Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAJA RAM MAHADEV PARANJYPE AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ABA MARUTI MALI AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
01/12/1961
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
DAS, S.K.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION:
1962 AIR 753 1962 SCR Supl. (1) 739
CITATOR INFO :
R 1966 SC1085 (4)
E 1968 SC 461 (2)
D 1970 SC 744 (7)
RF 1973 SC1041 (15)
R 1974 SC1613 (2)
R 1983 SC 990 (9)
R 1984 SC1164 (17)
ACT:
Landlord and Tenani-Ejectment-Non-payment of
rent for three years-Statutory right, to eject-
Power of court to grant relief-Equity-Bombay
Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act, 1948 (Bom. 67
of 1948), ss. 14, 25, 29.
HEADNOTE:
In the first three appeals the tenants were
in default in paying rents for three years and due
notices had been served by the landlords
terminating the tenancies. The landlords thus
acquired statutory rights to eject the tenants and
applied to the Mamlatdar, as required by s. 29 of
the Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act,
1948, for possession over the lands. The Mamlatdar
refused to make an order for possession on the
ground that the tenants were entitled to relief
against forfeiture on equitable principles. In the
fourth appeal also the tenants had defaulted in
paying rents for three years. In respect of the
default in the first year the tenant had been
granted relief against forfeiture under s. 25(1)
of the Act. The tenant contended that the default
in the first year had merged in the order under s.
25(1) and could not be relied upon far holding
that he had defaulted for three years.
^
Held, that the landlords were entitled to
orders for possession in all the four cases. Upon
default in payment of rent for three years a
statutory right accrued to the landlords under s.
25(2) to terminate the tenancy and to obtain
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possession. There was no provision in the Act for
granting relief against forfeiture in such a case;
the provision in s. 29(3) that the Mamlatdar
"shall pass such orders as he deems fit" did not
give him such a power. The Act merely empowered
him to grant relief where the tenant was not in
arrears for more than two years. No relief against
forfeiture could be granted to the
740
tenants on equitable grounds; relief on equitable
grounds could only be granted in cases of
contractual rights and not in cases of statutory
rights. Nor could relief be granted under s. 114
Transfer of Property Act as that provision was
inconsistent with the provisions of the Bombay Act
and was therefore inapplicable.
R. V. Boteler, (1864) 33 L. I. M. C. 101,
referred to.
Raghuvir, Vyasaraya Acharya v. Govind Mogre
Bandekar, (1955) I. L. R. Bom. 1069, disapproved.
Held, further, that in the fourth appeal the
default in the first year could also be taken into
consideration in computing of three years inspite
of the tenant having been relieved against
forfeiture for that year. The order granting the
relief did not wipe out the default, it only
prevented the termination of the tenancy for that
default alone.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals
Nos. 258-259 of 59 and 404 of 60.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment
and orders dated July 2, 1956, January 9, 1957 and
June 16,1958 of the Bombay High Court in Special
Civil Applications Nos. 1471, 1527 and 2990 of 56
and 1431 of 1958 respectively.
V.M. Limaye, V.L. Narasimha Moorthy, E.
Udayaratnam and S.S. Shukla, for the appellants.
B.C. Kamble and A.G. Ratnaparkhi, for
respondents Nos. 1 and 3 (in C. S. No. 258/59).
S.G. Patwardhan, B.C. Kamble and A.G.
Ratnaparkhi, for respondent No. 1 ( in C. A. No.
259/59) and the respondent in (C.A. No. 404 of
60).
Rameshwar Nath, for the respondent (in C.A.
No. 9 of 60).
1961. December 1. The Judgment of the Court
was delivered by
SARKAR, J.-These four appeals are by
landlords whose applications to the authorities
under the Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands
Act, 1948 for possession of the lands held by
their tenants, on the grounds had that the tenancy
had been terminated by due notices on the tenants’
failure to pay rents for three years, were
dismissed.
741
These authorities refused in three of these
cases to make an order for possession either
because the tenants had paid up all rent which had
fallen in arrear or because the authorities
thought it proper on the facts of the case to give
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them time to pay up. They felt that the tenants
were entitled to relief against forfeiture on
equitable principles. In the fourth case, which is
covered by Civil Appeal No. 259 of 1959, it was
held that there had not been on the facts of the
case, default in payment of rent for three years
and, therefore the tenant was entitled to
statutory relief against eviction under s. 25(1)
of the Act which we shall later set out.
