Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MANSARAM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
S. P. PATHAK AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT29/09/1983
BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
MISRA, R.B. (J)
CITATION:
1983 AIR 1239 1984 SCR (1) 139
1984 SCC (1) 125 1983 SCALE (2)1027
CITATOR INFO :
R 1987 SC1986 (34)
RF 1988 SC1841 (8)
ACT:
Central Provinces and Berar Letting of Houses and Rent
Control Order, 1949 Cls. 22, 23, and 25 Occupation of
premises by Government servant under cl. 23(2) on an
assurance from landlord-Conditions to be satisfied before he
can be evicted for contravention of cl. 22(2).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant who had taken the premises in question on
lease while he was serving as an employee of the Telephone
Department, continued to be in possession of the same after
his retirement in 1967. Respondent No. 1 who was allegedly
in need of accommodation, filed an application before the
House Allotment Officer praying for allotment of the said
premises in his favour on the ground that the appellant had
occupied the premises in contravention of cl. 22(2) of the
Central Provinces and Berar Letting of Houses and Rent
Control Order, 1949 and that respondent No. 4 who had
inherited the premises from the original landlord was
conspiring with the appellant by letting him continue to
live in the premises. Respondent No. 4, after having once
appeared through advocate, withdrew from the proceedings.
The appellant contended that he had not contravened any
provision of the Rent Control Order as he had occupied the
premises on the assurance given by the then landlord that
the house was being permitted to be occupied in accordance
with cl. 23(2) thereof, that the deceased landlord who had
tried to obtain possession of the premises during his
lifetime on the ground of bona fide personal requirement had
failed in the attempt and that he had been accepted as the
tenant even after his retirement. The House Allotment
Officer rejected the contention and directed the appellant
to deliver possession of the premises to respondent No. 4
holding that the appellant was liable to be evicted as the
letting out of the premises to him by the landlord and his
occupation of the same in 1954, were in contravention of cl.
22(1) (b) and cl. 22(2) respectively of the Rent Control
Order and further, that having occupied the premises while
holding an office of profit under the Union of India the
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appellant was not entitled to continue to remain in
occupation of the premises after his retirement from
service. The High Court having dismissed in limine the
Special Civil Application filed by him under Art. 227, the
appellant approached this Court.
Allowing the appeal,
HELD:1. According to cl. 22(1) of the C.P. and Berar
Letting of Houses and Rent Control Order, 1949, a landlord
is under a statutory duty to intimate the Collector any
existing or impending vacancy in the premises of which he is
the landlord. The object underlying the provision is to make
140
residential accommodation available to a specified class of
persons mentioned in cl. 23 which includes a person holding
an office of profit under the Union or State Government or a
displaced or an evicted person. The Collector can allot the
premises in respect of which he has received an intimation
of vacancy under cl. 22, to anyone belonging to this
specified class and none else. The very enumeration of the
class would show that these are persons who cannot be left
to the vagaries of the law of demand and supply of
residential accommodation. It may be that, at any given
point of time, no one from the specified class may be on the
waiting list, and therefore cl. 23(2) permits the landlord
to let out such premises to any person if, after 15 days
from the date of intimation of vacancy to the Collector, an
order of allotment is not served upon the landlord. As a
sequel to the right to obtain allotment on the ground of
being the holder of an office of profit under Union or State
Government, a corresponding obligation is cast by cl. 25
upon such person to vacate the premises as soon as he ceases
to hold the office or the post which enabled him to obtain
the order of allotment. The legal liability of giving
intimation of vacancy is squarely on the landlord and if he
has given such intimation and the statutory limit of 15 days
