Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MANGAT RAI & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KIDAR NATH & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT21/08/1980
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
DESAI, D.A.
CITATION:
1980 AIR 1709 1981 SCR (1) 476
1980 SCC (4) 276
CITATOR INFO :
F 1990 SC 808 (21)
ACT:
Tender of arrears of rent and future rent by the tenant
by way of deposit under Section 31 of the Punjab Relief of
Indebtedness Act, 1934 in the Court-Eviction suit filed by
the landlord under the provisions of East Punjab Urban Rent
Restrictions Act, 1949-Whether the deposit of rent is a
valid tender of rent for the purposes of Section 13(2) of
the Rent Act- Punjab Courts Act, 1938 and circulars dated
14-4-1947, effect of-Future Rent whether could be deposited
in the court
HEADNOTE:
The appellants were the tenants of the respondents-
landlord. The suit filed by the respondents for eviction of
the appellants under Section 13 of the East Punjab Urban
Rent Restriction Act, 1949 on the ground of default in
repayment of rent was decreed in spite of the fact that the
appellants deposited all the rents before the date of filing
of the suit, the future rent in advance before the first
date of hearing and also the interest and cost of the suit
amounting to Rs. 23 on the first date of hearing. These
deposits were made under Section 31 of the Punjab Relief of
Indebtedness Act, 1934 and under Section 13 of the Rent Act
before the Rent Controller-cum-Senior Sub-Judge
respectively. The suit was decreed on the ground that the
said deposit was not a valid tender and the appellants could
not claim any protection under the proviso to Section 13(2)
of the Rent Act but the Appellate Court set aside the
judgment of the Trial Court on the ground of the validity of
the notice. The High Court in revision following the
decision of this Court in Yasodai Ammal’s case set aside the
appellate order and decreed the suit. Both the Appellate
Court and the High Court never went into the question of
deposit of rent so as to protect the tenant from eviction.
Hence the appeal by obtaining the special leave from this
Court
Allowing the appeal, the Court
^
HELD (1) The main object of the Relief of Indebtedness
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Act, 1934 is to give relief to debtors and protect them from
paying excessive rates of interest. From the plain and
unambiguous language of Section 31, it cannot be spelt out
that the Act applies only to a particular type of debtors
and creditors. Section 31 has been couched in the widest
possible terms and the legislature has advisedly not used
the word debtor in Section 31 so as to confine the
provisions of the section only to the ’debtor’ defined in
the said Act and to no other but the legislature intended to
embrace within its fold all persons owing money including
tenants who are in arrears. Thus, under Section 31 of the
Indebtedness Act any person who owes money is entitled to
deposit in court the money owed either in full or in part in
tho name of his creditor. It is clear, therefore, that
Section 31 would apply even to a tenant who owes money to
his landlord by way of rent due and he can also enjoy the
facility provided by Section 31 of the Indebtedness Act.
[481 C, 482 E-G]
477
(2) The combined effect of the provisions of Section 31
of the Indebtedness Act and the Notification No. 1562-Cr.-
47/9224, dated 14th April, 1947 published in the Punjab
Gazette Extraordinary and the Notification made under the
Punjab Courts Act, 1918 by which a Senior Sub-Judge was to
function as a Controller under the Rent Act is that Section
31 is constituted a statutory agency or machinery for
receiving all debts and paying the same to the creditors.
This is the dominant purpose and the avowed object of
Section 31 of the Indebtedness Act. It thus follows as a
logical consequence that any deposit made by a tenant under
Section 31 would have to be treated as a deposit under the
Rent Act to the credit of the landlord and which will be
available to him for payment whenever he likes to withdraw.
[482 H, 483 H-484 B]
Kuldip Singh v. The State of Punjab & Anr. [1956]
S.C.R. 125, followed.
Mam Chand v. Chhotu Ram & Ors I.L.R. 1964 Punjab 626
and Khushi Ram v. Shanti Rani & Ors. 1964 Punjab Law Reports
755, approved.
