Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
WARYAM SINGH AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
AMARNATH AND ANOTHER.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
19/01/1954
BENCH:
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BENCH:
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
MAHAJAN, MEHAR CHAND (CJ)
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
BOSE, VIVIAN
HASAN, GHULAM
CITATION:
1954 AIR 215 1954 SCR 565
CITATOR INFO :
R 1955 SC 233 (20)
R 1958 SC 321 (6)
R 1958 SC 398 (30)
F 1965 SC1994 (18)
F 1972 SC1598 (12)
R 1975 SC1297 (7)
R 1978 SC 45 (5)
RF 1979 SC 1 (11)
RF 1986 SC1272 (102)
F 1987 SC 117 (17)
ACT:
Constitution of India, arts. 227 and 241-High Court-Whether
conferred power of judicial superintendence-Rent
Controllerand District Judge-Whether Tribunals within the
meaning of art. 227-East Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act
(III of 1949 as extended to Himachal Pradesh, s. 13(2)(i),
Proviso Non-payment of arrears of rent on first hearing of
application for ejectment-Legal effect thereof.
HEADNOTE:
The Court of the Judicial Commissioner of Himachal Pradesh
exercises jurisdiction in relation to the whole of the
territories of Himachal Pradesh.
The Rent Controller and the District Judge exercising juris.
diction under the East Punjab Rent Restriction Act,,1949,
are certainly tribunals it not courts within the meaning of
art. 227 of the Constitution and they function within the
territories of
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Himachal Pradesh. Therefore art. 227(1) read with art. 241
confers on the Court of the Judicial Commissioner power of
superintendence over such tribunals.
The words "in relation to which" in art. 227(1) qualify the
word "territories" and not the words "courts and tribunals".
There is no force in the contention that cl. (2) of art.
227 only confers on the High Court administrative
superintendence over the subordinate courts and tribunals
because cl. (2) of the article is expressed to be without
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prejudice to the generality of the provisions in cl. (1).
The power of superintendence conferred by art. 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.
In view of the admitted failure by the tenants to pay the
rent as provided by the rent deed or at the first hearing of
the court under the proviso to s. 13(2)(1) the lower courts
had acted arbitrarily in refusing to make an order for
ejectment against the tenants who had not done what was
incumbent on them to do under the law and thereby refused to
exercise jurisdiction vested in them by law and it was a
case which called for interference by the Court of Judicial
Commissioner and it acted quite properly in doing so.
Moti Lal v. The State through Shrimati Sagrawati (I.L.R.
[1952] 1 All. 558 at p. 567) and Dalmia Jain Airways Ltd. v.
Sukumar Mukherjee (A.I.R. 1951 Cal. 193) referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CiviL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 64 of 1953.
Appeal by special leave from the Judgment and
Decree, dated the 29th November, 1951, of the Court of the
Judicial Commissioner for Himachal Pradesh at Simla in Civil
Revision No. 52 of 1951.
Gopal Singh for the appellants.
S. C. Isaacs (Amar Nath Chona, with him) for the
respondents.
1954. January 19. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
DAS J.-This is an appeal by special leave against the order
made on the 20th November, 1951, by the Judicial
Commissioner of Himachal Pradesh in proceedings instituted
by the respondents under articles 226 and 227 of the
Constitution of India.
There is no substantial dispute as to the facts leading
up to the present appeal. The ’appellants
567
were tenants of a certain shop premises situate in Solan
Bazar in the district of Mahasu in Himachal Pradesh. On the
llth October, 1947, they had executed a rent deed by which
they agreed to pay an annual rent of Rs. 175 payable as to
Rs. 50 on the last of Baisakh and as to the balance of Rs.
125 in the month of October, in default of which payment,%
the respondents, as landlords, would be entitled to recover
the whole of the said rent in one lump sum. The tenancy
created by the rent deed was only for one year in the first
instance but it provided that if the tenants desired to
continue in occupation they must execute a further rent deed
before the expiration of the said term. The appellants
never executed any further rent deed but held over and
continued in occupation of the demised premises.