for making an allotment order has expired, the landlord can
proceed to let out the premises to anyone. In such a
situation, the only duty cast on the tenant is to seek an
assurance from the landlord that the premises are being
permitted to be occupied in accordance with cl. 23(2). [145
E-H; 146 A-B; 147 B-C]
In the instant case the order of the House Allotment
Officer is conspicuously silent on the most relevant
question why the allegation of assurance put forward by the
appellant was not examined by him and why it was rejected
sub silentio. It was incumbent upon him to enquire whether
the deceased landlord had given intimation of vacancy and
whether any allotment order had been issued within the
period of 15 days from the date of receipt of such
intimation. The non-application of mind by the quasi-
judicial authority to this relevant point goes to the root
of the matter and vitiates the order. It was obligatory upon
respondent No. 4, who was the successor-in-interest of the
landlord, to prove that no such assurance had ever been
given to the appellant. Instead, the respondent No. 4
remained absent. Even assuming that the landlord gave a
false assurance in 1954 to the appellant, if the appellant
bona fide relied upon such assurance and it was not shown
that the appellant was in league with the landlord, he
cannot be accused of entering the premises in contravention
of cl. 23(2). The High Court was in error in rejecting in
limine the petition under Art. 227. The points raised by the
appellant merited a reasoned decision or, at least, a
speaking order briefly indicating why the contentions put
forward by the appellant did not find favour with the High
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Court. [148 G; 147 D; 148 H; E; 147 F-G; 143 G-H]
2. In order to attract cl. 25 which obligates the
holder of an office of profit to vacate the premises on his
ceasing to hold the office of profit, it must be shown that
he entered the premises under an order of allotment made by
the Collector either under cl. 23 or under cl. 24-A. [149 B]
In the instant case, in the absence of an allotment
order, it was not open to the House Allotment Officer to
draw an inference that, the premises were allotted to the
appellant because he was holding an office of profit. [149
D]
141
3. Where power is conferred to effectuate a purpose, it
has to be exercised in a reasonable manner and the
reasonable exercise of power inheres its exercise within a
reasonable time. [150 F]
In the instant case, power is conferred on the
Collector by cl. 28 to see that the provisions of the Rent
Control Order, which disclose a public policy, are
effectively implemented and, therefore, if he comes across
information that there is a contravention, he is clothed
with adequate power to set right the contravention by
ejecting anyone who comes into the premises in contravention
of the provisions. No limitation prescribed in this behalf.
But, even if the House Allotment Officer were to reach the
affirmative conclusion that the initial entry of appellant
into the premises 22 years back was an unauthorised entry
and that failure to vacate premises till nine years after
retirement was not proper, yet it was not obligatory upon
him to pass a peremptory order of eviction in the manner in
which he has done. It was open to him not to evict the
tenant. [150 E-F; G-H]
Murlidhar Aggarwal & Anr. v. State of U.P. & Ors.,
[1975] 1 S.C.R. 575 and State of Gujarat v. Patel Raghav
Natha and Ors.,[1970] 1 S.C.R. 335; referred to.
4. The appellant had entered the premises in 1954 and
there had been numerous proceedings between him and the
deceased landlord; but no one had ever raised the question
whether the appellant had entered the premises in
contravention of cl. 22(2). This would permit an inference
that the then landlord had accepted the appellant as his
tenant and his tenancy did not suffer from any infirmity.
Respondent No. 4 who is the successor in interest of the
deceased landlord did not raise any controversy about the
occupation of the premises by the appellant and rent was
accepted without question before and after the death of the
original landlord. [149 G-H; 150 A-C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1262 (N)
of 1978.
Appeal by Special leave from the Judgment and Order
dated the 4th July, 1978 of the Bombay High Court (Nagpur
Bench) in Special Civil Application No. 1957 of 1977.
