Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 7
PETITIONER:
HARI SHANKAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RAO GIRDHARI LAL CHOWDHURY
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
05/12/1961
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
KAPUR, J.L.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1963 AIR 698 1962 SCR Supl. (1) 933
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1964 SC 461 (4)
R 1964 SC1305 (20)
R 1964 SC1317 (15,16)
R 1965 SC 553 (2)
R 1969 SC1344 (8,9)
R 1974 SC1059 (6)
RF 1987 SC1782 (14,15)
R 1988 SC1422 (7)
ACT:
Revision Application-Concurrent findings of
the courts below-No provision in statute for
second appeal-High court, if dould re-assess the
value of evidence-Distinction between appeal and
revision-Delhi & Ajmer Reni Contgrol Act, 1952-(38
of 1952), ss. 34, 35 (1).
HEADNOTE:
In an ejectment suit under the Delhi & Ajmer
Rent Control Act, 1952, the trial Judge decreed
the suit and on appeal under s.34 of the Act the
Additional District Judge confirmed
934
the decision. The Act did not provide for a second
appeal, and under s. 35 (1) a revision was filed
against the Order of the Additional District Judge
The single Judge of the Punjab High Court
following a previous decision of the same High
Court, was of opinion that in assessment as all
the evidence was not considered it was competent
for him to reconsider the concurrent findings of
the courts below.
The question is whether the High Court in
exercise of its revisional powers is entitled to
re-assess the value of the evidence and to
substitute its own conclusions of facts in place
of those reached by the courts below.
^
Held, (per Sinha, C. J., Hidayatullah and
shah, JJ, that though s. 35 of the Delhi and Ajmer
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 7
Rent Control Act is worded in general terms, but
it does not create a right to have the case re-
heard.
The distinction between an appeal and
revision is a real one. A right to appeal carries
with it right of re-hearing on law as well as
fact, unless the statute conferring the right to
appeal limits the re-hearing in some way. The
power to hear a revision is generally given to a
superior court so that it may satisfy, itself that
a particular case decided according to law. The
phrase "according to law" in s. 35 of the Act
refers to the decision as a whole, and is not to
be equated to errors of law or of fact
simplicitor. All that the High Court can see is
that these has been no miscarriage of justice and
that the decision is according to law in the sense
mentioned.
per Kapur, J.-The power under s. 35 (1) of
the Act of interference by the High Court, is not
restricted to a proper trial according to law or
error in regard to onus of proof or proper
opportunity of being heard. It is very much wider
than that when in the question of the High Court
the decision is erroneous on a question of law
which affects the merits of the case or decision
is manifestly unjust the High Court is entitled to
interfere.
Bell and Co. Ltd. v. Waman Hemraj (1938) 40
Bom. LR. 125 approved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 94 of 1959.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and
decree dated May 7, 1957, of the Punjab High Court
(Circuit Bench) at Delhi in Civil Revision
Application No. 144-D of 1957.
Bishan Narain R. Mahalingier and B. C. Misra
for the appellants.
935
Gurbachan Singh and Harbans Singh, for the
respondent.
1961. December 5. The Judgment of Sinha,
C.J., Hidayatullah and Shah, JJ., was delivered by
Hidayatullah, J. Kapur, J. delivered a separate
judgment.
HIDAYATULLAH, J.-The appellants (in this
appeal by special leave) are the sons of one Gauri
Shankar, who owned a bungalow known as 5, Haily
Road, New Delhi. This bungalow was given to the
respondent by Gauri Shankar on a monthly rent of
Rs. 234-6-0, excluding taxes. The suit, out of
which this appeal arises, was brought by the
appellants against the respondent, Rao Girdhari
Lal Chowdhury, for his eviction on the ground
(among others) that he had sub-let a portion of
the bungalow after the commencement of the Delhi
and Ajmer Rent Control Act, 1952 (38 of 1952) to
one, Dr. Mohani Jain, without obtaining the
consent in writing of the landlord, as required by
s. 13(1)(b)(i) of the Act. The defence was that
the original contract of tenancy was entered into
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 7
sometime in 1940 and a term in the contract gave
the tenant right to sub-let. It was alleged that a
letter written by the tenant which embodied the
terms of the tenancy was in the possession of the
landlord and a demand was made for its production.
