Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHEO NARAIN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHER SINGH
DATE OF JUDGMENT21/09/1979
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
SHINGAL, P.N.
SEN, A.P. (J)
CITATION:
1980 AIR 138 1980 SCR (1) 836
1980 SCC (1) 125
CITATOR INFO :
R 1980 SC1708 (3,4,21)
D 1989 SC1160 (15)
ACT:
East Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act, 1949, Provisio
to Section 13(2) (i) -Scope of-Whether the deposit by a
tenant of the entire arrears of rent or the Fair Rent fixed
by the Rent Controller before the first date of hearing of
the ejectment application would amount to deposit on the
firs. date of hearing so as to attract the benefit under
Section 13(2)(i) of the Act.
HEADNOTE:
The proviso to clause (1) of sub-section (2) of section
13 of the East Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act, 1949,
states that "if the tenant on the first hearing of the
application for ejectment after due service pays or tenders
the arrears of rent and interest @ 65% per annum or such
arrears together with the cost of application assessed by
the Controller, the tenant shall be deemed to have duly paid
or tendered the rent within the time showed in clause (i) of
sub-section (2) of section 13 of the Act, 1949". In such
circumstances, an order for eviction against the tenant
cannot be passed.
The appellant was a tenant under the respondent-
landlord Sher Singh. On 21-3-67, Sher Singh tiled an
application under Section 13 of the East Punjab Urban Rent
Restrictions Act, 1949 for ejectment of the appellant-tenant
from the tenanted shop situate in Gurgaon Cantonment, on the
ground of arrears of rent for the period from 9-11-65 to 8-
3-67 at the agreed rate @ Rs. 15/- pm. The notice of the
application for ejectment with the first date of hearing as
11-5-67 was served on the appellant-tenant on 22-4-67. On
29-4-1967 the appellant-tenant made an application before
the very same Rent Controller praying for payment of arrears
of rent i.e. Rs. 178.48 for the above period computed @ Rs.
10.62 p.m., being the fair rent fixed by that Court on 20-4-
67 in an earlier application for fixation of fair rent. The
said amount was actually deposited on the court of the Rent
Controller on 4-5-67. On 11-5-67 the appellant tenant
tendered in the court to the landlord a further sum of Rs.
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25/- being the costs and Rs. 2/- being the interest. This
was not accepted on the ground that the lender was not a
valid one within the meaning of section 13(2)(i) of the Act.
This objection was accepted by the Rent Controller and an
ejectment order was passed. On first appeal the District
Judge reversed the said order. In the Revision before the
High Court, the High Court remanded the matter to the first
Appellate Court for fresh orders in view of this Court’s
ruling in Vidya Prachar Trust v. Basant Ram [1970] 1 S.C.R.
66. The First Appellate Court affirmed the ejectment order.
In the further revision to the High Court, the learned
single Judge referred it to the Division Bench which in turn
referred it to a third Judge. The third Judge agreed with
the single Judge that the payment of fair rent fixed on 4-5-
67 was not a valid tender within the meaning of section
13(2)(i) of the Act. The single Judge, therefore, dismissed
the revision petition and confirmed the orders of ejectment
of the courts below.
Allowing the appeal by special leave, the Court.
837
^
HELD : 1. Proviso to section 13(2)(i) of the East
Punjab Urban Rent Restrictions Act, 1949 requires three
essential conditions: (1) that there must be an application
for ejectment before the Court, (2) that even after due
service the tenant does not pay or tender the arrears of
rent and interest at 6 per cent per annum together with
costs assessed by the Controller, (3 ) that if the payment
as required by the aforesaid two conditions is made then the
tenant shall be deemed to have paid rent within the time
required by law. The last part of section 13 enjoins that
where the conditions of the proviso are not fulfilled the
Controller shall make an order directing the tenant to put
the landlord in possession and where he is satisfied that
the rent has been paid, the application of the Landlord must
be rejected. [841 A-C]
2. There is no magical formula or any prescribed manner
in which rent can be deposited by the tenant with the
landlord. The rent can be deposited by placing the money in
the hands of the landlord which could amount to actual
tender. The second mode of payment is to deposit the amount
in the court where a case is pending in such a manner so as
to make the amount available to the landlord without any
hitch or hindrance whenever he wants it. Even the Act does
not prescribe any particular mode of deposit. In fact, the
use of the words "tender or deposit" in the proviso clearly
postulate that the rent can be given to the landlord in
either of the two modes. (I) It may be tendered to the
landlord personally or to his authorised agent or it may be
deposited in Court which is dealing with the case of the
landlord to his Knowledge so that the landlord may withdraw
the deposit whenever he likes. In the instant case the
appellant tenant chose the second course. [842 A-C]
3. A deposit before the Rent Controller where the case
of the landlord was subjudice would be a valid deposit, if
it was in fact in. existence on the date of the first
hearing to the knowledge of the landlord. In fact, if the
tenant deposits the rent even before the first date of
hearing it is a solid proof of his bonafides in the matter
and the legal position would be that if the lent is
deposited before the first date of hearing, it will be
deemed to have been deposited on the date of the hearing
also because the deposit continues to remain in the court on
that date and the position would be as if the tenant had
deposited the rent in court for payment to the landlord.