The High Court at Bombay by a summary order,
without stating any reasons, refused to interfere
when moved under Art. 227 of the Constitution. The
landlords have therefore filed these appeals with
leave of this Court.
We shall now deal with the first three cases
and later take up the fourth case. In these three
cases relief was granted to the tenants on the
basis of certain observation of the High Court at
Bombay in Sitaram Vithal Chitnis v. Gundu Satyappa
Dhade, Special Civil Application No. 1695 of 1955,
unreported, which we quote here: "Every court of
equity will be extremely reluctant to enforce an
order of ejectment against a tenant when the only
ground on which the landlord seeks ejectment is
failure to pay rent. Therefore, if the tenant is
willing to pay all arrears of rent, in our
opinion, it would be inequitable to turn these
tenants out when they are prepared to make good
the arrears of rent." With great respect to the
learned Judges of the High Court, we are unable to
assent to the proposition so broadly put.
We now set out the relevant provisions of the
Act.
742
S. 5 (1) No tenancy of any land shall be
for a period of less than ten years:
Provided that at the end of the said
period and thereafter at the end of each
period of ten years in succession, the
tenancy shall, subject to the provisions of
sub-secs. (2) and (3), be deemed to be
renewed for a further period of ten years on
the same terms and conditions notwithstanding
any agreement to the contrary.
(2) x x x x x x x x x x x x
x x x x x x x x x x
(3) Notwithstanding anything contained
in sub-sec. (1):
(a) every tenancy shall, subject to the
provisions of ss. 24 and 25, be liable to be
terminated at any time on any of the grounds
mentioned in s. 14.
x x x x x x x x x x x x
x x x x x x x x x x x x
S. 14(1) Notwithstanding any agreement,
usage, decree, or order of a court of law,
the tenancy of any land held by a tenant
shall not be terminated unless such tenant:-
(a)(1) has failed to pay in any year,
with in fifteen days from the day fixed.. the
rent of such land for that year.
x x x x x x x x
x x x x x x x x
Provided that no tenancy of any land
held by a tenant shall be terminated on any
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of the grounds mentioned in this sub-section
unless the landlord gives three months’
notice in writing intimating the tenant his
decision to terminate the tenancy and ground
for such termination.
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S. 25(1)Where any tenancy of any land
held by any tenant is terminated for non-
payment of rent and the landlord files any
proceeding to eject the tenant, the Mamlatdar
shall call upon the tenant to tender to the
landlord the rent in arrears together with
the costs of the proceeding within fifteen
days from the date of order, and if the
tenant complies with such order, the
Mamlatdar shall, in lieu of making an order
for ejectment, pass an order that the tenancy
had not been terminated, and thereupon the
tenant shall hold the land as if the tenancy
had not been terminated:
Provided that if the Mamlatdar is
satisfied that in consequence of total or
partial failure of crops or similar calamity
the tenant has been unable to pay the rent
due, the Mamlatdar may, for reasons to be
recorded in writing, direct that the arrears
of rent together with the costs of the
proceedings if awarded, shall be paid within
one year from the date of the order and that
if before the expiry of the said period, the
tenant fails to pay the said arrears of rent
and costs, the tenancy shall be deemed to be
terminated and the tenant shall be liable to
be evicted.
(2) Nothing in this section shall apply
to any tenant whose tenancy is terminated for
non-payment of rent if he has failed for any
three years to pay rent within the period
specified in section 14.
S. 29(1) A tenant or an agricultural
labourer or an artisan entitled to possession
of any land or dwelling house under any of
the provisions of this Act may apply in
writing for such possession to the Mamlatdar.
x x x x x x x x x x x x
x x x x x x x x x x x x
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(2) No landlord shall obtain possession
of any land or dwelling house held by a
tenant except under an order of the
Mamlatdar. For obtaining such order he shall
make an application in the prescribed form
and within a period of two years from the
date on which the right to obtain possession
of the land or dwelling house, as the case
may be, is deemed to have accrued to him.
(3) On receipt of such application under
sub-section (1) or (2) the Mamlatdar shall,
after holding an enquiry, pass such order
thereon as he deems fit.
