Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
HARCHARAN SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHIV RANI AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT20/02/1981
BENCH:
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
BENCH:
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
DESAI, D.A.
SEN, A.P. (J)
CITATION:
1981 AIR 1248 1981 SCR (2) 962
1981 SCC (2) 535 1981 SCALE (1)401
ACT:
Service be refusal-Notice demanding arrears and seeking
eviction is sent by registered post but refused by the
tenant-Whether the tenant could be imputed the knowledge of
the contents thereof so that upon his failure to com ply
with the notice the tenant could be said to have committed
willful default in payment of rent-U.P. Cantonment (Control
of Rent and Eviction), (Central Act X), 1952, section 14(1)
scope of-General Clauses Act 1897, section 27, Indian
Evidence Act, section 114.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was inducted in the year 1964 as a tenant
of the suit premises on an yearly rental payable by December
31, every year. Since the appellant did not pay the rent for
the years 1965, 1966 a combined notice dated November 9,
1966 demanding payment of arrears and seeking ejectment on
termination of tenancy, was sent by registered post by the
respondents. The appellant refused to receive the notice on
November 10, 1966. On his failure to comply with the
requisitions contained in the notice, the respondents filed
a suit against the appellant seeking eviction as well as
recovery of rents and mensne profits.
Having lost before the trial court and the first
appellate court, the respondents came up before the High
Court in second appeal. The High Court accepted the finding
of fact recorded by the first appellate court that there was
service of the notice on the appellant by refusal and held
that when notice was tendered to the tenant and when the
latter refused to accept the same know ledge of the contents
of the notice must be imputed to him. The High Court allowed
the landlords’ appeal and granted three months time to the
appellant to vacate the shop. Hence, the tenant’s appeal
after obtaining special leave from this Court.
Dismissing the appeal, the Court
^
HELD: (By majority) Per Tulzapurkar, J. (On behalf of
A. P. Sen, J. and himself).
1:1. The presumptions that are raised under section 27
of the General Clauses Act, 1897 and section 114 of the
Indian Evidence Act, make it clear that, when service is
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effected by refusal of a postal communication, the addressee
must be imputed with the knowledge of the contents thereof.
[971 E-F]
1:2. Before the knowledge of the contents of the notice
could be imputed, it is not necessary that the sealed
envelope must be opened and read by the addressee or when
the addressee happens to be an illiterate person the contend
should be read over to him by the post-man or someone else.
Such things do not occur when the addressee is determined to
decline to accept the sealed envelope. [971 D-E]
963
Vaman Vithal Kulkarni and Ors. v. Khanderao Ram Rao
Sholapurkar, A.I.R. 1935 Bom. 247, explained and dissented
from.
Mahboob Bi v. Alvala Lachmiah, A.I.R. 1964 A.P. 324,
held inapplicable.
Shri Nath and another v. Smt. Saraswati Devi Jaiswal,
A.I.R. 1964 All. 52; Fanni Lal v. Smt. Chironja, (1972)
Allahabad Law Journal 499; Ganga Ram v. Smt. Phulwati,
(1970) Allahabad Law Journal 336 (FB); Kodali Bapayya and
Ors. v. Yadavalli Venkataratnam and Ors., A.I.R. 1953 Mad.
884, approved.
Harihar Banerji and Ors. v. Ramshashi Roy and Ors.,
A.I.R. 1918 P.C. 102, referred to.
2: 1. The suit under section 14(1) of the U.P.
Cantonment (Control of Rent & Eviction) Act (Central Act X
of 1952), in the instant case was maintainable. Under
section 14(1) of the Central Act, which in pari materia with
section 3(1) of the U.P. (Temporary) Control of Rent and
Eviction Act, 1947, permission of the District Magistrate
was required if the landlord sought eviction of the tenant
on any ground other than those specified in clauses (a) to
(f) and not when it was sought on any of the grounds
specified in clauses (a) to (f). [973 E-P]
Bhagwan Dass v. Paras Nath, [1969] 2 SCR 297, followed.
2:2. All the courts rightly dealt with the matter as
being governed by the U.P. Cantonments (Control of Rent &
Eviction) Act, X of 1952-a Central Act and not by U.P.
(Temporary) Control of Rent and Eviction Act, 1947 much less
by the later U.P. (Rent & Eviction) Act, 1972. [966 E-F]
Per Desai. J. Contra.
1. Uttar Pradesh Urban Buildings (Regulation of
Letting, Rent & Eviction) Act, 1972 is a socially
beneficient statute and should be construed according to
well recognised canons of construction. The words used in
the statute, if they are plain and unambiguous must be
applied as they stand, however, strongly it may be suspected
that the result does not represent the real intention of the
legislature. However, if two constructions are possible and
legitimate ambiguity arises from the language employed that
which enlarges the protection of a socially beneficient
statute rather than one which restricts it should be
preferred and adopted. In other words the construction which
would be more consistent with the policy and attainment of
the legislation which is to protect the possession of the
tenant unless the landlord establishes a ground for eviction
should be preferred. Further where two constructions are
possible the one which would accord with reason and justice
must be preferred. [975 G-H, 976 A, D, G]
Inland Revenue Commissioners v. Hinchy, 1960 A.C. 748,
H. L. at 767= (1960) 1 All India Reports 505 at 512; River
Wear Commissioners v. Adamson, (1877) 2 A.C. 743 & 765,
quoted with approval.
Mohd. Shafi v. Additional District & Sessions Judge
(VII), Allahabad and Others, [1977] 2 S.C.C. 226; Gurucharan
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Singh v. Kamla Singh & Ors. [1976] 2 S.C.C. 152; H. H.
Maharajadhiraja Madhav Rao Jivaji Rao Scindia Bahadur of
Gwalior & Ors. v. Union of India & Another, [1971] 1 S.C.C.
85, reiterated.
964
2:1. The substitution of the expression, "arrears of
rent for not less than four months" in sub-clause (a) of
sub-section (2) of section 20 of the Uttar Pradesh Urban
Buildings (Regulation of Letting Rent & Eviction) Act, 1972
is a contemporaneous legislative exposition bringing out
clearly the legislative intention that the landlord would be
entitled to evict the tenant if the rent is in arrears for
not less than four months. Before the landlord can commence
action under sub-clause (a): (i) the tenant must have
committed default in Payment of rent for a period of four
months, and (ii) a notice has to be served, giving the
tenant locus poeniteniae to repair the default within month.
