Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 18
PETITIONER:
MONGIBAI HARIRAM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA AND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
25/10/1965
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 882 1966 SCR (2) 322
ACT:
Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act (57
of 1947), ss. 13 and 17-Bombay Land Requisition Act (33 of
1948), ss. 4(3) and 6-Room in a building-If "Premises"-
Eviction of tenant on ground of landlord’s bona fide
requirement-If premises could be requisitioned.
HEADNOTE:
P, the tenant of a room, in a block of buildings owned by a
trust of which the appellants were trustees, left the room
without informing the appellants and leaving K in occupation
thereof. The appellants never recognised K as a tenant. No
rent was paid from 1st January 1956. The appellants gave
the tenant P a notice to quit and thereafter filed a suit
against P and K for recovery of possession of the room under
the Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act,
1947 on three grounds, namely, sub-letting without
permission, non-payment of rent and bona fide requirement
the room for their own use and occupation. Evidence was led
on the second and last grounds. An ex parte decree in
ejectment was passed and on 30th April 1959, the appellants
obtained possession. On 1st May 1959, K wrote to the
Accommodation Controller that he was evicted and rendered
homeless, and the Controller on September 10, 1959 passed
two separate orders under the Bombay Land Requisition Act,
1948, requisitioning the room by one, and allotting the room
to K by the other. The appellants moved the High Court
under Art. 226 for quashing these orders but were unsuc-
cessful.
In appeal to this Court, it was contended by the appellants
that : (i) Since the appellants obtained an ejectment decree
on the ground that they wanted the room for their own use
and they did not intend to let it out at the time of
requisition, the room would not be ’premises’ under s. 4(3)
of the Act of 1948 which could be requisitioned; and (ii)
the order of requisition was passed mala fide.
HELD: (i) (By Full Court) : The room was ’premises’
within the definition of that word in the Act of 1948 and
could be requisitioned. [327 H; 338 F]
Per Sarkar J : The expression "let or intended to be let
separately" in the definition of premises in the Act of 1948
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 18
is only applicable to a’ part of a building for there is no
question of a whole building being let separately. The
words "intended to be let" in this definition do not refer
to any intention to let, actually existing at the time of
the requisition; they have been used to indicate that a part
of a building which had never been let before would not be
"premises" within the Act unless the lessor had intended to
let it separately. If it is proved that the landlord had at
any time let or intended to let a part of a building
separately, it would for all time to come be ’premises’
within the Act of 1948. [326 H; 327 D, E]
Per Raghubar Dayal and Ramaswami, JJ : The words ’let or
intended to be let separately’ can apply only to the letting
of a part of building, as rightly, a landlord of a building
is not to be forced to let a part of the building when he is
in occupation of it. Therefore, from the date of the
323
enforcement of the Requisition Act, every building comes
within the expression "premises" and a part of a building
comes within the expression, if it is let or if it is
intended to be let separately on that date. It would be
impracticable to decide every time a part of a building fell
vacant, whether the landlord intends or does not intend to
let it. [337 G-H; 338 B, E]
(ii) Per Raghubar Dayal and Ramaswami, JJ. : The facts that
the allottee had not paid rent previously to the appellants,
took various steps to delay the execution of the decree for
ejectment and applied to the Accommodation Controller for
allotment to himself on the day following the ejectment, do
not, in law, make the requisition order mala fide, when the
order was not made on account of any animus against the
appellants or for a purpose for which requisition could not
be made. [339 F-H]
Requisitioning of premises for allotment to a person who is
homeless is requisitioning for a public purpose. The
allotment to a person who was a tenant of the premises and
who remiss in his duties as a tenant and had been evicted in
execution of a decree of a court, in pursuance of the
practice that the first informant of the existence of a
"suppressed vacancy" would be allotted the premises, is not
against law. Moreover, the conditions of allotment of the
requisitioned premises ensure that the landlord would not be
put to any further trouble so far as the collection of rent
is concerned. [339 H; 340 B-D]
The first part of s. 13 (1) (g) of the Rent Act refers to
persons who receive or are entitled to receive rents on
their own account and not to persons who receive or are
entitled to receive ’rents as a trustee. Such a trustee-
landlord can require the premises under the section for
occupation for purposes of the trust, but since the suit was
uncontested, no occasion arose in the ejectment suit for the
court to determine whether reasonable accommodation was
available for the tenant and whether greater hardship would
be caused to the landlord if no ejectment was ordered. If
the Government happens to requisition the premises for the
person who had been evicted therefrom in execution of a
decree of a civil court, it does not mean that the
Government is not respecting the decree of the court and is
acting against public interest or against the interests of
administration of justice. [341 A-C; 343 B-C]
There is no conflict between the provisions of s. 6 of the
Requisition Act and the provisions of ss. 13 and 17 of the
Rent Act and the requisition was valid. [342 C]
Under s. 17(1) of the Rent Act, the court may order the
landlord to reallot the premises to the tenant who had been
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 18
evicted in case the landlord does not occupy the premises
within a period of one month, or, if the landlord reallots
the premises to another person within a year of the
eviction. Since the Requisition Act provides by s. 6, that
the landlord cannot occupy the premises which had become
vacant on the eviction of the tenant within a month of the
receipt of the intimation of vacancy by the State
Government, the court will not exercise its discretionary
power of reallotment to the tenant when another enactment by
its language provides for the landlord’s non-occupation.
Under s. 17(2), a landlord is liable to conviction if he
keeps the premises unoccupied without reasonable cause or if
he fails to comply with the order passed under s. 17(1).
The non-occupation of the premises within one month of the
ejection of the tenant, when s. 6(1) of the Requisition Act
applies to the premises, will be non-occupation for a
reasonable cause and therefore, there can be no, occasion
for a conviction on the ground that the premises were kept
unoccupied. [341 F-G, H; 342 A-B]
324
Further, the Requisition Act was enacted later than the Rent
Act and since no exception from requisition with respect to
premises becoming vacant on the eviction of a tenant on the
ground of bona fide requirement by the landlord had been
made, the Requisition Act would apply to such premises also.
