Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DILIP
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MOHD. AZIZUL HAQ & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 14/03/2000
BENCH:
S.S.M.Quardi, S.Rajendra Babu
JUDGMENT:
RAJENDRA BABU, J. :
Leave granted in S.L.P. (C) Nos. 6767-6768 of 1999.
Respondent No. 1 filed a civil suit against the
appellant regarding the plot in Civil Suit No. 268 of 1987
on the ground that the premises is open land and the
provisions of C.P. and Berar Letting of Houses and Rent
Control Order, 1949 [hereinafter referred to as the Order]
was not applicable to the said premises and that the tenancy
of the appellant stood terminated by efflux of time followed
by a notice dated 8th March, 1986 with effect from 1st
April, 1986. The appellant took the stand that the premises
in question is not an open plot but is a house as defined in
the Order as the said land is a part and parcel of the
residential house and the residential house cannot be used
without the said land. Further it was contended that
permission to construct a shed had been granted, the open
land was no longer an open land as such shed had been
constructed with permission. There is a well also situate
in this land which is for the use of the occupants of the
house in the premises and, therefore, clause 13-A of the
Order would dis-entitle the respondent from obtaining the
relief of a decree. The Civil Judge, Akola, passed a
decree. The appellant preferred an appeal challenging the
findings of the trial court that the premises in possession
of the appellant is an open plot and not a house as defined
in clause 13 of the Order. On 27th June, 1989 the Order was
amended by substituting the word premises for the word
house, wherever it occurs, and by this amendment, sub-
clause (4-A) was also inserted in clause 2 whereby lands not
being used for agricultural purposes also stood included in
the definition of the premises. Thereafter the State of
Maharashtra made another amendment which became effective
from 26th October, 1989 and introduced clause 13-A in the
Order to the effect that no decree for eviction shall be
passed in a suit or proceeding filed and pending against the
tenant in any court or before any authority unless the
landlord produces a written permission of the Controller as
required by sub- clause (1) of clause 13. At that stage,
the appellant filed an application under Order 7 Rule 11 of
the Civil Procedure Code to contend that in view of the
amendment introduced by insertion of clause 13-A read with
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the definition of premises in clause 2(4-A) the Order
stood extended to open plots and, therefore, even on the
basis of the plaint allegations the same was liable to be
rejected. In the meanwhile, the respondent filed a Writ
Petition before the High Court of Judicature at Bombay,
Nagpur Bench, challenging the validity of clause 2(4-A) and
clause 13-A of the Order on the ground that the same are
ultra vires Section 2 of the C.P. and Berar Regulation of
Accommodation Act, 1947 [hereinafter referred to as the
Act]. The High Court stayed the proceedings in the appeal
pending before the District Court. A Division Bench of the
High Court declared the said provisions in clause 2(4-A) and
clause 13-A of the Order ultra vires the Act. The appellant
preferred an appeal by special leave to this Court. This
Court allowed the said appeal and the matter stood remanded
to the High Court with a direction that the High Court to
restore to its file the original Writ Petition and to decide
the question with regard to the applicability of clause
2(4-A) and clause 13-A of the Order to the facts as
available in the present case and to dispose of the Writ
Petition afresh as to the vires of the clauses, if so
warranted. In the meanwhile, Joint District Court, Akola,
allowed the appeal filed by the appellant and the suit filed
by the respondent No. 1 was dismissed. A revision
application was filed before the High Court questioning the
correctness of the order made in the appeal which is pending
consideration by the High Court.
After remand in the writ petition, the High Court took
the view that there was no appeal filed or pending against
the tenant on 26th October, 1989 when the second amendment
was published and hence it has to be inferred that no
proceedings are filed or pending against the tenant as on
that date and thus the amendment was not applicable to the
instant case as the tenancy in respect of the open plot was
deemed to have expired immediately on 10th April, 1986 in
view of Section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act and the
suit plot was not covered under the provisions of the
Central Provinces and Berar Regulation of Letting of
Accommodation Act, 1946 and the suit was decreed. The
second amendment brought into force on 26th October, 1989
was not applicable to the plot as the same would be
prospective and not retrospective. On that basis the High
Court held that clause 2(4-A) and clause 13-A of the Order
would not be applicable to the suit land and disposed of the
writ petition. This order is in challenge before us.
