Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAMKARANDAS RADHAVALLABH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BHAGWANDAS DWARKADAS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/11/1964
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1144
ACT:
Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates (Control) Act,
1947 Rules made under the Act-Rule 8-Whether ultra vires.
Code of Civil Procedure (Act 5 of 1908), s. 151-Inherent
powers, exercise of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant firm was the tenant and the respondent
landlord of a flat in Bombay. The parties were governed by
the Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates (Control-)
Act, 1947. Rule 8 under the Act made the procedure in 0. 37
of the Civil Procedure Code applicable to suits for
Possession by the landlord against the tenant. The
respondent filed a suit for the ejectment of the appellant
from the suit premises under the procedure prescribed in r.
2 of 0. 37, as amended by the Bombay High Court. Under that
procedure the trial court gave leave to the appellant to
defend the suit on condition that he paid the arrears of
rent in fixed insalments. On the failure of the appellant
to pay these the trial court passed a decree against him
without giving him leave to defend. His application under
r. 4 of 0. 37 for setting aside the decree was rejected, for
the special circumstances required by that rule were he
held not to exist. In appeal, a bench of the Court of Small
Causes set aside the decree holding that the trial court
should have considered the use of its inherent powers under
s. 151 of the Code. On appeal by the respondent-landlord
the High Court held that s. 151 was not applicable to the
case. The appellant came to the Supreme Court by special
leave.
Apart from the applicability of s. 151 of the Code, the
contention of the appellant was that r. 8 which made 0. 37
applicable to suits under the Rents Act was ultra vires the
reason being that under the provisions of the Rent Act the
court had to consider the position of the tenant and had a
discretion to pass or not to pass a decree, whereas under r.
2 of 0.37 once the tenant defaulted the Court had no
course open except to pass a decree against him.
HELD : (i) Inherent powers are to be exercised by the Court
in very exceptional circumstances for which the Code lays
down no special procedure. Rule 4 of 0. 37 expressly gives
power to a court to set aside a decree under the provisions
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of that Order. Hence if a case does not come within the
provisions of that rule there is no scope for resort to s.
151 for setting aside such a decree. [189 B-C]
(ii)The appeal was against the order passed on an
application made by the appellant under r. 4 of 0. 37. If
the contention of the appellant that 0. 37 was not
applicable were to be accepted then the result would not be
to set aside the decree; it would only cause the dismissal
of his application as being incompetent. No relief based on
this contention could therefore be granted in the appeal.
[190 F-G]
(iii)It is not correct to say that when leave to defend
has been refused to a defendant, the court is bound to pass
a decree. What subrule 2 of r. 2 of 0. 37 contemplates is
that the court will accept the
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statements in the plaint as correct and on those statements
pass such decree as the plaintiff may in law be entitled to.
If the plaint discloses no cause of action, the court cannot
pass any decree in favour of the plaintiff. If the law
requires the court to exercise a discretion on the facts
deemed to be admitted, it will have to do so. [191 B-D]
(iv) in the procedure laid down under 0. 37 the defendant
may
not be allowed to place his side of the case for assisting
the court in the exercise of its discretion, but that does
not create any conflict with the Rents Act. Rules of
procedure may be framed for the exercise of rights and
such rules are not ultra vires only because the right has to
be exercised in accordance with them. Therefore r. 8 is not
ultra vires. [191 D-F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 851 of 1964.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
February 17, 1964, of the Bombay High Court in Civil
Revision Application No. 1969 of 1962.
D.R. Dhanuka, K. Rajendra Chaudhuri and K. R. Chaudhuri, for
the appellant.
Purshottam Trikamdas, S. T. Tajasiwala, J. B. Dadachanji,
O.C. Mathur and Ravinder Narain, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Sarkar J. The appellant was the tenant of the respondent of
a third floor flat in Bombay. The tenancy was governed by
the Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates (Control)
Act, 1947, hereafter referred to as the Rents Act. We will
refer to the appellant as the tenant and the respondent as
the landlord.
The landlord obtained a decree in ejectment against the
tenant in a suit filed under Or. 37 of the Code of Civil
Procedure and the present appeal arises out of an
application made by the tenant to set aside that decree
under r. 4 of that Order. The question is, should the
decree be set aside ?
