Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 5751 of 2005
PETITIONER:
Hari Rao
RESPONDENT:
N. Govindachari & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 15/09/2005
BENCH:
B.N. SRIKRISHNA & P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
[Arising out of Special Leave Petition (Civil) No. 24112 of 2002]
P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN, J.
1. Leave granted.
2. A room in a building in Thousand Lights, Mount Road
Madras, is the subject matter of this proceeding. The respondent-landlord
leased that room, a ’building’ as defined in the Tamil Nadu Buildings
(Lease and Rent Control) Act, 1960 to the appellant. According to the
landlord, the letting was for the purpose of a shoe trade or trade in leather
goods by the tenant. There was a prior proceeding in which there was a
compromise and the building was re-let to the tenant after it was re-
modeled or re-constructed. While carrying on his business, the tenant had
used a part of the premises for carrying on a trade in readymade garments
and that amounted to a user of the building by the tenant for a purpose
other than that for which it was leased, within the meaning of Section 10
(2) (ii) (b) of the Act. The tenant had also fixed name-boards outside and
drilled two holes in the walls for fixing racks for the purpose of his trade
and had taken an independent three phase electric connection and for that
purpose he had made holes on the floor and on the wall; that these acts of
the tenant amount to commission or causing the commission of such acts
of waste as are likely to impair materially, the value or utility of the
building within the meaning of Section 10 (2) (iii) of the Act. Thus, the
landlord claimed eviction of the tenant, the appellant, on these two
grounds.
3. The appellant resisted the claim. He contended that the
original letting was not for the purpose of trade in shoes or leather goods
alone. He was still carrying on the business of selling shoes, but had
expanded his trade by including the trade in readymade garments. There
was no user of the room by him for a purpose other than the purpose for
which it was let. He was not liable to be evicted on that ground. The
fixing of the sign-boards was permitted by the landlord and fixing of the
boards or the fixing of the racks for the purpose of his trade, did not
amount to acts of waste as are likely to impair materially the value and
utility of the building. He had to take the electric connection, a three
phase one, for the purpose of his trade and that act again did not result in
any damage to the building or amount to waste and hence he was not
liable to be evicted on that ground as well. He thus prayed for dismissal
of the petition for eviction.
4. In addition to marking Ex. A1, to A4, the landlord examined
himself as P.W.1 and examined the Engineer who prepared Ex. A4 report
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as P.W. 2. The tenant marked Ex. B1- letter and Ex. B2-report and
examined himself as R.W.1 and examined the engineer who prepared Ex.
B2- report as R.W.2. According to him, Exhibit B1 indicated that there
was no restriction on his user of the premises. The Rent Controller held
that the user of the building also for the purpose of carrying on a trade in
readymade garments, amounted to using the building for a purpose other
than that for which the building was let within the meaning of Section 10
(2) (ii) (b) of the Act and an order for eviction was liable to be passed
thereunder. He also held that the fixing of the sign-boards, the fixing of
the racks and the taking of an independent three phase electric connection
by drilling holes for that purpose, amounted to commission of waste in the
building attracting Section 10 (2) (iii) of the Act. Thus, eviction was
ordered both under Section 11(2)(ii)(b) and under Section 11 (2) (iii) of
the Act. The tenant appealed. The Appellate Authority found that the
user by the tenant of the building also for the purpose of a retail trade in
readymade garments, did not amount to user of the building for a purpose
other than that for which the building was let and consequently, held that
the landlord was not entitled to an order for eviction under Section 10 (2)
(ii) (b) of the Act. The Appellate Authority further held that the fixing of
the sign-boards, the fixing of the racks and the taking of an independent
three phase connection did not amount to commission of waste by the
tenant attracting Section 11 (2) (iii) of the Act. Thus, the Appellate
Authority found that the landlord has not made out his claim for eviction
on the two grounds he had put forward. It reversed the decision of the
Rent Controller and dismissed the eviction petition. The landlord filed
a revision before the High Court challenging the legality, regularity
and propriety of the order of the Appellate Authority. The High Court
held that the Rent Controller was correct in ordering eviction on the facts
established in the case and the decision of the Appellate Authority was
liable to be reversed. The High Court, thus, allowed the revision and
setting aside the decision of the Appellate Authority, restored the order for
eviction passed by the Rent Controller. The decision of the High Court
thus rendered, is challenged in this appeal at the instance of the tenant.
