Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
B. BANERJEE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ANITA PAN
DATE OF JUDGMENT20/11/1974
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
GOSWAMI, P.K.
CITATION:
1975 AIR 1146 1975 SCR (2) 774
1975 SCC (1) 168
CITATOR INFO :
F 1976 SC 479 (8)
E&R 1978 SC1062 (4,6,7,9)
RF 1978 SC1296 (59)
E 1980 SC 214 (26)
R 1980 SC 898 (66)
R 1980 SC1124 (18)
MV 1982 SC1325 (31)
O 1983 SC1155 (13,15,23,27,29)
F 1985 SC 376 (4)
ACT:
West Bengal Premises Tenancy Act 1956 as amended in 1969-S.
13(1)(f) and (ff)-Constitutional validity of-Whether offends
Art. 19(1)(f) and (5).
HEADNOTE:
Section 13(1)(f) of the West Bengal Premises Tenancy Act,
1956 Act XII of 1956) enacted that no order or decree for
the recovery of possession of any premises shall be made by
any court in favour of the landlord against the tenants
except among others, on the ground that the premises are
reasonably required by the landlord either for the purpose
of building or rebuilding or for making thereto substantial
additions or alterations or for his own occupation if he is
the owner or for the occupation of any person for whose
benefit the premises are held.
Section 13(4) of the Act provides that where a landlord
requires the premises on any of the grounds mentioned in cl.
(1)(f) and the Court is of opinion that such requirement may
be substantially satisfied by ejecting the tenant from a
part only of the premises the Court shall pass a decree
accordingly. In 1969 the Act was amended by West Bengal
Premises Tenancy (Second Amendment) Act. Section 13 of the
original Act was amended by introducing sub-section (3A) in
it. This sub-section prohibits institution of a suit for
ejectment of a tenant by a landlord who has purchased the
premises for his own use within three years of the purchase.
The Amending Act also enacted that the said Act shall apply
to suits and appeals, which are pending at the date of the
commencement of the Act.
The respondent purchased the suit premises in which the
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appellant was a tenant and instituted a suit for ejectment
of the tenant under s.13(1)(f) of the original Act. The
suit was decreed by the lower court and affirmed by the
lower appellate court. A single Judge of the High Court
dismissed the appeal. When the Letters Patent Appeal was
pending before the High Court, the Amending Act of 1969 was
passed, whereupon, the tenant-appellant invoked the
provisions of the new sub-sec. (3A) and contended that since
the landlord had instituted a suit the ejectment within
three years of the purchase, the suit should be dismissed.
The High Court held that s.3A was valid prospectively but
that the restriction imposed by the sub-section. giving it
retrospective effect, was violative of Art. 1(1) (f) of the
Constitution.
Per Beg and Krishna Iyer, JJ:
Allowing the appeals and remitting the case to the High
Court,
HELD : (1) (a) There is no violation of Art. 19(1) (f) read
with Art. 19(5) of the Constitution in the Amending Act, and
s.13 of the original Act, as amended is valid. The evil
corrected by the Amendment Act is to stop the influx of a
transferee class of evictors of tenants and institution of
litigation to eject and rack-rent or re-build to make large
profits. Apparently the inflow of such suits must have been
swelling slowly over the years and when the stream became a
flood the Legislature rushed with an amending bill. Had it
made the law merely prospective, those who had, in numbers,
already gone to Court and induced legislative attention
would have escaped the inhibition. This would defeat the
object and so the application of the additional ban to
Pending actions could not be called unreasonable. There is
no foundation for the assumptions made by the High Court
that there may be cases of ejectment instituted prior to
1956 or that a number of suits and decrees, perhaps decades
old. will unjustly be nullified by the previous operation of
the new ban. Recondite instances and casual hardships
cannot deflect constitutional construction of social
legislation,
775
if the main thrust of the statute relates to a real social
evil of dimensions deserving to be antidoted by antedated
legislative remedy. Questions such as whether those cases
which were filed several years ago should have been carved
out of the category of transferees hit by the Act, and at
what point of time the evil assumed proportions were best
left to legislative wisdom and not to courts commonsense.
[788C-D; 787F-G; 783F; 787H]
In the instant case the two landlord-respondents had
purchased the buildings in the early sixties, but while
considering the constitutionality the Court would not be
moved by such accidental instances. The substantial evil
has been substantially met by a broad application of the new
ban to pending proceedings. [788C]
Section 13. fairly read, directs that the amendment made by
s. 4 shall have effect in respect of suits, including
appeals, pending at the commencement of the Act. The Court
is, therefore, bound to give effect to s. 4 in pending
actions regardless of isolated anomalies and individual
hardships. [788G]
(b)Where two interpretations are possible that which
validates the statute and shortens litigation should be
preferred to the one which invalidates or proliferates it.
Although the old cl. (f) is substantially similar to the
present cls.(f) and (ff) the latter imposes more severe
restrictions protecting the tenants. Much more has to be
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proved by the landlord now before he can get eviction than
when he was called upon to under the earlier corresponding
provision of the basic Act. Moreover, the three year
prohibition against institution of the suit is altogether
new. It follows, therefore, that on the present allegation
and evidence the landlord may not get a decree, his suit
having been instituted at a; time when he could not have
foreseen the subsequent enactment saddling him with new
conditions. [789C; 789B]
Though therefore, the suit, as originally brought in, would
be defective since it did not and could not contain the
averments complying with the new cls. (f) and (ff) of s.
13(1) it is made effective by construing the term
’institute’ in a natural and grammatical way. [789D]
(c)’To institute is ’to begin or commence’. The
prohibition clamped down by sub-section (3A), carefully
read, is on suits for recovery of possession by transferee-
landlords on any of the grounds mentioned in cl. (f) Qr cl.
(ff) of sub-section (1). [789G]
In the instant case the suits were not for recovery on
grounds contained in clauses (f) and (ff). They were based
on the repealed cl.(f) of s.13 of the basic Act. Strictly
speaking sub-section (3A) brought in by s. 4 of the Amending
Act applies only if (a) the suit is by a transferee-
landlord; (b) it is for recovery of possession of premises;
and (c) the ground for recovery is what is mentioned in cls.
(f) and (ff) of sub-section (1). Undoubtedly the third
condition is not fulfilled and therefore sub-s. (3A) is not
attracted. [789H]
(d)But since the new cls.(f) and (ff) were included by the
Amendment Act in s.13 of the basic Act and since the suits
did not seek eviction on those grounds they will have to be
dismissed on account of the omnibus inhibition on recovery
of possession contained in s. 13 itself. [790C]
Per Goswami, J : (1)(a) In trying to include old actions
that may be surviving in courts because of laws’ proverbial
delay s. 13 of the Amended Act has gone far in excess of the
actual needs of the time and problems and the provisions
therefore cannot be said to impose a reasonable restriction
on the right of the transferee landlords, albeit a well
defined class amongst the landlords, to hold and enjoy their
property in the interest of the general public. Such
transferee-landlords with pending old actions in suits or in
appeals are not likely to be of a large number. The
imposition of such restrictions on a few transferee-
landlords cannot be in the general interests of the large
body of tenants. If relief in the shape of postponement of
the landlord’s suit were the object of sub-section (3A) in
giving retrospectivity to it. the law did not take count of
the inevitable long
776
delay that takes place in pending litigation as a result of
man-made laws of procedure in courts such as have been
clearly demonstrated by the cases at hand. The lawthat
misses its object cannot justify its existence. Besides it
will be a sterilerelief if tenants have to face a fresh
summons next days. [798A-C]
(b)Under the Constitution an individual’s right will have
to yield to the commonweal of the general community, That
general community may be in broad segments but even then
must form a class as a whole. A few individuals cannot take
the Place of a class and for the matter of that the general
public. [798H]
In the present case the relief contemplated by the Amendment
Act is in favour of tenants in general and the restriction
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under sub-section (3A) must be viewed in that context. It
cannot be said that the legislature in applying sub-section
(3A) retrospectively has achieved that avowed object at all.
The applicability of the blanket ban to pending suits and
appeals cannot be said to be a reasonable restriction in ,he
interest of general public. [799A-B]
(c)Sub-section (3A) so far as it is retrospective and as
such applicable to pending suits including appeals is ultra
vires Art. 19(1) (f) of the Constitution. The provision is
valid only prospectively. The retrospectivity so far as
subsection (3A) in concerned with regard to institution of
suits made applicable to pending suits and appeals is
clearly very wide of a reasonable mark and is an imposition
of an unreasonable restriction on the right of the
transferee landlords in pending suits which had been
instituted prior to the amendment Act and in appeals arising
therefrom and it is not saved by the protective clause (5)
of Art. 19 of the Constitution. [799D-E]
(2)On the terms of only s. 13 (3A) it is difficult to hold
that it would bring old actions within the mischief of s.
13(3A) which imposes a ban expressly on institution of suits
within three years of the acquisition of ownership of the
premises subject to the relaxation contained in the proviso
thereto. [796B-C]
(3)Section 13(1)(f) and (ff) are not ultra vires of Art.
