Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 5628 of 2000
PETITIONER:
CHRIST THE KING CATHEDRAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
JOHN ANCHERIL & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 24/07/2001
BENCH:
S. Rajendra Babu & Shivaraj V. Patil
JUDGMENT:
[WITH C.A. Nos. 5781/2000, 6375/2000, 6376/2000, 6378/2000, 6380/2000, 6381/2000, 6372/2000,
6374/2000,
6382/2000, 6373/2000 and C.A. No4456/2001
(arising out of S.L.P. (C) No. 11259/2000)]
J U D G M E N T
RAJENDRA BABU, J. :
C.A.Nos. 5628/2000, 5781/2000, 6375/2000, 6376/2000, 6378/
2000, 6380/2000, 6381/2000, 6372/2000, 6374/2000 and C.A. No.
4456/2001 (arising out of S.L.P. (C) No. 11259/2000)
Leave granted in S.L.P. (C) No. 11259/2000.
Two notifications were issued under Section 25 of the Kerala
Buildings (Lease and Rent Control) Act, 1965 (for short the Act) one
S.R.O. No. 435/92 issued on 7.3.92 published in the Kerala Gazette on
7.4.92, which exempted in public interest the buildings of all
Churches/Mosques of all the minority religions from the provisions of
Sections 4, 5, 7, 8, 11 and 13 of the Act and another notification S.R.O.
No. 769/96 was published exempting buildings of all Dioceses, Arch-
dioceses, Monasteries, Convents, Wakfs and Madarsas also from the
provisions of Sections 4, 5, 7, 8, 11 and 13 of the Act and amended
earlier notification. A batch of writ petitions was filed in the High Court
challenging the validity of these notifications. The High Court held that
there is no application of mind by the Government in issuing the
impugned notifications resulting in arbitrary exercise of the discretionary
powers conferred upon a statutory authority and there is no material
before the Government to exercise such exemption. In reaching this
conclusion, the High Court took into consideration that the buildings of
Churches or Mosques are commercially used and, therefore, granting of
exemption under Section 25 of the Act on the basis of ownership is not
right. The High Court also proceeded to consider the scope of secular
nature of the Constitution and observed that conferment of power upon
the Government to grant such blanket exemptions would defeat the very
power conferred on it.
In the counter affidavit the State supported the exemptions on the
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basis of the law declared by this Court. This Court in P.J. Irani v. State
of Madras, 1962 (2) SCR 169, held that a similar power vested under the
Madras Buildings (Lease and Rent Control) Act, 1949 to exempt any
building from the provisions of the Madras Act is not violative of Article
14 of the Constitution by holding that the charitable and religious trusts
or endowments fall into a separate class . In S. Kandaswamy Chettiar v.
State of Tamil Nadu & Anr., 1985 (1) SCC 290, this Court upheld grant
of total exemption in respect of buildings belonging to public trusts,
religious or charitable in nature, on the basis that such trusts
constituted a well recognised distinct group inasmuch they not only
serve public purpose, but the disbursement of their income is governed
by the objects with which they are created
On an earlier occasion in Jayakaran v. Kerala Health R&W
Society, 1994 (1) KLT 24, the High Court held as follows : -
Grant of exemption in favour of charitable bodies like the
petitioner must be held to be in public interest. Even though no
reasons are stated in the notification granting exemption it is
enough if it is stated in the counter-affidavit. The notification
granting exemption is undisputably being in public interest, the
same is not open to challenge on the ground urged in the Original
Petition.
The High Court after referring to the said decision held that the
exercise of discretionary power is subject to test of reasonableness but
observed that by one stroke the entire buildings owned by minority
religions in the State have been taken away from the purview of the Act
without being supported by any material enabling the Government to
consider the issue in a legal and proper manner uninfluenced by any
extraneous considerations or acting under the dictation of a third party.
The High Court compared the provisions under the Tamil Nadu Buildings
(Lease and Rent Control) Act, 1960 considered in S. Kandaswamy
Chettiar case (supra) and the provisions of the Act under consideration
and drew a distinct between the two provisions. The relevant portions of
the said two Acts are as follows :
Section 29 of the Tamil Nadu Act
Section 25 of the Act
29. Exemption Notwithstanding
any thing contained in this Act,
the Government may, subject to
such conditions as they deem fit,
by notification, exempt any
building or class of buildings from
all or any of the provisions of this
Act.
Notwithstanding anything
contained in this Act, the
Government may, in public
interest or for any other
sufficient cause, by
notification in the Gazette,
exempt any of the provisions
of the Act.
The High Court noticed that the power of exemption under Section 29 of
the Tamil Nadu Act is general in nature, while such power could be
exercised under the Act only in public interest or for any other sufficient
cause. But, we find that distinction sought to be made by the High
Court on the basis of language of these two provisions is not well
founded. The Government may grant exemption and while granting
exemption even under the Tamil Nadu Act it has got to bear in mind that
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it should be in public interest or for any other sufficient cause and it
cannot be whimsical or arbitrary exercise of these powers as such action
could attract the wrath of Article 14 of the Constitution. Therefore,
distinction sought to be made by the High Court between these two
provisions is not of much materiality.