The case of the tenant was that the sub-tenancy
commenced in the year 1951, that is to say, before
the passing of the Act of 1952, and the tenant was
not required to obtain the written consent of the
landlord to sublet Admittedly, in this case, no
written consent was proved. We need not mention
the other allegations and counter-allegations
which are usual in proceedings between landlords
and tenants, the most important of them being
about the arrears of rent, which the tenant under
permission of the Court ultimately deposited in
Court.
936
The issue on which the decisions below have
differed was framed by the Sub-Judge, First Class,
Delhi, in the following terms:
"Did the plaintiff consent to the sub-
letting of parts of the demised premises by
the defendant ? If so, when and to what
effect."
The trial Judge found that there was no
evidence that the landlord was ever consulted
before a portion of the bungalow was sublet to Dr.
Mohani Jain, and further that the sub-tenancy was
created after June 9, 1952, the date on which the
Act came into force. In reaching the latter
conclusion, the trial Judge made a reference to a
dispute between the tenant and Dr. Mohani Jain for
fixation of standard rent before the Rent Control
authorities. In those proceedings, Dr. Mohani Jain
had alleged that she was living as a sub-tenant
from the end of 1951, but the tenant had denied
this fact. The proceedings before the Rent Control
authorities ended in a compromise, but the
admission of the tenant was relied upon to support
the conclusion that the sub-tenancy commenced
after the Act. The trial Judge decreed the suit.
The decision of the trial Judge was confirmed on
appeal by the Additional District Judge, Delhi.
Though Dr. Mohani Jain gave oral evidence in this
case that her sub-tenancy commenced in December
1951, the Additional District Judge found
categorically that the sub-tenancy commenced
sometime after the coming into force of the Act.
He held that even if Dr. Mohani Jain was living
there even from before it was a guest and not as a
sub-tenant.
Against the order of the Additional District
Judge, a revision was filed under s. 35 (1) of the
Act. That section reads as follows:
"The High Court may, at any time, call
for the record of any case under this Act for
the purpose of satisfying itself that a
decision
937
made therein is according to law and may pass
such order in relation thereto as it thinks
fit."
Acting in accordance with a decision of the Punjab
High Court as to the ambit of this section, the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 7
learned single Judge, who heard the revision
application, thought that it was competent for him
to reconsider the concurrent findings about the
time when the sub-tenancy commenced. He held that
Dr. Mohani Jain’s statement showed that the sub-
tenancy commenced prior to the passing of the Act,
and that the landlord’s consent in writing was not
necessary. In reaching this conclusion, the
learned Judge was of opinion that all the evidence
was not considered by the two Courts below, and
that he was entitled, in view of the
interpretation placed upon the section above
quoted, to go into the matter afresh, and decide
the question of fact.
It may be pointed out that while the suit was
pending before the Subordinate Judge, an
application was made for the production of the
letter referred to in the written statement of the
tenant, to which a passing reference has already
been made. A letter was produced, and it is Ex. D-
1. That letter does not disclose all the terms of
the tenancy and it would appear, therefore, that
the terms of the original tenancy have not been
proved in this case, and there is no material on
which it can be said either way as to whether a
right to sublet was conferred upon the tenant. The
defendant did not insist in the Court of first
instance that there was yet another letter, and
the argument to that effect in this Court cannot
be entertained.
In reaching the conclusion that all the
evidence pertinent to the issue was not
considered, the learned Judge of the High Court
stated that Ex.P-19, which was the petition filed
by Dr. Mohani Jain under s. 8 of the Act to get
the standard rent fixed was not taken into account
by the Additional District Judge. That petition
contained an averment
938
that her sub-tenancy commenced on December 1, 1951
with a rent of Rs. 100/-per month, and that a
cheque for Rs. 1,800/- as advance rent for 18
months was given by her in the name of the
daughter of the tenant, because the tenant
represented that he had no account in the bank and
therefore a cheque should be given in the name of
his daughter. This, the learned Judge felt,
adequately supported the statement of Dr. Mohani
Jain to the same effect as a witness in this case.
