Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SANT RAM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RAJINDER LAL AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT22/09/1978
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
DESAI, D.A.
SEN, A.P. (J)
CITATION:
1978 AIR 1601 1979 SCR (1) 900
ACT:
East Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act, 1949, Sec.
13(2) (ii) (b), as applied to Himachal Pradesh, construction
of-Words & Phrases-"Used the building... for a purpose other
than that for which it was leased".
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, a harijan by birth and a cobbler by
vocation was the lessee of a portion of a shop in Ram Bazaar
Simla, since 1963, on an annual rent of Rs. 300/-. On the
landlord’s petition for eviction of the appellant a tenant
under section 13 (2) (ii) (b) of the East Punjab Urban Rent
Restriction Act, 1949, as applied to Himachal Pradesh on the
ground that the premises were being used for a purpose other
than the one for which they were let out, the Rent
Controller held in favour of the landlord. The appellate
authority having reversed it, the landlord went in revision
before the High Court. The High Court set aside the
appellate decision and restored the Rent Controller’s Order,
inferentially inter preting the lease deed that the lease
being of a shop the purpose must have been commercial. In
appeal by special leave, the appellant reiterated his
contentions viz. that (a) there was no specific commercial
purpose inscribed in the demise and therefore it was not
possible to postulate a diversion of purpose and (b) even
assuming that the letting was for a commercial purpose, the
fact that the appellant had cooked his food or stayed at
night in the rear portion of the small shop did not offend
against S. 13(2) (ii) (b) of the Act.
Allowing the appeal, the Court,
^
HELD : 1. While interpreting deeds and statutes two
rules must be remembered. The first one is "in drafting it
is not enough to gain a degree of precision which a person
reading in good faith can understand, but it is necessary to
attain if possible to a degree of precision which a person
reading in bad faith cannot misunderstand". The second more
important one for the Third World countries is that
statutory construction, so long as law is at the service of
life, cannot be divorced from the social setting. Welfare
legislation must be interpreted in a Third World
perspective. [903E-G]
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The law itself is intended to protect tenants from
unreasonable eviction and is, therefore, worded a little in
favour of that class of beneficiaries. When interpreting the
text of such provisions-and this holds good in reading the
meaning of documents regulating the relations between the
weaker and the stronger contracting parties-the Court should
remember that
"where doubts arise the Gandhian talisman becomes
a tool of interpretation; "whenever you are in
doubt.....apply the following test. Recall the face of
the poorest and the weakest man whom you may have seen,
and ask yourself, if the step you contemplate is going
to be of any use to him." [903G-H, 904A-B]
Moti Ram and Ors. v. State of Madhya Pradesh, [1979] 1
SCR 335, applied.
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2. The provision of Section 13(2)(ii)(b) of the East
Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act, 1949 has not been
attracted. Even the legislature by a later amendment of the
definition of "non-residential building" in its realism, has
veered round expressly to approve de jure what is the de
facto situation prevailing in the urban areas of Himachal
Pradesh. [905B, F-G]
3. The life style of the people shapes the profile of
the law and not vice versa. Law, not being an abstraction
but a pragmatic exercise, the legal inference to be drawn
from a lease deed is conditioned by the prevailing
circumstances. The intention of parties from which courts
spell out the purpose of the lease is to be garnered from
the social milieu. Thus viewed it is difficult to hold,
especially when the lease has not spelt it out precisely,
that the purpose was exclusively commercial and incompatible
with any residential use, even of a portion. [903D-E]
In the instant case, it is impossible to hold that if a
tenant who takes out petty premises for carrying on a small
trade also stays in the rear portion, cooks and eats, he so
disastrously perverts the purpose of the lease. A different
‘purpose’ in the context is not minor variations but
majuscule in mode of enjoyment. This is not a case of a man
switching over to a canteen business or closing down the
cobbler shop and converting the place into a residential
accommodation. On the other hand, the common case is that
the cobbler continued to be cobbler and stayed in the shop
at night on days when he was running his shop but left for
his home on shop holidays. A sense of proportion in social
assessment is of the judicial essence. [904G-H, 905A-B]
[The Court directed the restitution into possession by
the trial court under section 144 C.P.C. within one month
ignoring the fact that some other tenant was inducted by the
landlord.]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1526 of
1978.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 9-8-1977 of the Himachal Pradesh High Court in Civil
Revision No. 68 of 1976.