We are not concerned in these three cases
with s. 24 mentioned in s. 5(3)(a). The "date
fixed" mentioned in s. 14(1)(a)(i) is it may be
stated the 20th of March of each year. It is not
in dispute in these cases that the tenants were in
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default in paying rents for three years within s.
14(1)(a)(i) and due notices had been served by the
landlords terminating the tenancies as required by
the proviso to s. 14(1).
By s. 5, therefore, a tenancy under the Act
is made to have indefinite duration being
renewable for ten years at the end of every ten
years and the landlord cannot put an end to the
tenancy except under the provisions of the Act,
one of which is s. 14. This is irrespective of any
contract between the parties. Under s. 14 on the
default in payment of a year’s rent occurring, the
landlord may, if he so chooses, bring the tenancy
to end by giving the prescribed notice. If the
tenancy is terminated, the tenant has, of course,
no right to hold the land. The landlord would then
be entitled to recover possession of the land from
him. In view however of s. 29(2), the landlord
cannot do so except by an application made to a
Mamlatdar for the purpose. Now when such an
application is made in case where the tenant has
been in default for not
745
more than two years, s. 25(1) would have to be
applied and the Mamlatdar would have to give the
tenant a chance to pay up and thereby annul the
termination of the tenancy brought about under s.
14.
In these three cases there is no controversy
that the tenancies have been terminated under s.
14. There is also no dispute that the tenants are
not entitled to be relieved against that
termination under sub-s. (1) of s. 25 because of
the provisions of sub-sec. (2) of that section, as
in these cases the rent had not been paid for
three years. They however claim relief on the
principle on which equity grants relief against
forfeiture of tenancies. The authorities under the
Act have granted them the relief by applying this
equitable principle.
In our opinion, the authorities were clearly
in error in thinking that they could grant relief
in these cases on equitable principles. In equity
relief may be granted to a tenant who has incurred
a forfeiture under the terms of the tenancy, that
is, his contract with the landlord. Here, that is
not the position. The tenancies have been
terminated in these cases under a statutory
provision. In the circumstances that have
happened, the landlords have in our opinion
acquired a statutory right to the possession of
the lands and, therefore, to eject the tenants,
the reasons for which view we shall discuss in
some detail later. In such a case, no relief can
be granted to the tenants on equitable principles.
Equity does not operate to annul a statute. This
appears to us to be well established but we may
refer to white and Tudors Leading Cases in Equity
(9th ed.) p. 238, where it is stated,
"Although, in cases of contract between
parties, equity will often relieve against
penalties and forfeitures, where compensation
can be granted, relief can never be given
against the provisions of a statute."
746
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The order of the authorities taking away the
landlords’ statutory right to possession by
application of rules of equity cannot be
supported.
It was then said that s. 29(3) gives ample
power to the authorities to refuse to make an
order for possession in the landlord’s favour if
the tenant pays up the arrears and the justice of
the case requires that the tenant should not be
deprived of the land. That sub-section no doubt
says that the Mamlatdar "shall...pass such order
thereon as he deems fit". We are however wholly
unable to agree that this provision warrants the
making of any order that the authority concerned
thinks in his individual opinion that the justice
of the case requires. We may here refer to R.
v. Boteler where a statute which conferred power
upon Justices to issue a distress warrant "if they
shall think fit" was considered. In that case the
Justices had refused to issue the distress
warrant. Cockburn C. J. observed,
"They went upon the ground that the
introduction of this extra-parochial place
into the union was a thing unjust in itself;
in other words, that the operation of the act
of parliament was unjust......I think,
therefore it amounts virtually to saying,-’We
know that we ought upon all other grounds to
issue the warrant, but we will take upon
ourselves to say that the law is unjust, and
we will not carry out the law’. That is not
such an exercise of discretion as this Court
will hold, in accordance with the authorities
cited, to be one upon which it will act. The
Justices must not omit or decline to
discharge a duty according to law."
We think that is what the authorities in the three
cases before us have done. They have
747
refused to carry out the Act because they felt
that it worked hardship. They have refused to give
to the landlords the relief which the Act said
they should have.