[342 C-E]
The fields of operation of the two Acts are different.
Under the Rent Act, the civil court in deciding a suit for
eviction, simply takes into consideration the needs of the
landlord vis-a-vis the tenant and the grounds of eviction.
Under the requisition Act, the State Government, when
considering the question of requisitioning the premises does
not consider such matters but considers only whether the
purpose for which it is to requisition is a public purpose
or not. To hold that the benefit of the Act cannot be given
to persons evicted on the ground that the landlord required
the premises for his own use would not only deprive the
evicted person from getting the premises allotted to himself
but would also deprive many other homeless persons besides
some special class of persons, allotments to whom would
clearly come within public purpose. [342 F, G, H; 343 C-D]
It is not open ’to the appellants to urge that the premises
did not become vacant or were not vacant when the
requisition order was passed, because, a declaration was
made in the requisition order that the premises were vacant
and such a declaration operates as conclusive evidence of
the premises being vacant. [339 A-B]
The fact that the allottee was not made a party to the
proceedings, is also fatal to the maintainability of the
writ petition. [343 F]
Per Sarkar, J. (Dissenting) : The orders of requisition and
allotment passed in this case were not within the
contemplation of the Act. In the circumstances of the case
it has to ’be held that the ejectment decree was passed on
the ground mentioned in s. 13(1)(g) of the Act of 1947, that
is to say, the court ordering ejectment found that the
appellants required the room for their own occupation and
they were entititled to it in preference to the defendants P
and K. The result of the orders under the Act of 1948 was to
annul the decision of the court granting the ejectment. It
cannot be said that the powers under the Act of 1948 were
intended to be exercised to set at naught the judgment of a
court. [329 A-B, D]
If the powers to requisition and allot under the Act of 1948
could be exercised in a case where an ejectment decree had
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 18
been passed under s. 13(1)(g) of the Act of 1947, a
conflict would arise between s. 17 of the Act of 1947 and s.
6 of the Act of 1948. This conflict has to be harmonised
and the only way to do so is to say that the Requisition Act
does, not apply to, a case where the landlord has been
permitted to recover possession for his own occupation. [330
H; 331 A-B]
The Act of 1948 does not contemplate a requisition in vacuo;
there must be a prospective or actually homeless person in
view before an order requisition can be passed. [331 H]
The Act of 1948 does not give larger powers of requisition
where the landlord has failed to give notice of a vacancy as
required by s. 6 of that Act. [332 D-E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 577 of 1964.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
September 13/14th 1960, of the Maharashtra High Court in
Appeal No. 14 of 1960.
32 5
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, B. R. Agarwala, H. K. Puri, for
the appellants.
Purushottam Trikamdas, B. R. K. G. Achar and R. H. Dhebar,
for the respondents.
Sarkar, J. delivered a dissenting Opinion. The Judgment of
Raghubar Dayal and Ramaswami, JJ. was delivered by Raghubar
Dayal, J.
Sarkar J. The appellants are trustees of a certain trust
which owns a big block of buildings situate at Matunga in
the city of Bombay. The rooms in this block of buildings
are let out to various tenants. One P. S. Nambiar was a
tenant of room No. 26 in this block for a long time. He had
left the room without informing the appellants and having
put one K. A. Nambiar in possession.. It is not known when
P. S. Nambiar left. The appellants never accepted K. A.
Nambiar or any one else as the tenant. No rent. had been
paid in respect of the room since January 1, 1956 which was
prior thereto being paid in the name of P. S. Nambiar.
The appellants terminated the tenancy of P. S. Nambiar by a
notice to quit, expiring on December 31, 1957, and
thereafter on March 26, 1958 filed a suit in the Court of
Small Causes, Bombay against P. S. Nambiar and K. A. Nambiar
for recovery of possession of the room, P. S. Nambiar being
sued as the tenant and K. A. Nambiar as the person in
occupation of the room. The grounds on which ejectment was
sought were that (1) P. S. Nambiar had sublet the room
without the permission of the appellants, (2) he had been in
arrears with his rent from January 1, 1956 and (3) the
premises were required by the appellants for their own use
and occupation. On proof of any of these grounds an
ejectment decreecould be passed against the tenant under the
provisions of the Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House
Rates Control Act, 1947, hereafter referred to as the Rent
Act. The defendants could not be personally served and
eventually service of the summons was effected by affixing
it on the room. That was due service of’ the summons but
the defendants did not enter appearance to the suit.
Evidence was led on behalf of the appellants to prove that
the rents were in arrear as stated and that they required
the room reasonably and bona fide for their own use and
occupation as such trustees. No evidence appears to have
been led as to any subletting by P. S. Nambiar. So this
ground of eviction may be left out of consideration.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 18
An ex parte decree in ejectment was passed in the suit on
August 18, 1958. The execution of that decree was
obstructed in various
326
ways including an application by K. A. Nambiar to set aside
the decree on the ground of non-service of summons which was
dismissed by the trial Court and an appeal from that order
also failed. Eventually the appellants obtained possession
of the room on April 30, 1959. On the next day, that is,
May 1, 1959, K. A. Nambiar wrote to the Controller of
Accommodation appointed under the Bombay Land Requisition
Act, 1948, stating that he was evicted from the room in
execution of a decree and requesting that the room be
requisitioned and allotted to him under the Requisition Act
as he had no other accommodation. Thereafter, by a notice
dated July 11, 1959 the appellants were called upon to show
cause why the room should not be requisitioned under the Act
and after certain enquiries had been made, an order was
passed on September 10, 1959 declaring the room to be vacant
and requisitioning it and by another order dated the same
day, it was allotted to K. A. Nambiar. The appellants took
certain steps under the Requisition Act in the nature of an
appeal to have these orders annulled but their attempts were
unsuccessful.
