Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
TEJ BHAN MADAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
II ADDITIONAL DISTRICT JUDGE AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT09/05/1988
BENCH:
VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J)
PATHAK, R.S. (CJ)
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
CITATION:
1988 AIR 1413 1988 SCR Supl. (1) 247
1988 SCC (3) 137 JT 1988 (2) 574
1988 SCALE (1)1083
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1989 SC 758 (11)
RF 1990 SC 636 (6,9,10)
ACT:
Indian Evidence Act, 1872: Section 116-Estoppel in
relation to tenants-Whether there can be denial of title of
landlord without tenant renouncing.
Uttar Pradesh (Temporary) Control of Rent and Eviction
Act, 1947: Section 3(1)(f)-Denial of title of the landlord
by tenant-Forfeiture of tenancy-When arises.
HEADNOTE:
Mainavati, who had purchased the premises in question
at a court-sale, conveyed the same by sale in favour of
Gopinath. The appellant who was in occupation attorned his
tenancy in favour of Gopinath. Gopinath, in turn, sold the
property in favour of Chhaya Gupta, the third respondent.
The appellant-tenant on being asked to attorn the tenancy in
favour of Chhaya Gupta, declined to do so and assailed not
only the derivative title of the third respondent to the
property but also the validity of the sale in favour of
Gopinath himself on the ground that Mainavati had not
acquired the totality of all rights and interests in the
property and, as such, her title was defective.
This act of disclaimer of the title of Gopinath to whom
the appellant had attorned was the foundation of proceedings
in ejectment. The High Court, dismissing the appellant’s
writ petition, upheld the order of ejectment made by the
Courts below.
Before this Court it was contended by the appellant:
(1) that the High Court was in error in its view that the
stand taken by the appellant amounted in law to a denial of
title of the landlord, and (2) that the view of the High
Court on the scope of a tenant’s estoppel was erroneous.
Dismissing the appeal, it was
^
HELD: (1) The law as to the estoppel of a tenant under
Section 116 of the Evidence Act was a recognition, and
statutory assimilation, of the equitable principles
underlying the doctrine of estoppel in rela-
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248
tion to tenants. The Section was not exhaustive of the law
of estoppel. The section inter-alia, predicated that no
tenant of immovable property during the continuance of the
tenancy, would be permitted to deny that the landlord of
such tenant had, at the beginning of the tenancy, title to
such property. [251B-C]
(2) There could be a denial of the title of his
landlord without the tenant renouncing his own character as
a tenant, where, for instance, he had set up a plea of Jus
tertii. [254B]
(3) The derivative title of the third-respondent was
not denied on any other ground than the one that the vendor,
Gopinath-to whom appellant had attorned-had himself no
title, the implication of which was that if appellant could
not have denied Gopinath’s title by virtue of the
inhibitions of the attornment, he could not question third-
respondent’s title either. What appellant did, indeed,
amounted to a denial of title which appellant was precluded
from doing on the general principles of estoppel between
landlord and tenant. [254C-D]
(4) Having regard to the findings of fact recorded by
the High Court, it appeared to be a clear case which
attracted the grounds for eviction under section 3 (1) of
the Uttar Pradesh (Temporary) Control of Rent and Eviction
Act, 1947. [254E-F]
Kumar Krishna Prasad Lal Singha Das v. Baraboni Coal
Concern Ltd., AIR 1937 PC 251, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 80 of
1981.
From the Judgment and Order dated 10.7.80 of the
Allahabad High court in Civil Miscellaneous W.P.No. 5661 of
1979.
Manoj Swarup for the Appellant.
S.K. Bagga for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATACHALIAH, J. This appeal, by special leave, by
the tenant arises out of and is directed against the
Judgment dated 10.7.1980 of the Allahabad High Court in
Civil Misc. Writ Petition No. 5661 of 1979 rejecting the
appellant’s challenge to of the decrees of ejectment
249
granted in favour of the third respondent-landlord on the
ground that there was a denial of the title of the landlord
within the meaning, and for purposes, of Section 3(1)(f) of
the Uttar Pradesh (Temporary) Control of Rent and Eviction
Act, 1947 (Act III of 1947).
