Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SMT. YAMUNA MALO0
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ANAND SWARUP
DATE OF JUDGMENT28/02/1990
BENCH:
MISRA RANGNATH
BENCH:
MISRA RANGNATH
PUNCHHI, M.M.
AGRAWAL, S.C. (J)
CITATION:
1990 AIR 1725 1990 SCR (1) 715
1990 SCC (3) 30 JT 1990 (1) 497
1990 SCALE (1)384
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1991 SC1233 (5,10,13)
E 1992 SC1555 (2,16,17)
ACT:
Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958: Section 21--Limited tenan-
cy-Objection to validity--To be raised before the lease
lapses.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant-landlady and the respendent-tenant ap-
peared before the Rent Controller for creation of a tenancy
under Section 21 of the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958. Ac-
cordingly, the authority passed an order creating tenancy
for a limited period of two years. Since the respondent did
not vacate the premises on the expiry of two years, the
appellant moved the Rent Controller for issuance of warrant
of possession. The Respondent filed his objection. Enter-
taining the objection the Rent Controller dismissed the
petition, holding that the order granting permission for the
tenancy under section 21 of the Act was not in accordance
with law. The appellant’s first appeal before the Rent
Control Tribunal, as also her second appeal before the High
Court met the same fate.
This appeal, by special leave, is against the High
Court’s order dismissing the second appeal in limine.
On behalf of the appellant, it was contended that the
Rent Controller should not have entertained the objection of
the respondent as the same has not been filed during the
currency of the tenancy. It was also contended that some of
the considerations which weighed with the Rent Control
Tribunal were not relevant for judging the bona fides and
genuineness of actions taken at the time of creating the
tenancy.
Allowing the appeal, this Court,
HELD: 1. Section 14 of the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958
deals with a normal tenancy and protects the tenant against
unreasonable eviction. Section 21 of the Act, on the other
hand, places the tenant outside the purview of s. 14 and
provides for an order of eviction at the time of creation of
the tenancy. There is a purpose behind enacting s. 21 of the
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Act. The Legislature considered it appropriate that should a
716
landlord not need his residential premises for a period,
instead of keeping it vacant the same could be available for
a tenant’s use on being let out for a limited period condi-
tional upon the tenant’s surrendering possession as soon as
the tenancy terminates by efflux of time and the need of the
landlord revives. [719G-H; 720A]
2.1. The rule in Noronah’s case has to be confined to a
particular set of facts and should not be freely extended so
as to take away the effect ors. 21. [724F-G]
2.2. In Vohra’s case and in Shiv Chander Kapoor’s case,
though not arising for determination in either, it has been
stated while laying down the rule that proceeding to chal-
lenge limited tenancy has to be taken during the currency of
the tenancy, an objection filed by the tenant could be
looked into, is indeed an obiter. The rule having been
stated to the contrary in Vohra’s case, there was indeed no
warrant to indicate the contra situation. Perhaps to meet
the eventuality which might arise in a particular case, the
exception has also been indicated. If, the tenant has an
objection to raise to the validity of the limited tenancy it
has to be done prior to the lapse of the lease and not as a
defence to the landlord’s application for being put into
possession. Even if such an exercise is available that must
be taken to be very limited and made applicable to excep-
tional situations. Unless the tenant is able to satisfy the
Controller that he had no opportunity at all to know the
facts earlier and had come to be aware of them only then,
should such an objection be entertained. [725E-H]
2.3. In the facts and circumstances of the present case
the belated objections of the tenant should not have been
entertained and prayer for possession made by the landlady
after the limited tenancy ran out should have been granted.
[726A]
S.B. Noronah v. Prem Kumari Khanna, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 281;
J.R. Vohra v. India Export House Pvt. Ltd. & Anr., [1985] 2
SCR 899; Inder Mohan Lal v. Ramesh Khanna, [1987] 4 SCC 1
and Shiv Chander Kapoor v. Amar Bose, JT 1989 (4) SC 471,
referred to.
[This Court directed that the landlady be put into
possession of the premises by 31st March, 1990.]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1319 of
1990.
717
From the Judgment and Order dated 7.9.1987 of Delhi High
Court in S.A.O. No. 99/1987.
Dr. L.M. Singhvi and Dalveer Bhandari for the Appellant.
