Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BALDEV SAHAI BANGIA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
R.C. BHASIN
DATE OF JUDGMENT16/04/1982
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
VARADARAJAN, A. (J)
CITATION:
1982 AIR 1091 1982 SCR (3) 670
1982 SCC (2) 210 1982 SCALE (1)366
CITATOR INFO :
D 1987 SC 514 (5)
ACT:
Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958-S. 14(1)(d)-Application
for ejectment of tenant-Tenant ceasing to reside in premises
for over six months-When maintainable.
Words and pharases-’Members of family’-Who are-S.
14(1)(d) of Delhi Control Act, 1958.
HEADNOTE:
A landlord is entitled to recover possession of the
premises let for residential purpose under s. 14(1)(d) of
the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958, if he can show that
neither the tenant nor any member of his family has been
residing therein for a period of six months immediately
before the date of the filing of the application.
The appellant took the house in question on lease in
May, 1961 and lived there with his parents, sisters and a
brother. He went to Canada in 1971, leaving behind in the
house, his mother and brother, who continued to pay the
rent.
The landlord filed an application for ejectment of
tenant under s. 14(1)(d) of the Delhi Rent Control Act in
September 1972 contending that with the migration of the
tenant to Canada, his mother and brother could not be
treated as members of the appellant’s family. The
application was dismissed by the Rent Controller who found
that the mother, brother and sister of the appellant were
undoubtedly residing in the disputed premises along with the
appellant and continued to reside there even on the date
when the action for ejectment was brought.
The landlord’s appeal against the order of the Rent
Controller was allowed by the Rent Control Tribunal which
ordered eviction of the family members of the appellant from
the tenanted house.
The appeal of the family members against the order of
eviction was dismissed by the High Court on the ground that
after the exit of the main tenant to Canada, neither the
mother nor the brother or the sister could be legally termed
as a member of the family of the appellant.
Allowing the appeal,
671
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^
HELD: 1. (a) The Act affords intrinsic evidence to show
that the non-applicants were undoubtedly members of the
family residing in the house and the migration of the main
tenant to Canada would make no difference. [674 H]
(b) The term ’family’ has to be given not a restricted
but a wider meaning. There are abundant authorities to show
that the term ’family’ should always be liberally and
broadly construed so as to include near relations of the
head of the family. A beneficial provision must be
meaningfully construed so as to advance the object of the
Act. [676 F; 678 E]
Price v. Gould and Ors., [1930] Vol. 143 Law Times 333;
G.V. Shukla v. Shri Prabhu Ram Sukhram Dass Ojha, [1963]
P.I.R. (Vol. LXV) 256; Govind Dass and Ors. v. Kuldip Singh,
A.I.R. 1971 Delhi 151 and Hira Lal and Ors. v. Banarsi Dass,
[1979] 1 R.L.R. 466 referred to.
(c) The Act has manifested its intention by virtue of a
later amendment. The definition of ’tenant’ inserted in s.
2(1) of the Act by the Amending Act 18 of 1976 expressly
included ’parents’ in sub-clause (iii) thereof and also
indicated that apart from the heirs of the tenant specified
therein, even those persons who had been ordinarily living
in the premises with the tenant would be treated as members
of the family. [675 B; 677 H; 678 A]
2. (a) The legislature has advisedly provided that any
member of the family residing therein for a period of six
months immediately before the date of the filing of the
action would be treated as a tenant. The stress is not so
much on the actual presence of the tenant as on the fact
that the members of the family actually live and reside in
the tenanted premises. Clause (d) of s. 14(1) of the Act is
a special concession given to the landlord to obtain
possession only where the tenanted premises have been
completely vacated by the tenant. [676 G-H; 677 A]
(b) The landlord had failed to prove the essential
ingredients of clause (d) of s. 14(1) of the Act so as to
entitle him to evict the members of the family of the main
tenant. It could not be said that when the appellant
migrated to Canada, he had severed all his connections with
his mother so that she became an absolute stranger to the
family. Such an interpretation is against our national
heritage and could never have been contemplated by the Act.
[680 B; 675 B]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1533 of
1980.
From the Judgment and Order dated the 20th February,
1980 of the High Court of Delhi at New Delhi in S.A.O. 149
of 1979.
S.K. Mehta for the Appellant.
Yogeshwar Prasad, Ravinder Bana and Mrs. Rani Chhabra
for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
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FAZAL ALI, J. This appeal by special leave is directed
against a judgment dated February 20, 1980 of the Delhi High
Court decreeing the landlord’s suit for ejectment of the
tenant.