19(1)(f) of the Constitution. Further reliefs have been
sought to be given to the tenants as a class by these
provisions in the Amendment Act. These further reliefs are
in the general interests of tenants and can be applied
without any difficulty, to pending suits including appeals.
There is nothing unreasonable about such a retrospectivity
in applying these provisions for the general welfare of
tenants in securing for them asafe and sure tenure as
far as practicable untrammelled by inconvenient
litigation.[799F-G]
Arguments for theappellants In C.A. 2063/73 by P. C.
Chatterjee
There is no vestedright to eject on determination of the
tenancy but it is conditioned by s. 13, Cl. (a) to (k) and
therefore right to eject is not vested in the landlord until
a decree is passed. Upto that stage it is contingent depen-
ding on the satisfaction of cl. (a) to (k) of s.13. If there
is no vested property right, no question of Art. 19(1)(f) of
the Constitution will arise. By denying the right to eject
for three years from the date of purchase the right to
property is not restricted or burdened. The approach of the
High Court of separately treating prospectivity and
retrospectivity is not correct. The correct approach
adopted by this Court is that in considering the
reasonableness of any provision retrospectivity of the law
is a factor to be considered. Retrospective operation is
not bad because it covers a period of 10 years or so.
For respondent (In C.A. 1304 of 1973.)
The object of the new sub-section (3A) being to give
protection to tenants for a limited period of three years
from the date of purchase of the premises by the landlord,
by giving retrospective effect to’ the said sub-section the
period limited by the subsection cannot be enlarged.
Therefore, s.13 of the Amending Act which gives
retrospective effect to the said sub-section (3A) should be
construed in a manner so as to keep the effect of
retrospectively within the period
777
limited by the said new sub-section 3A. Sections 4 and 13
of the Amending Act have to be construed harmoniously
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keeping the object of the Act in view and in doing that if
the court has to supply some words to make the meaning
clear, it should prefer the construction which is more in
consonance with reason and justice. [1958] S.C.R. 739 at
745. The language of sub-s. 3A and the object and reason
for introduction of the said sub-section make it clear that
Only Prospective effect could be given to the sub-section
and in any case its effect cannot go beyond three years of
purchase of the premises by the landlord. If, s.13 of the
Amending Act means that s. 4 of the Amending Act applies to
all pending suits including appeals filed by a transferee
landlord after the principal Act came into force, then it is
clearly violative of art 19(1)(f) of the Constitution. The
High Court therefore, rightly struck down s.13 giving
retrospective effect to s. 4 of the , Act. Further no law
can impose restrictions retrospectively on fundamental
rights.
Arguments for the respondent in C.A. No. 2063 of 1973.
The impugned section cannot be so interpreted as to give it
retrospective effect so as to bring within its mischief all
suits and proceedings including appeals which may be pending
since the enforcement of the Act. This Court can depart
from the general rule to apply the law as it is on the date
of institution of the suit and apply the law as on the date
when the appeal comes up for disposal specially because no
injustice is going to be caused between the parties and as
such a course would avoid multiplicity of proceedings.
Section 13 of the Amending Act is ultra vires of article 19,
because, construed literally the section cannot give
protection to such of the tenants against whom proceedings
are pending for more than 10 years or so, a protection for a
period more than what is envisaged by the Amending Act.
This is clearly not what is intended or contemplated by the
legislature. Giving retrospective effect to the section
would only benefit a few and is not in the public interest
of the tenants of the transferee-landlords. The restriction
is arbitrary and invades the right to property and is not
saved by cl. (5) of article 19. The restriction is not
reasonable.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2063 of 1973.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated-
the 25th July. 1973 of the Calcutta High Court in Appeal
from Appellate Decree No. 1193 of 1972.
Civil Appeal No. 1304 of 1973.
From the judgment and order dated the 3rd February, 1972 of
the Calcutta High Court in L.P.A. No. 14 of 1969.
P. Chatterjee and Rathin Das, for the appellant (In C. A.
2063/73).
Urmila Kapoor and Shobha Dikshit, for the respondent (In
C.A. No. 2063/73).
P.K. Chatterjee, G. S. Chatterjee, and Sukumar Basu, for the
Advocate General for the State of West Bengal.
Sukumar Ghose, for the appellants. (In C.A. No. 1304/73).
D. N. Mukherjee, for the respondents (in C.A. No. 1304/73).
The judgment of M. H. Beg and V. R. Krishna Iyer, JJ was
delivered by Krishna Iyer, J. P. K. Goswami, J. gave a
separate Opinion.
KRISHNA IYER, J.-Calcutta or Cochin, for the urban people of
India, the shocking scarcity of a roof to rest one’s tired
bones is an
-L346SupCI/75
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778
unhappy problem of social justice that compels control of
rent. and eviction laws. In the case now before us,
attacking the constitutionality of legislation handcuffing
the landlord-proprietariat’s right of eviction, the law has
to be tested not merely by the cold print of Art. 19(1)(f)
but also by the public concern of Art. 19(5) and the,
compassionate animus of Art. 39, Parts III and IV of the
Constitution together constitute a complex of promises the
nation has to keep and the legislation challenged before us
is in partial fulfilment of this tryst with the people.
These observations become necessary in limine since counsel
for the respondents dismissed the concept of social justice
as extraneous to an insightful understanding of the section
invalidated by the High Court, while we think that judicial
conscience is not a mere matter of citations of precedents
but of activist appraisal of social tears to wipe out which
the State is obligated under the Constitution.
The two appeals before us, raising substantially identical
points, have been heard together and are being disposed of
by a common judgment. Both of them stem from a decision of
the Calcutta High Court reported as Sailendra Nath v. S. E.
Dutt(1). One of the decisions under appeal (C.A. 2063 of
1973) was rendered by a Single Judge of the High Court
following a Division Bench ruling of the same Court (i.e.,
the one reported as Sailendra Nath v. S. E. Dull) since he
was obviously bound by it.
A provision imparting some sort of retroactivity to a 1969
legislative amendment implanting additional restrictions on
eviction of premises under the earlier West Bengal rent
control law has been voided by the High Court in the
judgment& under appeal. The aggrieved tenant in each case
has appealed and the State, not being directly a party to
the legislation, has entered appearance to support, the
legislation and to challenge the Calcutta decision to the
extent it has invalidated the retrospective part of the
statute.
Welfare legislation calculated to benefit weaker classes,
when their vires is challenged in Court, casts an obligation
on the State, particularly when notice is given to the
Advocate General, to support the law, if necessary by a
Brandeis brief and supply of socio-economic circumstances
and statistics inspiring the enactment. Courts cannot, on
their own, adventure into social research outside the record
and if Government lets down the Legislature in Court by not
illumining the provisions from the angle of the social
mischief or economic menace sought to be countered, the
victims will be the class of beneficiaries the State
professed to protect. In this case, we are unable to
compliment the State or the Advocate General from this point
of view. It may happen that when the Court decides against
the validity of a measure or order because Government fails
to bring the socially relevant totality of facts, it is used
Is an alibi by
(1) A.1 R. 1971 Cal. 331.
779
he latter for the misfortune. Courts cannot help cover up
the Executive’s drowsy default or half-hearted help in
making the socioconomic conspectus available.
The West Bengal Premises Tenancy Act, 1956 (Act XII of 956)
(for short, referred to as the basic Act) clamped down
several restrictions on ejectment of tenants by landlords
from buildings, the policy behind it being alleviation of
the lot of the weaker segment of the urban community without
their own homes in the context of the scarcity of
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accommodation and the colossal sociceconomic upheaval which
would follow if unbridled evictions were allowed. The
temptation to evict or rack-rent under scarcity conditions
is an irresistible evil in our economic order and it is an
all India phenomenon that the social conscience of the State
Legislatures has responded to this large scale threat by
effective control measures. Indeed, for decades now, every
State in India has on, the statute book rent control law
and, what is more pertinent to the present case, tactics of
circumvention have compelled the enactment of additional
safeguards from time to time by vigilant statutory measures.
West Bengal, a populous State, with an overcrowded city
choked by the largest human congregation in the country,
enacted the basic Act whereby the plenary right of landlords
to recover possession of their buildings was shackled in
many ways. Industrial growth and other factors induced
demographic congestion such as was witnessed in the urban
areas of that State. Consequently, the legislature, was
faced with a fresh danger in the shape of ingenious
transfers of ownership of buildings by indigenous but
indigent landlords and the transferees resorting to eviction
on a large scale equipped as they were with better financial
muscles and motivated as they were by hope of speculative
returns from their investments oil eviction. Presumably,
the phenomenal increase of the menance of eviction by the
new species of transferee-owners of building was countered
by a legislative measure-the West Bengal Premises Tenancy
(Second Amendment) Act, 1969 (Act XXXIV of 1959)
(hereinafter referred to as the amendment Act). By this
legislation the new class of transferee landlords was
subject to a stringent trammel viz.. that they should not
sue for eviction within three years of the date of transfer
(We are not immediately concerned here with certain other
changes effected by the Amendment Act). The social
objective and the practical effect of this fetter will be
con Court has upheldthis provision which is now
contained in s. 13(3A) sidered briefly the little later.
