Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MOHD. MAHMOOD AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
TIKAM DAS AND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/05/1965
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 210 1966 SCR (1) 128
CITATOR INFO :
D 1967 SC1196 (11)
ACT:
Madhya Pradesh Accommodation Control Act, 1951, ss. 15(3),
16(2), 45(1) and 45(2)Sub-tenant claiming direct tenancy
under s. 16(2)Question as to lawfulness of
sub-tenancy--Civil Court whether has jurisdiction to decide.
HEADNOTE:
Respondent No. 1 who was the landlord of the accommodation
in dispute obtained a decree of ejectment against respondent
No. 2, his tenant. The appellants who were sub-tenants
under respondent No. 2 gave a notice to the landlord under
s. 15(2) of the Madhya Pradesh Accommodation Control Order,
1961, and thereafter filed a suit against him claiming a
declaration that being lawful sub-tenants they had become
direct tenants of the landlord under s, 16(2) of the Act.
The High Court held that the suit was barred by s. 45(1) of
the Act according to which no civil court could enter-Lain
any suit or proceeding in so far as it related to any matter
which the Rent Controlling Authority under the Act was
empowered to decide. In appeal to the Supreme Court.
HELD : (1) For s. 16(2) to come into operation the sub-
tenancy has to be lawful. The question of lawfulness of a
sub-tenancy was one which under s. 15(3), the Rent
Controlling Authority was empowered to decide. Under s.
45(1) of the Act no civil court could entertain a suit or
proceeding which the Rent Controlling Authority was
empowered to decide. ’Me High Court was therefore right in
holding that the suit had been filed in a court incompetent
to try it and in dismissing it. [13OH-131B]
(ii)There is nothing in s. 15(3) of the Act to indicate
that it does not apply to a case where a, landlord has
already obtained a decree against a tenant. If in spite of
the decree the appellants had a right under the Act to a
direct tenancy under the landlord, they had a right to move
the Rent Controlling Authority within the prescribed period
for a decision of the question that the subletting to them
was lawful. If the Rent Controlling Authority had the power
to decide that question, a civil court would not be
competent to decide the dispute in a suit brought within
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that period. The suit by the appellants had been filed
within that period. [131G-132B]
(iii)The fact that the landlord had not applied under
s. 15(3) did not affect the issue as it was for the
appellants as sub-tenants to prove that the sub-letting to
them was lawful., [132C]
(iv)Section 45(2) also did not help the appellants. That
provision was clearly intended only to protect a right to
resort to a civil court for the decision of a question as to
an interest in property existing apart from the Act
concerning which an adjudication may have been incidentally
made by a Rent Controlling Authority in deciding a question
which it had been empowered by the Act to decide. It does
not authorise a civil court to decide a dispute as to the
lawfulness of sub-letting for the purpose of s. 16(2). [133
C-E]
129
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 356 of 1965.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
October 27, 1964, of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Second
Appeal No. 240 of 1964.
B. Sen and M. S. Gupta, for the appellants.
S. T. Desai and A. G. Ratnaparkhi, for the respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Sarkar, J. The first respondent Tikam Das had let out a
house in the city of Jabalpur to the second respondent Surya
Kant Naidoo. Sometime in 1961 Tikam Das, herein referred to
as the landlord, served a notice on Surya Kant, herein
referred to as the tenant, terminating the tenancy and later
in the same year filed a suit in a civil court against the
latter for ejectment. On June 23, 1962, by consent of
parties, a decree for ejectment was passed in that suit in
favour of the landlord against the tenant. The appellants
who were occupying the premises as sub-tenants under the
tenant had not been made parties to the suit.
On June 25 and 26, 1962, the appellants served notices on
the landlord under s. 15(2) of the Madhya Pradesh Accommo-
dation Control Act, 1961 which had come into force on Decem-
ber 30, 1961, claiming that as the tenant had sub-let the
premises to them before the Act had come into force with the
consent of the landlord, they had become his direct tenants
under s. 16(2) of the Act and on June 28, 1962, the
appellants filed a suit against both the landlord and the
tenant in a civil court claiming a declaration that they had
in the circumstances become direct tenants of the premises
under the landlord. On June 30, 1962, the landlord sent a
reply to the notices sent by the appellants in which he
denied that the sub-letting by the tenant had been with his
consent or was lawful. It does not appear that the landlord
had put his decree in execution for evicting the appellants.
