Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 4526 of 1999
PETITIONER:
T.Lakshmipathi & Ors.
RESPONDENT:
P.Nithyananda Reddy & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 31/03/2003
BENCH:
R.C. LAHOTI & ARUN KUMAR.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
R.C. Lahoti, J.
A decree for eviction passed in favour of the respondent no.1 on
the grounds available under Section 10(2)(i) and 10(3)(b)(iii) of A.P.
Buildings (Lease, Rent & Eviction) Control Act, 1960 by the courts
below and upheld by the High Court is under challenge in this appeal
by special leave, filed by the persons in occupation of the premises.
The facts of the case are complex and litigations between the parties
are multiple. It will be useful to notice in brief the several litigations
between the parties which will have an incidental bearing on the
principal controversy and would enable precise appreciation of the
facts.
The suit premises are non-residential bearing Door No.18-7-4
situated in Ponniamman Koli Street of Chittoor town. This property
was initially owned by one P. Nayarana Reddy. In the year 1959 a suit
was instituted for partition of certain joint family properties wherein
the suit property was one of the items. P. Narayana Reddy had two
sons, namely, P. Nithyananda Reddy, the respondent no.1 and P.
Manohar Reddy and five daughters. Late P. Narayana Reddy, his wife
and his two sons were arrayed as plaintiffs. Partition of joint family
properties was sought for from the other branch of the family headed
by brother of late P. Narayana Reddy. P. Narayana Reddy expired in
the year 1981. By that time P. Manohar Reddy, the second son, had
pre-deceased the father. Five daughters and the widow of pre-
deceased son were brought on record by way of substitution in place
of late P. Narayana Reddy and his wife who had also expired. A
preliminary decree for partition was passed. At one stage in the
appeals pending against the preliminary decree there was a
compromise entered into by some of the parties in the year 1983. The
compromise had the effect of allotting the suit property to the share of
P. Nithyananda Reddy, the respondent no.1. However, the
compromise decree was recalled and set aside on an application filed
by some of the co-sharers who were not joined as parties to the
compromise. The appeal against the preliminary decree is still
pending. Final decree in the partition suit is yet to be passed.
Therefore, for all practical purposes though the shares of the parties to
partition stand declared by the decree of the trial court, the declaration
is still hanging fire in the pending appeal and partition by metes and
bounds is yet to take place.
Here it would be relevant to state that during the course of
hearing in the present appeal before us, some controversy was sought
to be raised as to the extent of share to which P. Nithyananda Reddy,
the respondent no.1, would be entitled to in the suit premises.
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However, we are not concerned with that controversy in the present
appeal and leave the same to be adjudicated upon in the partition suit
and the pending appeal and proceedings subsequent thereto. For the
purposes of the present appeal, we will proceed on an assumption that
P. Nithyananda Reddy, the respondent no.1, is a co-owner in the suit
premises and there are other co-owners as well; the exact extent or
proportion of co-ownership interests being irrelevant for the present
proceedings.
Late P. Narayana Reddy had inducted a tenant in the suit
premises, namely, G. Ethirajulu, the respondent no.2. On the death of
P. Narayana Reddy in the year 1981, the tenant, G. Ethirajulu
acknowledged P. Nithyananda Reddy as landlord of the property and
started paying rent solely to him. He also paid Rs.3000/- by way of
advance and incurred Rs.1300/- by way of repairs which was adjusted
in payment of rent for the period January 1982 to April, 1984. Upto
the end of April, 1985 the tenant G. Ithirajulu went on paying rent of
the suit premises to P. Nithyananda Reddy, the respondent no.1
treating him as landlord. Thereafter, P. Varadarajulu, the respondent
no.3, entered upon the scene. The respondent no.3 is the brother-in-
law of respondent no.2. The respondent no.3 claiming himself as
tenant, tendered rent in April 1986 to the respondent no.1 which he
refused to receive on the ground that the respondent no.3 had nothing
to do with the suit property and the respondent no.1 did not recognize
the respondent no.3 as tenant. Thereupon, the respondent no.3
initiated proceedings under Section 8(5) of the Act seeking permission
to deposit rent in the Court on account of respondent no.1 having
refused to receive the rent. In these proceedings the respondent no.3
claimed himself to be tenant and alleged and acknowledged the
respondent no.1 to be the owner. Rent upto January 1990 was
deposited in the proceedings under Section 8(5) of the Act. The
proceedings came to be dismissed in default of appearance of the
applicant therein.