Now, we feel no doubt that the Act provided
that a tenant should be granted relief only in a
case where he had not been in arrears with his
rents for more than two years; in other words, if
he had been in arrears for more than two years he
was not to be given any relief against ejectment
and the landlord would be entitled to an order for
possession. First, we have to point out that the
tenancy having been terminated in terms of the
statute, the statute would necessarily create a
right in the landlord to obtain possession of the
demised premises. The tenancy having been
terminated, the tenant is not entitled to remain
in possession and the only person who would then
be entitled to possession would be the landlord.
The statute having provided for the termination of
the tenancy would by necessary implication create
a right in the landlord to recover possession. The
statute recognises this right by providing by s.
29(2) for its enforcement by an application to the
Mamlatdar. Indeed, s. 29(2) itself mentions this
right expressly for it says that the application
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shall be made within two years from the date on
which "the right to obtain possession of the land"
accrued to the landlord. We repeat that this is a
statutory right because it is the statute which
fixes the term of the tenancy and also provides
for its termination; it is not a contractual right
which may be made subject to an equitable relief.
We turn now to s. 25. Under sub-s. (1) of
this section the tenant has a right to an order
continuing the tenancy inspite of its termination
by notice under s. 14 for non-payment of rent.
Sub-section (2) however provides that sub-s. (1)
shall not be available to a tenant if he has
failed for any three years to pay rent. The result
is that the statute itself
748
provides for relief to a tenant where such a
termination has taken place and prescribes the
conditions on which relief would be available. It
would follow that the statute indicates that the
tenant would not have the relief in any other
circumstances. The result of this would inevitably
be that the statute confers a right on the
landlord to recover possession where the right
under s. 25(1) is not available to the tenant,
which right he can enforce in the manner
indicated. That being so, s. 29 (3) cannot be read
as conferring on the authorities a power to annul
this intendment of the Act. The words "in lieu of
making an order for ejectment" in sub-s. (1) of s.
25 support the view that the Act intends that
except in the circumstances mentioned in it, the
landlord is entitled as of right to get an order
for possession from the Mamlatdar. This view is
further strengthened by the proviso to s. 25 (1)
which says that if the default in payment of rent
had been caused by failure of crops or similar
reasons, the Mamlatdar may give the tenant a
year’s time to pay up and shall then provide in
the order to be made by him that on the tenant’s
failure to pay within that year, "the tenancy
shall be deemed to be terminated and the tenant
shall be liable to be evicted". In such a case the
Mamlatdar could not by virtue of his supposed
powers under s. 29(3) give further relief if the
tenant failed to pay as directed, for the Act
makes it incumbent on him to pass the conditional
order of ejectment. There, of course, is
possession for the Act to have treated the cases
under sub-s. (1) and the proviso to it,
differently. This again is another reason for
saying that the Act provides that apart from the
circumstances mentioned in sub-s. (1) of s. 25 and
the proviso to it, the landlord has on a
termination of the tenancy, a right to obtain an
order for possession in his favour. It would be
anomalous if the general words in s 29 (3) were to
be construed as conferring power on the
authorities to deprive him
749
of the right which the other provisions in the Act
give him.
We think, therefore, that s. 29 (3) only
confers power to make an order in terms of the
statute, an order which would give effect to a
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right which the Act has elsewhere conferred. The
words "as he deems fit" do not bestow a power to
make any order on considerations dehors the
statute which the authorities consider best
according to their notions of justice. Obviously,
the provision has been framed in general terms
because it covers a variety of cases, namely,
applications by landlords and tenants in different
circumstances, each of which circumstances may
call for a different order under the Act.
One other argument under a similar head as
dealt with previously, was that the tenants were
entitled to relief against forfeiture under s. 114
of the Transfer of Property Act. Section 3 of the
Act provides that "the provisions of Chapter 5 of
the Transfer of Property Act, 1882 shall in so far
as they are not inconsistent with the provisions
of this Act, apply to the tenancies and leases of
land to which this Act applies". The present
contention of the tenents is based on this
section. It may be pointed out that ch. 5 of the
Transfer of Property Act includes ss. 114 and 117.
The last mentioned section provides that nothing
in ch. 5 shall apply to leases for agriculture
purposes except in so far as the State Government
by notification declare them to be applicable. No
such notification had been issued by the State
Government. Therefore, the landlords contend, s.