The law had been stated by this Court to the effect that public
religious or charitable endowments or trusts constitute a well recognised
group which serves not only public purposes, but disbursement of their
income is governed by the objects with which they are created and
buildings belonging to such endowments or trusts clearly fall into a class
distinct from the buildings owned by private landlords. It is in respect of
three areas a regulation would be made under the Act, as has been done
in other similar enactments and these areas are (i) with respect to
regulation of lease of buildings (residential or non-residential); (ii) control
of rent of such buildings and (iii) control of eviction of tenants from such
buildings. A public trust, as has been held in S. Kandaswamy Chettiar
case (supra), is not likely to unreasonably act either in the matter of
enhancement of rent or eviction of tenants being institutions of religion
or charity. On that basis, this Court upheld the validity of the exemption
granted under the Tamil Nadu Act in favour of such trust or endowment.
In the present case, the contention has been specifically put forth that
the appellants fall into that very category which came up for
consideration before this Court in S. Kandaswamy Chettiar case (supra).
Therefore, no distinction can be made between that class of owners of the
buildings in that case and in the present case. We do not understand
as to what other material was required by the Court in a matter of this
nature if the contention put forth before this Court is not that Churches
or Mosques, Dioceses, Arch-dioceses, Monasteries, Convents, Wakfs and
Madarsas are not religious and charitable in nature.
Shri Nageshwar Rao, the learned counsel appearing for the
contesting respondents, submitted that there is total non-application of
mind by the Government in the matter of grant of exemption and the
guidelines indicated in S. Kandaswamy Chettiar case (supra) have not
been followed in the present case and, therefore, the exemption should
not have been granted in the present case. In S. Kandaswamy Chettiar
case (supra) an affidavit had been filed as to the lower rents that was
being paid and the tenants were exploiting the situation and brought the
charitable institutions to a situation of helplessness and that position
not having been challenged the Court made those orders. If we bear in
mind the fact that the purpose of the Act is apparently to prevent
unreasonable eviction and also to control rent and if the trustees of
religious and public charities are given freedom to charge normal market
rent with the further freedom to evict the tenants for not paying such
market rent, the result would be unjust and causes hardship to them.
But apprehension, by itself, is not sufficient. There is no material on
record to show that in any of these cases the landlords would resort to
such a course of action. On the other hand, if the building belonging to
such public trust or religious institution is exempt from Act, the purpose
of the trust could be carried out much better is quite clear. If that is the
object with which the Government has granted exemption, we do not
think, there is any reason to quash the notifications impugned before the
High Court.
The High Court has unnecessarily gone at tangent on various
constitutional and administrative law questions which are wholly
unnecessary to be decided in the present case. The High Court ought to
have riveted its attention only to the aspect whether there was due
application of mind to the issue of notifications in question in terms of
the provisions of the Act and, if that aspect was satisfied, no further
questions arose for consideration in the present case and thus the
observations made by the High Court, in our view with respect, are
irrelevant.
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An argument is sought to be raised on the basis of ownership of
property that there should not have been a distinction as is being made
in the present case. That was the very basis of distinction made in case
of statutory bodies like the Housing Board, local authorities which was
noticed in the Jayakaran v. Kerala Health R & W Society case (supra)
or registered Wakfs which was considered in Lakshmanan v. Mohamood,
1992 (1) KLT 85 (FB). When such bodies or institutions falling to a
distinct class by themselves and exemption granted to them would serve
a public purpose, namely, to carry out the objects of the trust or the
endowment or religious activity in a broad sense, we do not think that
the fine distinction sought to be made by the High Court in this regard is
justified.
Reliance is placed before us on the decision in Rohtas Industries
Ltd. v. S.D. Agarwal & Anr., 1969 (3) SCR 108, to contend that if there
is no material at all upon which the authority could form the requisite
opinion, the Court may infer that the authority passed the order without
applying its mind to the relevant facts. But, in the present case, we
should look at the fact that this Court had in S. Kandaswamy Chettiar
case (supra) explained the scope of the provisions similar to Section 25 of
the Act and the parameters within which such power could be exercised.
Thereafter, the Kerala High Court in Jayakaran v. Kerala Health R & W
Society case (supra) had upheld the notification as being in public
interest even in the absence of any reasons being stated in the
notification. Again, the same Court had upheld a similar notification in
relation to property belonging to Devaswom Board in State of Kerala v.
Vijayan, 1978 KLT 342, and to a wakf in Lakshmanan v. Mohamood
case (supra). Therefore, we think that the decision of the High Court
has to be set aside and the notifications issued impugned in the two writ
petitions are held to be valid.
The writ petitions deserve to be dismissed by allowing civil appeals.
Ordered accordingly. No costs.
C.A.Nos. 6373/2000 and 6382/2000
In view of the orders made in Civil Appeal No. 5628/2000 and
connected matters, these civil appeals shall stand dismissed.
J.
[ S. RAJENDRA BABU ]
J.
[ SHIVARAJ V. PATIL ]
JULY 24, 2001.