On 24.1.1990, the appellants no. 3 to 5 before us got a sale
deed of the suit premises executed in their favour from four daughters
of P. Narayana Reddy and the widow of pre-deceased son late
Manohar Reddy. P. Nithyananda Reddy, the respondent no.1 and his
one sister, did not join in the execution of sale deed and therefore
their rights, to the extent they may be, do not stand transferred to the
appellants. P. Varadarajulu, respondent no.3 claims himself to be the
tenant in the suit premises, while according to respondent no.1, it is
the respondent no.2 who is the tenant and P. Varadarajulu was
inducted illegally as a sub-tenant. The fact remains that subsequent
to the execution of the sale deed dated 24.1.1990 referred to
hereinabove, P. Varadarajulu, respondent no.3 has with the consent,
express or implied, of G. Ithirajulu, respondent no.2, handed-over
possession over the suit premises to the appellants no. 3 to 5 herein.
The rights and interests of the respondents no.2 and 3, have come to
vest in the appellants no. 3 to 5 apart from theirs being purchasers of
interest of some of the co-owners of the joint property.
On 26.3.1990 the respondent no.1 initiated the present
proceedings for eviction of the respondent nos. 2 and 3 (allegedly the
tenant and the sub-tenant) under Section 13 of the A.P. Buildings
Control Act. It was alleged that the respondent no.1 required the
premises bona fide for his own use and that the tenant was in arrears
of rent and had also sub-let the premises parting with possession in
favour of a third person. In these proceedings the appellants no. 3 to
5 herein sought for intervention and being joined as parties to the
proceedings. The prayer for impleadment was rejected by the learned
Rent Controller vide his order dated 14.2.1992. However, in revision
preferred by the appellants no. 3 to 5, the prayer for their
impleadment was allowed by the High Court vide order dated
16.4.1992 in view of their having entered into possession of the
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premises. On 17.7.1993 appellants nos. 3 to 5 transferred their right
and interest in the property along with possession in favour of the
appellant nos. 1 and 2 through a registered deed of sale. They were
also joined as parties and this is how the five appellants are parties to
the eviction proceedings.
On 10.4.1990 the respondent no.1 filed Original Suit No. 59 of
1990 seeking an injunction against the appellant nos. 3 to 5
restraining them for interfering with the possession over the suit
premises. The Trial Court granted the temporary injunction.
However, the Appellate Court, vide its order dated 1.10.1990 directed
the injunction to be vacated recording a finding that the appellant nos.
3 to 5 had entered into actual possession of the property in the
purported exercise of their title under the sale deed dated 24.1.1990,
and therefore the temporary preventive injunction against them was
uncalled for.
Reverting back to the present proceedings, the appellant nos. 3
to 5, on having been joined as parties to the eviction proceedings, filed
a written statement on 12.7.1994, taking a plea that they were owners
in possession of the property and there was no landlord-tenant
relationship between them and the respondent no.1. On being joined
as parties to the proceedings, the appellant nos. 1 and 2 also filed
their written statement on 7.3.1996 raising a similar plea.
