Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BHAGWAT DUTT RISHI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RAM KUMAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT08/11/1989
BENCH:
MISRA RANGNATH
BENCH:
MISRA RANGNATH
SAWANT, P.B.
RAMASWAMY, K.
CITATION:
1989 SCR Supl. (2) 93 1990 SCC (1) 324
JT 1989 (4) 386 1989 SCALE (2)1157
ACT:
East Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act, 1949: Ss. 2(hh)
& 13A--Eviction--Public Officer becoming landlord after
superannuation-Whether ’specified landlord’--Whether enti-
tled to eviction.
HEADNOTE:
Section 13A of the East Punjab Urban Rent Restriction
Act, 1949 lays down the procedure for a ’specified landlord’
to seek immediate recovery of possession of his residential
building at any time within one year prior to or within one
year after the date of his retirement or after his retire-
ment but within one year of the date of commencement of the
East Punjab Urban Rent Restriction (Amendment) Act, 1985,
whichever is later. Section 2(hh) of the Act defines ’speci-
fied landlord’ to mean a person who is entitled to receive
rent in respect of a building on his own account and who is
holding or has held an appointment in a public service or
post in connection with the affairs of the Union or of a
State.
The appellant, who was holding a post in connection with
the affairs of the State, had retired on September 30, 1981.
He was member of a Mitakshara family. The house in question
was tenanted out to the respondent by his father in July
1982 and upon his father dying in the following month the
tenant attorned to the appellant. The amendment came into
force with effect from November 16, 1985. The appellant
applied for eviction on May 13, 1986. He sought benefit of
the special procedure laid down in s. 13A of the Act on the
ground that all the ingredients of the definition of ’speci-
fied landlord’ were satisfied. The courts below rejected the
contention. The High Court relying on the ratio laid down by
this Court in D.N. Malhotra v. Kartar Singh, [1988] 1 SCC
656 and Mrs. Winifred Ross v. Mrs. Ivy Fonseca, [1984] 1 SCC
288 held that the appellant could not be a ’specified land-
lord’.
Dismissing the appeal by special leave,
HELD: Until the landlord satisfies the test that he was
a landlord qua the premises and the tenant at the time of
his retirement or dis-
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charge from service. he can not be a ’specified landlord’ as
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defined in s. 2(hh) of the East Punjab Urban Rent Restric-
tion Act, 1949. [98F, 94F]
In the instant case, the appellant was not the landlord
of the premises in question before he superannuated. He
would not, therefore, be entitled to the benefit of the
special procedure laid down in s. 13A of the Act. [99A-B]
D.N. Malhotra v. Kartar Singh, [1988] 1 SCC 656 and Mrs.
Winifred Ross v. Mrs. Ivy Fonseca, [1984] 1 SCC 288, ap-
plied.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 4567 of
1989.
From the Judgment and Order dated 22.12.1988 of the
Punjab & Haryana High Court in C.R. No. 1327 of 1987.
Gopal Subramanium, N.D. Garg and Rajiv K. Garg for the
Appellant.
J.K. Nayyar, Rajeev Sharma and S.K. Bisaria for the
Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RANGANATH MISRA, J: Special leave granted.
The short question for consideration in this appeal at
the instance of the landlord in a proceeding for eviction
under the East Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act is as to
whether the appellant before us is a specified landlord as
defined in s. 2(hh) of the Act. The High Court has decided
against the landlord by relying upon the decision of this
Court in the case of D.N. Malhotra v. Kartar Singh, [1988] 1
SCC 656. When this matter came before a 2-Judge Bench on
16.8.1988 the following order was made:
"This matter may be listed before a
Bench of three Hon’ble Judges two weeks hence
for consideration of the question in the light
of the decision of this Court in D.N. Malhotra
v. Kartar Singh, [1988] 1 SCC 656."
Section 2(hh) of the Act defines ’specified landlord’ to
mean:
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"a person who is entitled to receive rent in
respect of a building on his own account and
who is holding or has held an appointment in a
public service or post in connection with the
affairs of the Union or of a State."
It is not disputed that the appellant was Reader to the
Sessions Judge of Sangrur from where he retired on 30th of
September, 1981. He was thus holding a post in connection
with affairs of a State. He was member of a Mitakshara
family and the house in question was tenanted out to the
respondent by his father in July, 1982, and upon his father
dying in the following month the tenant attorned to the
appellant.
Section 13-A of the Act provides:
"Where a specified landlord at any time,
within one year prior to or within one year
after the date of his retirement or after his
retirement but within one year of the date of
commencement of the East Punjab Urban Rent
Restriction (Amendment) Act, 1985, whichever
is later, applies to the Controller along with
a certificate from the authority competent to
remove him from service indicating the date of
his retirement and his affidavit to the effect
that he does not own and possess any other
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suitable accommodation in the local area in
which he intends to reside to recover posses-
sion of his residential building or scheduled
building, as the case may be, for his own
occupation, there shall accrue, on and from
the date of such application to such specified
landlord, notwithstanding anything contained
elsewhere in this Act or in any other law for
the time being in force or in any contract
(whether expressed or implied), custom or
usage to the contrary, a right to recover
immediately the possession of such residential
building or scheduled building or any part or
parts of such building if it is let out in
part or parts: ..........."
