Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SOHAN LAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE UNION OF INDIA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
07/03/1957
BENCH:
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
BENCH:
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
MENON, P. GOVINDA
KAPUR, J.L.
CITATION:
1957 AIR 529 1957 SCR 738
ACT:
Writ of mandamus-Disputed questions of fact and law-Dispute
regarding title-Whether remedy by way of writ appropriate
-When writ can issue to private individual-State illegally
evicting Person from house-Another Person taking Possession
bona fide without knowledge of illegal eviction-Whether writ
can issue against such person-Constitution of India, Art.
226.
HEADNOTE:
J, a displaced person, was found Prima facie entitled to
allotment of a house and the Accommodation Officer moved his
family into the house on May 10, 1952, but no letter of
allotment was issued to him. Later, when certain facts
became known which in the opinion of the Union of India
disentitled j to the allotment, he was informed that the
house could not be allotted to him. j was evicted from the
house on September 27, 1952, without being given 15 days
notice as required by S. 3 of the Public Premises Eviction
Act (XXVII of 1950). The house was then allotted to S and
he was given possession on October 3, 1952. J filed a
petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution in the High
Court. The High Court ordered the Union of India and also S
to restore possession of the house to J. S appealed. Held,
that the High Court erred in issuing the writ of mandamus.
There was a serious dispute on questions of fact between the
parties and also whether j had acquired any title to the
property in dispute. Proceedings by way of a Writ were not
appropriate in a case where the decision of the Court would
amount to a decree declaring a party’s title and ordering
restoration of possession. The proper remedy in such a case
is by way of a title suit in a Civil Court. The alternative
remedy of obtaining relief by a
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writ of mandamus or an order in the nature of mandamus could
only be had if the facts were not in dispute and the title
to the. property in dispute was clear.
As the eviction of J was illegal on account of the failure
to give him notice under S. 3 Of the Public Premises
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Eviction Act a writ of mandamus might have issued to the
Union if the property had still been in its possession. But
no such writ could issue to S as, normally, it does not
issue to a private individual. If it had been proved that
the Union and S had colluded, and the transaction between
them was merely colourable, entered into with a view to
deprive J of his rights, jurisdiction to issue the writ
might be said to exist in the Court. The writ however could
not issue to S who had, apparently, entered into bona fide
possession of the house without knowledge that J had been
illegally evicted therefrom.
R. v. Chestey Corporation, (1855) 25 L.J.Q.B. 61, applied.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No.
132 of 1954.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
April 30, 1953, of the Circuit Bench of the Punjab High
Court at Delhi in Civil Writ Application No. 314 of 1952.
Ram Lal Anand and S. N. Anand, for the appellant.
R.Ganpathy Iyer and R. H. Dhebar, for respondent No. 1.
A.N. Grover and K. L. Mehta, for the respondent No. 2.
1957. March 7. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
IMAM J.--The respondent Jagan Nath filed a petition under
Art. 226 of the Constitution in the Punjab High Court which
was allowed. The High Court ordered the respondent The
Union of India and the appellant Sohan Lal to forthwith
restore possession of house No. 35 situated in West Patel
Nagar, Delhi to Jagan Nath. Against this order of the High
Court the appellant applied for and obtained special leave
to appeal to this Court.
Jagan Nath is a displaced person and a refugee from
Pakistan. The Government of India had devised various
schemes for the rehabilitation of refugees. One
740
of these was a scheme for sale of certain houses constructed
by the Government of India for refugees in West Patel Nagar.
It was not intended -under the scheme to entertain
applications from displaced persons who had already been
allotted agricultural land in East Punjab. A limited number
of houses known as ’box-type tenements" were constructed.
According to -he procedure prescribed in order to give
effect to the scheme, only those displaced persons, who were
registered before the 15th of August, 1948, and were gain-
fully employed, were eligible for allotment of a house. A
displaced person wishing to apply for allotment of a house
was required to submit an application in the prescribed form
offering to purchase a house in West Patel Nagar. If the
applicant was prima facie eligible, he could be instructed
to deposit the sale price of the house in the treasury, his
eligibility to be verified later on Permission to deposit
the sale price did not mean that his eligibility had been
accepted. After payment of the sale price the applicant
could be required to produce proof of his eligibility. A
list would be prepared of all the applicants who had
deposited the sale price and whose eligibility had been
verified. If the number of the applicants was in excess of
the available number of houses, those, whose treasury
challans bore a later date, would be excluded and their
money refunded. The applicants whose names were included in
the final list would be required to pay the ground. rent by
a specified date. A particular house would be allotted to
an applicant by drawing lots. Jagan Nath had got himself
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registered as a refugee on December 31, 1947. He had made
his application in the prescribed form. He had deposited
the sum of Rs. 5,600 as the sale price after his prima facie
eligibility had been accepted. He had also deposited the
ground rent for the plot on which the house had been built,
having been informed previously that it had been decided to
allot him a two-roomed enclosed verandah "box-type" house in
West Patel Nagar. He was informed that the allotment of a
particular house would be decided by drawing lots at site on
February 15, 1952, at 3 p.m. As the result of the drawing of
lots, house No. 35, the
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property in dispute in this appeal, fell to his lot.