5. Admittedly, the building was let out for the purpose of
carrying on of a trade by the tenant. There is no lease deed executed by
the parties evidencing the transaction. The evidence indicates that at the
relevant time, the tenant wanted to start a business in sale of leather
goods, particularly shoes, and for that purpose he took the building on
lease. Exhibit B-1 letter, written by the landlord to tenant referred to and
quoted by the Rent Controller, shows that the tenant was entitled to
’continue the tenancy with the present increased rent, on the premises,
with all tenancy rights including the rights of putting up boards and
painting on the walls of the portion of the premises, No. 638 at Mount
Road, Madras-6 under your occupation’. In his evidence as P.W.1, the
landlord stated that he had let out the premises for running a shoe-mart
and he had not entered into any other agreement permitting the tenant to
sell readymade garments in the premises. But, there was an agreement to
allow him to sell decoration materials but the tenant was not selling them.
There was also a permission to sell fancy goods but that represented only
leather goods. Chappals and socks as well as shoes could be sold from
the premises. There was no agreement by which the tenant was permitted
to sell clothes and T-shirts. In his petition for eviction, the landlord had
only stated that the tenant had taken the building on lease for the purpose
of running a shoe-mart but the tenant had converted a portion of the shop
for selling readymade dresses and this amounted to user of the shop by the
tenant for a purpose other than that for which it was leased. This was
disputed by the tenant in his objection, who took the stand that it was
generally for the purpose of his trade that the building was let, though, at
the relevant time, he was only conducting a trade in shoes. There was no
violation by him of any term of the letting and there was no user of the
shop for a purpose other than the purpose for which it was let out to him.
It is necessary to notice here that there was no plea of the tenant having
covenanted not to use the building for any other trade.
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6. On the plain terms of the statute, uninfluenced by authorities,
it appears to us that user of the building for a purpose other than that for
which it was leased, has to be considered in the context of Section 21 of
the Act which prohibits conversion of a residential building into a non-
residential building except with the permission in writing of the
controller, any covenant in that behalf entered into by the tenant and the
nature of the tenancy. In other words, when the lease is granted for the
purpose of a trade, in the absence of any covenant in the contract between
the parties prohibiting a user different from the particular one mentioned
in the lease deed, the tenant would be entitled to carry on any trade in the
premises, consistent with the location and the nature of the premises. In a
case where the premises let out for a commercial purpose, is used by the
tenant for a residential purpose, it would be a user for a purpose other than
that for which it was leased attracting Section 10 (2) (ii) (b) of the Act.
Similarly, if a building had been let out for the purpose of a trade, but a
tenant uses the premises for the purpose of manufacture or production of
materials after installing machinery, that would be a user other than the
one for which the building was let. User of a building let out for a trade
as a godown may attract the provision. Ultimately, the question would
depend upon the facts of a particular case, in the context of the terms of
the letting and the covenants governing the transaction and the general
spirit of Section 108(o) of the Transfer of Property Act. Merely because a
shop let out for trade in shoes and other leather goods, is used by the
tenant also for the purpose of trading in readymade garments, it could not
be held to be a user by the tenant of the premises for a purpose other than
that for which it was leased. It has to be noted that even now, the tenant is
carrying on the business of trading in shoes, which according to the
landlord was the purpose for which the building was let. The trade in
shoes has not been stopped by the tenant. All that has happened is, that he
has also diversified into selling some readymade garments or T-shirts, the
manufacture of which even some of the manufacturers of shoes have
taken up.
