Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
K.A. RAMESH & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SMT. SUSHEELA BAI & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 13/02/1998
BENCH:
S.B. MAJMUDAR, S.P. KURKUKAR
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
THE 13TH DAY OF FEBRUARY, 1996
Present:
Hon’ble Mr. Justice S.B. Majmudar
Hon’ble Mr. Justice S.P. Kurdukar
Mr. K. Ramakrishna Reddy, Sr.Advocate, Mr. P.S. Narasimha
and Mr. V.G. Pragasam, Advocate with him for the appellants.
Mr. Subodh Markandaya, Mr. Ashok Kumar Sharma, Mr. Alok
Singh and Mrs. Chitra Markandaya, Advocated for the
respondents.
O R D E R
The following Order of the Court was delivered:
Leave granted.
With the consent of learned counsel for the parties the
appeal was finally heard today and is being disposed of by
this order.
The appellants are the tenants in the premises situated
at Secunderabad in Andhra Pradesh. Provisions of A.P.
Building (Lease, Rent & Eviction) Control Act, 1960 [‘the
Act’ for short] govern the relationship between the
appellants tenants and the respondent-landlords.
The short question is whether the appellant-tenants
were whiling defaulters in payment of rent on which ground
the decree for possession has been passed by the courts
below under Section 10 of the Act. The arrears of rent were
from July 1988 to December 1988. The appellants sent a
telegram dated 17th December 1988 to the respondent-
landlords calling upon them to issue receipts for the rent
which they had already paid apprehending that the respondent
ma make out a case for default in payment of rent for these
relevant months. The landlords responded by giving reply
dated 19th December 1988 stating that the rent was not paid
and it was not correct to say that the receipts were not
issued despite payment of rent for the relevant months.
Under these circumstances the appellant sent a bank draft
for the entire arrears on 02nd February 1989. Presumably
having knowledge that the bank draft was being sent to them,
the respondents filed an Eviction Petition on 06th February
1989 and it appear that on the next date the bank draft
reached them. They got it encased. On the ground that the
appellants had committed willful default in payment of rent
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for the relevant months the eviction proceedings were
prosecuted by the respondents before the authority. These
eviction proceedings were under sub-section (2) (i) of
Section 10 of the Act. The said provision reads as under:
"10. Eviction of tenants:-
(1)................
(2) A landlord who seeks to evict his tenant shall
apply to the Controller for a direction in that behalf.
If the Controller, after giving the tenant a reasonable
opportunity of showing cause against the application,
is satisfied.
(i) that the tenant nor paid or tendered the rent due
by him in respect of the building within fifteen days
after the expiry of the time fixed in the agreement of
tenancy with his landlord or in the absence of any such
agreement, by the last day of the month next following
that for which the rent is payable; or
(ii)...............
(iii)..............
(iv)...............
(v)................
(vi)...............
The Controller shall make an order direction the tenant
to put the landlord in possession of the building and if the
Controller is not so satisfied, he shall make an order
rejecting the application:............
There is a proviso to the said Section which reads as
under:
"Provided that in any case falling
under clause (i), if the Controller
is satisfied that the tenant’s
default to pay or tender the rent
was not willful, he may,
notwithstanding anything in Section
11, give the tenant a reasonable
time, not exceeding fifteen days,
to pay or tender the rent due by
him to the landlord up to the date
of such payment or tender and so
such payment or tender, the
application shall be rejected."