On 12.3.1996 the Rent Controller directed the eviction petition
to be decreed. According to the Rent Controller the respondent no.1
was landlord of the suit premises and the respondent nos. 2 and 3
were the tenants having attorned in favour of respondent no.1, and
therefore, the persons inducted into possession by them were also
liable to be evicted along with them. On 24.7.1998 the Principal
Senior Civil Judge dismissed the appeal, confirming the order of the
Rent Controller. The Civil Revision preferred before the High Court also
came to be dismissed on 2.12.1998. Two relevant facts may be stated
here by way of clarification. The judgment of the High Court records
under a mistaken apprehension as to the facts either on the part of the
Court or on the part of the learned counsel for the appellants that the
two sale deeds executed respectively in favour of the appellant nos. 3
to 5 and then appellant nos. 1 and 2 were unregistered and therefore
did not have the effect of transferring title to them. It was conceded
at the Bar and very fairly by the learned counsel for both the parties
before us that the sale deeds are in fact registered and the statement
of fact contained in the judgment of the High court in that regard is
incorrect. Both the learned counsels appearing before us made their
submissions proceeding on the foundation that the two sale deeds are
registered. The other point is that the only plea raised before the High
Court on behalf of the appellants was that they being transferees in
possession from some of the co-owners, they would also acquire the
status of co-owner and they can never be tenants of the respondent
no.1 who is just one of the co-owners and therefore the eviction
proceedings based on landlord-tenant relationship are fundamentally
misconceived and deserve to be dismissed so far as they are
concerned. The remedy of one co-owner against the other co-owner in
possession is by way of suit for partition and not by way of eviction. It
is noteworthy that before the High Court no challenge was laid to the
findings on the availability of the grounds of eviction arrived at by the
courts below. The result is that the finding as to availability of
grounds of eviction has achieved a finality and is immune from
challenge before this Court. Very fairly the learned senior counsel for
the appellants has not made any submissions in that regard. The
controversy surviving for decision is as to the nature and character of
possession of the appellants over the suit premises. If the appellants
can be held to be co-owners in possession of the property the suit for
eviction would not lie, submits Shri P.P. Rao, the learned senior
counsel for the appellants. On the contrary, the stand taken by Shri
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Lalit, the learned counsel for the respondent no.1, is that the
appellants have been inducted into possession by the tenants in the
suit property, without consent of the landlord-respondent no.1, and
therefore, it is a clear case of parting with possession by the tenant.
The fact that the appellants have also acquired title from some of the
co-owners would not make any difference. The respondents nos.2 and
3 have acknowledged and attorned the respondent no.1 as landlord of
the property. They have not surrendered possession to the
respondent no.1. They have admittedly transferred possession to the
appellants nos.3 to 5 who have in their turn transferred the possession
to appellants nos. 1 and 2. They are inducted into possession of the
tenancy premises by the tenants or the tenant and his sub-tenant.
Simply because the appellants have also acquired title of some of the
co-owners it would not have the effect of merging the tenancy with
ownership and bringing the landlord-tenant relationship between the
respondent no.1 and respondent nos.2 and 3 to an end so as to get rid
of their obligation of placing the landlord in possession of the tenancy
premises on the tenancy coming to an end.
It is not disputed that the tenancy premises have been
demolished and new premises have been reconstructed in place of the
old one by the transferees in connivance with the tenants.
We have set out the facts in brief incorporating the bare
essential details by way of backdrop. Certain neat questions of law
arise for decision in this appeal. For dealing with those questions, we
sum up and set out as follows the factual foundation on which we are
now proceeding. Out of the several co-owners of the property, the
respondent No.1 was a landlord dealing with the tenants as such and
his landlordship was attorned to and acknowledged by the tenants; the
respondents No.2 and 3 shall both be treated as tenants, as they
themselves claim to be, without entering into the controversy whether
one of them is tenant and other is a sub-tenant or a person inducted
in possession by the tenant; the tenants i.e. respondents No. 2 and 3
have parted with possession in favour of the appellants without the
consent, express or implied, of the respondent no.1, who is landlord-
cum-co-owner of the suit premises; and the appellants being
transferees from some of the co-owners of the property, have acquired
partial proprietory interest (to the extent of the interest held by their
predecessors in interest) in the suit premises. These facts are beyond
any pale of controversy so far as the present appeal is concerned.
The first question which arises for decision is whether the
appellants are absolved of their obligation of delivering possession
over the suit premises to the landlord-respondent No.1 because the
tenancy rights in the suit premises held by respondents No.2 and 3
and transferred by them to the appellants have merged in the
ownership entailing determination of tenancy. The learned senior
counsel for the appellants has placed strong reliance on the doctrine of
merger.