[978 B-C]
2:2. Two ingredients emerge from the expression "the
tenant is in arrears of rent for not less than four months":
(i) that the rent is payable by month and (ii) the tenant
has committed default in payment of rent for four different
months and that this default subsists and continues on the
date when the land-lord invokes the provision of clause (a)
and proceeds to serve a notice of demand. Again, if within a
period of one month from the date of receipt of notice, the
tenant pays up the arrears of rent he does not lose the
protection of the Rent Act. [978 G-H 979]
2:3. It is implicit in the expression "the tenant is in
arrears of rent for not less than four months" that the
legislature clearly intended to cover those cases Of default
in payment of rent under clause (a) where the contract of
lease provided for payment of rent every month meaning
thereby that the unit for liability to pay rent is one month
and secondly the tenant has committed default on four
different occasions of four different months or four
different units agreed upon for payment of rent and that too
after the liability to pay the same has accepted. [979 A-C]
2:4. Section 20(2)(a) of the Rent Act, 1972 does not
attract cases where the landlords accept rent on an yearly
basis. The language of the section does not admit of a
construction, namely, that even if the rent is payable by
year, once the year is over and a period of four months has
elapsed he could be said to be "a tenant in arrears, of rent
for not less than four months". In the instant case, the
parties are ad idem that the rent is payable by year at the
rate of Rs. 100/- per annum. In such a case it could not be
said that this tenant was in arrears of rent for not less
than four months. His case would not be covered by section
20(2) of the Rent Act and, therefore, the landlord would not
be entitled to a decree for eviction on this ground and that
was the sole ground on which eviction has been ordered. [980
C-D, 981 A-B]
3. The amended section 100 of the Civil Procedure Code
restricted the jurisdiction of the High Court to entertain a
second appeal only if the High Court was satisfied that the
case involved a substantial question of law. Sub-section
G(4) cast a duty on the court to formulate such substantial
question of law and the appeal has to be heard on the
question so formulated. It would also be open to the
respondent at the hearing of he appeal to contend that the
case does not involve such a question. Thus, the High Court
ordinarily cannot and did not interfere with the concurrent
findings of fact arrived at by the courts below. [981 G-H,
982 A]
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In the facts of this case, there was a concurrent
finding that the statutory notice as required by section
20(2)(a) was not served upon the tenant and, therefore, the
High Court was in error in interfering with this finding of
fact. [982 B-C]
965
R. Ramachandran Ayyar v. Ramalingam Chettiar, [1963] 3
S.C.R. 605; Mst. Durga Chaudhrain v. Jawahar Choudhary, 1890
LR 17 IA, 122; Goppulal v. Dwarkadhishji, [1969] 3 S.C.R.
989, reiterated.
4:1. Mere refusal of a registered letter would not
permit a presumption to be raised that not only the service
was legal, but the refusal was the conscious act flowing
from the knowledge of the contents of the letter. [987 C]
4:2. This concept that the registered envelope properly
addressed and returned with an endorsement of refusal must
permit a rebuttable presumption that the addressee refused
it with the knowledge of the contents is wholly borrowed
from the western jurisprudence. Not considering the specific
Indian conditions and the approach of rural Indian to
registered letters, but merely going in with the technical
rules of Evidence Act would cause more harm and lead to
injustice through law. [985 G-H, 986 A]
4:3. The Rent Act does not seek to evict a mere
defaulter. That is why a provision for notice has been made.
If even after notice the default continues, the tenant can
be condemned as willful defaulter. He could not be dubbed
guilty of conscious, willful, contumacious, intentional
conduct even when he did not know what was in the registered
env‘elope. It would be atrocious to impute any such
knowledge to a person who has merely been guilty of refusing
to accept the registered notice. Where service of notice is
a condition precedent, a dubious service held established by
examining the postman who must be delivering hundreds of
postal envelopes and who is ready to go to the witness box
after a long interval to say that he offered the envelope to
the addressee and he refused to accept the same, would be
travesty of justice. And if this condition precedent is not
fully satisfied, the subsequent conduct cannot be said to be
willful. [987 E-G]
Fannilal v. Smt. Chironja, (1972) All. Law J. 499
(D.B.) dissented to.
Appabhai Motibhai v. Laxmichand Zaverchand & Co.,
A.I.R. 1954 Bom. 159, held inapplicable.
Mahboob Bi v. Alvala Lachmiah, A.I.R. 1964 A.P. 314;
Amarjit Singh Bedi v. Lachman Das; Waman Vithal Kulkarni &
Others v. Khandera Ram Rao Sholapurkar, A.I.R. 1935 Bom.
247, quoted with approval.
5. The argument that it would be impossible to serve
the notice as statutorily prescribed, once it is held that
no knowledge of the contents of the refused letter could be
imputed to the tenant, is incorrect. The notice is required
to be served in the manner prescribed by section 106 of
Transfer of Property Act which, inter alia, provides for
affixing a copy of the notice on the premises in possession
of the tenant. Therefore, it cannot be said that the
approach of the Court would render it impossible for the
landlord to meet with the statutory requirement of service
of notice before commencing the action for eviction [1988 C]
966
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1402 of
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1979.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 16-2-1979 of the Allahabad High Court in Second Appeal
No. 430/70.
P. C. Bhartari for the Appellant.
L. M. Singhvi and Pramod Swarup for the Respondent.
The Judgment of V. D. Tulzapurkar, J. and A. P. Sen, J.
was delivered by Tulzapurkar, J. D. A. Desai, J. gave a
dissenting Opinion.
TULZAPURKAR, J. This is a tenant’s appeal by special
leave directed against the judgment and decree passed by the
Allahabad High Court on February 16, 1979 in Second Appeal
No. 430 of 1970 whereby the High Court decreed the
respondents’ (landlords) suit for ejectment against the
appellant (tenant) and the only question of substance raised
in the appeal is whether when the landlords’ notice
demanding arrears and seeking eviction is sent by registered
post and is refused by the tenant the latter could be
imputed the knowledge of the contents thereof 60 that upon
his failure to comply with the notice the tenant could be
said to have committed willful default in payment of rent ?
The question arises in these circumstances: The
appellant occupied shop No. 5 in Ivanhoe Estate, situated at
Landure Cantonment, Mussorie, originally owned by one Parvij
Waris Rasool, on an yearly rental of Rs. 250 payable by
December 31, every year. The property at all material times
was admittedly governed by the U.P. Cantonment, (Control of
Rent & Eviction) Act, X of 1952-a Central Act and, in my
view, all the Courts below rightly dealt with the matter as
being governed by that Act and not by U.P. (Temporary)
Control of Rent and Eviction Act, 1947, much less by the
later U.P. (Rent and Eviction) Act, 1972. The respondents
purchased the aforesaid Estate form its previous owner on
November 27, 1964 and the previous owner attorned the
tenancy of the appellant to the respondents along with the
rental due from him for the year 1964. The appellant
continued to be the tenant of the shop during the years 1965
and 1966 as well but since he did not pay the rent the
respondents on November 9, 1966 gave a combined notice
demanding payment of arrears and seeking ejectment on
termination of tenancy which was refused by him on
November, 10, 1966. On his failure to comply with the
requisitions contained in the notice the respondents filed a
suit against the appellant seeking eviction as well as
recovery of rents and mesne profits.
967
The suit was resisted by the appellant, inter alia, on
the ground that the rent of the accommodation payable to the
previous owner was Rs. 250 per annum less 10% rebate on
account of repairs; that in 1964 at the intervention of some
common friends he agreed to vacate and did surrender the
residential portion of the shop comprising two rooms, one
kitchen, one bath room and one varandah at the back of the
shop in consideration of respondents relinquishing the
rental of Rs. 250 due from him for the year 1964; that for
the years 1965 and 1966 the rental for the remaining shop
was reduced by agreement to Rs. 50 per annum less rebate for
repairs and that he had sent a cheque for the amount due to
the respondents. He denied that he has committed default in
payment of rents and averred that no notice of demand and
ejectment was served on him and consequently prayed for
dismissal of the suit.