It is obvious that if the evidence led before the
Controller shows that the tenant had not committed willful
default in payment of rent during the relevant time for
which grievance is made in the Eviction Petition moved by
the landlord, then despite what is stated in Section 11 a
reasonable time has to be given to the tenant to pay up the
amount. On the facts of the present case, we fail to
appreciate how it could be said that the said proviso was
not attracted. it has to be seen that even months before the
filing of the Eviction Petition the tenants had made a
grievance by sending a telegram to the respondents on 17th
December 1988 that though the rent was paid for those months
receipts were not issued. Even theat apart, by sending a
bank draft on 02nd February 1989 when there was no
litigation between the parties, full payment of arrears was
tendered. That was accepted and realised pending the
eviction proceedings. The clearly shows that there was no
default at all much less willful default on the part of the
tenant in paying the rent for the months from July 1988 to
December 1988. Consequently, the eviction proceedings were
not required to be proceeded any further as the aforesaid
proviso shows that even if the rent was not paid, there was
a locus penintentiae with the appellant-tenants to get
reasonable time not exceeding fifteen days for paying up the
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arrears by showing that default was not willful and if
during the time granted by the court the default was made
good, the application for possession, in that eventually,
has to be rejected. In the present case as the bank draft
dated 02nd February 1989 for the entire arrears sent prior
to the filing of the proceedings, was already got encased by
the respondent-landlords, the proviso got clearly complied
with and there remained no occasion for the Controller to
again ask the appellant to pay the very same amount twice
over. Therefore, the application was required to be
summarily rejected. However, it was proceeded further and
resulted in eviction order which was challenged in appeal
unsuccessfully and further before the High Court in
revision, that too unsuccessfully and that is how the
appellants are before us.
Once the aforesaid conclusion is reached, on the facts
of this case, it must be held that the eviction proceedings
are liable to be dismissed. However, learned counseled for
the respondents vehemently contended that even pending these
proceedings there was default on the part of the tenants as
they had not paid rent during the pendency of these
proceedings. He heavily relied on sub-section (1) and (2) of
Section 11 of the Act, which read as under:
"11. Payment or deposit of rent
during the pendency of proceedings
of eviction :- (1) No tenant
against whom an application for
eviction has been made by a
landlord under Section 10, shall be
entitled to contest the application
before the Controller under that
Section or to prefer any appeal
under Section 20 against any order
made by the Controller on the
application, unless he had paid to
the landlord or deposits with the
Controller, or the appellate
authority, as the case many be, all
arrears of rent due in respect of
the building up to the date of
payment or deposit and continues to
pay or deposit any rent which may
subsequently become due in respect
of the building, until the
termination of the proceedings
before the Controller or the
appellate authority, as the case
may be.
(2) The deposit of rent under sub-
section (1) shall be made within
the time and in the manner
prescribed."
He submitted that under these circumstances a statutory
right arose to the respondents to get all further
proceedings stopped and for a direction to the appellant
tenants to put the respondent landlords in possession of the
building. In support of this contention, reliance was placed
on sub-section (4) of Section 11 which reads as under:
"11(4). If any tenant fails to pay
or to deposit the rent as
aforesaid, the Controller or the
appellate authority, s the case may
be, shall, unless the tenant shows
sufficient cause to the contrary,
stop all further proceedings and
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make an order directing the tenant
to put the landlord in possession
of the building."
We fail to appreciate how this contention can be
pressed into service on the peculiar facts of this case. As
we have seen earlier, the eviction proceedings have
themselves become infructuous once the bank draft dated 02nd
February 1989 for the full amount of arrears was already got
encashed by the respondents. That apart, even if there was
any default pending such proceedings, it was open to the
respondents to enforce the statutory right available to them
under Section 11(1) read with Section 11(4) of the Act for
getting all further proceedings stopped before the Rent
Controller and for asking immediate, decree for possession,
and/or in appeal of the appellant-tenants to request the
appellate court to dismiss the appeal and put the
respondent-landlords forthwith in possession on account of
such default. Nothing of this sort was done by the
respondents, If they had tried to enforce this night, the
appellants would have got an opportunity to show to the
Trial Court or the Appellate Court, as the case may be that
there was sufficient cause for not passing such an order
under Section 11(4) of the Act. That opportunity never
became available to the appellants as the respondents did
not invoke this provision. It can, therefore, easily be said
that the respondents waived this night available to them
under the Statute presumably because they themselves were
satisfied on getting full payment of arrears of rent by
encashing the bank draft dated 02nd February 1989,
Consequently, even this contention cannot be on any
assistance to the respondents.
In the result, this appeal is allowed. The order passed
by the Rent Controller and as confirmed by the appellate
authority as well as by the High Court is set aside and the
eviction proceedings are dismisses with no order as to costs
all throughout.