There were various proceedings between the parties before
the judgment under appeal came to be passed but it will be
unnecessary to refer to all of them. The suit was filed in
the Court of Small Causes, Bombay on November 1, 1960 for
ejectment on two grounds, namely, (1) a certain default in
payment of rent and (2) unlawful subletting of the demised
premises. The Rents Act permits ejectment if these grounds
are proved. The tenant entered an appearance to the suit on
December 3, 1960. On March 23, 1961, the landlord took out
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a summons for judgment under Or. 37 r. 2 and the tenant
opposed that summons by an affidavit, setting out various
defences to the claim for ejectment
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to the details of which it is unnecessary to refer. On May
2, 1961, an order was made by consent of parties on that
summons directing the tenant to deposit moneys in Court by
certain instalments on account of the arrears of rent and
providing that if it made a default in making the payments
on the dates mentioned, the suit was to be set down for
disposal in accordance with law. The effect of this order
clearly was to give a conditional leave to defend so that on
failure to perform the conditions the tenant would under the
provisions of Or. 37, r. 2 no longer have the right to
defend the action.
Now the first instalment under the consent order was payable
on June 1, 1961. It was not however paid. The tenant
thereafter made an application for extension of time and
this was rejected on June 22, 1961. It filed an appeal
against the order refusing extension of time but this was
rejected. The tenant then appealed against the consent
order of May 2, 1961 but this also failed. Thereafter the
suit was placed on the list on June 28, 1961 and a decree in
ejectment was passed on that date under the provisions of
Or. 37 on the basis of the statements made in the plaint and
without permitting the tenant to appear and oppose. This is
the decree which the tenant sought to set aside. These are
all the proceedings between the parties that need be
mentioned for the purpose of this judgment.
On September 12, 1961 the application under r. 4 of Or. 37
to set aside the ejectment decree was made to the trial
Court. The trial Court dismissed the application holding
that no special ground had been made out by the tenant as
required by r. 4 Or. 37 to set aside the decree. The tenant
then appealed from this Order to a bench of the Court of
Small Causes under s. 29 of the Rents Act which is said to
have treated the appeal as a revision. That bench agreed
with the trial Court that no special circumstances as
required under r. 4 of Or. 37 had been made out to justify
the setting aside of the decree, but it observed that Court
had not considered whether relief could be given to the
tenant under S. 151 of the Code and itself set aside the
decree acting under that section. The landlord appealed to
the High Court from the judgment of the bench. The High
Court agreed with the Courts below that no special
circumstances justifying the setting aside of the decree
existed. It however held that there was no scope for
applying S. 151 to the present case as r. 4 of Or. 37 of the
Code had made special provision for it. It also rejected
the other contentions raised by the tenant, to one of which
we
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will refer later. In the result the High Court allowed the
appeal and hence the present appeal to this Court.
Learned advocate for the tenant contended that the High
Court was wrong in its view that s. 151 had no application
to the present case. We are unable to accept this
contention. It has been observed by this Court in Manohar
Lal v. Seth Hiralal(1), "The inherent powers are to be
exercised by the Court in very exceptional circumstances,
for which the Code lays down no procedure." This is a well
recognised principle. Rule 4 of Or. 37 expressly gives
power to a Court to set aside a decree passed under the
provisions of that Order. Express provision is thus made
for setting aside a decree passed under Or. 37 and hence if
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a case does not come within the provisions of that rule,
there is no scope to resort to s. 151 for setting aside such
a decree. We, therefore, agree with the High Court that the
appellate bench of the Court of Small Causes was in error in
setting aside the ex parte decree in exercise of powers
under s. 151. Again all the Courts have taken the view, and
we think rightly, that no circumstances justifying the
setting aside of the decree under r. 4 of Or. 37 existed in
the present case. We did not also understand learned
advocate for the tenant to rely on any such circumstances in
this Court. No question of setting aside the decree under
that order, therefore, arises.
The next point argued by learned advocate for the tenant was
that Or. 37 was not applicable to a decree in ejectment in
view of the provisions of the Rents Act in terms of which
alone such a decree could be passed. Now s. 49 of the Act
gives the Government power to make rules for the purpose of
giving effect to its provisions. The Government made
certain rules under these powers and r. 8 of these rules
provides that suits under the Act may be instituted in
accordance with the procedure laid down in Or. 37. It is by
virtue of this rule that the landlord filed his suit for
ejectment under the procedure laid down in Or. 37. The High
Court of Bombay had made certain amendments to the
provisions of Or. 37 as contained in the Code. Rule 2 of
that Order as so amended and so far as relevant, is in these
terms :
Rule 2. (1) "Suits in which the landlord seeks
to recover possession of immovable
property...... may in case the plaintiff
desires to proceed hereunder, be instituted by
presenting a plaint in the prescribed form but
the summons shall be in form No. 4 in appendix
B, or in such other form as may be from time
to time prescribed.
