Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
AMMAL CHANDRA DUTT
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
IIND ADDL. DISST. JUDGE & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT01/11/1988
BENCH:
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
BENCH:
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
PATHAK, R.S. (CJ)
CITATION:
1989 AIR 255 1988 SCR Supl. (3) 722
1989 SCC (1) 1 JT 1988 (4) 291
1988 SCALE (2)1450
ACT:
U. P. Urban Buildings (Regulation of Letting, Rent and
Eviction) Act 1972/U. P. Urban Buildings (Regulation of
Letting, Rent and Eviction) Rules, 1972--Section 21/Rules
18-Release of house on requirement of landlord--Second
application--Whether permissible.
%
Statutory Interpretation: Where situation and context
warrants word ’shall’ has to be construed as ’may’.
HEADNOTE:
In 1967 the second respondent landlord applied to the
Prescribed Authority, under section 3 of the U.P.
(Temporary) Control of Rent and Eviction Act, 1947 for
permission to file a suit for eviction against the
appellant-tenant on the ground of his own requirement
because his brother with whom he was living had asked him to
find accommodation elsewhere. This application was rejected.
After the 1947 Rent Act was replaced by the U.P. Urban
Buildings (Regulation of Letting, Rent and Eviction) Act
1972, the second respondent again sought the permission of
the Prescribed Authority for recovery of possession of the
leased premises either fully or partially, on the ground
that he was living in great hardship in a single room in a
house. The Prescribed Authority refused to grant the
permission on the ground that the application had been made
within a period of six months from the commencement of the
1972 Rent Act and hence it was barred by Rule 18 (1) of the
U.P. Urban Buildings (Regulation of letting, Rent and
Eviction) Rules, 1972. The Appellate Authority, however,
granted permission to the second respondent to recover
possession of the ground floor portion of the house. The
appellant moved a petition in the High Court against the
order of the Appellate Authority but did not succeed.
Before this Court the appellant contends that(l) a
second application on the same ground made within six months
from the commencement of the 1972 Act was barred under Rule
18 (1) of the 1972 Rules; (2) the High Court’s view that it
is not barred because it is the circumstances of requirement
and not the nature of the requirement that would constitute
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PG NO 723
the ground of eviction is erroneous and unsustainable (3)
the Act and the Rules do not permit the creation of two
dwelling units in a building covered by a single tenancy;
(4) the Appellate Authority has erred in rendering a finding
against the appellant in the matter of comparative hardship;
and (5) the Appellate Authority and the High Court have
failed to notice the without the ground floor, the first and
second floors cannot be used as residence because the bath
and toilet rooms are situated only in the ground floor.
Dismissing the appeal, it was,
HELD: (I) All that Rule 18(1) says is that if a second
application is made for release of the house on which
permission to sue was sought for in the previous application
on the same ground within a period of six months from the
date of the final order in that application or within six
months from the commencement of the Act, whichever is later,
’the prescribed authority shall accept the findings in those
proceedings as conclusive." [727E-Fl
(2) Even if the two applications are treated as having
been made on the same ground, the second application would
not attract the operation of Rule 18(1) since the Rule
contains only a formula of presumption based on facts. The
prescription of the rule is only of a directory nature and
not of a mandatory nature [728C]
(3) In the interpretation of statutes, where the
situation and the context warrants, the word "shall" used in
a section or rule has to be construed as "may". The present
context is one such where the words "the prescribed
Authority shall accept the findings in those proceedings as
conclusive" have to be read as "the Prescribed Authority may
accept the findings in those proceedings as conclusive"
because the finding are based upon existence of facts.
[728(,-H]
(4) It will be inequitable and unrealistic to construe
Rule 18(1) as containing an inexorable legal prescription
for rejecting a second application filed within the
prescribed time limit solely on the basis of the findings
rendered in the earlier application. [729F]
(5) The long interval of time between the rejection of
the first application and the date of making the second
application viz., about five years, and the significant
changes that had taken place during the interval in the
living conditions of the second respondent undoubtedly
rendered irrelevant the earlier findings. [730A-B]
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(6) Section 21(1) provides for an order of eviction
being passed against a tenant ’From the building
under tenancy or any specified part thereof." [730C]
(7) It is open to the appellant to move the Prescribed
Authority for directions being given to the second
respondent to make suitable provision in the ground floor
for the appellant and his family members to have access to
and make use of the bath and toilet rooms in the ground
floor. [730G]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1201 of
1976.
