Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHIV SARUP GUPTA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DR. MAHESH CHAND GUPTA
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 30/07/1999
BENCH:
V.N. Khare, R.C. Lahoti.
JUDGMENT:
R.C. Lahoti, J.
The appellant, a tenant in a residential
accommodation has sought for special leave to appeal feeling
aggrieved by an order of the High Court of Delhi which has
in exercise of jurisdiction conferred by Section 25-B (8) of
Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 allowed a civil revision and
directed the appellant tc be ejected from the suit
accommodation reversing an order of Additional Rent
Controller, Delhi dismissing the landlord’s application for
recovery of possession of the suit premises on the ground
specified in clause (e) of the proviso to sub-section (1) of
Section 14 of Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 (hereinafter the
Act, for short).
Leave granted.
The suit premises are situated at D-219, Defence
Colony, New Delhi. The building has two floors and a
Barsati. The accommodation in each of the two floors
consists of two bathrooms, two bedrooms, a study room, a
glazed verandah, a drawing-cum-dining room and a kitchen.
There is a garage on the ground floor and a servant room on
the Barsati floor. The landlord is occupying the ground
floor. In July, 1978 the first floor and the Barsati were
let out by the landlord to the tenant -appellant for
residential purpose. There was some controversy whether one
room of the suit premises had formed part of the tenancy or
was illegally encroached upon and taken possession of by the
tenant. However, that controversy is over and the parties
before us have proceeded on assumption that the.. premises
in occupation of the tenant are all included in the tenancy.
The landlord-respondent is a practising doctor
presently about 78 years of age. In January, 1988 when the
proceedings for eviction were initiated, the family of the
landlord consisted of himself, his wife, a sqn Munish (also
a practising doctor), daughter-in-law and a grand son. The
landlord has three other sons, namely, Dr. Sunil Gupta, Dr.
Anil Gupta and Shri Deepak Gupta. Dr. Anil Gupta and one
more - two sons are non-resident Indians settled abroad.
The third one has his own business and is residing
separately from the father. The need pleaded in the
application for eviction was that the accommodation on the
ground floor in possession of the landlord was not
sufficient to meet his and his family’s residential
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requirement. The landlord had a mother-in-law, suffering
from various ailments and was practically a dependent on the
son-in-law, a doctor by profession. The two doctors in the
family needed some accommodation as a part of their
residential unit for attending to the patients who visited
them either in emergency or with previous appointment at
timings other than the fixed hours of the clinic which was
being run at 2544, Sir Syed Ahmed Road, Darya Ganj, New
Delhi in a part of a house belonging to Joint Hindu Family
of the landlord which had many other members as well.
Undisputedly, the joint family house is a commercial
property and the portions other than the one occupied by the
landlord for clinic are in possession of the tenants,
Admittedly, there is a house property situated at
C-217, Sarvodya Enclave, New Delhi. The house there stands
on a plot belonging to the wife of the landlord and had come
up some time in the year 1986. Eversince the date of ’
construction and also at the time of initiation of the
present proceedings it was in occupation of a tenant and
hence not available to the landlord or his wife for their
residence. Before the Rent Controller, the plea taken and
sought to be substantiated by some evidence by the landlord
was that the landlord’s wife had executed a will whereby the
Sarvodya Enclave property was proposed to be bequeathed to
Dr. Anil Gupta, the NRI son and it is he who had invested
his own funds in constructing the property.
During the pendency of the proceedings before the
Rent Controller, the mother-in-law of the landlord expired.
The wife of the landlord also died. So far as the
requirement of the landlord by reference to the need of the
mother-in-law and of the wife as a member of the family, is
concerned, has come to an end.
The learned Additional Rent Controller held that the
landlord was the owner of the suit premises and that the
purpose of the letting was residential one. However, on the
solitary ground for ejectment, he held the alleged need of
the landlord to be not bonafide. He further held that
consequent upon the death of the mother-in-law and the wife
of the landlord, the accommodation in possession of the
landlord was sufficient to satisfy his requirement and
therefore it could not be held that the landlord was
bonafidely in need of any additional accommodation. The
learned Additional Rent Controller was also impressed by an
admission of the landlord-respondent made in his statement
that the Sarvodya Enclave property if available to the
landlord would have been sufficient to meet his requirement.
