Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
METALWARE & CO. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BANSILAL SHARMA AND ORS. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT04/05/1979
BENCH:
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
BENCH:
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
CITATION:
1979 AIR 1559 1979 SCR (3)1107
1979 SCC (3) 398
CITATOR INFO :
R 1987 SC2117 (26,30)
ACT:
Tamil Nadu Building (Lease & Rent Control) Act, 1960-
Sections 14(1)(b), 14(2)(b), 15 and 16-Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, a proprietary concern, has been a tenant
of a shop in the premises in dispute. The respondent had
purchased the building in 1975 and filed eviction
applications against all the tenants on the ground that (1)
the building being very old and dilapidated required
immediate demolition and reconstruction, (ii) the appellants
bona fide required it for their own occupation, (iii) they
possessed of sufficient means to undertake the demolition
and reconstruction and lastly they obtained from the
Municipal Corporation sanction for reconstruction. The
appellants disputed the above allegations. The Rent
Controller held that the respondent had sufficient means to
undertake the demolition and reconstruction, (ii) the
intention to demolish the existing structure and to
reconstruct another building on the same site was honest but
did not give a definite finding on the question "whether the
building was in a dilapidated condition and required
immediate demolition and reconstruction. The Rent Controller
took the view that it was not always essential to prove that
the building was decrepit before an application for
possession could be made and that the respondent had right
to demolish his property in order to build a new structure
on the site with a view to improve his business. He
therefore, ordered eviction of the appellant. Their appeal
against the decision of the Rent Controller was dismissed.
The appellants filed a civil revision in the High Court
which was also dismissed on the ground that the only thing
to be looked into in such cases is whether the intention to
demolish the building was present, with the future intention
to reconstruct and whether the same is bona fide and all
these were found in favour of the respondent-landlord.
Allowing the appeals,
^
HELD: 1. The phrase used in s. 14(1) (b) of the Act is
"the building is bona fide required by the landlord" for the
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immediate purpose of demolition and reconstruction and the
same clearly refers to the bona fide requirement of the
landlord. The requirement in the terms is not that the
building should need immediate demolition and
reconstruction. The state or condition of the building and
the extent to which it could stand without immediate
demolition and reconstruction in future would not be a
totally irrelevant factor while determining "the bona fide
requirement of the landlord." If the Rent Controller has to
be satisfied about the bona fide requirement of the landlord
which must mean genuineness of his claim in that behalf the
Rent Controller will have to take into account all the
surrounding circumstances including not merely the
1108
factors of the landlord being possessed of sufficient means
or funds to undertake the project and steps taken by him in
that regard but also the existing condition of the building,
its age and situation and possibility or otherwise of its
being put to a more profitable use after reconstruction. All
these factors being relevant must enter the verdict of the
Rent Controller of the question of the bona fide requirement
of the landlord, under s. 14(1) (b). In a sense if tho
building happens to be decrepit or dilapidated it will
readily make for the bona fide requirement of the landlord,
though that by itself in the absence of any means being
possessed by the landlord would not be sufficient.
Conversely a landlord being possessed of sufficient means to
undertake the project of demolition and reconstruction by
itself may not by sufficient to establish his bona fide
requirement if the building happens to be a very recent
construction in a perfectly sound condition and its
situation may prevent its being put to a more profitable use
after reconstruction. In any case these latter factors may
cast a serious doubt on the landlord’s. bona fide
requirement. It is, there were, clear that the age and
condition of the building would certainly be a relevant
factor which will have to be taken into account while
pronouncing upon the bona fide requirement of the landlord
under s. 14(1)(b) of the Act and the same cannot be ignored.
[1114C-H, 1115A-B]
2. The age and existing condition of the building
whether it is a recent construction or very old and whether
it is in a good and sound condition or has become decrepit
or dilapidated-are relevant factors forming part of ’all the
circumstances. that have to be considered while determining
the bona fide requirement of the landlord under s. 14(1)(b)
of the Act and in the totality of the circumstances these
factors may assume lesser or greater significance depending
upon whether in the scheme of the concerned enactment there
is or there is not a provision for reinduction of the
evicted tenant into the new construction. Such a view would
be in accord with the main objective of the benign
legislation enacted with the avowed intention of giving
protection to the tenant. [1115E-F]
3. The existing condition of the building far from
being totally irrelevant a vital factor which will have to
be considered while pronouncing upon the bona Fide
requirement or the landlord under that provision which has
to be done by having regard to "all the circumstances" and
since in the instant case all the courts have totally
ignored this vital factor their conclusion on the question
of bona fide requirement of the landlord deserves to be set
aside. The Court accordingly set aside the said conclusion
of the Courts below and remanded the matter back to the Rent
Controller to dispose of the landlords application in light
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of this judgment. [1120 A-B]
Neta Ram v. Jiwan Lal, [1962] Suppl 2 SCR 623; The
Patiala and East Punjab States Union Urban Rent Restriction
ordinance, (Section 13) 2006 B. K. Mehsin Bhai v. Hale &
Company G. T. Madras (1964) 2 M.L.J. 147 affirmed.
