Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JIVABHAI PURSHOTTAM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CHHAGAN KARSON AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
27/03/1961
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 1491 1962 SCR (1) 568
CITATOR INFO :
R 1964 SC1305 (33)
R 1966 SC1758 (10,11)
ACT:
Agricultural Land--Protected tenant--Notice by landlord for
termination of tenancy--Amendment of enactment--
Applicability--Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act,
1948 (Bom. LXVII of 1948), as amended by Amending Act
XXXIII of 1952, ss. 34 (2A), 34(1).
HEADNOTE:
Sub-section (2A) of S. 34 of the Bombay Tenancy and Agri-
cultural Lands Act, 1948, as amended by the Amending Act of
1952, applied from the date when the tenancy stood
terminated on expiry of the notice of ejectment served on
the tenant by the landlord under S. 34(1) of the Act and not
from the date of the notice.
The Amending Act could not be said to divest the landlord of
any vested right since he could have none till the period of
notice terminated and the tenancy came to an end.
Consequently, where the landlord gave notice of ejectment
under S. 34(1) of the Act, but the Amending Act came into
force before the period of notice expired the landlord could
be entitled to possession only after satisfying the
provisions of that subsection.
Durlabbhai Fakirbhai v. jhaverbhai Bhikabhai, (1956) 58 Bom.
L. R. 85, referred to.
Jeebankrishna Chakrabarti v. Abdul Kader Choudhuri, (1933)
I.L.R. LX Cal. 1037, distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 153 of 1958.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
January 9, 1956, of the Bombay High Court in Special Civil
Application No. 2258 of 1955
J. B. Dadachanji, S. N. Andley, and Rameshwar Nath, for
the appellant.
S. P. Sinha, M. I. Khowaja and A. C. Dave, for respondent
No. 1.
1961. March 27. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
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WANCHOO J.-This appeal by special leave against the judgment
of the Bombay High Court raises a question of the
interpretation of a. 34 (2-A) of the
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Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act, No. LXVII of 1948
(hereinafter called the Act). The brief facts necessary for
present purposes are these: The appellant is the landlord
and the respondent a protected tenant. The appellant gave
notice of termination of tenancy to the respondent on
December 31, 1951, under s. 34(1) of the Act. The notice
was for one year as required by s. 34(1) and the tenancy was
to terminate from after March 31, 1953. The landlord
therefore made an application on April 7, 1953, under s.
29(2) of the Act for obtaining possession of the land to the
Mamlatdar. In the meantime, an amendment. was made to the
Act by the insertion of sub-s. (2-A) to s. 34 by the
Amending Act No. XXXIII of 1952, which came into force on
January 12, 1953. By this amendment certain further
restrictions were placed on the right of the landlord to
terminate the tenancy of a protected tenant. The relevant
part of sub-s. (2-A) is in these terms:-
"If the landlord bona fide requires the land
for any of the purposes specified in sub-
section (1) then his right to terminate the
tenancy shall be subject to the following
conditions, namely-
(1) The land held by the protected tenant on
lease stands in the record of rights in the
name of the landlord on the first day of
January, 1952, as the superior holder.
(2) If the land held by the landlord is in
area equal to the agricultural holding or
less, the landlord shall be entitled to
terminate the tenancy of the protected tenant,
in respect of the entire area of such land.
(3) If the land held by the landlord is more
than the agricultural holding in area, the
right of the landlord to terminate the tenancy
of the protected tenant shall be limited to an
area which shall, after such termination,
leave with the tenant half the area of the
land leased.
(4) The tenancy in respect of the land left
with the protected tenant after termination
under this section shall not at any time be
liable to be terminated on the ground that the
landlord bona fide
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requires the said land for any of the
purposes specified in sub-section (1).
Explanation.-The "agricultural holding" shall
mean sixteen acres of jirayat land or four
acres of irrigated or paddy or rice land, or
lands greater or less in area than the
aforesaid areas in the same proportion:
The restriction contained in sub-s. (2-A) is in addition to
the restrictions in sub-s. (2), which lays down that the
landlord shall have no right to terminate the tenancy of a
protected tenant, if the landlord at the date on which the
notice is given or at the date on which the notice expires
has been cultivating personally other land fifty acres or
more in area, provided that if the land which is being
cultivated personally is less than fifty acres, the right of
the landlord to terminate the tenancy of the protected
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tenant and to take. possession of the land leased to him
shall be limited to such area as will be sufficient to make
the area of the land which he has been cultivating to the
extent of fifty acres.
When therefore the landlord applied for possession of the
land under s. 29(2) of the Act, the tenant objected and
claimed the benefit of the third clause of subs. (2-A), and
the question that arose for determination was whether the
tenant was entitled to the protection contained in this
clause The Mamlatdar to whom the application under s. 29 (2)
was made allowed the application. The respondent thereupon
appealed but his appeal was dismissed. He then went in
revision to the Revenue Tribunal, which was rejected. The
tenant then filed an application under Art. 227 of the
Constitution before the High Court and contended that the
provision of s. 34(2-A) should have been taken into
consideration by the Revenue Courts in deciding the
application of the landlord under s. 29(2) and that the
revenue courts were wrong in the view they had taken that
that sub-section did not apply to the present proceedings.
The High Court allowed the application of the tenant,
relying on its previous Full-Bench decision in Durlabbhai
Fakirbhai v. Jhaverbhai Bhikabhai (1), where it was held
that as the tenancy had
(1) (1956) 58 Bom. L.R. 85.