Vidya Prachar Trust v. Pandit Basarat Ram [1970] 1
S.C.R. 65, overruled.
(3) To give a narrow meaning to the words "person who
owes money" used in Section 31 of the indebtedness Act would
be to unduly restrict the scope of Section 31 which is
contrary to the intention of the legislature. Furthermore,
under the proviso to Section 13(2) of the East Punjab Urban
Rent Restriction Act, 1949, the tenant was required to
deposit interest also in order to get protection of the
proviso. Hence, the tenant was a debtor with a sort of a
statutory agreement to pay interest and would therefore
squarely fall within the definition of Section 31 of the
Indebtedness Act. [485 G-486 A]
(4) There is absolutely no bar either under Section 6
or under Section 19 of the East Punjab Urban Rent
Restriction Act, 1949 to receive future rent. Section 6 of
the Act merely provides that where a fair rent is fixed by
the Controller it would not be open to the landlord to
receive any amount in advance in excess of the fair rent.
Section 6, therefore, clearly deals with a situation where a
fair rent under Section 6 is fixed by the Controller on the
application of the parties. Neither in the present case nor
in Vidya Prachar Trust’s case was there any allegation that
a fair rent had been fixed by the Controller. So long as
fair rent is not fixed by the Controller the parties are
free to agree to payment of any rent and neither Section 6
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nor Section 19 would be attracted to such a case. Moreover,
even if the tenant were to deposit future rent it is always
open to the landlord not to withdraw the future rent but
confine himself to taking out only the rent that is in
arrears which will not at all violate any provision of the
Rent Act. Therefore, a deposit by a tenant under Section 31
of the Indebtedness Act was a valid tender. [486D, G-H;
487A-C]
(5) Like all other Rent Control Acts in the other
States in the country, the Rent Act is a piece of social
legislation which seeks to strike a just balance between the
rights of the landlords and the requirements of the tenants.
The Act prevents the landlord from taking the extreme step
of evicting the tenant merely on the ground of default in
payment of rent if the landlord is guaranteed entire payment
of the entire arrears of rent, cost and interest. Thus the
proviso to Section 13(2) of the East Punjab Urban Rent
Restriction Act, 1949 affords a real and sanctified
protection to the tenant which should not be nullified by
giving a hypertechnical or literal
478
construction to the language of the proviso which instead of
advancing the object of the Act may result in its
frustration. [487F-G]
(6) The statutory provisions of the proviso which is
meant to give special protection to the tenant, if property
and meaningfully construed, lead to the inescapable
conclusion that the rent together with cost and interest,
etc., should be paid on or before the date of the first
hearing and once this is done, there would be sufficient
compliance with the conditions mentioned in the proviso. In
the instant case all the necessary conditions of the proviso
of Section 13(2) of the Rent Act were fully complied with.
[487H-488 A, B]
Sheo Narain v Sher Singh [1980] 1 S.C.C. 125, applied.
(7) Once it is held that the deposit under section 31
of the Indebtedness Act is a valid tender having been
deposited on or before the first date of hearing, the exact
point of time when the deposit is made is wholly irrelevant
and will not amount to non-compliance of the conditions of
the proviso to Section 13(2) of the Rent Act. In the instant
case, the deposit of the-arrears of rent had been made prior
to the filing of ejectment petition and the interest and
cost were raid on the first date of hearing. [489B-C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 3325 of
1979.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and order
dated 12-10-1979 of the Punjab and Haryana High Court in
Civil Revision No. 1526/74.
R.P. Bhatt and Adarsh Kumar Goel for the Appellant.
M.M. Abdul Khader, S.R. Bagga and Mrs. S. Bagga for the
respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
FAZAL ALI, J.-This appeal by special leave is directed
against a judgment dated November 12, 1979 of the Punjab and
Haryana High Court and raises a pure question of law. The
facts of the case lie within a very narrow compass. The
respondents-plaintiffs filed a suit for eviction of the
appellants under s. 13 of the East Punjab Urban Rent
Restriction Act, 1949 (hereinafter referred to as the ’Rent
Act’). The ejectment was sought for from the shop B-VI, 1400
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old B-IX-1736, New Ground Floor, situated in Saban Bazar,
Ludhiana. The main ground on which the suit for eviction was
filed was that the appellant had committed default in the
payment of rent.