Dr. Y.S. Chitale and A.K. Sangal for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RANGANATH MISRA, J. Special Leave granted.
This is an appeal by the landlady whose application for
being put in possession of the premises on the expiry of a
limited tenancy of two years under section 21 of the Delhi
Rent Control Act (hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’) has
been dismissed by the Rent Controller, the Rent Control
Tribunal and the High Court.
On 30th September, 1976, the appellant-landlady and the
respondent-tenant appeared before Shri M.A. Khan, Additional
Rent Controller for creation of a tenancy under s. 21 of the
Act. The Additional Rent Controller recorded the statements
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of both the landlady and the prospective tenant and made the
following order:
"Having regard to the facts stated in the petition and the
statement of the parties made above permission under section
21 of the Delhi Rent Control Act is granted to Yamuna Maloo
applicant to let out ground floor of her premises No.
B--2/104, Safderjung--Enclave, New Delhi comprising of
drawing cum dining hall, two bed rooms with attached bath
room, kitchen, parking place and a small’ lawn delineated in
the enclosed plan Ex. AI, to Mr.Anand Swarup respondent for
residential purposes for a limited period of two years with
effect from 1.10.76."
After the expiry of the two year period, when the re-
spondent did not vacate the premises, the landlady moved the
Rent controller for issuance of warrant of possession to
which the tenant filed his objection. The Additional Rent
Controller entertained the objection and dismissed the
landlady’s petition for being put into possession. There
upon the landlady moved the Rent Control Tribunal in appeal
and when she failed before it, a second appeal was filed
before the High Court which was dismissed in limine.
718
The Controller relied upon the judgment of this Court in
S.B.Noronah v.Prem Kumari Khanna[1980] 1 SCR 281 and came to
hold:
"I have carefully gone through the execution appli-
cation, the objections, the evidence on record, the original
file in which the permission was granted and have heard the
learned counsel for parties. I am of the view that the order
dated 30.9.75 granting permission was not in accordance with
law and that the applicant/petitioner is not entitled to
obtain possession of the premises in dispute under section
21 of the Delhi Rent Control Act."
Noronah’s case had stated:
"Of course, there will be presumption in favour of
the sanction being regular, but it will Still be open to a
party to make out his case that in fact and in truth the
conditions which make for a valid sanction were not
present."
It is interesting to note that by the time the appel-
lant’s appeal came up for hearing before the Tribunal, Shri
M.A. Khan who as an Additional Rent Controller had approved
the tenancy by his order dated 30th September, 1976, on
being judicially satisfied that the tenancy under s. 21 of
the Act could be created had become the Rent Control Tribu-
nal. He noticed this fact in his appellate order dated 11th
April, 1986, by stating
"In this appeal, the validity and executability of the order
dr. 30.9.76 is disputed which was passed by me as Addl. Rent
Controller. Since there is no other Rent Control Tribunal,
therefore, in exigency of the situation I have no option but
to proceed to decide this appeal."
He concluded
"The appellant in the application and in her statement did
not give the reason for letting out the premises for two
years only. She even did not give the reason in application
for recovery or’ possession. In reply to the objection of
the respondent, she states that she was residing in Vasant
Vihar at a house which was allotted to her husband by the
employer. There was no possibility of her vacating the said
719
house and shifting to the disputed premises. The first floor
of the disputed premises was also let out by her to another
tenant for a limited period. She did not disclose that she
intended to create a limited tenancy in respect of the first
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floor also. Further the premises were let after an adver-
tisement of ’to let’ in Hindustan Times dt. 25.9.76. It is
conceded that in the advertisement it was not specified that
the premises were available for letting for two years only.
All these facts proved that the appellant did not require
the premises for occupation after two years and that these
premises could have been let out for an indefinite period.
She made a wrong statement before the court. She also con-
cealed the material facts from the court. She obtained the
permission from the court under section 21 by playing fraud.
The order passed under section 21 is therefore invalid and
in execution thereof, the respondent cannot be evicted."
We have already said that the second appeal was dis-
missed in limine.
Lengthy arguments were advanced at the hearing in
support of the respective stands.