On an appreciation of the evidence led by the parties
before it the Trial Court came to the conclusion that
initially the rent fixed was Rs. 250 per year but after the
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respondents’ purchase of the property the appellant vacated
the residential portion of the shop under an agreement
arrived at between the parties where under there was
relinquishment of rent due for 1964 and that the rent for
the main shop was fixed at Rs. 100 per annum and that no
rebate of any kind had been agreed to at any time on account
of repairs. Regarding the arrears of rent outstanding
against the appellant the Trial Court held that rent for the
years 1965 and 1966 had not been paid and was due from him
but it held that the notice dated November 9, 1966 was not
served on the appellant and hence he could not be held to
have committed willful default in payment of arrears of
rent. In this view of the matter the Trial Court dismissed
the suit insofar as the relief of eviction was concerned but
decreed it for arrears of rent at the rate of Rs. 100 per
annum. Aggrieved by that judgment and decree the respondents
filed an appeal to the District Court, Dehradun. The learned
District Judge concurred with the findings of the Trial
Court that the rental for the year 1964 had been
relinquished and that the rental of the front portion of the
shop had been fixed at Rs. 100 per annum. He further held
that the notice was tendered to the appellant on November
10, 1966 but he declined to accept it and hence there was
service by refusal, but in his opinion despite such service
it could not be presumed that the appellant had knowledge
about the contents of that notice and consequently he could
not be said to have committed any willful default in the
payment of rent. In the result the appeal was dismissed. The
respondents preferred Second Appeal No. 430 of 1970 to the
High Court. In that appeal the tenant sought to reagitate
the question
968
whether or not the notice was tendered to him and was
refused by him on the ground that the finding had been
recorded by the District Court without application of mind
to the statement on oath made by him to the effect that no
postman had ever gone to him with a registered letter either
on 9th or 10th November, 1966 and he had not declined to
receive any registered letter but the High Court refused to
entertain the contention inasmuch as it found that the
learned District Judge had referred to this part of the
appellant’s evidence as also the postman’s evidence on the
point and that on an appreciation of such rival evidence on
record he had recorded a finding that the notice was
tendered to the appellant but it was refused by him; in
other words in the absence of animus being attributed to the
postman the District Judge had preferred the postman’s
evidence to that of the appellant’s. The High Court,
therefore, accepted the finding of fact recorded by the
District Court that there was service of the notice on the
appellant by refusal. On the further question as to whether
when such refusal had been established, the appellant could
be imputed with the knowledge of the contents of the notice,
the High Court, following its two previous decisions in Shri
Nath and another v. Smt. Saraswati Devi Jaswal and Fanni Lal
v. Smt. Chironja, held that when notice was tendered to the
tenant and when the latter refused to accept the same,
knowledge of the contents of the notice must be imputed to
him. The District Judge’s view in this behalf was thus
reversed and since there was failure on the part of the
appellant to pay the rent within one month of the service of
notice upon him, the High Court held that he had committed
willful default within the meaning of s. 14(a) of the Act.
Accordingly the High Court allowed the appeal and the
respondents’ prayer for ejectment was granted but the
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appellant was given three months" time to vacate the
accommodation. The tenant has come up in appeal to this
Court.
Counsel for the appellant vehemently contended before
us that the High Court was in error in taking the view that
when service by refusal had been effected the tenant must be
deemed to have knowledge about the contents of the notice,
for, no such presumption could be drawn especially when it
was clear on evidence that neither the registered envelope
was opened either by the tenant or by the postman nor the
contents thereof read before the same was returned to the
postman. He further urged that the envelope bore the seal of
Shri S. P. Singh, Advocate and the appellant could not,
therefore, know that the notice was from his landlords; he
also pointed out that the appellant was illiterate and did
not know English and since the address on the envelope as
969
well as the seal of the lawyer were in English the appellant
could not even know who the sender of the notice was.
Counsel, therefore, urged that in the peculiar circumstances
of the case the learned District Judge had rightly recorded
a finding that the knowledge of the contents of the notice
could not be imputed to the appellant and, therefore, the
appellant could not be regarded as a willful defaulter in
the matter of payment of rent. In support of this contention
strong reliance was placed by him on the decision of the
Bombay High Court in the case of Vaman Vithal Kulkarni and
Ors. v. Khanderao Ram Rao Sholapurkar where the following
observations of Beaumont, C. J., appear at page 251:
"In case of defendants 4 and 5 a registered letter
containing the notice was sent to them duly addressed,
and service : is alleged to have been refused. In fact
the refusal was not proved, as the postman who took the
letter and brought it back was not called. But in any
case, even if the refusal had been proved, I should not
be prepared to hold that a register ed letter tendered
to the addressee and refused and brought back unopened,
was well served. There are, I know, some authorities in
this Court to the contrary, but it seems to me
impossible to say that a letter has been served so as
to bring the contents to the notice of the person to
whom the letter is addressed, if the agent for service
states that in fact the notice was not served, although
the reason may have been that the addressee declined to
accept it. One cannot assume that because an addressee
declines to accept a particular sealed envelope he has
guessed correctly as to its contents "
Counsel also referred to some other decisions including that
of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Mahboob Bi v. Alvala
Lachmiah but these other decisions do not touch the
aforesaid aspect of visiting the addressee with the
knowledge of the contents. Of the refused notice but have
expressed the view that refusal of registered notice without
more may not amount to proper service and hence it is
unnecessary to consider them. But placing strong reliance
upon the observations of Chief Justice Beaumont quoted above
counsel for the appellant urged that the High Court ought to
have confirmed the finding of the learned District Judge
that the appellant could not be presumed to have known the
contents of the notice or that the notice was one demanding
arrears of rent simply because he refused to accept the
same.
On the other hand, counsel for the respondents
contended before us that both under s. 27 of the General
clauses Act, 1897 and s. 114 of
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970
the Indian Evidence Act presumption of due service could
arise if the notice was sent to the tenant by properly
addressing the same, prepaying and sending the same by
registered post and it was pointed out that in the instant
case as against the denial by the appellant there was
positive oath of postman (Kund Ram P.W. 2) who was examined
by the respondents to prove the fact that the registered
letter containing the notice was tendered to the appellant
and when he declined to accept it the postman had made
endorsement in his hand on the envelope "Refused. Returned
to the sender". Counsel, therefore, urged that in view of
such positive evidence of postman led by the respondents
which had been accepted by the learned District Judge, the
High Court was justified in holding that the appellant must
be imputed with the knowledge of the contents of the notice.
In this behalf counsel for the respondents placed reliance
on the Privy Council decision in Harihar Banerji and Ors. v.
Ramshashi Roy and Ors and Madras decision in Kodali Bapayya
and Ors. v. Yadavalli Venkataratnam and Ors and the two
decisions of the Allahabad High Court relied upon by the
High Court. Counsel pointed out that the Madras High Court
in Kodali Bapayya’s case (supra) and the Allahabad High
Court in its Full Bench decision in Ganga Ram v. Smt.
Phulwati have dealt with the Bombay decision and have
expressed their disagreement with the view expressed
therein.
Section 27 of the General Clauses Act, 1897 deals with
the topic ’Meaning of service by post’ and says that where
any Central Act or Regulation authorises or requires any
document to be served by post, then unless a different
intention appears, the service shall be deemed to be
effected by properly addressing, pre-paying and posting it
by registered post, a letter containing the document, and
unless the contrary is proved, to have been effected at the
time at which the letter would be delivered in the ordinary
course of post. The section thus arises a presumption of due
service or proper service if the document sought to be
served is sent by properly addressing, pre-paying and
posting by registered post to the addressee and such
presumption is raised irrespective of whether any
acknowledgement due is received from the addressee or not.