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[842 D-E]
In the instant case, all the conditions necessary for
the application of the proviso have been completely
fulfilled. This is more particularly so when the Controller
gave notice to the counsel for the respondent on the first
date of hearing that the amount had been deposited with the
Controller. [842 E-F]
Vidya Prachar Trust v. Pandit Basant Ram, [1970] 1
S.C.R. explained and distinguished.
Dulichand v. Maman Chand, C.A. 1744/69 dated 27-3-79
followed
Mehnga Singh & Ors. v. Dewan Dilbagh Rai & Ors., (1971)
P.L.R. 57 overruled.
Observation:
The Rent Control Act is a piece of social legislation
designed to project the tenant from eviction by landlords on
frivolous, insufficient or purely technical ground. Even as
the Act allows eviction of the tenant on the ground of
838
non-payment of arrears of rent the proviso affords
sufficient protection to the tenant against eviction if the
tenant deposits the rent in accordance with the proviso.
[844 B-C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 80 of
1977.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and order
dated 4-11-1976 of the Punjab and Haryana High Court in
Civil Rev. No. 226 of 1971.
Suresh Sethi (Amicus Curiae) for the Appellant.
Yogeshwar Prasad and Mrs. Rani Chhabra for the
Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
FAZAL ALI, J. This appeal by special leave is directed
against the judgment of the Punjab and Haryana High Court
dated 4th November, 1976 dismissing the revision petition
filed by the appellant before the High Court.
This case has rather a chequered career and travelled
through various stages and finally when it came to the High
Court the case was remanded and after remand another re-
vision petition was filed before the High Court which was
heard by a Single Judge who referred it to a Division Bench
as in his opinion a substantial question of law was involved
in the case. When the case went before the Division Bench
consisting of Pandit and B. S. Dhillon, JJ. the two Judges
differed from each other and the case was referred to a
third Judge, namely, Mittal, J. who agreed with Pandit, J.
and dismissed the petition. Hence this appeal.
In order to understand the point of law involved in
this case, it may be necessary to give a brief resume of the
facts leading to the appeal. It appears that the appellant
defendant was a tenant of a shop belonging to one Sher Singh
and was situated in Gurgaon Cantonment. Sher Singh gave an
application on 21-3-1967 under the provisions of the East
Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act 1949 (hereinafter referred
to as the Act) against the defendant-appellant for eviction
from the shop on the ground that he had defaulted in payment
of the rent and arrears for the period 9-11-1965 to 8-3-
1967. Notice of this application for 11th May 1967 was
issued on the 22nd March, 1967 and was actually served on
the defendant appellant on 22nd April, 1967. on the 29th
April, 1967 the defendant-appellant made an application
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before the Senior Sub-Judge who was also the Rent Controller
for depositing a sum of Rs. 179.48 being the rent along with
interest due. The amount was however deposited before the
Rent Controller on the 4th May, 1967. It appears that the
first date of the hearing of the
839
application was 11th May, 1967 on which date the Rent
Controller made the following order:
"Present: Mr. Vijay Pal Singh for the petitioner
Mr. P. L. Kakkar for the respondent
The respondent’s counsel Sh. P. L. Kakkar has been
informed that the petitioner has deposited Rs. 179.48
paise on 4-5-67. Papers are filed."
Even before this date when the amount was actually deposited
by the appellant, the Rent Controller had passed the
following order:-
"Present: Sh. Shiv Narain Petitioner .