114 does not apply to the present leases which are
for agricultural purposes and the tenants are not
entitled to relief under it. It does not seem to
us necessary to decide the question so raised. In
our view, the provisions in s. 114 of the Transfer
of Property Act are inconsistent with the
provisions of the Bombay and cannot,
750
therefore, under s. 3 of the latter Act govern the
tenancies to which it applies. We have earlier
stated that the Bombay Act clearly intended that
relief against termination of tendency for non-
payment of rent would be given only in the cases
mentioned in s. 25(1) and in no others. Under s.
114 of the Transfer of Property Act relief may be
given in other circumstances. Therefore, the
provisions of this section are inconsistent with
the provisions of the Bombay Act. For this reason
we do not think that the tenants in the cases
before us are entitled to claim any relief under
s. 114 of the Transfer of Property Act.
We think, therefore, that the tenants were
not entitled to the relief which the authorities
below granted them. Before we pass on to the other
appeal raising a different question, we have to
refer to the case of Raghuvir Vyasaraya Acharya v.
Gobind Mogre Bandekar were it had been held by
Chagla C.J., that s. 29 (3) justifies an order
granting relief to the tenant and refusing to make
an order for possession in favour of the landlord
even where the tenant has not paid rent for more
than two years. We think that this case was
wrongly decided. Chagla C.J., held that s. 25 did
not confer any substantive right on the landlord
to obtain possession and that s. 29(3) conferred
on the Mamlatdar a discretion to pass any proper
order that he thought fit. We think, for the
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reasons earlier stated, that on both these matters
the learned Chief Justices was in error. We repeat
that under the Act the landlord gets a right to
obtain possession of the demised premises on the
termination of the tenancy under s. 14 and that s.
25 as also s. 29 clearly recognises that right.
We turn now to the remaining appeal, namely
Civil Appeal No. 259 of 1959. The question raised
here is whether for the purposes of s. 25(2) a
tenant
751
is to be considered as having failed to pay rent
for any year in respect of which he had been
granted relief under s. 25(1). The Revenue
Tribunal, following a decision of the High Court
at Bombay in Special Civil Application No. 2073 of
1955, unreported, held that where a landlord made
an application for possession of the demised land
on the failure of the tenant to pay rent for a
year within the time prescribed in s. 14, and the
Mamlatdar granted relief to the tenant under s.
25(1), the default was merged in the order of the
Mamlatdar and could not thereafter be relied upon
for the purposes of s. 25(2). We did not have the
original judgment of the High Court placed before
us and are not aware of the reasons which
persuaded it to the view that it took.
In our opinion, that view is clearly
incorrect, Section 25(2) says that nothing in s.
25-which of course only means sub s. (1) of that
section-shall apply to any tenant whose tenancy is
terminated for non-payment of rent if he has
failed for any three years to pay rent within the
period specified in s. 14. We are unable to
appreciate the contention that when a tenant has
been granted relief under s. 25(1) in respect of
any year’s default, the default merged in the
order granting relief and deceased to be a
default. How can the default for the year merge in
an order? No doubt relief has been given against
the consequence of the default for the year, but
that does not wipe out the default itself; it only
prevents the termination of the tenancy, if any,
consequent thereon, becoming effective. Inspite of
the relief granted under s. 25(1), the tenant
remains a tenant who made default in paying rent
for the year within the period specified in s. 14
and that is the tenant mentioned in s. 25(2). We
find nothing in s. 25(2) to justify the view that
in such a case the year of default cannot be taken
into account in computing the
752
three years there mentioned. It is of some
significance to point out that s. 25(2) does not
require three successive years of default but it
is satisfied where the tenant has been in default
for any three years. If the interpretation put by
the High Court were to be accepted, then a
landlord wishing to recover possession of his land
would have to wait till the tenant has committed
default for three years, for if he took steps
earlier and relief was granted to the tenant, he
would not be able to recover possession after two
more years of default by the tenant. We see no
justification for thinking that the Act intended
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to put so much difficulty in the way of landlords.
We, therefore, come to the conclusion that
these appeals must succeed. We set aside the
orders of the High Court in the cases in which
that Court had been moved and of the Revenue
Tribunal and other authorities under the Bombay
Act refusing to make an order for possession in
favour of the landlords. We direct that the
respondent tenants make over possession of the
lands held by them to their respective landlords.
The appellants will be entitled to costs
throughout.
Appeals allowed.
753