Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JAI SINGH JAIRAM TYAGI ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MAMANCHAND RATILAL AGARWAL AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT28/03/1980
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
CITATION:
1980 AIR 1201 1980 SCR (3) 224
1980 SCC (3) 162
CITATOR INFO :
R 1982 SC 149 (247)
R 1987 SC 222 (8,13)
R 1989 SC1708 (18)
F 1991 SC 855 (46)
ACT:
The Cantonments (Extension of Rent Control Laws) Act,
1957 as amended retrospectively by Amending Act 22 of 1972-
Effect of the provisions of the Amending Act-Whether a
compromise decree passed in 1967 before the amendment is
saved by the Amending Act.
Doctrine of Res Judicata-Compromise decree declared
nullity by the Executing Court as the Bombay Rents, Hotel
and Lodging House Rates Control Act, 1947 had no application
to buildings in Cantonment area-All decrees validated by
Amending Act 22 of 1967-whether earlier decision of the
Executive Court bars further execution suit on the ground of
res judicata.
HEADNOTE:
The respondents in Civil Appeal No. 708/78 Mamanchand
Ratilal Agarwal and others, who are the landlords of
premises bearing door No. 16 in Nawa Bazar Area Kirkee
Cantonment, filed a civil suit No. 17,0 of 1964 against the
Appellant-tenant for recovery of possession and arrears of
rent under the provisions of Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging
House Rates Control Act, 1947. The suit was decreed. There
was an appeal by the tenant. It resulted in a com promise
decree dated July 12, 1967 by which some time was given to
the tenant to vacate the premises.
On April 29, 1969, in the case of Indu Bhushan Bose v.
Rama Sundari Devi and Anr. [1970] 1 S.C.R. 443, this Court
held that Parliament alone had and the State Legislature did
not have the necessary competence to make a law in regard to
the "regulation of house accommodation in Cantonment Areas."
The expression "regulation of house accommodation" was
interpreted as not to be confined to allotment only but as
extending to other incidents, such as termination of
existing tenancies and eviction of persons in possession of
house accommodation etc. To get over the situation created
by the said decision, on December 29, 1969, the Central
Government issued a notification under section 3 of the
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Cantonment (Extension of Rent Control Laws) Act, 1957
extending the pro visions of the Bombay Rents, Hotel and
Lodging House Rates Control Act, 1947, to the Kirkee and
other cantonment areas. In June 2, 1972, the Parliament also
enacted Act 22 of 1972 amending the Cantonment (Extension of
Rent Control laws) Act 1957, purporting to enable the
Central Government to make the Rent Control Laws in the
several States applicable to Cantonment areas from dates
anterior to the dates of notification and further purporting
to validate certain pre-existing decrees. In the meanwhile,
taking advantage of the decision in the case of Indu Bhushan
Bose v. Rama Sundari Devi and Anr., the appellant-tenant
filed Miscellaneous Application No. 597/70 for a declaration
that the decree obtained against him was a nullity and
incapable of being executed. This application was allowed by
the Court on November, 19, 1971. But, after the enactment of
Act 22 of 1972, on January 11, 1973 the landlords filed
Darkhast No. 104 of 1973 to execute the decree in their
favour. The appellant-tenant raised three objections,
namely, (i) subsequent to the compromise decree there was a
225
fresh agreement of lease between the landlords and himself;
(ii) the provisions of the amending Act 22 of 1972 were not
extensive enough to save the decree dated July 12, 1967;
,(iii) in any case, the decision in Miscellaneous
Application No. 597/70 holding the decree to be a nullity
operated as res judicata between the parties. The first
objection was left open by all the Courts for future
adjudication, as the landlord denied the existence of any
fresh agreement. The second and third objections alone were
considered. In the judgment under appeal, the High Court
overruled them and hence this appeal by special leave and
two other similar appeals.