The facts giving rise to the present litigation are
summarised in the judgments of the Rent Controller and the
High Court and need not be repeated.
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Shorn of details, the position seems to be that Baldev
Singh took the premises on rent on May 12, 1961 at a monthly
rental of Rs. 95/-. At the time when the tenancy started,
the tenant was living in the tenanted house with his father,
mother, two sisters and a brother. The tenant himself was at
that time a bachelor but seems to have married subsequently.
One of his sisters was married in this very house.
As it happened, in 1971 the tenant went to Canada
followed by his wife and children. It is alleged that after
having gone to Canada, the husband alongwith his wife took
up some employment there. Admittedly. the tenant did not
return to India after 1971. While leaving for Canada the
tenant had left his mother and brother in the house who were
regularly paying rent to the landlord. There is some
controversy as to whether or not the mother and brother, who
were left behind, were being supported by the tenant or were
living on their own earnings or by the income of the
property left by the tenant in India. Such a controversy
however, is of no consequence in deciding the question of
law which arises for consideration in this case.
On September 27, 1972 the landlord filed an application
for ejectment of the tenant on the ground of bona fide
requirement and non-residence of the tenant under clauses
(d) and (e) of sub-section (1) of section 14 of the Delhi
Rent Control Act, 1958 (hereinafter referred to as the
’Act’). The fundamental plea taken by the landlord was that
with the exit of the tenant from the house it became vacant
and his mother and brother who were left behind could not be
treated as members of the family. Hence, in the eye of law
the tenanted premises must be deemed to have fallen vacant.
The suit was resisted by the mother, brother and sister
of the tenant who averred that even if the tenant alongwith
his wife and children had shifted to Canada, the non-
applicants were continuing to live in the tenanted premises
and as they had been paying rent
673
to the landlord regularly, who had been accepting the same,
no question of the tenancy becoming vacant arose.
Thus, the entire case hinges on the interpretation of
the word ’family’ as also clauses (d) and (e) of s. 141(1)
of the Act. So far as clause (e) is concerned, both the
courts below found as a fact that the landlord was not able
to prove his bona fide necessity. Therefore, as far as
ground (e) is concerned, the same no longer survives in view
of the findings of fact recorded by the courts below. The
only question that remains to be considered is whether the
landlord can bring his case for eviction within the ambit of
clause (d) of s. 14(1) which may be extracted thus:
"14 (1) 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:
Provided that the Controller may, on an
application made to him in the prescribed manner, make
an order for the recovery of possession of the premises
on one or more of the following grounds only, namely:
XX XX XX
(d) that the premises were let for use as a
residence and neither the tenant nor any member of his
family has been residing therein for a period of six
months immediately before the date of the filing of the
application for the recovery of possession thereof;
A close analysis of this provision would reveal that
before the landlord can succeed, he must prove three
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essential ingredients-
(1) that the premises were let out for use as a
residence,
(2) that the tenant after having taken the premises
has ceased to reside, and
(3) that apart from the tenant no member of his family
also has been residing for a period of six months
immediately before the date of the filing of the
application for ejectment.
674
It is manifest that unless the aforesaid conditions are
satisfied the landlord cannot succeed in getting a decree
for ejectment. In the instant case, while it is the admitted
case of the parties that the tenant had shifted to Canada
alongwith his wife and children, yet he had left his mother,
brother and sister in the house, hence the second essential
condition of clause (d) continues to apply with full force.
The learned counsel for the appellant, however,
submitted that the mother, brother and sister were
undoubtedly living with the tenant and so long as they
continued to reside in the tenanted premises, there could be
no question of the premises falling vacant. To this, the
counsel for the landlord countered that neither the mother,
nor the brother nor the sister could in law be treated as
members of the family of the tenant after he had himself
shifted to a country outside India. Even though while he was
living in Delhi, he was in Government service. Thus, it was
argued that in the eye of law, the so-called family members
would lose their status as members of the family of the
tenant and would be pure trespassers or licensees or
squatters.
While the suit of the landlord was dismissed by the
Rent Controller, the Rent Control Tribunal allowed the
appeal and directed eviction of the family members of the
tenant under clause (d) of s. 14(1) of the Act. The family
members of the tenant then went up in appeal to the High
Court which also affirmed the findings of the Tribunal and
upheld the order of eviction passed by it. The High Court
was also of the view that after the exit of the main tenant
from India to Canada, neither the mother, nor the brother,
nor the sister could be legally termed as a member of the
family of the tenant.