7. Learned counsel for the landlord placed considerable reliance
on the decision in M. Arul Jothi & anr. Vs. Lajja Bal (Deceased) and
Anr.[(2000) 3 SCC 723]. That case also arose under Section 10 (2) (ii)
(b) of the Act. The transaction between the parties was governed by a
lease deed. The tenant covenanted that the premises, "shall be used by the
tenant for carrying on his own business \005 and the tenant shall not carry
on any other business than the above said business." The business
intended was dealing in radios, cycles, fans, clocks and steel furniture.
Subsequently, the tenant also started a trade in provisions (spices and dals
etc.). The landlord sought eviction and the courts below ordered eviction
under Section 10 (2) (ii) (b) of the Act. The tenant had appealed to this
Court. This Court referred to the earlier decisions of this Court including
the one in M.K. Palaniappa Chettiar Vs. A. Pennuswami Pillai [(1970)
2 SCC 290]. It also referred to Section 108 (o) of the Transfer of
Property Act. This Court distinguished the various decisions brought to
its notice under other sister enactments and took the view that the
covenant in the rent deed not to use the premises for any purpose, other
than the one referred to in the rent deed, brought the user by the tenant
within the mischief of Section 10 (2) (ii) (b) of the Act and, therefore, the
order for eviction was justified. With respect, as we see it, their Lordships
rested their decision on the existence of the negative covenant in the lease
deed and on the view that a breach of that covenant, would attract Section
10 (2) (ii) (b) of the Act, and make the user, one coming within the
mischief of that provision. In this case, as observed, there is no covenant
as the one involved in Arul Jothi’s case. In M.K. Palaniappa Chettiar
Vs. A. Pennuswami Pillai [(1970) 2 SCC 290], the tenant, while
continuing the business for which the building was taken on rent, was
using a negligible portion of the building for the purpose of cooking. This
Court held that the High Court was in error in reversing the decision of
the Rent Controller and the Appellate Authority to the effect that no
ground for eviction under Section 10 (2) (ii) (b) of the Act was made out.
This Court dismissed the petition for eviction. In Mohan Lal Vs. Jai
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Bhagwan (1988 (3) SCR 345), this Court, interpreting the corresponding
provision in Haryana Urban (Control of Rent & Eviction) Act, 1973, held
that when a tenant who had taken a building on lease for the purpose of
running a business in liquor, converted the business into that of general
merchandise, in the absence of a negative covenant, the user did not
amount to user for a purpose other than that for which the building was
leased. The same position was adopted in Gurdial Batra Vs. Raj
Kumar Jain (1989 (3) SCR 423), where the premises was let out for
repairing business and the tenant along with the repairing business, also
carried on sale of television sets for a while. This Court held that there
was no change of user which would attract the liability for eviction under
the corresponding provision of the East Punjab Urban Rent Restriction
Act, 1949. It was clearly stated that the concept of injury to the premises
which forms the foundation of Section 108 (o) of the Transfer of Property
Act is the main basis for a provision similar to the one in Section 10 (2)
(ii) (b) of the Act. We think that the case on hand is governed by the
principles recognized in the latter decisions and the ratio of the decision in
Arul Jothi has no application in the absence of a negative covenant as
the one obtaining in that case. Dashrath Baburao Sangale & Others
Vs. Kashimath Bhaskar Data [1994 Supp (1) SCC 504] was a case
where the premises was taken on rent for "sugarcane crushing with the
help of an ox and for the shop thereof" and the tenant was to get
constructed a temporary shed of tin-sheet for that purpose. The tenant
started a cloth business in the premises. The courts below found that this
was a user for a purpose other than that for which the premises was leased
and this Court found no ground to interfere. This decision only re-affirms
the position that everything would depend on the terms of the letting and
the facts of the case. Obviously, the cloth business started, had no
connection with crushing of sugarcane. The decision in Ram Gopal Vs.