Panchamal Narayan Shenoy v. Basthi Venkatesha Shenoy,
[1970] 3 S.C.R. 734, distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal Nos. 2087-
2088/ 78.
1109
Appeals by Special Leave from the Judgment & order dated 4-
8-1978 of the Madras High Court in Civil Revision Petition
Nos. 1723/78 and 1727/78.
AND
CIVIL APPEAL No. 1301 OF 1978
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and order
dated 4-8-1978 of the Madras High Court in C.R.P.No.
1054/78.
AND
CIVIL APPEAL No. 1381 OF 1978
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment & order dated
19-6-1978 of the Madras High Court in Civil Revision No.
1102/78.
AND
WRIT PETITION No. 4428 OF 1978
Under Article 32 of the Constitution.
S. K. Dhingra for the Appellant in CA No. 1301/78 and
for the Petitioner in W.P. 4428/78.
A. K. Sen and E. C. Agarwala for the Appellant in CA
No. 1381/78 and 2087-2088/78.
K. S. Ramamurthy, P. N. Ramalingam, A. T. M. Sampath
for the Respondents in C. A. 2087-2088/78.
Y. S. Chitale, L. N. Singhvi, J. S. Sinha, K. J. John
and B. Bhandari for RR in CA 1381 /78 and RR in C.A.
1301/78.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
TULZAPURKAR, J.-These appeals preferred by tenants by
special leave raise a common question whether while
considering the bona fide requirement of the building by the
landlord for the immediate purpose of demolition and
reconstruction under s. 14(1) (b) of the Tamilnadu Buildings
(Lease and Rent Control) Act 18 of 1960 (as amended by Act
23 of 1973) (hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’) the
condition of the building is wholly irrelevant factor ?
Since the facts giving rise to the aforesaid question
in all these appeals are almost similar it will suffice if
the facts in C.A. Nos. 20872088/78 are stated. The appellant
Metalware & Co., a proprietary concern has been a tenant of
the premises in dispute, namely, a shop on the ground floor
of door No. 425, Mint Street, George Town, Madras-1 since
1953. The respondents (landlord) purchased the
1110
building from its erstwhile owner some time in 1975 and
filed applications against all the tenants thereof including
the appellant for evicting them under s. 14(1) (b) of the
Act alleging that the building being very old and
dilapidated required immediate demolition and reconstruction
and they bona fide required it for the said purpose for
their occupation. The respondents further alleged that they
were possessed of sufficient means to undertake the
demolition and reconstruction and had applied for and
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obtained from the Municipal Corporation sanctioned plans in
that behalf and after duly terminating the tenancies had
sought vacant possession. The application was resisted by
the appellant on several grounds. Inter alia, the claim of
the landlords that the building was bona fide required by
them for the immediate purpose of demolition and
reconstruction was seriously disputed; in particular it was
emphatically denied that the building was in a dilapidated
condition requiring immediate demolition and reconstruction,
so also the allegation that the respondents had sufficient
means to undertake the demolition and reconstruction.
Admittedly the building was over 70 years old but as regards
the existing condition thereof the landlords were able to
produce merely one Notice (Ex. Pl) received from the
Municipal Corporation requiring them to carry out repairs
specified therein which clearly showed that the building
could not be said to be in any dilapidated condition needing
demolition. The Rent Controller (7th Judge small Causes
Court, Madras) on the evidence led before him by the parties
came to the conclusion that the respondents had sufficient
means to undertake the demolition and reconstruction, had
got their plans approved by the Municipal Corporation and
had an honest intention to demolish the existing structure
and to reconstruct another on that site. On the question
whether the building was in a dilapidated condition and
required immediate demolition and reconstruction no definite
finding one way or the other was given but he took the view
that it was well settled that it was not always essential to
prove that the building was decrepit before an application
for possession could be made under s. 14(1)(b) of the Act
and that the landlord had a right to demolish his property
in order to build a new structure on the site with a view to
improve his business or get better returns out of
investments and that since in the instant case the
respondents had purchased the building for the purpose of
demolition and reconstruction and had obtained the municipal
sanction in that behalf and were found to be possessed of
sufficient means, they satisfied the condition of s.