R. K. Bhatt and Mrs. Krishna Bhatt for the Appellant.
Hardev Singh for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J. A small event may mark a great portent
as this tiny proceeding for eviction, from a mini-shop, of a
little man, will presently disclose.
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The appellant, a harijan by birth and a cobbler by
vocation, was a petty tenant of the eastern half of a shop
in Ram Bazar, Simla. The original landlord passed away and
his sons, the respondents, stepped into his shoes as legal
representatives. He filed a petition for eviction of the
appellant-tenant under S.13(2) (ii) (b) of the East Punjab
Urban Rent Restriction Act, 1949, as applied to Himachal
Pradesh on the ground that the premises were being used for
purpose other than the one for which they were let out. The
Rent Controller having held in
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favour of the land-lord, an eviction order ensued. The
appellate authority reversed this finding and dismissed the
petition for eviction. The High Court, in revision, reversed
the appellate decision and restored the Rent Controller’s
order. The cobbler-appellant, in the last lap of litigation,
has landed in this Court. The poverty of the appellant is
reflected in the chequered career of the case in this Court
where it was dismissed more than once for default in payment
but ultimately, thanks to the persistence of the appellant,
he got this Court’s order to pay the balance amount
extended. He complied with that direction and thus could not
be priced out of the justice market, if we may use that
expression.
The short point for adjudication is as to whether the
respondent land-lord made out the statutory ground for
eviction, of having diverted the building for a use
radically different from the one for which it was let,
without his consent. There is no case of written consent put
forward by the tenant. But he contested the land-lord’s
claim by asserting that there was no specific commercial
purpose inscribed in the demise and, therefore, it was not
possible to postulate a diversion of purpose. Secondly, he
urged that, even assuming that the letting was for a
commercial purpose, the fact that he had cooked his food or
stayed at night in the rear portion of the small shop did
not offend against S. 13(2)(ii)(b) of the Act.
S.13 (2) (ii) (b) reads:
"used the building ..... for a purpose other than
that for which it was leased"
The factual matrix may be shortly projected; for as Mr.
Justice Cardozo luminously stated.
"More and more we lawyers are awaking to a
perception of the truth that what divides and distracts
us in the solution of a legal problem is not so much
uncertainty about the law as uncertainty about the
facts-the facts which generate the law. Let the facts
be known as they are, and the law will sprout from the
seed and turn its branches toward the light."(1)
A cobbler-the appellant-was the lessee of a portion of a
shop in Ram Bazar, Simla, since 1963, on an annual rent of
Rs. 300/- (i.e. Rs. 25/- per month). Ex. P. 1, the lease
deed, disclosed no purpose; but inferentially it has been
held by the High Court that the lease being of a shop the
purpose must have been commercial. Possible; not
903
necessarily sure. The actual life-situations and urban
conditions of India, especially where poor tradesmen like
cobblers, candle-stick makers, cycle repairers and tanduri
bakers, take out small spaces on rent, do not warrant an
irresistible inference that if the lease is of a shop the
purpose of the lease must be commercial. It is common
knowledge that in the small towns-why, even in the big
cities-little men plying little crafts and possessing little
resources taken on lease little work places to trade and to
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live, the two being interlaced for the lower, larger bracket
of Indian humanity. You struggle to make a small income and
work late into the right from early in the morn and, during
intervals, rest your bones in the same place, drawing down
the shutters of the shop for a while. The primary purpose is
to ply a petty trade, the secondary but necessary incident
is to sleep in the same place since you can hardly afford
anything but a pavement for the creature needs of cooking
food, washing yourself, sleeping for a time and the like.
The life style of the people shapes the profile of the
law and not vice-versa. Law, not being an abstraction but a
pragmatic exercise, the legal inference to be drawn from a
lease deed is conditional by the prevailing circumstances.
The intention of parties from which we spell out the purpose
of the lease is to be garnered from the social milieu. Thus
viewed, it is difficult to hold, especially when the lease
has not spelt it out precisely, that the purpose was
exclusively commercial and incompatible with any residential
use, even of a portion.
Two rules must be remembered while interpreting deeds
and statutes. The first one is:
"In drafting it is not enough to gain a degree of
precision which a person reading in good faith can
understand, but it is necessary to attain if possible
to a degree of precision which a person reading in bad
faith cannot misunderstand."(1)
The second one is more important for the Third World
countries. Statutory construction, so long as law is at the
service of life, cannot be divorced from the social setting.