Suffice it to say at this stage the High of the basic Act.
However , while holding the provision substantial intra
vires the Court has invalidated the giving effect to the
provision to pending suits and appeals. Such limited
retrospectivity had been incorporated by s. 13 of the
amending Act and, if the law were only prospective the
landlords in the two cases who had initiated their
litigation several years prior to the enactment of the
Amendment Act would be free from the three year interdict
and the other extra restrictions. Once the embargo is out
of their way, the decree-, for eviction they have secured
must stand. On tile contrary, if the restriction on
eviction by the transferee landlords were to operate on
780
pending litigation the appellants-tenants are immune to
eviction in the current proceedings as they now stand. Thus
the short constitutional issue is as to whether s. 13(3A) of
the basic Act to the extent it applies to pending litigation
on the strength of s. 13 of the Amending Act is violative of
Arts. 14 and 19(1)(f) of the Constitution, weapons relied
upon for the attack before the High Court, and here. We
will proceed to consider the constitutional vulnerability of
this limb of the protective legislation. By way of
anticipating our conclusion we may also pose the problem
whether ss. 1 3 and 4 of the Amendment Act can be validly
implemented vis-a-vis pending actions in any other just
manner which will preserve the additional protection,
minimise multiplicity of litigation and make law and justice
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bedfellows in the &hanged statutory circumstances.
Some background observations to appreciate the contest in
court are necessary. No social realist will deny the
frightful dimensions of the problem of homeless families and
precarious tenancies; and if the Directive Principles of
State Policy are not to be dismissed by the masses as a
’teasing illusion and promise of unreality’, curtailment, in
public interest, of such extreme rights of the landlord as
are ’red in tooth and claw’ is a constitutional compulsion.
The Court, informed by this sore economic situation and
reinforced by the initial presumption of constitutionality,
hesitates to strike a socially beneficial statute dead,
leading to escalation of the mischief to suppress which the
House legislated-unless, of course, a plain breach of the
fundamental right of the citizen is manifest.
The perspective of the amending Act is sketched by the High
Court in lurid language :
"The scarcity of accommodation is a burning
problem, not only of the State of West Bengal
but of the other States as well. Keeping pace
with the needs of the gradually swelling
population of West Bengal, new buildings have
not been built owing to abnormal high price of
land and materials. A large majority of the
people of West Bengal live in those premises
at the mercy of the landlords."
The explosive import of neglecting such a distressing urban
development reasonably obliges the State to impose drastic
restrictions on landlords’ right to property. And when
circumvention of wholesome legal inhibitions are practised
on a large scale the new challenge is met by clothing the
law with more effective amount and that is the rationale of
the Amendment Act. The learned Judges rightly refer to the
legislative proceedings, notorious common knowledge and
other relevant factors properly brought to their ken. The
’sound-proof theory’ of ignoring voices from parliamentary
debates, once sanctified by British tradition, has been
replaced by the more legally realistic and socially
responsible canon of listening to the legislative authors
when their artifact is being interpreted We agree with the
High Court when it observes :
"Proceedings of legislature can be referred to
for the limited purpose of ascertaining the
conditions, prevailing at
781
or about the time of the enactment in
question, which actuated the sponsor of the
bill to introduce the same and the extent and
urgency of the evil, sought to be remedied.
In the Statement of Objects and Reasons of the
West Bengal Premises Tenancy (Second
Amendment) Bill, 1969, it is stated that it
has been consider necessary that some more
reliefs should- be given to the tenants
against eviction. It is found from the speech
of the Minister at the time of introducing the
Bill in the legislature, that the problems of
tenants are many : there are landlords of
different kinds : there is one class-original
owners who are the old inhabitants of the city
: these owner-landlords are Dot affluent: they
solely depend upon the rents received from the
tenants. It has been ascertained from
experience that two of the, grounds of
eviction, namely, of the landlords and for the
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purpose of building and rebuilding, have been
misused by the landlords. In the city of
Calcutta and other towns, there are millions
of tenants who are left at the mercy of the
landlords. In this background and after
taking into account similar provisions in
other States, it has been decided that some
restrictions ought to have been imposed upon
transferee-landlords prohibiting them from
bringing ejectment suits against the tenants
within three years from their purchase. On
the above two grounds and for that purpose,
the said classification has been made."
The conclusion of the Court, crystellised in
the following words, commends itself to us :
"Taking an overall view of the various
considerations, the statement of, the
Minister, the objects of the Bill, matters of
common knowledge and state of facts, existing
at the time of the legislation, it may be well
conceived that underlying policy and objects
of the amended provision is to give more
protection to the tenants against eviction and
the classification of landlords into owner-
landlords and transfereelandlords is based
upon a rational and intelligible differentia
and we hold accordingly."
Proceeding to examine the limited attack on s. 13(3A) of the
basic Act read with s. 13 of the Amending Act, we have to
remember die comity of constitutional instrumentalities and
raise the presumption that the legislature understands and
appreciates the needs of the people and is largely aware of
the frontiers of and limitations upon its power. (See: The
State of Bombay v. R. M. D. Chamar-baguwala(1) and Shri Ram
Krishna Dalmia v. Shri Justice S. R. Tendolkar & Others(2).
Some Courts have gone, to the extent of holding that "there
is a presumption in favour of constitutionality, and a law
will not be declared unconstitutional unless the case is so
clear as to be free from doubt; and ’to doubt the
constitutionality of a law is to resolve it in, favour of
its validity."(3) Indeed, the Legis-
(1) [1957] S.C.R. 874. (2) [1959] S.C.R. 279.
(3) Constitutional law of India by H. M. Seervai-p 54 vol.
1.
782
lature owes it to the Court to make like respectful
presumptions. We therefore view the provision impugned
through a socially constructive, not legally captious,
microscope to discover glaring unconstitutional infirmity,
if any, and not chase every chance possibility of
speculative, thought which may vitiate the law. Stray
misfortunes when laws affecting large chunks of the
community are enacted are inevitable and the respondents
before us may perhaps belong to that category. Social
legislation without tears, affecting vested rights, is
impossible. Statutory construction has a benignant
sensitivity and we are satisfied the High Court, in
substantially upholding the Amendment Act, has done right,
but in striking down the retrospective portion of the
section has stumbled into a specious error.
It is helpful to reproduce the relevant portion of s. 13 of
the basic Act in its unamended state and the amendments
dovetailed into it by the 1969 Act, The so-called
’retrospectivity’ of this provision has been anathematised
by the respondent-landlords and annulled by the High Court :
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"13(1) Notwithstanding anything to the
contrary in any other law, no order or decree
for the recovery of possession of any premises
shall be made by any Court in favour of the
landlord against a tenant except on one or
more of the following grounds, namely:-
unamended cl. (f) : where the premises are
reasonably required by the landlord either for
purposes of building or rebuilding or for
making thereto substantial additions or
alterations or for his own occupation if he is
the owner or for the occupation of any person
for whose benefit the premises are held;
cls. (f) and (ff) substituted therefor-
(f)subject to the provisions of sub-section
(3A), and section 18A, where the premises are
reasonably required by the landlord for
purposes of building or re-building or for
making thereto substantial additions or
alterations and such building or rebuilding or
additions or alterations cannot he carried out
without the premises being vacated,
(ff) subject to the provisions of subsection
(3A), where the premises are reasonably
required by the landlord for his own
occupation if he is the owner or for the
occupation of any person for whose benefit the
premises are held and the landlord or such
person is not in possession of any reasonably
suitable accommodation,
Sub-s. (3A) newly introduced.
13(3A) Where a landlord has acquired his
interest in the premises by transfer, no suit
for the recovery of possession of the premises
on any of the grounds mentioned in clause (f)
or clause (ff) of sub-section (1) shall be
insti-
78 3
tuted by the landlord before the expiration of
a period of three years from the date of his
acquisition of such-interest :
Provided that a suit for the recovery of the
possession of the premises may be instituted
on the ground mentioned in clause (f) of sub-
section (1) before the expiration of the said
period of three years if the Controller, on
the application of the landlord and after
giving the tenant an opportunity of being
beard, permits, by order, the institution of
the suit on the ground that the building or
rebuilding, or the additions or alteration, as
the case may be, are necessary to make the
premises safe for human habitation."
Once the substantive restriction super-added by s. 13(3A) is
held valid, we have to focus attention only on the extension
of the new ban to pending proceedings. That legislative
competence to enact retroactively exists is trite law and we
have only to test its validity on the touchstone of Arts. 14
and 19 (1) (f) pressed into service before us.
