Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DULI CHAND (DEAD) BY L.RS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
JAGMENDER DASS
DATE OF JUDGMENT08/12/1989
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V. (J) II
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V. (J) II
SHARMA, L.M. (J)
CITATION:
1989 SCR Supl. (2) 465 1990 SCC (1) 169
JT 1989 Supl. 389 1989 SCALE (2)1331
ACT:
Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958---Section 14(1)(b)--"Con-
sent in Writing"--Interpretation of--Sub-letting--Written
consent--Necessity for--Mere Permission or acquiescence
would not do.
HEADNOTE:
The Respondent--landlord filed a petition under section
14(1)(b) of the Delhi Rent Control Act 1958 for an order of
eviction of the appellant tenant from a shop situate at G.T.
Road, Delhi on the ground that the tenant Duli Chand had
sub-let or parted with the possession of the said shop after
the 9th of June 1952 to M/s Hira Lal Sri Bhagwan illegally
and without the written consent of respondent landlord. The
contention of the appellant--tenant was that he had not
sub-let or parted with the possession of the shop in ques-
tion. According to him Hiralal was his relative who died
sometime prior to 1958 and that Sri Bhagwan was his son and
the name of the business as M/s Hiralal Sri Bhagwan & Compa-
ny was given in memory of the deceased Hira Lal. In reply,
the Landlord--respondent had contended that it was true that
Sri Bhagwan was the natural son of Duli Chand but since he
had given him in adoption to Hiralal, he had gone out of the
family of the appellant and as such it was a clear case of
sub-letting and parting with the possession of the rented
premises.
The Rent Controller, held that the land-lord had failed
to prove parting with possession of the tenanted shop. On
appeal by the landlord, the Rent Control Tribunal held that
the tenant had parted with the legal possession of the
premises and in that view ordered the eviction of the appel-
lant-tenant under section 14( 1 )(b) of the Act. Thereupon
the appellant-tenant preferred second appeal before the High
Court. The High Court having affirmed the finding of the
Tribunal that the appellant-tenant had parted with the
possession of the premises in dispute, dismissed the appeal.
Hence this appeal by the tenant.
Dismissing the appeal, this Court,
HELD: Section 14(1)(b) requires a "Consent in Writing"
of the landlord in order to avoid an eviction on the ground
of sub-letting,
466
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assigning or otherwise parting with the possession of the
whole or any part of the premises. [472B]
Mere permission or acquiescence will not do. The consent
shah also be to the specific sub-letting or parting with
possession. The requirement of consent to be in writing was
to serve a public purpose i.e., to avoid dispute as to
whether there was consent or not. [473C]
If the words were "without consent of the landlord" it
might mean without consent, express or implied and in that
sense question of waiver may arise. The question of implied
consent will not arise, if the consent is to be in writing.
[473E]
In the instant case, though there is some evidence to
show that the sign board M/s Hira Lal Sri Bhagwan was seen
in the premises since 1972 and the landlord had seen Shri
Bhagwan sitting in the shop since the year 1968, there is no
positive evidence to show when the landlord had come to know
of Sri Bhagwan getting the exclusive possession and doing
business in the premises. [471G]
Jagan Nath (deceased) through L. Rs. v. Chander Bhan & Ors.,
[1988] 3 SCC 57; Lakshman Singh Kothari v. Smt. Rup Kanwar,
[1962] SCR 477; Bai Hira Devi & Ors. v. The Official Assign-
ee of Bombay, [1958] 1 SCR 1384; Associated Hotels of India
Ltd., Delhi v. S.B. Sardar Ranjit Singh, [1968] 2 SCR 548
and M/s Shalimar Tar Products L,d. v. H.C. Sharma & Ors.,
[1988] 1 SCC 70, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1810 of
1982.
From the Judgment and Order dated 30.3.1982 of the Delhi
High Court in S.A.O. No. 204 of 1980.
Ram Panjwani and Vijay Panjwani for the Appellant.