The death of the landlord’s wife in whose name stood the
property was a subsequent event having impact on the
availability of the said accommodation to the landlord for
satisfying his alleged need. In view of these findings the
Additional Rent Controller has by order dated 24.8.1995,
dismissed the application for eviction.
The landlord preferred a revision to the High Court.
The landlord also moved an application styled as one under
Order 41 Rule 27 read with section 151 of the CPC inviting
the attention of the High Court to the effect of the death
of his wife Sushila Devi on 13th January, 1995 and annexing
with the application copy of a registered will dated 13th
June, 1994 executed by late Smt. Sushila Devi. By the said
will Smt. Sushila Devi has bequeathed her house property
no. C-217, Sarvodya Enclave in favour of her four sons
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subject to Dr. Anil Gupta being reimbursed by the sons for
Rs. 2 lacs, the amount spent by him on construction over
the said property. The application proceeded to state that
it was a material evidence to decide the controversy between
the parties and so the evidence deserved to be taken on
record and the petition disposed of after taking the said
evidence into consideration. Apart from the copy of the
registered will, the copies of the lease deed dated 12.7.78
of the plot in favour of the deceased, and the
letter-cum-order from the DDA dated 29.8.1996 intimating
mutation of plot/property number C217, Sarvodya Enclave in
favour of the four sons in place of their deceased mother
late Sushila Devi were also filed. The application was
opposed on behalf of the tenant. It appears that the High
Court heard the final’ arguments. By the impugned order,
the revision filed by the landlord has been allowed and
eviction of the tenant ordered recording a finding of the
premises in occupation of the tenant being needed bonafide
for the residence of the landlord and his family. The will
dated 30th June, 1994 executed by late Sushila Devi filed
before the High Court along with the application for
additional evidence by the landlord has been taken into
consideration by the High Court though the application does
not appear to have been formally allowed and the documents
annexed therewith were not formally taken on record and
admitted - muchless proved - in evidence.
Before this Court, Ms. Syamla Pappu, the learned
senior counsel for the tenant-appellant has submitted that
the High Court has committed a jurisdictional error in
reversing the findings of facts recorded by. the Additional
Rent Controller. The jurisdiction so exercised by the High
Court is not one vested in it by sub-section (8) of Section
25B of the Act. The learned senior counsel further
submitted that the findings of act arrived at by the learned
Additional Rent Controller were based on evidence and
reasonably arrived at; there was no occasion to interfere
with and reverse the same. The learned senior counsel also
submitted that the High Court has committed a serious
jurisdictional irregularity by taking into consideration the
documents filed for the first time by the landlord before
the High Court without formally admitting the same in
evidence and without affording the tenantappellant an
opportunity of rebutting the additional evidence.
Shri Arun Jaitley, the learned senior counsel for
the landlord-respondent has supported the order of the High
Court. He submitted that the documents placed before the
High court by the landlord along with his application merely
intended a subsequent event to be brought to the notice of
the High Court. The documents were of undoubted veracity.
He further submitted that the ultimate finding arrived at by
the High Court would not be dislodged even if the documents
accompanying the application were excluded from
consideration. At ’ the end submitted Shri Jaitley that the
finding arrived at by the High Court was the only finding
that co^ld have been reasonably arrived at from the material
available on record and hence the conclusion arrived at by
the Additional Rent Controller being not one ’according to
law’ within the meaning of Section 25-B (8) was rightly set
aside by the High court, in any case the present one was not
a fit case for the exercise of jurisdiction under Article
136 of the Constitution, persuasively appealed the learned
senior counsel.