Counsel for the landlady argued that the Additional
Rent Controller should not have entertained the objection of
the tenant to the execution of the eviction order as the
same had not been filed during the currency of the tenancy;
it was further argued that some of the considerations which
weighed with the Rent Control Tribunal were
) not at all relevant for judging the bona fides and genu-
ineness of actions taken on 30th of September, 1976, at the
time of creation of the tenancy. On the/side of the tenant,
the contentions which had prevailed with the’Additional Rent
Controller and the Rent Control Tribunal were reiterated.
Section 14 of the Act deals with a normal tenancy and
protects the tenant against unreasonable eviction. Section
21 of the Act, on the other hand, places tile tenant outside
the purview of s. 14 and provides for an order of eviction
at the time of creation of the tenancy. There is a purpose
behind enacting s. 21 of the Act. The Legislature considered
it appropriate that should a landlord not need his residen-
tial premises for a period, instead of keeping the same
vacant the same could be available for a tenant’s use on
being let out for a limited period condi-
720
tional upon the tenant’s surrendering possession as soon as
the tenancy terminates by efflux of time and the need of the
landlord revives. The conditions to be fulfilled at the time
of creation of such a tenancy are three, namely, (i) the
landlord would not require the premises for a particular
period, (ii) the Controller must be satisfied about that
position, and (iii) the tenant agrees to vacate at the end
of the period.
In Noronah’s case supra two-Judge Bench dealt with this
question. This Court then said.
"We must notice that section 21 runs counter to the general
scheme and, therefore, must be restricted severely to its
narrow sphere. Secondly, we must place accent on every
condition which attracts the section and if any one of them
is absent the section cannot apply and, therefore, cannot
arm the landlord with a resistless eviction process. Third-
ly, we must realise that the whole effect of section 14 can
be subverted by ritualistic enforcement of the conditions of
sanction under section 21 or mechanical grant of sanction
therein. Section 21 overrides section 14 precisely because
it is otherwise hedged in with drastic limitations and
safeguards itself against landlords’ abuses.
It is true that the judgment of this Court which is
dated August 16, 1979, was not in existence when Sri Khan
sanctioned the tenancy but the law then in force was not
different. In fact, the orders out of which that appeal
arose had also taken the same view. This Court Noronah’s
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case further said:
"When an application under section 21 is filed by the land-
lord and/or tenant, the Controller must satisfy himself by
such inquiry as he may make, about the compulsive require-
ments of that provision. If he makes a mindless order, the
Court, when challenged at the time of execution, will go
into the question as to whether the twin conditions for
sanction have really been fulfilled."
A three-Judge Bench of this Court in J.R. Vohra v. India
Export House Pvt. Ltd. & Anr., [1985] 2 SCR 899 was examin-
ing the requirement of notice to the tenant when at the
expiry of the period of tenancy the landlord had applied for
being put in possession. While so examining that question
this Court approved the following observations in Noronah’s
case:
721
"Parliament was presumably keen on maximising accommodation
available for letting, realising the scarcity crises. One
source of such spare accommodation which is usually shy is
potentially vacant building or part thereof which the land-
lord is able to let out for a strictly limited period pro-
vided he has some credible assurance that when he needs he
will get it back. If an officer is going on other assignment
for a particular period, or the owner has official quarters
so that he can let out if he is confident that on his re-
tirement he will be able to re-occupy, such accommodation
may add to the total lease-worthy houses. The problem is
felt most for residential uses. But no one will part with
possession because the lessee will become a statutory tenant
and, even if bona fide requirement is made out, the litiga-
tive tiers are so many and the law’s delays so tantalising
that no realist in his sense will trust the sweet promises
of a tenant that he will return the building after the
stipulated period. So the law has to make itself credit-
worthy. The long distance between institution of recovery
proceedings and actual dispossession runs often into a
decade or more--a factor of despair which can be obviated
only by a special procedure.
Section 21 is the answer. The law seeks to persuade
the owner of premises available for letting for a particular
or limited period by giving him the special assurance that
at the expiry of that period the appointed agency will place
the landlord in vacant possession."
Noronah’s judgment was approved to this extent. In the three
succeeding paragraphs in Vohra’s decision. Noronah’s case
was also referred to. Dealing with the contentions relied
upon in Noronah’s case, Tulzapurkar, J. who delivered the
judgment of the Court, observed:
"At the outset we would like to observe that in Noronah’s
case the question whether a prior notice is required to be
served upon the tenant before issuance of warrant of posses-
sion in favour of the landlord under section 21 did not
arise for consideration. It was a case where upon receipt of
landlord’s application for recovery of possession under the
section the tenant raised pleas that the premises had been
let out for non-residential purposes and that the sanction
or permission granted for the creation of the limited tenan-
cy was vitiated by fraud and collusion and the question that
722
arose for consideration was whether at that stage the Rent
Controller could go into and consider such pleas and this
court has ruled that the Controller should consider those
pleas even when raised at that stage."
