Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 7160 of 2005
PETITIONER:
Nirmal Kanta (Dead) through Lrs.
RESPONDENT:
Ashok Kumar & Anr.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 28/03/2008
BENCH:
C.K. THAKKER & ALTAMAS KABIR
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Altamas Kabir,J.
1. This appeal by special leave is directed
against the judgment and order dated 7th January,
2002, passed by the High Court of Punjab & Haryana
at Chandigarh in Civil Revision No. 2250 of 1984
filed under Section 15 of the East Punjab Rent
Restriction Act, 1949, (hereinafter called \023the
1949 Act\024). By the said judgment, the High Court
set aside the order dated 25th October, 1983, passed
by the Appellate Authority and restored the order
dated 13th August, 1983, passed by the Rent
Controller dismissing the appellant-landlords\022
petition for eviction of the respondents under
Section 13 of the 1949 Act. The facts relating to
the filing of the eviction petition are set out in
brief hereinbelow.
2. One Smt. Nirmal Kanta, wife of Shri
T.R.Bhandari, filed the above-mentioned petition
under Section 13 of the 1949 Act seeking ejectment
of the respondents herein from the shop-room in
question. Ejectment was sought on the ground that
the tenant had not paid the rents for the tenanted
shop-room from 2nd March, 1982, till 15th June,
1982, when the eviction petition was filed. It was
also alleged that the conduct of the tenant was a
constant nuisance not only to the landlord but also
to the neighbours as well and that the landlord
wanted to construct a first floor on the demised
premises, which was being obstructed by the tenant.
A separate ground as to creation of sub-tenancy was
also pleaded along with some other grounds relating
to installation of electric meter and an attempt
being made by the tenant to establish his own title
to the suit property. The Rent Controller
dismissed the application on 13.8.1983 and against
such order of dismissal of his petition the
appellant filed an appeal before the Appellate
Authority. The Appellate Authority allowed the
appeal and set aside the order of the Rent
Controller by its judgment dated 14th June, 1984.
The tenant, the respondent No.1 herein, was
directed to put the landlord/appellant in
possession of the tenanted premises within three
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months. The respondent No.1/tenant filed Civil
Revision No. 2250 of 1984 before the High Court
against the order of the Appellate Authority and
the same was allowed on the finding that by
allowing a tailor, even on payment, to sit in a
part of the shop-room with his sewing machine,
while retaining his possession and rights as a
tenant over the premises leased to him, the
respondent No.1/tenant did not create a sub-lease
and the tailor could at best be said to be a
licensee. The High Court held that the appellant
landlord had failed to discharge his burden that
there was a sub-letting of the demised premises.
3. None of the other grounds appear to have been
urged on behalf of the appellant-landlord before
the High Court, which set aside the judgment of the
Appellate Authority only on the ground of alleged
sub-letting. It is against the said order of the
High Court that the present Special Leave Petition
has been filed.
4. At this juncture, it may be mentioned that the
sole petitioner before the Rent Controller died
during the pendency of this appeal and she was
substituted by her legal heirs in the appeal. The
appellant No.1, Tilak Raj Bhandari, the husband of
the deceased Nirmal Kanta, who is an advocate, has
appeared in person in support of the appeal.
5. He urged that the High Court had erred in
reversing the well-considered judgment and order of
the Appellate Authority on a wrong understanding of
the law relating to creation of sub-tenancies by
holding that even if it was established that the
respondent No.1-tenant had allowed the respondent
No.2, a tailor, to sit inside a part of the demised
premises with his sewing machine for the purpose of
stitching, the same would not amount to creation of
a sub-tenancy or a sub-lease. It was urged that by
allowing the respondent No.2 to use a portion of
the demised premises, the respondent No.1, had
parted with the exclusive possession of the said
portion of the demised premises, thereby, in fact,
creating a sub-tenancy.
