Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JAGAN NATH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RAM KISHAN DASS AND ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT12/12/1984
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION:
1985 AIR 265 1985 SCR (2) 388
1985 SCC (1) 406 1984 SCALE (2)1017
ACT:
Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958-S. 14(1) proviso scope
of.
HEADNOTE:
The respondents, Landlord. filed three ejectment
applications on March 9, 1967, May 13, 1968 and March 9,
1971 respectively against the appellants, a tenant for
possession of one room situate at Kamla Nagar, New Delhi.
The first application was on the ground of non-payment
arrears of lent and bona fide requirement, the second on the
ground of bona fide requirement of the landlord and the
third one again on the ground of non. payment of arrears of
rent. The first application, where the appellant complied
with an order passed by the Rent Controller u/s 14(21 r/w s.
15(1 ) of the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 calling upon the
appellant to deposit arrears of rent, was withdrawn by the
respondents subsequently on the ground that they had not
given to the appellant a notice to quit. The second
application was dismissed on merits. In the third
application out of which the present appeal arises, the
Additional Rent Controller passed an order of eviction
against the appellant holding that no order u/s. 15(1), of
the Act could be passed on the ground that such a benefit
was given to the appellant in the first eviction petition
and that by reason of the proviso to sub-s. 2 of s. 14 of
the Act, the appellant could not claim that benefit once
again. The appeal of the appellant against the order of
eviction was allowed by the Rent Control Tribunal, which
took the view that the appellant was entitled to the
benefit of the provision contained in section 14 (2) of the
Act and that, the proviso to that sub-section had no
application because, the benefit of the provision contained
in section 14 (2) was being availed of by the appellant for
the first time in the present proceedings. But the High
Court in second appeal set aside the judgment of the Rent
Control Tribunal and restored that of the Rent Controller.
The appellant contended that the proviso to sub-s. (2)
of s. 14 can have no application to the instant case
because, in the first ejectment proceedings the appellant
had not obtained any benefit under that sub-section. The
respondent contended that if a tenant avails of the benefit
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of an order passed u/s. 15 (1), he must be regarded as
having obtained the benefit of the provision contained in s.
14 (2) and that the final result of the eviction petition in
which an order was passed under section 15 (1) for the first
time, or the form of the final order passed in that
proceeding, has no relevance on the question whether the
tenant had obtained benefit of the provision contained in
section 14 (2).
389
Allowing the appeal,
^
HELD: (I) Section 14 (2) of the Act provides that no
order for the recovery of possession of any premises can be
made on the ground that the tenant has committed default in
the payment of rent, if he pays or deposits the rent in
accordance with the provisions of section 15. The benefit
which the tenant obtains under section 14 (2) is the
avoidance of the decree for possession. Though he had
committed default in the payment of rent, no decree for
possession can be passed against him. This benefit accrues
to the tenant by reason of the fact that he has complied
with the order passed by the Controller under section 15 of
the Act. The passing of an order under section 15 is not a
benefit which accrues to the tenant under section 14(2). It
is obligatory upon the Controller to pass an order under
section 15(1) in every proceeding for the recovery of
possession or: the ground specified in section 14 (1) (a),
that is, on the ground that the tenant has committed default
in the payment of rent. That is a facility which the law
obliges the Controller to give to the tenant under section
15. It is through the medium of that facility that the
tenant obtains the benefit under section 14(2). And that
benefit consists in the acquisition of an immunity against
the passing of an order of possession on the ground of
default in the payment of rent. It must follow that, it is
only if an order for possession is Dot passed against the
tenant by reason of the provision contained in section
14(2), that it can be said that he has obtained a benefit
under that section. [394C-G]
(2) If the earlier proceeding was withdrawn by the
landlord, it cannot be said that the tenant obtained the
benefit of not having had an order of possession passed
against him. It is self-evident that if a proceeding ends in
an order granting permission for its withdrawal, it cannot
possibly be said that "no order for the recovery of
possession was passed therein for the E reason that the
tenant had made payment or deposit as required by section
15". That is the gist of Section 14(2). The stage or
occasion for passing an order to the effect that ’no order
for possession can be passed because of the fact that the
tenant has complied with the order passed under section 15
does not arise in the very nature of things, in a case
wherein the landlord is permitted to withdraw the
application for ejectment of the tenant.