Law Lexicon (P. Ramanatha Aiyar, Second Edition, 1997) defines
"merger" as the "destruction or ’drowning’ by operation of law of the
less in the greater of two estates coming together and vesting without
any intervening estate in one and the same person in the same right."
"Whenever a greater estate and a less coincide and meet in one and
the same person without any intermediate estate, the less is
immediately annihilated, or in the law phrase is said to be merged that
is, sunk or drowned in the greater (2 Black. Com.177; Tomlins Law
Dic.). According to Foa (General Law of Landlord and Tenant, Eighth
Edition, p.642), a lease may be determined by merger. A merger
takes place where a tenant acquires the immediate reversion: for
when a greater estate and a less coincide in the same person without
any intermediate estate, the less is said to be merged in the greater. .
. . . . For merger, however, to take place, the two interests must
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come to one and the same person in one and the same right."
The common law doctrine of merger is statutorily embodied in
Transfer of Property Act, 1882. Section 111 (d) provides:-
"111. Determination of lease.___ A lease of
immovable property determines___
xxx xxx xxx xxx
(d) in case the interests of the lessee and
the lessor in the whole of the property become
vested at the same time in one person in the same
right;
xxx xxx xxx xxx"
A bare reading of the doctrine of merger, as statutorily recognized in
India, contemplates (i) coalescence of the interest of the lessee and
the interest of the lessor (ii) in the whole of the property (iii) at the
same time (iv) in one person (v) in the same right. There must be a
complete union of the whole interests of the lessor and the lessee so
as to enable the lesser interest of the lessee sinking into the larger
interest of the lessor in the reversion.
In Badri Narain Jha & Ors. Vs. Rameshwar Dayal Singh &
Ors., 1951 SCR 153, it was held by this Court that if the lessor
purchases the lessee’s interest, the lease no doubt is extinguished as
the same man cannot at the same time be both a landlord and a
tenant, but there is no extinction of the lease if one of the several
lessees purchased only a part of the lessor’s interest. In such a case
the leasehold and the reversion cannot be said to coincide.
In Shaikh Faqir Bakhsh Vs. Murli Dhar & Ors., AIR 1931 PC
63, the plaintiff was holding on lease a portion of the entire property.
Subsequently, plaintiff and defendant became pro indiviso joint
proprietors of the property by purchasing shares from the earlier
owners. The lease was subsisting when the shares were bought by the
parties. In a suit for accounts filed by the plaintiff it was held that the
plaintiff’s rights under lease of a part do not merge in his rights as
joint proprietor of the whole of the property and as between the
parties the plaintiff held a valid and subsisting lease.
A Division Bench of Patna High Court in Parmeshwar Singh &
Ors. Vs. Mt. Sureba Kuer & Ors., AIR 1925 Patna 530, held that
Section 111(d) applies only to a case where the interests of the lessee
and of the lessor in the whole of the property become vested at the
same time in one person in the same right. Where a co-proprietor in
the property purchased for himself, the interest of the lessees of the
whole property, there could be no merger. On purchase of a partial
interest in tenancy rights by the owner, the onus of proving that the
distinction between the interests continued to be kept alive
subsequently also cannot be placed on the party alleging that the
distinction was so kept alive. To the same effect is the view of the law
taken in Lala Nathuni Prasad & Ors. Vs. Syed Anwar Karim &
Ors., 1919 IC 16 (Patna). Merger is largely a question of intention,
dependent on circumstances, and the courts will presume against it
when it operates to the disadvantage of a party, as was held by this
Court in Nalakath Sainuddin Vs. Koorikadan Sulaiman, (2002) 6
SCC 1 (Para 20).
In the case at hand, it cannot be denied, nor has it been denied,
that the appellants herein are not purchasers of the entire ownership
interest in the property. What they have purchased is interest of some
out of all the co-owners of the property. The interest of the
respondent No.1, whatever be its extent, has not come to vest in the
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appellants. The appellants have also acquired the tenancy rights in
the property. Thus they have acquired partial ownership and full
tenancy rights. It cannot be said that the interests of the lessee and
the lessor in the whole of the property have become vested in the
appellants at the same time and in the same right. The lease cannot
be said to have been determined by merger. So long as the interests
of the lessee, the lesser estate and of the owner, the larger estate do
not come to coalesce in full either the water of larger estate is not
deep enough to enable annihilation or the body of lesser interest does
not sink or drown fully.
