Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SARLA AHUJA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNITED INDIA INSURANCE COMPANY LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 27/10/1998
BENCH:
S.Saghir Ahmad, K.T.Thomas
JUDGMENT:
THOMAS J.
A widow wants to shift her residence from calcutta
to New Delhi to occupy her own building which is presently
in the possession of her tenant M/s United India Insurance
Company Limited. Though she got an order of eviction from
the Rent Controller under Section 14(1)(e) of the Delhi rent
Control Act 1958 (for short "the Act"), a single judge of
the Delhi High Court non-suited her by reversing the roder.
She has sought for special leave to appeal against the said
decision of the High Court. Leave granted.
When she filed a case before the Rent Controller her
husband was alive. By the time her case reached the stage
of evidence she became a widow, but that did not affect her
claim for eviction because it was not for the use of her
husband that the building is required. At present she is
staying at Calcutta in a flat with her son and his family.
She is doing business, along with her son, in Patents and
Trade Marks. In connection with the said business they have
to be in Delhi quite often. The house where she is now
living in Calcutta is on the third floor of a building which
she finds it very inconvenient particularly on account of a
knee trouble which she has developed recently. As the house
in Delhi is on the ground floor of the building there would
be no problem for climbing up the stairs. Those apart, her
daughter is now staying at NOIDA which in on outskirts of
Delhi. The Rent Controller, after appraisal of the
evidence, came to the conclusion that she bona fide requires
the tenanted premises for her occupation and she has no
other suitable residential accommodation in Delhi.
But learned single judge of the High Court made a
reappraisal of the evidence and reached a different
conclusion by observing that "it was only when her husband
(who was carrying on the business) was alive that she could
urge the ground of wanting to live with her husband in
Delhi." Learned single judge pointed out that her
relationship with her son and daughter-in-law is cordial and
that her family is settled down in Calcutta for long.
According to her knee problem learned single judge noticed
that she has recently moved into a new flat at Calcutta
wherein a lift is provided and hence she need not much
bother about that problem.
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Learned counsel for the appellant - landlord
contended that the High Court has committed jurisdictional
transgression while exercising revisional jurisdiction by
interfering with the finding of fact made by the Rent
Controller. We find much force in the said contention. The
power which the High Court was exercising is envisaged in
the proviso to Section 25B(8) of the Act. The said section
is one of the three provisions subsumed in Chapter IIIA of
the Act which was added to the parent Act as per Act 57/1988
for "summary trial of certain applications."
Section 25B of the Act lays down "special procedure
for the disposal of application for eviction on the ground
of bona fide requirement." Sub-section (1) says that every
application for recovery of possession on the ground
specified in Section 14(1)(e) of the Act shall be dealt with
in accordance withthe procedure specified in Section 25B.
Sub-section (8) says that no appeal or second appeal shall
lie against an order for the recovery of possession of any
premises made by the Rent Controller in accordance with the
procedure specified in this section. The proviso that
sub-section reads thus:
"Provided that the High Court may, for the
purpose of satisfying itself that an order made
by the Controller under this section is according
to law, call for the records of the case and pass
such order in respect thereto as it thinks fit.’
The above proviso indicates that power of the High
Court is supervisory in nature and it is intended to ensure
that the Rent Controller conforms to law when he passes the
order. The satisfaction of the High Court when perusing the
records of the case must be confined to the limited sphere
that the order of the Rent Controller is "according to the
law." In other works, the High Court shall scrutinize the
records to ascertain whether any illegality has been
committed by the Rent Controller in passing the order under
Section 25B. It is not permissible for the High Court in
that exercise to come to a different fact finding unless the
finding arrived at by the Rent Controller on the facts is so
unreasonable that no Rent Controller should have reached
such a finding on the materials available.
Although, the work "revision" is not employed in the
proviso to Section 25B(8) of the Act it is evident from the
language used therein that the power conferred is revisional
power. In legal parlance distinction between appellate and
revisional jurisdiction is well understood. Ordinarily,
appellate jurisdiction is wide enough to afford a re-hearing
of the whole case for enabling the appellate forum to arrive
at fresh conclusions untrammeled by the conclusions reached
in the order challenged before it. Of course, the statute
which provides appeal provision can circumscribe or limit
the width of such appellate powers. Revisional power on the
contrary, is ordinarily a power of supervision keeping
subordinate tribunals within the bounds of law. Expansion
or constriction of such revisional power would depend upon
how the statute has couched such power therein. In some
legislations revisional jurisdiction is meant for satisfying
itself as to the regularity, legality or propriety of
proceedings or decisions of the subordinate court. In Sri
Raj Lakshmi Dyeing Works vs. Rangaswamy [1980 4 SCC 259]
this Court considered the scope of the words ("the High
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Court may call for and examine the records .... to satisfy
itself as to the regularity of such proceedings or the
correctness, illegality or propriety of any decision or
order...") by which power of revision has been conferred by
a particular statute. Dealing with the contention that the
above words indicated conferment of a very wide power on the
revisional authority, this Court has observed thus in the
said decision:
"The dominant idea conveyed by the incorporation
of the words to satisfy ’itself’ under the
Section appears to be that the power conferred on
the High Court under the Section is essentially a
power of superintendence. Therefore, despite the
wide language employed in the Section the High
Court quite obviously should not interfere with
findings of fact merely because it does not agree
with the finding of the subordinate authority."
