Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHAH PHOOLCHAND LALCHAND
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PARVATHI BAI
DATE OF JUDGMENT02/02/1989
BENCH:
KANIA, M.H.
BENCH:
KANIA, M.H.
SHARMA, L.M. (J)
CITATION:
1989 AIR 865 1989 SCR (1) 417
1989 SCC (1) 556 JT 1989 (1) 224
1989 SCALE (1)243
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950: Article 136--Contention
that partners of a firm not made parties by landlord in
eviction proceeding-Such a contention--Whether could be
raised at special leave stage.
Tamil Nadu Buildings (Lease and Rent Control) Act, 1960:
Section 10(2)(ii)(a)--Unlawful sub-letting--Eviction on that
ground-Whether partners of the firm are to be made parties
to such eviction petition.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants are tenants of the premises belonging to
the Respondent, and have been carrying on business as a
partnership firm in the said premises. The respondent filed
an eviction petition against the appellant firm and another
firm, on the ground that the appellant had unlawfully and
without the consent of the Respondent sub-let the premises
to the other firm. The Trial Court passed a decree for
eviction, against which the appellants preferred an appeal
to the Appellate Authority. The Appellate Authority dis-
missed the appeal and upheld the finding of unlawful sub-
letting by the appellants. The appellants preferred a Civil
Revision petition before the High Court, which was also
dismissed. The present appeal by special leave is against
the High Court’s decision.
On behalf of the appellants, it was contended that since
the eviction petition had been filed without joining the
partners of the other firm (the sub-tenant) the eviction
petition was not maintainable at all.
Dismissing the appeal,
HELD: 1. The objection that the eviction petition was
filed against the appellants-firm and the other firm, was
not maintainable as it had been filed without joining any of
the partners of the said other firm as respondents or serv-
ing them as partners, had not been raised at all till the
stage of special leave and it is not open to the appellants
to raise such an objection at a very late stage and thereby
delay matters for a number of years. [419F; 420C]
418
Chhotelal Pyarelal, the partnership firm and others v.
Shikharchand, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 268, distinguished.
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2. There is evidence to show that the other firm was
carrying on business at the said premises and that the said
firm carried on business in the said premises even for some
time during which the appellants-firm had ceased to carry on
the business there. Moreover, although a notice was given by
the respondent to the appellants and the other firm to
produce their income-tax returns, assessment orders as well
as account books and ledgers for the relevant period, these
were not produced. It was open to the Trial Court, from
these circumstances, to come to the conclusion that had the
account books and ledgers been produced, they would have
shown that rent was received by the appellants from the
other firm which would justify the finding of subletting.
[420D-F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1347 of
1981
From the judgment and Order dated 24.1. 1981 of the
Madras High Court in C.R.P. No. 44 of 1981.
B.N. Nayar, T.V.S.N. Chaff, K. Srinivasan, C.H. Badri
Nath, R.K. Gupta and Ms. Sudha Srivastava for the Appel-
lants.
U.R. Lalit and Ambrish Kumar for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KANIA, J. This is an appeal filed by Special Leave under
Article 136 of the Constitution by the appellants who are
the tenants against the respondent-landlady.
The appellants are a partnership firm and are the ten-
ants of premises situate at No. 6 Kasi Chetty Street, G.T.
Madras. They carry on business there. The respondent filed
an eviction petition being H.R.C. No. 641 of 1975 in the
Court of Small Causes, Madras against the appellants and one
other partnership firm, carrying on business in the name and
style of M/s. Adeshwar Glass Mart on the ground that the
appellants had unlawfully and without the consent of the
respondent sublet the said shop let out to the said M/s.
Adeshwar Glass Mart and were liable to be evicted for unlaw-
ful subletting under the provision of Section 10(2)(ii)(a)
of the Tamil Nadu Buildings (Lease and
419
Rent Control) Act, 1960 (hereinafter referred to as "the
said Rent Act"). M/s. Adeshwar Glass Mart were also joined
by the respondent herein as respondents in the eviction
petition on the ground that they were unlawful sub-tenants.
