Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MRS. RENA DREGO
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
LALCHAND SONI, ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/03/1998
BENCH:
S. SAGHIR AHMAD, K.T.THOMAS
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Thomas,J.
Leave granted.
A landlady had rented out her flat situate at Bandra
(West) in Bombay (now Mumbai) to a tenant in 1969 for a rent
of Rs. 200/- per month. As years passed by, she found it
difficult to accommodate her large family in the small
residential apartment where she is presently living. So, she
moved the Court in 1977 for a decree of eviction of her
tenant from her flat at Bandra. Of course, she cast the net
very wide covering a variety of grounds to have a decree for
eviction, but what ultimately survived among them was the
ground envisaged in Section 13 (1)(g) of the Bombay Rents,
Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act, 1947 (for short
’the Act’), i.e., bona fide and reasonable requirement of
the tenanted premises for her own occupation. though, she
was not suited by the trial court (which is the Small Causes
Court, Bombay), she went in appeal to the appealable bench
of the Court of Small causes, where she got a decree for
eviction on the ground mentioned above. But the said decree
did not enure to her benefit as the same was later upset by
the High court of Bombay when the tenant filed writ petition
under Article 227 of the Constitution for quashment of the
same. This appeal, by special leave, has been filed by the
landlady impugning the aforesaid judgment of the Bombay High
Court.
It is to be pointed out, right now itself, that need of
the landlady for additional accommodation in view of large
family was recognised by the trial court. Still she was non-
suited by the trial court on the premise that her pleadings
on that score were scanty. Appeal Court after concurring
with the finding which was favourable to the landlady did
not take the inadequacy in the pleadings as capable of
fatally affecting her cause. Hence the appeal court found no
hurdle in granting the decree of eviction. But a learned
single judge of the High court who quashed the Said decree
held the landlady guilty of two wrongs. First is that she
did not speak the truth in her evidence that her eldest son
(whose name is Giles Drego) has his own flat where he is
living with his family (The landlady has admitted in her
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reply affidavit filed in the High Court, during the pendency
of the Writ petition, that her son Giles Drego and his wife
are joint owners of a flat situate at Vasai in Thane
district). Second is that, she failed to specify the plinth
area of the apartment in which she is presently living with
her family.
According to us, the high Court has traversed far
beyond the limit of its supervisory jurisdiction under
Article 227 of the Constitution when the learned Single
Judge reversed the Decree of eviction which was based on
findings of facts arrived at by the fact-finding authority
upon the evidence on record. it would have been well for the
High court to remind itself that it was not exercising
certiorari jurisdiction under Article 226 of the
Constitution but a supervisory jurisdiction under Article
226 of the Constitution but a supervisory jurisdiction under
Article 227 which obliges the High Court to confine to the
Scrutiny of records and proceedings of the lower tribunal.
By relying on fresh materials which were not before the
tribunal, the High Court should not have disturbed findings
of facts in exercise of such supervisory jurisdiction. it is
now well high settled that power under Article 227 is one of
judicial superintendence which cannot be used to upset
conclusions of facts, however erroneous those may be, unless
such conclusions are so perverse or so unreasonable that no
court could ever have reached them Way back in 1954, a
Constitution Bench of this Court, in Waryam Singh & anr. Vs.
Amarnath & anr. ( AIR 1954 SC 215) has pointed out that the
power of superintendence conferred by Article 227 should be
exercised "most sparingly and only in appropriate cases in
order to keep the subordinate courts within the bounds of
their authority and not for correcting mere errors."