6. The appellant No.1 urged that during the
hearing of the application filed before the Rent
Controller under Section 13 of the 1949 Act, the
Rent Controller had appointed a Local Commissioner
on 15th June, 1982, to visit the locale and to
report the factual position regarding the use of
the portion of the demised premises by Lachman
Singh working as a tailor and as to whether, he had
affixed his sewing machine, plied by feet, on the
floor at a particular point in the site plan. It
was pointed out that the Local Commissioner had
reported that on his inspection in the presence of
the parties, he found that the tailor Master
Lachman Singh was operating as a tailor from the
point shown in the site plan of the shop-room and
that he had got a sewing machine plied by feet
fixed to the said spot.
7. The appellant No.1 submitted that the report
of the local commissioner had been wrongly
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interpreted by the High Court, inasmuch as, it
amply proved that a portion of the shop-room had
been sublet to Lachhman Singh. He also submitted
that the Appellate Authority had correctly held
that the respondent-tenant was liable to be evicted
on account of such sub-letting and the High Court
had erred in reversing the said finding upon
holding that the fact that the alleged sub-tenant
was found sitting inside the shop-room would not
alone establish the sub-tenancy and that if any
person sits in the shop-room for augmentation of
the business of the tenant the plea of sub-tenancy
could not be accepted. The High Court further
observed that the Rent Controller had arrived at
the correct finding that at best Lachman Singh was
a licensee under the tenant and not a sub-tenant as
alleged by the appellant herein. The appellant
submitted that the judgment of the High Court was
contrary to the law relating to licence and sub-
tenancy and was liable to be set aside and that of
the Appellate Authority was liable to be restored.
8. On behalf of the respondents it was contended
that in order to constitute a sub-tenancy, one of
the basic ingredients is that the tenant was
required to part with possession of the whole
premises let out to him and that by allowing a
person to sit in a portion of the shop-room even if
on payment of rent do not amount to sub-letting but
at best could have created a licence. It was urged
that from the evidence on record it would be amply
clear that the respondent No.1 had not parted with
exclusive possession of the shop\026room and had only
allowed the alleged sub-tenant to operate his
sewing-machine from a portion of the shop-room and
that too for the purpose of assisting the
respondent No.1 in his cloth business.
9. It was submitted that Lachhman Singh, the
alleged sub-tenant, had been allowed to sit in the
shop-room to facilitate customers in taking
measurements for the purpose of buying cloth and as
a master tailor, Lachhman Singh\022s job was to assist
the customer to assess the amount of cloth required
for a particular purpose.
10. It was urged that even if the report of the
local commissioner showed that a sewing-machine had
been affixed to the floor in a portion of the shop-
room, that was not in the nature of a sub-tenancy
as alleged on behalf of the appellant, but in order
to assist the respondent No.1 in his business. It
was submitted that the Rent Controller, as also the
High Court, had very correctly assessed the
situation in holding that at best it could be said
that a licence had been created by the respondent
No.1 in favour of Lachman Singh in that portion of
the shop-room where the sewing-machine had been
affixed and from where Lachman Singh was operating.
11. In support of his submission learned counsel
firstly relied upon the decision of this Court in
Delhi Stationers and Printers vs. Rajendra Kumar
[(1990) 2 SCC 331] wherein the meaning of sub-
letting had been explained to mean transfer of an
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exclusive right to enjoy the property in favour of
a third party in lieu of payment of some
compensation or rent. It was observed that parting
with legal possession meant parting with possession
with the right to include and to exclude others and
that mere occupation is not sufficient to infer
either sub-tenancy or parting with possession.
12. Reliance was also placed on the decision of
this Court in Bharat Sales Limited v. Life Insurance
Corporation of India [(1998) 3 SCC 1] in which it
was held that sub-tenancy or sub-letting comes into
existence when the tenant gives up possession of the
tenanted accommodation wholly or in part and puts
another person in exclusive possession thereof in
such process. Rather, the scene is enacted behind
the back of the landlord, concealing the overt acts
and transferring possession clandestinely to a
person who is an utter stranger to the landlord. It
was further observed that it is the actual, physical
and exclusive possession of that person, instead of
the tenant, which ultimately reveals to the landlord
that the tenant to whom the property was let out has
put some other person into possession of that
property.