On September 30, 1959, the appellants moved the High Court
at Bombay under Art, 226 of the Constitution for a writ
directing the State of Bombay and the Accommodation Officer
appointed under the Requisition Act to withdraw the orders
of requisition and allotment and also for a writ quashing
these orders. The petition was heard by a learned Single
Judge of the High Court who dismissed it. The appellants
then went up to a Division Bench in appeal against the
judgment of the learned Single Judge but in this appeal also
they were unsuccessful. They have now appealed to this
Court with special leave.
On behalf of the appellants it was pointed out that the
premises which could be requisitioned under the Act were
defined as any "building or part of a building let or
intended to be let separately". It was said that where a
building or a part of it was not intended to be let, it
would not be premises and the intention to let had to be
determined at the date of the order of requisition. It was,
therefore, contended that as the appellants had obtained an
ejectment decree on the ground that they wanted to occupy
the room themselves, they did not intend to let it out and
so, in the absence of such intention at the date of
requisition, the room was not premises within the Act and
could not be requisitioned. According to the appellants the
order of requisition was hence bad. This argument does not
seem to me to be well founded. The words "let ,or intended
to be let separately" are only applicable to a part of a
building for there is no question of a whole building being
let
327
separately; a whole building is not joint with anything else
separately from which it can be let. That being so, it
seems to me that the words "let or intended to be let, were
used only to indicate that a part of a building is not to be
understood as premises capable of being requisitioned unless
the landlord let it or intended to let it separately from
the rest which might be in his occupation. The reason for
treating a part of the building in this way was apparently
that it would cause hardship to a landlord to force him to
accept in a part of his house a stranger as a tenant. A
part of building was considered by the statute to be fit for
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 18
requisition only when the landlord had out of his free
choice let it separately from the rest or intended so to let
it. Such a view would be understandable for in such a case
there would be no question of any hardship on him.
The words "intended to be let" did not, in my view,
therefore refer to any intention to let actually existing at
the time of the requisition. They had been used to indicate
that a part of a building which had never been let before
would not be premises within the Act unless the lessor had
intended to let it separately at any time. It would not be
taking an unreasonable view to hold that if it is once
proved that the landlord had at any time intended to let a
part separately, it would for all time to come be premises
within the Act, for if once the landlord had wanted to let
out the part, the letting could not cause any hardship to
him. If the Act thereafter did not take any notice of any
change in the landlord’s mind regarding the letting of a
part, that would only mean that it did not think it right to
give him the luxury of changing his mind from time to time.
That does not seem to me to be an unnatural interpretation
of the Act.
Again, the definition does not say that the building or a
part of it must have been intended to be let at the date of
the requisition. I find no justification either in the
context or the intendment of the Act to warrant the addition
of words to that definition to support the appellant’s
contention. Furthermore, if the words "intended to be let"
were meant to refer to an intention at the time of
requisition, it had also to be held that the word "let"
meant that the premises to be requisitioned were let at the
time of requisition. That would, of course, be absurd for
what could be requisitioned under the Act was what was not
let and not occupied by a landlord or a tenant, namely,
vacant premises. I am, therefore, unable to agree that the
room was not "premises" within the definition of that word
in the Act. The order of requisition is not open to
challenge on the ground that it related to premises as
defined in the Act.
3 28
That however does not, in my opinion, conclude the matter.
I confess that this case has caused me great anxiety but
having given it the utmost thought that I could, I have not
been able to persuade myself that the orders that were made
in this case can be sustained. I think that though they may
be within the letter of the Act, they are not within its
spirit or intendment. In my view, the requisition made in
this case was not for a public purpose contemplated by the
Act nor was the power of requisition conferred by the Act
intended to be exercised in the circumstances that
prevailed. There has been in a legal sense, a mala fide use
of the powers conferred by it. I proceed to set out the
reasons which have led me to this view. I should state here
that this aspect of’ the matter had not been presented to
the High Court for its consideration.
Under the Act premises could be requisitioned only for a
public purpose. Public purpose would no doubt include the
purpose of finding a shelter for a homeless person. This
has indeed been held by this Court in The State of Bombay v.
Bhanji Munji(1). A person evicted from a premises in his
occupation may be a homeless person. Now in the present
case the requisition had been made for K. A. Nambiar. He
had no doubt been evicted from the premises in question. I
will assume he had no other home in which he could take
shelter and that he was a homeless person. But the question
still remains whether he was a homeless person within the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 18
contemplation of the Act, that is, whether his requirement
was a public purpose within the Act. I do not think he was.
Now S. 13(1)(g) of the Rent Act provides that an order for
eviction from premises may be made against a tenant where
the landlord requires them reasonably and bona fide for his
own occupation. Section 12 of this Act provides for
eviction for non-payment of rent. As I have said earlier,
the appellants had asked for eviction on both these grounds
and had given evidence in support of them. It is not
necessary to consider the ground of nonpayment of rent for
the purposes of this judgment for it does not annul the
other ground of eviction and does not affect the order of
eviction made under S. 13(1)(g). With regard to S. 13(1)(g)
the appellants’ case was that they required possession of
the room for storing building materials of the trust and
also for their occupation when they came from Calcutta where
they resided to Bombay to look after the properties of the
trust of which they were trustees as they had no residential
accommodation in Bombay. It has not. been disputed that
this, if proved, would satisfy S. 13(1)(g). They
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 777.
329
gave evidence to prove this requirement. This they
repeatedly stated in their affidavits and it has not ’been
denied by the respondents. That evidence was unchallenged,
as it must be held in view of the proceedings in the
ejectment suit earlier referred to, that the tenant and
occupier had deliberately kept away from the hearing of the
ejectment suit. It follows, therefore, that the ejectment
must have been ordered also on the ground that the
appellants wanted the room for their occupation. It is true
that there was no judgment in the ejectment suit but only an
order for, ejectment. without stating the reasons on which
it was based but that cannot affect the rights of the
appellants. The omission of the Court to state the reasons
for its order would not show that the order had’ not been
passed on the ground of the bona fide personal requirement
of the premises by the landlord.