(emphasis supplied)
The said decision was made in an appeal which considered an
order passed by a Rent control court. Quoting the aforesaid
dictum a three Judge Bench of this Court has in Babhutmal
Raichand Oswal Vs. Laxmibai R. Tarte & Anr. (AIR 1975 SC
1297) observed thus:
" The power of superintendence of
High Court under Article 227 being
extraordinary is to be exercised
most sparingly and only in
appropriate cases. The power, as in
the case of certiorari
jurisdiction, cannot be invoked to
correct an error of fact which only
a superior court can do in exercise
of its statutory power as a court
of appeal. The High Court cannot,
in guise of exercising its
jurisdiction under Art. 227,
convert itself into a court of
appeal when the legislature has not
conferred a right of appeal and
made the decision of the
subordinate court or tribunal final
on facts. The High Court cannot,
while exercising jurisdiction under
Art. 227, interfere with findings
of fact recorded by the subordinate
court or tribunal. It’s function is
limited to seeing that the
subordinate court or tribunal
functions within the limits of its
authority. it cannot correct mere
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errors of fact by examining the
evidence and appreciating it."
The aforesaid position has been reiterated by the Court
on subsequent occasions also (vide M/s. India Pipe Fitting
Co. vs. Fakruddin M.A. Baker & anr, AIR 1978 SC 45; Sukhbir
Narain vs. Deputy director of Consolidation, AIR 1987 SC
1645).
For appreciating the arguments or both sides, we have
to take a look at the provision under which the landlady
claimed eviction. The material portion of Section 13(1)(g)
of the Act is the following:
"13. When landlord may recover
possession:-
(1) Notwithstanding anything
contained in this 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.-
x x x
(g) that the premises are
reasonably and bona fide
required by the landlord for
occupation by himself or by
any person for whose benefit
the premises are held or where
the landlord is a trustee of a
public charitable trust that
the premises are required for
occupation for the purposes of
the trust; or
x x x
Sections 15 and 15A have no bearing on the facts of
this case and hence it is not necessary to extract them
here. However, sub-section 2 of Section 13 also has to be
quoted which reads thus:
(2) No decree for eviction shall be
passed on the ground specified in
clause (g) of sub-section (1) if
the Court is satisfied that, having
regard to all the circumstances of
the case including the question
whether other reasonable
accommodation is available for the
landlord or the tenant, greater
hardship would be caused by passing
the decree than by refusing to pass
it.
Where the Court is satisfied that
no hardship would be caused either
to the tenant or to the landlord by
passing the decree in respect of a
part of the premises, the Court
shall pass the decree in respect of
such part only".
The important postulates for constituting the aforesaid
ground are: (1) the requirement of the landlord for his
occupation of the tenanted premises should be reasonable ;
(2) it should also be bona fide; (3) the hardship of the
tenant in case of eviction should not be more than the
hardship of the landlord if he fails to get the eviction
order. Whether the requirement is reasonable or not can only
be judged from the facts since no strait-jacket formula can
be evolved for it.
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it is difficult to give an exact definition of the word
’reasonable’. It is often said that "an attempt to give a
specific meaning to the word ‘reasonable’ is trying to count
what is not number and measure what is not space." The
author of ’Words and Phrases’ [Permanent Edition] has quoted
from In re Nice & Schreiber, 123 F. 987,988 to give a
plausible meaning for the said word. He says "the expression
’reasonable ’ is a relative term, and the facts of the
particular controversy must be considered before the
question as to what constitutes reasonable can be
determined." it is not meant to be expedient or convenient
but certainly something more that . While interpreting the
word ’reasonable’ in Section 13 of the Act, the Bombay High
Court has suggested in Krishchand Moorjimal vs. Bai
Kalavati, AIR 1973 Bombay 46, "that the word ’reasonable’
cannot mean convenient or luxurious, though it may not
necessarily exclude the idea of convenience and comfort."
However, the expression reasonable can be taken as providing
an angle which is conformable or agreeable to reasons,
having regard to the facts of the particular controversy.
In Municipal Corporation of Delhi vs. Jagan Nath Ashok
Kumar, 1987 (4) SCC 497, this Court has stated that "the
word ’reasonable’ has in law prima facie meaning of
reasonable in regard to those circumstances of which the
actor, called upon to act reasonable, knows or ought to
know." This has been reiterated by Sabyasachi Mukherjee J.
(as his Lordship then was) in Gujarat Water Supply &
Sewerage Board vs. Unique Erectors (Gujarat) p. Ltd, 1989
(1) SCC 532.