The appellants fell into arrears with the payments of
rents due for the years 1948 and 1949 and the respondents
made applications to the Rent Controller for eviction of the
appellants under section 13 (2) (i) of the East Punjab Urban
Rent Restriction Act, 1949, as extended to Himachal Pradesh.
The appellants, however, paid up the arrears of rent into
court and claimed the benefit of the proviso to section 13
(2) (i). The claim was allowed and the said applications
were dismissed accordingly on the 18th December, 1950.
The appellants again fell into arrears with the pay-
ment of rent due for the year 1950. On the 26th December,
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1950, the respondents served on the appellants a notice c
alling upon the latter to pay whole of the said rent
forthwith but the appellants failed to do so. The
respondents thereupon, on the 2nd January, 1951, filed an
application under section 13 (2) (i) for the eviction of the
appellants on the ground of nonpayment of rent.
Thereafter, on the 10th January, 1951, the appellants
made an application to the Rent Controller for the fixation
of a fair rent under section 4 of the said Act.
On the 25th January, 1951, the appellants filed their
written statements in the proceedings under section 13
568
(2) (i) admitting the nonpayment of rent and the receipt of
the notice but pleaded (i) that the respondents’ application
was barred by reason of the rejection of the previous
applications for eviction made by the respondents and (ii)
that the present application could not be entertained in
view of the pendency of their application for fixation of a
fair rent under section 4 of the said Act.
On the 20th February, 1951, the Rent Controller framed the
following issues:-
(1) Whether the application in question was not
entertainable in view of the judgment of the District Judge,
dated the 18th December, 1950 Onus on defendants.
(2) If issue No. I is not proved, had the opposite party
(tenants) not paid the rent and as such were they liable to
be ejected? Onus on plaintiffs.
(3) Have the opposite party already filed an application in
the said court for the fixation of rent and are they,
therefore, not liable for ejectment pending the decision on
the application and what is its effect on the said
application? Onus on defendants.
By his judgment, dated the 29th May, 1951, the Rent
Controller held that as the previous applications related to
non-payment of rents for the years 1948 and 1949 the present
application which was founded on non-payment of rent for
1950 was not barred under section 14 of the said Act but,
although the fact of rent being in arrears was admitted, the
Rent Controller did not think fit to make an order directing
the appellants to put the respondents in possession of the
demised premises. The reasons given by him were as
follows:-
" Regarding the non-payment of the rent when the plea of the
tenant is only that he is waiting for the fixation of fair
rent by the Rent Controller there is not enough ground for
ejectment. A civil suit for the recovery of the rent would
have been a more appropriate method of obtaining that rent.
I therefore dismiss the suit.’ The parties should bear their
own
569
The respondents preferred an appeal to the District Judge of
Mahasu under section 15 of the said Act. The learned
District Judge dismissed the appeal observing-
"On behalf of the landlord it was urged that under section
13 (2) of the Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act, as applied
to Himachal Pradesh, the Controller, if it came to the
finding that rent had not been paid, had no option but to
direct the tenant to put the landlord in possession.
Undoubtedly, that is the correct legal position, but in the
present case the non-payment of rent was due to a
misapprehension of the legal position created by the tenant
filing an application for fixing fair rent. 1, therefore,
think that this case can be distinguished and does not fall
within section 13 (2), Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act."
The respondents moved the Judicial Commissioner, Himachal
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Pradesh, under articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution of
India for setting aside the order of the District Judge.
The learned Judicial Commissioner held that in view of the
admitted failure to pay the rent as provided by the rent
deed or at the first hearing of the court under the proviso
to section 13 (2) (i) the courts below had acted arbitrarily
in refusing to make an order for ejectment against the
tenants who had not done what was incumbent on them to do
under the law and that such a situation called for inter-
ference by the court of the Judicial Commissioner in order
to keep the subordinate courts within the bounds of their
authority. He accordingly set aside the orders of the
courts below and allowed the application for ejectment but
gave the appelants three months’ time for vacating the
premises. The appellants have now come up before this court
on appeal by special leave obtained from this court.