A little later Justice Tulzapurkar further observed:
"In fact even in Noronah’s case this Court has observed,that
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there will be a presumption in favour of the sanction or
permission being regular and if that be so, we fail to
appreciate as to why the Rent Controller should invite such
pleas of fraud, collusion etc. at the instance of the tenant
by being required to serve a notice upon him before issuing
the warrant of possession in favour of the landlord espe-
cially when the scheme of sec. 21 and the connected relevant
provisions do not require it."
The three-Judge Bench thereafter went to consider the
remedy available to the tenant in a case where the objec-
tions were as in the present case:
"What then is the remedy available to the tenant in a case
where there was in fact a mere ritualistic observance of the
procedure while granting permission for the creation of a
limited tenancy or where such permission was procured by
fraud practised by the landlord or was a result of collusion
between the strong and the weak? Must the tenant in such
cases be unceremoniously evicted without his plea being
inquired into? The answer is obviously in the negative. At
the same time must he be permitted to protract the delivery
of possession of the leased premises to the landlord on a
false plea of fraud or collusion or that there was a mechan-
ical grant of permission and thus defeat the very subject of
the special procedure provided for the benefit of the land-
lord in section 217 The answer must again be in the nega-
tive. In our view these two competing claims must be harmo-
nised and the solution lies not in insisting upon service of
a prior notice on the tenant before the issuance of the
warrant of possession to evict him but by insisting upon his
approach the Rent Controller during the currency of the
limited tenancy for adjudication of his pleas no sooner he
discovers facts and circumstances that tend to vitiate ab
initio the initial grant of permission. Either it is a
723
mechancial grant of permission or it is procured by fraud
practised by the landlord or it is the result of collusion
between two unequals but in each case there is no reason for
the tenant to wait till the landlord makes his application
for recovery of possession after the expiry of the fixed
period under section 21 but there is every reason why the
tenant should make an immediate approach to the Rent Con-
troller to have his pleas adjudicated by him as soon
facts and circumstances giving rise to such pleas come to
knowledge or are discovered by him with the diligence. The
special procedure provided for the benefit of the landlord
in section 21 warrants such immediate approach on the part
of the tenant."
What followed thereafter perhaps is more in the nature
of an obiter than a part of the decision proper, namely:
"Of course if the tenant alliunde comes to know about land-
lord’s application for recovery of possession and puts forth
his plea of fraud or collusion etc. at that stage the Rent
Controller would inquire into such plea but he may run the
risk of getting it rejected as an afterthought."
It may be pointed out that in Vohra’s case the objec-
tions on the ground of fraud and collusion were raised after
the claim by the landlord for being put in possession but
were rejected as belated. The question that came for consid-
eration before the three-Judge Bench was whether notice was
necessary when the landlord applied to be put in possession
after the termination of the tenancy. In that context, the
observation that tenant’s objections could be enquired into
if the tenant aliunde came to know of the landlord’s move
and objected was not relevant for the decision.
There are certain observations in Inder Mohan Lal v.
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Ramesh Khanna, [1987] 4 SCC 1 which are relevant:
"An analysis of this judgment (Noronah’s case) which has
been applied in the various cases would indicate that sec-
tion 21 only gives sanction if the landlord makes a state-
ment to the satisfaction of the court and the tenant accepts
that the landlord does not require the premises for a limit-
ed period; this statement of the landlord must be bona fide.
