Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 7517 of 2001
PETITIONER:
S.N. KAPOOR (DEAD) BY HIS LRS. APPE
LLANTS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BASANT LAL KHATRI & ORS. RE
SPONDENTS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/11/2001
BENCH:
M.B. Shah & Doraiswamy Raju
JUDGMENT:
W I T HCIVIL APPEAL NO. 7518 OF 2001
(Arising out of S.L.P.[C] No.13103 of 2000)
J U D G M E N T
RAJU, J.
Leave granted.
The Landlady is the appellant in the above appeals of which one arising
out of the order dated 19.1.2000 passed by the learned Single Judge of the Delhi
High Court in C.M. No.5154/99 in C.R. No.513/98 rejecting the prayer for
converting the application filed initially for eviction under Section 14 (1) (e) of the
Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 into one under Section 14 D of the said Act and to
consider the claim of the Landlady accordingly and the other arising out of the
order dated 3.7.2000 made in Civil Revision No.573/98 dismissing the main
revision petition.
Late Shri S.N. Kapoor, the original owner of the premises at A-278,
Defence Colony, New Delhi, was serving in the Indian Army and after his
retirement he established his residence at Bhopal with his wife and 5 children in
the year 1968. The premises in question at New Delhi was under tenancy. In
1982 the eldest son was said to have got married. Late Shri Kapoor and his wife
began residing with their eldest son and daughter in law. After the Bhopal Gas
Leak Accident, Late Shri Kapoor was also affected with serious ophthalmic
problems and he was under going treatment in All India Institute of Medical
Sciences at New Delhi. In view of all the above, he called upon the respondents
to vacate and deliver vacant possession of the premises for him to occupy by
shifting his residence from Bhopal to New Delhi. Since the request was not
complied with in 1986, Eviction Case No. E.119/86 for eviction of the respondent
No.1 came to be instituted also for the reason that the relationship between Mrs
Kapoor and her daughter in law were getting strained and in the advance age of
Mr. Kapoor he wanted to live in peace with his wife at Delhi. After getting leave
to defend, the first respondent opposed the application contesting the bona fides
of the landlord.
After trial by an order dated 16.3.98, the Additional Rent Controller held
that though late Shri Kapoor was the owner of the property in question and did
not own any other property in Delhi, yet the claim for owners occupation was not
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bona fide, in that the desire to shift to Delhi was not in accordance with law.
Aggrieved, late Shri Kapoor filed Civil Revision No.513/98 before the High Court
of Delhi. Pending disposal of the revision, on 1.4.99 Shri S.N. Kappor expired
and his wife was brought on record by way of substitution to enable her to
continue the proceedings. Thereafter, the wife of Shri Kapoor filed an application
under Order VII Rule 7 of the Code of Civil Procedure read with Section 14-D of
the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 that the petition filed for eviction under Section
14 (1) (e) be converted as one under Section 14-D of the Delhi Rent Control Act,
1958, she having become a widow entitled to recovery of possession and her
claims considered accordingly. As noticed earlier, this application came to be
rejected by an Order dated 19.1.2000 on the ground that the High Court had no
such powers to order for such conversion and the decision in 1995 Supp. (3)
SCC 172 in which this Court had an occasion to entertain such a claim for
conversion could not be a precedent for the High Court to do so since this Court
had wide powers under Article 142 of the Constitution of India. It is against this
Order of rejection SLP (c) No.12298/2000 came to be filed. Subsequently, the
revision was also heard on merits of the claim under Section 14 (1) (e) of the Act
and came to be rejected resulting in the filing of SLP (c) No.13103/2000.
Heard, Shri Kailash Vasdev, Senior Advocate, for the appellant in both the
appeals and Shri Prag P. Tripathy, Senior Advocate, for the respondents.
Learned counsel for the appellant strenuously contended that the orders of the
Rent Controller as well as that of the learned Single Judge in the High Court are
contrary to law and that the correct principles governing the claim have not been
properly applied to the indisputable material on record and that grave miscarriage
of justice resulted thereby. Argued the learned counsel for the appellant that on
the indisputable materials on record the High Court ought to have allowed the
application for conversion as prayed for and ordered eviction of the respondent
and the conclusion to the contrary are unsustainable in law. Per contra, the
learned counsel for the respondent contending with equal force urged that the
concurrent findings recorded by the Rent Controller as well as the learned Single
Judge of the High Court on the question of bona fide need for owners occupation
of the premises in question are well merited and do not call for any interference
in this appeal. It was also further contended that even under Section 14-D of the
Act, the essential pre-requisite of the claim being bona fide need to be
substantiated to get relief and in as much as there had been concurrent findings
against the claim, no exception could be taken to the Order passed declining the
request for conversion of the claim even on merits dehors the question of
entertainabilty of the same at that stage of the proceedings.
The plea based on concurrent findings, in our view, could not come to the
rescue of the tenant in this case, having regard to the perfunctory nature of the
said findings and want of proper consideration and lack of application of relevant
principles governing the issue. When the Court exercising jurisdiction under
Section 25-B (8) was obliged to objectively consider whether the order passed by
the Rent Controller was according to law, but has miserably failed to do so
resulting in miscarriage of justice, the High Court must be held to have failed to
exercise its powers and consequently, this Court is bound to interfere in the
matter to render real and substantive justice. All the more so when as in this
case it is shown that improper and wrong inferences have been drawn in utter
disregard of the materials on record and too technical a view has been found to
have been taken.