It is obvious that when the section raises the presumption
that the service shall be deemed to have been effected it
means the addressee to whom the communication is sent must
be taken to have known the contents of the document sought
to be served upon him without any thing more. Similar
presumption is raised under Illustration (f) to s. 114 of
the Indian Evidence Act whereunder it is stated that the
Court
971
may presume that the common course of business has been
followed in h a particular case, that is to say, when a
letter is sent by post by pre-paying and properly addressing
it the same has been received by the addressee. Undoubtedly,
the presumptions both under s. 27 of the General Clauses Act
as well as under s. 114 of the Evidence Act are rebuttable
but in the absence of proof to the contrary the presumption
of proper service or effective service on the addressee
would arise. In the instant case, additionally, there was
positive evidence of the postman to the effect that the
registered envelope was actually tendered by him to the
appellant on November 10, 1966 but the appellant refused to
accept. In other words, there was due service effected upon
the appellant by refusal. In such circumstances, we are
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clearly of the view, that the High Court was right in coming
to the conclusion that the appellant must be imputed with
the knowledge of the contents of the notice which he refused
to accept. It is impossible to accept the contention that
when factually there was refusal to accept the notice on the
part of the appellant he could not be visited with the
knowledge of the contents of the registered notice because,
in our view, the presumption raised under s. 27 of the
General Clauses Act as well as under s. 114 of the Indian
Evidence Act is one of proper or effective service which
must mean service of everything that is contained in the
notice. It is impossible to countenance the suggestion that
before knowledge of the contents of the notice could be
imputed the sealed envelope must be opened and read by the
addressee or when the addressee happens to be an illiterate
person the contents should be read over to him by the
postman or someone else. Such things do not occur when the
addressee is determined to decline to accept the sealed
envelope. It would, therefore, be reasonable to hold that
when service is effected by refusal of a postal
communication the addressee must be imputed. with the
knowledge of the contents thereof and in our view, this
follows upon the presumptions that are raised under s. 27 of
the General Clauses Act, 1897 and s. 114 of the Indian
Evidence Act.
Turning to the Bombay decision in Vaman Vithal’s case
(supra), We would like to point out two aspects that emerge
clearly from the very observations which have been strongly
relied upon by counsel for the appellant. In the first
place, the observations clearly show that the refusal to
accept the notice was not satisfactorily proved in the case
inasmuch as the postman who took the letter and brought it
back had not been examined; consequently the further
observations made by the leaned Chief Justice were
unnecessary for decision on the point and as such will have
to be regarded as obiter.
972
Secondly, while making those observations the learned Chief
Justice WAS himself conscious of the fact that there were
some authorities of that Court taking the contrary view.
Having regard to these aspects it is difficult to hold that
the concerned observations lay down the correct legal
position in the matter. In any event we approve of the view
taken by the Allahabad High Court in its three decisions,
namely, Sri Nath’s case, Fanni Lal’s case and Ganga Ram’s
case (supra) and would confirm the High Court’s finding on
the point in favour of the respondents.
Counsel for the appellant then faintly argued that the
respondents suit was not maintainable under s. 14(1) of the
Act inasmuch as no permission of the District Magistrate had
been obtained by the respondents before filing the suit as
required by s. 14 and in this behalf reliance was placed on
s. 14(a) of the Act which ran thus:
"14. Restrictions on eviction. No suit shall, without
the permission of the District Magistrate, be filed in
any Civil Court against a tenant for his eviction from
any accommodation except on one or more of the
following grounds, namely:
(a) that the tenant has willfully failed to make
payment to the landlord of any arrears of
rent within one month of the service upon him
of a notice of demand from the landlord."
According to counsel for the appellant the aforesaid
provision clearly shows that under the Act two safeguards
were available to a tenant- (i) eviction could not be had by
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any landlord except on one or more of the grounds specified
in cls. (a) to (f) of s. 14 and (ii) no suit for eviction
even on those grounds specified in cls. (a) to (f) could be
instituted without the permission of the District
Magistrate, and admittedly the landlords in the instant case
had filed the suit against the appellant without obtaining
the permission of the District Magistrate. He, therefore,
urged that the Civil Court had no jurisdiction to entertain
the suit and the decree was without jurisdiction.
It must be observed that no such contention was raised
by the appellant in any of the Courts below presumably
because the appellant as well as this lawyer knew how an
identical provision contain ed in s. 3(1) of the U.P.
(Temporary) Control of Rent and Eviction Act, 1947, an
allied enactment, had been judicially interpreted by
in this Court in Bhagwan Dass v. Paras Nath Section 3 of the
U.P. Act 3 of 1947 ran thus:
973
"3. Restrictions on evictions.-Subject to any
order passed under sub-section (3), no suit shall
without the permission of the District Magistrate,
be filed in any Civil Court against a tenant for
his eviction from any accommodation, except on one
or more of the following grounds:
(a) that the tenant is in arrears of rent
for more than three months and has
failed to pay the same to the landlord
within one month of the service upon him
of a notice of demand."
This Court in Bhagwan Dass case Asupra) has explained
at page 305 of the report the legal position arising on a
grammatical construction of s. 3(1) thus:
"Section (3) 1 does not restrict the landlord’s
right to evict his tenant on any of the grounds
mentioned in cls. (a) to (g) of that sub-section.
But if he wants to sue his tenant for eviction on
any ground other than those mentioned in those
clauses then he has to obtain the permission of
the District Magistrate whose discretion is
subject to any order passed under sub-s. (3) of s.
3 by the Commissioner. These are the only
restrictions placed on the power of a landlord to
institute a suit for eviction of his tenant."
It would be conducive to judicial discipline to interpret an
identical provision contained in s. 14(1) of the U.P.
Cantonment (Control of Rent & Eviction) Act, 1952 in a
similar manner. In other words, under s. 14(1) of the
concerned Central Act permission of the District Magistrate
was required if the landlord sought eviction of his tenant
on any ground other than those specified in cls. (a) to (f)
and not when it was sought on any of the grounds specified
in cls. (a) to (f). (If may be stated that both the
enactments have since been repealed). It is, therefore, not
possible to accept the contention of the counsel for the
appellant that the instant suit filed by the respondents
against the appellant could not be entertained by the Civil
Court.
In the result the appeal fails and is dismissed.
However, having regard to all the facts and circumstances of
the case there will be no order as to costs and we grant the
appellant six months time to vacate.
DESAI, J.-I have very carefully gone through the
judgment prepared by my learned brother Mr. Justice V. D.
Tuzapurkar, but I regret my inability to agree with the
same.
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974
The relevant facts leading to the appeal by special
leave have been succinctly set out in the main judgment and
therefore, I would straightway proceed to deal with the
three important questions raised in this appeal.
The first and the principal question which goes to the
root of the matter is about the construction of section
20(2) (a) of the Uttar Pradesh Urban Buildings (Regulation
of Letting, Rent & Eviction) Act, 1972 (’Rent Act’ for
short). It reads as under:
"20. Bar of suit for eviction of tenant except on
specified grounds:-
(2) A suit for the eviction of a tenant from a
building after the determination of his
tenancy may be instituted on one or more of
the following grounds namely:
(a) that the tenant is in arrears of rent for not
less than four months, and has failed to pay
the same to the landlord within one month
from the date of service upon him of a demand
:"
There is a proviso to this sub-section which is not
material for the purpose of this appeal.