The suit was resisted by the appellant mainly on the
ground that he was not in arrears as he had deposited the
entire rent due in the court of Senior Sub Judge, Ludhiana
under s. 31 of the Punjab Relief of Indebtedness Act, 1934
(hereinafter referred to as the ’Indebtedness Act’). It was
also averred by the defendant-tenant that not only the rent
due was deposited but even future rent in advice had
479
also been deposited before the first date of hearing. It was
also alleged by the tenant that he had deposited the
interest and cost of the suit amounting to Rs. 23 which was
admittedly accepted by the landlord under protest. Thus, the
tenant-appellant claimed complete protection under the
proviso to s. 13(2) of the Rent Act. The defendant also
pleaded that the notice given to the appellant by the
landlord was legally defective.
The trial court held that any deposit made by the
appellant under s. 31 of the Indebtedness Act in the Court
of the Senior Sub Judge was not a valid tender and therefore
the appellant could not claim any protection under the
proviso to s. 13(2) of the Rent Act. On the question of
notice, the trial court held that the notice was valid and
accordingly decreed the suit for ejectment. Other pleas were
also taken by the defendant which were overruled by the
trial court and have not been pressed before us. The
appellant then filed an appeal before the District Judge,
Ludhiana, being the appellate authority, under the Rent Act
against the judgment of the trial court. The appellate
authority did not go at all into the question as to whether
or not the deposit of the rent due by the appellant was a
valid tender but held that as the notice was not in
accordance with law, the suit was liable to fail. He
accordingly allowed the appeal, set aside the order of the
Controller and dismissed the suit for ejectment. Thereafter,
the landlord-respondent went up in revision to the High
Court against the order of the appellate authority and the
only contention raised before the High Court was that in
view of the decision of this Court in V. Dhanapal Chettiar
v. Yesoclai Ammal as no notice was necessary, therefore the
Rent Controller was wrong in non-suiting the plaintiff on
the ground of invalidity of the notice. The High Court
accordingly decreed the suit without, however, going into
the question of deposit 1 of rent so as to protect the
tenant from eviction. The appellant then filed an
application for special leave which was granted and hence
this appeal. The only point raised by the learned counsel
for the appellant before us is that the appellant having
deposited the rent before even the respondent filed the
application for ejectment after which the appellant
deposited the sum of Rs. 23 as cost and interest, ke was
entitled to the protection of the proviso to si. 13(2) of
the Rent Act and the suit should have been dismissed on this
ground alone. It was further argued that the deposit of the
rent due under s. 31 of the Indebtedness Act was a valid
tender as it would, in the eye of law, be treated as a
deposit in the court of the Rent Controller because the
court of the Senior Sub Judge was also functioning as a Rent
480
Controller. The counsel for the respondent, however,
submitted that the deposit made by the appellant cannot be
held to be a valid tender as decided by a decision of this
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Court in Shri Vidya Prachar Trust v. Pandit Basant Ram. The
learned counsel further submitted that although this case
was noticed by two later decisions of this Court in Sheo
Narain v. Sher Singh and Duli Chand v. Maman Chand yet the
said case had been distinguished but not overruled.
Before examining the contention of the learned counsel
for the parties it may be necessary to mention the
undisputed facts which emerge from the petition, affidavits,
annexures and counter-affidavits of the parties. It is not
disputed that the rent of the premises was Rs. 35.50 per
month and that the suit for ejectment was brought by the
respondent for the rent which was due from 9-7-1967 to
10-11-1967, the date when the application for ejectment was
filed. Secondly, it was also not disputed but rather tacitly
admitted in the counter affidavit filed by the respondent
that a sum of Rs. 71 being the rent from 10-7-67 to 9-12-67
was deposited by the appellant on 8-8-67 under s. 31 of the
Indebtedness Act before the Court of the Senior Sub Judge.