Dismissing the appeals the Court,
^
HELD:
1. In Indu Bhushan Bose v. Rama Sundari and Anr., [1970
] 1 S.C.R. 443, the Supreme Court agreed with the view of
the Calcutta and Rajasthan High Courts and held that the
power of the State Legislature to legislate in respect of
landlord and tenant of buildings was to be found not in
Entry 18 of the List II, but in Entries 6, 7 and 13 of List
III of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution and that
such power was circumscribed by the exclusive power of
Parliament to legislate on the same subject under Entry 3 of
List I. But even before this decision Parliament took the
view of the Calcutta Rajasthan High, Courts as the correct
view and proceeded to enact the Cantonment (Extension of
Rent control Laws) Act, 1957, by section 3 of which the
Central Government was enabled, by notification in the
official Gazette to extend to any cantonment with such
restrictions and modifications as it thought fit, any
enactment relating to the control of rent and regulation of
house accommodation which was in force on the date of the
notification in the State in which the Cantonment was
situated. Though this Act came into force on December 18,
1957, no notification was issued extending the provisions of
the Bombay Rents Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act,
1947, to Kirkee and other Cantonment areas within the State
of Bombay until 1969. Apparently such a notification was
thought unnecessary in view of the fact that the Bombay Act
was supposed to operate within the said Cantonment areas
because of the consistent view taken by the Bombay High
Court regarding the applicability of the Bombay Act to such
areas. In view of the Supreme Court decision in Indu
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Bhushan’s case, it became necessary that a notification
under section 3 of the Cantonment (Extension of Rent Control
Laws) Act, 1957, should be issued. It was accordingly done
on December 29, 1969. But it was realised that the entire
problem was not thereby solved since all such notifications
as the one issued on December 29, 1969 could only be
prospective and could not save decrees which had already
been passed. Therefore, Amending Act 22 of 1972 was enacted
for the express purpose of saving decree which had already
been passed. By section 2 of the Amending Act of 1972 the
Principal Act of 1957 was itself deemed to have come into
force on January 26, 1950. Original Section 3 was renumbered
as subsection 1 and the words "on the date of the
notification" were omitted and "were deemed always to have
been omitted." [229 B-G & 230 C-D]
2. Under section 3 of the unamended Act, 1957, a
notification could be issued extending a State Legislation
to a Cantonment area with effect from the date of
notification. As a result of the introduction of sub-section
2 of section 3 the notification can be given effect from an
anterior date or a future late but it cannot be made
effective from a date earlier than the commencement
226
of the State Legislation or the establishment of the
Cantonment or the commencement of the Cantonment (Extension
of Rent Control Laws) Act, 1957. Sub-section 3 is merely
consequential to sub-section 2, in that it provides that a
State Legislation when extended to a Cantonment area with
effect from the date of the notification from an anterior
date, such legislation is to stand extended with all the
amendments to such State Legislation made after such
anterior date but before the commencement of the 1972
Amending Act, the amendments being applicable as and when
they come into force. Sub-s. 4 makes provision for the
saving of decrees or orders for the regulation of or for
eviction from any house accommodation in a Cantonment made
before the extension of the State Legislation to the
Cantonment provided certain conditions are fulfilled. One
condition is that the decree or order must have been made by
any Court, Tribunal or other authority in accordance with a
law for the control of rent and regulation of house
accommodation for the time being in force in the State in
which such Cantonment is situated. In other words the decree
or order must have been made by the wrong application of the
State Legislation to the Cantonment area. If a decree or
order has been made by such wrong application of the State
Legislation to the Cantonment area it shall be deemed, with
enact from the date of the notification to have been
properly made under the relevant provisions of the State
Legislation. 1231 A-H, 232 A-BI
3. The applicability of sub-section 4 cannot be
confined to cases where notifications are issued with
retrospective effect under sub-section 2. Sub section 4 is
not so confined. It applies to all cases of decrees or
orders made before the extension of a State Legislation to a
Cantonment area irrespective of the question whether such
extension is retrospective or not. The essential condition
to be fulfilled is that the decree or order must have been
made as if the State Legislation was already in force,
although. strictly speaking, it was not so in force.
Subsection 4 is wide enough to save all decrees and orders
made by the wrong application of State rent control and
house accommodation legislation to a Cantonment area, though
such State Legislation could not in law have been applied to
cantonment areas at the time of the passing of the decrees
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or order. The decree obtained by the respondent is saved by
the pro visions of section 3, sub-section 4 of the
Cantonment (Extension of Rent Control Laws) Act 22 of 1957,
as amended by Act 22 of 1972. [232 E-F]
4. If the decision in the previous proceeding was to be
regarded as res judicata it would assume the status of a
special rule of law applicable to the parties relating to
the jurisdiction of the Court in derogation of the rule
declared by the legislature. [234 A]
In the present case, the executing Court had refused to
exercise jurisdiction and to execute the decree on the
ground that the decree was a nullity as the Bombay Rents,
Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act, 1947, had no
application to buildings in Cantonment areas. That defect
having been re moved and all decrees obtained on the basis
that the Bombay rent law applied to the Kirkee Cantonment
area having been validated by Act 22 of 1972, it cannot be
said that the earlier decision holding that the decree was a
nullity operated as res judicata. [234 B-D]
Mathura Prasad Bajoo Jaiswal and ors. v. Dessibai N. B.