The result of this-order is that the Court acting under the
Rent Act found after due trial that the appellants were also
homeless persons and between them and the defendants they
had a greater right to occupy the room: see s. 13 (2). The
result of the requestion order was to annul this decision.
It does not seem to me that powers under the Requisition Act
were intended to be exercised to set at naught the judgment
of a Court and restore possession to the evicted tenant. In
my opinion, in the circumstances prevailing, the premises
could not be requisitioned at all for if they were
requisitioned even for putting a third person in possession
the result might be that the evicted tenant rendered
homeless for no fault of his own would have to go without a
shelter while the third person to whom the premises were
allotted was provided with a home. It would be unnatural to
think that the Act intended such an anomalous situation. 1,
therefore, think that the requisition,. order was outside
the Act and invalid.
This view finds some support from the judgment of the Ap-
pellate Bench of the High Court. It was there said that if
the premises had been allotted to K. A. Nambiar though he
was in arrears with the rent and for that reason evicted,
then it would have to be held that the orders of requisition
and allotment "were not free, from mala fide". The learned
Judges however held that K. A. Nambiar had no liability for
rent as he was not the tenant, that liability being only
that of P. S. Nambiar who was the tenant, and, therefore.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 18
the orders could not be said to have been made male fide.
With respect, I am unable to see what difference the fact
that K. A. Nambiar was not liable for rent and could not be
said to have been evicted for non-payment of rent by him,
made. Admittedly, he was in occupation of the premises all
along. He
330
knew that rents had not been paid and that he was occupying
the premises free. Is not that fact as strong to show mala
fides as the fact, if it had been so, that he was liable to
pay rent and did not pay ? It seems to me impossible that
the Act contemplated a requisition to restore possession to
him. It is not necessary how.ever to pursue this aspect of
the matter further. The point that I wish to make is that
the learned Judges of the Appellate Bench of ,the High Court
thought it a mala fide application of the Act to allot-
premises to a tenant who had been evicted from them on the
ground that he had not paid rent. I find no distinction
between that case and one allotting premises to a person who
has been directed by a ,court to be evicted on the ground
that the landlord is entitled to their possession in
preference to the person in whose right he was there. In my
view, the Requisition Act was not intended to be utilised
for putting the evicted person back in possession in either
case; in each case the requisition would be mala fide. The
requisitioning authorities were fully aware of all the facts
of the litigation between the appellants and the Nambiars
and I cannot help wondering how notwithstanding that they
thought fit to make the order of requisition. I do not wish
to say that they deliberately set the decree of court at
naught but I am clearly of opinion that they completely
misconceived their powers under the Requisition Act.
There is yet another aspect of the case which has led me to
the view that the requisition order was outside the Act. I
have already stated that the Rent Act provides by s. 1 3 (1)
(g) that an order of eviction may be made against a tenant
where the premises ’are reasonably and bona fide required by
the landlord for his ,own occupation. Section 17 of the Act
states that where a decree for eviction has been passed on
such a ground I have held that the decree for eviction in
the present case was passed on that ground-and the premises
are not occupied within a period of one month from the date
the landlord recovers possession, the landlord is liable to
a penalty of imprisonment or fine and, what is important,
the Court may also on the application of the evicted person
order the landlord to place him in occupation of the pre-
mises on the original terms and conditions. Now s. 6 of the
Requisition Act says that when premises become vacant as a
result of the tenant having been evicted, the landlord shall
give intimation of the vacancy to the prescribed authority
within seven days and he shall not occupy the premises or
permit them to be occupied by anyone before giving the
intimation of vacancy and also for one month from the date
when the intimation given is received by the authority. It
would appear, therefore, that a conflict will arise between
the two Acts if both were applicable at the same
331
time in a case where the tenant has been evicted on the
ground that the landlord required the premises for personal
occupations under one the landlord has to occupy the
premises within a month while under the other he cannot
occupy them for a month or longer. This conflict must be
harmnonised and the only way to, do so is to say that the
Requisition Act does not apply to a case: where the landlord
has been permitted to recover possession for his own
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 18
occupation. This would leave both the Acts a fair field on
which to operate. Otherwise the provision of the Rent Act
requiring the landlord to occupy the premises earlier
referred to would become completely ineffective. I may also
add that the Rent Act is a special law dealing with the
relations between landlords and tenants while the
Requisition Act is a general Act dealing with the
requisition of all vacant premises. To give the Requisition
Act preference over the Rent Act would be to hold that a
general statute overrides a special one. This would be
against the accepted canons of interpretation. To my mind,
this affords a further ground for saying that it was not
intended that the Requisition Act would apply to such a
case. The present is, precisely a case of the same kind.
A suggestion was made on behalf of the respondents that the,
order of requisition and the order of allotment were
separate and that being so the requisition order would not
become invalid because the allotment had been made to a
person to whom it could, not be made under the Act. I
should at once state that in the view that I have earlier
taken, the question does not arise for in, my view the
requisition order made in this case was itself bad for,,. no
requisition could be made in a case where a landlord has
been,, held entitled by court to evict the tenant as he
requires the premises for his personal occupation. I will
also consider the argument apart from this. aspect of the
case. I do not think that the, two orders were separate.
Assume however that they were so. Even then ex concessis
the order of allotment is outside the Act and therefore bad.
If both were good or both were bad, it would be to no
purpose to discuss whether there were two orders or one.