According to Jagan Nath, on May 10, 1952, the Accommodation
Officer in his absence removed the members of his family
along with his entire belongings to the house in dispute in
a truck and he and his family thus entered into possession
of the house in dispute. Jagan Nath, however, was evicted
from the house in dispute on September 27, 1952, by virtue
of a warrant of eviction dated September 11, 1952,
purporting to have been issued under s. 25 of Ordinance III
of 1952. After his eviction,possession of the house in
dispute was given to the appellant on October 3, 1952. The
appellant, who is also a displaced person, had applied on
February 27, 1952, for allotment of a house in West Patel
Nagar. He had made the deposit of Rs. 5,600 as sale price
and had apparently complied with all the necessary
conditions for allotment of a house to him and the house in
dispute was allotted to him on July 31, 1952. The appellant
has been in possession of the disputed house since October
3, 1952.
The appellant’s main contention has been that, having regard
to the circumstances of ’the case, the High Court erred in
making the order it did which presumably purported to be in
the nature of a writ of mandamus. There was a serious
dispute on questions of fact between the parties and also
whether Jagan Nath had acquired in law any title to the
property in dispute. Proceedings by way of a writ were not
appropriate in a case where the decision of the Court would
amount to a decree declaring Jagan Nath’s title and ordering
restoration of possession. The proper remedy open to Jagan
Nath was to get his title declared in the ordinary way in a
Civil Court. The alternative remedy of obtaining relief by
a writ of mandamus or an order in the nature of mandamus
could only be had if the facts were not in dispute and Jagan
Nath’s title to the property in dispute was clear. It was
further contended on behalf of the appellant that a writ of
mandamus or an order in the nature of mandamus could not be
made against the appellant, a private individual. He had
come into lawful possession and there was no evidence of
collusion
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between him and the Union of India and there was no finding
by the High Court that the appellant had acted in collusion
with the Union of India as a result of which Jagan Nath was
dispossessed of the property in dispute and the same was
allotted to him.
On behalf of Jagan Nath, it was urged that when he entered
into possession of the property in dispute he did not do so
as a trespasser. He had been inducted on the property by
the Accommodation Officer. He could not have been illegally
evicted. S. 3 of the Public Premises (Eviction) Act, 1950
(Act No. XXVII of 1950), required a notice to be served upon
him directing him to vacate the premises within 15 days from
the date of the service of the notice upon him before he
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could be evicted. This was not done and he had been evicted
without complying with the mandatory provisions of a. 3 of
the said Act. His eviction was a high-handed act of the
Government without any legal justification whatsoever. The
Union of India which had illegaly evicted him should be
ordered to restore possession of the property in dispute to
him and as the eviction was at the instance of the
appellant, he should also be directed to restore possession
of the said property to Jagan Nath. Reliance was placed
upon certain decisions of the High Courts of Punjab in
Khushal Singh v. Shri Rameshwar Dayal, Deputy Commissioner,
Delhi (1), Hyderabad in G. Kistareddy v. Commr. of City
Police, Hyderabad (2) and Pepsu in Mohinder Singh v. State
of Pepsu (1), as well as certain observations in the
judgment of this Court in the case of Wazir Chand v. The
state of Himachal Pradesh (4) in support of the proposition
that, as Jagan Nath was in possession and he had been
illegally evicted, he was entitled to have property, from
which he had been illegally evicted, restored to him.
We do not propose to enquire into the merits of the rival
claims of title to the property in dispute set up by the
appellant and Jagan Nath. If we were to do so, we would be
entering into a field of investigation which is more
appropriate for a Civil Court in a properly constituted suit
to do rather than for a Court exercising
(1) I.L.R. [1954] Punjab 211.
(2) A.I.R. [1952] Hyderabad 36.
(3) A.I.R. [1955] Pepsu 60.
