Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF WEST BENGAL & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SARAL KUMAR SEN GUPTA & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT15/04/1986
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
THAKKAR, M.P. (J)
CITATION:
1987 AIR 514 1986 SCR (2) 515
1986 SCC (3) 45 1986 SCALE (1)630
ACT:
West Bengal Government Premises (Teanancy Regulation)
Act, 1976 - S.3(2) - Agreement of tenancy - Stipulation -
’Premises to be used exclusively by the tenant and members
of his family’ - Tenant ceasing to occupy premises himself -
Whether liable to eviction.
HEADNOTE:
Respondent No.1 - an employee of the State Government
was allotted on lease a two-roomed flat. Clause (7) of the
agreement of tenancy provided that the premises shall be
used exclusively for the purpose of the residence of
Respondent No.1 and the members of his family. At that time
the family of the Respondent No.1 consisted of himself, his
elder brother and three unmarried sisters. In the year 1959,
Respondent No.1 got married and alongwith his wife shifted
to another flat taken on lease. His elder brother and two
unmarried sisters continued to be in occupation of the flat.
The Prescribed Authority under the West Bengal
Government Premises (Tenancy Regulation) Act, 1976 issued a
notice to Respondent No.1 calling upon him to quit and
deliver possession of the flat on the ground that the
tenancy had automatically terminated as provided in s.3(2)
of the Act because he had ceased to occupy it and that cl.
(7) of the agreement of the tenancy had been violated.
Respondent No. 1 filed a Writ Petition under Article
226 alleging that since Respondent No.2 was his elder
brother he was a member of his family and he was entitled to
live in the flat even though Respondent No.1 himself was not
living therein. The petition was dismissed by a Single
Judge.
In appeal, the Division Bench held that cl. (7) of the
agreement of tenancy was not violated even if the tenant had
himself ceased to occupy and a member of his family
continued to reside in the flat, and allowed the appeal.
516
Allowing the appeal by the State to this Court,
^
HELD: 1. Respondent No. 1 violated cl.(7) of the
agreement of tenancy when he ceased to occupy the premises
himself. The judgment of the Division Bench is set aside and
that of the Single Judge is restored. [521 A-B]
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2. What cl.(7) of the agreement of tenancy stipulates
is that the premises can be used by respondent No. 1 and the
members of his family, that is to say, respondent No.1 could
stay himself along with his family members and not by
respondent No.1 or the members of his family. As long as
respondent No. 1 is residing in the premises he could
accommodate along with him any other member of his family in
the premises. But when he ceases to reside in the premises
and occupies other premises for residence as a separate unit
other members constituting a separate unit cannot in their
own right as a separate unit continue to get the same
without violating cl.(7) of the agreement of tenancy. It is
the condition of the lease that the tenant in whose favour
the premises are leased should reside in the premises let to
him and not in some other premises during the currency of
the lease. [519 E-G]
Baldev Sahai Bangia v. R.C. Bhasin, [1982] 3 S.C.R.
670, distinguished.
3. To meet the growing demand for Government premises
the State Legislature had to amend the Act by the West
Bengal Act XLVI of 1980, by introducing cl. (ia) in sub-s.
(2) of s.3 of the Act which provided that a tenancy in
respect of a Government Premises would stand automatically
terminated without any notice to quit where the tenant had
subsequently built a house or acquired (by purchase, gift,
inheritance, lease, exchange or otherwise) a house or an
apartment, either in his own name or in the name of any
member of his family, within a reasonable distance from such
Government premises. [520 F-H]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 9963 of
1983.
From the Judgment and Order dated 3rd August 1983 of
the Clacutta High Court in First Misc. Appeal (Mandamus)
Tender No. 168 of 1983.
517
N.N. Gooptu, D.P. Mukherjee and G.S. Chatterjee for the
Appellants.
