Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KRISHNAN NAIR & ANR. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GHOUSE BASHA
DATE OF JUDGMENT08/09/1987
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
OZA, G.L. (J)
CITATION:
1987 AIR 2199 1988 SCR (1) 65
1987 SCC (4) 404 JT 1987 (3) 588
1987 SCALE (2)572
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1992 SC2166 (4)
ACT:
Tamil Nadu Buildings (Lease & Rent Control) Act, 1960:
s. 10(3) (a) (iii)-Demised premises-Requirement of by
landlord for sons’ business in partnership with strangers-
Eviction order-Validity of.
HEADNOTE:
The landlord was carrying on leather business in which
his two sons used to take active part. Thereafter they went
into a partnership with others to carry on the business and
jointly held half the shares. The landlord needed the
demised premises bona fide for the business of his sons. The
High Court maintained the order of eviction passed by the
courts below.
In the appeal, it was contended for the appellant that
an application for eviction under s. 10(3)(a)(iii) of the
Tamil Nadu Buildings (Lease and Rent Control) Act, 1960 was
liable to be dismissed solely on the ground that the
landlord had chosen to file it to accommodate a partnership
firm in which his sons and some strangers were partners,
which was not in conformity with the provisions of the
section.
Dismissing the appeal,
^
HELD: If the deed of partnership excludes the son
expressly or impliedly from the management of the firm of
business and makes him a sleeping partner it cannot be said
that the accommodation is needed directly or substantially
for his occupation by way of his business. [68A]
D.N. Sanghavi & Sons v. Ambalal Tribhuvan Das, [1974] 3
SCR 55, applied.
Shantilal Thamordas & Ors. v. Chimanlal Maganlal
Telware, [1977] 1 SCR 341, distinguished.
Partnership is a compendious way of describing those
who constitute the firm under s. 4 of the Partnership Act.
If a person carries on a business alongwith other partners
and it was the other partner who
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actually carried on the business the position perhaps would
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have been entirely different. If the same were only sleeping
partners that would have been different. [67CD]
In the instant case, the partnership deed was silent as
to what role the sons of the landlord would perform in it.
There is, however, evidence that they were in the leather
business and had carried on the business previously before
shifting to the premises in question. If that is the
position, it cannot be said that they were sleeping
partners. Having regard to the past conduct of the sons and
having regard to their shares in the partnership it can be
said that the sons were carrying on business actively along
with other partners. As such, the sons needing the
accommodation with others would be for the sons’ business in
terms of s. 10(3)(a)(iii) of the Tamil Nadu Buildings (Lease
and Rent Control) Act. The landlord was, therefore, entitled
to the benefit of eviction. [67B, 68BC, 67DE, 68C, 67E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 689-90
of 1987.
From the Judgment and Order dated 27.11.1986 of the
Madras High Court in C.R.P. No. 3306 of 1984.
A.T.M. Sampath for the Appellant.
Sanjay Parekh and Sudershan Menon for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, J. This is an appeal by the tenant
against the judgment and order of the High Court of Tamil
Nadu. By the aforesaid judgment the High Court upheld the
landlord’s contention of bona fide requirement of the
premises in question for the business of his sons and
maintained the order of eviction passed by the courts below.
So far as the question of bona fide need is concerned it has
been upheld by the courts below and that finding is not
assailed G before us. But what was contended was that the
application itself under section 10(3)(a)(iii) of the Tamil
Nadu Buildings (Lease and Rent Control) Act, 1960,
hereinafter called the Act was not maintainable. as the
requirement of the land was not for the landlord or members
of his family as such but for two sons who were running a
leather business in partnership with strangers. The deed of
partnership was H examined by the High Court but it is,
however, not before us. It
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appears from the evidence that previously the father and the
two sons used to carry on leather business from long time.
The sons went into the partnership with others and two of
the sons were partners. They jointly hold half the shares.