From the Judgment and Order dated 3.8.76 of the
Allahabad High Court in Civil Miscellaneous Writ No. 12204
of 1975.
Appellant in person.
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Dileep Tandon and R.B. Mehrotra for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
NATARAJAN, J. This appeal by special leave by a tenant
is directed against the dismissal of Civil Miscellaneous
Writ No 12204 of 1975 by the High Court of Allahabad.
The second respondent became the owner of a house
bearing Municipal No. 140 (old No. 94-A) in Hewett Road,
Allahabad under a gift deed executed in his favour by his
mother in 1945. However even in 1944, his father had leased
the house to the appellant on a monthly rent of Rs.30 which
after some years was raised to Rs.35 The house is a three-
storeyed building and the appellant was residing in the
first and second floors and running a drug store belonging
to his wife in the ground floor. Some years later the second
respondent’s father leased out an adjacent building also to
the appellant for being used for the drug store business.
In 1967 it became necessary for the second respondent to
seek recovery of possession of the house because his elder
brother, with whom he was living, asked him to find
accommodation elsewhere. Therefore the second respondent
applied for permission under Section 3 of the U.P.
(Temporary) Control of Rent and Eviction Act 1947
(hereinafter referred to as the 1947 Rent Act) to the
Prescribed Authority to file a suit for eviction against the
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appellant on the ground of urgent and reasonable requirement
of the house for his own occupation. The Prescribed
Authority rejected the application on November 10, 1967.
After the 1947 Rent Act came to be replaced by the U.P.
Urban Buildings (Regulation of Letting, Rent and Eviction)
Act 1972 (hereinafter the 1972 Rent Act), the second
respondent again sought the permission of the Prescribed
Authority to file a suit against the appellant but this time
he sought for recovery of possession of the leased premises
either fully or partially. He averred in the application
that since his brother had asked him to vacate his house he
had taken up residence in a single room in the house of one
Srivastava and was living there in great hardship and as
such he wanted to recover possession of his house in its
entirety failing which at least a portion of it. The
Prescribed Authority refused to grant permission on the
ground the application had been made within a period of six
months from the commencement of the 1972 Rent Act and hence
it was barred by Rule 18(1) of the U.P. Urban Buildings
(Regulation of Letting, Rent and Eviction) Rules, 1972
(hereinafter the Rules). The Appellate Authority, however,
differed from the Prescribed Authority and granted
permission to the second respondent to recover possession of
the ground floor portion of the house alone. Thereupon the
appellant moved the High Court under Article 226 of the
Constitution for issuance of a writ to quash the order of
the Appellate Authority but did not meet with Success and
hence this appeal by special leave.
A few facts may first be noticed before the appellant’s
contentions are set out and examined. Admittedly, the second
respondent became the owner of the leased premises in the
year 15145 under a gift settlement made by his mother and
except the leased building he has no other house. It is also
an admitted fact that when the first Application for
permission to sue was made, the second respondent was living
with his brother but subsequently he had to move out of that
house and take up residence in a single room in a building
belonging to one Srivastava. A Commissioner appointed by the
Court had inspected the room occupied by the second
respondent and found that the second respondent was faced
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with acute shortage of space and that the bath room and
latrine were situated in the ground floor which was in the
landlord’s occupation. While the prayer in the first
application was for the release Of the entire house, the
prayer in the second application was for release of the
whole house or in the alternative for the release of at
least a portion of the house.
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Coming now to the contention of the appellant, who is a
member of the bar and who appeared in person and argued the
case for himself. they were as follows:
1. The application made under the 1972 Rent Act was a
second application for release of the house on the same
ground of requirement and hence it was barred under Rule
18(1) of the Rules since it had been made within six months
from the commencement of the 1972 Rent Act.
2. The High Court’s view that the second application was
not barred under Rule 18(1) because it is the circumstances
of requirement and not the nature of the requirement that
would constitute the ground of eviction is erroneous and
unsustainable.
3. The Act and the Rules do not permit the creation of
two dwelling units in a building covered by a single tenancy
and hence the grant of permission for partial eviction is
bad in law.
4. The Appellate Authority has erred in rendering a
finding against the appellant in the matter of comparative
hardship merely because the appellant had another building
adjacent to the leased premises for running the drug store.
5. In any event, the Appellate Authority and the High
Court have failed to notice that without the ground floor,
the first and second floors cannot be used as residence
because the bath and toilet rooms are situated only in the
ground floor.