Dealing with Section 32 Delhi and Ajmer Rent
(Control) Act, 1952, which is almost identically worded as
in the proviso to Section 25B(8) of the Act a three judge
bench of this Court has stated thus in Hari Shankar vs. Rao
Girdhari Lal Chowdhury [1962 Suppl (1) SCR 933]:
"The section is thus framed to confer larger
powers than the power to correct error of
jurisdiction to which S.115 is limited. But it
must not be over-looked 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."
In Malini Ayyappa Naicker vs. Seth Menghraj
Udhavadas 1969 (1) SCC 688 another three judge bench of this
court was considering a similarly worded proviso in Section
75(1) of The Provincial Insolvency Act 1920. Though,
learned judges did not give an exhaustive definition of the
expression "according to law", a catalogue of instance in
which the High Court may interfere under the said proviso
was given in the decision as the following:
"They 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."
The bench has, however cautioned that the High Court
should not interfere merely because it considered that
"possibly the Judge who heard the case may have arrived at a
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conclusion which the High Court would not have arrived at."
Learned Single Judge of the High Court in the
present case has reassessed and re-appraised the evidence
afresh to reach a different finding as though it was
exercising appellate jurisdiction. No doubt even while
exercising revisional jurisdiction, a reappraisal of
evidence can be made, but that should be for the limited
purpose to ascertain whether the conclusion arrived at by
the fact finding court is wholly unreasonable. A reading of
the impugned order shows that the High Court has
over-stepped the limit of its power as a revisional Court.
The order impugned, on that score, is hence vitiated by
jurisdictional deficiency.
Clause (e) of the proviso to Section 14(1) of the
Act affords one of the grounds to the landlord to seek
recovery of possession of the building leased. The said
clause reads thus:
"(e) that the premises let for residential
purposes are required bona fide by the landlord
for occupation as a residence for himself or for
any member of his family dependent on him, if he
is the owner thereof or for any person for whose
benefit the premises are held and that the
landlord or such person has no other reasonably
suitable residential accommodation;
Explanation: For the purposes of this clause
’Premises let for residential purposes’ include
any premises which having been let for use as a
residence are, without the consent of the
landlord, used incidentally for commercial or
other purposes."
If the landlord has another residential
accommodation which is reasonably suitable he is not
permitted to avail himself of the benefit afforded in the
ground set out in the clause. Learned Single Judge of the
High Court has noted that the landlord in this case has
"admitted in her deposition that the house in Calcutta was a
3-bedroom house with drawing/dining room and one of the
bedrooms was used by her and other by her son with his wife,
and another bedroom was kept for her daughter who use to
come and stay". This was one of the reasons which persuaded
the learned Single Judge to interfere with the order of
eviction. To deprive a landlord of the benefit of the ground
mentioned in Section 14(1)(e) on account of availability of
alternative residential accommodation, it is not enough that
such alternative accommodation is in a far different State.
Such accommodation must be available in the same city or
town, or at least within reasonable proximity thereof if it
is outside the limits of the city. The said limb of clause
(e) cannot be interpreted as to mean that if landlord has
another house anywhere in the world he cannot seek recovery
of possession of his building under clause (e). High Court
therefore went wrong in observing that since the landlord
has possession of another flat at calcutta she is
disentitled to seek recovery of possession of possession of
the tenanted premises situated at Delhi.
The crux of the ground envisaged in clause (e) of
Section 14(1) of the Act is that the requirement of the
landlord for occupation of the tenanted premises must be
bona fide. When a landlord asserts that he requires his
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building for his own occupation the Rent Controller shall
not proceed on the presumption that the requirement is not
bona fide. When other conditions of the clause are
satisfied and when the landlord shows a prima facie case it
is open to the Rent Controller to draw a presumption that
the requirement of the landlord in bona fide. It is often
said by courts that it is not for the tenant to dictate
terms to the landlord as to how else he can adjust himself
without getting possession of the tenanted premises. While
deciding the question of bona fides of the requirement of
the landlord it is quite unnecessary to make an endeavour as
to how else the landlord could have adjusted himself.
Facts such as the cordial relationship between a
landlord and her daughter-in-law or that he is comfortably
residing in the present building are not relevant in judging
the bona fides of the claim of the landlord. Otherwise it
would appear that landlord can think of residing in his or
her own residential building only when cracks develop in the
relationship between him and his other kith and kin.
In this case the landlord put forth a variety of
reasons which persuaded her to seek recovery of the tenanted
premises: (1) That the tenanted building is her own and it
is a residential building. (2) In the building where she
now resides at Calcutta her son and daughter-in-law are also
living with their children. (3) She and her son have to go
to Delhi quite often and stay there for days in connection
with their business. (4) Her daughter is living in NOIDA
which is on the outskirts of Delhi and it would be
convenient for that daughter to stay with the mother
frequently. (5) Landlord is getting old and developed
orthopedic problems and hence she feels that living in the
ground floor is more advisable. (6) The flat in which she
lives now at Calcutta is on the third floor whereas the
tenanted premises are on the ground floor.
Rent Controller approved the claim of the landlord
as bona fide after taking into account the aforesaid broad
aspects. It cannot be said that the Rent Controller had
taken into account irrelevant factors in reaching the
conclusion. Hence the High Court has improperly exercised
its revisional jurisdiction in upsetting the findings of the
Rent Controller.
In the result, we set aside the impugned order and
restore the eviction order passed by the Rent Controller and
direct the respondent-tenant to vacate from the premises on
or before the expiry of three months from today.