One of the points canvassed in the High Court was whether in
view of s. 45(1) of the Act a civil court was competent to
entertain the appellants’ suit and it held that it was not
and in that view of the matter dismissed the suit. The
question is whet-her the High Court was right.
The Act established certain authorities called Rent
Controlling Authorities and gave them power to decide
various matters. Sub-
130
,section (1) of s. 45 states that "no civil court shall
entertain any suit or proceeding in so far as it
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relates...... to any.......... matter which the Rent
Controlling Authority is empowered by ,or under this Act to
decide". If, therefore, the suit related to a matter which
a Rent Controlling Authority had jurisdiction to decide, the
civil court would have no jurisdiction to entertain it.
Now the appellant’s suit was for a declaration that they
had .become direct tenants under the landlord by virtue of
s. 16(2) of the Act. That provision is in these terms
S. 16. (1)
(2) Where, before the commencement of this
Act, the interest of a tenant in respect of
any accommodation has been determined without
determining the interest of any sub-tenant to
whom the accommodation either in whole or in
part had been lawfully sub-let, the subtenant
shall, with effect from the date of the
commencement of this Act be deemed to have
become a tenant holding directly under the
landlord on the same terms and conditions on
which the tenant would have held from the
landlord, if the tenancy had continued.
Clearly the appellants would not be entitled to the benefit
of this provision unless the sub-letting to them was lawful.
This is where their difficulty arises. Sub-section (2) of
s. 15 deals with the case of a sub-letting before the Act
and provides for a notice of the sub-letting being given to
the landlord by the tenant and the sub-tenant. There is no
dispute that the sub-letting to the appellants was before
the Act and they had given the notice. The subletting,
therefore, comes within sub-s. (2) of s. 15. Then we come
to sub-s. (3) of s. 15 which provides, "Where in any case
mentioned in sub-section (2), the landlord contests that the
accommodation was not lawfully sub-let and an application is
made to the Rent Controlling Authority in this behalf,
either by the landlord or by the sub-tenant, within two
months of the date of the receipt of the notice of sub-
letting by the landlord or the issue of the notice by the
tenant or the sub-tenant, as the case may be, the Rent
Controlling Authority shall decide the dispute." This sub-
section empowers a Rent Controlling Authority to decide
whether a sub-letting was lawful where the landlord disputes
that the subletting was lawful, on an application made to it
by either party within the period mentioned. When the Rent
Controlling Authorities have the power to decide the
lawfulness of the subletting, a civil court is plainly
debarred from deciding that question by s. 45(1). In the
present case the landlord did contend
131
that the sub-letting was not lawful. The appellants’s suit
was filed within the period mentioned in sub-s. (3) of s.
15. So the Rent Controlling Authorities had the power to
decide the question on which the appellants’ suit depended.
It follows that the suit related to a matter which the Rent
Controlling Authorities had power to decide and no civil
court was, therefore, competent to entertain it. Hence we
think that the High Court was right in deciding that the
suit had been filed in a court incompetent to entertain it,
and in dismissing it.
It was said that a Rent Controlling Authority would have no
power to decide a dispute as to whether a sub-letting was
lawful where the notice mentioned in s. 15(2) had not been
served, orafter the period mentioned in sub-s. (3) of that
section had expired if it had not been moved earlier.
Another question mooted was that the two months mentioned in
sub-s. (3) only provided a special period of limitation for
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the application mentioned in it and the provision of the
period did not mean that a Rent Controlling Authority had
power to decide the matter only if an application had been
made within that period, so that if no such application had
been made, after the expiry of the period a civil court
would have jurisdiction to decide a dispute as to whether a
sub-letting was lawful. The point is that the real effect
of s. 15(3) was to deprive the civil court of the
jurisdiction to decide that dispute for all time. We do not
feel called upon to decide these questions. They do not
arise in the present case and it was not said that these
questions affect the question of the competence of the civil
court to try the present suit. They clearly do not. The
suit was filed within the period of two months during which
admittedly the Rent Controlling Authorities had jurisdiction
to decide the dispute on which it was based. Whatever may
be the jurisdiction of a civil court on other facts, in the
present case it clearly had no jurisdiction to entertain the
appellants’ suit.