A brief resume of concurrently found facts which would
high light the question of construction would be
advantageous. Appellant was inducted as a tenant of the
premises by its former owner on a rent of Rs. 250/- per
annum in the year 1964, on a request by the then landlord,
appellant-tenant surrendered a portion of the premises,
comprising two rooms, a kitchen, a bathroom and a verandah
at the back of the shop, retaining only possession of the
shop, consequently reducing the rent by agreement between
the parties at the rate of Rs. 100/- per annum. It is thus
an agreed and incontrovertible fact that the appellant-
tenant is a tenant of a shop on an yearly rent of Rs. 100/-,
payable at the end of every year.
The focus should immediately be turned to the provision
of law under which the landlord seeks to evict this tenant.
According to respondent-landlord she served notice dated
November 9, 1966, terminating the tenancy of the appellant
as the appellant-tenant was a defaulter within the meaning
of s. 20(2) (a) and, therefore, she all was entitled to a
decree for eviction as she has satisfactorily proved all the
requirements or ingredients of s. 20(2) (a). Accepting the
finding of fact that the appellant is a tenant liable to pay
rent
975
@ Rs. 100/- per annum, the crux of the matter is whether his
case is covered by s. 20(2) (a).
What does s. 20(2) (a) postulate and what are its
components which when satisfied, the landlord would be
entitled to evict the tenant ? On analysis following
ingredients of s. 20(2) (a) would emerge each of which will
have to be satisfied before the landlord 1 would be eligible
to obtain a decree for eviction, viz:
(i) Tenant must be a tenant of premises governed
by the Rent Act;
(ii) That the tenant is in arrears of rent for not
less than four months;
(iii) That such a tenant has to pay rent in arrears
within a period of one month from the date of
service upon him of a notice of demand.
In this case, the tenant is a tenant of premises
governed by tho Rent Act.
The crucial question is whether the second ingredient,
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as extracted above, is satisfied by the landlord. The
attention has to be focused on the expression ’in arrears of
rent for not less than four months’. What does this
expression signify ? As contended on behalf of the
respondent that whatever be the default in payment of rent,
the notice can be served after the default has continued for
a period of four months, and failure to comply with the
requisition in the notice would disentitle the tenant to the
protection of Rent Act. Alternatively it was contended that
the expression in arrears of rent for not less than four
months’ on a literal grammatical construction would signify
that rent is payable by the month and that the tenant has
committed a default in payment of four months’ rent and
further failed to comply with the requisition made in the
notice within the stipulated period of one month and only
then the protective umbrella of the Rent Act would be
removed and the tenant would be exposed to a decree for
eviction.
The two rival constructions raised a question of
construction of a sub-section in a statute primarily enacted
as can be culled out from the long and short title of the
Rent Act, being regulation of letting and rent and arbitrary
eviction of tenant from the premises to which the rent Act
would apply. It is a socially beneficent statute and in
construing such statute certain well recognised canons of
construction have to be borne in mind. Undoubtedly, the
dominant purpose in construing the statute is to ascertain
the intention of the legisla-
976
ture. This intention, and, therefore, the meaning of the
statute, is primarily to be sought ill the words used in the
statute itself, which must, if they are plan and
unambiguous, be applied as they stand, however strongly it
may be suspected that the result does not re present the
real intention of legislature (see Inland Revenue
Commissioner v. Hinchy). In approaching the matter from this
angle, it is a duty of the Court to give fair and full
effect to statute which is plain and unambiguous without
regard to the particular consequence in a special case. Even
while giving liberal construction to socially beneficent
legislation, if the language is plain and simple the making
of a law being a matter for the legislature and not courts,
the Court must adopt the plain grammatical construction (see
River Wear Commissioners v. Adamson) The Court must take the
law as it is. And, accordingly, it is not entitled to pass
judgment on the propriety or wisdom of making a law in the
particular form and further the Court is not entitled to
adopt the construction of a statute on its view of what
Parliament ought to have done. However, when two
constructions are possible and legitimate ambiguity arises
from the language employed, it is a plain duty of the Court
to prefer and adopt that which enlarges the protection of a
socially beneficent statute rather than one which restricts
it. In Mohd. Shafi v. Additional District & Sessions Judge
(VII), Allahabad and Others, this Court while interpreting
the explanation (iv) to s. 21 of the Rent Act observed that
where the language is susceptible of two interpretations,
the Court would prefer that which on larges the protection
of the tenants rather than one which restricts it. It was
further observed that the construction that the Court
adopted would be more consistent with the policy and
attainment of the legislation which is to protect the
possession of the tenant unless the landlord establishes a
ground for eviction. Similarly in Gurucharan Singh v. Kamla
Singh & Ors. while interpreting the provision of s. 6 of the
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Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950, this Court observed that the
Court was called upon to interpret a land reforms law are
not just an ordinary state and, therefore, the socioeconomic
thrust of the law in these areas should not be retarded by
judicial construction but filliped by the legal process
without parting from the object of the Act. It must also be
emphasised that where two constructions are possible, the
one that must be preferred is one which would accord with
reason and justice (see H. H. Maharaja-
977
dhiraja Madhav Rao Jivaji Rao Scindia Bahadur of Gwalior &
Ors. v. Union of India & Another.
Bearing in mind this interpretative approach let us
hark back to the expression used in s.20(2)(a) and ascertain
whether the exception is susceptible of one construction
only or more than one construction and whether there is
ambiguity and if so, in which direction the interpretative
jurisprudence must move.
The expression "the tenant is in arrears of rent for
not less than four months" may suggest that the tenant is in
arrears of rent for one or any number of months and that the
arrears have fallen due four months back meaning thereby
that within four months there was no attempt on the part of
the tenant to pay up the arrears and cure the default. This
construction would imply that if the tenant is in arrears of
rent for one month only, an action under the relevant clause
can be commenced against him if this infault has continued
for a period of four months even if the tenant has paid rent
for subsequent months and on the expiry of the period of
four months from the date on which the rent had become due
and payable for one month a notice of demand can be served
and on the failure of the tenant to comply with the
requisition made in the notice he would be liable to be
evicted. In other words, a period of four months must elapse
between the date of default and the service of notice
irrespective of the fact whether the default is in payment
of one month’s rent or more than one month’s rent. In this
constriction it is implicit that failure to pay rent for
four different months is not a sine qua non for commencing
action under s. 20(2) (a). What is of the essence of matter
is that a period of four months must elapse between the date
of default complained of and service of notice under s.