It was also not disputed that a sum of Rs. 106.50 being the
rent for the period from 10-9-67 to 9-12-67 was deposited on
7-11-67 vide challan Annexure R-7 and R-8 for Rs. 71 and Rs.
106.50 respectively, that is to say three days before the
application for ejectment was filed. Finally, it was
admitted by the respondent Kidar Nath that a sum of Rs. 23,
being the cost and interest, was accepted by the landlord
under protest before the first date of hearing and he
further admitted that he learnt about the challans Exs. P-1
and P-2 containing the previous deposit of rent due also on
the first date of hearing when they were produced. It is
thus manifest that the entire arrears of rent, interest and
cost were available for payment to the respondent on the
first hearing. Thus, all the essential requirements of the
provisions were complied with. The argument of the
respondent, however, only centered round the question as to
whether or not the deposit made by the appellant could be
treated as a deposit under the Rent Control Act and,
therefore, a valid tender to the landlord. That is really
the crucial question which falls for determination in the
instant case. The counsel for the appellant has placed
strong reliance on two later decisions of this Court in Sheo
Narain v. Sher Singh and Duli Chand v. Maman Chand (supra),
whereas the counsel for the respondent has relied on Vidya
481
Prachar Trust’s case (supra). Before, however, going to the
decisions we would like to examine the provisions of the
relevant Acts. It is true that there is absolutely no
provision in the Rent Act under which a deposit could be
made by a tenant before the Controller to the credit of the
landlord. Under s. 31 of the Indebtedness Act there is
undoubtedly a specific provision for a person who owes money
to another to deposit the amount in the court and once this
is done, the interest would cease to run. The serious
question for consideration is as to whether or not a deposit
by the tenant under s. 31 of the Indebtedness Act could be
treated as a deposit in the court of Rent Controller so as
to enure for his benefit. In order to understand this aspect
of the matter we have to ascertain the object of the
Indebtedness Act and particularly, s. 31 of the said Act.
The main object of the Indebtedness Act appears to be to
give relief to debtors and protect them from paying
excessive rates of interest. The Act thus contains
provisions for setting up Debt Conciliation Boards. Section
7(1) defines ’Debt’ and clause (2) of s. 7 defines ’Debtor’
thus:
"Debtor" means a person who owes a debt and
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(i) who both earns his livelihood mainly by
agriculture, and is either a land-owner, or tenant
of agricultural land, or a servant of a land-
owner, or of a tenant of agricultural land; or
(ii) who earns his livelihood as a village
menial paid in cash or kind for work connected
with agriculture; or
(iii) whose total assets do not exceed five
thousand rupees;"
In Vidya Prachar Trust case (supra), Hidayatullah, C.
J., examined some of the provisions of the Indebtedness Act
and held that the Act was not intended to operate between
landlords and tenants nor was the court of Senior Sub-Judge
a clearing house for rent so as to convert it into a court
of Rent Collector and speaking for the Court observed thus:-
"The Act is not intended to operate between
landlords and tenants; nor is the Court of the Senior
Sub-Judge created into a clearing house for rent..
There is no provision in the Urban Rent Restriction Act
for making a deposit except one, and that is on the
first day of the hearing of the case. It could not have
been intended that all tenants who may be disinclined
to pay rent to their landlords should be enabled to
deposit it in the Court of a Senior Sub-Judge making
the Senior Sub-Judge a kind of a Rent Collector for all
landlords."
482
With due respect, in making these observations the
attention of the learned Chief Justice does not appear to
have been drawn to certain important aspects and facets of
the true scope and purport of s. 31 of the Indebtedness Act
or even to the fact that the same Sub-Judge before whom
deposit could be made under s. 31 of the Indebtedness Act
was also functioning as Rent Controller under the Rent Act.