The allotment order has, therefore, in any event, to go. If
the, allotment order was unjustified, the requisition order
would also fall, for it is not said that there was any
homeless person other than K. A. Nambiar to whom the
allotment had been made, for whom it was necessary to
requisition the premises. I do not think the Act
contemplates a requisition in vacuo; there must be a public,
that is to say, a prospective or actually homeless person in
view. before a requisition can be made. I think that there
are observa-
332
tions in Bhanji Munji’s case(1) supporting that view. It is
not in dispute that in this case there was no homeless
person prospective or actual to the knowledge of the
requisitioning authorities who required accommodation,
except K. A. Nambiar. He had given intimation of the
vacancy and had at the same time requested that the room be
requisitioned and allotted to him. Both the orders were
besides made on the same day. It is obvious that the two
orders are connected and, therefore, really one. The
contention that the orders were separate is, to my mind, too
naive to be accepted. There is in the present case,
therefore, really one order and that must go.
In the course of the hearing in this Court our attention was
repeatedly drawn to the fact that this was a case of a
"suppressed vacancy". What was meant by "suppressed
vacancy" was that the appellants had failed to give notice
of the vacancy as required by S. 6 of the Requisition Act.
On the facts, it has to be held that the appellants had not
given the necessary notice. But I do not see that makes any
difference to the present case. The Requisition Act nowhere
says that larger powers of requisition may ’be exercised
where the required notice has not been given. Those powers
are the same whether notice has or has not been given. All
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 18
that the Act says is that on the failure to give notice the
landlord would incur a penalty by way of imprisonment or
fine : see S. 6(5). 1 find nothing in the case of Bhanji
Munji(1) contrary to this view or contrary to anything that
I have said in this judgment.
I would for these reasons allow the appeal with costs
through--out.
Raghubar Dayal, J. The appellants, in this appeal by special
leave, are the trustees-owners of Kutchi House situate at
Brahmanwada Road, Matunga, Bombay. They purchased the
-property in 1948.
One P. S. Nambiar was at the time tenant in occupation of
room No. 26 on the second floor of the Kutchi House. He
paid rent at Rs. 20.68 per month exclusive of electricity.
He did not pay rent from January 1, 1956. He left the
premises sometime without informing the appellants and after
putting K. A. Nambiar in possession of the room. In 1958
the appellants sued for
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 777.
33 3
ejectment of P. S. Nambiar and K. A. Nambiar from room No.
26 in the Court of Small Causes, Bombay, on grounds :
(a) that the defendant P. S. Nambiar has
sublet and / or assigned his interest in the
suit premises without the permission of the
plaintiffs and in breach of the provisions of
Bombay Act 57/47;
(b) that the said defendant No. 1 has been
in arrears of rent and/or compensation from
1st January, 1956 at the rate of Rs. 20.68
exclusive of electricity charges; and
(c) that the premises are required by the
plaintiffs for their own use and occupation
bona fide and reasonably.
On any of these grounds the landlord could evict the tenant
in view of the provisions of S. 13 of Act 57/47 viz.’. the
Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act,
1947 (hereinafter called the Rent Act). The proceedings
were to be taken in the Court of Small Causes, Bombay, in
view of s. 28 of that Act.
The suit was decreed ex parte on August 5, 1958. The decree
directed the defendants to vacate the room by August 16,
1958. The decree-holders actually got possession of the
room on April 30, 1959 as proceedings were taken against K.
A. Ramakrishnan who had obstructed the execution of the
warrant of possession on September 30, 1958 and as K. A.
Nambiar also took proceedings for the setting aside of the
ex parte decree.
On May 1, 1959 K. A. Nambiar applied to the Controller of
Accommodation for requisitioning the premises, room No. 26,
under the Bombay Land Requisition Act, 1948 (Act XXXIII of
1948), hereinafter called the Act, and for allotting it to
him as he had been evicted therefrom on April 30, 1959. On
July 1 1, the Accommodation Officer issued a notice to the
appellants to show cause why the room be not requisitioned
under the Act. The appellants showed cause and, by his
letter dated August 17, 1959, the Accommodation Officer
informed the appellants that on the evidence available to
him he had come to the conclusion that it was a case of
suppressed vacancy. Against this order of the Accommodation
Officer the appellants appealed to the Government of Bombay.
334
On September 10, 1959 the Government of Bombay issued the
requisition order. It reads :
"Whereas. on inquiry it is found that the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 18
premises specified below had become vacant on
the 30th day of April, 1959.
Now, therefore, in exercise of the powers
conferred by clause (a) of sub-section (4) of
section 6 of the Bombay Land Requisition Act,
1948 (Bom. XXXIII of 1948), the Government of
Bombay, is pleased to declare that the said
premises had become vacant after 4th December,
1947 and to requisition the said premises for
a public purpose, namely, for housing a
homeless person.
Premises
Room No. 26, 2nd Floor, Kutchi House etc.
By the order and in the name of the Governor
of Bombay.
Sd/-
Accommodation Officer."
On September 12, room No. 26 was allotted to K. A. Nambiar.
He was required to pay to the land-lord on behalf of the
Government, in advance, on or before the 10th day of every
month, compensation at the rate of Rs. 20.68 per month in
respect of the premises and to send to the Controller of
Accommodation a certificate of such payment counter-signed
by the land-lord on or before the 15th day of each month.
The appellants then addressed an application to the Revenue
Minister on September 14, 1959. On September 25, the Deputy
Minister of Revenue interviewed the representatives of the
appellants in the presence of K. A. Nambiar and the
Controller of Accommodation.
On September 30, the appellants filed a petition in the High
Court of Bombay against the State of Bombay and the Accommo-
dation Officer, Bombay, praying inter alia for the issue of
a writ of mandamus under art. 226 of the Constitution
against the respondents directing them to cancel or withdraw
the orders of requisition and allotment. The petition was
contested by the respondents. The learned Single Judge who
heard the petit I ion held
335
that room No. 26 came within the definition of ’premises’
and that the requisition order was not mala fide. The
contention to the effect that the appellants had given
necessary intimation of vacancy by their letter dated May 3,
1959, was not pressed in view of the denial of the receipt
of any such notice by the Government. The other contention
about the requisition order being against the pronounced
policy of the Government was rejected. The result was that
the appellants’ petition was dismissed.