G. L. Sanghi, B. Datta, V. A Boby Shyam Mudaliar and B.
P. Singh for the Appellant.
B. R. Agarwal. P. G. Gokhale and Miss Vijayalakshmi for
the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DESAI, J. Appellant Shri Mansaram son of Shri Chanduram
Sharma was serving in the telephone office at Nagpur and was
thus
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holding an office of profit under the Union of India. He
took on lease premises on a monthly rent of Rs. 75 per
month, more particularly described in the application made
to the House Allotment Officer, Nagpur by first respondent
Shri S. P. Pathak, from the then owner of the premises one
Shri Basantrai Sharma. He continued to be in possession even
after his retirement from service in 1967. Shri Basantrai
Sharma died and there is a dispute between respondents 3 and
4 and Shri Prabhakar about succession to the estate of the
deceased Shri Basantrai Sharma. Respondents 3 and 4 claimed
to be the legatees under a will of deceased Shri Basantrai
Sharma. Respondent No. 1 Shri S. P. Pathak made an
application to House Allotment Officer, Nagpur registered as
Miscellaneous Case No. 51/A-71(2)/76-77 against the present
appellant Mansaram alleging that the appellant had occupied
the premises involved in the dispute in contravention of
sub-cl. (2) of Clause 22 of the Central Provinces and Berar
Letting of Houses and Rent Control Order, 1949 (’Rent
Control Order’ for short), in that he occupied the premises
to which Chapter III of the Rent Control Order applies
without obtaining an order under sub-cl. (1) of Clause 23 or
Clause 24 or without an assurance from the landlord that the
premises are being permitted to be occupied in accordance
with sub-cl. (2) of Clause 23. To this petition, respondent
4 Smt. Usha Rani N. Sharma was also impleaded as a
respondent but after having once appeared through advocate,
she did not prefer to remain present along with her counsel
and the House Allotment Officer proceeded against her ex
parte. In the application made by Shri S. P. Pathak, Ist
respondent on December 7, 1976, it was in terms stated that
the appellant Shri Mansaram Sharma was a Government servant
employed in the telephone department at Nagpur and the
appellant has now retired from service and therefore, is not
entitled to retain the demised premises. It was further
alleged that the former owner of the premises Shri Basantrai
Sharma has died. The premises have been inherited by
respondent 4 Smt. Usha Rani N. Sharma and she and the tenant
Mansaram Sharma have conspired together and are violating
the provision of law by letting Shri Mansaram Sharma to
continue to live in the premises. It was further alleged
that the appellant Shri S. P. Pathak was badly in need of
premises and therefore, the premises may be allotted to him.
Appellant Shri Mansram Sharma appeared and filed a
written statement inter alia contending that he occupied the
premises on the assurance given by the then landlord Shri
Basantrai Sharma that
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the house is being permitted to be occupied in accordance
with sub-cl. (2) of Clause 23. It was further contended that
in a proceeding under the Rent Control Order, that late Shri
Basantrai Sharma, the deceased landlord, had sought
possession of the premises on the ground of bona fide
personal requirement but he had lost the same. It was
further alleged that Shri S. P. Pathak is a near relation of
Shri Basantrai Sharma and that he has been put forward by
Smt. Usha Rani N. Sharma for seeking a collusive order. It
was further alleged that it is incorrect to say that he
occupied the house under any allotment order. It was further
stated that since his retirement in July, 1967, he has been
accepted as tenant and therefore, no proceeding can be taken
against him under Clause 28 of the Rent Control Order for
alleged contravention of clause 22.
The House Allotment Officer held that Shri Basantrai
Sharma let out the premises to the appellant in the year
1954 in contravention of clause 22(1) (b) of the Rent
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Control Order and the appellant occupied the premises in
contravention of clause 22(2) of the Rent Control Order and
therefore, he was liable to be evicted under clause 28. It
was further held that the appellant had occupied the
premises when he was holding an office of profit under the
Union of India and now that he has retired, he is not
entitled to continue in the premises and therefore, also he
is liable to be evicted. Accordingly, the House Allotment
Officer by his order dated November 2, 1977 gave a direction
to the appellant to vacate the premises within a fortnight
from the communication of the order and deliver the
possession of the premises to Smt. Usha Rani N. Sharma
failing which action will be taken under clause 28(1) of the
Rent Control Order.
Appellant filed a Special Civil Application No. 1957 of
1977 before the Nagpur Bench of the Bombay High Court. A
learned Single Judge dismissed the petition in limine. Hence
this appeal by special leave.
At the outset, we must confess that the learned Single
Judge was completely in error injecting the petition under
Art. 227 of the Constitution in limine because various
points raised by the appellant are such that atleast a
reasoned decision by the High Court was a must or atleast a
speaking order briefly showing why these contentions did not
find favour with the High Court. At one stage, we were
toying with the idea to remit the matter to the High Court
but
144
that would merely be further delaying the already over
delayed proceedings.
Order 22 of the Rent Control Order reads as Under:
"22(1)-Every landlord of a house situated in an
area to which this Chapter extends, shall-
(a) within seven days from the date of the extension
of this chapter, if the house is vacant on such
date; or
(b) within seven days from the date on which the
landlord becomes finally aware that the house will
become vacant or available for occupation by
himself or for other occupation on or about a
specified date; give intimation of this fact to
the Collector of the district in which the area is
included or such other officer as may be specified
by him, in the Form given in the Schedule appended
to this Order, and shall not let or occupy the
house except in accordance with sub-clause (2) of
clause 23."