Section 31 runs thus:
"31. Deposit in court.-(1) Any person who owes
money may at any time deposit in court a sum of money
in full or part payment to his creditor.
(2) The court on receipt of such deposit shall
give notice thereof to the creditor and shall, on his
application, pay the sum to him.
(3) From the date of such deposit interest shall
cease to run on the sum so deposited."
The learned Chief Justice held that although the
general words ’any person who owes money’ may appear to
cover the case of a tenant yet as a whole the Act was not
meant to cover cases of a landlord and tenant but only such
debtors and creditors between whom there was an agreement
for payment of interest. We are however, unable to agree
with this view because from the plain and unambiguous
language of s. 31 it cannot be spelt out that the Act
applies only to a particular type of debtors and creditors
as hinted by the learned Chief Justice. We have highlighted
this aspect of the matter to show that s. 31 has been
couched in the widest possible terms and the legislature has
advisedly not used the word ’debtor’ in s. 31 so as to
confine the provisions of the section only to the ’debtor’
defined in the said Act and to no other, but the legislature
intended to embrance within its fold all persons owing money
including tenants who are in arrears.
Thus, under s. 31 any person who owes money is entitled
to deposit in court the money owed either in full or in part
in the name of his creditor. It is manifest, therefore, that
this provision would apply even to a tenant who owes money
to his landlord by way of rent due and he can also enjoy the
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facility provided by s. 31 of the Indebtedness Act.
It appears that by virtue of a notification (No. 1562-
Cr.-47/9224 published in the Punjab Gazette Extraordinary,
dated 14th April 1947) all subordinate Judges of First Class
were appointed as Controllers. The notification may be
extracted thus:
"In pursuance of the provisions of clause (b) of
Section 2 of the Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act,
1947, the Governor
483
of Punjab is pleased to appoint all first class
Subordinate Judges in the Punjab to perform the
functions of Controllers under the said Act, in the
Urban area within the limits of their existing civil
jurisdiction".
In the instant case, it is not disputed that the Senior
Sub-Judge was a Sub-Judge First Class and was also
functioning as a Rent Controller in Ludhiana which was an
urban area, hence any deposit made in his court by a tenant
to the credit of a landlord to get the protection of the
Rent Act, would have to be treated as a deposit before the
Rent Controller. Afterall, if the Sub-Judge was a Rent
Controller, the amount would have to be deposited by a
challan in the same treasury which was to be operated by the
Sub-Judge who was also a Controller. By a notification made
under the Punjab Courts Act, 1918, a Sub-Judge is conferred
with first class, second class and third class powers
according to the nature of the jurisdiction of the cases
which they are competent to try. A Sub-Judge, first Class
exercises jurisdiction without any limit as to the value of
the case. A Sub-Judge, Second Class exercises jurisdiction
in cases of which the value does not exceed Rs. 10,000 and a
Subordinate Judge, III Class exercises jurisdiction in cases
of which the value does not exceed Rs. 5,000. This appears
to be the hierarchy of the Sub-Judges under the Punjab
Courts Act, 1918. This aspect of the matter was noticed by
this Court in Kuldip Singh v. The State of Punjab & Anr.
where referring to the nature of the Senior Sub-Judge, the
following observations were made:
"The Rules and orders of the Punjab High Court
reproduce a Notification of the High Court dated 16th
May 1935 as amended on 23rd February 1940, at page 3 of
Chapter 20-B of Volume I, where it is said in paragraph
2-
’It is further directed the Court of such
Senior Subordinate Judge of the first class shall
be deemed to be a District Court. etc.’
This appears to regard each Senior Subordinate
Judge as a Court in himself and not merely as the
presiding officer of the Court of the Subordinate
Judge."
Thus, the combined effect of the provisions of s. 31 of
the Indebtedness Act and the notification by which a Senior
Sub-Judge was to function as a Controller under the Rent Act
is that s. 31 is constituted a statutory agency or machinery
for receiving all debts and paying the same to the
creditors. This appears to us to be the
484
dominant purpose and the avowed object of s. 31. It thus
follows as a logical consequence that any deposit made by a
tenant under s. 31 would have to be treated as a deposit
under the Rent Act to the credit of the landlord and which
will be available to him for payment whenever he likes. That
this is the position has been clearly held by two Division
Bench decisions of the Punjab High Court. In Mam Chand v.