20(2) (a). It was said that the legislature has given locus
poenitentiae to the tenant to repair the default within the
period of four months. This approach overlooks the obvious
that before action can be commenced under s. 20(2) (a) a
notice has to be served and tenant is given locus
poenitentiae to repair the default within one month. It
appears that by s. 43 of the Rent Act the United Provinces
(Temporary) Control of Rent and Eviction Act, 1947
(’Repealed Act’ for short) was repealed. Section 3 of the
Repealed Act enumerated grounds on which a tenant could be
evicted. Sub-clause (a) of s. 3 provided that the landlord
would be entitled to eviction of a tenant if the tenant was
’in arrears of rent for more than three months’ and had
failed to pay the same to the landlord within one month of
the service upon him of the notice of demand. The language
employed in the repealed provision led
978
the Court to hold that whatever be the default in payment of
rent, a period of three months should have expired from the
date of default whereafter alone the landlord would be
entitled to serve a notice as provided in the relevant sub-
clause. It was so held by the Allahabad High Court in Ram
Saran Das v. L. Bir Sain, but this decision was overruled in
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Jitendra Prasad v. Mathur Prasad. In order to avoid ally
such controversy, in the Repealing statute the expression
’arrears of rent for more than three months’ has been
substituted by the expression ’arrears of rent for not less
than four months’. This is contemporaneous legislative
exposition which clearly brings out the legislative
intention that the landlord would be entitled to evict the
tenant if the rent is in arrears for not legs than four
months. Therefore, it would clearly imply that before the
landlord can commence action under sub-clause (a), the
tenant must have committed default in payment of rent for a
period of four months. Therefore, the first suggested
construction is not borne out by the language employed in
the section.
The question still remains: what does the expression
’in arrears of rent for not less than four months’ signify ?
It is implicit in the expression that the rent must be
payable by month. Irrespective of the fact whether the
tenancy is a yearly tenancy or a monthly tenancy, it is
implicit in sub-clause (a) that either by the contract of
lease or by oral agreement or by long usage the tenant is
liable to pay rent at the end of every month. In other
words, the unit for computation of rent is one month, that
is, rent becomes due and payable every month. It is only
such a tenant who may fall in arrears for a period of four
months. Every month the tenant would be liable to pay the
rent in the absence of a contract to the contrary. Thus the
rent becomes due and payable at the end of every month. As
soon as the month is over the rent becomes due and payable
and failure on the part of the tenant to pay the same would
dub him as a tenant in arrear of rent for one month. If this
process goes on meaning thereby that a period of four months
having expired and for each of the four months the rent when
It became due and payable was not paid, then alone the
tenant could be said to be a tenant in arrears of rent for
not less than four months. Two definite ingredients emerge
from the expression ’the tenant is in arrears of rent for
not less than four months’ (i) that the rent is payable by
month; and (ii) the tenant has committed default in payment
of rent for four different months and that this default
subsists and continues on the date when the landlord invokes
the
979
provision of clause (a) and proceeds to serve a notice of
demand. Again, if within a period of one month from the
date of receipt of the notice the tenant pays up the arrears
of rent he does not lose the protection of the Rent Act. The
legislature clearly intended to cover those cases of default
in payment of rent under clause (a) where the contract of
lease provided for payment of rent every month meaning
thereby that the unit for liability to pay rent is one month
and secondly the tenant has committed default on four
different occasions of four different months or four
different units agreed upon for payment of rent and that
they differ the facility to pay the same has accrued. As
stated earlier this is implied in the expression ’the tenant
is, in arrears of rent for not less than four months.
In this connection one can profitably refer to s. 12(3)
(a) of the Bombay Rents, Hotel & Lodging House Rates Control
Act, 1947, which reads as under:
"Where the rent is payable by the month and there
is no dispute regarding the amount of standard rent or
permitted increases, it such rent or increases are in
arrears for a period of six months or more and the
tenant neglects to make payment thereof until the
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expiration of the period of one month after notice
referred to in sub-section (2), the (2) (Court shall
pass a decree) for eviction in any such suit for
recovery of possession."
The expression used there is that the rent is payable
by month and the tenant is in arrears for a period of six
months. In the Rent Act under discussion, a conjoint
expression is used that a tenant is in arrears of rent for a
period of not less than four months. It only means that
where the rent is payable by month and the tenant is in
arrears of rent for not less than four months, and that is
the clearest intention discernible from the language used in
the relevant clause.
It was, however, contended that this construction would
give an undeserved advantage to the defaulting tenant where
the rent is not payable by month. The contention is that a
landlord who had agreed to accept rent on an yearly basis
would be at the mercy of the tenant because even if the
default is contumacious the landlord would not be entitled
to evict the tenant and that such could not be the intention
of the legislature. It was, therefore, said that the
expression ’the tenant is in arrears of rent for not less
than four
980
months’ is also susceptible of the meaning that where the
rent is payable by year and after the year is over and the
rent has become due and payable if the tenant has not paid
the rent for four months his case would be covered by clause
(a). If a tenant is under a contract with the landlord to
pay rent at the end of a specific year agreed to between the
parties, could he be said to be a tenant arrears for not
less than four months even if he has defaulted in payment of
rent at the end of one year l How can a tenant who is to pay
rent on the expiry of a specified year be in arrears of rent
for not less than four months ? And if that construction is
adopted, a tenant who has committed default in payment of
rent for one month and the default has continued without
repair for a period of Four months even though he has paid
rent for subsequent months he would be liable to be evicted,
a construction which ought to be rejected on legislative
exposition by change in expression adopted in the repealed
Act and substituted in the present Act discussed herein
above. If that construction is rejected it would be
difficult to accept the construction that even of the rent
is payable by year once the year is over and a period of
four months has elapsed he could be said to be a tenant in
arrears of rent for not less than four months. The language
does not admit of this construction. Therefore, where the
rent is payable by the year clause (a) is not attracted. Now
the wild apprehension expressed on behalf of the landlord
that such a construction would give an unfair advantage to a
tenant who is liable to pay yearly rent need not detain us
because the wisdom of enacting a law in a certain manner is
for the legislature to decide and not for the court to
impose. It may be that the legislature would have intended
that such landlords who relied on the income from rent month
after month must have a sanction which can be applied if the
tenant commits default in payment of rent of four different
months but a landlord who apparently does not depend upon
the rental income by agreeing to accept yearly rent need not
have that sanction and it would be still open to such a
landlord to file a suit merely for recovery of rent and not
for eviction. Such a thing is not unknown to law because in
permanent tenancy and in tenancies of long duration the
landlords can only sue for rent and not for eviction on the
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tenant committing default in payment of rent. Therefore, on
examining both the rival constructions one which extends the
protection deserves to be accepted in view of the fact that
the legislature never intended to provide a ground for
eviction for failure to pay rent in case of leases where
yearly rent was reserved. Rent Act was enacted to fetter the
right of re-entry of landlord and this construction accords
with the avowed object of the Rent Act.
981
In the instant case the parties are ad idem that the
rent is payable by year at the rate of Rs. 100/- per annum.
In such a case it could not be said that this tenant was in
arrears of rent for not less than four months. His case
would not be covered by s. 20(2) (a) of the Rent Act and,
therefore, the landlord would not be entitled to a decree
for eviction on this ground and that was the sole ground on
which eviction has been ordered.
The second contention is that the High Court was in
error in interfering with the concurrent finding of facts
while hearing second appeal in February, 1979 and that too
without framing the point of law which arose in the appeal.
The disputed finding of fact is about the service of notice.