[394H; 395A-B]
(3) In the instant case, the reason leading to the
termination of the earlier ejectment application was that
the respondents wanted to cure the formal defect from which
the application suffered and not that no order for
possession could be passed against the appellant for he
reason that the had complied with the order passed under
section 15. In other words, there was no nexus between the
final order which was passed in the earlier ejectment
application and the fact that the appellant had complied
with the order passed under section 15. The earlier
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ejectment application was founded on two grounds, namely,
that the appellant had committed default in the payment of
rent and that respondents wanted the premises for their
personal need. The fact that the first of these grounds was
no longer available t ) the respondents since the appellant
had complied with the order passed under section 15 could
not have resulted in the dismissal of the ejectment
application because, the other ground on which eviction of
the appellant was sought by the respondents had yet to be
considered by the Rent Controller. This is an additional
reason why it cannot be said on the facts, of this case
390
that the appellant obtained a benefit under section 14(2).
But, the two circumstances, just mentioned will not make any
difference to the fundamental legal position explained above
that the proviso to section 14(2) can be attracted only if
it is shown that the tenant had obtained the benefit of the
provision contained in that section and not otherwise.
[395D-H]
(4) The Court allowed the appeal, set aside the
judgment of the High Court and restored that of the Rent
Control Tribunal with the modification that the period of
one month for depositing the arrears Or rent shall be
computed from the date of this judgment. [397C]
Rama Gupta v. Rai Singh Kain 1972 All India Rent
Control Journal 712, Ashok Kumar v. Ram Gopal 1982 (2) Rent
Control Journal 29 approved.
Kahan Chand Makan v. B.S. Bhambri, AIR 1977 Delhi
27 referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 653
of 1979.
Appeal by Special leave from the Judgment and Order
dated the 14th August, 1978 of the Delhi High Court in S. A.
O. No. 166173.
U. R. Lalit and B. P. Maheshwari, for the Appellant.
A. K. Goel for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD, CJ. The appellant is a tenant of the
respondents in respect of one room in a house at Kamla
Nagar, New Delhi. The rent of the room is Rs. 10/- per
month. On March 19, 1967 the respondents filed an
application for possession of the room on two grounds: one,
that the appellant was in arrears of rent and, two, that
they required the room bona fide for their own use and
occupation. An order was passed by the Rent Controller in
that proceeding under section 14 (2) read with section 15
(1) of the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 (hereinafter called
"the Act"), calling upon the appellant to pay or deposit the
arrears of rent within one month. The appellant complied
with that order, whereupon, on April 1, 1968 respondents
withdrew the ejectment application, with liberty to file a
fresh application. The reason stated by the respondents for
withdrawing the application was that they had not given to
the appellant a notice to quit under section 106 of the
Transfer of Property Act and that, therefore, the
application was liable to fail for a formal defect.
Immediately thereafter, on April 7, 1968 respondents
gave a notice to quit to the appellant, terminating his
tenancy with effect
391
from May 9, 1968. On May 13, 1968, respondents filed a fresh
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application for possession against the appellant on the
ground that they required the room bona fide for their
personal use. That application was dismissed on February 14,
1969.
On March 9, 1971 respondents filed the instant
application against the appellant for possession of the room
on the ground that the appellant was in arrears of rent from
April 1968 until March 1971. In this proceeding, the learned
Additional Rent Controller, Delhi, refused to pass an order
under section 15 (1) of the Act on the ground that such a
benefit was given to the appellant in the first eviction
petition and that, by reason of the proviso to subsection
(2) of section 14 of the Act, the appellant could not claim
that benefit once again. In that view of the matter, the
Rent Controller passed an order of eviction against the
appellant.
The appeal filed by the appellant against the order of
eviction was allowed by the Rent Control Tribunal, which
took the view that the appellant was entitled to the benefit
of the provision contained in section 14 (2) of the Act and
that the proviso to that subsection had no application
because, the benefit of the provision contained in section
14 (2) was being availed of by the appellant for the first
time in the present proceedings. According to the Tribunal,
the first ejectment application filed by the respondents
against the appellant was dismissed because, respondents
asked for leave to withdraw that application with liberty to
file a fresh application on the ground that they had not
served a notice to quit on the appellant, and not on the
ground that the appellant had complied with the order passed
under section 15 (1) of the Act.