Shankar Ghose and Rathin Das for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMIAH,J. The State of West Bengal, the Deputy
Secretary and the Assistant Secretary, Housing Department to
the Government of West Bengal are the appellants in this
appeal. The above appeal is filed by special leave against
the judgment dated August 3, 1983 of the High Court of
Calcutta in Appeal from Original Order T. No. 168 of 1983
allowing the appeal against the judgment dated January 18,
1983 of the learned Single Judge of the Calcutta High Court
in C.R. No. 12684 (W) of 1976. Respondent No. 1, Saral Kumar
Sen Gupta was an Upper Division Assistant in the Directorate
of Food and Supplies, Government of West Bengal. In the year
1958 he was allotted on lease a two-roomed flat bearing No.
5 in Block ’F’ of the Government Housing Estate, Karaya
Road, Calcutta. The allotment was made under an agreement of
tenancy which contained the terms and conditions under which
the flat had been allotted in his favour. Clause (7) of the
agreement read as follows :
"(7) You should use the premises exclusively for
the purpose of residence of yourself and the
members of your family and for no other purpose
whatsover."
(emphasis added)
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It is stated that in the year 1958 the members of the
family of Respondent No.1, Saral Kumar Sen Gupta consisted
of himself, his elder brother Santosh Kumar Sen Gupta,
Respondent No.2, and three unmarried sisters. The 1st
respondent was married in the year 1959. After some time
Respondent No. 1 along with his wife shifted to another flat
which he had taken on lease. His elder brother and his two
unmarried sisters were in occupation of the flat in
question. On coming to know that Respondent No.1 had ceased
to occupy the flat and that only his elder brother and his
two unmarried sisters were residing there, the Deputy
Secretary, Housing Department of the
518
Government of West Bengal, the Prescribed Authority under
the West Bengal Government Premises (Tenancy Regulation)
Act, 1976 (hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’) issued a
notice to Respondent No.1 calling upon him to quit and
deliver possession of the flat on the ground that the
tenancy had automatically terminated as provided in section
3(2) of the Act as he had ceased to occupy it and that
clause (7) of the agreement of tenancy had been violated.
Aggrieved by the said notice Respondent No.1 filed a writ
petition in the High Court of Calcutta contending that since
Respondent No.2 was his brother and as such a member of his
family, Respondent No.2 was entitled to live in the said
flat even though Respondent No.1, the tenant was not living
therein. The writ petition came up for hearing before the
learned Single Judge of the High Court who after hearing the
parties dismissed it. Against the judgment of the learned
Single Judge Respondent No. 1 filed an appeal before the
Division Bench of the High Court. The Division Bench allowed
the appeal and made the rule absolute holding that since
Respondent No.2, the elder brother of Respondent No.1 was a
member of the family of Respondent No.1, clause (7) of the
agreement of tenancy had not been violated. In other words
the Division Bench was of the view that clause (7) of the
agreement of tenancy was not violated even if the tenant had
himself ceased to occupy a member of his family continued to
reside in the flat. This appeal by special leave is filed
against the judgment of the Division Bench of the High Court
of Calcutta.
It may be mentioned here that after the judgment of the
learned Single Judge, the State Government took possession
of the flat in question on January 27, 1983 and it has
continued to be in the possession of the State Government
notwithstanding the appeal of Respondent No.1 being allowed
by the Division Bench of High Court by virtue of an interim
order passed by this Court. Even now the flat is in the
possession of the Government of West Bengal.