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Chhotuu Ram & Ors a Division Bench consisting of Falshaw, C.
J. and Grover, went into this very question in great detail
and observed as follows:-
"It is equally clear that a deposit made under
section 31 would save the running of interest and that
the tenants would be entitled to take the benefit of
the provisions contained in section 31 regarding cesser
of interest from the date of payment into Court for the
purposes of calculating the amount which have to be
deposited under the proviso in question to claim
protection against eviction. If the money deposited in
Court under section 31 is a good payment for the
purpose of stopping the running of interest it looks
highly problematical that it would cease to be a valid
payment to the landlord of rent.
.... ..... ......
......in a case of the present type where it has
not been shown that there was any other account between
the landlord and the tenant and the amount was
deposited clearly towards payment of rent because the
landlord would not accept the money orders which had
been previously sent, it is not possible to accept the
view that the payment is not being made to the landlord
on account of rent. It may well be that the landlord is
not inclined to accept that payment but it is for that
very purpose that the provision, namely. section 31 of
the Punjab Relief of Indebtedness Act, has been enacted
The language of section 31 itself is clear that
the person who owes money can deposit the same in Court
in full or part payment to his creditor. This means
that deposit in Court is tantamount to payment having
been made to the creditor. Even if no such implied
agency can be inferred, the Court is constituted as a
statutory agent because the payment made to it is by
fiction of law considered to be payment made to the
creditor by the debtor and which, in addition, is
effective enough to stop the running of interest."
485
To the same effect is another decision of the same High
Court in Khushi Ram v. Shanti Rani & Ors. Where Dulat, J.,
speaking for the Court observed as follows:-
"It is clear that if such deposit is not to be
equivalent to actual payment to the creditor, it is
certainly good’ and valid tender of the money, for it
has been paid into, Court and the creditor has been
told through Court that the money has been deposited
and can be received by the creditor at any time. In my
opinion, therefore, there is no occasion for further
consideration of the decision of the Division Bench in
Mam Chand’s case, which, if I may say so, adopts a
perfectly reasonable and matter-of-fact view of the
situation. I would therefore hold that a deposit made
under section 31 of the Punjab Relief of Indebtedness
Act in respect of any arrears of rent must be taken in
law to be at least a valid tender of such arrears. In
both these cases, therefore, it is impossible to ignore
the fact of the deposit."
We find ourselves in complete agreement with the
observations made by the. Punjab High Court in the two cases
referred to above which lay down the correct law on the
subject
In view of these circumstances we are unable to agree
with the view taken by the learned Chief Justice in Vidya
Prachar Trust’s case (supra) that the Court of Senior Sub-
Judge was not converted into a court of Rent Controller by
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the tenant because the Sub-Judge was actually functioning as
a Rent Controller by virtue of the notification, as
indicated above. It may also be emphasised at this stage
that the present suit was also filed before the Senior Sub
Judge, Ludhiana where the deposit was made by the appellant,
though after the suit was filed it was transferred to some
other Sub-Judge who was also empowered to function as a Rent
Controller. Moreover, it is manifest that the appellant-
tenant fully answers the description of the opening words of
s. 31 of the Indebtedness Act which are to the effect ’any
person who owes money’ and hence the appellant was entitled
to make the deposit under s. 31 which would enure for the
benefit of the creditor. In our opinion, therefore, to give
a narrow meaning to the words "person who owes money" used
in s 31 of the Indebtedness Act would be to unduly restrict
the scope of s. 31 which appears to be contrary to the
intention of the legislature. Furthermore, under the proviso
to s. 13(2) of the Rent Act, the tenant was required to
deposit interest also in order to get protection of the
proviso. Hence, the tenant was a debtor with a sort of a
statutory agreement to pay interest
486
and would therefore squarely fall within the definition of
s. 31 of the Indebtedness Act even if the interpretation
placed by the learned Chief Justice on s. 31 in Vidya
Prachar Trusts case (supra) is, accepted at its face value.