13. The learned counsel for the respondent also
referred to the decision of this Court in Joginder
Singh Sodhi vs. Amar Kaur [ (2005) 1 SCC 31], in
which, while dismissing the special leave petition
filed by the landlord this Court observed that as
far as sub-letting was concerned, two ingredients,
namely, parting with possession and monetary
consideration therefor have to be established. It
was submitted that neither of the two ingredients
had been proved in the instant case and all that was
relied upon by the Appellate Authority was the
report of the local commissioner which indicated
that Lachhman Singh was operating from a portion of
the shop-room where he had fixed a feet-driven
sewing machine. Regarding parting with exclusive
possession learned counsel submitted that the
respondent No.1 was always in possession of the
entire shop-room and the key of the shop-room was
retained by him and till he opened the shop-room no
one had access thereto. Various other decisions were
also referred to on behalf of the respondents, which
need not detain us.
14. The learned counsel submitted that there was no
merit in the appeal and both the Rent Controller and
the High Court had correctly dismissed the eviction
petition filed by the appellant/landlord.
15. What constitutes sub-letting has repeatedly
fallen for the consideration of this Court in
various cases and it is now well-established that a
sub-tenancy or a sub-letting comes into existence
when the tenant inducts a third party/stranger to
the landlord into the tenanted accommodation and
parts with possession thereof wholly or in part in
favour of such third party and puts him in exclusive
possession thereof. The lessor and/or a landlord
seeking eviction of a lessee or tenant alleging
creation of a sub-tenancy has to prove such
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allegation by producing proper evidence to that
effect. Once it is proved that the lessee and/or
tenant has parted with exclusive possession of the
demised premises for a monetary consideration, the
creation of a sub-tenancy and/or the allegation of
sub-letting stands established.
16. All the different cases cited on behalf of the
parties are ad-idem on this interpretation of the
law relating to the creation of a sub-tenancy or
sub-letting. As was observed by this Court in the
case of Bharat Sales Limited (supra) the arrangement
regarding the creation of a sub-tenancy or grant of
a sub-lease without the permission of the landlord
has obviously to be done behind the scene to prevent
the landlord from coming to learn of such
arrangement and it is only after the landlord finds
that stranger or a third party, other than the
tenant, was occupying the tenanted premises, does he
become aware of the creation of such sub-tenancy or
granting of such sub-lease. In the instant case,
from the report of the Local Commissioner appointed
by the Court it stands established that the
respondent No.2, Lachhman Singh, was, in fact,
operating a feet-driven sewing machine from inside
the shop-room comprising the tenanted premises. The
same has been interpreted in different ways by the
Rent Controller, the Appellate Authority and
thereafter by the High Court. From the evidence
that has come on record, it appears that the
respondent No.2 had been accommodated by the
respondent No.1 to assist him in his cloth business
by helping customers to assess the amount of cloth
required for their particular purposes. The said
activity did not give the respondent No.2 exclusive
possession for that part of the shop room from where
he was operating and where his sewing machine had
been affixed. The aforesaid issue has been
correctly decided both by the Rent Controller as
also the High Court. In our view, the learned
Appellate Authority has mis-construed the principles
relating to parting with exclusive possession which
is one of the key ingredients for arriving at a
finding regarding the creation of a sub-tenancy or
grant of a sub-lease. Since from the report of the
Local Commissioner it only appears that the
respondent No.2 was operating from a portion of the
shop-room, it is quite clear that the respondent
No.1 had not parted with exclusive possession of the
tenanted premises as had been found both by the Rent
Controller and the High Court. The main ingredient
of the creation of a sub-tenancy and/or grant of a
sub-lease not having been established, it may at
best be said that the respondent No.2 was a licensee
under respondent No.1 which would not entitle the
appellant-landlord to obtain a decree for eviction
against the respondent No.1-tenant on the ground of
sub-letting.
17. Since none of the other points appear to have
been urged before either the Appellate Authority or
the High Court, we are not called upon to deal with
the same.
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18. The appeal accordingly fails and is dismissed.
19. There will be no order as to costs.