Law is a social science and constitutionality turns not on
abstract principles or rigid legal canons but concrete
realities and given conditions; for the rule of law stems
from the rule of life. We emphasize this facet of
sociological jurisprudence only because the High Court has
struck down s. 13 of the Amendment Act on surmises, possi-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 26
bilities and may be rather than on study of actualities and
proof of the nature, number and age of pending litigations
caught in the net of the retrospective clause. Judges act
not by hunch but on hard facts properly brought on record
and sufficiently strong to rebuff the initial presumption of
constitutionality of legislation. Nor is the Court a third
Chamber of the House to weigh whether it should legislate
retrospectively or draft the clause differently. We find no
foundation for the large assumptions made by the High Court
and duly repeated before us by counsel that there may be
cases of ejectment instituted prior to 1956 or that a number
of suits and decrees perhaps decades old will unjustly be
nullified by the previous operation of the new ban.
Recondite instances and casual hardships cannot deflect
constitutional construction of social legislation, if the
main thrust of the statute relates to a real social evil of
dimensions deserving to be antidoted by antedated
legislative remedy.
In the present case, indubitably the State was faced with a
new, insidious and considerable situation of exploitation,
undermining the security of tenancy conferred by the basic
Act. A large number of original landowners living in their
own home could not, under the basic Act, claim recovery of
possession, being occupants of their own houses. Likewise,
they could not urge the ground of recovery for rebuilding,
not being financially able to invest on such a costly
venture. They had to look up to modest old-time rentals as
the only source of return and lest the penurious tenantry
desperately inhabiting little tenements be forced to pay
extortionate rents the rent control law of 1956 froze the
rates at the 1940 level with gentle increases as provided
therein. However, for now buildings to be constructed
784
special incentive provision was made by deeming the contract
rent as fair rent, thus ensuring a high return on building
investment. The social upshot of this scheme was that the
old landlords found their ownership a poor return
investment, saw a new class of wealthier investors streaming
into cities and towns ready to buy the premises evict old
tenants, re-let on rack-rents or re-build and reap a rich
return. They had no buildings of their own and could prove
plans to rebuild, thus disarming the nonevictability
provision of s. 13 of the basic Act. The transferees could
thus get decrees for eviction under the basic Act.
Naturally, transfers of buildings to this somewhat
speculating class increased and the spectacle of eviction
litigation’ or potential eviction proceedings was projected
on the urban scene. The Legislature promptly reacted by the
Amendment Act to rescue the lessees by clamping down new
restrictions by way of s. 13 (3A). A three-year moratorium
was given to the tenants from being hunted out of their
homesteads by imposing a ban on institution of suits for
eviction by transferee landlords. This would both
disenchant speculative purchases and provide occupants time
to seek alternative housing. Presumably, these objects
inspired the law-makers to extend the embargo backwards to
pending eviction proceedings. Quite conceivably, the
tendency to create a transferee class of real estate owners
gradually gathered in volume and showed up in rashes of
pending actions. When Government was alerted amending
legislation was proposed. Unfortunately, the State’s legal
wing has failed to protect, in Court the class for whose
benefit the amending law was made by placing luscent social
or statistical materials on these aspect-.. As earlier
stated by us, Government have a duty, where social
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 26
legislation to protect the weak are challenged, to exhibit
the same activism in the Halls of Court as in the Houses of
Legislature. Failure in the former duty can be as bad as
not promulgating the law. Not an elucidatory affidavit by
the State nor even the Minister’s explanatory speech has
been filed in this Court. We make these observations
because of the handicaps we have faced and the little help
on facts the State has given to sustain the legislation.
The Calcutta High court has upheld the vires of sub-s. (3A)
but invalidated its application to pending litigation. So
the short issue is whether this projection into the past of
the otherwise reasonable restriction on the right of
eviction arbitrary, irrational, ultra vires ? If yes, the
lethal sting of Arts. 14 and 19(1) (f) will deaden s. 13 of
the Amendment Act. And the High Court has held so on ,he
latter Article.
The prospective validity of the restriction under Arts. 14
and 19(1) (f), the High Court thinks, is vindicated by sound
classification and sanctioned reasonably by the interest of
the general public. Having regard to the policy of the
legislation, the classification of landlords into two
classes of owner-landlords and transferee-landlords and the
imposition of an embargo on the latter minacious class
against bringing eviction suits within three years of
purchase passes the dual tests of reasonable classification
and the differentia having a rational nexus with the
statutory object. Therefore, the High Court had no
hesitation-and we totally concur-that the provision is
78 5
impregnable. The controversy rages round giving effect to
these stringent restraints newly enacted on earlier legal
actions. This, it is contended, is a horrendous invasion of
property right,; and unjust anteriority which hits innocent
plaintiffs whose, purchases were beyond three years. Before
us respondents’ counsel have contended that Art. 14 is
violated. by s. 3 read with s. 4 of the Amendment Act
although the high Court has negatived this submission thus :
"We have carefully considered the arguments
advanced by the learned counsel and we are of
the Opinion that the retrospective operation
of sub-section (3A) on pending suits and
appeals does not offend Article 14 of the
Constitution."
Since the argument, dressed, differently, has been urged
before us again we will briefly deal with it, agreeing as we
do with the High Court. Plaintiffs whose transfers are
twenty years ago or two years before the Act, are lugged
together and subjected to the same ban if their suits were
instituted within three years of the transfer. This blanket
ban regardless of the varying periods which have elapsed
after the transfers and before the Act was passed was
unequal treatment or rather harshly equal subjection to
restriction of plainly unequally situated transferees.
There is seeming attractiveness in this presentation. But
Courts are concerned not how best to hammer out equal
justice but to oversee whether the classification is without
rational basis unrelated to the object of the Act. That is
why we are confined to check whether the reasoning on this
aspect adopted by the High Court is not tenable. We may or
may not disagree with the wisdom of the Legislature in the
grouping adopted or hold views about fairer ways of
treatment. But our powers are judicial, not legislative and
arbitrariness and irrationality are not writ large in the
method of differentiation the legislature has here chosen.
In the words of A. K. Mukuherji J :
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 26
"In the instant case, suits of the affected
transfereelandlords may be regarded as a sub-
class, within a class and, if within the said
sub-class, the suits are not differently
treated, they will not be hit by Article 14.
The persons affected are transferee-landlords
who instituted their suits within three years
of their purchase and they form a separate
class and, among the suits of that ’affected
class’, there is no discrimination. The law
applied equally with respect to the pending
suits with regard to this affected class."
Some hardship is bound to occur peripherally in any mode of
classification and a few hard cases (we have not been shown
whether many have been struck by this pattern of grouping)
cannot guide the Court in upsetting legislative
compartmentalisation.
The next attack by the respondents is that the deprivation
of the right to sue is absurdly beyond the object of the Act
when applied to pending cases where the transfers took place
more than three years before the Act. Were we draftsmen of
legislation, may be counsel’s submission could have had more
potency. But our limited power is to
786
examine the reasonableness of the restriction, not by
substituting our personal notions but by interfering if the
Legislature has gone haywire in unreasonably hamstringing
transferee-landlords by dismissing suits brought long before
the legislative bill was in the womb of time.
In an earlier case this Court observed(1)
"Right at the, threshold we must warn
ourselves of the limitations of judicial power
in this jurisdiction. Mr. Justice Stone of
the Supreme Court of the United States has
delineated these limitations in United States
v. Butter (297 U.S. 1 56 Sup. Ct. 312 80 Law.
Ed. 477 thus:
The power of courts to declare a statute
unconstitutional is subject to two guiding
principles of decision which ought never to be
absent from judicial consciousness. One is
that courts ire concerned only with the power
to enact statutes, not with their wisdom. The
other is that while unconstitutional exercise
of power by the executive and legislative
branches of the government is subject to
judicial restraint, the only check upon our
exercise of power is our own sense of self-
restraint. For the removal of unwise laws
from the statute books appeal lies not to the
courts but to the ballot and to the processes
of democratic government."
In short, unconstitutionality and not
unwisdom of a legislation is the narrow area
of judicial review."
The High Court has assumed that even proceedings started
prior to 1956 may be affected. This, admittedly, is wrong
as pre-basic Act suits will be governed by the, then law as
provided in s. 40 and the Amendment Act amends only the 1956
Act. It may also be conceded that in both the appeals
before us, thanks to Indian longevity of litigation, more
than three years from the date of transfer in favour of the
plaintiff has passed and thus the spirit of the protection
in that sense is fulfilled. Indeed, counsel for the.
respondents urged that the validation of the retrospective
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 26
limb of the law would only drive the parties to fresh suits,
thus promoting multiplicity of suits ruinous to both sides
with no social gain. There is force in this submission.
Its relevance to decide, the constitutional issue is
doubtful but its influence on our ultimate solution in this
case, as will be seen later, is undeniable.
A closeup of the social milieu leading up to the enactment
in 1969 of the Amendment Act is useful to identify the
substantial, mischief the law was intended to overpower.