Jeejeebhoy, [1970] 1 S.C.R. 830 (@) 836: followed.
227
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 708 to
710 Of 1978.
Appeals by Special Leave from the Judgment and order
dated 18-2-1978 of the Bombay High Court in Special Civil
Application Nos. 2564/74, 5997/78 and 5999/78.
V.M. Tarkunde, C.K Ratnaparkhi, V.N. Ganpule, Mrs.
Veena Devi Khanna and Miss Manik Tarkunde for the Appellants
in all the appeals. .
Soli J. Sorabjee, S.K Mehta, P.N. Puri and E.M.S. Anam
for the Respondents 1 to 6 in CAs 708 to 710/1978.
P.H. Parekh, C.B. Singh, B.L. Verma, Miss V. Caprihan,
Hemant Sharma and Raian Karanjawala for the Respondent No. 5
in CA 710/78.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHINNAPPA REDDY, J. The respondents in Civil Appeal No.
708 of 1978, Mamanchand Ratilal Agarwal and others, who are
the landlords of premises bearing door No. 16 in Nawa Bazar
Area Kirkee Cantonment, filed civil suit No. 1730 of 1964
against the appellant-tenant for recovery of possession and
arrears of rent under the provisions of the Bombay Rents,
Hotel and Lodging House Rate Control Act, 1947. The suit was
decreed. There was an appeal by the tenant. It resulted in a
compromise decree dated July 12, 1967 by which some time was
given to the tenant to vacate the premises. As the tenant
failed to vacate the premises within the time given to him,
the landlords were compelled to take out execution.
On April 29, 1969, in the case of Indu Bhusan Bose v.
Rama Sundari Devi & Anr this Court held that Parliament
alone had and the State Legislature did not have the
necessary competence to make a law in any regard to the
"regulation of house accommodation in Cantonment .. areas".
The expression "regulation of house accommodation" was
interpreted as not to be confined to allotment only but as
extending to other incidents, such as termination of
existing tenancies and eviction of persons in possession of
house accommodation etc. To get over the situation created
by Indu Bhusan Bose v. Rama Sundari Devi & Anr. on December
29, 1969, the Central Government issued a notification under
Section 3 of the Cantonments (Extension of Rent Control
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Laws) Act, 1957, extending the provisions of the Bombay
Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act, 1947, to
the Kirkee and other Cantonment areas. On June 2, 1972, the
Parliament also
228
enacted Act 22 of 1972 amending the Cantonments (Extension
of Rent Control Law;) Act, 1957, purporting to enable the
Central Government to make the rent control laws in the
several States applicable to Cantonment areas from dates
anterior to the dates of notification and further purporting
to validate certain pre-existing decrees. In the meanwhile
taking advantage of the decision in the case of Indu Bhusan
v. Rama Sundari Devi & Anr. (supra), the appellant-tenant
filed Miscellaneous Application No. 597 of 1970 for a
declaration that the decree obtained against him was a
nullity and incapable of being executed. This application
was allowed by the Court on November 15, 1971. But, after
the enactment of Act 22 of 1972, on January 11, 1973, the
landlords filed Darkhast No. 104 of 1973 to execute the
decree in their favour. The tenant raised various
objections. One of the objections was that subsequent to the
compromise decree there was a fresh agreement of lease
between the landlords and himself. This was denied by the
landlords. Another objection was that the provisions of the
Amending Act 22 of 1972 were not extensive enough to save
the decree dated July 12, 1967. The third objection was
that in any case the decision in miscellaneous application
No. 597 of 1970 holding the decree to be a nullity operated
as res judicata between the parties. The first of the
objections was left open by all the Courts for future
adjudication. The second and third objections alone were
considered, for the time being. In the judgment under
appeal, the High Court over-ruled the second and third
objections of the tenant and hence this appeal by special
leave.
The first question for our consideration is whether the
compromise decree dated July 12, 1967 is saved by Amending
Act 22 of 1972?