14(1)(b) of the Act. He, therefore, ordered the eviction of
the III appellant. In the appeal preferred by the appellant
under s. 23 of the Act, the appellate authority (2nd Judge
of Small Causes Court, Madras) confirmed the view of the
Rent Controller that the respondents had
1111
established their bona fide requirement under s. 14(1) (b)
and dismissed the appeal. The appellant preferred a Civil
Revisional Application to the High Court specifically
contending that the decision of the lower authorities on the
question of bona fide requirement was wrong inasmuch as the
factor whether the building itself required demolition and
reconstruction or not had been regarded as irrelevant and
completely ignored. The High Court dismissed the Revisional
Application by observing that "the only thing to be looked
into in such cases is whether the intention to demolish the
building is there and whether such an intention is for the
purpose of demolishing the same with a future intention to
reconstruct and whether it is a bona fide intention; all
these have been found in favour of the landlord." The
appellant has challenged the correctness of the view adopted
by the Rent Controller, the appellate authority and the High
Court before us.
It will be desirable to set out the material provisions
of s. 14 of the Act:
"14. Recovery of possession by landlord for
repairs or for reconstruction...(l) Notwithstanding
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anything contain ed in this Act, but subject to the
provisions of sections 12 and 13, on an application
made by a landlord, the Con troller shall, if he is
satisfied-
(a) that the building is bona fide required by the
landlord for carrying out repairs which cannot be
carried out with out the building being vacated; or
(b) that the building is bona fide required by the
landlord for the immediate purpose of demolishing it and
such demolition is to be made for the purpose of erecting a
new building on the site of the building sought to be
demolished, pass an order directing the tenant to deliver
possession of the building to the landlord before a
specified date.
(2) No order directing the tenant to deliver possession
of the building under this section shall be passed-
(a) on the ground specified in clause (a) of sub-
section (1), unless the landlord gives an undertaking that
the building shall, on completion of the repairs, be offered
to the tenant, who delivered possession in pursuance of an
order under sub-section (I) for his re-occupation before the
expiry of three months from the date of recovery of
possession by the landlord, or before the expiry of such
further period as the Controller may, for reasons to be
recorded in writing, allow; or
1112
(b) on the ground specified in clause (b) of sub-
section (1), unless the landlord gives an undertaking
that the work of demolishing any material portion of
the building shall be substantially commenced by him
not later than one month and shall be completed before
the expiry of three months from the date he recovers
possession of the entire building or before the expiry
of such further period as the Controller may, for
reasons to be recorded in writing allow.
.............................................
.............................................
It may be stated that under s. 15 provision has been made
whereby the tenant has been given the right to reoccupy the
premises from which he has been evicted under s. 14(1 ) (a)
after all the repairs are carried out by the landlord while
s. 16 makes a provision enabling the tenant to reoccupy the
premises from which he has been evicted under s. 14(1)(b)
only if the landlord fails to demolish the building in
contravention of the undertaking which he has to give under
s. 14(2) (b) but it will be significant to note that there
is no provision in the Act whereby the tenant is entitled to
be reinducted in the reconstructed building. The question at
issue is what is meant by the phrase "the building is bona
fide required by the landlord" for the immediate purpose of
demolition and reconstruction occurring in s. 14(1)(b) 7 It
is true that the phrase refers to the bona fide requirement
of the land lord and not that the building, requires
demolition and reconstruction but even so the question is
whether while considering the bona fide requirement of the
landlord for the immediate purpose of demolition and
reconstruction the aspect as to what is the existing
condition of the building, whether it requires demolition
and reconstruction is totally irrelevant or whether the said
aspect forms part of the surrounding circumstances and
should be taken into account while determining the bona fide
requirement of the landlord ?
Counsel for the appellant contended that the words
"bona fide required" occurring in the phrase must be
interpreted to have reference to the condition of the
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building, the demolition of which is sought by the landlord
and those words cannot refer to the honest or bona fide
intention entertained by the landlord to demolish the
building and to reconstruct the same with a view to putting
the property to a more profitable use after reconstruction.