Did that evil reasonably necessitate, for effectual
implementation of purpose, the extension of the new law to
pending suits and appeals ? How many suits, appeals and
second appeals by transferees within the three-year belt
were pending? How long had they been so pending? Were
there only stray eviction cases of long ago and was it
feasible or necessary to
(1) Murthy Match Works v. Asst. Collector of Central
Excise, A.T.R. 1974 8.C. 497, 503.
787
draw a line somewhere to prevent injustice to non-
speculative and old-time buyers of buildings without
impairing the-limited immunity meant for tenants and
intended against now realty investors ? On these facts the
State has sat with folded hands and we have been thrown on
our own to scan and sustain or strike down. But here arises
the significance of initial presumption of
constitutionality. The High Court has made short shrift of
this plea thus :
"There is nothing on the record to show that
the mischief, sought So be remedied by the
amended legislation, was in existence since
1956. On the other hand, the ministerial
speech, referred to above, rather indicates
that the said mischief was of comparatively
recent origin. In this context, the
application of the restriction on the omnibus
scale to ill pending suits and appeals would
smack of unreasonableness."
Who has the onus to place compelling facts, except in
flagrant cases of gross unreasonableness, to establish
excessiveness, or perversity, in the restriction imposed by
the statute? Long ago in Dalmia’s Case(1) this Court held
that
"there is always a presumption in favour of
the constitutionality of an enactment and the
burden is upon him who attacks it to show that
there has been a clear transgression of the
constitutional principles"; and
’that it must be presumed that the legislature
understands and correctly appreciates the need
of its own people, that its laws are directed
to problems made manifest by experience and
that its discriminations are based on adequate
grounds-,"
If nothing is placed on record by the challengers the
verdict ordinarily goes against them.
Moreover, what is the evil corrected by the Amendment Act?
The influx of a transferee class of evictors of tenants and
institution of litigation to eject and rack-rent or re-build
to make larger profits. Apparently, the inflow of such
suits must have been swelling slowly over the years and when
the stream became a flood the Legislature rushed with an
amending bill. Had it made the law merely prospective,
those who bad, in numbers, already gone to Court and induced
legislative attention would have escaped the inhibition.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 26
This would defeat the object and so the application of the
additional ban to Pending actions could not be called
unreasonable. To omit to do so would have been unreasonable
folly. The question is whether those cases which were filed
several years ago should have been carved out of the
category of transferees hit by the Act ? Where do you draw
the line ? When did the evil assume proportions ? These are
best left to legislative wisdom and not court’s commonsense
although there may be grievances for some innocent
transferees.
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 279, 297-propositions (b) and (c).
788
If this be the paradigm of judicial review of
constitutionality, we have to ignore exceptional cases which
suffer misfortune unwittingly. The law is made for the bulk
of the community to produce social justice and isolated
instances of unintended injury are inevitable martyrs for
the common good since God Himself has failed to make perfect
laws and perfect justice, Freaks have to be accepted by the
victims rightly or wrongly as forensic fate: Not that it
should be so but human infallibility being unattainable,
easily the next best in social justice is to promote the
public weal sacrificing some unmerited private hurt as
unfortunate but unavoidable. It must be conceded that prima
facie the two landlord-respondent’s had purchased the
buildings in the early sixties and three time three years or
more have now passed since that date. But while considering
constitutionality can we be moved by such accidental
instances ? No. The substantial evil has been substantially
met by a broad application of the new ban to pending
proceedings. We see in the Amendment Act no violation of
Art. 19(1) (f) read with 19(5). The same High Court, in a
later case Kalyani Dutt v. Pramila Bala Dassi(1) came to the
same conclusion by what it called ’independently considering
the question’. We discern nothing substantially different
in the analysis or approach to merit review of our result.
We hold s. 13 of the Amendment Act valid and repel the vice
of unreasonableness discovered in both the reported rulings
of the High Court.
And if reasonable interpretation can avoid invalidation, it
is surely preferable. Here humanist considerations, public
policy and statutory purpose may provide guidelines of
construction within reasonable limits. Section 13 of the
Amendment Act reads:
"13. Retrospective effect.-The amendments
made to the said Act by section 4, 7, 8 and 9
of this Act shall have effect in respect of
suits including appeals which are pending at
the date of commencement of this Act."
The Court is called upon ’to give effect to s. 4. of this
new Act.’ Section 4 introduced amendments in s. 13 of the
basic Act which we have set out earlier.
There is no doubt that the purpose of the law is to
interdict, for a spell of three years, institution of suits
for eviction on grounds (f) and (ff) of sub-s. (3A).
Section 13 of the Amending Act makes it expressly applicable
to pending actions, so much so the operation of the
prohibition is not simply prospective as in the Kerala case
cited before, us (Nealakandhayya Fillai v. Sankaran(2).
Section 13, fairly read, directs that the amendment made by
s. 4 shall have effect in respect of suits, including
appeals, pending at the commencement of the Act. We are
therefore bound to give effect to s. 4 in pending actions,
regardless of isolated anomalies and individual hardships.
As earlier noticed, s. 4 has two limbs. It amends s. 13 of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 26
the basic Act by substituting two new clauses (f) and (ff)
in place of the old clause (f) of sub-s. (1) of s. 13
Secondly, it forbids, for a period of three years from the
date of acquisition, suits by new acquirers of
(1) I.L.R. [1972] 2 Cal. 660.
(2) (1961) R.L.T. 755.
789
landlord’s interest in premises, for recovery of possession
on any of the grounds mentioned in cl. (f) or cl. (ff) of
sub-S. (1). The result of the= two mandatory provisions has
to be clearly understood. For one thing although the old
cl. (f) is substantially similar to the present cls. f) and
(ff), the latter imposes more severe restrictions protecting
the tenants. Much more has to be proved by the landlord now
before he can get eviction than when he was called upon to
under the earlier corresponding provision of the basic Act.
Moreover, the three year prohibition against institution of
the suit is altogether new. It follows, therefore, that on
the present allegations and evidence the landlord may not
get a decree, his suit having been instituted at a time when
he could not have foreseen the subsequent enactment saddling
him with new, conditions.
We consider that where two interpretations are possible that
which validates the statute and shortens litigation should
be preferred to the one which invalidates or proliferates
it. We are guided by that consideration in the
interpretative process. We are satisfied further that
originally brought in, is defective since it did not
contain-and ordinarily could not-averments complying with
the new cls. (f) and (ii) of sub-s. (1) of S. 13 and we are
making it effectively by construing the word ’institute’ in
a natural and grammatical way. The suit is really
instituted in compliance with cls. (f) and/or (ff) only when
the new pleading is put in.
The bigger roadblock in the way of the plaintiff is in a
pending action lies in the prohibition of the institution of
the suit within three years of the transfer from the
landlord. Indeed, such prohibitions are common in rent
control legislation as has been noticed by the Calcutta High
Court and is found even in agrarian reforms laws (vide
Malaber Tenancy Act, as amended by Act VII of 1954, Madras).
Section 13 of the Amendment Act compels the postponement of
the institution of the suit (including appeal) for a period
of three years from the date of the transfer. In both the
cases before us, the suits were instituted within the
prohibited period of three years. The argument therefore is
that the suits must be straightaway dismissed, the
institution being invalid. We do not think that this
consequence is inevitable. ’To institute, is ’to begin or
commence’, in plain English. The question then is whether
the suit can be said to begin on the date it was filed in
1961 or 1964 as the case may be. Here we have to notice a
certain nice but real facet of sub-s. (3A). The prohibition
clamped down by sub-s. (3A), carefully read, is on suits for
recovery of possession by transferee landlords ’on any of
the grounds mentioned in cl. (f) or cl. (ff) of subs.(1)’.
Obviously the suits with which we are concerned are not for
recovery on grounds contained in cis. (f) and (ff). They
were based on the repealed cl. (f) of S. 13 of the basic
Act. Strictly speaking, sub-s. (3A) brought in by S. 4 of
the Amending Act applies only if (a) the suit is by a
transferee landlord; b) it is for recovery of possession of
premises and (c) the ground for recovery is what is
mentioned in cl. (f) and cl. (ff) of sub-s. (1).
Undoubtedly the third condition is not fulfilled and there-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 26
fore sub-s. (3A) is not attracted. This does not mean that
the suit
790
can be proceeded with and decree for recovery passed,
because S. 13 of the basic Act contains a broad ban, on
eviction in the following words :
"13(1) Notwithstanding anything to the
contrary in any other law, no order or decree
for the recovery of possession of any
premises, shall be made by any Court in favour
of the landlord against a tenant except on one
or more of the following grounds, namely:-
(emphasis, ours)
Since the new cls. (f) and (ff) are included by the
Amendment Act in s. 13 of the basic Act and since the suits
we are concerned with, as they now stand, do not seek
eviction on those grounds they will have to be dismissed on
account of the omnibus inhibition on recovery of possession
contained in S. 13 itself.