Jai Narain and others [1995 Supp. (4) SCC 648], shows that the user by
the tenant of a building taken on rent for the purpose of running a shop
(commercial), for a manufacturing purpose, would entail his eviction on
the ground of change of user. The tenant, in that case, installed an Atta
Chakki and an Oil Kolhu, in the shop. The case on hand is not one of that
nature. In other words, in the present case, there was no change of user,
from non-residential to residential or from business to manufacturing or
industrial. As emphasized already, there was also no negative covenant as
was available in Arul Jothi’s case. In such a situation, we are satisfied
that the High Court was clearly in error in interfering with the decision of
the Appellate Authority that there was no change of user in the case on
hand attracting Section 10 (2) (ii) (b) of the Act. Merely because a tenant,
who has taken a building for the purpose of running a trade, alters the
commodity in which he was trading when he took the building on lease or
trades in other commodities also, he could not be held to be using the
premises for a purpose other than the purpose for which it was let. The
purpose has to be understood, as the purpose of trade and in the absence
of a covenant barring the using of it for any other trade, it will be open to
the tenant to use the premises for expanding his trade or even for taking
up other lines of trade as befits a prudent trader.
8. It is true that this Court has held in Malpe Vishwanath
Acharya and others Vs. State of Maharashtra and Anr. [(1998) 2 SCC
1], that the Rent Control Legislation is enacted in the larger interest of the
society as a whole and it is not intended to confer any disproportionately
larger benefit on the tenant to the disadvantage of the landlord. But that
does not mean that the Rent Control Legislation should not be approached
as a beneficial piece of legislation and with the recognition that
reasonable protection to the tenant is one of the objects of that legislation.
While construing a provision of law imposing a liability, for eviction, like
Section 10 (2) (ii) (b) of the Act, one must see whether there has been
such a change of user of the premises as to make it alien to the purpose for
which the building was let and deny eviction when the basic activity
remains the same and there is only a variation in the manner or mode of
carrying on of that activity. Therefore, the interpretation placed on
Section 10 (2) (ii) (b) of the Act by the High Court in the decision under
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appeal and in some other decisions of that Court referred to in the orders
of the Rent Controller and the High Court, has to be held to be not
warranted or justified. The order of eviction passed by the High Court
under Section 10 (2) (ii) (b) of the Act has, therefore, to be reversed.
9. In support of his claim for eviction under Section 10(2)(iii)
of the Act, what the landlord pleaded was that his tenant had put up new
sign-boards and fixed two additional racks by drilling holes in the wall
and in the beam and had taken an independent electric connection for
which holes have been drilled in the floor and the wall, and all this
amounted to commission of acts of waste as are likely to impair materially
the value and utility of the building. He also pleaded that the tenant had
damaged the building while converting the shop for selling readymade
dresses. He had installed additional show-cases on the walls of the
building by making holes therein. He had increased the consumption of
electricity by fixing up more lights and fans. He had increased the electric
load, causing constant blowing out of the fuse in the building and causing
damage to the electric service connection to the whole building and the
entire building may catch fire at any moment. He also put up a big name
board outside, damaging the building and had also drawn heavy electrical
lines and taken service connection to the name board, with a heavy load of
electricity. The tenant admitted the putting up of sign-boards and the
fixing up of racks but he denied that he had caused any damage.
Whatever he had done was with the consent of the landlord and the claim
put forward by the landlord was only an attempt to gain the sympathy of
the Court. The Engineer, P.W. 2 noted that new racks were fixed by
making holes in floor walls and also in the beams. Two new massive sign
boards were fixed in the front and side. Holes were made in the parapet
wall of the first floor and angle irons supporting the sign boards were
fixed. The parapet wall was only 2" thick and it could not take the weight
of the huge sign boards and the parapet wall may collapse at any time.
New electric connection has been given by making holes in the
foundation and the wall in front and a new meter board had been fixed.
This report of P.W.2 was not sought to be corroborated by any other
material to show that there was any danger because of the taking of a new
electric connection or by the increase in load. It is true that for the
purpose of his trade, the tenant fixed new racks by making holes in the
floor, the walls and in the beams. But, in the absence of any other
material, it cannot be said to be the commission of acts of waste as are
likely to impair materially the value and utility of the building. We must
say that there is hardly any evidence on the side of the landlord to show
that there was material impairment, either in the value or the utility of the
building by the acts of the tenant. The mere fixing of sign-boards outside
the shop by taking support from the parapet wall, cannot be considered to
be an act of waste which is likely to impair materially the value or utility
of the building. The report of the Engineer, P.W.2, merely asserts that the
parapet wall will collapse at any time. There is no supporting evidence in
respect of that assertion. Ex. B1-letter of the landlord giving permission
to the tenant to fix boards, cannot also be ignored in this context.