If a landlord seeks eviction on the ground of tenant’s
default in payment of rent under s. 20(2) (a) it is
obligatory upon him to serve a notice of demand of the rent
in arrears On the tenant and can only seek eviction if the
tenant fails to comply with the requisition made in the
notice. The appellant tenant in terms contended that no
notice was served upon him. On the assertion of the
respondent landlord that notice dated November 9, 1966, was
served upon the appellant tenant on November 10, 1966, but
he refused to accept the same and the refutation thereof by
the tenant that no notice was offered to him by the postman
nor was any notice refused by him, a triable issue arose
between the parties. The learned trial judge framed Issue
No. 7 on the question of service of notice. He recorded a
finding that the appellant tenant was not served a notice of
demand and of ejectment and answered the issue in favour of
the appellant tenant. On appeal by the respondent landlord
the appellate court framed point no. 2 on the question of
service of notice and answered it by observing that the
defendant tenant refused to accept the registered notice but
no knowledge can be attributed to him of the contents of the
registered envelope and, therefore, the tenant could not be
said to be guilty of wilful default on the expiry of one
month after the service of notice. He accordingly confirmed
the finding of the trial court that the plaintiff landlord
is not liable to a decree of eviction on the ground
mentioned in s. 20(2)(a). The landlord approached the High
Court in second appeal.
When this appeal was heard, section 100 of the Civil
Procedure Code after its amendment of 1976 was in force. It
restricted the jurisdiction of the High Court to entertain a
second appeal only if the High Court was satisfied that the
case involved a substantial question of law. Sub-section 4
cast a duty on the court to formulate such a substantial
question of law and the appeal has to be heard on the
question so formulated. It would also be open to the
respondent
982
at the hearing of the appeal to contend that the case does
not involve such a question. Even prior to the amendment of
Section 100, the High Court ordinarily did not interfere
with the concurrent findings of fact. This position has been
repeatedly asserted and one need not go in search of
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precedent to support the proposition. However one can
profitably refer to R. Ramachandran Ayyar v. Ramalingam
Chettiar. After examining the earlier decisions and the
decision of the Privy Council in Mst. Durga Chaudhrain v.
Jawahar Choudhary Gajendragadkar J. speaking for this Court
in terms spelt out the jurisdiction of the High Court in
second appeal as under:
"But the High Court cannot interfere with the
conclusions of fact recorded by lower appellate Court
however erroneous the same conclusions may appear to be
to the High Court, because, as the Privy Council
observed, how ever gross or in excusable the error may
seem to be, there is no jurisdiction under s. 100 to
correct that error".
This view was re-affirmed in Goppulal v. Dwarkadhishji
wherein after reproducing the concurrent finding of fact
this Court observed that this concurrent finding of fact was
binding on the High Court in second appeal and the High
Court was in error in holding that there was one integrated
tenancy of six shops.
In the facts of this case, there was a concurrent
finding that the statutory notice as required by s. 20(2)
(a) was not served upon the tenant and, therefore, the High
Court was in error in interfering with this finding of fact.
However, it is not necessary to base the judgment on this
conclusion because it was rightly said on behalf of the
respondent that whether the notice was offered to the
petitioner tenant and he refused to accept the same the
finding is not concurrent because the appellate court has
held that the notice was offered but the tenant refused to
accept the same and, therefore, on the refusal to accept the
notice there was no concurrent finding. This contention is
legitimate because the appellate court held that notice as
required by law was not served because even if the tenant
refused to accept the notice the knowledge of the contents
of the registered envelope not opened by him cannot be
imputed to him, and, therefore, there was no service of
notice as required by s. 20(2) (a). The first appellate
court was of the view that in the absence of knowledge of
the demand of rent in arrears as alleged in the notice the
tenant cannot be said
983
to be guilty of wilful default so as to be denied the
protection of the Rent Act.
This accordingly takes me to the third contention in
this appeal. The third contention is that even if this Court
agrees with the High Court in holding that the notice in
question was tendered by the postman to the appellant tenant
and he refused to accept the same n: and, therefore, this
refusal amounts to service within the meaning of s.
20(2)(a), yet as the knowledge of the contents of the notice
would reflect on subsequent conduct as wilful or
contumacious, it is not sufficient that a notice is served
or tendered and refused but it must further be shown that in
the event of refusal the tenant did it with the knowledge of
the contents of the registered envelope and his subsequent
conduct is motivated. The question then is; What would be
the effect of a notice sent by registered post and refused
by a tenant on the question of his knowledge about the
contents of the notice and his failure to act? Would it
tantamount to an intentional conduct evidencing wilful
default on his part? This aspect cannot be merely examined
in the background of some precedents or general
observations. One has to examine this aspect in the
background of Indian conditions or in the words of Krishna
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Iyer, J., ’the legal literacy in rural areas and the third
world jurisprudence.’
Before we blindly adhere to law bodily imported from
western countries we must not be oblivious to the fact that
the statutes operating in the western countries are meant
for a society if not 100 per cent., 99 per cent. literate.
We must consciously bear in mind that our society especially
in the semi-urban and rural areas is entirely different and
wholly uncomparable to the western society. A literate mind
will react to a problem presented to him in a manner other
than an illiterate mind because illiteracy breeds fear and
fear oriented action cannot be rationally examined on the
touchstone of legal presumptions. To articulate the point as
it arises in this case, let one put his feet in the shoes of
a rural illiterate person to whom a registered envelope by a
postman is presented. Does it require too much of
imagination to conclude that he will be gripped with fear
and he may react in a manner which will be his undoing? He
would believe that by refusing to accept the registered
envelope he would put off the evil rather than accept the
same and approach a person who can advise him and meet the
situation. Can this action of fear gripped mind inflict upon
the person an injury flowing from the assumption that he not
only refused the registered envelope with the conscious
knowledge of the fact that it contained a notice by a lawyer
on behalf of his landlord and that it accused him of wilful
984
default in payment of rent and that if he would act
rationally he would repair the default by tendering the rent
within the period of one month granted by the statute? If he
is deemed to have acted consciously is it conceivable that
he would invite injury by sheer refusal to accept the
registered envelope rather than know the con tents or make
them knowable to him and meet the charge of wilful default.
As was said, again by Krishna Iyer, J., which bears
quotation:
"The Indian Courts interpret laws the Anglo-Indian
way, the rules of the game having been so inherited.
The basic principles of jurisprudence are borrowed from
the sophisticated British system, with the result that
there is an exotic touch about the adjectival law, the
argumentative method and the adversary system, not to
speak of the Evidence Act with all its technicalities".
Lord Devlin recently said:
"If our business methods were as antiquated as our
legal methods, we would be a bankrupt country....There
is need for a comprehensive enquiry into the rules of
our procedure backed by a determination to adopt it to
fit the functions of the welfare State".
This is much more apposite in the conditions of our society
and this was noticed by Beaumost, C. J. way back in fourth
decade of this century in Waman Vithal Kulkarni & Others. v.
Khanderao Ram Rao Sholapurkar. An exactly identical question
arose before the Division Bench of the Bombay High Court.
The facts found were that the registered letter containing
the notice was sent to defendants 4 & 5 duly addressed and
service was alleged to have been refused. The contention was
two-fold that the refusal was not proved but alternatively
it was contended that even if it was proved, the addressee
could not be imputed with the knowledge of the contents of
the registered envelope. The pertinent observation is as
under:
"In the case of defendants 4 and 5 a registered
letter containing the notice was sent to them duly
addressed, and service is alleged to have been refused.
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In fact the refusal was not proved, as the postman who
took the letter and brought it back was not called. But
in any case, even if the refusal had been proved, I
should not be prepared to hold
985
that a registered letter tendered to the addressee and
refused and brought back unopened, was well served.