The learned Judge was in error in thinking that
Ex. P-19 was not taken into account by the
Additional District Judge. The latter had, in
fact, considered Ex. P-19, the petition of Dr.
Mohani Jain, before the Rent Control authorities.
Ex. P-20, the reply of the tenant to that petition
and Ex.P-21, the petition of compromise; but he
cited Exs. P-20 and P-21 only. There is internal
evidence to show that Ex. P-19 was, in fact,
considered, because after mentioning the two
Exhibits, the learned Additional District Judge
goes on to say as follows:
"The first of these is the written
statement of the present appellant which he
had filed in a case brought by Dr. Mohani
Jain against him for the fixation of fair
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 7
rent. There he had completely denied
somewhere in the year 1953 that Dr. Mohani
Jain was his subtenant and could not sue for
fixation of rent. This was enough to show
that right up to the year 1953 the appellant
himself did not regard Dr. Mohani Jain as a
sub-tenant."
This clearly shows that the learned Additional
District Judge was weighing Ex. P-19 as against
Ex. P20 and was acting on Ex. P-20, which
contained a material admission by the tenant
before the present dispute had begun. The learned
single Judge was, therefore, in error in departing
from a concurrent finding of fact on a wrong
supposition.
939
But the question that arises in this appeal
is one deeper than a mere appraisal of the
evidence. It is whether the High Court in the
exercise of its revisional power is entitled to
re-assess the value of the evidence and to
substitute its own conclusions of fact in place of
those reached by the Court below. This question
requires an examination of the powers of revision
conferred on the High Court by s. 35 of the Act.
That question is one of common occurrence in Acts
dealing with some special kinds of rights and
remedies to enforce them. Section 35 is
undoubtedly worded in general terms, but it does
not create right to have the case reheard, as was
supposed by the learned Judge. Section 35 follows
s. 34, where a right of appeal is conferred; but
the second sub-section of that section says that
no second appeal shall lie.
The distinction between an appeal and a
revision is a real one. A right of appeal carries
with it a right of rehearing on law as well as
fact, unless the statute conferring the right of
appeal limits the rehearing in some way as, we
find, has been done is second appeals arising
under the Code of Civil Procedure. The power to
hear a revision is generally given to a superior
Court so that it may satisfy itself that a
particular case has been decided according to law.
Under s. 115 of the Code of Civil Procedure. the
High Court’s power are limited to see whether in a
case decided, there has been an assumption of
jurisdiction where none existed, or a refusal of
jurisdiction where it did, or there has been
material irregularity or illegality in the
exercise of that jurisdiction. The right there is
confined to jurisdiction and jurisdiction alone.
In other acts, the power is not so limited, and
the High Court is enabled to call for the record
of a case to satisfy itself that the decision
therein is according to law and to pass such
orders in relation to the case, as it thinks fit.
The phrase "according to law" refers to the
decision as a whole, and is not to be equated to
940
errors of law or of fact simpliciter. It refers to
the overall decision, which must be according to
law which it would not be, if there is a
miscarriage of justice due to a mistake of law.
The section is thus framed to confer larger powers
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 7
than the power to correct error of jurisdiction to
which s. 115 is limited. But it must not be
overlooked that the section in spite of its
apparent width of language where it confers a
power on the High Court to pass such order as the
High Court might think fit-is controlled by the
opening words, where it says that the High Court
may send for the record of the case to satisfy
itself that the decision is "according to law". It
stands to reason that if it was considered
necessary that there should be a rehearing, a
right of appeal would be a more appropriate
remedy, but the Act says that there is to be no
further appeal.