The building in question belongs to the State
Government and the incidents of its lease are governed by
the Act. Section 3(2) of the Act provides that a tenancy in
respect of a Government premises shall stand automatically
terminated without any notice to quit, where the tenant has
violated the terms of the lease or made default in payment
of rent for
519
three consecutive months. The provisos to section 3(2) of
the Act are not relevant for the purposes of this case. The
Prescribed Authority appointed under the Act is entitled to
recover possession of any Government premises from a tenant
under section 3(2) of the Act on the violation of the terms
of the lease. The short question which arises for
consideration in this case is whether Respondent No.1 who
was the tenant of the Government premises in question had
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violated the terms of the lease. We have already set out
above clause (7) of the agreement of tenancy. It provides
that the premises can be used exclusively for the purpose of
the residence of Respondent No.1 along with the members of
his family and for no other purpose whatsoever. Admittedly,
Respondent No.1 has not been residing in the premises from a
date prior to the date on which the notice was issued to him
calling upon him to quit and deliver possession of the
premises. The Division Bench of the High Court was of the
view that since Santosh Kumar Sen Gupta, the elder brother
of Respondent No.1 had been residing in the premises, the
condition contained in clause (7) of the agreement of
tenancy had not been violated. It was of the view that even
though Respondent No.1 had himself along with his wife
shifted to some other flat or premises the building could be
used by his brother who could be said to be a member of the
family of Respondent No.1. With great respect we cannot
agree with the view taken by the Division Bench of the High
Court. What clause (7) of the agreement of tenancy
stipulates is that the premises could be used by Respondent
No. 1 and the members of his family, that is to say
Respondent No.1 could stay himself along with his family
members and not by Respondent No.1 or the members of his
family. As long as Respondent No. 1 is residing in the
premises he could accommodate along with him any other
member of his family in the premises. But when he ceases to
reside in the premises and occupies other premises for
residence as a separate unit other members constituting a
separate unit cannot in their own right as a separate unit
continue to occupy the same without violating clause (7) of
the agreement of tenancy. It is the condition of the lease
that the tenant in whose favour the premises are leased
should reside in the premises let to him and not in some
other premises during the currency of the lease.
The learned counsel for the Ist Respondent drew our
attention to the decision of this Court in Baldev Sahai
Bangia
520
v. R.C. Bhasin, [1982] 3 S.C.R. 670 and contended that this
Court had recognised the right of the members of the family
of a tenant to reside in a building taken on lease even
after the tenant had left the premises. We have gone through
that decision. In that case this Court was concerned with
clause (d) of section 14(1) of the Delhi Rent Control Act,
1958 which provided that where the premises were let for use
as a residence and neither the tenant nor any member of his
family had been residing for a period of six month
immediately before the date of the filing of the
application, the landlord could apply for eviction of the
tenant. This decision is of no assistance to the Ist
Respondent since the language of section 14(1)(d) of the
Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 is different from the language
in clause (7) of the agreement of tenancy in the case before
us. The expression ’neither the tenant nor any member of his
family’ in the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 was capable of
the construction that if either the tenant or a member of
his family was residing in the premises section 14(1)(d) of
that Act was not attracted. But in the present case the term
contained in clause (7) of the agreement of tenancy required
that the premises could be used for the residence of the
tenant and (along with him) the members of the family and
not tenant or the members of his family in the sense that
the tenant stays somewhere else and his other family members
stay in the leased premises. The decision relied on is,
therefore, clearly distinguishable.
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It has to be borne in mind that the buildings owned by
the Government are limited in number and there is a great
demand for allotment of Government premises. The Government
cannot afford to allow one family to have the privilege of
occupying two buildings. It is in order to meet the growing
demand for the Government premises the State Legislature had
to amend the Act by the West Bengal Act XLVI of 1980
introducing clause (ia) in sub-section (2) of section 3 of
the Act which provided that a tenancy in respect of a
Government premises would stand automatically terminated
without any notice to quit where the tenant had subsequently
built a house or acquired (by purchase, gift, inheritance,
lease, exchange or otherwise) a house or an apartment,
either in his own name or in the name of any member of his
family, within a reasonable distance from such Government
premises. We have referred to the above clause only to show
the magnitude of the
521
shortage of housing accommodation. In any view of the matter
it has to be held that Respondent No. 1 violated clause (7)
of the agreement of tenancy when he ceased to occupy the
premises himself. The judgment of the Division Bench of the
High Court is, therefore, liable to be set aside. It is
accordingly set aside. The judgment of the learned Single
Judge is restored.
The appeal is accordingly allowed. No costs.
A.P.J. Appeal allowed.
522