There are, I know, some authorities in this Court to
the contrary, but it seems to me impossible to say that
a letter has been served so as to bring the contents to
the notice of the person to whom the letter is
addressed, it the agent for service states that in fact
the notice was not served, although the reason may have
been that the addressee declined to accept it. One
cannot assume that because an addressee declines to
accept a particular sealed envelope he has guessed
correctly as to its contents. Many people in this
country make a practice of always refusing to accept
registered letters, a practice based, I presume, on
their experience that such documents usually contain
something unpleasant. To that, it is clear that this
notice was not served on three of the defendants".
Learned counsel for the respondent tried to distinguish
this decision by observing that the court did hold that the
refusal was not proved, therefore, the rest of the
observation was obiter. It is not far a moment suggested
that the decision of the Division Bench of the Bombay High
Court is binding on this Court but the reasoning which
appealed to the Division Bench in 1935 is all the more
apposite at present. The Division Bench noticed that in the
society from which the defendants came, there was a feeling
that such registered letters usually contained something
unpleasant. Is there anything to suggest that this feeling
is today displaced or destroyed? The Division Bench further
noticed that many people in India make a practice of always
refusing to accept registered letters and the practice
according to the Division Bench was based on their
experience that such documents usually contained something
unpleasant. The reaction is to put off the evil by not
accepting the envelope. Could such ignorant illiterate
persons be subjected to a legal inference that the refusal
was conscious knowing the contents of the document contained
in the registered envelope? To answer it in the affirmative
is to wholly ignore the Indian society. And this concept
that the registered envelope properly addressed and returned
with an endorsement of refusal must permit a rebuttable
presumption that the addressee refused it with the knowledge
of the contents is wholly borrowed from the western
jurisprudence. I believe it is time that we ignore the
illusion and return to reality. Reference was also made to
Appabhai Motibhai v. Laxmichand Zaverchand & Co., but that
case does not touch the point. In Mahboob Bi v. Alvala
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Lachmiah, an almost identical question figured before the
Andhra Pradesh High Court. In that case the Rent Controller
issued a notice in respect of the proceedings initiated
before him by the landlord for the eviction of the tenant,
to the tenant by registered post and the envelope was
returned with the endorsement of refusal and the Rent
Controller set down the proceedings for ex parte hearing and
passed a decree for eviction. The tenant under the decree of
eviction preferred an appeal in the City Small Causes Court.
A preliminary objection was raised by the respondent-
landlord that the appeal was barred by limitation as it was
filed six days after the time allowed for filing the appeal.
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The appellant-tenant countered this by saying that he had no
knowledge of the proceedings before the Rent Controller and
that he was never served with the notice of proceedings
before the Rent Controller. The relevant rule permitted
service of notice by registered post. After examining the
relevant rule the Court accepted the contention of the
tenant observing as under:
"Moreover nothing has been placed before me to
show that there is any duty cast upon any person to
receive every letter or notice sent by registered post,
nor does the refusal to receive has been made the
subject-matter of any presumption which may arise under
sec. 114 of the Evidence Act. Then again, there is the
practical difficulty of having to import the knowledge
of the date of hearing or the precise proceedings with
which the registered notice is concerned in the case of
a mere refusal to receive a registered notice".
The Court thus was of the view that even if refusal
amounted to service, yet it is not service as required by
law to fasten a liability on the tenant because no
presumption can be raised that the refusal war, with the
conscious knowledge of the contents of the registered
envelope. Undoubtedly, our attention was also drawn to a
contrary view taken by a Division Bench of the Allahabad
High Court in Fannilal v. Smt. Chironja. It was contended
that even if the registered letter was refused no
presumption of knowledge of the contents of the letter could
in law the raised against the tenant. In support of the
submission reliance was placed on Amarjit Singh Bedi v.
Lachchman Das, an unreported decision of a single judge of
the Allahabad High Court and the decision of Beaumont, C.J.
in Waman Vithal Kulkarni’s case. The Division Bench of the
Allahabad High Court did not accept the view of Beaumont,
C.J. The Court was of the opinion that a presumption of fact
would arise under
987
s. 114 of the Evidence Act that the refusal was with the
knowledge of the contents of the registered envelope. The
Court has not considered the specific Indian conditions, the
approach of rural Indians to registered letters and has
merely gone by the technical rules of Evidence Act, which,
as experience would show, could sometimes cause more harm
and lead to injustice through law. The contrary Allahabad
decision does not commend to me. On the contrary, the Bombay
view is in accord with the conditions of society in rural
India and I do not propose to make any distinction even with
regard to urban areas where also there are a large number of
illiterates Even in the case of a semi-literate person who
is in a position to read and write he could not be accused
of legal literacy. Therefore, it is not possible to accept
the submission that mere refusal would permit a presumption
to be raised that not only the service was legal but the
refusal was the conscious act flowing from the knowledge of
the contents of the letter.
How dangerous this presumption is can be easily
demonstrated, and how it would lead to miscarriage of
justice can be manifestly established. Once knowledge of the
contents of the registered envelope is attributed to a
person to whom a registered envelope is sent and who has
refused to accept the same, that this was an act accompanied
by the conscious knowledge of the contents of the letter he
who may be an innocent defaulter or presumably no defaulter
at all, would be charged with a contumacious conduct of
being a wilful defaulter. The Rent Act does not seek to
evict a mere defaulter That is why a provision for notice
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has been made. If even after notice the default continues,
the tenant can be condemned as wilful defaulter. Could he be
dubbed guilty of conscious, wilful, contumacious,
intentional conduct even when he did not know what was in
the registered envelope? In my opinion, it would be
atrocious to impute any such knowledge to a person who has
merely been guilty of refusing to accept the registered
notice. Where service of notice is a condition precedent, a
dubious service held established by examining the postman
who must be delivering hundreds of postal envelopes and who
is ready to go to the witness box after a long interval to
say that the offered the envelope to the addressee and he
refused to accept the same, would be travesty of justice.
And if this condition precedent is not fully satisfied, the
consequent conduct cannot be said to be wilful. In a
slightly different context in Commissioner of Income-tax,
Kerala v. Thayaballi Mulla Jeevaji Rapasi (decd.), this
Court held that service of the notice under
988
s. 34(1)(a) of the Income-tax Act, 1922, within the period
of limitation being a condition precedent, to the exercise
of jurisdiction, if no notice is issued or if the notice
issued is shown to be invalid, then the proceedings taken by
the Income-tax Officer without a notice or in pursuance of
an invalid notice would be illegal and void.
It was, however, contended that if the Court accepts
the legal contention as canvassed on behalf of the appellant
it would be impossible tc serve the notice as statutorily
prescribed. This wild apprehension is wholly unfounded. The
notice is required to be served in the manner prescribed by
s. 106 of Transfer of Property Act which, inter-alia,
provides for affixing a copy of the notice on the premises
in possession of tenant. Therefore, it cannot be said that
the approach of the Court would render it impossible for the
landlord to meet with the statutory requirement of service
of notice before Commencing the action for eviction.
Having, therefore, examined the three vital
contentions, in my opinion the suit of the landlord must
fail on the ground that the rent was not payable by month
and, therefore, section 20(2) (a) is not attracted. And
further, even if it is attracted, as the statutory notice as
required by s. 20(2) (a) was not served, a decree for
eviction cannot be passed on the only ground of default in
payment of rent.
I would accordingly allow this appeal and dismiss the
suit of the respondent for eviction but with no order as to
costs in the circumstances of the case.
S.R. Appeal dismissed.
989