A contention has been raised before us that the
expression house would also include land appurtenant to
such building and, therefore, it is a part of the house and
even if the amendment is not held applicable, the High Court
should have examined the question whether the premises in
question is a house as defined under the Act or not.
Further at the time of hearing, a point, which was put forth
before us, is that clause 13-A is applicable to a pending
appeal even filed by a tenant. On behalf of the appellants
reliance is placed on three decisions Amarjit Kaur v.
Pritam Singh & Ors., 1974 (2) SCC 363; Lakshmi Narayan Guin
& Ors. v. Niranjan Modak, 1985 (1) SCC 270, and H. Shiva
Rao & Anr. v. Cecilia Pereira & Ors., 1987 (1) SCC 258, to
contend that if a rent Act is made applicable during
pendency of an appeal irrespective of the fact whether the
appeal is preferred by the landlord or by the tenant, such
appeal would be governed by the Act and its provisions would
operate from the date of the filing of the suit and if the
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suit filed not in terms of the ground specified in the rent
Act, the suit would be incompetent and, therefore, the
appeal must be disposed of accordingly. Shri V.A. Mohta,
the learned senior Advocate appearing for the respondents,
submitted that the Act provides for regulating the letting
and sub-letting of accommodation in the State of Madhya
Pradesh of which Akola town was a part prior to the
reorganisation of the States and that the Act is applicable.
Government under Section 2 of the Act could, by an order,
extend by a notification for regulating the letting and
sub-letting of any accommodation or class of accommodation
whether residential or non-residential, whether furnished or
unfurnished and whether with or without board and, inter
alia, providing for preventing the eviction of tenants or
sub-tenants from such accommodation in specific
circumstances. Therefore, it was argued that the Order is
only an administrative order and cannot have retrospective
effect and relied upon the decisions of this Court to
support this proposition in The Income Tax Officer, Alleppy
v. M.C. Ponnoose & Ors. etc., 1969 (2) SCC 351; The
Cannanore Spinning and Weaving Mills Ltd. v.. Collector of
Customs and Central Excise, Cochin & Ors., 1969 (3) SCC 112,
and Bakul Cashew Co. & Ors. v. Sales Tax Officer, Quilon
& Anr., 1986 (2) SCC 365. It was further contended that the
accommodation would only mean a residential or dwelling
house and can never mean open plot of land; that the
definition of house could not have been replaced by
premises and, therefore, the said provision is ultra
vires. It was further submitted that the appeal was filed
only against the decree and thus the bar under clause 13-A
was only in respect of passing of a decree and inasmuch as a
decree had already been passed, it would not be applicable
to a proceeding in an appeal or a revision petition. Shri
A.K. Sanghi, the learned counsel for the respondents,
adopted these arguments of Shri Mohta as to the
interpretation of the provisions and added by submitting
that there had been a surrender of the premises which,
however, was not supported by any material on record.
The vires of the provisions are not in issue before
us. Now what we have to consider in this proceeding is
whether the provisions of clause 13-A would be applicable to
the present case or not. The High Court proceeded on the
basis that there is no appeal filed or pending against the
tenant on 26th October, 1989 when the amendment came into
force and, therefore, it has to be inferred that no
proceedings were filed or pending against the tenant as on
that date. This view of the High Court does not take note
of the language of clause 13-A of the Order. The effect of
a decree passed by a court against which an appeal is filed
has been considered in Lachmeshwar Prasad Shukul v. Keshwar
Lal Chaudhuri, 1940 FCR 84, wherein the Federal Court
explained that once a decree passed by a court has been
appealed against the matter became sub-judice again and
thereafter the appellate court acquired seisin of the whole
case. It has been a principle of legislation in India at
least from 1861 onwards that a court of appeal shall have
the same powers and shall perform as nearly as may be the
same duties as conferred and imposed on courts of original
jurisdiction. Such a view was taken even before the Civil
Procedure Code was introduced in Kristnama Chariar v.
Mangammal, 1902, ILR 26 Mad 91, that the hearing of an
appeal is under the processual law of the country being in
the nature of a re-hearing and it is on the theory of an
appeal being in the nature of a re-hearing that the courts
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in this country have, in numerous cases, recognised that in
moulding the relief to be granted in a case on appeal, the
court of appeal is entitled to take into account even facts
and events which have come into existence after the decree
appealed against. As an appeal is a re-hearing, it must
follow that if an appellate court dismisses an appeal it
would be passing a decree affirming eviction and thereby
passes a decree of its own, and in the event it upsets the
decree of the trial court, it would be again passing a
decree of its own resulting in merger of decree of the trial
court with that of the appellate court. In Garikapati v.