The rent be deposited at the responsibility of the
petitioner and after that notice be issued on payment
of P.F. for the respondent for 11-5-67."
It is, therefore, manifest that in the instant case a
deposit of the rent and the arrears along with interest had
actually been made before the first date of hearing to the
knowledge of the Court and the Court had acknowledged the
fact of the deposit of the amount. Again, on the first date
of hearing i.e. 11th May, 1967 the Rent Controller informed
counsel for the applicant respondent that a sum of Rs.
179.48 had been deposited. It is, therefore, clear that the
applicant respondent 1’ was apprised clearly of the fact
that the amount in question had actually been deposited and
was at his disposal and he could withdraw the same from the
Court of the Rent Controller whenever he liked. Despite
these facts, the Rent Controller held in its order dated the
2nd December, 1967 that the deposit was not made in
accordance with the proviso to section 13(2) (i) of the Act,
and, therefore, the appellant being a defaulter the
application was allowed and ejectment was ordered.
Thereafter, the appellant went up in appeal to the District
Judge who was the Appellate Authority under the Act which
differed from the view taken by the Rent Controller and by
his order dated 22nd February, 1968 having held that the
deposit was valid dismissed the application filed by the
respondent for evicting the appellant. Thereafter a revision
was filed to the High Court which was remanded to the
District Judge for deciding the case afresh, and
particularly having regard to the decision of this Court in
the case of Shri Vidya Prachar Trust v. Pandit Basant
Ram(l). On remand the District Judge accepted the
application of the respondent and affirmed the order of the
Rent Controller directing ejectment of the appellant.
Thereafter the
840
appellant filed a revision before the High Court which, as
already indicated, had a varied career before the High Court
and was ultimately decided against the appellant and in
favour of the applicant respondent
The three Judges of the High Court who heard the case
have been greatly influenced by the decision of this Court
in Shri Vidya Prachar Trust case (supra). It appears that
the previous Division Bench of the Punjab and Haryana High
Court in the case of Mehnga Singh & Ors. v. Dewan Dilbagh
Rai & ors had followed the Supreme Court decision and taken
the view that the deposit in the circumstances was not
valid.
We have gone through the judgment of the Judges of the
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High Court and we are unable to agree with the
interpretation placed by them oh the proviso to section
13(2)(i) of the Act. We are also constrained to observe that
the High Court has misapplied the decision of this Court in
Vidya Prachar Trust case (supra) which is clearly
distinguishable from the facts and circumstances of this
case.
Before dealing with the point of law involved it may be
necessary to extract portions of the Act with which we are
concerned. In the instant case, we are mainly concerned with
section 13 of the Act which may be extracted thus:-
"13. (1) x x x
(2) A landlord who seeks to evict his tenant shall
apply to. the Controller for a direction in that
behalf. If the Con troller, after giving the tenant a
reasonable opportunity of showing cause against the
applicant, is satisfied-
(i) that the tenant has not paid or tendered the rent
due by him in respect of the building or rented
land within fifteen days after the expiry of the
time fixed in the . agreement of tenancy with his
landlord or in the absence of any such agreement,
by the last day of the month next following that
for which the rent is payable:
Provided that if the tenant on the first hearing of the
application for ejectment after the due service pays or
tenders the arrears of rent and interest at six per
cent per annum on such arrears together with the cost
of application assessed by the Controller, the tenant
shall be deemed to have duly paid or tendered the rent
within the time aforesaid.
X X X X X
841
The Controller may make an order directing the tenant
to put the landlord in possession of the building or
rented land and if the Controller is not so satisfied
he shall make an order rejecting the application."
The decision of the case mainly turns upon the
interpretation of the proviso to section 13, which requires
three essential conditions: (1) that there must be an
application for ejectment before the Court, (2) that even
after due service the tenant does not pay or tender the
arrears of rent and interest at 6 per cent per annum
together with costs assessed by the Controller, (3) that if
the payment as required by the aforesaid two conditions is
made then the tenant shall be deemed to have paid rent
within the time required by law. The last part of section 13
enjoins that where the conditions of the proviso are not
fulfilled the Controller shall make an order directing the-
tenant to put the landlord in possession and where he is
satisfied that the rent has been paid, the application of
the landlord must be rejected.