That is why, welfare legislation like the one with which we
are now concerned, must be interpreted in a Third World
perspective. We are not on the Fifth Avenue or Westend of
London. We are in a hilly region of an Indian town with
indigents struggling to live and huddling for want of
accommodation. The law itself is intended to protect tenants
from unreasonable eviction and is, therefore, worded a
little in favour of that class of beneficiaries. When
interpreting the text of such provisions-and this holds good
in reading
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the meaning of documents regulating the relations between
the weaker and the stronger contracting parties-we must
remember what is an earlier decision of this Court, has been
observed :(1)
"Where doubts arise the Gandhian talisman becomes
a tool of interpretation; "Whenever you are in
doubt.... apply the following test. Recall the face of
the poorest and the weakest man whom you may have seen,
and ask yourself, if the step you contemplate is going
to be of any use to him."
If we remember these two rules, the conclusion is easy that
there is no exclusiveness of purpose that can be spelt out
of the lease deed. That knocks at the bottom of the case of
the land-lord.
The circumstances are clearer as we proceed further.
For well over a decade the tenant have been in occupation,
cobbling and sleeping, in the same place on working days,
but going home on days when the shop is closed. Indeed, the
pathetic genesis of the residential user cannot be lost
sight of. The cobbler’s wife became mentally deranged and he
could not leave her at home lest she should prove a danger
to herself and to others around. Being a harijan cobbler he
could not hire servants and so, in despair, he took his
insane wife to the place where he was toiling on leather. He
worked in the shop, cooked food for his wife, slept there at
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night and thus managed to survive although she died a little
later. "A bed by night and a chest of drawers by day" is not
unusual even in England, as those who have read Goldsmith
know. The dual uses of accommodation are common enough and,
in this case, the land-lord himself appears to have
understood it that way. The evidence shows that the
sympathetic father of the respondents had not objected to
the petitioner living in the premises and had even provided
a sink in the shop to facilitate such user. Not that oral
permission to divert the user to a different purpose is
sufficient in the face of the statutory requirement of
written consent but that circumstance of the land-lord’s
acquiescence over a long stretch of time reinforces the case
of the tenant that the purpose was two-fold. The common
experience of life lends credence to this case and none but
those who live in ivory towers can refuse to look at the raw
realities of life while administering justice. We are in the
field of Poverty Jurisprudence.
It is impossible to hold that if a tenant who takes out
petty premises for carrying on a small trade also stays in
the rear portion, cooks and eats, he so disastrously
perverts the purpose of the lease. A different ’purpose’ in
the context is not minor variations but majuscule in mode of
enjoyment. This is not a case of a man switching over to a
905
canteen business or closing down the cobbler shop and
converting the place into a residential accommodation. On
the other hand, the common case is that the cobbler
continued to be cobbler and stayed in the shop at night on
days when he was running his shop but left for his home on
shop holidays. A sense of proportion in social assessment is
of the judicial essence.
The irresistible inference, despite the ingenious
argument to the contrary, is that the provision of
S.13(2)(ii) has not been attracted. We are comforted in the
thought that our conclusion is a realistic one, as is
apparent from a subsequent amendment to the definition of
nonresidential building which reads thus:
"(d) "non-residential building" means a building
being used,-
(i) mainly for the purpose of business or
trade; or
(ii) partly for the purpose of business or
trade and partly for the purpose of
residence, subject to the condition that
the person who carries on business or
trade in the building resides there;
Provided that if a building is let out for
residential and non-residential purpose
separately to more than one person, the
portion thereof let out for the purpose of
residence shall not be treated as a non-
residential building.
Explanation.-Where a building is used mainly for
the purpose of business or trade, it shall be
deemed to be a non-residential building even
though a small portion thereof is used for
the purpose of residence."
Shri Bhatt raised an argument that this provision was
applicable to pending proceedings. We do not have to
investigate into that question in the view we have already
taken and note the amendment only to indicate that the
legislature, in its realism, has veered round expressly to
approve de jure what is the de facto situation prevailing in
the urban areas of Himachal Pradesh.
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In this view, the appeal is allowed with costs. The
tenant shall not be ejected. If he has been, as in this case
it is stated he has been, the tenant shall be restituted
into possession by the trial court under S. 144, C.P.C.
within one month ignoring the fact that some other tenant is
inducted by the landlord.
S.R. Appeal allowed.
906