Before the decision of this Court in Indu Bhusan Bose
v. Rama Sundari Devi & Anr. (supra), there was a conflict of
views on the question whether Entry 3 of List I of Schedule
VII to the Constitution which enabled Parliament to
legislate in regard to "the regulation of housing
accommodation (including the control of rents)" in
Cantonment areas was wide enough to include the subject of
relationship of landlord and tenant of buildings situated in
Cantonment areas. The High Courts of Bombay, Nagpur and
Patna had taken the view that regulation of the relationship
of landlord and tenant did not fall within Entry 2 of List I
of the Seventh Schedule to the Govt. Of India Act, 1935
(which corresponded to Entry 3 of List I of Seventh Schedule
to the Constitution and that the Provincial Legislature was
competent to legislate even in regard to the regulation of
the relationship between landlord and tenant in Cantonment
areas by virtue of Entry 21 of List II of the
229
Seventh Schedule to the Govt. Of India Act, 1935(which
corresponded to Entry 18 of the List II of the Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution). On the other hand the High
Courts of Calcutta and Rajasthan held that the power of the
State Legislature to legislate in respect of landlord and
tenant of buildings was to be found not in Entry 18 of List
II but in Entries 6, 7 and 13 of List III of the Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution and that such power was
circumscribed by the exclusive power of Parliament to
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legislate on the same subject under Entry 3 of List I. The
view expressed by the Calcutta and Rajasthan High Courts was
accepted as correct by this Court in Indu Bhusan Bose v.
Rama Sundari Devi & Anr. (supra), But even before the
decision of this Court in Indu Bhusan Bose v. Rama Sundari
Devi & Anr. (supra), Parliament appeared to take view of the
Calcutta and Rajasthan High Courts as the correct view and
proceeded to enact the Cantonments (Extension of Rent
Control Laws) Act, 1957, by Section 3 of which the Central
Government was enabled, by notification in the official
Gazette, to extend to any Cantonment with such restrictions
and modifications as it thought fit. Any enactment relating
to the control of rent and regulation of house accommodation
which was in force on the date of the notification in the
State in which the Cantonment was situated. Though this Act
came into force on December 18, 1957, no notification was
issued extending the provisions of the Bombay Rents, Hotel
and Lodging House Rates Control Act, 1947, to Kirkee and
other Cantonment areas within the State of Bombay until
1969. Apparently such a notification was thought unnecessary
in view of the fact that the Bombay Act was supposed to
operate within the said Cantonment areas because of the
consistent view taken by the Bombay High Court, regarding
the applicability of the Bombay Act to such areas. But the
position was upset as a result of the decision of this Court
in Indu Bhusan Bose v. Rama Sundari Devi & Anr. (supra).
Thereafter it became necessary that a notification under
section 3 of the Cantonment (Extension of Rent Control Laws)
Act, 1957, should be issued. It was accordingly done on
December 29, 1969. But it was soon realised that the entire
problem was not thereby solved since all such notification
as the one issued on December 29, 1969 could only be
prospective and could not save decree which had already been
passed. Amending Act 22 of 1972 was, therefore, enacted for
the express purpose of saving decrees which had already been
passed. The statement of objects and reasons of the
amending act stated:
"..... But these notifications could be issued
only prospectively and could not save the decrees
already passed. A number of representations had been
received
230
from and on behalf of tenants and tenants’
associations, ventilating their grievances in this
regard. It was accordingly proposed to amend s. 3 to
empower the Government to extend to any Cantonment any
enactment relating to the control of rent and
regulation of house accommodation in force in the State
in which the Cantonment was situated either from the
commencement of such enactment or from 26-1-1950, the
date when the Constitution came into force, whichever
was later, and to save decrees already passed under the
enactment deemed to have been in force in the
Cantonment before such extension."
By section 2 of the Amending Act of 1972 the Principal
Act of 1957 was itself deemed to have come into force on
January 26, 1950.
Original s. 3 was renumbered as sub.-s. 1 and the words
"on the date of the notification" were omitted and "were
deemed always to have been omitted". New sub.-sections 2, 3
and 4 were introduced and they are as follows:
"(2) The extension of and enactment under sub
section (1) may be made from such earlier or future
date as the Central Government may think fit:
Provided that no such extension shall be made from
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a date earlier than-
(a) the commencement of such enactment, or
(b) the establishment of the cantonment, or
(c) the commencement of this Act,
whichever is later.