The appeal raises a short question whether, in the
circumstances of the case, there was a disclaimer on the
part of the appellant of the landlord’s title, so as to
incur forfeiture of the tenancy.
2. The necessary and material facts may briefly be
stated:
The premises in question, i.e. No. 7/3, Shambhoo
Barracks, Allahabad, originally belonged to a certain
Shambhoo Lal Jain. Shamboo Lal died in the year 1943
leaving behind him his widow Rajul Devi; his two sons,
Dayachand and Dhoomchand; and a daughter Mainavati.
Dayachand, it is stated, went away in adoption to the
family of one Banvarilal, a brother of Shamboo Lal.
Pursuant to and in execution of a money-decree obtained
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by the said Mainavati against her brother Dhoomchand,
she brought the said premises for sale and claimed to
have purchased the same at a Court-sale on 21.5.1956.
Mainavati, thereafter, conveyed the property by sale in
favour of a certain Gopinath Agrawal.
Appellant who was in occupation of the premises as a
tenant even prior to the sale attorned the tenancy in favour
of the purchaser Gopinath and came to pay the rents to
Gopinath accordingly. Gopinath, in turn, sold the property
in favour of Chhaya Gupta, the third respondent herein. Both
the vendor-Gopinath and the purchaser-Chhaya Gupta issued
notices to the appellant to attorn the tenancy in favour of
the purchaser, Chhaya Gupta. But appellant-tenant declined
to do so and assailed not only the derivative title of the
third-respondent to the property but also the validity of
the sale in favour of Gopinath himself.
3. The provocation for the denial on the part of the
appellant of the third respondent’s title was this: It would
appear that in a separate litigation which culminated in the
judgment dated 6.7.1971 of the Allahabad High Court in First
Appeal No. 260 of 1968 between the said Mainavati on the one
hand and a certain Chamanlal on the other, it was held that
what Mainavati had acquired under the execution sale of
24.4.1956 was not the totality of all rights and interests
in the property, but was only such right, title and interest
as the judgment-
250
debtor, i.e. Dhoomchand, had and that the Court-sale did not
convey to Mainavati the interest of Rajul Devi, the widow of
Shamboolal Jain. It was also held that Chamanlal who
obtained a decree against both Dhoomchand and the estate of
Shamboolal would, notwithstanding the sale in favour of
Mainavati, be entitled to bring the residuary interests in
the same property for sale in his execution. Appellant
sought to raise this defect in Mainavati’s title. But the
point to note, however, is that the appellant had attorned
the tenancy in favour of Gopinath Agarwal, paid rents
through-out the period during which Gopinath’s interest
subsisted. The question was whether despite this attornment,
the appellant could assail Gopinath’s title. Appellant
sought to assert that the sale in favour of Gopinath was
void and conveyed nothing.
This act, on the part of the appellant, of denial and
disclaimer of the title was the foundation of the
proceedings in ejectment. The High Court, dismissing the
appellant’s writ petition, has upheld the order of ejectment
made by the Courts below.
4. We have heard Shri K.B. Asthana, learned Senior
Counsel for the appellant and Shri B.D. Aggarwal, learned
Senior Counsel for the contesting third-respondent. The
point that Shri Asthana sought to put across was that the
High Court was in error in its view that the stand taken by
the appellant in his reply dated 3.4.1972 amounted in law to
a denial of title of the land-lord and that, at all events,
the view of the High Court on the scope of a tenant’s
estoppel was clearly untenable. Learned counsel submitted
that the estoppel of a tenant does not go so far as to bar
him from questioning the derivative title of an assignee of
the reversion or from contending, as here, that, in addition
to the particular person claiming to be the successor or
assignee of the reversion, there were also others who were
co-owners of the reversion. On the first aspect, learned
counsel submitted that where a tenant requires from the
person, claiming to be assignee or successor-in-interest of
the reversion, proof of the vestitive facts on which the
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claim rests or where the tenant alleges that the reversion
vested not exclusively in the person so claiming, but in a
body of co-owners, there was no disclaimer of the position
of the tenant as tenant.