The judgment of the Rent Control Tribunal was set
aside in Second Appeal by the High Court of Delhi. The High
Court took the view that though the first ejectment
application was withdrawn by the respondents on the ground
that they had not given a notice to quit to the appellant,
that cannot alter the position that the appellant had
availed of the benefit of the provision contained in section
14 (2) of the Act. Therefore, according to the High Court,
by reason of the proviso to section 14 (2), the appellant
was not entitled to invoke the provisions of section 15 (1)
of the Act. By this appeal, the tenant challenges the
correctness of the judgment of the High Court.
Section 14 of the Act contains provisions which are
more or less similar to the provisions contained in various
other Rent Acts.
392
Sub-section (I) of that section contains the prohibitory
provision that, notwithstanding anything to the contrary
contained in any other law or contract, no order or decree
for the recovery of possession of any premises shall be made
by any court or Controller in favour of the landlord against
a tenant. The proviso to that subsection enables or entitles
a landlord to obtain possession of the premises let out to
a tenant on one or more of the grounds only, which are
mentioned in clauses (a) to (I) of the sub-section. Clause
(a) of the proviso enables 3 landlord to obtain possession
if the tenant has neither paid nor tendered the arrears of
rent within two months from the date on which the notice of
demand for the arrears of rent has been served on him by the
landlord in the manner prescribed by section 106 of the
Transfer of Property Act. Under clause (e) of the proviso,
the landlord can obtain possession of the residential
premises let out to the tenant, on the ground, broadly, that
the premises are required by him for a personal need.
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Subsection (2) of section 14 reads thus:
"14 (2)- No order for the recovery of
possession of any premises shall be made on the ground
specified in clause (a) of the proviso to sub section
(1), if the tenant makes payment or deposit as required
by section 15:
Provided that no tenant shall be entitled to
the benefit under this sub-section, if, having obtained
such benefit once in respect of any premises, he again
makes a default in the payment of rent of those
premises for three consecutive months "
Section 15(1) of the Act reads thus:
"15 (1) In every proceeding for the recovery of posses-
sion of any premises on the ground specified in clause (a)
of the proviso to sub-section (I) of Section 14, the
Controller shall, after giving the parties an opportunity of
being heard, make an order directing the tenant to pay to
the landlord or deposit with the Controller within one month
of the date of the order, an amount calculated at the rate
of rent at which it was last paid for the period for which
the arrears of the rent were legally recoverable from the
tenant including the period subsequent thereto up to the end
of the month previous to that in which payment or deposit is
made and to continue to Pay or deposit, month by month,
393
by the fifteenth of each succeeding month, a sum
equivalent A to the rent at that rate."
Sub-section (6) of section 15 provides that if a
tenant makes payment or deposit as required by sub-section
(1), no order shall be made for the recovery of possession
against him on the ground of default in the payment of rent
by him. On the other hand, if a B tenant fails to make
payment or deposit as required by section 15 (1), the
Controller may order the defence of the tenant to be struck
off under sub-section (7) and proceed with the hearing of
the ejectment application.
The rent of the suit premises is small, only Rs. 101
per month. The tenant, of course, is much too small as would
appear from the fact that he committed default in the
payment of rent at that rate for a long time. But, quite
often small tenants have small landlords who are entitled to
expect that the tenants will pay at least the small rent
regularly and not drive them to a court proceeding which is
bound to cost more than the amount of arrears of rent which
is at stake. This seemingly insignificant case raises a
question of some public importance, which is partly
evidenced by the fact that the learned Judges of the Delhi
High Court have taken conflicting views upon the question
Those views were explained carefully and those judgments
were read out to us by Shri A. K. Goel who appears on behalf
of the respondents. We do not propose to embark upon an
analysis of these judgments since, that exercise is not
likely to prove fruitful The reason is that the facts of the
various cases which were before the High Court differed from
case to case, which partly accounts for the divergent views
expressed by different learned Judges of the High Court.