It was said on behalf of the appellants that s. 15(3) had no
application to the present case as the landlord had before
the appellants’ suit was filed, obtained a decree against
the tenant for eviction. We are unable to accept this
contention. There is nothing in sub-s. (3) of s. 15 to
indicate that it does not apply to a case where a landlord
has obtained such a decree. If in spite of the decree the
appellants had a right under the Act to a direct tenancy
under the landlord, they had a right to move the Rent
Controlling Authority within the period mentioned (now
expired) for a decision of the question that the sub-letting
to them
132
was lawful. If the Rent Controlling Authority had the power
to decide that question, a civil court would not be
competent to decide the dispute in a suit brought within
that period. So the decree does not make a civil court, a
court competent to entertain the suit.
It was also said that as the landlord had not applied under
sub-s. (3) of s. 15-and this is not disputed by the
landlord that provision is put out of the way and it must
now be held that the appellants had become direct tenants
under him. The words of the sub-section lend no support to
this contention. The appellants can claim the direct
tenancy only when they establish that the sub-letting to
them was lawful. As they claim that right, they must
establish it and they do not do so by the failure of the
landlord to move for a decision that the sub-letting was not
lawful. This contention of the appellants seems to us to be
untenable. In any case it is difficult to appreciate how
the failure of the landlord to apply under s. 15(3) would
affect the question of the competence of a civil court to
entertain the appellants’ suit which had been filed before
the time limited by the sub-section for the landlord to
apply to a Rent Controlling Authority had expired.
We now come to sub-s. (2) of s. 45 of the Act which is in
these terms :
S.45. (1)
(2)Nothing in sub-section (1) shall be
construed as preventing a civil court from
entertaining any suit or proceeding for the
decision of any question of title to any
accommodation to which this Act applies or any
question as to the person or persons who are
entitled to receive the rent of such
accommodation.
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It is said by the appellants that their suit raises a
question of title to the tenanted premises within the
meaning of that word as used in the subsection. This
contention does not seem to us to be well founded.
"Accommodation" has been defined in the Act as a building,
garden, ground, out-house, or garage appurtenant to it, its
fixtures and furniture supplied for use there and also land
not used for agricultural purpose. The word, therefore,
refers to property of certain varieties and in our opinion
the words "title to any accommodation" in the sub-section
mean a right to or interest in property existing otherwise
than under the Act and not those created by it. It does not
include a subtenant’s right created by the Act to be treated
under certain cir-
133.
cumstances as the direct tenant of the landlord. This seems
to, us to be clear from the whole scheme of the Act, which
is to create certain rights and to leave them in certain
cases to be decided by the Rent Controlling Authority
established under it, quickly, inexpensively and summarily
and with restricted rights of appeal from their decision.
The object of the Act as disclosed by its scheme would be
defeated if civil courts were to adjudicate upon the rights
which it was intended the Rent Controlling Authorities would
decide, with all the consequent delay, expense and series of
appeals. Again if the civil courts had the power to decide
such rights, s. 15 (3) would be meaningless, for the
decision of the dispute as to whether sub-letting was lawful
was necessary only for establishing a sub-tenant’s right to
a direct tenancy under the landlord under s. 16 (2). Sub-
section (2) of s. 45 was clearly intended only to protect a
right to resort to a civil court for the decision of a
question as to an interest in property existing apart from
the Act concerning which an adjudication may have been
incidentally made by a Rent Controlling Authority in
deciding a question which it had been expressly empowered by
the Act to decide. We, therefore, think that sub-s. (2) of
s. 45 does not authorise a civil court to decide the dispute
as to the lawfulness of the sub-letting and does not
therefore make it competent to entertain the appellants’
suit.
For these reasons, in our view, no civil court had
jurisdiction to try the appellants’ suit and it was rightly
dismissed as having been filed in an incompetent tribunal.
The result is that the appeal fails and is dismissed with
costs.
Appeal dismissed.
134