(3) Where any enactment in force in any State relating
to the control of rent and regulation of house accommodation
is extended to a cantonment from a date earlier than the
date on which such extension is made (hereafter referred to
as the "earlier date"), such enactment, as in force on such
earlier date, shall apply to such cantonment, and where any
such enactment, has been amended at any time after the
earlier date but before the commencement of the Cantonments
(Extension of Rent Control Laws Amendment Act 1971, such
enactment, as amended, shall apply to the cantonment on and
from the date on which the enactment by which such amendment
was made, came into force.
(4) Where, before the extension to a cantonment of any
enactments, relating to the control of rent and regula-
231
tion of house accommodation therein (hereafter referred
to as the "Rent Control Act"):-
(i) any decree or order for the regulation of, or
for eviction from, any house accommodation in that
cantonment, or
(ii) any order in the proceedings for the
execution of such decree or order, or
(iii) any order relating to the control of rent or
other incident of such house accommodation,
was made by any court, tribunal or other authority in
accordance with any law for the control of rent and
regulation of house accommodation for the time being in
force in the State in which such cantonment is
situated, such decree or order shall, on and from the
date on which the Rent Control Act is extended to that
cantonment, be deemed to have been made under the
corresponding provisions of the Rent Control Act, as
extended to that cantonment, as if the said Rent
Control Act, as so extended, were in force in that
Cantonment, on the date on which such decree or order
was made".
The effect of the provisions of the Amending Act appear
to us lo be very clear. Under s. 3 of the unamended Act, a
notification could be issued extending a State Legislation
to a Cantonment area with effect from the date of the
notification. As a result of the introduction of sub.-s. 2
of s. 3 the notification can be given effect from an
anterior date or a future date, but it cannot be made
effective from a date earlier than the commencement of the
State Legislation or the establishment of the Cantonment or
the commencement of the Cantonment (Extension of Rent
Control Laws) Act, 1957. Sub.-s. 3 is merely consequential
to sub.-s. 2 in that it provides that a State Legislation
when extended to a Cantonment area from an anterior date,
such legislation is to stand extended with all the
amendments to such State Legislation made after such
anterior date but before the commencement of the 1972
Amending Act, the amendments being applicable as and when
they come into force. Sub-.s. 4 makes provision for the
saving of decrees or orders for the regulation of or for
eviction from any house accommodation in a Cantonment made
before the extension of the State Legislation to the
Cantonment provided certain conditions are fulfilled. One
condition is that the decree or order must have been made by
any Court, Tribunal or other authority in accordance with a
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law for the control of rent and regula-
232
tion of house accommodation for the time being in force in
the State in which such Cantonment is situated. In other
words the decree or order must have been made by the wrong
application of the State legislation to the Cantonment area.
If a decree or order has been made by such wrong application
of the State Legislation to the Cantonment area, it shall be
deemed, with effect from the date of the notification, to
have been properly made under the relevant provisions of the
State Legislation.
Shri V.M. Tarkunde, learned Counsel for the appellant
urged that sub.-s. 4 had to be read in the context of sub.-
s. 2 and 3 and that it was to be applied only to cases where
a notification issued under sub.-s. 1 was given
retrospective effect under the provisions of sub.-s. 2. We
see no justification for confining the applicability of
sub.-s. 4 to cases where notifications are issued with
retrospective effect under sub.-s. 2. Sub.-s. 4 in terms is
not as confined. It applies to all cases of decrees or
orders made before the extension of a State Legislation to a
Cantonment area irrespective of the question whether such
extension is retrospective or not. The essential condition
to be fulfilled is that the decree or order must have been
made as if the State Legislation was already in force,
although, strictly speaking, it was not so in force. In our
view sub.-s. 4 is wide enough to save all decrees and orders
made by the wrong application of a State rent control and
house accommodation legislation to a Cantonment area, though
such State Legislation could not in law have been applied to
Cantonment areas at the time of the passing of the decrees
or order. We, therefore, hold that the decree obtained by
the respondents is saved by the provisions of s. 3, 4 sub.-
s. 4 of the Cantonment (Extension of Rent Control Laws) Act
of 1957. as amended by Act 22 of 1972.