’The learned counsel for the second respondent. besides
refuting the above contentions of the appellant argued that
the appeal itself has become unsustainable because the
appellant has vacated the building in the year 1976 itself
and taken up residence in another house belonging to his
wife and consequently by reason of Explanation (1) to
Section 21 of the 1972 Rent Act, he is disentitled to
dispute the second respondent’s right to recover possession
of the house.
We will now consider the contentions of the appellant in
seriatum In so far as the first contention is concerned, it
suffers from a fallacy in that it is founded upon a
misconstruction of Rule 18 (1) The Rule in question is
worded as under:
18. Avoidance of multiplicity of proceedings (Section
38(4) and 41)--(l) Where an application of a landlord
against any tenant for permission to file a suit for
PG NO 727
eviction under Section 3 of the old Act, on any ground
mentioned in Section 21(1) has been finally allowed or
rejected on merits either before or after the commencement
of the Act, whether by the District Magistrate or on
revision by the Commissioner or the State Government or
under clause (i) or clause (m) of Section 43(2) by the
District Judge, and the landlord instead of filing a suit
for eviction makes an application under Section 21 on the
same ground within a period of six months from such decision
or from the commencement of the Act, whichever is later, the
Prescribed Authority shall accept the findings in those
proceedings conclusive. " (emphasis supplied)
Provided that the period during which the operation of
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any permission as aforesaid is stayed by order ot’ any
court or authority shall be excluded in computing the said
period of six months
(2) ..... omitted.
On a reading of Rule 18(1), it may be seen that the Rule
does not prohibit or bar the filing of an application for
release of any building on any ground mentioned in Section
21( 1) within a period of six months from the date on which
a final order was passed in the previous application made
under Section 3 of the 1947 Rent Act or within a period of
six months from the commencement of the Act. All that the
Rule says is that it a second application is made for
release of the house on which permission to sue was sought
in the previous application on the same ground within a
period of six months from the date of the final order in
that application or within six months from the commencement
of the Act whichever is later," the prescribed authority
shall accept the findings in those proceedings as
conclusive." The Rule only sets out a rule of presumption
to be followed by the Prescribed Authority for dealing with
an application for release on the same ground without a
sufficient interval of time between the filing of the two
petitions The Rule does not mandate that a second
application preferred on the same ground within a period of
six months from the date of the order in the previous
application or from the commencement of the Act must
necessarily be dismissed as barred under the Rules. The
first contention of the appellant is therefore obviously
misconceived and cannot therefore be sustained
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In so far as the second contention is concerned, the
appellant is right when he says that the earlier application
under Section 3 of the 1947 Rent Act and the later
application under Section 21(1) of the 1972 Rent Act should
be construed as having been made on one and the same ground
viz. bona fide requirement of the premises by the second
respondent for his own occupation. The High Court has
however taken the view that the ground of eviction in the
two applications is not the same because different sets of
circumstances would constitute different grounds and such a
test is satisfied in this case. We do not think it necessary
to go into the question whether the High Court’s view is
correct or not because even if we treat the two applications
as having been made on the same ground, the second
application would not attract the operation of Rule 18(1).
Since the Rule contains only a formula of presumption based
on facts, it goes without saying that the prescription is
only of a directory nature and not of a mandatory
nature. In this context we may appositely refer to the
following passage in Phipson on Evidence (Thirteenth
Edition) at pages 4 and 5:
"Presumptions are either of law or fact. Presumptions of
law are arbitrary consequence expressly annexed by law to
particular facts; and may be either conclusive, as that a
child under a certain age is incapable of committing any
crime; or rebuttable, as that a person not heard of for
seven years is dead, or that a bill of exchange has been
given for value.
Presumptions of fact are inferences which the mind
naturally and logically draws from given facts, irrespective
of their legal effect. Not only are they always rebuttable,
but the trier of fact may refuse to mke the usual or natural
inference notwithstanding that there is no rebutting
evidence."
Besides it is a well-known principle that in the
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interpretation of statutes that where the situation and the
context warrants it, the word "shall" used in a Scction or
Rule of a statute has to be construed as "may". The present
context is one such where the words "the Prescribed
Authority shall accept the findings in those proceedings as
conclusive" have to be read as "the Prescribed Authority may
accept the findings in those proceedings as conclusive"
because the findings are based upon existence of facts.