Learned advocate appearing in support of this appeal urges
that the learned Judicial Commissioner acted wholly without
jurisdiction inasmuch as (1) the Rent Controller or the
District Judge exercising powers
570
under the Act was not amenable to the jurisdiction of the
High Court and, therefore, article 227 confers no power on
the court of the Judicial Commissioner over the Rent
Controller or the District Judge, and (2) that article 227
read with article 241 confers no power of judicial
superintendence on the court of the Judicial Commissioner.
Re. l.-The court of the Judicial Commissioner of Himachal
Pradesh exercises jurisdiction in relation to the whole of
the territories of Himachal Pradesh. The Rent Controller
and the District Judge exercising jurisdiction under the Act
are certainly tribunals, if not courts, and they function
within the territories of Himachal Pradesh. Therefore,
article 297 (1) read with article 241 confers on the court
of the Judicial Commissioner power of superintendence over
such tribunals. The words " in relation to which "
obviously qualify the word " territories " and not the words
"courts and tribunals".
Re. 2.The material part of article 227 substantially
reproduces the provisions of section 107 of the Government
of India Act, 1915, except that the power of superintendence
has been extended by the article also to tribunals. That
the Rent Controller and the District Judge exercising
jurisdiction under the Act are tribunals cannot and has not
been controverted. The only question raised is as to the
nature of the power of superintendence conferred by the
article. Reference is made to clause (2) of the article in
support of the contention that this article only confers on
the High Court administrative superintendence over the
subordinate courts and tribunals. We are unable to accept
this contention because clause ( 2) is, expressed to be
without prejudice to the.generality of the provisions in
clause (1). Further, the preponderance of judicial opinion
in India was that section 107 which was similar in terms to
section 15 of the High Courts Act, 1861, gave a power of
judicial superintendence to the High Court apart from and
independently of the provisions of other laws conferring
revisional jurisdiction on the High Court. In this
connection it has to
571
be remembered that section 107 of the Government of India
Act, 1915, was reproduced in the Government of India Act,
1935, as section 224. Section 224 of the 1935 Act, however,
introduced sub-section (2), which was new, providing that
nothing in the section should be construed as giving the
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High Court any jurisdiction to,question any judgment of any
inferior court which was not otherwise subject to appeal or
revision. The idea presumably was to nullify the effect of
the decisions of the different High Courts referred to
above. Section 224 of the 1935 Act has been reproduced with
certain modifications in article 227 of the Constitution.
It is significant to note that sub-section (2) to section
224, of the 1935 Act has been omitted from article 227.
This significant omission has been regarded by all High
Courts in India before whom this question has arisen As
having restored to the High Court the power of judicial
superintendence it had under section 15 of the High Courts
Act, 186 1, and section 107 of the Government of India Act,
1915. See the cases referred to in -Moti Lal v. The State
through Shrimati Sagrawati(1). Our attention has not been
drawn to any case which has taken a different view and, as
at present advised, we see no reason to take a different
view.
This power of superintendence conferred by article 227 is,
as pointed out by Harries C. J., in Dalmia Jain Airways Ltd.
v. Sukumar Mukherjee(2), to 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. As rightly pointed out by the
Judicial Commissioner in the case before us the lower courts
in refusing to make an order for ejectment acted
arbitrarily. The lower courts realised the legal position
but in effect declined to do what was by section 13 (2) (i)
incumbent on them to do and thereby refused to exercise
jurisdiction vested in them by law. It. was, therefore, a
case which called for an interference by the court of the
Judicial Commissioner and it acted
(1) I.L.R. [1952] 1 All. 558 at p. 567,
(2) A.I.R. 1951 Cal. 193.
75
572
quite properly in doing so. In our opinion there is no
ground on which in an appeal by special leave under article
136 we should interfere. The appeal, therefore, must stand
dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
Agent for the appellants: M. M. Sinha. Agent for the
respondent: K. L. Mehta.