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Section 25-B of Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 finding
its place in Chapter III-A of the Act was inserted into the
body of the main Act by Act No .18 of 1976 with effect from
1.12.1975. It provides for a special procedure to be
followed for the disposal of applications for eviction on
the ground of bona fide need. Obviously, this ground for
eviction of the tenant has been treated on a footing
different from the one on which other grounds for eviction
of the tenant stand. Section 25-B is a self-contained
provision in the sense that remedy against an order passed
by the Rent Controller thereunder is also provided by that
provision itself. Sub-section (8) provides that no appeal
or second appeal shall lie against an order for the recovery
of possession of any premises made by the Controller in
accordance with the procedure specified in Section 25-B,
provided that the High Court may, for the purpose of
satisfying itself that an order made by the Controller under
this section is according to law (or not), call for the
records of the case and pass such order in respect thereto
as it thinks fit’. The phraseology of the provision as
reproduced hereinbefore provides an interesting reading
placed in juxtaposition with the phraseology employed by the
Legislature in drafting Section 115 of the Code of Civil
Procedure. Under the latter provision the exercise of
revisional jurisdiction of the High Court is circumscribed
by the subordinate court having committed one of the three
errors, namely (i) having exercised jurisdiction not vested
in it by law, or (ii) having failed to exercise a
jurisdiction so vested, or (iii) having exercised its
jurisdiction with illegality or material irregularity.
Onder the proviso to sub-section (8) of Section 25-B, the
expression governing the exercise of revisional jurisdiction
by the High Court is ’for the purpose of satisfying if an
order made by the Controller is according to law’. The
revisional jurisdiction exercisable by the High Court under
Section 25-B (8) is not so limited as is under Section 115
CPC nor so wide as that of an Appellate Court. The High
Court cannot enter into appreciation or re-appreciation of
evidence merely because it is inclined to take a different
view of the facts as if it were a court of facts. However,
the High Court is obliged to test the order of the Rent
Controller on the touchstone of "whether it is according to
law’. For that limited purpose it may enter into
re-appraisal of evidence, that is, for the purpose of
ascertaining whether the conclusion arrived at by the Rent
Controller is wholly unreasonable or is one that no
reasonable person acting with objectivity could have reached
that conclusion on the material available. Ignoring the
weight of evidence, proceeding on wrong premise of law or
deriving such conclusion from the established facts as
betray the lack of reason and/or objectivity would render
the finding of the Controller ’not according to law’ calling
for an interference under proviso to sub-Section (8) of
Section 25-B of the Act. A judgment leading to miscarriage
of justice is not a judgment according to law. [See; Sarla
Ahuja Vs. United India Insurance Co .Ltd. -(1998) 8 SCC
119 and Ram Narain Arora Vs. Asha Rani and Ors. - (1999) I
SCC 141.]
A perusal of Section 14 of the Act shows that the
law has imposed restrictions on the recovery of possession.
of any premises by landlord from a tenant notwithstanding
any law or contract to the contrary. However, an order for
recovery of possession is permissible on one or more of the
specified ground^. One such ground is the premises let for
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residential purposes being required bona fide by the
landlord for occupation as residence for himself or for any
member of his family dependent on him. What is a bofta fide
requirement is not defined in the Act. The words ’need’ and
"require’ both denote a certain degree of want with a thrust
within demanding fulfilment. ’Need’ or ’requirement’
qualified by word ’bonafide’ or ’genuine’ preceding as an
adjective - is an expression often used in Rent Control
Laws. ’Bonafide or genuine need’ of the landlord or that
the landlord ’genuinely requires’ or "requires bonafide" an
accommodation for occupation by or use for himself is an
accepted ground for eviction and such expression is often
employed by Rent Control legislation draftsman. The two
expressions are interchangeable in practise and carry the
same meaning.
Chambers 20th Century Dictionary defines bonafide to
mean ’in good faith : genuine’. The word ’genuine’ means
’natural; not spurious; real: pure: sincere’. In Law
Dictionary, Mozley and Whit ley define bonafide to mean
’good faith, without fraud or deceit’. Thus the term
bonafide or genuinely refers to a state of mind.