(4) [1955] S.C.R. 408.
S.C.R. 743
the prerogative of issuing writs. There are questions of
fact and law which are in dispute requiring determination
before the respective claims of the parties to this appeal
can be decided. Before the property in dispute can be
restored to Jagan Nath it will be necessary to declare that
he had title in that property and was entitled to recover
possession of it. This would in effect amount to passing a
decree in his favour. In the circumstances to be mentioned
hereafter, it is a matter for serious consideration whether
in proceedings under Art. 226 of the Constitution such a
declaration ought to be made and restoration of the property
to Jagan Nath be ordered.
Jagan Nath had entered into a transaction with the Union of
India upto a certain stage with respect to the property in
dispute, but no letter of allotment had been issued him.
Indeed, he had been informed, when certain facts became
known, that the property in question could not be allotted
to him as he was a displaced person who had been allotted
land in East Punjab. As between Jagan Nath and the Union of
India it will be necessary to decide what rights were
acquired by the former in the property upto the stage when
the latter informed Jagan Nath that the property would not
be allotted to him. Another question for decision will be
whether Jagan Nath was allowed to enter into possession of
the property because it was allotted to him or under a
misapprehension as the Union of India was misled by the
contents of his application. The case of the Union of India
is that under the scheme Jagan Nath was not eligible for
allotment of a house in West Patel Nagar, as it was
subsequently discovered that he had been allotted, previous
to his application, agricultural land in the District of
Hissar. Being satisfied that Jagan Nath was not eligible
for allotment, the Union of India refused to allot to him
the tenement No. 35, West Patel Nagar and allotment of that
house was made to the appellant who was found to be eligible
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in every way. The appellant was accordingly given
possession of the property after Jagan Nath’s eviction. The
appelant had complied with all the conditions imposed by
744
the Union of India and a letter of allotment was actually
issued to him and he entered into possession of the property
in dispute under the authority of the Union of India. Did
the appellant thereby acquire a legal right to hold the
property as a against Jagan Nath? In our opinion, all these
questions should be decided in a properly constituted suit
in a Civil Court rather than in proceedings under Art. 226
of the Constitution.
The eviction of Jagan Nath was in contravention of the
express provisions of s. 3 of the Public Premises (Eviction)
Act. His eviction, therefore, was illegal. He was entitled
to be evicted in due course of law and a writ of mandamus
could issue to or an order in the nature of mandamus could
be made against the Union of India to restore possession of
the property to Jagan Natb from which he had been evicted
the property was still in the possession of the Union of
India. The property in dispute, however, is in possession
of the appellant. There is no evidence and no finding of
the High Court that the appellant was in collusion with the
Union of India or that he had knowledge that the eviction of
Jagan Nath was illegal. Normally, a writ of mandamus does
not issue to or an order in the nature of mandamus is not
made against a private individual. Such an order is made
against a person directing him to do some particular thing,
specified in the order, which appertains to his office and
is in the nature of a public duty (Halsbury’s Laws of
England Vol. 11, Lord Simonds Edition, p. 84). If it had
been proved that the Union of -India and the appellant had
colluded, and the transaction between them was merely
colourable, entered into with a view to deprive Jagan Nath
of his rights, jurisdiction to issue a writ to or make an
order in the nature of mandamus against the appellant might
be said to exist in a Court. We have not been able to find
a direct authority to cover a case like the one before us,
but it would appear that so far as election to an office is
concerned, a mandamus to restore, admit, or elect to an
office will not be granted unless the office is vacant. If
the office is in fact full, proceedings must be taken by way
of injunction or election petition to oust the party. in
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possession and that a mandamus will go only on the
supposition that there is nobody holding the office in
question. In R. v. Chester Corporation (1) it was held that
it is an inflexible rule of law that where a person has been
de facto elected to a corporate office, and has accepted and
acted in the office, the validity of the election and the
title to the office can only be- tried by proceeding on a
quo warranto information. A mandamus will not lie unless
the election can be shown to be merely colourable. We
cannot see why in principle there should be a distinction
made between such a case and the case of a person, who has,
apparently, entered into bona fide possession of a property
without knowledge that any person had been illegally evicted
therefrom.
In our opinion, the High Court erred in allowing the
application of Jagan Nath filed under Art. 226 of the
Constitution and making the order it did. The appeal is
accordingly allowed and the order of the High Court is set
aside. In the circumstances of the present case, however,
we are of the opinion that each party should bear his own
costs in this Court and in the High Court.
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Appeal allowed.