It was submitted by the learned senior counsel for the
appellants that assuming if the tenancy has not determined by merger
still what was held by the respondents No.2 and 3 on tenancy was
’building’ or super structure only and not the land beneath.
Admittedly, the building has been demolished. As tenancy premises
have ceased to exist, the tenancy has come to an end in view of the
very subject matter of tenancy having ceased to exist. Assuming also
that the act of the appellants is wrongful still the remedy of the
respondent No.1 who is only a co-owner in the property would be to
sue for partition and seek recovery of damages; a suit based on
landlord-tenant relationship and seeking recovery of possession is
misconceived and must fail, submitted the learned senior counsel Shri
P.P. Rao.
The tenancy cannot be said to have been determined by
attracting applicability of the doctrine of frustration consequent upon
demolishing of the tenancy premises. Doctrine of frustration belongs
to the realm of Law of Contracts; it does not apply to a transaction
where not only a privity of contract but a privity of estate has also
been created inasmuch as lease is the transfer of an interest in
immovable property within the meaning of Section 5 of the Transfer of
Property Act (wherein the phrase ’the transfer of property’ has been
defined), read with Section 105, which defines a lease of immovable
property as a transfer of a right to enjoy such property. (See
observations of this Court in this regard in Raja Dhruv Dev Chand
Vs. Raja Harmohinder Singh & Anr., 1968 (3) SCR 339). It is
neither the case of the appellants nor of the respondents No.2 and 3
that the subject matter of lease was the building and the building
alone, excluding land whereon the building forming subject matter of
tenancy stood at the time of creation of lease.
In Woodfall’s Laws of Landlord and Tenant (28th Edition, Vol.1)
the relevant law is so stated:-
"Where the lessee covenants to pay rent at
stated period (without any exception in case of
fire), he is bound to pay it, though the house be
burnt down; for the land remains, and he might
have provided to the contrary by express
stipulation, if both parties had so intended. And
this rule applies, although the lessee’s covenant to
repair contain an exception in case of fire.
Similarly, an action for use and occupation still lies
in respect of the whole period of the tenancy
notwithstanding the destruction of the premises by
fire." (Para 1-0778)
"In a lease of land with buildings upon it the
destruction of even the entirety of the buildings
does not affect the continuance of the lease or of
the lessee’s liabilities under it, unless so provided
by express contract." (Para 1-2055)
"A demise must have a subject-matter,
either corporeal or incorporeal. If the subject-
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matter is destroyed entirely, it is submitted that
the lease comes automatically to an end, for there
is no longer any demise. The mere destruction of a
building on land is not total destruction of the
subject-matter of a lease of the land and building,
so the demise continues. But if by some convulsion
of nature the very site ceases to exist, by being
swallowed up altogether or buried in the depths of
the sea, it seems clear that any lease of the
property must come to an end." (Para 1-2056)
A lease of a house or of a shop is a lease not only of the
superstructure but also of its site. It would be different if not only the
site but also the land beneath ceases to exist by an act of nature. In
the present case the appellants who are the successors of the tenancy
right have demolished the superstructure but the land beneath
continues to exist. The entire tenancy premises have not been lost.
Moreover, the appellants cannot be permitted to take shelter behind
their own act prejudicial to the interest of the respondent No.1 under
whom the respondents no.2 and 3 were holding as tenants and then
inducted the appellants.
In D.G. Gouse & Co. (Agents) Pvt. Ltd. Vs. State of Kerala
& Anr., (1980) 2 SCC 410, while dealing with Entry 49 of List II of the
Seventh Schedule of the Constitution, making a reference to Oxford
English Dictionary, this Court has held that the site of the building is a
component part of the building and therefore inheres in the concept or
ordinary meaning of the expression ’building’. Referring to
Corporation of the City of Victoria Vs. Bishop of Vancouver
Island, AIR 1921 PC 240, it was held that the word ’building’ must
receive its natural and ordinary meaning as ’including the fabric of
which it is composed, the ground upon which its walls stand and the
ground embraced within those walls".