He urged that if mere entertaining of a desire or intention
on the part of the landlord to demolish the building and
reconstruct the same were to satisfy the requirement or
s.14(1)(b) then several tenants could be evicted even from
building
1113
which may be in a very good and sound condition simply
because the A landlord wishes to demolish and reconstruct
the same with a view to render his investment more
profitable. Counsel emphasized the aspect that unlike other
Rent Control enactments, as for instance, the Mysore Rent
Control Act (22 of 1961) or the Bombay Rent Act (57 of 1947)
there was no provision in the Madras Act entitling the
tenant evicted under s. 14(1) (b) to get reinducted into the
reconstructed building. He, therefore, urged that apart from
the landlord’s honest desire or intention to undertake
demolition and reconstruction, the Rent Controller must be
satisfied that the building sought to be demolished is in
such a condition that it requires demolition and
reconstruction before the application under 6.14(1) (b)
could be granted by him. In any case, he urged that the
aspect whether the building needs demolition or not was most
vital and could not be ignored while determining the bona
fide requirement of the landlord under s. 14(1)(b) and since
all the Courts below had pronounced upon the landlord’s bona
fide requirement by totally ignoring the most vital factor
their decision was liable to be set aside. In support of his
contention strong reliance was placed by him on a decision
of this Court in Neta Ram v. Jiwan Lal(l) and a decision of
the Madras High Court in Mehsin Bhai v. Hale and Company, G.
T. Madras(2).
On the other hand, counsel for the respondents
(landlords) contended that both the Rent Controller as well
as the Appellate Authority had recorded certain findings
which were impliedly confirmed by the High Court, namely,
that the building was more than 60 years old, that the
landlords had purchased the building with a view to demolish
it and reconstruct another at the same site for their own
use and occupation, that their intention of demolition and
reconstruction was backed by sufficient funds as well as
sanctioned plans from the Municipal Corporation and above
all no oblique motive had been found in making the
application under s.14(1) (b) and on the basis of these
facts it had been held that their bona fide requirement
under s.14(1) (b) was established which conclusion should
not be disturbed by this Court. He urged the language of
section 14(1)(b) clearly showed that the existing condition
of the building whether it was sound or dilapidated was not
a relevant factor for determining the bona, fide requirement
of the landlord. He pointed out that the Madras High Court
has in several decisions consistently taken the view that
under s.14 ( 1 ) (b) a bona fide desire or intention of the
landlord was essential but not the requirement that the
building
(1) [1962] Suppl.2 S.C.R.623.
(2) (1964)2 M.L.J.147
15-409 SCl/79
1114
should be old and decrepit and that in any case the age and
dilapidated condition of the building was not a sine qua non
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for eviction of the tenant under the said provision.
Reference in this behalf was made to two decisions of the
Madras High Court, one in Mahboob Badsha v. M. Manga Devi
and Anr.(1) and the other in R. P. David & Anr. v. N. Daniel
& ors.(2) and it was pointed out that the view of the
learned Single Judge in Mehsin Bhai’s case (supra) had not
been approved in subsequent decisions of that Court.
Reliance was also placed upon a decision of this Court in
Panchamal Narayan Shenoy v. Basti Venkatesha Shenoy(3) and
certain observations made by this Court in S.M.
Gopalakrishna Chetty v. Ganeshan & ors(4).
As stated earlier it cannot be disputed that the phrase
used in s.14(1) (b) of the Act is "the building is bona fide
required by the landlord" for the immediate purpose of
demolition and reconstruction and the same clearly refers to
the bona fide requirement of the landlord; it is also true
that the requirement in terms is not that the building
should need immediate demolition and reconstruction. But we
fail to appreciate how the state or condition of the
building and the extent to which it could stand without
immediate demolition and reconstruction in future would be a
totally irrelevant factor while determining "the bona fide
requirement of the landlord". If the Rent Controller has to
be satisfied about the bona fide requirement of the landlord
which must mean genuineness of his claim in that behalf the
Rent Controller will have to take into account all the
surrounding circumstances including not merely the factors
of the landlord being possessed of sufficient means or funds
to undertake the project and steps taken by him in that
regard but also the existing condition of the building, its
age and situation and possibility or otherwise of its being
put to a more profitable use after reconstruction All these
factors being relevant must enter the verdict of the Rent
Controller on the question of the bona fide requirement of
the landlord under s.14(1)(b). In a sense if the building
happens to be decrepit or dilapidated it will readily make
for the bona fide requirement of the landlord, though that
by itself in the absence of any means being possessed by the
landlord would not be sufficient. Conversely a landlord
being possessed of sufficient means to undertake the project
of demolition and reconstruction by itself may not be
sufficient to establish his bona fide requirement if the
building happens to be a very recent construction in a
perfectly sound condition
(1) 1965 (2) M.L.J. 209
(2) 1967 (1) M.L.J. 110.