The appellants then filed an appeal under the Letters
Patent. This appeal also failed. The appellate Bench
agreed with the findings of the learned single Judge on the
question of room No. 26 being ’premises’ within the
definition of that word in the Act and on the requisition
order being not made mala fide. The contention that there
was no statutory vacancy in respect of room No. 26 which
could have been the subject matter of requisition by the
respondents was not pressed. It is against this order of
the appellate Bench of the High Court that this appeal has
been filed.
Besides the two contentions urged before the High Court, it
has also been contended for the appellants that the premises
were not vacant as contemplated by the Act and that
therefore they could not have been requisitioned.
The requisition order is made under s. 6(4) of the Act.
Sub-s- (1) of s. 6 reads
If any premises situate in an area specified
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 18
by the State Government by notification in the
Official Gazette, are vacant on the date of
such notification and wherever any such
premises are vacant or become vacant after
such date by reason of the landlord, the
tenant or the subtenant, as the case may be,
ceasing to occupy the premises or by reason of
the release of the premises from requisition
or by reason of the premises being newly
erected or reconstructed or for any other
reason the landlord of such premises shall
give intimation thereof in the prescribed form
to an officer authorised in this behalf by the
State Government."
Sub-s. (2) requires the landlord to give an intimation to
the State Government by registered post within 7 days of the
premises become vacant or becoming. available for
occupation. Sub-s. (3) prohibits the landlord without the
permission of the State Government to let, occupy or permit,
to be occupied such premises before giving the intimation
and for a period of one month from
2 Sup CI/668
336
the date on which the intimation is received by the State
Government. Sub-s. (4) reads :
"Whether or not an intimation under sub-
section (1) is given and notwithstanding
anything contained in section 5, the State
Government may by order in writing-
(a) requisition the premises for any public
purpose and may use or deal with premises, for
any such purpose in such manner as may appear
to it to be expedient;.
Provided that where an order is to be made
under clause (a) requisitioning the premises
in respect of which no intimation is given by
the landlord, the State Government shall make.
such inquiry as it deems fit and make a
declaration in the order that the premises
were vacant or had become vacant, on or after
the date referred to in sub-section (1) and
such declaration shall be conclusive evidence
that the premises, were or had so become
vacant."
Sub-s. (5) provides for penalty for failure to
give the necessary intimation required by sub-
s. (2). Explanation to s. 6 reads
"For the purposes of this section-
(a) premises, which are in the occupation of
the landlord, the tenant or the sub-tenant, as
the case may be, shall be deemed to be or
become vacant when such landlord ceases to be
in occupation or when such tenant or sub-
tenant ceases to be in occupation upon
termination of his tenancy, eviction,
assignment or transfer in any other manner of
his interest in the premises or otherwise,
notwithstanding any instrument or occupation
by any other person prior to the date when
such landlord tenant or sub-tenant so ceases
to be in occupation;
(b) premises newly erected or reconstructed
shall be deemed to be or become vacant until
they are first occupied after such erection or
reconstruction."
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 18
It is true that the State Government can requisition
premises ,Only. ’Premises’ is defined in cl. (3) of S. 4.
The relevant portion of the definition is
premises’ means any building or part of a building let or
intended to be let separately."
3 3 7
The contention for the appellants. is that the appellants
had sought and got decree for the ejectment of P. S. Nambiar
and K. A. Nambiar inter alia on the ground that they
required the premises reasonably and bona fide for
occupation by themselves, a ground mentioned in s. 13 (1)
(g) of the Rent Act, that room No. 26 could not be said to
be intended to be let on the ejectment of the Nambiars on
April 30, 1959 and therefore did not come within the term
’premises’. The argument is that the intention about the
letting of the building or part of it is not to be
determined once for all when it is let but is to be
determined on each occasion the part of the building falls
vacant. If the same intention exists then, the part of the
building will answer the definition of premises, but if such
an intention does not exist and the landlord intends to
occupy the building himself or even does not intend to let
it, the, building would not come within the definition of
the, word ’premises’. We consider this argument unsound.
If accepted, the purpose of the Act will be mostly defeated.
While the object of the Rent Act was to control the rent
payable by a tenant and his eviction from the premises, the
object of the Act was to requisition premises for making
them available to the persons in need of accommodation.’
Both sections 5 and 6 empower the State Government to
requisition land or premises for a public purpose. The
Government has to have complete control over the buildings
from the time the requisition Act came into force, so that
it could effectively meet the requirements of the persons in
need of accommodation. Such a control has been given to the
Government by the provisions of the Act.
The word ’premises’ means, as already stated, any building
or part of a building let or intended to be let separately.
It has been urged for the appellant that the expression ’let
or intended to be let separately’ govern both the word
’building’ and the expression part of a building’. We are
of the view that this is not really so and that this
expression governs only the clause ’part of a building’.
Intended to be let separately’ cannot have any reasonable
meaning with. reference to a building. There is no question
of its being intended to be let separately. It is to be let
or not to be let. ’Let Or intended to be let separately’
can apply only to the letting of a part of a building as
rightly a landlord of a building is not to be forced to let
a, part of the building when he be in occupation of it. It
follows then that all buildings, irrespective of the fact
whether they were let or were intended to be let at the time
the Act came into force came within the expression
’premises’ and therefore could be requisitioned by the
Government if the requirements of
338
SS. 5 and 6 were satisfied. If the buildings come under the
control of the Government from the date of the enforcement
of the Act, there is no reason why part of a building which
was let or which was intended to be let separately on such a
date be not thereafter under the control of the Government
for the purposes of the Act. It would be impracticable to
decide every time a part of a building fell vacant, whether
the landlord intends or does not intend to let it. It
appears that the Act contemplated every building to be
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 18
available for letting whenever it fell vacant be it in the
occupation of the tenant or of the landlord at the time the
Act came into force, as sub-s. (1) of S. 6 contemplates
premises becoming vacant after the date of the notification
by the State Government under that section by reason of the
landlord ceasing to occupy premises or by reason of the
release of the premises from requisition. The premises on
the landlord’s ceasing to occupy them, become vacant and
therefore subject to an order of requisition by the State
Government. So long as the landlord was occupying the
building or part of a building, it would not come within the
definition of ’premises’ if the argument for the appellants
that the intention to let must be determined on each
occasion of a building or part of a building falling vacant.