A just resolution of this complex situation was put by us to
counsel on both sides and the learned Advocate representing
the State readily agreed that the policy of the legislation
and the conditions in the Amendment Act would be fulfilled
if the interpretation we proposed were to be accepted. We
are satisfied that as far as possible courts must avoid
multiplicity of litigation. Any interpretation of a statute
which will obviate purposeless proliferation of litigation,
without whittling down the effectiveness of the protection
for the parties sought to be helped by the legislation,
should be preferred to any literal, pendantic, legalistic or
technically correct alternative. On this footing we are
prepared to interpret s. 13 of the Amendment Act and ,give
effect to s. 4 of that Act. How do we work it out ? We do
it by directing the-plaintiffs in the two cases to file
fresh pleadings setting out their grounds under cls. (f)
and/or (ff)_ of sub-s.(1) if they so wish. On such pleading
being filed we may legitimately bold that the transferee-
landlord institutes his suit on grounds mentioned in cls.
(f) or (ff) of sub-s. (1) on that ’.ate. It is only when he
puts in such a pleading setting out the specific ground
covered by sub-s. (3A) of s. 13 that we can say he, has
begun or instituted a suit for the recovery of possession of
the premises on that ground. Institution of a suit earlier
has to be ignored since that was not based on grounds
covered by cls. (f) and/or (ff) and is not attracted by sub-
s. (3A). He begins proceedings on these new grounds only
when he puts in his pleading setting out these_grounds. In
spirit and in letter he institutes his suit for recovery on
the new grounds only on the date on which he puts in his new
pleading. We cannot be ritualistic in insisting that a
return of the plaint and a representation thereof incorpo-
rating amendments is the sacred requirement of the law. On
the other hand, social justice and the substance of the
matter find fulfilment when the fresh pleadings are put in,
subject of course to the three-year interval between the
transfer and the filing of the additional pleading. Section
13 of the Amendment Act speaks of suits including appeals.
It thus follows that these fresh pleadings can be put in by
the plaintiff either in the suit, if that is pending. or in
appeal or second appeal, if that is pending. Thereupon, the
opposite party. tenant, will be given fin opportunity to
file his written statement and the Court ’Will dispose of it
after giving both sides the right to lead
791
additional evidence. It may certainly, be open to the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 26
appellate Court either to take evidence directly or to call
for a finding. Expeditious disposal of belated litigation
will undoubtedly be a consideration with the court in
exercising this discretion. The proviso to sub-s. (3A) can
also be complied with if the plaintiff gets the permission
of the Rent Controller in the manner laid down therein
before filing his fresh pleading.
We, are conscious that to shorten litigation we are
straining language to the little extent of interpreting the
expression ’institution of the suit’ as amounting to filing
of fresh pleading. By this construction we do no violence
to language but, on the other hand, promote public justice
and social gain, without in the least imperiling the
protection conferred by the Amendment Act.
Ruinous protraction of litigation, whoever may temporarily
seem to benefit by delay, bankrupts both in the end and
inflicits wounds on society by sterile misuse of money.
Tenant passengers who prolong their expensive flight on the
litigation rocket, are buying tickets for financial crash,
drugged though they be by the seeming blessings of law’s
delays. Courts, by interpreting the expression ’institution
of suits’ cannot authorize reincarnation, all over again, of
litigation for eviction. We save the tenant by applying it
to pending cases and save him also from litigative waste.
This consideration is itself germane, to the larger concept
of justice which it is the duty of Courts to promote. Law
finds its finest hour when it speaks to justice on fair
terms. In the present case our interpretative endeavour has
been imbued with this spirit. In the process of
interpretation where alternatives are possible’ the man in
the law influences the law in the man may be and the
construction on ss. 4 and 13 of the Amendment Act herein
adopted, we admit, appeals to us as more, humane. The
calculus of statutory construction relating to complex
problems of the community cannot be hide-bound by orthodox
text-book canons.
An obiter, maybe. More buildings is the real solution for
dwelling shortage; freezing scarcer accommodation relieves
for a little while. Tiger balm is no serious cure for brain
turnover We make no more comments on the need for dynamic
housing policies beyond statutory palliatives. These belong
to legislative ’wisdom’ and administrative ,activism’ and
not to judicial ’constitutionalism’.
It was noticed in the course of arguments that a later
Amending Act of 1970 purporting to give relief to tenants
against whom decrees for eviction bad been passed but
dispossession had not ensued, had been put on the statute
book. It is surprising that counsel on either side did not
choose to address us any arguments on the basis of those
provisions. We therefore do not go into the impact of that
Act on situations where eviction has been ordered by Courts.
We therefore allow the appeals with costs but direct the
High Court to dispose of the cases in the light of the
directions and obser-
792
vations we have made. It will be open to the, Court seised
of the matter to direct, in its discretion, award of costs
to be incurred hereafter.
GOSWAMI, J.Civil Appeal No. 1304 of 1973 is by certificate
granted by the Calcutta Hi Court and Civil Appeal No. 2063
of 1973 is by Special Leave of this Court.
The first one arises out of Letters Patent Appeal No. 14 of
1969 of the Calcutta High Court dismissed on February 3,
1972, relying upon its earlier decision in Kalyani Dutt vs.
Pramila Bala Dassi since reported in I.L.R. (1972) 2
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 26
Calcutta 660. A preliminary question had arisen in
connection with the aforesaid Letters Patent Appeal along
with three other appeals at an earlier stage with regard to
the constitutionality of section 13(3A) of the West Bengal
Premises Tenancy (Second Amendment) Act, 1969 (briefly the
Amendment Act). A Division Bench repelled the contention of
the appellants in decision which has since been reported in
A.I.R. (1971) Calcutta 331 (Sailendra Nath Ghosal & Ors. vs
Sm. Ena Dutt & Others). The Division Bench had held that
sub-section (3A) of section 13 in so far as it was
retrospective in operation was ultra vires Article 19(1) (f)
of the Constitution on the ground of unreasonableness.
Since, however, the Letters Patent Appeal was not completely
disposed of, the bar of sub-section (3A) was this time
pleaded asserting that Article 19 was not at all attracted
to the present case on the ground that the right of
reversion of the landlord, namely, the right to recover
possession of the property from the tenant, is not a right
of property which is a condition precedent to the
application of Article 19(1) (f) and consequently, the
question as to the infringement of fundamental right did not
at all rise and that there could not be, any scope for
holding that the provision of sub-section (3A) offended
against Article 19(1)(f). This second contention which was
allowed to be raised by the Letters Patent Bench was also
repelled following its earlier decision in Kalyani Dults
case (supra) disposed of on September 7, 1971.
Civil Appeal No. 2063 of 1973 arises out of the decision of
the High Court in Second Appeal No. 1193 of 1972 disposed of
on 25th July, 1973 relying upon Sailendra Nath Ghosal’s case
(supra) which is the subject matter of appeal in Civil
Appeal No. 1304 of 1973.
The history of tortuous litigation in both the appeals may
also be noticed. In Civil Appeal No- 1304 of 1973 the
plaintiff (respondent herein) purchased the premises in suit
on February 16, 1961. She instituted Title Suit No. 480 of
1961 in the court of Munsif of Sealdah, District 24-Pargana,
for ejectment of the defendant, on July 24, 1961. The suit
was decreed by the Munsif on July 21, 1964, but was
dismissed by the lower appellate court on May 17, 1965. On
second appeal at the instance of the plaintiff, the High
Court framed an additional issue and remanded the suit to
ram a finding on the same. On receipt of the finding of the
court below, the learned single Judge of the High Court,
dismissed the second appeal and granted
793
leave to a Letters Patent Appeal. That appeal was dismissed
on February 3, 1972. The High Court granted certificate to
appeal against that decision to this Court on May 24, 1973,
referring to the earlier certificate granted by that Court
in Kalyani Dutt’s case (supra). That is how Civil Appeal
No. 1304 of 1973 is now before us.
The facts in Civil Appeal No. 2063 of 1973 are these. The
property in suit was purchased by the plaintiff (respondent
herein) on February 7, 1964 and the eviction suit No. 76 of
1966 was instituted in February 1965. The suit was
dismissed by the Trial Court on October 11, 1966. On appeal
by the plaintiff, the Additional District Judge allowed the
appeal on June 8, 1967, and remanded the suit for disposal
after taking additional evidence. The Munsif thereafter
decreed the plaintiff’s suit on December 23, 1968. On
appeal by the defendant the Additional District Judge
allowed the same and dismissed the suit on April 8, 1969.
On plaintiff’s appeal to the High Court in Second Appeal No.
968 of 1969, the High Court allowed the same on April 3,
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1971 and remanded the suit to the Munsif for retrial. The
Munsif again dismissed the plaintiff’s suit on September 13,
1971. On appeal by the plaintiff the Additional District
Judge allowed the same and decreed the suit on April 29,
1972. The High Court on appeal by the defendant dismissed
the second Appeal on July 25, 1973, relying upon Salindra
Nath Ghosal’s case (supra) disposed of on January 28, 1971.