Thus, the sole question which has to be determined in
the instant case is as to whether or not the deposit made by
the appellant was legally valid. The grounds on which the
High Court held the deposit to b invalid were (1) that the
rent was deposited in the Court of the Rent Controller
without there being any express provision in the Act
requiring the tenant to deposit the rent in Court, (2) that
even if the deposit be held to be valid since it was made
not on the date of the first hearing but before that date,
the deposit did not conform to the conditions required in
the proviso. Thirdly, the High Court relied mainly on the
decision of this Court in Vidya Prachar Trust case (supra)
and held that the deposit was not valid.
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Before examining the case of this Court in the case of
Vidya Prachar Trust case (supra) it may be necessary to
comment on the reasons given by the High Court in rejecting
the case of the appellant. We have already indicated above -
that tho appellant first moved the Rent Controller for
making a deposit of Rs. 179.48 and then made the actual
deposit on the 4th May, 1967 i.e. to say a week before the
date of the first hearing fixed by the Rent Controller. It
is also not disputed before us or for that matter also, also
before the courts below that the amount deposited by the
appellant consisted of not only the arrears of rent but also
costs and interest as required by the proviso to section 13
of the Act. Fourthly, it is also established that after the
deposit was made before the Rent Controller he did not
return the same to the appellant on the ground that he had
no jurisdiction to receive it but oh the other hand directed
that notice of the deposit may be given to the respondent
842
for 11-5-1967. Furthermore, the trial court on 11-5-1967
that is the first date of hearing recorded an order that the
respondent’s counsel had been informed that the amount had
been deposited. There is magical formula or prescribed
manner in which rent can be deposited by the tenant with the
landlord. The rent can be deposited by placing the money in
the hands of the landlord which would amount to actual
tender. The second mode of payment is to deposit the amount
in the court where a case is pending in such a manner so as
to make the amount available to the landlord without any
hitch or hindrance whenever he wants it. Even the Act does
not prescribe any particular mode of deposit. In fact, the
use of the words "tender or deposit" in the proviso clearly
postulate that the rent can be given to the landlord in
either of the two modes. (1) It may be tendered to the
landlord personally or to his authorised agent or it may be
deposited in Court which is. dealing with the case of the
landlord to this knowledge so that the landlord may withdraw
the deposit whenever he likes. In the instant case the
appellant tenant chose the second course. How can it be said
that a deposit before the Rent Controller where the case of
the landlord was sub-judice would not be a valid deposit if
it was in fact in existence on the date of the first hearing
to the knowledge of the landlord. The reasoning of the High
Court that the rent was deposited earlier than 11-S-1967 and
is therefore, invalid does not appear to us at all. In fact,
if the tenant deposits the rent even before the first date
of hearing it is a solid proof of his bonafides in the
matter and the Legal position would be that if the rent is
deposited before the first date of hearing, it will be
deemed to have been deposited on the date of the hearing
also because the deposit continues to remain in the court on
that date and the position would be as if the tenant has
deposited the rent in court for payment to the landlord.
This is’ more particularly so when the Controller gave
notice to counsel for the respondent on the first date of
hearing that the amount had been deposited with the
Controller. In these circumstances, we ar,- satisfied that
all the conditions necessary for the application of the
proviso have been completely fulfilled in this case and the
High Court was not at all justified in allowing the
application of the landlord and directing ejectment of the
appellant.
Coming now to the case of Vidya Prachar Trust case
(supra) which is the sheet anchor of the judgment of the
High Court we think that it is clearly distinguishable from
the facts of this case. In the first place, although in that
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case also an application under section 13 of the Act had
been made by the applicant for the eviction of the
respondent on the ground that rent was not paid, the tenant
on the first date of hearing did not tender the rent, cost
and interest as required
843
by the proviso but only a part of the rent. It is,
therefore, manifest A that in the case which was being dealt
with by the Supreme Court the first condition enjoined by
the proviso was not fulfilled at all and on that ground
alone it could be held that the deposit was not valid.
Secondly, the deposit in that case was made not before the
Rent Controller under the proviso to section 13 of the Act
but was made before the Judge under section 31 of the Punjab
Relief of Indebtedness Act which had absolutely no
application to proceedings for eviction taken under the Act.