The second submission of the learned counsel for the
appellant was that the decision of the executing Court in
Miscellaneous Application No. 597 of 1970 declaring the
decree to be a nullity separated as res judicata between the
parties. The learned counsel relied upon the following
observations of this Court in Mathura Prasad Bajoo Jaiswal &
ors. v. Dessibai N.B. Jeejeebhoy(1)
"The matter in issue, if it is one purely of act,
decided in the earlier proceeding by a competent court
must in a subsequent litigation between the same
parties be regarded as finally decided and cannot be
reopened. A mixed question of law and fact determined
in the earlier proceeding between the same parties may
not, for the reason, be questioned in a subsequent
proceeding between
233
the same parties. But, where the decision is on a
question of law, i.e. the interpretation of a statute,
it will be res judicata in a subsequent proceeding
between the same parties where the cause of action is
the same, for the expression ’the matter in issue’ in
s. 11 Code of Civil Procedure means the right litigated
between the parties i.e. the facts on which the right
is claimed or denied and the law applicable to the
determination of that issue. Where, however, the
question is one purely of law and it relates to the
jurisdiction of the Court or a decision of the Court
sanctioning something which is illegal, by resort to
the rule of res judicata a party affected by the
decision will not be precluded from challenging the
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validity of that order under the rule of (’ res
judicata, for a rule of procedure cannot supersede the
law of the land.
In the very observations relied upon by the learned counsel
for the appellant the last sentence is clearly against the
appellant. The matter becomes clear if certain observations
made earlier in the very judgment are considered. They are:
"A question relating to the Jurisdiction of a
Court cannot be deemed to have been finally determined
by an erroneous decision of the Court. If by an
erroneous interpretation of the statute the Court holds
that it has no jurisdiction, the question would not,
lin our judgment, operate as res judicata. Similarly by
an erroneous decision if the Court assumes jurisdiction
which it does not possess under the statute, the
question cannot operate as res judicata between the
same parties, whether the cause of action in the
subsequent litigation is the same or otherwise".
In that case the appellant who had a lease of an open land
for construction of buildings had applied for determination
of standard rent under the Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging
House Rates Control Act, 1947. The application was rejected
on the ground that the Act did not apply to open land let
for construction. The view was confirmed by the High Court.
Later in another case, the view taken by the High Court was
over-ruled by the Supreme Court and it was held that the Act
applied to open land let out for construction The appellant
once again filed an application for determination of
standard rent. The lower Courts and the High Court held that
the previous decision operated as res judicata between the
parties. The Supreme Court reversed the view of the lower
courts and the High Court. It 16-189SCI/80
234
was held that the earlier decision that the Civil Judge had
no jurisdiction to entertain the application for
determination of standard rent ? was wrong in view of the
judgment of the Supreme Court. If the decision in the
previous proceeding was to be regarded as res judicata it
would assume the status of a special rule of law applicable
to the parties relating to the jurisdiction of the Court in
derogation of the rule declared by the legislature. The
situation in the present case is analogous. The executing
Court had refused to exercise jurisdiction and to execute
the decree on the ground that the decree was a nullity as
the Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act,
1947, had no application to buildings in Cantonment areas.
That defect having been removed and all decrees obtained on
the basis that the Bombay rent law applied to the Kirkee
Cantonment area having been validated by Act 22 of 1972, it
cannot be said that the earlier decision holding that the
decree was a nullity operated as res judicata. As pointed
out by this Court in Mathura Prasad Bajoo Jaiswal & Ors. I
v. Dassibai N.B. Jeejeebhoy (supra) if the earlier decision
in the Miscellaneous Application is to be regarded as res
judicata it would assume the status of a special rule of
jurisdiction applicable to the parties in derogation of the
law declared by the legislature. We, therefore, see no
substance in the second submission. Civil Appeal No. 708 of
1978 is accordingly dismissed with costs.
In Civil Appeal No. 709 of 1978, the only question is
about the validity of a decree obtained before the date of
the notification issued under s. 3 of the Cantonments
(Extension of Rent Control Laws) Act, 1957. In view of what
we have said above, this question has to be decided against
the appellant. This appeal is also dismissed with costs.
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In Civil Appeal No. 718 of 1978, special leave was
granted under a misapprehension that the appeal raised the
same questions as were raised in Civil Appeal No. 708 of
1978. It is now stated that it is not so. This appeal is
also dismissed with costs.
S.R. Appeals dismissed.
235