Avadh Behari Rohtagi and P.N. Gupta for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
V. RAMASWAMI, J. The tenant is the appellant. The re-
spondent-landlord filed a petition under section 14(1)(b) of
the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 (hereinafter referred to as
’the Act’) for an order of eviction of the appellant-tenant
for a shop bearing No. 361 (Old No.
467
25-A) Azadpur, G.T. Road, Delhi, on the ground that the
tenant-Duli Chand has sub:let or parted with the possession
of the said shop after 9th day of June, 1952 to M/s Hira Lal
Sri Bhagwan illegally and without the written consent of the
landlord. The main contention of the tenant was that there
was no sub-letting or parting with the possession of the
shop, that Hira Lal was a relative of the tenant who died
some time prior to 1958, that Sri Bhagwan is the son of the
tenant, and that the name of the business was given as M/s
Hira Lal Sri Bhagwan in memory of the deceased relative Hira
Lal. He further pleaded that the possession of the shop is
with the tenant. Some other defences like the Respondent-
petitioner was not a landlord, that he had no locus standi
to file the petition for eviction, and that the notice of
termination of tenancy was not valid, were taken in the
written statement and they were overruled and do not survive
for consideration in this appeal. On the main contention,
the tenant has taken up the defence that Sri Bhagwan is the
son of the respondent and the name of the business M/s Hira
Lal Sri Bhagwan is given only in memory of the deceased
relative Hira Lal. A reply statement was filed by the land-
lord to the effect that though Sri Bhagwan was the natural
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son of the tenant-Duli Chand, he had been given in adoption
to Hira Lal, that on such adoption Sri Bhagwan had gone out
of the family of the respondent and that it was a clear case
of sub-letting or parting with the possession of the shop.
On the facts and circumstances of the case, the question
of subletting did not arise but the case was considered on
the dispute whether the tenant had parted with possession of
the shop. The tenant never pleaded that he had obtained any
written consent from the landlord for parting with posses-
sion. The only question, therefore, for consideration in
this case is as to whether the tenant had parted with pos-
session of the whole or part of the tenanted premises. The
learned Rent Controller held that the landlord had not
proved parting with possession of the tenanted shop by the
tenant. On appeal by the landlord the Rent Control Tribunal
held that the tenant had parted with the legal possession of
the tenanted premises and in that view ordered the eviction
of the tenant under section 14(1)(b) of the Act. The second
appeal filed by the tenant to the High Court was dismissed
confirming the finding of the Rent Control Tribunal that the
tenant had parted with possession of the tenanted shop.
Section 14(1)(b) of the Act provides that the Rent
Controller may on an application made to him in the pre-
scribed manner make an order for recovery of possession of
the premises on the ground--
468
"(b) that the tenant has, on or after the 9th
day of June, 1952, sub-let, assigned or other-
wise parted with the possession of the whole
or any part of the premises without obtaining
the consent in writing of the landlord."
The parametric content and the meaning of the words "parted
with possession of the whole or any part of the premises"
had come up for consideration in a quite number of cases
including some of the decisions of this Court. It is enough
if we refer to the latest judgment of this Court on this
point. In Jagan Nath (deceased) through L.Rs. v. Chander
Bhan and Others, [1988] 3 SCC 57, Mukharji, J. speaking for
the Court held that:
"parting with possession meant giving posses-
sion to persons other than those to whom
possession had been given by the lease and the
parting with possession must have been by the
tenant; user by other person is not parting
with possession so long as the tenant retains
the legal possession himself, or in other
words there must be vesting of possession by
the tenant in another person by divesting
himself not only of physical possession but
also of the fight to possession. So long as
the tenant retains the fight to possession
there is no parting with possession in terms
of clause (b) of section 14(1) of the Act."