Thus, a deposit made before some other court had no nexus
with the arrears of rent for which an application for
ejectment was filed before the Rent Controller. Thirdly, it
was pointed out by this Court that the tenant had deposited
even on.- month’s rent in advance which under the provisions
of section 19 read with section 6 of the Act was an offence
if the landlord had withdrawn the rent. Thus, the tenant in
that case had deposited the rent in a manner and under
circumstances under which it could not be made available to
the landlord even if he wanted to withdraw it because the
landlord may have entailed a criminal penalty. These are the
facts on the basis of which this Court held that the deposit
was not valid. In this connection this Court observed as
follows:-
"There is only one saving for the tenant and that
is when he tenders the full rent in Court before the
Rent Controller together with interest and costs. In
the present case, the tenant did tender rent but only
for a portion of the period and he relied on his
deposit under the Relief of Indebtedness Act as due
discharge of his liability for the earlier period. It
may be stated that the deposit before the Senior Sub
Judge was made not only of arrears of rent but
prospectively for some future period for which the rent
was then not due."
It appears from the observations of this Court extracted
above that the deposit was prima facie invalid. This Court
further observed as follows:-
It is impossible to think that the landlords would
be required to go to the Court of the Senior Sub Judge
with a view to finding out whether their tenants have
deposited rent due to them or not.. on the whole,
therefore, we are of opinion that the deposit under
section 31 of the Relief of Indebtedness Act did not
save the tenant from the consequences of the default as
contemplated by s. 13 of the Urban Rent Restriction
Act."
844
The effect of this observation is that the deposit was
made in a wrong court and under such circumstances that the
deposit could not be available to the landlord whenever he
wanted. It was against the background of these special facts
and circumstances that this Court in the Vidya Prachar Trust
case (supra) held that the deposit was not valid. In the
instant case we find that the deposit made by the appellant
does not suffer from any such infirmities as were present in
Vidya Prachar Trust case (supra).
Finally, we would like to observe that the Rent Control
Act is a piece of social legislation designed to protect the
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tenant from eviction by landlords on frivolous, insufficient
or purely technical grounds. Even as the Act allows eviction
of the tenant on the ground of non-payment of arrears of
rent the proviso affords sufficient protection to the tenant
against eviction if the tenant deposits the rent in
accordance with the proviso. Vidya Prachar Trust case
(supra) was reconsidered by this Court in a recent decision
in the case of Duli Chand v. Maman Chand by a Bench of three
Hon’ble Judges of which one of us (Kailasam, J.) was a party
and while distinguishing the case this Court made the
following observations:-
"We need not deal with all the contents that have
been canvassed on both sides. Nor do we feel the
necessity of reconsidering the decision in Vidya
Prachar Trust v. Basant Ram because on facts, the
instant case is clearly distinguish able from that
case. Here, before us, the rent for the months of
February, March and April 1964 was deposited by the
tenant to the credit of the landlord in the very court
of the Rent Controller in which the landlord
subsequently filed the eviction petition. The deposit
lying in the Treasury was in the legal custody and
control of the court of the Rent Controller, and at the
first hearing, if not earlier, the landlord was
informed that he was entitled to withdraw that deposit.
Thus, even if the tenant had obtained the order of the
Rent Controller for making the deposit, by referring to
section 31 of the Relief Act, the fact remained that
the money was in custodia legis and could be ordered to
be paid to the land lord there and then by the Court at
the first hearing."
It was further held by this Court that where the tenant
makes the deposit of the arrears of rent and interest
informing the landlord at the
845
first hearing then the requirement of the law has been
sufficiently complied with. In this connection, the Court
observed thus:-
"The tenant by making deposit of the arrears of
rent and interest and costs and informing the landlord
at the first hearing that he could receive the same
from the Court, had substantially complied with the
requirement of the said. proviso."
In the instant case w,- have already pointed out that the
appellant had fulfilled all the conditions of the proviso
and had deposited the rent arrears, costs and interest on
the first date of hearing and he, therefore, complied with
all the requirements of the proviso and was, therefore,
entitled to the protection given by the statute. In view of
the legal opinion we have formed regarding the
interpretation of proviso to section 13 of the Act it is
manifest that the judgment of the High Court is legally
erroneous and the case of Mehnga Singh (supra) is hereby
overruled, as it had wrongly applied and misconstrued the
decision of this Court in Vidya Prachar Trust case (supra).
For these reasons, therefore, we allow this appeal, set
aside the judgment of the High Court and dismiss the
application of the respondent for ejectment of the
appellant. In the peculiar facts and circumstances of this
case the parties will pay and bear their own costs
throughout.
S.R. Appeal allowed.
846
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