(3) [1970] 3 S.C.R. 734.
(4) [1976] 1 S.C.R. 273.
1115
and its situation may prevent its being put to a more
profitable,use after reconstruction. In any case these
latter factors may cast a serious doubt on the landlords
bona fide requirement. It is, therefore, clear to us that
the age and condition of the building would certainly be a
relevant factor which will have to be taken into account
while pronouncing upon the bona fide requirement of the
landlord under s.14(1)(b) of the Act and the same cannot be
ignored.
We would like to observe that each side has adopted an
extreme stand on the question at issue which is obviously
incorrect. On the one hand counsel for the appellant urged
that the words ’bona fide required" refer to the condition
of the building and not to the honest or bona fide intention
entertained by the landlord to undertake demolition and
reconstruction, suggesting thereby that the condition of the
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building should be a decisive factor while counsel for the
respondent on the other hand contended that that aspect was
totally irrelevant and the bona fide requirement of the
landlord should be determined on the basis of factors such
as the financial capacity of the landlord to undertake the
project and whether he had taken any steps in that behalf
etc. We do not agree that old age and dilapidated condition
of the building is a sine qua non or a decisive factor for
eviction under 6. 14(1)(b) hor is it possible to accept the
view that the said. circumstance is totally irrelevant in
pronouncing upon the bona fide requirement of the landlord.
We are clearly of the view that the age and existing
condition of the building-whether it is a recent
construction or very old and whether it is in a good and
sound condition or has become decrepit or dilapidated-are
relevant factors forming part of all the circumstances’ that
have to be considered while determining the bona fide
requirement of the landlord under s. 14(1) (b) of the Act
and in the totality of the circumstances these factors may
assume lesser or greater significance depending upon;
whether in the scheme of the concerned enactment there is or
there is not a provision for reinduction of the evicted
tenant into the new construction. Such a view would be in
accord with the main objective of the benign legislation
enacted with the avowed intention of giving protection to
the tenant.
Turning to the decided cases cited by counsel on either
side we might mention that our aforesaid view receives
support from them, In Neta Ram’s case (supra) the landlord
had sought eviction of his tenants from a building owned by
him, inter alia, on the ground that the shops occupied by
the tenants were in a state of great disrepair and were
dilapidated and he wishes to rebuild the same after
dismantling the structures. Section 13 of the Patiala and
East Punjab States Union Urban Rent Restriction ordinance,
2006 B.K. provided that a land
1116
lord may apply for eviction "in the case of any building if
he (landlord) requires it for re-erection of that building
or for its replacement by another building or for the
erection of other building." It also provided that the
Controller shall, if he is satisfied that the claim of the
landlord is bona fide, make an order directing the tenant to
put the landlord in possession of the building On the
question of the construction of the provisions of the
Ordinance this Court observed that according to the
provisions it should be established that a claim of the
landlord that he required the building for reconstruction
and re-erection, must be bona fide, that is to say, "honest
in the circumstances," At Pp. 629-630 of the report the
relevant observations run thus
"The Controller has to be satisfied about the
genuineness of the claim. To reach this conclusion,
obviously the Controller must be satisfied about the
reality of the claim made by the landlord, and this can
only be established by looking at all the surrounding
circumstances, such as the condition of the building,
its situation, the possibility of its being put to a
more profitable use after construction, the means of
the landlord and so on. It is not enough that the land
lord comes forward, and says that he entertains a
particular intention, however, strongly, said to be
entertained by him. .............. The very purpose of
the Rent Restriction Acts would be defeated, if the
landlords were to come for ward and to get tenants
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turned out, on the bare plea that they want to
reconstruct the houses, without first establishing that
the plea is bona fide with regard to all the
circumstances, viz., that the houses need
reconstruction or that they have the means to
reconstruct them, etc." (Emphasis supplied).