From the evidence it appears that the sons used to take
active part even before the partnership started in the
leather business carried on by the father. Thereafter, the
partnership firm with the other partners carried on the
business. We must proceed on the basis that the partnership
deed was silent as to what role the sons of the landlord
would perform in this. The only question which was urged
before us was that the application for eviction under
section 10(3)(a)(iii) of the Act was liable to be dismissed
solely on the ground that the landlord has chosen to file
this application to accommodate a partnership firm in which
his sons and some strangers are partners and it is not in
conformity with the provisions of section 10(3)(a)(iii) of
the said Act. Partnership, as is well settled has a
compendious way of describing those who constitute the firm
under section 4 of the Partnership Act. Now, if that is the
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position, in our opinion, if a person carries on a business
alongwith other partners and it was the other partner who
actually carried on the business the position perhaps would
have been entirely different. If the same were only sleeping
partners that would have been different. On the contrary,
here having regard to the past conduct of the sons and
having regard to the shares this was their only application
where sons were carrying on the business along with other
partner. If that is the position in our opinion under
section 10(3)(a)(iii) of the Act as the sons and members of
the family carrying on the business in terms of the section
will be entitled to the benefit of eviction.
Our attention was drawn to a decision of this Court in
D.N. Sanghavi & Sons v. Ambalal Tribhuvan Das, [1974] 3 SCR
55 where the meaning of the expression ’his business’ under
section 12(1)(f) of the Madhya Pradesh Accommodation Control
Act, 1961 came up for consideration. The said section was in
pari materia with the present section. Therefore this court
held that the meaning of the expression ’his business’ under
section 12(1)(f) of the said Act is to be determined by the
examination of the object of the Act and setting of the
phrase ’his business’. There Dwivedi, J. speaking for the
court found that before the partnership, it was stated that
the father was to run the shop. Father died during the
pendency of the suit and neither of these two passages nor
anywhere else in the facts during the pendency had stated
that on the terms of the partnership they were entitled to
manage the partnership business or even that would also
occupy the suit accommodation along with his other partners
on obtaining possession
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from the appellant was not stated that the other partners
have agreed to shift the business. The court observed that
if the deed of partnership had excluded the son expressly or
impliedly from the management of the firm’s business and had
made him a sleeping partner it could not be held that the
accommodation was needed directly and substantially for his
occupation by way of his business. The firm is carrying on
the business in the premises in respect of which the
eviction was asked for the said firm. But here there is no
evidence that the sons were sleeping partners. On the
contrary, there is evidence that they were in the leather
business and had carried on the business previously before
shifting to the premises in question. If that is the
position, it cannot be accepted that they were sleeping
partners. On the contrary, having regard to the number, they
were active partners in the business and as such the sons
needed the accommodation with others would be for sons’
business under section 10(3)(a)(iii) of the Tamil Nadu Act.
We may mention that in the subsequent decision of this Court
in Shantilal Thamordas & Ors. v. Chimanlal Maganlal Telware,
[1977] 1 SCR 341 this question did not directly arise but
there this Court noted that some of the High Courts have
taken the view that occupation by partner who was a member
of the family would be the occupation of the landlord. This
Court felt that they should not express any opinion in that
regard, but doubt was expressed as to whether the
requirement of the premises by the landlord for the
occupation of the partnership firm in which he was a partner
would tantamount to the occupation by landlord. It appears
that the attention of this Court was not drawn to the
earlier decision referred to hereinbefore. In any event, the
court had no occasion to express any opinion where the sons
are active partners in a partnership firm whether such
business carried on by the sons would not come within the
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provisions of section 10(3)(a)(iii) of the Act.
In the aforesaid view of the matter we uphold the order
and judgment of the High Court and we are unable to accept
the challenge to the order. The appeal must therefore, fail
and is accordingly dismissed. In the facts and circumstances
of the case there will be no order as to costs.
P.S.S. Appeal dismissed.
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