The expression ’premises’ in S. 6(1) of the Act clearly
contemplates buildings in the occupation of the landlord,
buildings which were neither let nor could possibly be said
during the period of occupation to be intended to be let.
We are therefore of the view that from the date of the
enforcement of the Act, every building comes within the
expression ’premises’ and that a part of a building comes
within the expression if it is let or if it is intended to,
be let separately on that date. Room No. 26, which had been
let, was ’premises’ within the meaning of that term in the
Act. The fact that the appellants got the Nambiars ejected
from room No. 26 on the ground that they themselves
reasonably and bona fide required the premises for their use
and intended to occupy it, does not make room No. 26 cease
to be ’Premises’.
The second contention about the premises being not vacant
when requisitioned has no force. There is no doubt that the
Government can requisition premises which are vacant. Sub-
s. (2) of S. 6 requires the landlord to give notice of the
vacancy of the premises within a week of its falling vacant.
If such notice is received and the Government requisitions
the building within a month of receiving the notice, no
question about the vacancy of the premises can arise for
determination.. If no such intimation is given by the
landlord. the, proviso to cl. (a) of sub-s. (4) of S. 6
33 9
requires the State Government to make such enquiry as it
deems fit and make a declaration in the order of requisition
itself that the premises were vacant or had become, vacant
on or after the date of the notification under sub-s. (1) of
s. 6. Such a declaration is made conclusive evidence of the
premises being vacant or having become vacant. Such a
declaration is made in the requisition order dated September
10, 1956 requisitioning the premises in suit. It is
therefore not open to the appellant to urge successfully
that the premises in suit did not become vacant or were not
vacant when the requisition order was passed.
It may be further mentioned that the premises became vacant
in view of sub-s. (1) of S. 6 and explanation to s. 6 when
the tenant ceased to occupy it due to eviction in execution
of the decree secured by the appellant. The premises became
vacant on April 30, 1959. The act that the appellants
secured the eviction of P. S. Nambiar and K. A. Nambiar
inter alia on the ground that they required the, premises
for their use, does not affect the question of the premises,
becoming vacant on April 30. Even if the appellants had
actually occupied the premises after April 30, 1959, of
which there is no good evidence on record, the fact remains
that the premises had become vacant on the eviction of the
tenant. In view of these considerations, we reject the
second contention.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 18
The other contention is that the requisition order was made
alia fide. There is no allegation that the State Government
is in any way interested in K. A. Nambiar in whose favour
the allotment order was made after the requisitioning of the
premises. Mala hides are alleged merely on the ground that
the premises were requisitioned for allotting them to, K. A.
Nambiar who had illegally occupied them when P. S. Nambiar
ceased to occupy them, had not paid the rent to the
landlords-appellants, took various steps to delay the
execution of the decree for ejectment secured by the
landlords-appellants and applied to the Accommodation
Officer for allotment of the, house on the day following the
ejectment. These circumstances, do not, in law, make the
requisition order mala fide when the order was not made on
account of any animus against the appellants or for a
purpose for which requisition could not have been made.
Sub-s. (4) of s. 6 empowers the State Government to requisi-
tion premises for a public purpose. It has, been held that
requisitioning the premises for allotment to a person who is
homeless i.e., who has no premises to occupy, would be
requisitioning for a
340
public purpose, vide The State of Bombay v. Bhanji Munji(1)
where this, Court said at p. 785 :
"If therefore a vacancy is allotted to a person who is in
fact houseless, the purpose is fulfilled."
It may not appear very right, on grounds of sentiment and
propriety, that a tenant who has not behaved properly
towards the landlord and had been remiss in his duties as a
reasonable tenant be allotted the same premises after he had
been evicted in execution of a decree passed by a Court of
law in pursuance of the practice that the first informant of
the existence of a suppressed vacancy would be allotted
those premises but allotment to such a person is not against
the law. One homeless person is, as good as another. The
conditions of allotment of requisitioned premises ensure
that the landlord would not be put to any further trouble so
far as the collection of rent is concerned.
Section 8B of the Act empowers the State Government to
realise the dues which the allottee has to pay and has
failed to pay as arrears of land revenue. The allotment
order, Exhibit J, dated September 12, 1959, required the
allottee to deposit a certain sum by way of security for the
due observance of the terms and conditions subject to which
the allotment was made. It also required the allottee to
pay to the landlord in advance, on or before the 10th day of
every month, compensation at the rate of Rs. 20.68 per month
in respect of the premises. The allotment order is subject
to some other conditions also which, in the ultimate
analysis, enures to the benefit of the landlord.
It has been urged that ’homeless person’ does not include
one who has been evicted on the ground that the landlord
requires the premises for his own use and occupation as the
decree for ejectment on such a ground can be passed only if
the Court is satisfied that having regard to the
circumstances of the case, including the question whether
other reasonable accommodation will be available for the
landlord or the tenant, greater hardship would not be caused
by passing the decree than by refusing to pass it.
Section 1 3 (1) (g) of the Rent Act entitles. the landlord
to recover possession of the premises if the Court is
satisfied 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
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 18
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 777.
