhagwandas v. Municipal
Corporation of the City of Bombay, AIR 1956 Bom. 364 this
Court pointed out that as observed by Chagla, C.J., in the
case of Ram Bhagwandas, (supra) by enacting sub-section
(4)(a) of Section 4 of the Bombay Rent Act, the Legislature
was seeking to protect by that sub-section tenants who
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occupied buildings put up upon land belonging to a local
authority if the buildings occupied by them were constructed
under an agreement under which the lessee was under an
obligation to construct buildings. The protection of sub-
section (4)(a) was to buildings and not to lands and the
phrase "under an agreement, lease or other grant" modified
not only the expression "held by any person from the
Government or a local authority" but also "erected on any
land". This Court pointed out that this was the view taken
by this Court in Kanji Manji Case, cited earlier. On the
basis of this conclusion, this Court dismissed the Special
Leave Petition filed by the petitioner. This decision far
from supporting the submission of Dr. Chitale, militates
against it.
In the result, we find that there is no merit in the
Appeal and it must fail. The Appeal is, therefore, dismissed
with no order as to costs. However, taking into
consideration of the facts and circumstances of the case we
direct that the Appellants shall not be evicted from the
premises in question until December 31, 1988.
We can only observe that if the intention of the
Legislature is that the protection should be given to the
sub-lessee against the lessee in a building taken on lease
by the lessee from the Government or a local authority, it
is for the Legislature concerned to make appropriate
amendments in the Bombay Rent Act and it is not open for us
to re-write the provisions of sub-section (4)(a) of Section
4 of the Bombay Rent Act on the ground of any such intention
as suggested by Dr. Chitale.
S.L. Appeal dismissed.
917