So far as the challenge made to the order of the High Court rejecting the
prayer to modify the relief claimed under Section 14(1)(e) of the Act for eviction
into one under Section 14-D, the manner of disposal adopted seems to be to
summary and cursory. The Court has not chosen to, except stating that this
Court had such powers under Article 142 of the Constitution of India, has not
assigned any reason as to why it cannot do so, if the circumstances so warranted
or justified in a given case. The tenability or otherwise of such a claim would
depend upon the question as to whether a decision on the claim based upon
such altered provision would require any fresh enquiry and proof of new facts,
before it could be taken up for consideration. In Surjit Singh Kalra Vs. U.O.I. &
Anr. [1991(2) SCC 87], this Court held that Sections 14-B to 14-D though
different from proviso to Section 14(1)(e) and the tenant cannot contest the
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application on grounds specified therein, can and is entitled to show that
landlords requirement was not bona fide, even when made under Section 14-D.
In EMC Steel Limited, Calcutta Vs. Union of India & Anr., etc. [(1991)2 SCC
101] also this Court, while upholding the constitutional validity of Section 14-D,
observed that the special right conferred upon the widow under Section 14D can
be availed of by her only once and she had to also prove her bona fide need like
other landlords and that the restriction under Section 19 on re-letting after
recovery of possession will also apply to her. This Court in V. Rajaswari Vs.
Bombay Tyres Intdl. Ltd. [1995 Suppl.(3) SCC 172] countenanced such a claim
of the widow in an appeal filed under Article 136 of the Constitution of India, even
when the claim under Section 14(1)(e) came to be rejected by the courts below.
In that case, this Court held that we are of the view that under Section 14-D, the
tenant has practically no defence whatever. All that has to be proved under the
said Section extracted above are (i) that the landlady is a widow and (ii) the
premises are required by her for her own residence. The Court further observed
that the fact that she is living with her daughter or any other person, is no ground
to say that the premises in question is not required for her residence. So far as
Section 14(1)(e) is concerned, the bona fide nature of the requirement need be
established for getting an order of eviction and even in the absence of a specific
stipulation in this regard this Court, in order to make the enabling power under
Section 14-D to be more reasonable read into it also the need to substantiate
that the request of the widow to recover possession of the premises for her own
residence should be bona fide. The common determining factor being the Bona
fides in both cases, and the landlady seeks an adjudication on the basis of
materials already on record there should be no impediment for the
Authorities/Courts functioning even under the Act to permit such conversion or
alteration and consider the claims made under the altered provision of law. As a
matter of fact subsequent developments and altered circumstances were held to
be relevant in adjudging the nature and character of the claim made, at all stages
of the proceedings. The High Court, in our view, erred in refusing to allow the
application for modification of the claim made under Section 14(1)(e) into one
under Section 14-D, for being considered on its merits. The order dated
19.1.2000 in CM 5154/99 is set aside and the appeal filed against the same is
allowed and application of the appellant for modification of the claim is allowed.
That the landlord has no other building in New Delhi is not in controversy
and it is also a fact specifically noticed also by the Rent Controller. The question
that does really arise for consideration is as to whether the claim of the landlady
or the need to occupy the premises at New Delhi, in the circumstances, pleaded
or demonstrated could be said to be not bona fide or reasonable merely because
the landlady is residing, for the time being, at Bhopal altogether a different city
in a different Sate also, along with her son and his family notwithstanding her
decision to live separately at New Delhi. The need felt by the landlady to do so
does appear to be sincere and honest and not a mere pretence only to evict the
tenant. No material has been brought on record and no proof has been made by
the tenant by any positive material that it is neither genuine nor bona fide or
reasonable but a mere excuse to get rid of the tenant. Though the choice or
proclaimed need cannot be whimsical or merely fanciful yet certain amount of
discretion has to be allowed in favour of the landlady too and courts should not
also impose its own wisdom forcibly upon the landlady to arrange her own affairs,
according to their own perception carried away only by the interests or hardship
of the tenant and inconvenience that may result to him in passing an order of
eviction. In adjudging the claim under Section 14-D what is required to be
substantiated is that the landlady is a widow and that she wants the premises for
her own residence and that the claim by her is bona fide and not a feigned one.
So far as a claim under Section 14(1)(e) is concerned, the very requirement has
to be shown not only to be bona fide but the move of the landlord/landlady to
seek the eviction of the tenant must be genuine. As far as the claim under
Section 14-D is concerned, the widow-landladys need for her own residence is
recognized statutorily to be a valid one, but the move or request made to avail of
the special benefit must be shown to be a bona fide and not a pretext only to get
rid of the tenant. Viewed in the context of the indisputable facts on record that
the widow has no other premises of her own at New Delhi and that she wants to
reside away from Bhopal and aloof from her daughter-in-law are by themselves
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sufficient to sustain her claim. The rejection of the claim seems to be on hyper
technical appreciation of the materials on record and does not constitute a real,
proper and effective consideration at all. Therefore, viewed from any angle, we
find the need and requirement of the appellant-landlady to be bona fide and
consequently an order of eviction shall follow. We allow the claim of the landlady
for eviction and the appeal against the order dated 3.7.2000 shall stand allowed.
So far as the time to be granted to the tenant to vacate and deliver vacant
premises is concerned, the learned senior counsel appearing for the appellant
fairly consented for one years time, subject, of course, to the usual undertakings
to be given by the tenant. We accept the same and, accordingly, give one year
time to the tenant to deliver vacant premises and this is subject to the condition
that the first respondent tenant shall file in this Court the usual Undertaking
within two weeks from the date of this judgment. The parties will bear their
respective costs.
J.
[M.B. Shah]
J.
[Doraiswamy Raju]
November 5, 2001.