(2) No person shall occupy any house in respect of
which this chapter applied except under an order under
sub-clause (1) of clause 23 or clause 24 or on an
assurance from the landlord that the house is being
permitted to be occupied in accordance with sub-clause
(2) of clause 23."
Clause 23 provides that within fifteen days from the date of
receipt of intimation of vacancy under Clause 22, the
Collector may order the landlord to let the vacant premises
to any person holding an office of profit under the Union or
the State Government or to any person holding a post under
the Madhya Pradesh Electricity Board or to displaced person
or to an evicted person and thereupon not withstanding any
agreement to the contrary, the landlord shall let the house
to such person and place him in possession thereof
immediately, if it is vacant or as soon as it becomes
vacant. There is a proviso to clause 23 which provides that
simultaneously while giving intimation of the vacancy, if
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the landlord intimates to the Collector that he needs the
house which has fallen vacant or is likely to fall vacant
for his occupation, the Collector shall, if satisfied after
due enquiry that the house is so needed, permit the landlord
145
to occupy the same. This proviso is not relevant for the
present purpose. Sub-clause (2) of Clause 23 provides that
if no order is passed and served upon the landlord within
the period specified in sub-clause (1), he shall be free to
let the vacant house to any person. Clause 25 provides that
where a person is allotted the premises and is put in
possession thereof by an order under clause 23 or 24 A, his
tenancy shall stand terminated amongst others on the date
from which he ceases to hold an office of profit under Union
or a State Government etc. and such person shall vacate such
premises within seven days of such date and the landlord and
the tenant shall give the intimation about the same as
prescribed in clause 22 to the Collector in respect of such
premises. There is a proviso which confers power on the
Collector to extend the tenancy by a period not exceeding
four months. Clause 28 confers power on the Collector to
effectively carry out the duty and obligation cast on him
under Chapter III. Clause 28 reads as under:
"28.(1)-The Collector may take or cause to be
taken such steps and use or cause to be used such force
as may, in his opinion, be reasonably necessary for the
purpose of securing compliance with, or for preventing
or rectifying any contravention of this Order or for
the effective exercise of such power."
The relevant provisions noticed hereinbefore will show
that the landlord is under a statutory duty to intimate the
existing or impending vacancy in the premises of which he is
the landlord to the Collector (clause 22(1)). The object
underlying the provision is to make available residential
accommodation to the Collector for allotting the same to a
specified class of persons set out in clause 23. This class
comprises any person holding an office of profit under the
Union or State Government or any person holding a post under
the Madhya Pradesh Electricity Board, or a displaced person
or an evicted person. The Collector can allot the premises
in respect of which he has received an intimation of vacancy
under clause 22, to anyone belonging to the specified class
and none else. The very enumeration of the class would show
that these are persons who cannot be left to the vagaries of
the law of demand and supply of residential accommodation
and they are required to be assisted in this behalf for
efficient performance of public service or one who is
roofless on account of being a displaced person or evicted
person. It may be that at any given point of time, no one
from class for
146
whose benefit power is conferred on the Collector to allot
vacant premises may be on the waiting list and therefore,
sub-clause (2) of clause 23 permits the landlord to let out
such premises in respect of which he has intimated a vacancy
to any person if within fifteen days from the date of
intimation of vacancy to the Collector, an order of
allotment is not served upon the landlord. As a sequel to
the right to obtain allotment on the ground of being holder
of office of profit under Union or State Government a
corresponding obligation is cast upon such person to vacate
the premises as soon as he ceases to hold office or the post
which enabled him to obtain the order of allotment. To give
full effect to these provisions, power is conferred on the
Collector to take appropriate action to enforce provisions
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of clauses 22 to 27.
The application made by Ist respondent Shri S. P.