We may now set out the reason as to why the
prescription in Rule 18(1) should be construed as only
PG NO 729
directory and not mandatory In the first place, the Rule
envisages two kinds of situations, one of them where the
second application is made within an interval of six months
from the date on which final orders were passed in the
previous application and the other where the second
application is made beyond an interval of six months, which
may even go up to several years, as in this case where the
interval was over five years, but within six months of the
Act coming into force. Surely, the legislature would not
have intended that the interval factor in the two sets of
situations should be visited with the same consequences by
adopting a rigid and inflexible application of the
prescriptive guideline given in Rule 18(1) . The second
factor is that even if the interval factor is the sole
criterion for the application of the formula contained in
Rule 18(1), the legislature could not have intended that
even where drastic changes had taken place subsequent to the
disposal of the earlier application, the prescribed
authority should shut his eyes to the realities of the
situation and blindly and mechanically apply the formula in
Rule 18(1) and reject the second application. To cite a few
examples it may be that after the disposal of the first
application, the landlord had been rendered houseless due to
the house occupied by him falling down due to decay or heavy
rains or being destroyed by fire Could any one say that
irrespective of the changes that have taken place, the
findings rendered in the previous application would have the
force of relevancy till the period of six months fixed under
the Rule has expired? It is, therefore, manifest that the
rule of presumption enunciated in Rule 18(1) is only to
serve as a guideline to be followed by the prescribed
authority if he finds the circumstances to remain unchanged
and the finding rendered in the earlier application to have
relevancy even with reference to the facts set out in the
second application the Rule intended to avoid multiplicity
of proceeding as the very heading given to the Rule would
make it clear It will therefore be inequitable and
unrealistic to construe Rule 18 (1) as containing an
inexorable legal prescription for rejecting a second
application filed within the prescribed time limit solely on
the basis of the findings rendered in the earlier
application.
In this case we have already referred to the fact that
after the first application was rejected, the living
conditions ot’ the second respodent had changed materially
He had been turned out of his brother’s house and forced to
take up residence in a single room belonging to a third
party and live there in great discomfort and hardship In the
plight in which he was placed, he was even prepared to
accept partial release of the house it’ he could not get
release of the entire premises. The long interval of time
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between the rejection of the first application and the date
of making the second application viz. about five years and
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the significant changes that had taken place during the
interval in the living conditions of the second respondent
undoubtedly rendered irrelevant the earlier findings and
such being the case the rule of presumption given in Rule
18(1) can have no application or relevance to the second
application. Viewed in this manner, we do not think the
Appellate Authority or the High court has committed any
error in granting the relief of partial release of the house
to the respondent Hence the second contention of the
Appellant has also to fail.
So far as the third contention is concerned viz. the
impermissibility of creating two dwelling units in a single
tenanted premises, the argument fails to note that Section
21(1) provides for an order of eviction being passed against
a tenant "from the building under tenancy or any specified
part thereof." (Emphasis supplied). We do not therefore find
any error in the second respondent being granted the relief
of partial eviction.
As regards the fourth contention, it is admitted that
the appellant had been given an additional building by the
second respondent’s father for being used for the drug store
business Since the appellant was using the ground floor in
the suit premises only for running his wife’s drug store and
was not living there in the Appellate Authority cannot be
said to have committed any error in taking the view that in
the matter of comparative hardship the second respondent
would be the more affected person if eviction was not
ordered than the appellant by an order of partial eviction
being passed because he had another building and could
conveniently shift his business to that building.
Coming to the last contention of the appellant viz the
unsuitability of the first and second floors for residential
purpose without the use of the bath and toilet rooms in the
ground floor, it is open to the appellant to move the
Prescribed Authority for directions being given to the
second respondent to make suitable provision in the ground
floor for the appellant and his family members to have
access to and make use of the bath and toilet rooms in the
ground floor.
As regards the contention of the respondent that the
appellant and his wife are now living in a house belonging
to the appellant’s wife and as such the appellant is
precluded under Explanation (i) to Section 21(1) of the 1972
Rent Act from resisting the second respondent’s suit for
eviction, we are unable to make any pronouncement on it
because of lack of evidence in support of that plea and
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besides the appellant would say that the house now occupied
by him and his wife is the subject matter of a litigation
between his wife and her uncle.
In the light of our conclusions, the appeal fails and is
accordingly dismissed. There will, however, be no order as
to costs.
R.S.S. Appeal dismissed.