We have heard counsel for the parties and given our
anxious consideration to all aspects of the matter and we
feel that the High Court has taken a palpably wrong view of
the law in regard to the interpretation of the term ’member
of the family’ as used in clause (d) of s. 14(1) of the Act.
In coming to its decision, the High Court seems to have
completely overlooked the dominant purpose and the main
object of the Act which affords several intrinsic and
extrinsic evidence to show that the non-applicants were
undoubtedly members of the family residing in the house and
the migration of the main tenant to Canada would make no
difference. The word ’family’ has been defined in various
legal dictionaries and several
675
authorities of various courts and no court has ever held
that mother or a brother or a sister who is living with the
older member of the family would not constitute a family of
the said member. Surely, it cannot be said by any stretch of
imagination that when the tenant was living with his own
mother in the house and after he migrated to Canada, he had
severed all his connections with his mother so that she
became an absolute stranger to the family. Such an
interpretation is against our national heritage and, as we
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shall show, could never have been contemplated by the Act
which has manifested its intention by virtue of a later
amendment.
Coming now to (the definitions, we find that in Words
and Phrases (permanent Edition-volume 16) at pp. 303-311 the
word ’family’ has been defined thus:
"The father, the mother, and the children
ordinarily constitute a "family".
"The word "family" embraces more than a husband
and wife and includes children."
"A "family" constitutes all who live in one house
under one head."
"Father and mother of two illegitimate children,
and children themselves, all living together under one
roof, constituted a "family."
(pp. 303-304)
"The word "family" in statute authorizing use of
income for support of ward and "family" is not
restricted to those individuals to whom ward owes a
legal duty of support, but is an expression of great
flexibility and is liberally construed, and includes
brothers and sisters in poor financial circumstances
for whom the insane ward, if competent, would make
provision."
(p. 311)
"The general or ordinarily accepted meaning of the
word "family", as used in Compensation Act, means a
group, comprising immediate kindred, consisting of the
parents and their children, whether actually living
together or not."
(p. 343)
(Emphasis ours)
676
Similarly, in Webster’s Third New International
Dictionary, the word ’family’ is defined thus:
"Family-household including not only the servants
but also the head of the household and all persons in
it related to him by blood or marriage...a group of
persons of common ancestry."
(p. 821)
(Emphasis supplied)
In Chambers Twentieth Century Dictionary (New Edition
1972), the word ’Family’ has been defined thus:
"family-the household, or all those who live in
one house (as parents, children, servants): parents and
their children)"
In Concise Oxford Dictionary (Sixth Edition), the same
definition appears to have been given of the word ’family’
which may be extracted thus:
"family-Members of a household, parents, children,
servants, etc. set of parents and children, or of
relations, living together or not; persons children.
All descendants of common ancestor."
A conspectus of the connotation of the term ’family’
which emerges from a reference to the aforesaid dictionaries
clearly shows that the word ’family’ has to be given not a
restricted but a wider meaning so as to include not only the
head of the family but all members or descendants from the
common ancestors who are actually living with the same head.
More particularly, in our country, blood relations do not
evaporate merely because a member of the family-the father,
the brother or the son-leaves his household and goes out for
some time. Furthermore, in our opinion, the legislature has
advisedly used the term that any member of the family
residing therein for a period of six months immediately
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before the date of the filing of the action would be treated
as a tenant. The stress is not so much on the actual
presence of the tenant as on the fact that the members of
the family actually live and reside in the tenanted
premises. In fact, it seems to us that clause (d) of s.
14(1) of the Act is a special concession given to the
landlord to obtain possession only where the tenanted
premises have
677
been completely vacated by the tenant if he ceased to
exercise any control over the property either through
himself or through his blood relations.
In fact, a controversy arose as to what would happen to
the members of the family of the tenant if while residing in
the premises he dies and in order to resolve this anomaly
the legislature immediately stepped in to amend certain
provisions of the Act and defined the actual connotation of
the term ’members of the family’. By virtue of Act 18 of
1976 the definition of "Tenant" was inserted so as to
include various categories of persons. Sub-clause (iii) of
clause (i) of section 2 of the Act actually mentions the
persons who could be regarded as tenant even if main tenant
dies. This sub-clause may be extracted thus:
"(1) "tenant" means any person by whom or on whose
account or behalf the rent of any premises is, or, but
for a special contract, would be, payable and includes-
(i) a sub-tenant;
(ii) any person continuing in possession after the
termination of his tenancy; and
(iii) in the event of the death of the person continuing
in possession after the termination of his
tenancy, subject to the order of succession and
conditions specified, respectively, in Explanation
I and Explanation II to this clause such of the
aforesaid person’s-
(a) spouse,
(b) son or daughter or, where there are both son
and daughter, both of them,
(c) parents,
(d) daughter-in-law, being the widow of his
predeceased son,
as had been ordinarily living in the premises with
such person as a member or members of his family
up to the date of his death, but does not include,
....."