The section we are dealing with, is almost
the same as s. 25 of the Provincial Small Cause
Courts Act. That section has been considered by
the High Courts in numerous cases and diverse
interpretations have been given. The powers that
it is said to confer would make a broad spectrum
commencing, at one end, with the view that only
substantial errors of law can be corrected under
it, and ending, at the other with a power of
interference a little better than what an appeal
gives. It is useless to discuss those cases in
some of which the observations were probably made
under compulsion of certain unusual facts. It is
sufficient to say that we consider that the most
accurate exposition of the meaning of such
sections is that of Beaumont, C.J. (as he then
was) in Bell & Co. Ltd. v. Waman Hemraj (1) where
the learned Chief Justice, dealing with s. 25 of
the Provincial Small Cause Courts Act, observed:
"The object of s. 25 is to enable the
High Court to see that there has been no
miscarriage of justice, that the decision was
given according to law. The section does not
enumerate
941
the cases in which the Court may interfere in
revision, as does s.115 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, and I certainly do not propose to
attempt an exhaustive definition of the
circumstances which may justify such
interference; but instances which readily
occur to the mind are cases in which the
Court which made the order had no
jurisdiction or in which the Court has based
its decision on evidence which should not
have been admitted, or cases where the
unsuccessful party has not been given a
proper opportunity of being heard, or the
burden of proof has been placed on the wrong
shoulders. Wherever the court comes to the
conclusion that the unsuccessful party has
not had a proper trial according to law, then
the Court can interfere. But, in my opinion,
the Court ought not to interfere merely
because it thinks that possibly the Judge who
heard the case may have arrived at a
conclusion which the High Court would not
have arrived at."
This observation has our full concurrence.
What the learned Chief Justice has said
applies to s. 35 of the Act, with which we are
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 7
concerned. Judged from this point of view, the
learned single Judge was not justified in
interfering with a plan finding of fact and more
so, because he himself proceeded on a wrong
assumption.
The appeal thus succeeds, and is allowed with
costs. The order under appeal is set aside, and
that of the Additional District Judge restored. As
regards eviction, the respondent has given an
undertaking that he would vacate the house on or
before April 25, 1962, and this has been accepted
by the appellants.
KAPUR J.-I agree that the appeal should be
allowed and that the High Court was in error in
interfering with the finding of fact, but in my
942
opinion the power of revision under s. 35(1) of
the Delhi & Ajmer Rent Control Act is not so
restricted as was held by Beaumont, C. J., in Bell
& Co. Ltd. v. Waman Hemraj(1), a case under s. 25
of the Provincial Small Cause Courts Act. The
section provides that the order passed should be
in accordance with law and if it does not then the
High Court can pass such order as it thinks fit.
The language used in s. 35(1) of the Act is almost
identical with the words of the proviso to s.75(1)
of the Provincial Insolvency Act. The power under
that proviso has been thus commented upon by Mulla
in his Law of Insolvency at page 787 of 2nd
Edition:
"The power given to the High Court by
this proviso is very wide. In the exercise of
this power the High Court may set aside any
order if it is not ‘according to law’."
The power under the Insolvency Act has not, by the
Courts in India, been considered to be do
restricted as the observations of Beaumont, C. J.
in Bell & Co. Ltd. v. Waman Hemraj(1) seem to
suggest in regard to s. 25 of the Small Cause
Courts Act. This power of interference by the High
Court is not, in my opinion, restricted to proper
trial according to law or error in regard to onus
of proof or proper opportunity of being heard. It
is very much wider than that. When, in the opinion
of the High Court, the decision is erroneous on a
question of law which affects the merits of the
case or decision is manifestly unjust the High
Court is entitled to interfere. The error may not
necessarily be as to the interpretation of a
provision of law, it may be in regard to evidence
on the record. Thus when material evidence on the
record is ignored or a finding is such that on the
evidence taken as a whole no tribunal could, as a
matter of legitimate inference arrive at. It is
neither possible nor desirable to enumerate all
943
cases which would fall within the jurisdiction of
the High Court under s. 35(1) of the Act but it is
not to be narrowly interpreted nor to be so widely
interpreted as to convert the revision into an
appeal on facts.
Appeal allowed.