Requirement is not a mere desire. The degree of intensity
contemplated by ’requires’ is much more higher than in mere
desire. The phrase ’required bonafide’ is suggestive of
legislative intent that a mere desire which is outcome of
whim or fancy is not taken note of by the Rent Control
Legislation. A requirement in the sense of felt need which
is an outcome of a sincere, honest desire, in
contra-distinction with a mere pretence or pretext to ev.ict
a tenant, on the part of the landlord claiming to occupy the
premises for himself or for any member of the family would
entitle him to seek ejectment of the tenant. Looked at from
this angle, any setting of the facts and circumstances
protruding the need of landlord and its bonafides would be
capable of successfully withstanding the test of objective
determination by the Court. The Judge of facts should place
himself in the arm chair of the landlord and then ask the
question to himself-whether in the given facts substantiated
by the landlord the need to occupy the premises can be said
to be natural, real, sincere, honest. If the answer be in
the positive, the need is bonafide. The failure on the part
of the landlord to substantiate the pleaded need, or, in a
given case, positive material brought on record by the
tenant enabling the court drawing an inference that the
reality was to the contrary and the landlord was merely
attempting at finding out a pretence or pretext for getting
rid of the tenant, would be enough to persuade the Court
certainly to deny its judicial assistance to the landlord.
Once the court is satisfied of the bonafides of the need of
the landlord for premises or additional premises by applying
objective standards then in the matter of choosing out of
more than one accommodation available to the landlord his
subjective choice shall be respected by the court. The
court would permit the landlord to satisfy the proven need
by choosing the accommodation which the landlord feels would
be most suited .for the purpose; the court would not in such
a case thrust its own wisdom upon the choice Of the landlord
by holding that not one. but the other accommodation must
be accepted by the landlord to satisfy his such need. In
short, the concept of bonafide need or genuine requirement
needs a practical approach instructed by realities of life.
An approach either too liberal or two conservative or
pedantic must be guarded against.
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The availability of an alternate accommodation with
the landlord i.e. an accommodation other than the one in
occupation of the tenant wherefrom he is sought to be
evicted has a dual relevancy. Firstly, the availability of
another accommodation, suitable and convenient in all
respects as the suit accommodation, may have an adverse
bearing on the finding as to bonafides of the landlord if he
unreasonably refuses to occupy the available premises to
satisfy his alleged need. Availability of such circumstance
would enable the Court drawing an inference that the need of
the landlord was not a felt need or the state of mind of the
landlord was not honest, sincere, and natural. Secondly,
another principal ingredient of clause (e) of sub-section
(1) of Section 14, which speaks of nonavailability of any
other reasonably suitable residential accommodation to the
landlord, would not be satisfied. Wherever another
residential accommodation is shown to exist as available
than the court has to ask the landlord why he is not
occupying such other available accommodation to satisfy his
need. The landlord may convince the court that the
alternate residential accommodation though available is
still of no consequence as the same is not reasonably
suitable to satisfy the felt need which the landlord has
succeeded in demonstrating objectively to exist. Needless
to say that an alternate accommodation, to entail denial of
the claim of the landlord, must be reasonably suitable,
obviously in comparison with the suit accommodation
wherefrom the landlord is seeking eviction. Convenience and
safety of the landlord and his family members would be
relevant factors. While considering the totality of the
circumstances, the court may keep in view the profession or
vocation of the landlord and his family members, their style
of living, their habits and the background wherefrom they
come.
A few decided cases apposite to the point may be
referred. A Division Bench of Madhya Bharat High Court in
Motilal Vs. Badrilal - ILR 1954 MB 1. interpreted clause
(g) of the Madhya Bharat Sthan Niyantran Vidhan Samvat, 2006
where-under a landlord was entitled to eject a tenant if he
"really needs a house for himself and he possesses no other
accommodation belonging to him elsewhere". It was held that
the landlord was made the sole arbiter of his own
requirements but he must prove that he in fact wants and
genuinely intended to occupy-the premises. His claim would
no doubt fail if the Court came to the conclusion that the
evidence of "want" was unreliable and that the landlord did
not genuinely intend to occupy the premises. As to
alternative accommodation disentitling the landlord to the
relief of possession it was held that it must be reasonably
equivalent as regards suitability in respect to the
accommodation he was claiming. This statement of law was
cited with approval before a Full Bench of the High Court of
Madhya Pradesh in Damodar Sharma & Anr. Vs. Nandram
Deviram - AIR 1960 MP 345. Pandey,J. recording the
majority opinion emphasised the distinction between the
expressions ’genuinely requires’ and ’reasonably
requires’and said:-
"It is wrong to say that "genuinely requires" is the
same as "reasonably requires". There is a distinction
between the two phrases. The former phrase refers to a
state of mind; the latter to an objective standard.