Another ground taken by the learned Chief Justice to
hold that the deposit of money before the Sub-Judge could
not be a valid tender was that under s. 19 read with s. 6 of
the Rent Act, acceptance of future rent was punishable as an
offence and hence it would be impossible to contend that a
landlord would be required to accept rent at the peril of
going to jail. In this connection, the Chief Justice
observed as follows:-
"Further the deposit of money in the present case
was not only of the rent due but also of future rent.
Under s. 19 read with s. 6 of the Urban Rent
Restriction Act a landlord is liable to be sent to jail
if he recovers advance rent beyond one month."
With great respect to the Hon’ble Chief Justice, it
seems to us that there is absolutely no bar either under s.
19 or s. 6 of the Rent Act to receive future rent. Section 6
of the Rent Act may be extracted thus:
"6. Landlord not to claim anything in excess of
fair rent.- (1) Save as provided in section 5, when the
Controller has fixed the fair rent of a building or
rented land under section
(a) the landlord shall not claim or receive
any premium or other like sum in addition to fair
rent or any rent in excess of such fair rent, but
the landlord may stipulate for and receive in
advance an amount not exceeding one month’s rent;
(b) any agreement for the payment of any sum
in addition to rent or of rent in excess of such
fair rent shall be null and void."
Section 6 thus merely provides that where a fair rent is
fixed by the Controller it would not be open to the landlord
to receive any amount in advance in excess of the fair rent.
Section 6(a) further permits the landlord to stipulate and
receive in advance an amount not exceeding one month’s rent.
Clause (b) makes any agreement for payment of any sum in
excess of such fair rent null and void. This section
therefore clearly deals with a situation where a fair rent
under s. 6 is fixed by the Controller on the application of
the parties. Neither in the present case nor in Vidya
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Prachar Trust’s case (supra) was there any allegation that a
fair rent had been fixed by the Controller. Section 19 is
the penal section which makes a person
487
punishable with imprisonment for a maximum period of two
years if he violates the provisions of s. 6. So long as fair
rent is not fixed by the Controller the parties are free to
agree to payment of any rent and neither s. 6 nor s. 19
would be attracted to such a case. Moreover, even if the
tenant were to deposit future rent it is always open to the
landlord not to withdraw the future rent but confine himself
to taking out only the rent that is in arrears which will
not at all violate any provision of the Rent Act.
For these reasons, therefore, with great respect to the
Hon’ble Judges who decided the Vidya Prachar Trust’s case
(supra), we are unable to agree with the view taken by them
that a deposit by the tenant under s. 31 of the Indebtedness
Act was not a valid tender and we are of the opinion that
case was not correctly decided and we, therefore, overrule
the same.
Learned counsel for the respondent submitted that the
proviso to s. 13(2) of the Rent Act contemplates that the
rent with cost and interest must be deposited on the first
hearing of the application for ejectment either by paying or
tendering the same to the landlord on that date and neither
before nor after that date. We are unable to place such a
restricted or unreasonable interpretation on the language of
the proviso which runs thus:
"Provided that if the tenant on the first hearing
of the application for ejectment after due service pays
or tenders the arrears of rent and interest at six per
cent per annum on such arrears together with the cost
of application assessed by the Controller, the tenant
shall be deemed to have duly paid or tendered the rent
within the time aforesaid."
Like all other Rent Control Acts in the other States in
the country, the Rent Act is a piece of social legislation
which seeks to strike a just balance between the rights of
the landlords and the requirements of the tenants. The Act
prevents the landlord from taking the extreme step of
evicting the tenant merely on the ground of default in
payment of rent if the landlord is guaranteed entire payment
of the entire arrears of rent, cost and interest. Thus, the
proviso affords a real and sanctified protection to the
tenant which should not be nullified by giving a
hypertechnical or literal construction to the language of
the proviso which instead of advancing the object of the Act
may result in its frustration.