Pathak on December 7, 1976 to the House Allotment Officer
complained of appellant not vacating the premises even
though he has ceased to hold the office of profit. There was
not the slightest complaint that when the appellant entered
the premises in 1954, either he did it under an order of
allotment made by the Collector or surreptitiously or in
league with the then landlord Shri Basantrai Sharma or in
violation of the mandatory requirement of Clause 22. Yet the
House Allotment Officer proceeded to enquire as to whether
clause 22(1) (b) and 22(2) were contravened when the
appellant entered the premises in 1954.
The first question that should engage our attention is
whether the House Allotment Officer was right in holding
that there was any contravention of clauses 22(1) (b) and
22(2) of the Rent Control Order at the time when appellant
entered the premises in 1954. It is necessary to focus
attention on the contention of the appellant in this behalf.
He contended in the written statement that he entered the
premises on an assurance from the landlord that the premises
were being permitted to be occupied in accordance with sub-
clause (2) of clause 23, which permits the landlord to let
out the premises to whomsoever he considers proper if he has
not received an allotment order from the Collector within
fifteen days from the date of the receipt of the intimation
of vacancy under clause 22. No record was produced by the
applicant before the House Allotment Officer whether Shri
Basantrai Sharma, who was then the landlord and the owner of
the house intimated to the Collector that a portion of the
house which was then in his occupation was intended to be
let out. There is not one word in the order of the
147
House Allotment Officer as to how and in what circumstances
Shri Basantrai Sharma, the then owner let out the premises
to the appellant. If a landlord assures an incoming tenant
that he has complied with the provisions of clause 22, the
tenant can enter the premises without being charged for
having contravened sub-clause (2) of clause 22. The legal
liability of giving intimation of vacancy is squarely on the
landlord as provided by clause 22. If the landlord has
given intimation of vacancy under clause 22 and the
statutory limit of 15 days for making an allotment order has
expired, the landlord on his own can proceed to let out the
premises in respect of which he has sent the intimation of
vacancy to anyone he chooses to accept as tenant. In such a
situation, the only duty cast on the tenant is to seek an
assurance from the landlord that the premises are being
permitted to be occupied in accordance with sub-clause (2)
of clause 23. The appellant specifically contended that he
entered the premises on such an assurance from the landlord.
In this state of pleading, it was incumbent upon the House
Allotment Officer to enquire whether deceased Basantrai
Sharma had given intimation of vacancy and whether any
allotment order was issued within the period of 15 days from
the date of the receipt of the intimation of it. If it was
found that deceased Basantrai Sharma had given an intimation
of vacancy and that no allotment order was issued within 15
days from the receipt of the same and that he gave an
assurance to the appellant that the premises are being
permitted to be occupied in accordance with sub-clause (2)
of clause 23, obviously even if the quondam tenant occupied
the premises without an allotment order, he could not be
charged with contravention of sub-clause (2) of clause 23.
Assuming that landlord Basantrai Sharma gave a false
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assurance in 1954 to the appellant that the landlord had
sent an intimation of vacancy and that no allotment order is
secured within fifteen days from the date of intimation of
vacancy and accordingly false assurance was given, the
tenant if he bona fide relied upon the assurance emanating
from the landlord and is not shown to be in league with the
landlord, he would none the less be protected and cannot be
accused of entering premises in contravention of clause
23(2). The House Allotment Officer has recorded no finding
on this important point and therefore, on this short ground
his order is liable to be set aside.
We however find a greater infirmity in the order of the
House Allotment Officer. In the absence of an allotment
order being produced by the appellant, three possible
surmises are permissible;
148
They are: (1) Shri Basantrai Sharma never sent the
intimation of vacancy, (ii) that even though he did send the
intimation of vacancy and yet he did not receive any
allotment order within the prescribed period, and (iii) that
he surreptitiously let out the premises to the appellant
after giving him a false assurance that he has complied with
clause 22. If the allotment order was in fact issued, a copy
of it would be with the appellant as well it must have been
sent to the landlord. There would be an office copy in the
file of the case. No such allotment order is forthcoming. In
the absence of an allotment order, before the appellant
could be charged with contravention of clause 22(2), it was
incumbent upon the House Allotment Officer to enquire
whether Basantrai Sharma had sent any intimation of vacancy
to the Collector as required by clause 22(1) (b). If it was
not sent, could his successor in interest take advantage of
his own wrong when Smt. Usha Rani N. Sharma who claims to be
the inheritor of the premises deliberately remained absent
to help the applicant Shri S. P. Pathak, who is alleged to
be a near relation of the husband of Smt. Usha Rani N.