It would appear that parents were expressly included in
sub-clause (iii). It has also been provided that apart from
the heirs
678
specified in clauses (a) to (d) (extracted above), even
those persons who had been ordinarily living in the premises
with the tenant would be treated as members of the family.
The statement of objects and reasons for this amendment may
be extracted thus:
"There has been a persistent demand for amendments
to the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 with a view to
conferring a right of tenancy on certain
heirs/successors of a deceased statutory tenant so that
they may be protected from eviction by landlords and
also for simplifying the procedure for eviction of
tenants in case the landlord requires the premises bona
fide for his personal occupation. Further, Government
decided on the 9th September, 1975 that a person who
owns his own house in his place of work should vacate
the Government accommodation allotted to him before the
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31st December, 1975. Government considered that in the
circumstances, the Act required to be amended
urgently."
If this was the intention of the legislature then
clause (d) of section 14(1) of the Act could not be
interpreted in a manner so as to defeat the very object of
the Act. It is well settled that a beneficial provision must
be meaningfully construed so as to advance the object of the
Act, and curing any lacuna or defect appearing in the same.
There are abundant authorities to show that the term
"Family" must always be liberally and broadly construed so
as to include near relations of the head of the family.
In Hira Lal & Ors. v. Banarsi Dass(1) even the learned
Judge who decided that case had observed at page 472 that
the term "members of the family" on the facts and
circumstances of the case should not be given a narrow
construction.
In Gobind Dass & Ors. vs. Kuldip Singh(2) a Division
Bench of Delhi High Court consisting of H.R. Khanna, C.J.
(as he then was) and Prakash Narain, J. while recognising
the necessity of giving a wide interpretation to the word
"family" observed as follows:
"I hold that in the section now under
consideration the word "family" includes brothers and
sisters of the deceased
679
living with her at the time of her death. I think that
that meaning is required by the ordinary acceptation of
the word in this connection and that the legislature
had used the word "family" to introduce a flexible and
wide term."
In Mrs. G. V. Shukla v. Shri Prabhu Ram Sukhram Dass
Ojha(1) Mahajan, J. (as he then was) observed as follows:
"Therefore, it must be held that the word ’family’
is capable of wider interpretation, but that
interpretation must have relation to the existing facts
and circumstances proved on the record in each case."
Even as far back as 1930, Wright, J. in Price v. Gould
& Ors (2) (a King’s Bench decision) had clearly held that
the word "family" included brothers and sisters and in this
connection observed as follows:
"I find as a fact that the brothers and sisters
were residing with the deceased at the time of her
death..It has been laid down that the primary meaning
of the word "family" is children, but that primary
meaning is clearly susceptible of wider interpretation,
because the cases decide that the exact scope of the
word must depend on the context and the other
provisions of the will or deed in view of the
surrounding circumstances."
... ... ....
"Thus, in Snow v. Teed (1870, 23 L.T. Rep. 303; L. Rep.
9 Eq. 622) it was held that the word "family" could be
extended beyond not merely children but even beyond the
statutory next of kin."
In view, however, of the very clear and plain language
of clause (d) of section 14(1) of the Act itself, we do not
want to burden this judgment by multiplying authorities.
On a point of fact, we might mention that the Rent
Controller had given a clear finding that the mother,
younger brother (Davinder Kumar Bangia) and sister (Vijay
Lakshmi) were undoubtedly residing in the disputed premises
alongwith the main
680
tenant and continued to reside there even on the date when
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the action for ejectment was brought.
In these circumstances, we are satisfied that the view
taken by the High Court is legally erroneous and cannot be
supported. The landlord has miserably failed to prove the
essential ingredients of clause (d) of section 14(1) of the
Act so as to entitle him to evict the members of the family
of the main tenant.
We therefore, allow this appeal, set aside the judgment
and order of the High Court and dismiss the plaintiff’s
action for ejectment and restore the judgment of the Rent
Controller. In the peculiar circumstances of the case, there
will be no order as to cost.
H.L.C. Appeal allowed.
681