"Genuine requirement" would vary according to the
idiosyncrasy of the individual and the time and
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circumstances in which he lives and thinks. Reasonable
requirement belongs to the "knowledge of the law" and means
reasonable not in the mind of the person requiring the
accommodation but reasonable according to the actual facts.
In my opinion, in this part of Sec.4(g), the landlord is
made the sole arbiter of his own requirements but he must
prove that he, in fact, wants and genuinely intends to
occupy the premises. His claim would no doubt fail if the
Court came to the conclusion that the evidence of "want" was
unreliable and that the landlord did not genuinely intend to
occupy the premises".
As to impact of availability of another vacant
accommodation with the landlord it was held in Damodar’s
case (supra) that it must satisfy the test of suitability
for satisfying the need of the plandlord.
The abovesaid Full Bench decision of the High Court
of Madhya Pradesh was cited with approval before this Court
in Saryats TJ3. Vs. Nerai Chand 1965 JLJ 973 (SC).
In M. M. Quasim Vs. Manohar Lal Sharma - AIR 1981
SC 1113 this Court has held (vide para 18) that the landlord
does not have an unfettered right to choose the premises but
merely showing that the landlord has some other vacant
premises in his possession may not be sufficient to negative
the landlord’s claim if the vacant premises were not
suitable for the purpose for which he required the premises.
This Court cautioned that the Court must understand and
appreciate the relationship between the legal rules and
necessities of life.
In Ram Pass Vs. Ishwar Chander and Ors - AIP 1988
SC 1422 this Court has held that:-
" the need of the landlord should be genuine and
honest, conceived in good faith; and that, further, the
court must also consider it reasonable to gratify that need.
Landlord’s desire for possession, however honest it might
otherwise be, has inevitably a subjective element in it and
that, that desire to become a "requirement" in law must have
the objective element of a "need". It must also be su^h
that the court considers it reasonable and, therefore,
eligible to be gratified. In doing so, the court must take
all relevant circumstances into consideration so that the
protection afforded by law to the tenant is not rendered
merely illusory or whittled down".
In Sarla Ahuja Vs. United India Insurance Co.Ltd.
- 1998 (8) SCC 119 this Court has held that the Rent
Controller should not proceed on the assumption that the
landlord’s requirement is not bonafide. When t^e landlord
shows a prima facie case a presumption that the requirement
of the landlord is bonafide is available to be drawn. It is
not for the tenant to dictate terms to the landlord as to
how else he can adjust himself without giving possession of
the tenanted premises. While deciding the question of
bonafides of the requirement of the landlord, it is ’quite
unnecessary to make an endeavour as to how else the landlord
could have adjusted himself.
In Prativa Devi (Smt) Vs. T.V. Krishnan, 1996 (5)
SCC 353 this court has held that in considering the
availability of alternative accommodation, not availability
merely but also whether the landlord has the legal right to
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such accommodation has to be considered.