Sharma and who is keen to enter the premises by alleging
contravention of clause 22(1) (b) nearly 22 years before the
commencement of the proceedings. Further the tenant
contended that deceased landlord gave him an assurance as
required by clause 23(2). In the light of this contention it
was obligatory upon the landlord or his successor in
interest to prove that no such assurance as claimed by the
appellant was ever given to him. Shri S.P. Pathak, the
applicant claims to be a stranger. Original landlord
Basantrai Shrama was dead by the time the present
proceedings commenced. Her successor in interest Smt. Usha
Rani N. Sharma remained absent. Appellant gave evidence that
he was given the assurance that the premises were being let
out to him in accordance with sub-clause(2) of clause 23.
And sub-clause(2) of clause 22 protects a tenant against
charge of unauthorised occupation if he enters premises on
the assurance as aforesaid as provided in clause 22(2). The
order made by the House Allotment Officer is conspicuously
silent on this most relevant question why the allegation of
assurance put forward by the appellant was not examined by
him and why it was rejected sub silention. The non-
application of mind by the quasi judicial authority to the
most relevant point which goes to the root of the matter
completely vitiates the order of the House Allotment
Officer, because once the allegation of assurance canvassed
for on behalf of the appellant is accepted, he is not liable
to be evicted on the ground that he entered the premises in
contravention of clause 22(2).
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There is a still further infirmity in the order of the
House Allotment Officer. Admittedly, the appellant entered
the premises in 1954. He was then serving in the telephone
department which would permit an inference to be drawn that
he was holding an office of profit in the Union of India.
But in order to attract clause 25 of the Rent Control Order
which obligates such holder of the office of profit to
vacate the premises on his ceasing to hold the office of
profit, it must be shown that he entered the premises under
an order of allotment made by the Collector either under
clause 23 or clause 24A. Existence of an order of allotment
under clause 23 or clause 24A in favour of a person holding
an office of profit under the Union of India or the State
Government is a sine qua non before the obligation under
clause 25 can be fastened upon him to vacate the premises on
ceasing to hold the office of profit which enabled him to
get an order of allotment in his favour. In the absence of
an allotment order, it is not open to the House Allotment
Officer to draw an inference that the premises were allotted
to the appellant because he was holding an office of profit.
If there is no order of allotment issued to the appellant on
the ground that he is holding an office of profit. The House
Allotment Officer had no jurisdiction to call upon him to
vacate the premises on the short ground that he has ceased
to hold the office of profit. The House Allotment Officer
has in terms held that as the appellant has retired in 1967,
and therefore he is not entitled to continue to occupy the
premises. This line of reasoning proceeds on the assumption
that there was initially an order of allotment in favour of
the appellant on the ground that he was holding an office of
profit, the assumption being not borne out by the facts. In
the absence of an allotment order, the House Allotment
Officer has no jurisdiction to call upon the appellant to
vacate the premises on the short ground that he has ceased
to hold the office of profit.
What is stated hereinbefore is sufficient to quash and
set aside the order of the House Allotment Officer. However,
there is one more aspect of the matter which we cannot
overlook. The appellant entered the premises in 1954. There
have been numerous proceedings between him and the late
Basantrai Sharma who let out the premises to the appellant
but no one ever raised the question whether the appellant
had entered the premises in contravention of clause 22(2).
Till Basantrai Sharma died, no one raised the controversy
about the entry of the appellant in the premises as being
unauthorised or in contravention of clause 22. Basantrai
Sharma in his life time tried to
150
obtain possession of the premises from the appellant
alleging grounds available to him under the Rent Control
Order other than unauthorised entry. This would permit an
inference that Basantrai Sharma accepted the appellant as
his tenant and his tenancy did not suffer from any
infirmity. After Basantrai Sharma died, her successor in
interest one Smt. Usha Rani N. Sharma did not raise any
controversy about the occupation of the premises by the
appellant. One Mr. S.P. Pathak, a total stranger has come
forward to complain about the unauthorised entry of the
appellant in the premises. The unauthorised entry according
to the appellant was in the year 1954. Appellant retired in
1967. Basantrai Sharma was alive in 1967. If appellant came
into the premises because he was holding an office of
profit, obviously Basantrai Sharma would not miss the
opportunity to evict the appellant because he was otherwise
also trying to do the same thing. Rent was accepted without
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question from the appellant by Basantrai Sharma till his
death and thereafter. Could he be at this distance of time,
thrown out on the ground that his initial entry was
unauthorised. To slightly differently formulate the
proposition, could the initial unauthorised entry, if there
be any, permit a House Allotment Officer, 22 years after the
entry, to evict the appellant on the short ground that he
entered the premises in contravention of clause 22(2) ?