It is true that in the last sentence of the above
observations this r Court has used the disjunctive "or" when
referring to the condition of the building and the means of
the landlord to reconstruct tho houses but that does not
mean that this Court wanted to suggest that if the landlord
established that he had means to reconstruct the houses the
existing state of the building becomes irrelevant. This is
clear from the fact that this Court has emphasized at two
places in the above observations that the landlord’s plea of
bona fide claim is required to be established by having
regard to "all the surrounding circumstances". The
observations quoted above clearly suggest that amongst the
several circumstances which would go to establish the bona
fide requirement of the landlord the existing condition of
the
1117
building and its situation play an important part.
Incidentally, it may be stated that there was no provision
entitling the evicted tenant to get reinducted in the
reconstructed building in the concerned ordinance. In Mehsin
Bhai’s case (supra) Mr. Justice M. Ananthanarayanan of the
Madras High Court has taken the view that in order to decide
the bona fide of the landlord in an application under s.
14(1) (b) of the Act, the Courts have to apply several
criteria and judge upon the totality of the Acts and that
even though a building may be old still its present
condition may be such as to involve no danger whatsoever of
any breaking up so as to necessitate a decision by the
landlord that it is in his interest to demolish it
immediately; the condition of the building and extent to
which it could stand without immediate demolition and
reconstruction in future are all relevant considerations in
assessing the bona fide of the landlord. His observations,
which meet with our approval, have been put in negative
language. This is what he has observed:
"What the section really requires is that the
landlord must satisfy the Court that the building was
bona Fide required by him, for the immediate purpose of
demolition. I am totally unable to see how the present
state of the building, and the extent to which it could
stand without immediate demolition and reconstruction,
in the future, are not relevant considerations in
assessing the bona fides of the landlord."
The decisions on which reliance was placed by counsel
for the respondents, in our view,. do not go to the extent
of saying that the existing condition of the building is a
totally irrelevant factor. In Panchamal Narayan Shenoy’s
case (supra), a case arising under s.21(1)(;) of the Mysore
Rent Control Act, an extreme contention was urged on behalf
of the tenant that unless the landlord was able to establish
that the condition of the building was such that it
immediately required demolition and reconstruction no tenant
could be ordered to be evicted under the provision, in other
words, the contention was that the words "reasonably and
bona fide required by the landlord" occurring in cl. (j) of
s.21(1) of that Act must be interpreted to have reference to
the condition of the building, the demolition of which was
sought to be made, and that those words had no reference to
any intention entertained by the landlord. Such an extreme
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contention was negatived by this Court. And this Court went
on to observe; "no doubt, whether the landlord’s requirement
is reasonable and bona fide has to be judged in the light of
the surrounding circumstances, which will include his means
for reconstruction of
1118
the building, and other steps taken by him in that regard".
It is true that this Court also observed as follows:
"In our opinion, it is not necessary that the
landlord should go further and establish under this
clause that the condition of the building is such that
it requires immediate demolition."
This observation, in our view, was made by this Court
because of two aspects which emerged from the two other
specific provisions contained in the Mysore Act. First, that
in cl. (k) of 6. 21(1) another ground of eviction had been
provided to a landlord to obtain eviction of his tenant,
namely, that the condition of the property was such as
required immediate demolition and secondly, that under s. 27
of the Act the tenant had been given the right to occupy the
new building on its reconstruction provided he satisfied the
provision contained in that section. In other words, it was
in light of the such scheme of the Act, which contained cl.
(k) of s. 21(1) and s. 27 that this Court made that
particular observation. That particular observation on which
strong reliance was placed by counsel for the respondent
will have to be read in the context of scheme of the Mysore
Rent Control Act. Counsel for the respondent attempted to
argue that purely on question of construction the identical
words occurring in the two Acts should receive the same
construction and it must be held that under s. 14(1) (b) of
the Act it is not necessary for the landlord to establish
that the building is such that it requires immediate
demolition. It is not possible to accept his contention for
the simple reason that though the words employed in two
enactments may be the same or identical their construction
may not be the same and would vary depending upon other
cognate provisions of and the scheme of each enactment.
The next decision relied upon by counsel for the
respondents is S. M. Gopalkrishna Chetty’s case (supra), the
ratio of which is clearly different and does not touch the
issue arising before us in these appeals. ’the question
which arose for determination in that case was whether a
landlord who had a life interest in the property in question
could seek eviction of his tenant for bona fide requirement
of demolition and reconstruction and this Court took the
view that the definition of the word "landlord" under s.