The defendant then obtained special leave. Thus the life of
litigation in Civil Appeal No. 1304 of 1973 is now in the
fourteenth year after purchase of the premises by the
plaintiff six months earlier. The second one is a decade
old; the property having been purchased about a year
earlier.
Both the appeals were argued together and will be governed
by this common judgment.
The suits in both the appeals are by what has come to be
known as transferee-landlords. They have instituted suits
in one case within six months of the purchase in 1961 and in
the other within one year of the purchase in 1965. During
the long pendency of the litigation the West Bengal Premises
Tenancy (Second Amendment) Act was passed which came into
force on November 14, 1969. and section 4, inter-alia, was
made applicable to pending suits including appeals. It
amended the West Bengal Premises Tenancy Act, 1956 (West
Bengal Act XII of 1956) (briefly the Original Act). Section
4 of the Amendment Act introduced the following changes in
section 13 of
Section 13(1) (f) of the Original Act stood as follows
the Original Act :
"13(1) Notwithstanding anything to the
contrary in any other law, no order or decree
for the recovery of possession of any premises
%hall be made by any Court in favour of the
landlord against a tenant except on one or
more of the following grounds, namely
(f)Where the premises are reasonably
required by the landlord either for purposes
of building or rebuilding; or
4-L346Sup.CI/75
794
for making thereto substantial additions or
alterations or for his own occupation if he is
the owner or for the occupation of any person
for whose benefit the premises are held".
After the amendment of section 13 by section 4 of the
Amendment Act clause (f) was split up into two clauses (f)
and (ff) which read as under :-
"(f) Subject to the provisions of,sub-section
(3A) and section 18A, where the premises are
reasonably required by the landlord for
purposes of building or rebuilding or for
making thereto substantial additions or
alterations, and such building or re-building,
or additions or alterations. cannot be carried
out Without the premises being vacated;
(ff) Subject to the provisions of sub-section
(3A), where the premises are reasonably
required by the landlord for his own
occupation if he is the owner or for the
occupation of any person for whose benefit the
premises are held and the landlord or such
person is not in possession of any reasonably
suitable accommodation".
In addition, section 4 of the Amendment Act
introduced a new subsection (3A) which reads
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as follows :-
"Where a landlord has acquired his interest in
the premises by transfer, no suit for the
recovery of possession of the premises on any
of the grounds mentioned in clause (f) or
clause (ff) of sub-section (1) shall be
instituted by the landlord before the
expiration of a period of three years from the
date of his acquisition of such interest;
Provided that a suit for the recovery of the
possession of the premises may be instituted
on the ground mentioned in clause (f) of sub-
section (1) before the expiration of the said
period of three years if the Controller on the
application of landlord and after giving the
tenant an opportunity of being heard,
permits, by order, the institution of the suit
on the ground that the building or re-building
or the additions, or alterations, as the case
may be, are necessary to make the premises
safe for human habitation".
It should be noted that the grounds for ejectment in the
earlier sub-section (f) ,ire the same as the new grounds in
clauses (f) and (ff) except for some additional
restrictions. The common grounds for eviction are, broadly
speaking, reasonable requirement for the Purpose of building
or rebuilding, etc. [sub-clause (f)] and reasonable
requirement for occupation by the landlord, etc. [sub-clause
(ff)]. There is, there fore, no particular significance to
the mention of " grounds" in clause (f) or clause (ff) of
subsection (1) in subsection (3A).
,Section 13 of the Amendment Act which is the bone of
contention grants retrospectivity to section 4 of the
Amendment Act and, therefore, necessarily to sub-section
(3A) and section 13(1)(f)(ff). The grievance centres round
retrospectivity of sub-section (3A) and
795
section 13(1)(f) and (ff) made applicable by force of
section 13 of the Amendment Act to suits and appeals pending
on the commencement of the Act. It may be in order first to
deal with the question of retrospectivily of sub-section
(3A) which is the principal ground of attack in these
appeals.
Section 13 of the Amendment Act provides that. effect should
be given to section 4 of the Amendment Act in pending suits
including appeal on the date of the commencement of the Act.
The suits of the particular category by transferee-
landlords, therefore, could be pending on commencement of
the Amendment Act and these may have been instituted several
years prior to the Amendment Act. There may also be appeals
pending in different appellate courts against decrees in
such suits. The appeals necessarily have to be understood
as appeals arising out of suits instituted within the three
years’ ban. The tenants are now permitted to take objection
on the score of contravention of section 13(3A), before the
courts either in a pending suit or in a pending appeal
against decrees in such suits and the point for
consideration then would be whether such a suit was
instituted within three years’ ban and the appeal was
pending against such a banned suit. When section 13 of the
Amendment Act provides that section 4 therein has to be
given effect in pending suits including appeals, effect has
to be given by the courts. Now how will effect be given to
section 13(3A) ? Retrospectivity to be given under section
13 of the Amendment Act to section 4 broadly requires
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compliance as follows
(1) that no suit for eviction by a
transferee-landlord shall be instituted within
three years of his acquisition of the
premises;
(2) if eviction is sought on the ground
under section 13(1)(f) of the Amendment Act,
an additional restriction is put, namely, that
"such building or rebuilding or additions or
alterations cannot be carried out without the
premises being vacated";
(3) if eviction is sought on the ground
under section 13(1)(ff), a further restriction
is put upon the right of the landlord to
evict, viz., that "the landlord or such person
is not in possession of any reasonably
suitable accommodation".
Under proviso to section 13(3A) a transferee-landlord can,
however, institute a suit within three years’ ban provided
he obtains prior permission from me Controller who on an
application by the landlord and after hearing the parties
may decide whether permission should be given or not.
Prime-facie, a suit which had already been instituted prior
to the Amendment Act would not come within the mischief of
section 13(3A) since this sub-section, in terms, prohibits
only institution of suits and does not provide for dismissal
of suits already instituted. Similarly while there is a
relaxation in favour of a transferee landlord under the
proviso to obtain permission from the Controller this bene-
fit is out of the way even in a genuine case where the suit
had already
796
been instituted within three years of purchase and the same
or an appeal therefrom is now pending after the passing of
the Amendment Act. In this regard also it appears sub-
section (3A) is not intended to be attracted to suits which
were already instituted prior to the Amendment Act. But as
will be seen hereafter the above position is altered by the
express provision of section 13 of the Amendment Act whereby
it is intended that the court should give retrospectivity,
inter alia, to section 4 of the Amendment Act.
On the terms of only section 13 (3A) it is difficult to hold
that it would bring old sections within the mischief of
section 13 (3A) which imposes a ban expressly on institution
of suits within three years of the acquisition of ownership
of the premises subject to the relaxation contained in the
proviso thereto.
This being the correct interpretation of sub-section (3A),
taken by itself, what is the effect of section 13 of the
Amendment Act upon this provision? Section 13 of the
Amendment Act in seeking to give retrospective effect to
sub-section (3A) does exactly what sub-section (3A) by
itself contra-indicates.
The first part of section 13(3A) which provides for a ban
against institution of suits for eviction within three years
of acquisition of the premises must be given effect to under
section 13 of the Amendment Act in pending suits and in
pending appeals arising out of the decrees passed in such
suits provided the former had been instituted within the
period of the ban. If, therefore, after the Amendment Act
it is found in a pending suit or in a pending appeal that
the particular suit was instituted within the three years’
ban the same will have to be dismissed and only in that way
the court will be able to give effect to sub-section (3A).
With regard to the proviso of subsection (3A), when the
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ground of eviction is relatable to section 13(1)(f) of the
Amendment Act the court will have to dismiss the suit in
absence of the requisite permission.
That being the practical result of restrospectivity given to
subsection (3A), is that sub-section, in so far as it is
retrospective, violative of Article 19(1)(f) of the
Constitution? That takes us to the object and purpose of
the Amendment Act. The Statement of Objects and Reasons as
quoted in Kalyani Dutt’s case (supra) is as follows
"It has been considered necessary that some
more relief should be given to the tenants
against eviction, that the necessity of tender
of rent to the landlord every time the rent is
deposited with the Controller during a
continuous period should be dispensed with,
that the interests of the residents of hotels
and lodging houses should be safeguarded and
that the penalties for contravention of some
of the provisions of the West Bengal Premises
Tenancy Act, 1956, should be made more
stringent".
In the earlier judgment of the High Court which is also the
subject matter of Civil Appeal No. 1304 of 1973 the High
Court referred to the statement of the Minister at the time
of piloting of the Bill in the following words:-
797
"It is found from the speech of the Minister
at the time of introducing the Bill in the
legislature, that the problems of tenants are
many: there is one class-original owners who
are the old inhabitants of the city; these
owner-landlords are not affluent; they solely
depend upon the rents received from the
tenants. It has been ascertained from
experience that two of the grounds of
eviction, namely, requirement of the premises
for own use of the landlords and for the
purpose of building and re-building, have been
misused by the landlords. In the city of
Calcutta and other towns, there are millions
of tenants who are left at the mercy of the
landlords. In this background and after
taking into account similar provisions in
other States, it has been decided that some
restrictions ought to have been imposed upon
transferee-landlords prohibiting them from
bringing ejectment suits against the tenants
within three years from their purchase".