34 1
charitable trust that the premises are required for
occupation for the purposes of the trust. It is open to
doubt whether a trusteelandlord, as the plaintiffs-
appellants are, can be said to require the premises for,
occupation for himself. The first part of s. 1 3 ( 1 ) (g)
appears to contemplate persons who receive or are entitled
to receive rents on their own account and not to persons who
receive or are entitled to receive rents as a trustee. A
trustee-landlord can require the premises under s. 13(1)(g)
for occupation for purposes of the trust. The trustee-
landlord himself need not be a homeless person. No occasion
arose in the ejectment suit for the Court to determine
whether reasonable accommodation was available for the
tenant and whether greater hardship would be caused to the
landlord if no ejectment be ordered as the suit was
uncontested.
The provisions of s. 13 (2A) of the, Rent Act show that the
needs of the armed forces of the Union or their families get
precedence over the needs of the landlord. The needs of the
landlord therefore are not such a controlling factor as to
over-ride the provisions of the Act if the requisition of
the premises in suit comes within them. Requisition under
the Act is for a public purpose and there seems to be no
good reason why the needs of the landlord be not deemed
subservient to the requirements of public purpose as judged
by the State Government.
Another ground for the non-applicability of the Act to such
ejected person, is urged on the basis of the provisions of
s. 17 of the Rent Act. Sub-s. (1) of s. 17 empowers the
Court to order the landlord to reallot the premises to the
tenant who had been evicted therefrom in case the landlord
does not occupy the premises within a period of one month or
if the landlord reallots the premises to another person
within a year of the tenant’s eviction. The Court has a
discretion to pass such an order on the application of the
tenant. If the Act provides by s. 6 that the landlord
cannot occupy the premises which had become vacant on the
eviction of the tenant within a month of the receipt of the
intimation of vacancy by the State Government, there is no
conflict between that provision and the discretionary power
vested in the Court under sub-s. (1) of s. 17. The Court,
undoubtedly, cannot exercise such a discretionary power when
another enactment by its language provides for the
landlord’s not occupying the premises for a period in excess
of a month. Under sub-s. (2) of s. 17, a landlord is liable
to conviction if he keeps premises unoccupied without
reasonable cause or if he fails to comply with the order
passed under sub-s. (1) of s. 17. No question of conviction
in
3 4 2
the latter circumstances arises if as indicated earlier the
Court will not pass an order of re-allotment to the evicted
tenant in case the premises are subject to the provisions of
s. 6 of the Act. The nonoccupation of the premises within
one month of the ejection of the tenant on the ground that
the premises are situate in an area covered by the
notification under S. 6(1) of the Act will be non,occupation
of the premises for reasonable cause and therefore there can
be no. occasion for a conviction on the ground that the pre-
mises were kept unoccupied within a period of one month from
the date of recovery of possession.
We do not therefore consider that there is any real conflict
between the provisions of s. 6 of the Act and the provisions
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 18
of ss., 13 or 17 of the Rent Act.
It is also to be noticed that the Act was enacted later than
the Rent Act. The legislature is presumed to know the
provisions of the Rent Act. It did not make an exception
from requisition with respect to premises becoming vacant on
the eviction of a tenant on the ground mentioned in S. 1 3 (
1) (g) of the Rent Act. On the contrary, not only sub-s.
(1) of S. 6 speaks of the vacancy of the premises on a
tenant ceasing to occupy them but the Explanation to S. 6
clearly states that the premises which are in the occupation
of a tenant shall be deemed to become vacant when such
tenant ceases to be in occupation by eviction. An exception
could have been made in case of evictions for a particular
reason, such as in cl. (g) of sub-s. (1) of s. 13 of the
Act. The legislature made no such exception.
The fields of operation, of the two Acts, the Rent Act and
the Act, are different. The Rent Act deals with the
question arising between the landlord and the tenant on
account of the incidents of tenancy, while the Act deals
with the necessities of a public purpose as determined by
Government in a particular area for which a notification
under sub-s. (1) of S. 6 has been issued, keeping in mind
the interests of the land-lord also.
The Civil Court, in deciding a suit for eviction, simply
takes into consideration the needs of the landlord vis-a-vis
the tenant and the grounds of eviction. It does not take
into consideration the requirements of any public purpose.
It adjudicates between the rights of the landlord and the
tenant in accordance with the statutory provisions of the
Rent Act. The State Government, on the other hand, when
considering the question of requisitioning the premises
under sub-s. (4) of S. 6 does not consider such matters
3 4 3
but considers only whether the purpose for which it is to
requisition the premises is a public purpose or not. If it
is satisfied that it requires the premises for a public
purpose, it has not to consider the considerations affecting
the landlord except when the landlord applies for permission
under s. 6(3) of the Act. It has certainly no occasion to
consider the interests of the tenant as the premises can be
requisitioned only when they are vacant or are deemed vacant
in view of somebody occupying it in contravention of the
provisions of the Act. If the Government happens to
requisition the premises for the person who had been evicted
therefrom, in execution of a decree of a civil Court, it do-
is not mean that the Government is not respecting the decree
of the Court and is acting against public interest or the
interests of administration of justice.
To hold that the benefit of the Act cannot be given to
persons evicted on the ground that the landlord required the
premises for his use would not only deprive the evicted
person from getting the premises allotted to himself but
would also deprive many other homeless persons besides some
special class of persons allotments to whom would clearly
come within public purpose. Merely because there is a
possibility of the evicted person getting allotted the
premises he had been evicted from, does not appear to us to
be good reason for holding that the provisions of s. 6 of
the Act do not apply to the requisitioning of premises when
the premises became vacant on the eviction of a tenant by a
Civil Court on the ground that the landlord required the
premises for his own use.
K. A. Nambiar is no. party to these proceedings and this
should also prove fatal to the writ petition by the
appellants when the appellants seek the quashing of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 18
order of requisition and the order of allotment to K. A.
Nambiar.
We therefore agree with the High Court that the requisition
order cannot be said to be mala fide. The result will be
that the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
ORDER
In accordance with the opinion of the majority the appeal is
dismissed with costs.
344