On the second aspect, learned counsel submitted that
estoppel of a tenant is in respect of, and confined to, the
title as at the time the tenant was inducted or let-into
possession, that appellant could yet show that the
attornment made in favour of Gopinath Agarwal, from
251
whom the third respondent claims, was in ignorance of the
full facts and the result of fraud and mis-representation,
and that under these circumstances, appellant’s
acknowledgment of Gopinath Agarwal as the landlord, would
not debar him from contending that Gopinath himself was not
the full owner, but had acquired only an undivided share and
interest in the property.
5. The law as to estoppel of a tenant under Section 116
of the Evidence Act is a recognition, and statutory
assimilation, of the equitable principles underlying
estoppel in relation to tenants. The section is not
exhaustive of the law of estoppel. The section, inter-alia,
predicates that no tenant of immovable property shall,
during the continuance of the tenancy, be permitted to deny
that the landlord of such tenant had, at the beginning of
the tenancy, title to such property.
Referring to the reason underlying this branch of the
doctrine of estoppel Marton B said: (Cuthberton v. Irwing,
28 LJ Ex. 306).
"......This state of the law in reality tends to
maintain right and justice and the enforcement of
contracts which men enter into with each other-for
so long as a lessee enjoys every-thing which his
lease purports to grant how does it concern him
that the title of the lessor......is?"
Shri Asthana may be right in his submission that a
tenant who, without disclaiming his own position as tenant,
however, seeks proof of title from an alleged assignee of
the reversion cannot be held to have denied the landlord’s
title. It may also be true that the estoppel of a tenant is
primarily in relation to his landlord who had let him into
possession and that, accordingly, such tenant is not
precluded from questioning the alleged derivative title of a
person claiming to be the successor to, or assignee of, the
reversion, for want of proof of the vestitive facts on which
the claim for attornment is based. The rule of estoppel does
not also preclude a tenant from contending that the
landlord’s title has since terminated by transfer or
otherise or has been lost or defeated by title-peramount. In
English case law there was some authority for the
proposition that the tenant was only estopped from denying
his landlord’s title only if at the time he took the lease
from the landlord he was not already in possession of the
land.
In Kumar Krishna Prasad Lal Singha Deo v. Baraboni Coal
Concern Ltd. and Ors., AIR 1937 PC 251 the judicial
committee noticed this contention thus:
252
"The defendant company contended before the High
Court that the section only applies where it is
shown that the landlord put the tenant into
possession of the property, and that when a person
already in possession of land becomes tenant to
another there is no estoppel against his denying
his lessor’s title...."
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However, it was held:
"There is in English case law some authority for
the view that a tenant is only estopped from
denying his landlord’s title if at the time when
he took his lease he was not already in possession
of the land. But in Section 116, the Indian
Legislature has formulated no such condition. The
words ’at the beginning of the tenancy’ give no
ground for it. When a demise of land is made and
acted on, when the tenant proceeds to occupy and
enjoy under the grant, gets the shelter of the
grantor’s title and the benefit of his covenants,
it is difficult to see why ’during the continuance
of the tenancy’ he should be free of this form of
estoppel. ’Tenant who has occupied but not
entered’ is a difficult notion to thrust into
Section 116 and quite impossible to find therein."