The facts in this case as found by the Rent Control
Tribunal which was accepted by the High Court are that the
concern M/s Hira Lal Sri Bhagwan is the sole proprietary
concern of Sri Bhagwan, that Sri Bhagwan has been carrying
on that business in the premises in dispute, that Duli
Chand-tenant had no interest in the business, that Sri
Bhagwan is in exclusive possession of the property, that
tenant Duli Chand works at another Shop, M/s Aggarwal Hard-
ware and Mills Stores with his younger son, that there was
no plea of concurrent user of the premises by the tenant nor
there is any plea that Sri Bhagwan is a licensee, that
occasionally the tenant-Duli Chand was seen sitting in the
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shop and that the tenant had not retained any control over
the same. These facts clearly support the finding of Appel-
late Tribunal and High Court that the tenant had parted with
legal possession of the shop to the said Sri Bhagwan.
The learned counsel for the appellant, however, contend-
ed that Sri Bhagwan was not the adopted son of Hira Lal and
that by permitting the son to carry on business it could not
be stated that he had
469
parted with the legal possession of the premises. In this
connection, he drew our attention to the decision of this
Court in Lakshman Singh Kothari v. Smt. Rup Kanwar, [1962] 1
SCR 477 wherein this Court had held that in order that an
adoption may be valid under Hindu Law there must be a formal
ceremony of giving and taking by the natural parent and the
adopted parent after exercising their volition to give and
take the boy in adoption and that such an evidence of a
valid adoption is not available in this case. The Appellate
Tribunal and the High Court have dealt with the evidence
available in this case in detail and came to the conclusion
that Sri Bhagwan was adopted by Hira Lal. It is not neces-
sary for us to rely on the evidence available or the find-
ings as proof of a valid adoption under Hindu Law but the
evidence and the findings are enough to show that though
Duli Chand and Sri Bhagwan are father and natural son, it is
not possible to invoke any presumption that they constituted
a Joint Hindu Family. It may also be mentioned that in the
written statement the tenant had not pleaded specifically
that he and Sri Bhagwan, constituted a Hindu Joint Family,
that they are in joint possession, that either the business
is joint family business or Sri Bhagwan was permitted to use
the premises for carrying on any business as licensee re-
maining in joint possession. The evidence on adoption is
thus to be treated only relevant for the purpose of consid-
ering the question whether the tenant has not retained any
control over the premises and that he has parted with the
possession, and we do not think that the Courts below erred
in relying on the same for this
purpose.
At this stage we may dispose of another point raised by
the learned counsel in connection with the admissibility of
certain evidence in this case. In support of the case of the
landlord that Sri Bhagwan was adopted by Hira Lal he exam-
ined three witnesses, AW 2, AW 3, and AW 4. The first wit-
ness was an Inspector of House Tax According to this witness
in the House Tax assessment register Sri Bhagwan was shown
as the son of Hira Lal and residing at 26 Sarai Peepal
Thalla, which was the residence of Hira Lal and not that of
tenant-Duli Chand. The next witness was an Upper Division
Clerk of the Excise Department. His evidence was to the
effect that in the licence issued under the Central Excise
Act the father’s name of Sri Bhagwan was shown as Hira Lal.
The other witness was Upper Division Clerk in the Sales Tax
Department and his evidence was that Sri Bhagwan was an
assessee of the Department and as per the records in his
office the father’s name of Sri Bhagwan was Hira Lal. The
learned counsel contended that these evidences were inadmis-
sible under Section 91 of the Evidence Act. Section 91 of
the Evidence Act provides
470
that when the terms of a contract, or of a grant, or of any
other disposition of property, have been reduced to the form
of a document, and in all cases in which any matter is
required by law to be reduced to the form of a document, no
evidence shall be given in proof of the terms of such con-
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tract, grant or other disposition of property except the
document itself or secondary evidence of its contents in
cases in which secondary evidence is admissible under the
provisions of Evidence Act. This Court has considered the
scope of section 91 in Bai Hira Devi and Others v. The
Official Assignee of Bombay, [1958] 1 SCR 1384 it was held
therein:
"The normal rule is that the contents of a
document must be proved by primary evidence
which is the document itself in original.