Undoubtedly, power is conferred on the Collector to see that
the provisions of the Rent Control Order which disclosed a
public policy are effectively implemented and if the
Collector therefore, comes across information that there is
a contravention, he is clothed with adequate power to set
right the contravention by ejecting anyone who comes into
the premises in contravention of the provisions. But when
the power is conferred to effectuate a purpose, it has to be
exercised in a reasonable manner. Exercise of power in a
reasonable manner inheres the concept of its exercise within
a reasonable time. Undoubtedly, no limitation is prescribed
in this behalf but one would stand aghast that a landlord to
some extent in pari delicto could turn the tables against
the person a who was in possession for 22 years as a tenant.
In such a situation, even though the House Allotment Officer
was to reach an affirmative conclusion that the initial
entry 22 years back was an unauthorised entry and that
failure to vacate premises till 9 years after retirement was
not proper, yet it was not obligatory upon him to pass a
peremptory order of eviction in the manner in which he has
done. In such a situation, it would be open to him not to
evict the appellant. In this connection, we may refer to
Murlidhar Agarwal
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and Anr. v. State of U.P. & Ors. wherein one Ram Agyan Singh
who came into possession of premises without an order of
allotment in his favour as required by sec. 7(2) of the U.P.
(Temporary) Control of Rent and Eviction Act, 1947, was
permitted to retain the premises by treating his occupation
lawful and this court declined to interfere with that order.
No doubt it must be confessed that sec. 7A conferred power
on the District Magistrate to take action against
unauthorised occupation in contravention of the provisions
of the U.P. (Temporary) Control of Rent and Eviction Act,
1947, but there was a proviso to the section which enabled
the District Magistrate not to evict a person found to be in
unauthorised occupation, if the District Magistrate was
satisfied that there has been undue delay or otherwise it is
inexpedient to do so. There is no such proviso to clause 28
which confers power on the Collector to take necessary
action for the purpose of securing compliance with the Rent
Control Order. But as stated earlier, where power is
conferred to effectuate a purpose, it has to be exercised in
a reasonable manner and the reasonable exercises of power
inheres its exercise within a reasonable time. This is too
well established to need buttressing by a precedent.
However, one is readily available in State of Gujarat v.
Patel Raghav Natha & Ors. In that case Commissioner
exercised suo motu revisional jurisdiction under sec. 211 of
the Bombay Land Revenue Code which did not prescribe any
period of limitation for exercise of revisional
jurisdiction. The Commissioner exercised revisional
jurisdiction one year after the Collector made the order
which was sought to be revised. The High Court set aside the
order of the Commissioner. In the appeal by State of
Gujarat, this Court declined to interfere holding inter alia
that the revisional power in the absence of prescribed
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period of limitation must be exercised within a reasonable
time and period of one year was held to be too late. This
aspect must be present to the mind of House Allotment
Officer before just rushing in on an unproved technical
contravention brought to his notice contrived by the
successor in interest of the deceased landlord, and evicting
the appellant 22 years after his entry and 9 years after his
retirement on the short ground that his entry in the year
1954 was in contravention of clause 22(2).
Having examined all the aspects of the matter, we are
satisfied that the order of the House Allotment Officer
suffers from numerous
152
infirmities and is unsustainable and must be quashed and set
aside as also the order of the High Court dismissing the
Special Civil Application No. 1957 of 1977 preferred by the
present appellant. Accordingly this appeal succeeds and is
allowed and the application made by the first respondent to
the House Allotment Officer is dismissed with no order as to
costs throughout.
H.L.C. Appeal allowed.
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