6. In the present case the plea of the landlord is that
the general principles of estoppel preclude the tenant from
denying the title of the person to whom he has attorned. In
Kumar Krishna Prasad’s case their Lordships observed:
".... The principle does not apply to disentitle a
tenant to dispute the derivative title of one who
claims to have since become entitled to the
reversions, though in such cases there may be
other grounds of estoppel e.g., by attornment,
acceptance of rent etc. ......"
"The section does not deal or profess to deal with all kinds
of estoppel or occasions of estoppel which may arise between
landlord and tenant .............. Whether during the
currency of a term the tenant by attornment to A who claims
to have the reversion, or the landlord by acceptance of rent
from B who claims to be entitled to the term is estopped
from disputing the claim which he has once admitted are
important questions, but they are instances of cases which
are outside Section 116 altogether ......"
(emphasis supplied)
253
In regard to the effect of attornment Spencer Bower on
Estoppel says:
"192. Where a tenant, with full knowledge of the
facts, either expressly in writing, or impliedly
by acts, such as the payment of rent, attorns
tenant to a person other than his original
landlord or one who is claiming the estate or
interest of such original landlord by assignment,
succession, or otherwise, he is ordinarily
estopped from questioning the title of the person
to whom he has so attorned. But, here too, it is
open to the party sought to be estopped to explain
away the attornment, and so escape the estoppel to
which is would otherwise be subject, by proof
that, when he so attorned, he was labouring under
mistake or ignorance as to material facts
affecting the title of the person to whom he
attorned, particularly if such error or ignorance
was due to the fraud of that person."
(emphasis supplied)
(Estoppel by Representation by Spencer Bower &
Turner-III Edn.)
The concurrent findings of facts in this case-it is
indeed a matter of admission of the appellant-that ever-
since the purchase by Gopinath Agarwal the appellant
attorned the tenancy in his favour and paid rent to him.
Appellant did not establish that there was misrepresentation
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on the part of Gopinath or mistake on the part of the
appellant misleading appellant into this attornment. High
Court observes:
".... In the courts below, an attempt was made to
get over the effect of the defendant having
attorned to Gopinath Agrawal by trying to
demonstrate that the attornment was as the result
of fruad and mis-representation practised by
Gopinath Agrawal. Both the Courts below have
rejected this plea, which is undisputably purely
one of fact. Counsel for the petitioner made no
attempt to show that the said finding of the
courts below is wrong."
8. Now, Section 3(1)(f) which refers to one of the
grounds for eviction under the Act envisages:
"(f) that the tenant has renounced his character
as such or denied the title of the landlord
and the latter has not
254
waived his right or condoned the conduct of
the tenant;"
There can be a denial of the title of his landlord without
the tenant renouncing his character as such where, for
instance, he sets up a plea of Jus-tertii. The stance of the
appellant against the third-respondent’s title was not on
the ground of any infirmity or defect in the flow of title
from Gopinath, but on the ground that the latter’s vendor-
Mainavati herself had no title. The derivative title of the
third-respondent is not denied on any ground other than the
one that the vendor, Gopinath-to whom appellant had
attorned-had himself no title, the implication of which is
that if appellant could not have denied Gopinath’s title by
virtue of the inhibitions of the attornment, he could not
question third-respondent’s title either. Appellant did
himself no service by this stand.
It must, accordingly, be held on both the aspects
contended-for by Shri Asthana that what appellant did,
indeed, amounted to a denial of title and that appellant was
precluded from doing so on the general principles of
estoppel between landlord and tenant. The principle, in its
basic foundations. means no more than that under certain
cricumstances law considers it unjust to allow a person to
approbate and reprobate.
Having regard to the circumstances of this case and the
findings of fact recorded by the High Court it appears to us
to be a clear case which attracted the grounds under Section
3(1) of the Uttar Pradesh (Temporary) Control of Rent and
Eviction Act, 1947 (Act 3 of 1947). The view taken by the
High Court does not call for interference. We accordingly
find no merit in this appeal which is dismissed but without
an order as to costs.
R.S.S. Appeal dismissed.
255