571
terminated and the right to obtain possession had accrued to
the landlord after the coming into force of the Amending
Act, the Amending Act applied and therefore the landlord, if
he fails to satisfy the further conditions under the
Amending Act, would not be entitled to possession. It
further held that the Amending Act would apply to all
proceedings where the period of notice had expired after the
Amending Act had come into force and that what tile
Amending. Act did was that it imposed a new limitation on
the tight of the landlord to obtain possession and if the
landlord failed to satisfy the court at the date when the
tenancy expired and he became entitled to possession that he
was so entitled in law as it then stood, he could not claim
relief from the court. It is the correctness of this view
which is being challenged before us in the present appeal.
The contention on behalf of the appellant is that s. 34(1)
gives a right to the landlord to terminate the tenancy by
one year’s notice, which was given in this case in December
1951 before the Amending Act came into force. Therefore the
notice having been given before the Amending Act came into
force, the further limitation put on the right of the
landlord by subs. (2-A), introduced by the Amending Act,
would not apply to notices given before the Amending Act
came into force. The appellant further contends that the
right to terminate a tenancy having arisen when the notice
was given, the law to be applied, in case of notices given
before the Amending Act came into force, would be the law
existing on the date of notice.
We are of opinion that there is no force in this contention.
If we look at the words of sub-s. (2-A), it provider,
certain conditions subject to which the right to terminate
the tenancy shall be exercised. It may be that s. 34(1)
requires one year’s notice in order to exercise this right
to terminate, but flubs. (2-A) imposer, restrictions on the
landlord’s right to terminate the tenancy and does not speak
of any notice at all. Therefore, when we have to look to
the application of sub-s. (2-A) it is the date on which
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the tenancy terminates which determines its application.
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The restriction by sub-s. (2-A) is on the right to terminate
the tenancy and this restriction would come into play on the
day on which the landlord’s right to terminate the tenancy
is perfected, namely, the day on which the tenancy actually
terminates in consequence of the notice given to terminate,
it. A notice under s. 34(1) is merely a declaration to the
tenant of the intention of the landlord to terminate the
tenancy; but it is always open to the landlord not to carry
out his intention. Therefore, for the application of the
restriction under sub-s. (2-A) on the right of the landlord
to terminate the tenancy, the crucial date is not the date
of notice but the date on which the right to terminate
matures, that, is, the date on which the tenancy stands
terminated. It is on ’,-$hat date that the court has to
enforce the right of the landlord arising out of the notice
of termination and therefore the court has to see whether
the termination is in accordance with the restrictions
imposed by subs.(2-A) on the date the right is to be
enforced.
Nor are we impressed by the argument that by applying sub-s.
(2-A) to notices issued before the Amending Act came into
force we would be taking away the vested right of the
landlord. As we have already pointed out, the notice under
s. 34 (1) is merely a declaration to the tenant of the
landlord’s intention to terminate the tenancy and no further
proceedings may be taken by the landlord in consequence
thereof It is only when the period of notice has expired and
the tenancy has terminated that the landlord acquires a
vested right to obtain possession of the land. Therefore,
the Amending Act did not affect any vested right of the
landlords till the tenancy actually stood terminated after
the expiry of the notice. Consequently, the provisions of
the Amending Act which came into force before the tenancy
stood terminated by the notice will have to be taken into
consideration in determining the right of the landlord in
the matter of the termination of tenancy, for the Amending
Act put certain fetters on this right of termination. In
the circumstances, we are of opinion
573
that the view taken by the High Court is correct and sub-s.
(2-A) would apply to all cases where notices might have been
given but where the tenancy had not actually terminated
before the coming into force of the Amending Act.
This view, which appears to us to be plain enough on the
words of sub-s. (2-A), is further enforced by another
consideration, even if there is any doubt as to the meaning
of sub-s. (2-A). That consideration is that the Amending
Act is a piece of beneficent legislation meant for the
protection of tenants. Therefore, if there is any doubt
about the meaning of sub-s. (2-A) that doubt should be
resolved in favour of the tenant, for whose benefit the
Amending Act was passed.,. In this view it is obvious that
the legislature could not have intended that the benefit of
this beneficent measure should not be extended to tenants in
whose cases the tenancy had not yet terminated, though
notices had been given, when the further restrictions were
being put on the right to terminate the tenancy.
Learned counsel for the appellant has drawn our attention
in this connection to Jeebankrishna Chakrabarti v. Abdul
Kader Chaudhuri (1). In that case, the Bengal Tenancy Act
was amended and the amendment provided that a tenant would
be liable to ejectment on one year’s notice by the landlord.
The earlier law provided for a notice of ejectment but did
not provide that the notice should be for one year; it pro-
vided no period of notice whatsoever and it was sufficient
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under it to give notice expiring with the end of an
agricultural year in order to effect ejectment, howsoever
short might be the period of notice. The question therefore
arose whether the amendment applied to notices given under
the old law, and the Calcutta High Court held that it did
not. The circumstances under which that decision was given
are entirely different from the circumstances of the present
case. In that case the contents of notice were changed;
while formerly what was required was a notice without any
particular period, the amendment required a notice of one
year. There was no provision in the
(1) (1933) I.L.R. LX Cal. 1037-
574
Amending Act making notices which were in accordance with
the previous law ineffective. In these circumstances the
Calcutta High Court was right in holding that the amendment
did not affect notices already given. No such question
however arises in the present case. The period of notice is
the same before and after the amendment in the present case,
and what we have to see is whether the crucial date for the
application of the new sub-section (2-A) is the date of the
notice or the date of the termination of the tenancy. We
have already held that that date must be the date of the
termination of the tenancy. In the circumstances the appeal
fails and is hereby dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.