The High Court also observed further that-
"there is nothing on the record to show that
the mischief, sought to be remedied by the
amended legislation, was in existence since
1956. On the other hand, the ministerial
speech, referred to above, rather indicates
that the said mischief was of comparatively
recent origin".
Again in Kalyani Dutt’s case (supra) the High Court in para
27 observed that "such suits are not many and at the same
time most of them are pending for more than ten years". The
materials relied upon by the High Court stand uncontradicted
by any affidavit before US.
On the above materials it is safe to hold that the main
object of the Amendment Actis to counteract the "recent"
mischief of circumvention of theprovisions of the
original Act in order to evict tenants on even bona fide
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requirements specified under the law of device of transfer
of premises held under the occupation of tenants. Although
the Amendment Act has not completely barred institutions of
suits by transferee-landlords postponement of litigation for
a period of three years from acquisition of the premises was
provided for under subsection (3A). This had a twofold
purpose, namely, to enable tenants a reasonable respite to
arrange their affairs and also to discourage speculative
acquisitions with an ulterior motive. This salutary pro-
vision for the general body of tenants cannot be called
unreasonable. But the question is whether by applying the
provision to pending suits and appeals has that object been
achieved in the interest of the general body of tenants
which would certainly constitute the general public within
the meaning of clause 5 of Article 19? From the fact-,; and
circumstances extra fed above from the two judgments of the
High Court. it is not possible to bold that the interest of
the general body of tenants would be served by application
of sub-section (3A) to pending suits and appeals.
If the mischief was of "recent" origin, there is no reason
to overshoot the mark and outstretch the long rope of the
law beyond the
798
requirements of the situation. It is clear that in trying
to include old actions that may be surviving in courts, per
chance, because of laws’ proverbial delay, section 13 of the
Amendment Act has gone far in excess of the actual needs of
the time and problems and the provisions thereof cannot be
said to impose a reasonable restriction on the right of the
transferee-landlords, albeit a well-defined class, amongst
tile landlords, to hold and enjoy their property in the
interest of the general public. Such transferee-landlords
with pending old sections in suits or in appeals are, as
observed by the High Court, not likely to be of a large
number and necessarily so the tenants of such a sub-sec-
class. It is not in the general interest of the large body
of tenants to impose such restrictions on a few transfree-
landlords of this sub-class subject to unbearable delay in
litigation, understandably not on their own account. If
relief in the shape of postponement of a landlord’s suit
were the object of sub-section (3A) in giving
retrospectivity to it, the law did not take count of the
inevitable long delay that takes place in pending litigation
of this type as a result of man-made laws of procedure in
courts such as has even been clearly demonstrated by the
cases at hand. The law that misses its object cannot
justify its existence. Besides, it will be a sterile relief
if tenants have to face a fresh summons next day.
Hard cases will be on both sides of the line. law
contemplates in terms of generality and is not intended to
hit a few individuals by making invidious distinction.
Article 19 of the Constitution confers protection of rights
specified therein belonging to all citizens. Any individual
citizen may complain of encroachment of his rights and
freedom guaranteed under the Article. Law’s encroachment
upon such rights and freedom of citizens can survive
challenge if it passes the tests laid down in the six saving
clauses of Article 19.
Coming now to article 19(1)(f), with which we are concerned
in these appeals, the said provision confers upon each
individual citizen the right to acquire, hold and dispose of
property, This right is subject to clause (5) which we may
read so far as material for our purpose:
"Nothing in sub-clauses (d), (e) and (f) of
the said clause shall .... prevent the State
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from making any law imposing reasonable
restrictions on the exercise of any of the
rights conferred by the said sub-clauses ....
in the interests of the general public.. . . .
Even a single citizen may complain against violation of his
fundamental rights under Article 19 (1) (f) and his
vindication of his right may be defeated only if the
impugned infringement brought upon by the law can be
considered as a reasonable restriction and the ,aid
restriction is also in the interests of the general public.
It is manifest, therefore, under the Constitution. that an
individual’s right will have to yield to the common weal of
the general community. That general community may be in
broad segments, but even then must form a class as a whole.
A few individuals cannot take the place of a class and for
the matter of that the general public In the present case
the particular relief contemplated by the Amendment Act is
in favour
799
of tenants in general and the restriction under sub-section
(3A) must ,be viewed in that context. It cannot be said
that the legislature in applying sub-section (3A)
restrospectively has achieved that avowed object at all.
The matter would have been different it, in view of any
prevailing conditions, a reasonable date for giving
retrospective effect were fixed under the law in the light
of the known mischief. In its. absence, applicability of
the blanket ban to pending suits and appeals cannot be said
to be a reasonable restriction in the interests of the
general public. It may help a few tenants in litigation but
will prejudice the right of transferee-landlords locked up
in old and costly litigation. The gain of the few as
opposed to the general public cannot be the touchstone for
justifying reasonableness of the restriction imposed on the
rights of the transferee-landlords in applying subsection
(3A) to pending suits and appeals.
In the social combat between the interests of a few and the
general welfare of the community the latter is the clinching
factor to be reckoned and hard cases of a few individuals
cannot be assigned a higher place- and status than they
deserve to the detriment of the fundamental rights of even a
single individual.
Therefore, the retrospectivity so far as sub-section (3A) is
concerned with regard to institution of suits made
applicable to pending suits and. appeals is clearly very
wide of a reasonable mark and is, thus, an imposition of an
unreasonable restriction on the rights of the transferee-
landlords in pending suits which had been instituted prior
to the Amendment Act and in appeals arising therefrom and it
is not saved by the protective clause (5) of Article 19 of
the Constitution. Sub-section (3A) so far as it is
retrospective and as such applicable to pending suits
including appeal is ultra vires Article 19 (1)(f) of the
Constitution. The provision is valid only prospectively.
So far as the retrospectivity of section 13(1)(f) and (ff),
the position is entirely different. Clearly further reliefs
have been sought to be given to the tenants as a class by
these provisions in the Amendment Act. These further
reliefs are in the general interests of tenants and can be
applied without any difficulty to pending suits including
appears. There is nothing unreasonable about such a
retrospectivity in applying these provisions for the general
welfare of tenants in securing for them a safe and sure
tenure as far as practicable untrammelled by inconvenient
litigation. It is well-established that the legislature in
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enacting laws can legislate prospectively as well as
retrospectively. Section 13(1)(f) and (ff) are, therefore,
not ultra vires Article 19(1) (f) of the Constitution.
With regard to another contention of the appellants that the
right of tile landlords that is affected by sub-section (3A)
is only a mere right to sue and at best a right of reversion
and hence it is not a right to property under Article
19(1)(f) of the Constitution, it is sufficient to state that
the question is covered by two decisions of this Court in
The Commissioner, Hindu Religious Endowments, Madras v. Sri
Lakshmindra Thirtha Swamiar of Sri Shirur Mutt(1) and Swami
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 1005
800
Motor Transport (P) Limited and Another v. Sri
Sankaraswamigal Butt and Another(1). The right to own and
hold property in order to make an effective right under the
Constitution must include tine right to possession of the
property including the right to evict tenants in accordance
with law. The submission is, therefore, without any force.
The position, therefore, is that in a pending suit or even
in a pending appeal a landlord may be given an opportunity
to adduce evidence to establish such of the new requirements
in 13(1) (f) or (ff) as are relevant to the proceedings. In
that case the tenant will have also an opportunity to
produce evidence in rebuttal. If the matter arises in a
pending suit, it will be disposed of by the trial court.
If, however, the matter arises in appeal, it will be open to
the appellate court, in order to shorten the life of
litigation, to remand the matter to the appropriate court to
return a finding on such additional issues as may be framed
to meet the requirements of (f) and/or (ff), as the case may
be, under order 41, rule 25, Civil Procedure Code.
In the result these appeals are partly allowed. The
judgment of the High Court with regard to invalidity of sub-
section (3A) so far as it is retrospective and applicable to
pending suits and appeals is upheld. The orders dismissing
the appeals are, however, set aside and the appeals are
remanded to the High Court for disposal in the light, of the
observations with reference to section 13(1)(f) and/or (f)
whichever is applicable. The landlords may now be given by
the High Court an opportunity, if they so wish, to adduce
evidence with regard to such further requirements under (f)
and/or (ff) as may be applicable and the High Court will
call for a finding from the appropriate court in that behalf
and thereafter dispose of the appeals on merits. Since
success is shared, there will be no orders as to costs in
these appeals.
ORDER
In accordance with the majority judgment, the appeals are
allowed with costs; the cases are remanded to the High
Court, and the High Court is directed to dispose of the case
in the light of the directions and observations made in the
majority judgment. It will be open to the Court seised of
the matter to direct, in its discretion, amount of costs to
be incurred hereafter.
P.B.R.
(1) [1963] Supp. 1 S.C.R. 282.
801