With respect, some of the judgments cited before us overlook
that previous decisions turned on their own peculiar facts.
It is contended by Shri Lalit, who appears on behalf
of the appellant, that the proviso to sub-section (2) of
section 14 can have no application to the instant case
because, in the first ejectment proceeding which was filed
by the respondents against the appellant, the latter had not
obtained any benefit under that sub-section. On the other
hand, it is contended by Shri Goel that in a tenant avails
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of the benefit of an order passed under section 15 (1), he
must be regarded as having obtained the benefit of the
provision contained in section 14 (2). According to the
learned counsel, the object of the proviso to section 14 (2)
is to ensure that an order under section
394
15 (1) is not passed in favour of a tenant more than once.
Therefore, it is contended, the final result of the eviction
petition in which an order was passed under section 15 (1)
for the first time, or the form of the final order passed in
that proceeding, has no relevance on the question whether
the tenant had obtained benefit of the provision contained
in section 14 (2).
We are of the opinion that the appellant’s contention
is preferable to that of the respondents, having regard to
the language of section 14 (2) of the Act and of the proviso
to that section. Putting it briefly, that section provides
that no order for the recovery of possession of any
premises can be made on the ground that the tenant has
committed default in the payment of rent, if he pays or
deposits the rent in accordance with the provisions of
section 15. The benefit which the tenant obtains under
section 14 (2) is the avoidance of the decree for
possession. Though he had committed default in the payment
of rent, no decree for possession can be passed against him
This benefit accrues to the tenant by reason of the fact
that he has complied with the order passed by the Controller
under section 15 of the Act. The passing of an order under
section 15 is not a benefit which accrues to the tenant
under section 14 (2). It is obligatory upon the Controller
to pass an order under section 15 (1) in every proceeding
for the recovery of possession on the ground specified in
section 14 (1) (a), that is, on the ground that the tenant
has committed default in the payment of rent. That is a
facility which the law obliges the Controller to give to the
tenant under section 15. It is through the medium of that
facility that the tenant obtains the benefit under section
14 (2). And, that benefit consists in the acquisition of an
immunity against the passing of an order of possession on
the ground of default in the payment of rent. It must follow
that, it is only if an order for possession is not passed
against the tenant by reason of the provision contained in
section 14 (,), that it can be said that he has obtained a
benefit under that section. The Key words of the proviso to
sub-section (2) of section 14 are: "Provided that no tenant
shall be entitled to the benefit under this sub-section."
That brings out the relevance of the nature of the
order which was passed in the earlier proceeding in which
the tenant had complied with the order passed by the
Controller under section 15. It the earlier proceeding was
withdrawn by the landlord, it cannot be said that the tenant
obtained the benefit of not having had an order of
possession passed against him. It is self-evident that if a
proceeding
395
ends in an order granting permission for its withdrawal, it
cannot A possibly be said that "no order for the recovery of
possession was passed therein for the reason that the tenant
had made payment or deposit as required by section 15".
’that is the gist of section 14 (2). The stage or occasion
for passing an order to the effect that ’no order for
possession can be passed because of the fact that the tenant
has complied with the order passed under section 15’ does
not arise in the very nature of things, in a case wherein
the landlord is permitted to withdraw the application for
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ejectment of the tenant.
There are two circumstances which must be borne in
mind in this case though, we must add, they will not make
any difference to the legal position which is stated above.
The first circumstance is that the respondents asked for
leave to withdraw the earlier ejectment application. in
which the appellant that duly comlied with the order passed
by the Controller under section I C, on the ground that the
application was liable to fail for a formal defect since
they had not given a notice to quit to the appellant under
section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act. Thus, the
reason leading to the termination of the earlier ejectment
application was that the respondents wanted to care the
formal defect from which the application suffered and not
that no order for possession could be passed against the
appellant for the reason that he had complied with the order
passed under section 15. In other words, there was no nexus
between the final order which was passed in the earlier
ejectment application and the fact that the appellant had
complied with the order passed under section 15. The second
circumstance which must be mentioned is that the earlier
ejectment application was founded on two grounds, namely,
that the appellant had committed default in the payment of
rent and that respondents wanted the premises for their
personal need. The fact that the first of these grounds was
no longer available to the respondents since the appellant
had complied with the order passed under section 15, could
not have resulted in the dismissal of the ejectment
application because, the other ground on which eviction of
the appellant was sought by the respondents had yet to be
considered by the Rent Controller. This is an additional
reason why it cannot be said on the facts of this case that
the appellant obtained a benefit under section 14 (2). At
the cost of repetition, we must clarify that the two
circumstances which we have just mentioned will not make any
difference to the fundamental legal position which we have
explained above that the proviso to section 14 (2) can be
attracted only if it is shown that the tenant had obtained
the benefit of the provision contained in that section and
not otherwise.