Moreover, when a trade is carried on in a premises, that too in an
important locality in a city, it is obvious that the tenant would have to fix
sign-boards outside, to attract customers. These are days of fierce
competition and unless the premises is made attractive by lighting and
other means, a trader would not be in a position to attract customers or
survive in the trade. Therefore, the acts of the tenant established, are
merely acts which are consistent with the needs of the tenant who has
taken the premises on rent for the purpose of a trade in leather goods and
shoes and in furtherance of the prospects of that trade. The fixing of racks
inside the premises even by drilling holes in the walls or beams cannot be
said to be acts which are themselves acts of waste as are likely to impair
materially the value and utility of the building. Broadly, a structural
alteration however slight, should be involved to attract Section 10 (2) (iii)
of the Act. In fact, we see hardly any pleading or evidence in this case
which would justify a conclusion that the acts of the tenant amount to
such acts of waste as are likely to impair materially the value and utility of
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the building. In G. Arunachalam (died) through L.Rs. and anr. Vs.
Thondarperienambi and anr. [AIR 1992 SC 977] dealing with the same
provision, this Court held that the fixing of rolling shutters by the tenant
in place of the wooden plank of the front door by itself did not amount to
a structural alteration that impaired the value of the building and no
eviction could be ordered under Section 10 (2) (iii) of the Act. Of course,
in that case, there was also a report by an Engineer that the structural
alteration made for fixing the rolling shutter, did not impair the value of
the building. In the context of the Kerala statute which spoke of
impairment in the value or utility of the building materially and
permanently, this Court has recently held in G. Raghunathan Vs. K.V.
Varghese [2005 (6) SCALE 675] that the fixing up of rolling shutter and
doing of the allied acts referred to in that decision, would not amount to
user that materially and permanently impairs the value or utility of the
building. The Act here, only speaks of acts of waste as are likely to
impair materially the value and utility of the building. The impairment
need not be permanent. But even then, it appears to us that it must really
be a material impairment in the value or utility of the building. In British
Motor Car Co. Vs. Madan Lal Saggi (Dead) and anr. [(2005) 1 SCC
8], this Court considered the aspect of material alteration or damage in the
context of Section 13(2)(iii) of the East Punjab Urban Rent Restriction
Act, 1949. In the lease deed in that case, there was a covenant that the
lessee will not make any addition or alteration or change in the building
during the period of the tenancy. This Court referred to Om Prakash Vs.
Amar Singh [(1987) 1 SCC 458], Om Pal Vs. Anand Swarup [(1988) 4
SCC 545], Waryam Singh Vs. Baldev Singh [(2003) 1 SCC 59],
Gurbachan Singh Vs. Shivalak Rubber Industries [(1996) 2 SCC 626],
Vipin Kumar Vs. Roshan Lal Anand [(1993) 2 SCC 614] and held,
’When a construction is alleged to have materially
impaired the value and utility of the premises, the
construction should be of such a nature as to
substantially diminish the value of the building
either from the commercial and monetary point of
view or from the utilitarian aspect of the building.’
There is hardly any material in the present case on the basis of which the
Court could come to the conclusion that the act of the tenant here has
amounted to commission of such acts of waste as are likely to impair
materially the value and utility of the building. The Rent Controller and
the High Court have not properly applied their minds to the relevant
aspects in the context of the statute and have acted without jurisdiction in
passing an order of eviction under Section 10 (2) (iii) of the Act. The
Appellate Authority was justified in denying an order of eviction to the
landlord on this ground.
10. In these circumstances, we allow this appeal and setting aside
the decision of the High Court restore that of the Appellate Authority.
That would mean that the petition for eviction filed by the landlord would
stand dismissed. In the circumstances of the case we make no order as to
costs.