We are, therefore, of the opinion that in the event of the
tenancy having been created in respect of a building standing on the
land, it is the building and the land which are both components of
subject matter of demise and the destruction of the building alone
does not determine the tenancy when the land which was site of the
building continues to exist; more so when the building has been
destroyed or demolished neither by the landlord nor by an act of
nature but solely by the act of the tenant or the person claiming under
him. Ample judicial authority is available in support of this proposition
and illustratively we refer to George J. Ovungal Vs. Peter, AIR 1991
Kerala 55, Rahim Bux & Ors. Vs. Mohammad Shafi, AIR 1971
Allahabad 16, Hind Rubber Industries Pvt. Ltd. Vs. Tayebhai
Mohammedbhai Bagasarwalla & Ors., AIR 1996 Bombay 389 and
Jiwanlal & Co. & Ors. Vs. Manot & Co., Ltd., 64 CWN 932. The
Division Bench decision of Kerala High Court in Dr. V. Sidharthan Vs.
Pattiori Ramadasan, AIR 1984 Kerala 181, appears to take a view to
the contrary. But that was a case where the building was totally
destroyed by fire by negligence of the tenant. It is a case which
proceeds on very peculiar facts of its own and was rightly dissented
from by Bombay High Court in Hind Rubber Industries Pvt. Ltd.
Vs. Tayebhai Mohammedbhai Bagasarwalla & Ors., (supra).
In the facts and circumstances of the case, no defence or
shelter is available to the appellants behind the plea that they have
acquired interest of some of the co-owners. The law as to co-owners
is well settled. Where any property is held by several co-owners, each
co-owner has interest in every inch of the common property, but his
interest is qualified and limited by similar interest of the other co-
owners. One co-owner cannot take exclusive possession of the
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property nor commit an act of waste, ouster or illegitimate use, and if
he does so he may be restrained by an injunction. A co-owner may,
by an arrangement, expressed or implied, with his other co-owners,
possess and enjoy any property exclusively. Such a co-owner can also
protect his possession against the other co-owners and if he is
dispossessed by the latter, he can recover exclusive possession. (See
Jahuri Sah & Ors. Vs. Dwarika Prasad Jhunjhunwala & Ors.,
(1966) Supp SCR 280). It is beyond any controversy that on the
death of late P. Narayana Reddy, his rights devolved upon the several
heirs including respondent no.1. The respondent no.1 is the only male
person in the body of the co-owners, all others being women. It may
be for this reason, or otherwise, that the respondent no.1 was in
possession of the property, through tenants, realizing the rent
peacefully and with the consent, expressed or implied, of other co-
heirs of late P. Nithyananda Reddy. So far as the respondents no.2
and 3 are concerned, by operation of Section 116 of the Evidence Act,
they were estopped from challenging or denying the ownership of the
respondent no.1 and his rights in the tenancy premises. As held in
Vasudeo Vs. Balkishan, (2002) 2 SCC 50, the rule of estoppel
between landlord and tenant continues to operate so long as the
tenancy continues and unless the tenant has surrendered possession
to the landlord. The estoppel would cease to operate only on the
tenant openly restoring possession by surrender to the landlord.
Neither the respondents no. 2 and 3 nor their successors in interest or
the persons claiming under them could have denied the title of the
respondent no.1 during the continuance of the tenancy and even
thereafter unless they had restored possession over the tenancy
premises to the respondent No.1. Looking at the status of the
appellants whether as co-owners or as persons inducted in possession
by the tenants they have no legs to stand on. If other co-owners
could not have dispossessed the respondent no.1 or demolished the
property without the consent of respondent no.1 it is difficult to
conceive how their transferees could have demolished the tenancy
premises and raised their own construction over the land on which the
tenancy premises stood earlier.
For the foregoing reasons, we find the appeal devoid of any
merit and liable to be dismissed. It is dismissed accordingly and with
costs. The judgment and decree of the Trial Court as upheld by the
High Court are maintained.