2(6) was wide enough to include the appellant who had a
life-interest in the premises. Counsel however, relied upon
the general observation made by this Court in that case to
the effect "A landlord has every right to demolish his
property in order to build the new structure on the site
with
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a new to improve his business or to get better return on his
investment. Such a step per se cannot be characterised as
mala fide on the part of the landlord. In the first place
these observations were made in the context of the
contention that was strongly urged before the Court that a
person (landlord) having merely a life interest could not be
allowed to demolish the property in order to reconstruct it
as that action would per se be not bona fide for the
purposes of s. 14(1)(b). It was while rejecting this
contention that the aforesaid observation was made by this
Court. Secondly, all that the said observation indicates is
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that in the view of this Court if a landlord were to
exercise his right to demolish his property in order to
build a new structure at the site with a view to improve his
business or lo get better return on his investment such a
step per se could not be regarded as mala fide on the part
of the landlord. This has nothing to do with the question
whether while determining the bona fide requirement of the
landlord under s. 14(1) (b) of the Act, the condition of the
building is or is not a relevant factor. The Madras decision
in Mahboob Badsha’s case (supra) merely takes the view that
the age and the dilapidated condition of the building is not
a sine qua non for eviction under s. 14(1) (b) of the Act.
That is far from saying that it is a totally irrelevant
factor. In fact, in that case the relevancy of this Factor
has in one sense been accepted, for, the Court has observed
that a decrepit building may call for immediate demolition
and without anything more the landlord could be said to have
satisfied the condition of his bona fide requiring the
building for immediate demolition but according to the Court
the terms of s. 14(1)(b) are wide enough to cover cases
where landlord bona fide requires a building for the expanse
of his own business or for legitimate purpose. In David v.
Denial (supra) also the Division Bench of the Madras High
Court has proceeded on the basis that under s. 14(1) (b) of
the Act bona fide desire or intention on the part of the
landlord was essential and that it was not essential
requirement of the provision that the building should be old
and decrepit. But it is the alternative contention of the
counsel for the appellant which we have accepted, namely
that the age and decrepit condition of the building is a
relevant factor amongst several others which will have to be
considered while adjudicating upon the bona fide requirement
of the landlord under that provision and might receive
greater emphasis in a case where the enactment, as is the
case here, contains no provision for reinducting the evicted
tenant into the new building than where the concerned
enactment has such a provision.
Having regard to the above discussion, on the
construction of s. 14(1)(b) of the Act, particularly in the
light of its scheme, we are
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clearly of the view that the existing condition of the
building far from being totally irrelevant is a vital factor
which will have to be considered while pronouncing upon the
bona fide requirement of the land lord under that provision
which has to be done by having regard to "all the
circumstances" and since in the instant case all the Courts
have totally ignored this vital factor to feel that their
conclusion on the question of bona fide requirement of the
landlord deserves to be set aside. We accordingly set aside
the said conclusion of the Courts below and remand the
matter back to the Rent Controller to dispose of the
landlord’s application in light of our judgment.
In Civil Appeal No. 1301 of 1978 and Civil Appeal No.
1381 of 1978 which are by two tenants against the same
landlord and attempt was made by counsel appearing for the
respondent-landlord to show that the tenants in their
written statements had made an admission that the building
which was sought to be demolished was not merely old but in
a dilapidated condition. After going through the written
statements of the tenants in these appeals we are not
satisfied that any such clear admission has been made by the
tenants in their written statements. Further, in these
matters also the Rent Controller, the Appellate Authority as
well as the High Court proceeded on the footing that even if
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it were assumed that the building was not old nor
dilapidated even then the landlord was entitled to an order
of eviction as his honest intention to demolish the building
and to reconstruct the same was backed by sufficient funds
and the steps which he took by applying for sanction of plan
for demolition and reconstruction and, therefore, the
applications of the landlord will have to go back to the
Rent Controller and we accordingly set aside the orders of
the High Court and remand the applications to tho Rent
Controller for disposal according to law in the light of our
judgment.
There will be no order as to costs in all these
appeals.
In view of our judgment in Civil Appeal Nos. 2087-2088,
1301 and 1381 of 1978 the writ petition is allowed to be
withdrawn since the same is not pressed.
N.K.A. Appeals allowed.
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