Subbiah Chowdhry, AIR 1957 SC 540, this Court enunciated
that the legal pursuit of a remedy, suit, appeal and second
appeal are really but steps in a series of proceedings all
connected by an intrinsic unity and one to be regarded as
one legal proceeding.
After we heard the arguments, the learned counsel for
the respondents circulated a decision Motiram Ghelabhai v.
Jagan Nagar, 1985 (2) SCC 279, to contend that when a
provision is amended or repealed in respect of a pending
suit the principle that an appeal is a continuation of the
suit, cannot invoked so as to apply to appeals. In that
case, when the appeal was pending, Part II of the Bombay
Rents, Hotel and Lodging Housing Rates Control Act, 1947 was
made applicable to the area directly covered by the proviso
to Section 50 with a separate paragraph added thereto and
the appeal was liable to be decided and disposed of as if
the 1947 Act had not been passed, that is to say, the appeal
had to be disposed of in accordance with the law then
applicable to it. Therefore, in those circumstances, this
Court made the observation that the language of Section 50
of the 1947 Act read with the proviso thereto was an
ordinary repealing clause and it was held that the principle
that the appeal is a continuation of the suit could not be
invoked inasmuch as such a provision prevails over a general
provision affording protection to tenants. Otherwise, we
cannot reconcile this decision with the three decisions
referred to earlier in this order and relied on by the
learned counsel for the appellants. Hence, the learned
counsel for the respondents cannot derive any support from
this decision.
In theory the appeal is only a continuation of the
hearing of the suit. Accordingly, the word suit in the
Order has to be understood to include an appeal. The result
is that at the time of the institution of the suit for
eviction clause 13-A was not in force, but at the time of
appeal such a clause is introduced, the tenant in appeal
becomes entitled to its protection. We draw support for
these propositions from the three decisions of this Court
cited by the learned counsel for the appellants. Therefore,
we are of the view that the High Court was not justified in
holding that there was no appeal filed or pending against
the tenant. In this case, although a decree for eviction
had been passed in the suit, that decree was under challenge
in a proceeding arising out of that suit in appeal and was
pending in a court. Thus an appeal being a re-hearing of
the suit, as stated earlier, the inference drawn by the High
Court that no proceedings were filed or pending against the
tenant as on the date would not be correct..
The High Court further concluded that the amendments
have no retrospective effect. The provision came into force
when the appeal was pending. Therefore, though the
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provision is prospective in force, has retroactive effect.
This provision merely provides for a limitation to be
imposed for the future which in no way affects anything done
by a party in the past and statutes providing for new
remedies for enforcement of an existing right will apply to
future as well as past causes of action. The reason being
that the said statutes do not affect existing rights and in
the present case, the insistence is upon obtaining of
permission of the Controller to enforce a decree for
eviction and it is, therefore, not retrospective in effect
at all, since it has only retroactive force.
The problem concerning retrospectivity concerning
enactments depends on events occurring over a period. If
the enactment comes into force during a period it only
operates on those events occurring then. We must bear in
mind that the presumption against retrospective legislation
does not necessarily apply to an enactment merely because a
part of the requisites for its action is drawn from time
antecedent to its passing. The fact that as from a future
date tax is charged on a source of income which has been
arranged or provided for before the date of the imposition
of the tax does not mean that a tax is retrospectively
imposed as held in Commissioners of Customs and Excise v.
Thorn Electrical Industries Ltd., 1975 (1) WLR 1661.
Therefore, the view of the High Court that clause 13-A is
retrospective in effect is again incorrect.
The High Court further took the view that the
expression premises in the Act does not state as to when
the amendment was to be effective as it does not state
whether the amendment was retrospective or prospective. The
same is on the statute book on the date on which the suit or
proceeding is pending for purpose of eviction and cannot
ignore the provision on the statute book. Therefore, the
view of the High Court on this aspect of the matter also, is
incorrect. The arguments advanced on behalf of the
respondents that these amendments are retrospective in
character and could not have been made in the absence of an
authority under the main enactment by virtue which such
order is made is untenable.
For the aforesaid reasons, the appeals are allowed,
the order made by the High Court is set aside and the matter
is remitted to the High Court for a fresh consideration in
accordance with law. There will be no order as to costs.