The Trial Court held this ground established and passed a
decree for eviction as sought by the respondent. The appel-
lants preferred an appeal against this decision to the
Appellate Authority under Section 23 of the said Rent Act,
being the Court of Small Causes at Madras. The said appeal
was numbered as H.R.A. 156 of 1979. The Appellate Authority
dismissed the said appeal upholding the finding of unlawful
subletting by the appellants. The appellants then preferred
a Civil Revision Petition being C.R.P. No. 44 of 1981 in the
High Court of Judicature at Madras against the aforesaid
decision. This Revision Petition was dismissed by the then
learned Chief Justice of the Madras High Court. It is
against the decision the present appeal is directed.
Mr. Nayar, learned counsel for the appellants has urged
before us that the impugned judgment must be set aside as
the eviction petition was filed against the appellants firm
and one other partnership firm, M/s. Adeshwar Glass Mart
without joining any of the partners of the said firms as
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respondents or serving them as partners and hence, the
eviction petition was not maintainable at all. He placed
strong reliances on the decision of this Court in Chhotelal
Pyarelal, the partnership firm and others v. Shikharchand,
[1985] 1 S.C.R. 268. In that case an eviction petition was
filed by the respondent-landlord against the appellant a
partnership firm-under clause 13(3)(iv) and (vii) of the
Central Provinces and Berar Letting of Houses and Rent
Control Order, 1949. The appellant raised a preliminary
objection that the application against the partnership firm
was not maintainable without joining its partners as re-
spondents. It was held by this Court that it is only by
virtue of the provisions of order 30 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908, that a firm can sue and be sued in its own
name without the partners being impleaded. It was pointed
out by Mr. Nayar that the Code of Civil Procedure was not
applicable to the proceedings under the said Rent Act either
and hence, the ratio laid down in the aforesaid decision was
directly applicable to the case before us. In our view, it
is not open to Mr. Nayar to raise this contention at this
stage at all. This contention is not one which would have
been fatal to the eviction petition. Had this contention
been raised in the Trial Court or even in the first Appel-
late Court, it would have been open to the respondent to
amend the eviction petition and join the partners as re-
spondents. In the aforesaid decision in Chhotelal Pyarelal’s
case, relied upon by Mr. Nayar the objection to the main-
tainability of the
420
petition was raised at the earliest stage and was wrongly
negatived by the Trial Court. In fact, this Court observed
as follows:
"But we agree with the Division Bench of the
High Court that this cannot by itself result
in the dismissal of the application. It would
be merely a case of misdescription of the
respondents to the application and this misde-
scription can be corrected at any stage of the
proceedings. There can be no doubt that the
partners of the firm are before the Court
though in a wrong name."
In the case before us, no such objection has been raised
at all till the stage of Special Leave and it is surely not
open to the appellants to raise such an objection at a very
late stage and thereby delay matters for a number of years.
This contention must, therefore, be negatived.
It was next submitted by Mr. Nayar that there was no
evidence in the case to come to the conclusion that the
appellants had sublet the shop to M/s. Adeshwar Glass Mart.
In our view, there is no substance in this contention. There
is evidence to show that M/s. Adeshwar Glass Mart was carry-
ing on business at the said premises and that firm was
carried on business in the said premises even for some time
during which the appellants-firm had ceased to carry on the
business there. Moreover, although a notice was given by the
respondent to the appellants and M/s. Adeshwar Glass Mart to
produce their income-tax returns, assessment orders as well
as account books and ledgers for the relevant period, these
were not produced. It was surely open to the Trial Court
from these circumstances to come to the conclusion that had
the account books and ledgers been produced, they would have
shown that rent was received by the appellants from M/s.
Adeshwar Glass Mart which would justify the finding of
subletting. In these circumstances, this contention of Mr.
Nayar must fail.
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Although Mr. Nayar wanted us to undertake detailed
scrutiny of the evidence and to reappreciate the same, we
fail to see how we are called upon to do so in an appeal
under Article 136 of the Constitution.
In the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
G.N. Appeal dis-
missed.
421