Reverting back to the case at hand, the landlord has
been living on the ground floor of the Defence .Colony
house. It was conceded at the Bar that as on the day the
family of the landlord consists of the landlord himself (a
practising doctor), his son (again a practising doctor), the
daughter-in-law and two grand children who are gradually
growing in their age. Looking at the size of the family,
availability of three bed rooms in the premises .in which
the landlord may live, is a requirement which is natural and
consistent with the sense of decency - not to talk of
comfort and convenience. There is nothing unreasonable in a
family with two practising doctors as members thereof
needing a room or two or a room with a veranda to be used as
a residentialclinic divided into a consultation room and a
waiting place for the patients. A drawing room, a kitchen,
a living room and a garage are bare necessities for a
comfortable living. The landlord has been living in Defence
Colony locality for more than 35 years. The first floor
which was let out to the tenant in the year 1978 as being an
accommodation surplus with the landlord has with the lapse
of time become a necessity for occupation by the landlord
and his family members. More than ten years by now have
been lost in litigation. The death of the wife of the
landlord, and the death of the landlord’s mother-in-law, are
events which have hardly any bearing on the case of felt
need of the landlord. The need as pleadad and proved by the
landlord is undoubtedly natural,. sincere and honest and
hence a bonafide need. There is no material available on
record to doubt the genuineness of such need. It continues
to subsist in spite of the two deaths. It is not the case
of the tenant - appellant that while seeking eviction of the
tenant the landlord is moved by any ulterior motive or is
guided by some other thing in his mind. It will be most
unreasonable to suggest that the landlord may continue to
live on the ground floor of the Defence Colony house and
some members of the family may move to Sarvodaya Enclave
House if the whole family cannot be conveniently and
comfortably accommodated as one unit in the Defence Colony
house. It would be equally unreasonable to suggest that the
entire family must shift to Sarvodaya Enclave house which is
admittedly situated at a distance of about 7-8 kilometers
from Defence Colony. The landlord and his family are used
to living in Defence Colony where they have developed
friends and acquaintances, also familiarity with the
neighbourhood- and .the environment. The patients usually
visiting or likely to visit the residential clinic know
where their doctor would be available. Shri Arun Jaitley,
learned senior counsel for the respondent, has very rightly
submitted that it could not have been the intendment of the
Rent Control Law to compel the landlord in such facts and
circumstances to shift to a different house and locality so
as to permit the tenant to continue to live in the tenanted
premises. If the landlord wishes to live with comfort in a
house of his own, the law does not command or compel him to
squeeze himself tightly into lesser premises protecting the
tenant’s occupancy. In addition, we find that on the date
of the initiation of the proceedings, Sarvodaya Enclave
property was belonging to the wife of the landlord or to one
of his sons resident abroad and was in actual occupation of
a tenant. On the death of the wife of the landlord if any
one of the two wills (one which was in existence at the time
of initiation of the proceedings or the one, which appears
to have been subsequently executed by the landlords’ wife
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and filed before the High Court) was to be given effect to
then the ownership in the property has passed on to one son
or jointly to four sons of the landlord. If the will itself
is excluded from consideration as not proved then also the
ownership in the property has passed on to the four sons
jointly. Sarvodaya Enclave property does not belong to the
landlord and is not available for his occupation as an
owner. To these facts the applicability of law laid down in
Prativa Devi’s case (Supra) is squarely attracted. In our
opinion, the availability of Sarvodaya Enclave property is
not of any relevance or germane to determining the need and
the bonafides of the need of the landlord. We are not
therefore inclined to attach any weight to the application
for additional evidence filed by the landlord before the
High Court though we agree with the learned counsel for the
tenant - appellant that the High Court was not justified in
taking into consideration the contents of the will without
formally admitting the same in evidence and affording the
parties opportunity of adducing evidence in proof and
dis-proof thereof.
For the forgoing reasons, we are of the opinion that
the High Court did not commit any jurisdictional error in
reversing the order of the Rent Controller and upholding the
landlord’s claim for eviction. Inspite of excluding from
consideration, the documents’ which wereproposed to be filed
by the landlord on the record of the High Court, the
ultimate finding of the High Court is liable to be upheld.
On the material available on record, the only conclusion
which could have been drawn is the one drawn by the High
Court. The order of the Rent Controller was not according
to law and was, therefore, rightly set aside.
The appeal is dismissed. The tenant appellant is
however granted six months time to vacate the premises
subject to filing usual undertaking within a period of one
month on the affidavit of the appellant to deliver vacant
and peaceful possession over the premises to the landlord at
the end of the extended time and in between regularly paying
the rent. Costs as incurred.