396
As we have stated earlier, several conflicting
decisions of the High Court of Delhi were read out to us It
is both needless and difficult to consider them
individually. We will only indicate, that on facts similar
to those before us, the view taken by D. K. Kapur, J, in
Rama Gupta v Rai Singh Kain,(1) is the correct view to take
The learned Judge held in that case that since the landlord
had withdrawn the earlier eviction petition, it could not be
said that the tenant had derived a benefit under section 14
(2) of the Act. In Kahan Chand Makan v S. Bhambri, (a) a
Division Bench of the Delhi High Court noticed the
conflicting judgments rendered by the different Benches of
the High Court, including the judgment of D. K. Kapur, J.,
in Rama Gupta v. Rai Singh Kain- It is not possible to say
with certainty whether the view taken by D. K. Kapur, J.,
was approved because, the judgment of the Division Bench
refers to various derisions of the High Court without
stating which of those is correct and which not. In any
case, the conclusion recorded by the Division Bench in
paragraph 13 of its judgment seems too broad to apply to
varying situations. Besides, the learned Judges, with
respect. have apparently confused the availing of the
facility under section 15 by the tenant with the benefit
which accrues to him under section ’ 4 (2) . They say:
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"We, therefore, hold that where a deposit of
arrears of rent has been made by the tenant in
compliance with an order specifically passed under
section 15 (1) of the Act in the course of proceedings
initiated for his ejectment under section 14 (1) (a),
the benefit cannot be availed of in a subsequent
proceeding for his ejectment on the same ground. The
existence and proof of such an order in an earlier
proceeding covered by section 14 (1) (a) is essential
in order to deprive the tenant of the protection which
section (I4 (2) gives him."
The benefit which the proviso to sub-section (2) of
section 14 speaks of is: "the benefit under this sub-
section’ and not the benefit under section 15.
A recent decision of a learned Single Judge of the
Delhi High Court is reported in Ashok Kumar v. Ram Gopal-
(3) That was a typical case which attracted the proviso to
section 14(2). The landlord
(1) 1972 All India Rent Control Journal 712.
(2) AIR 1977 Delhi 247.
(3) 1982 2 Rent Control Journal 29.
397
therein had filed an application under section 14(1)(a) in
1973 for the A eviction of the tenant on the ground of non-
payment of rent. The Rent Controller passed an order under
section 15 (1) which was duly complied with by the tenant.
Thereupon, the landlord’s application was dismissed by the
Controller. In May 1979, the landlord filed another petition
for possession against the tenant on the ground that he had
committed default in the payment of rent. It was held by n
Kirpal J, and rightly, that since the tenant had obtained
the benefit of section 14 (2) in the previous ejectment
application, he was not entitled to the benefit of that
section once again.
For these reasons, we allow the appeal, set aside the
judgment of the High Court and restore that of the Rent
Control Tribunal with the modification that the period of
one month for depositing the arrears of rent shall be
computed from the date of this judgment. If the appellant
deposits the arrears of rent due until December 31, 1984 on
or before January 12, 1985 the respondent’ application for
possession will stand dismissed. On the other hand, if the
appellant fails to deposit the arrears of rent as directed
above, there shall be an order for possession in favour of
the respondents which they will be entitled to execute. The
amount of arrears will be deposited in the Court of the
Additional Rent Controller, Delhi, in which the ejectment
application was filed against the appellant.
There will be no order as to costs throughout.
M. L. A.
Appeal allowed.
398