The purpose must be residence. There must not be
724
any fraud or collusion. There is a presumption of regulari-
ty. But it is open in particular facts and circumstances of
the case to prove to the satisfaction of the executing court
that there was no collusion or conspiracy between the land-
lord and the tenant and the landlord did not mean what he
said or that it was a fraud or that the tenant agreed be-
cause the tenant was wholly unequal to the landlord. In the
instant case none of these conditions were fulfilled. There
is no evidence in this case that when the landlord stated
that he did not require the premises in question for a
particular period, he did not mean what he stated or that he
made a false statement. There was no evidence in this case
at any stage that the tenant did not understand what the
landlord was stating or that he did not accept what the
landlord stated. There was no evidence that either the
tenant was in collusion or perpetrating any fraud with the
landlord or the tenant was unequal to the landlord in bar-
gaining powers. It is manifest that there is no evidence to
show that the Controller did not apply his mind. If that is
so then on the principle enunciated by this Court in Noro-
nah’s case, this sanction cannot be challenged. It is not
necessary to state under section 21 the reasons why the
landlord did not require the premises in question for any
particular period. Nor is there any presumption that in all
cases the tenants are the weaker sections. The presumption
is, on the contrary, in favour of sanction, it is he who
challenges the statement and the admission of the landlord
or the tenant who has to establish facts as indicated in
Nagindas case."
In paragraph 22 of the judgment Mukharji, J. (as he then
was) speaking for the Court held out a caution that the
residue must be understood in its proper perspective. We may
point out that the respondent apart from being highly quali-
fied held the position of a Deputy Secretary to Government
and, therefore, was not a tenant of the type in Noronah’s
case. As has been stated in Inder Mohan Lal’s case, the rule
in Noronah’s case has to be confined to a particular set of
facts and should not be freely extended so as to take away
the effect of s. 21. Fraud is an allegation which can easily
be made but unless the allegations are clearly pleaded and
some evidence, either direct or circumstantial, is avail-
able, a charge of fraud would not succeed.
We may refer to another judgment of this Court in the
case of Shiv Chander Kapoor. v. Amar Bose, JT (1989) 4 SC
471 where the
725
validity of the permission under s. 21 of the Act came up
for consideration. Noronah’s case was also referred to. In
paragraph 15 of the judgment this Court pointed out that
there is nothing in this decision to support the
respondent-tenant’s contention in that appeal that the scope
of enquiry is wider permitting determination of the land-
lord’s bona fide need of the premises as if such a ground
for eviction specified in s. 14 of the Act was required to
be proved. Extending the enquiry to that field would indeed
be against the express prohibition enacted in s. 21 of the
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Act. Referring to Vohra’s case, the latest judgment indi-
cates:
"It is obvious from the decision in J.R. Vohra’s case that
the tenant is expected to raise such a plea during currency
of the limited tenancy and on such a plea being raised by
the tenant enquiry into it is contemplated. Even though it
is not expressly said in Vohra’s case, it is implicit that
on such an application being made by the tenant requiting
adjudication by the Controller, it is the Controller’s
obligation to issue notice of the same to the landlord and
then to make the adjudication with opportunity to both sides
to prove their respective contentions.
Both in Vohra’s case and in Shiv Chander Kapoor’s case
though not arising for determination in either, it has been
stated while laying down the rule that proceeding to chal-
lenge limited tenancy has to be taken during the cunency of
the tenancy, an objection filed by the tenant could be
looked into is indeed an obiter. We would like to make it
clear that the rule having been stated to the contrary in
Vohra’s case, there was indeed no warrant to indicate the
contra situation. Perhaps to meet the eventuality which
might arise in a particular case, neither of the two Benches
of this Court wanted to close the avenue of enquiry totally,
and that is why in both the cases decided by coordinate
Benches the exception has also been indicated. It must be
understood on the authority of the said two decisions and
our judgment now that if the tenant has objection to raise
to the validity of the limited tenancy it has to be done
prior to the lapse of the lease and not as a defence to the
landlord’s application for being put into possession. We
would like to reiterate that even if such an exercise is
available that must be taken to be very limited and made
applicable to exceptional situations. Unless the tenant is
able to satisfy the Controller that he had no opportunity at
all to know the facts earlier and had come to be aware of
them only then, should such an objection be entertained.
726
On the application of those tests to the present facts
we must hold that the belated objections of the tenant
should not have been entertained and prayer for possession
made by the landlady after the limited tenancy ran out
should have been granted.
The appeal is allowed; the decisions of the Controller,
Rent Control Tribunal and the High Court are reversed and
the landlady is directed to be put into possession of the
premises by 31st of March, 1990. The appellant would be
entitled to her costs in the proceedings throughout. Hearing
fee is assessed at Rs.2,000.
G.N. Appeal al-
lowed.
727