Section 91 is based on which is sometimes de-
scribed as the "best evidence rule". The best
evidence about the contents of a document is
the document itself and it is the production
of the document that is required by section 91
in proof of its contents. In a sense, the rule
enunciated by section 91 can be said to be an
exclusive rule inasmuch as it excludes the
admission of oral evidence for proving the
contents of the document except in cases where
secondary evidence is allowed to be led under
the relevant provisions of the Evidence Act."
The evidence in this case is not with reference to the
terms of contract or grant or any other disposition of
property which has been reduced to the form of a document or
a case in which the matter is required by law to be reduced
in the form of a document but the evidence is to the effect
that Sri Bhagwan has given his father’s name as Hira Lal
while claiming ownership to the House No. 26, Sarai Peepal
Thalla to the Municipality and similarly the evidence of the
other witnesses were that while applying for a licence he
had given his name as son of Hira Lal. The evidence may be
worth nothing without production of the extracts from the
property register or the other books maintained by the
departments. However, that does not make the evidence itself
inadmissible.
The learned counsel for the appellant then contended
that Sri Bhagwan had been carrying on business right from
1958 to the knowledge of the landlord and that therefore,
the landlord shall be deemed to have waived his right to get
order of eviction on the ground of parting with the posses-
sion under section 14(1)(b) of the Act. In this connection,
the learned counsel for the appellant relied on the
471
evidence of the landlord and some of his witnesses. The
landlord in his evidence as AW 1 has stated that Sri Bhag-
wan has been to his knowledge sitting at the shop since the
year 1968 that he has seen the board of M/s Hira Lal Sri
Bhagwan since 1972, and that he was residing in the same
building behind the shop in dispute. AW 5 who is the Uncle
of the landlord who came to depose on behalf of the landlord
in his evidence had stated that the firm M/s Hira Lal Sri
Bhagwan is doing the business in premises since 1960-61. The
tenant in his evidence has stated that the firm M/s Hira Lal
Sri Bhagwan is functioning in the disputed premises for the
last 18 years. The Rent Controller found that Shri Bhagwan
was doing business in the said premises since 1962, i.e.,
after the death of Hira Lal. On the basis of this evidence
the learned counsel contended that the landlord was aware
that Shri Bhagwan was carrying on business for at least 16
years prior to the filing of the petition for eviction and
in the circumstance he shall be deemed to have waived his
claim for eviction under section 14(1)(b). The learned
counsel for the landlord, however, contended that the land-
lord had not received the rent after he came to know of the
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parting with the possession by the tenant that he was col-
lecting rent till about 1972 only from the tenant-Duli
Chand, that the tenant defaulted in payment of the rent
subsequent to 1972, and the petition for eviction was filed
thereafter in 1976 and in such circumstances there could be
no question of waiving of his right with knowledge of part-
ing with possession by tenant could arise in this case. He
also contended legally no such waiver could be pleaded on
the language used in section 14(1)(b) of the Act.
In Associated Hotels of India Ltd. Delhi v. S.B. Sardar
Ranjit Singh, [1968] 2 SCR 548 this Court held that, a
waiver is an intentional relinquishment of a known right.
There can be no waiver unless the person against whom the
waiver is claimed had full knowledge of his right and of
facts enabling him to take effectual action for the enforce-
ment of such right.
In the present case, though there is some evidence to
show that the sign board M/s Hira Lal Sri Bhagwan was seen
in the premises since 1972 and the landlord had seen Sri
Bhagwan sitting in the shop since the year 1968, there is no
positive evidence to show when the landlord had came to know
of Sri Bhagwan getting the exclusive possession and doing
business in the premises. In fact, since the question of
waiver has not been raised in this form in the courts below
there is no definite finding as to when the landlord came to
know of such parting with possession and Sri Bhagwan doing
business in the pre-
472
mises as the sole proprietor of M/s Hira Lal Sri Bhagwan and
whether he had received rent after such knowledge. We can-
not, therefore, permit this point to be raised for the first
time in this Court nor can we go into this question of fact.