The statutory provisions of the proviso which is meant
to give a special protection to the tenant, if properly and
meaningfully construed, lead to the inescapable conclusion
that the rent together with cost and interest, etc., should
be paid on or before the date
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of the first hearing and once this is done, there would be a
sufficient compliance with the conditions mentioned in the
proviso. It is not disputed in the instant case that the
entire rent including even the future rent has been
deposited with the Rent Controller before the date of the
first hearing, that is to say on 8-8-67 and 7-11-67,
whereas the first date of hearing was 8-12-67. The landlord-
respondent himself admitted that he had received the
interest and cost of Rs. 23 on the first date of hearing.
Thus, all the necessary conditions of the proviso to s.
13(2) of the Rent Act were fully complied with in the
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instant case and in that view of the matter there was no
legal obstacle in dismissing the suit for ejectment.
In a recent case Sheo Narain v. Sher Singh (supra) this
Court observed as follows :
"It is therefore, manifest that in the instant
case a deposit of the rent and the arrears along with
interest had actually been made before the first date
of hearing to the knowledge of the Court and the Court
had acknowledged the fact of the deposit of the amount.
Again, on the first date of hearing, i.e., May 11, 1967
the Rent Controller informed counsel for the applicant
respondent that a sum of Rs. 179.48 had been deposited.
It is, therefore, clear that the applicant-respondent
was apprised clearly of the fact that the amount in
question had actually been deposited and was at his
disposal and he could withdraw the same from the Court
of the Rent Controller whenever he liked.
There is no magical formula or any prescribed
manner for which rent can be deposited by the tenant
with the landlord. The rent can be deposited by placing
the money in the hands of the landlord which would
amount to actual tender; second mode of payment is to
deposit the amount in the court where a case is pending
in such a manner so as to make the amount available to
the landlord without any hitch or hindrance whenever he
wants it. Even the Act does not prescribe any
particular mode of deposit. In fact, the use of the
words "tender or deposit" in the proviso clearly
postulates that the rent can be given to the landlord
in either of the two modes. It may be tendered to the
landlord personally or to his authorised agent or it
may be deposited in court which is dealing with the
case of the landlord to his knowledge so that the
landlord may withdraw the deposit whenever he likes. In
fact, if the tenant deposits the rent even before the
first date of hearing it is a solid proof of his bona
fides in the matter and the legal position would be
that if the rent is deposited before the first date of
hearing, it
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will be deemed to have been deposited on the date of
the hearing also because the deposit continues tn
remain in the court on that date and the position would
be as if the tenant has deposited the rent in court for
payment to the landlord."
It was, however, urged by the respondent that in the
case cited above, the rent was deposited after the suit for
ejectment was filed and not before the suit. hence the
deposit was held to be valid. In our opinion, this argument
is not tenable because once it is held that a deposit under
s. 31 of the Indebtedness Act is a valid tender having been
deposited on or before the first date of hearing, the exact
point of time when the deposit is made is wholly irrelevant
and will not amount to non-compliance of the conditions of
the proviso to s. 13(2) of the Rent Act. In the instant
case, we have also found that the deposit of the arrears of
rent had been made prior to the filing of the ejectment
petition and the interest and cost were paid on the first
date of hearing as admitted by the respondent.
For these reasons, therefore we hold that the
appellant-tenant having complied with the conditions of the
proviso to s. 13(2) of the Rent Act, the High Court
committed an error of law in decreeing the plaintiff’s suit
for ejectment. The result is that the appeal is allowed, the
order of the High Court is set aside and the suit of the
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plaintiffs for ejectment is dismissed. In the peculiar
circumstances of this case and particularly having regard to
the fact that Vidya Prachar Trust’s case (supra) held the
field before this judgment rendered by us. we would leave
the parties to bear their own costs.
Appeal allowed.
S.R.
490