The amendment came into force with effect from
16.11.1985. The appellant applied for eviction on 13.5.1986.
Thus, within one year of the enforcement of the Amending Act
of 1985, the application for eviction was filed following
the procedure laid down under the Act. Appellant’s conten-
tion which has been rejected in the Courts below has been
that all the ingredients of the definition of ’specified
landlord’ are satisfied and he should, therefore, have been
admitted to be a
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specified landlord and given the benefit of the special
procedure. The High Court relied upon the following observa-
tions in Malhotra’s case:
"It has been urged before us on behalf of the
respondent at the relevant time i.e. after
retirement of the respondent from service
within one year of the date of commencement of
the said Act he is the landlord of the appel-
lant and as such he falls within the defini-
tion of section 2(hh) of the said Act and he
becomes a specified landlord. This submission,
in our view, cannot be sustained inasmuch as
the words ’specified landlord’ as used in
section 2(hh) refer to the person in service
of the Union who is a landlord at the time of
his retirement from the public service or post
in connection with the affairs of the Union or
of State. It cannot in any manner include an
ex-serviceman who was not a specified landlord
qua the tenant and the premises on or before
the date of his retirement from the service of
the Union. This has been very succinctly held
by this Court in the case of Mrs. Winifred
Ross v. Mrs. Ivy Fonseca, which has been
referred to hereinbefore."
Malhotra’s case in terms relied upon an earlier decision
of this Court in Mrs. Winifred Ross v. Mrs. Ivy Fonseca,
[1984] 1 SCC 288 in support of its view.
It is not disputed that on the ratio laid down by this
Court in the two decisions referred to above the High Court
had come to the correct conclusion that on the facts the
appellant could not be a specified landlord. It is now for
consideration whether the cases of Winifred Ross and D.N.
Malhotra, have been correctly decided.
Winifred Ross, case was considering s. 13A of the Bombay
Rents, Hotel & Lodging Houses Rates Control Act of 1947.
Section 13A had been brought into the Act in 1975. The said
section provided:
"Notwithstanding anything contained in this
Act,--
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(a) a landlord who is a member of the
armed forces of the Union, or who was such
member and is duly retired (which term shall
include premature retirement), shall be enti-
tled to recover possession of any premises, on
the ground that the premises are bona fide
required by him for occupation by himself or
any member of his family (which
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term shall include a parent or other relation
ordinarily residing with him and dependent on
him); and the Court shall pass a decree for
eviction on such ground if the landlord, at
the hearing of the suit produces a certificate
signed by the Head of his Service or his
Commanding Officer to the effect that--
(i) he is presently a member of the
armed forces of the Union or he was such
member and is now a retired ex-serviceman;
(ii) ....................
(b) ...................."
Dealing with this provision this Court said:
"The essential requirement is that he should
have leased out the building while he was a
member of the Armed Forces. His widow can also
recover the premises of which she is or has
become the landlord under clause (b) subject
to fulfilment of the conditions. Having regard
to the object and purposes of the Act and in
particular Section 13-A 1, it is difficult to
hold that Section 13-A 1 can be availed of by
an ex-member of the Armed Forces to recover
from a tenant possession of a building which
he acquires after his retirement. Acceptance
of this argument will expose the very Section
13-A 1 of the Act to a successful challenge on
the ground of violation of Article 14 of the
Constitution for it that were so, a retired
military officer who has no house of his own
can purchase any building in the occupation of
a tenant after his retirement, successfully
evict a tenant living in it on the ground that
he needs it for his use, then sell it for a
fancy price and again because he has no house
of his own, he can again acquire another
building and deal with it in the same way.
There appears to be n0 restriction on the
number of times he can do so. It was argued
that he would not be able to get the requisite
certificate under the Act more than once. A
reading of Section 13-A 1 of the Act shows
that the certificate should show that the
person concerned has been a member of the
Armed Forces and that he does not possess any
other suitable residence in the local area
where he or members of his family can reside.
Those
98
conditions being satisfied the certificate
cannot be refused. A liberal construction of
Section 13-A1 of the Act as it is being
pressed upon us, would also enable unscrupu-
lous landlords who cannot get rid of tenants
to transfer their premises to ex-military men,
as it has been done in this case in order to
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avail of the benefit of the said section with
a private arrangement between them. It is also
possible that a person who has retired from
the Armed Forces may after retirement lease
out a premises belonging to him in favour of a
tenant and then seek his eviction at his will
under Section 13-A 1 of the
Act .............."
A little later in the same decision this Court said:
"Since a liberal interpretation of Section
13-A 1 of the Act is likely to expose it to a
successful challenge on the basis of Article
14 of the Constitution, it has to be read down
as conferring benefit only on those members of
the Armed Forces who were landlords of the
premises in question while they were in serv-
ice even though they may avail of it after
their retirement. Such a construction would
save it from the criticism that it is discrim-
inatory and also would advance the object of
enacting it, namely, that members of the Armed
Forces should not while they are in service
feel worried about the difficulties of a long
drawn out litigation when they wish to get
back the premises which they have leased out
during their service."
In Malhotra’s case, this Court was called upon to con-
sider s. 13A of the very Act with which we are now con-
cerned. On the basis of the ratio in Winifred Ross’ case,
this Court came to the conclusion that until the landlord
satisfied the test that he was a landlord qua the premises
and the tenant at the time of his retirement or discharge
from service, he would not be entitled to the benefit of s.
13A of the Act.
It is not disputed that the appellant retired on 30th of
September, 1981. On the finding the appellant is right in
his submission that this was not a case of transfer with an
oblique motive but as the property belonged to a Mitakshara
father, upon his death the property has come to his hands.
This feature which is different from the facts appearing in
the two reported decisions, however, would not persuade us
to give a different meaning to the definition in s. 2(hh).
In both the cases, for good reason this Court came to the
conclusion that the public officer
99
should have been a landlord of the premises in question
while in service. Admittedly, the appellant was not the
landlord before he superannuated.
We are of the view that the opinion of this Court in
Winifred Ross’ case is unassailable and, therefore, the
appellant would not be entitled to the benefit of the spe-
cial procedure in s. 13A of the Act.
The appeal fails and is dismissed. Parties are directed
to bear their own costs.
P.S.S. Appeal dismissed.
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