That apart section 14(1)(b) requires a "consent in writing"
of the landlord in order to avoid an eviction on the ground
of sub-letting, assigning or otherwise parting with the
possession of the whole or any part of the premises. This
Court considering the need for obtaining a consent in writ-
ing under the provision, in M/s. Shalimar Tar Products Ltd.
v.H.C. Sharma and Others, [1988] 1 SCC 70 quoted with ap-
proval the following passage from the judgment of the High
Court in Delhi Vanaspati Syndicate v. M/s. Bhagwan Dass,
Faquir Chand:
"Section 16 of the Act of 1958 holds the key
to the interpretation of provisions of clause
(b) of sub-section (1) of section 14 of this
Act as well as of clause (b) of sub-section
(1) of section 13 of the Act of 1952. It deals
with restrictions on sub-letting. Sub-section
(1) of section 16 makes sub-letting lawful
though it was without the consent of the
landlord provided that the sub-letting has
taken place before June 9, 1952 and the sub-
tenant is in occupation of the premises at the
time when the Act of 1958 came into force.
Sub-section (2) of section 16 reiterates the
provisions of clause (b) of sub-section (1) of
section 13 of the Act of 1952 and lays down
that the sub-letting after June 9, 1952 with-
out obtaining the consent in writing of the
landlord shall not be deemed to be lawful. It
does not say that the requisite consent should
be obtained before sub-letting the premises
and the consent obtained after sub-letting
will not enure for the benefit of the tenant.
However, sub-section (3) of Section 16 prohib-
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its subletting of the premises after commence-
ment of Act of 1958 without the ’previous’
consent in writing of the landlord. The use of
the word ’previous’ in this sub-section shows
that where it was the intention of the legis-
lature that the consent in writing should be
obtained before sub-letting it said so specif-
ically. The absence of the word ’previous’ in
sub-section (2) shows that it was not
the intention of the legislature that the
consent in writing could be obtained before
sub-letting. Before the Act of 1952 a tenant
could successfully show acquiescence of the
landlord in subletting of escape forfeiture of
tenancy. Since the absence of
473
consent in writing by a landlord for sub-
letting gave rise to Unnecessary litigation
between a landlord and a tenant, the Act of
1952 required the consent of the landlord in
writing after its commencement. The purpose
seemed to be that the consent of the landlord
evidenced by a writing would cut out litiga-
tion on this ground. After all a landlord
could always agree to sub-letting either
before or after sub-letting of the premises.
For that reason no condition was laid
down that such consent should be obtained
before sub-letting the premises."
In the aforesaid view it was held that it was necessary
for the tenant to obtain the consent in writing to sub-
letting the premises. The mere permission or acquiescence
will not do. The consent shall also be to the specific sub-
letting or parting with possession. This Court further
observed that the requirement of consent to be in writing
was to serve a public purpose, i.e., to avoid dispute as to
whether there was consent or not and that, therefore, mere
permission or acquiescence will not do. While noting that
everyone has a right to waive and to agree to waive the
advantage of a law made solely for the benefit and protec-
tion of the individual in his individual capacity, in the
context of the statutory provision of the Delhi Rent Control
Act, this Court further held that the requirement as to the
consent being in writing was in the public interest and
that, therefore, there cannot be any question of waiver of a
right, dealing with the rights of the tenants or landlord.
The words used in the section are "without obtaining the
consent in writing of the landlord." If the words were
"without consent of the landlord" it might mean without
consent, express or implied and in that sense question of
waiver may arise. The question of implied consent will not
arise, if the consent is to be in writing.
The learned counsel for the appellant referred to a
number of decisions of the English Courts in support of his
contention. We do not think it necessary to refer to them in
view of the direct decision of this Court on this point.
In the circumstances, there are no grounds to interfere
with the decisions of the courts below. This appeal is
accordingly dismissed with costs.
Y. Lal Appeal dis-
missed.
474