(1) [1962] Supp. 1 S.C.R. 450.
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(2)In any case in which the plaint and summons
are in such forms respectively, the defendant
shall not defend the suit unless he enters an
appearance and obtains leave from a Judge as
hereinafter provided so to defend; and in
default of his entering an appearance and of
his obtaining such leave to defend, the
allegations in the plaint shall be deemed to
be admitted, and the Plaintiff shall be
entitled to a decree for possession..........
It is by virtue of this rule that the decree in the present
case was passed without permitting the tenant to be heard.
This was because the tenant had been given leave to defend
on May 2, 1961 on a condition that it paid the arrears of
rent by instalments as prescribed in the order. This order
had been made by consent and the tenant had failed to
perform that condition, the result of which was to deprive
him of the leave to defend earlier granted; the case became
one as if no leave to defend had been given to the tenant
and upon which the landlord became entitled to a decree
under sub-r. (2) of r. 2 of Or. 37.
The contention of learned advocate for the tenant is that
under the provision of the Rents Act the landlord is not
entitled to a decree as a matter of right; the Court has to
consider the position of the tenant and has a discretion to
pass or not to pass a decree. Therefore to a suit governed
by the Act the provisions of r. 2 of Or. 37 which make it
incumbent on the Court to pass a decree in circumstances
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coming within that sub. rule, are inapplicable. It is on
this ground that it is said that r. 8 of the Rules made
under the Rents Act is ultra vires and void.
The first difficulty that appears to us to arise on this
line of argument is that even if the contention is right, we
cannot in the present appeal makes order setting aside the
decree. The appeal has come to us out of an application
originally filed in a Court of Small Causes under the
provisions of Or. 37 r. 4 by the tenant itself. If the
present contention is right, then the tenant’s application
was wholly incompetent. The result of that however would
not be to set aside the decree; it would only cause the dis-
missal of the tenant’s application. The tenant has to take
other appropriate proceedings to show that the decree was
ineffective in case it wants to contend that the suit had
not been brought according to the procedure permissible in
law, and that it had been illegally deprived of a hearing.
It itself having resorted to Or. 37, it scarcely lies in it
now to contend that Order is wholly inapplicable.
Furthermore, by consenting to the Order of May 2, 1961, it
had in this case clearly agreed that the suit had been
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rightly brought under Or. 37. It cannot be allowed to
change its position in the proceedings arising out of that
very suit. For that reason alone we think no relief can be
granted to it in this appeal based on the present
contention.
On the merits too, we think that the contention is
fallacious. It proceeds on the basis that when leave to
defend has been refused to a defendant, the Court is bound
to pass a decree. It seems to us that what sub-r. (2) of r.
2 of Or. 37 contemplates is that the Court will accept the
statements in the plaint as correct and on those statements
pass such decree as the plaintiff may in law be entitled to.
If, for example, the plaint discloses no cause of action,
the Court cannot pass any decree in favour of the plaintiff.
If this were not so, the words "allegations in the plaint
shall be deemed to be admitted" in sub-r. (2) of r. 2 of Or.
37 would have been unnecessary. The Court in making a
decree under sub-r. (2), r. 2 of Or. 37 has to keep the law
in mind. If the law requires the Court to exercise a
discretion on the facts deemed to be admitted, it will have
to do so.
In the procedure laid down under Or. 37 the defendant may
not be allowed at the hearing to place his side of the case
for assisting the Court in the exercise of that discretion,
but that does not create any conflict with the Rents Act. A
rule can be made quite consistently with the Act that the
defendant will have to adopt a certain procedure and to act
within a certain time in order to be heard in that matter.
Suppose a defendant does not put in an appearance in a suit
for ejectment not brought under Or. 37, can he say that the
Act gave him a right to appear at the hearing and place his
case before the Judge ? We feel no doubt that such a thing
is not contemplated by the Act and cannot be permitted.
Rules of procedure may be framed for the exercise of rights
and such rules are not ultra vires only because the right
has to be exercised in accordance with them. Therefore we
do not think that r. 8 is ultra vires.
In what we have said in the preceding paragraph we have
proceeded on the assumption that the Court has a discretion.
Certain provisions in ss. 12 and 13 of the Rents Act had
been read to us and it had been contended that they
conferred that discretion on the Court. In the view that we
have taken, it is unnecessary to express any opinion on that
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contention and we do not do so.
In the result this appeal fails and it is dismissed with
costs.
Appeal dismissed.