For the present purpose, the broad features of this
case, which are undisputed, can be looked at. They are: (1)
Appellant is now living in a small apartment which has only
one bedroom, one living room, a kitchen and a toilet; (2)
appellant is living with her husband and her grown up sons
(Cedric Drego, his wife and a child, and the youngest son
Nereus Drego); (3) the eldest son Giles Drego is staying in
another flat with his wife and children; (4) the tenant is
in occupation of yet another flat situate in the same
locality which, on his own admission, is " kitchen plus
three -room flat."
In the light of the above admitted factual position
when the landlady says that the she needs more accommodation
for her family, there is no scope for doubting the
reasonableness of the requirement. Further the above
circumstances would raise a presumption that the requirement
is bona fide also. The tenant has failed to show that the
demand for eviction was made with any oblique motive and in
the absence of any such evidence the presumption of bona
fides stands unrebutted.
There cannot be any possible contention that the
hardships, if any, which may enure to the tenant in the
event of eviction from this tenanted premises, would be more
than the hardship which appellant is now facing due to
shortage of the space in her possession, particularly in
view of the large number of members of the family living
there.
It is unfortunate that the High Court has given undue
prominence to a seeming discrepancy in the evidence of the
landlady regarding the flat of her eldest son Giles Drego.
In her evidence she declined to agree to the suggestion of
the cross-examination that Giles Drego owns another flat,
but in her affidavit, filed in the High Court, she admitted
that the said son owns a flat jointly with his wife. It is
not clear from the averments in the affidavit whether Giles
drego came into possession of the said flat during the
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interval between the evidence taking stage and launching of
the writ petition. Even otherwise there is nothing to
indicate in the judgment of the appellate authority that it
was persuaded by the aforesaid answer of the landlady in
cross-examination. That authority was concerned about the
plight of the third son Cedric drego who was working in Taj
Hotel. This can be discerned from the following reasons
advanced by the appellate authority:
" It is absolutely and clearly
established that as of now, the
family of the landlady, including
her son in Taj Hotel and daughter-
in-law have no place for residence.
That they would become entitled to
it in future or even further that
they could have got it and have not
attempted to get it would not by
itself vitiate the case of the
requirement set up by the landlady.
Here, quite plainly speaking the
case of the requirement set up by
the landlady. Her, quite plainly
speaking the case appears to be
that the landlady is put up in a
flat belonging to her husband and
that flat falls short of the
requirement and therefore, there is
a need for additional
accommodation. We do not find any
thing unreasonable or male fide in
t he case tried to be set up by the
landlady."
The other ground highlighted by the learned single
judge for upsetting the decree of eviction is that the
landlady did not specify the plinth area of the space which
is presently in her of occupation. There is no legal
requirement that the person who claims eviction on the
ground under Section 13(1) (g) of the Act shall specify the
area in his possession. However, if the High Court thought
it necessary to know the exact plinth area in the possession
of the appellant, she could have been asked to spell it out.
It was not done, and instead learned Single Judge has blamed
her in the following terms:
" Even at this stage, no attempt
has been made by filling an
affidavit to show what is the area
of the flat presently occupied by
the landlady."
As a matter of fact, the landlady had mentioned it,
which the High Court has overlooked. In the affidavit sworn
to by the landlady in the writ petition filed in the High
Court the following averment has been made:
" I say that I am holding and
occupying a flat admeasuring 560
sq. ft. which consists of one bed
room, one living room, one kitchen
and a bathroom along with W.C."
We find no justification for the High Court for
quashing the decree of eviction passed by a competent court
on satisfaction of the ground under Section 13(1)(g) of the
Act. We, therefore, allow these appeals and set aside the
impugned judgment of the high Court. The decree of eviction
will stand restored subject to a rider that respondent-
tenant can have three months’ time from today for
surrendering the premises in question, provided he gives the
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undertaking on usual terms within four weeks in the Registry
of this Court.