Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SRI KRISHNA KHANNA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ADDITIONAL DISTRICT MAGISTRATE, KANPUR AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT26/02/1975
BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
BHAGWATI, P.N.
CITATION:
1975 AIR 1525 1975 SCC (2) 361
ACT:
U.P. (Temporary) Control of Rent and Eviction Act, 1947,
Sections 3, 7 and 7A and Control at Rent and Eviction Rules,
1949, Rules 3, 4, 5 and 6--Intimation of vacancy by
landlord--Allotment order made after expiry of the required
period--Allotment order, if invalid.
Compromise Decree--Compromise void, being unlawful and
opposed to public policy--Respondent. if committed fraud in
ignoring void compromise while applying for eviction of
appellant.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant who is the owner of the building hearing No.
24/6, Tulsa Kothi, Kanpur, lives in the upper floor of the
building with his son and other members of the family.
There are two shops in the ground floor in which tenants had
been inducted. One of the shops has been in possession of
Raghunath Prasad Mehrotra, respondent no. 3 and his brother
Kanahyalal Mehrotra who have been carrying on the business
of Druggists and Chemists in the said shop as partners of
the firm Pioneer Drug Stores. The other shop was in the
tenancy of Bata Shoe Company Ltd. Since the said Company
had taken another shop on rent sometime in the year 1961 it
was about to vacate the shop in the building of the
appellant. He. therefore, filed an application on 7-11-1961
before the Rent Control and Eviction Officer (Rent
Controller) with a copy to the District Magistrate, Kanpur
under Rule 6 of the Control of Rent and Eviction Rules,
1949- framed under Section 17 of the U.P. (Temporary)
Control of Rent and Eviction Act, 1947 praying for the
release of the shop in his favour on the ground that he
required the accommodation for his own use for establishing
a business for his son. On 2-5-1962. respondent No. 3 made
an application under section 7(2) of the Act for allotment
of the accommodation to him. There were four more
applicants under section 7(2). The shop was actually
vacated by Bata Shoe Company on 15-8-1962. On 16-8-1962
intimation was given by the appellant to the Rent Controller
about the vacancy of the shop in accordance with section
7(1). The Additional District Magistrate, to whom
proceedings had been transferred, made an order on 17-9-1962
refusing to release the shop to the appellant and directed
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its allotment to respondent No. 3. In pursuance of the order
made in his favour, the respondent got actual possession of
the shop from the appellant who had occupied the shop in
the meantime.
Before the filing of the application by the third respondent
on 2-11-1962 under section 7A of the Act, the appellant had
filed on 22-9-1962, suit No. 132/1962 in the Court of First
Civil Judge at Kanpur challenging the allotment order of the
Additional District Magistrate and the Rent Controller
impleading the third respondent as the sole defendant in the
suit. A decree for permanent injunction was asked for.
interim injunction was granted. The suit ended in
compromise on 11-10-1962. The appellant filed an
application for review on 17-11-1962 before the Rent
Controller asking him to review his ex-parte order dated 15-
11-1962 made under section 7A of the Act chiefly oil two
grounds viz. (1) that no notice was served upon the
appellant; (2) that the third respondent had obtained the
order fradulently by suppressing the fact of compromise
entered in Suit No. 132/1962. The Rent Controller refused
to review his order and dismissed the application on 8-1-
1963. The appellant on the same date i.e. on 8-1-1963 filed
a petition in the Allahabad High Court under Article 226 of
the Constitution to challenge the various orders of allot-
ment and delivery of possession made by respondents I and 2
from time to time. The Writ Petition was dismissed by a
learned single Judge on 7-5-19-63. Special Appeal No.
254/1963 was dismissed by a Bench of the Allahabad High
Court on 3-2-1964. The present appeal was preferred in this
Court on grant of certificate by the High Court.
710
It was contended on behalf of the appellant
that
(i) The order of allotment having not been
made within 30 days of the receipt of the
intimation sent by the landlord under section
7(1) (a) of the Act as required by Rule 3 of
the Rules was ultra vires and void;
(ii) Respondent No. 3 had no right to apply
for possession under section 7A of the Act
after having entered into a compromise in Suit
No. 132/1962;
(iii) that the order of allotment issued by
the Rent Controller was bad as it was
mechanically issued on the basis of the order
of the Additional District Magistrate and
without any application of the mind by the
former.
Dismissing the appeal,
HELD:(By Court)
(i) Section 3 of the Act providing for restrictions on
eviction is based on public policy. It is intended to
protect the weaker section of the community in general by
granting equality of bargaining power. [714D; 718E]
Murlidhar Agarwal and Anr. v State of Uttar Pradesh and
Ors.; A.I.R. 1974 S.C. 1924, relied on
In Jiwan Singh v. Rajindra Prasad & Anr., Civil Appeal No.
999(N) of 1971 decided on 18-12-1974, this Court held that
if the landlord failed to discharge his obligation of giving
7 days’ notice in accordance with section 7(1) (a), he lost
his right of making a nomination under Rule 4. The District
Magistrate has got to make the order, of allotment within 30
days of the receipt of the intimation sent by the landlord
under section 7(1)(a) of the Act. Ho has, at the same time,
to give notice of his order of allotment to the landlord.
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If the landlord receives no notice from the District
Magistrate within 30 days, which as a matter of construction
under Rule 4 must mean shortly after the expiry of 30 days
of , the receipt by the landlord under section 7(1)(a), of
an order of allotment having been made within that period,
he gets a right to nominate a tenant. Ordinarily and
generally the District Magistrate shall have to allot the
accommodation to the nominee of the landlord but for special
reasons to be recorded in writing, he may depart from the
nomination made by the landlord and allot the accommodation
to some other person’ even to a person who was an applicant
before him before the expiry of the period of 30 days and
due to one reason or the other no order of allotment could
be in his favour within the said period. If, however, the
landlord does not make a nomination in accordance with Rule
4 be cannot challenge the order of allotment subsequently
made by the District Magistrate on the expiry of the period
of 30 days only on the ground of its having been made beyond
the time. [715D-E, F-716B; 718E-719F]
(ii) in the instant case it is not correct to say that the
order of allotment made onthe 17th September. 1962-two
days after the expiry of the period of 30 days was invalid
on that account alone. The High Court is also right in its
view that no order of allotment was possible to be made in
this case before disposal of the landlord’s claim under
Rule, 6. There is no time limit fixed for disposal of such a
laim. of course it should be disposed of as quickly as
possible, preferably within the period of 30 days mentioned
in Rule 3. That being so even in the light of Rule 6 it is
difficult to nullify an order of allotment made by the
District Magistrate merely on the ground of having been made
on the expiry of the period of 30 days. On the facts of
this case surely ,the Order of allotment was not invalid.
[716D-E-, 719F-720B]
(iii) The order of allotment in this caw was made by the
Additional District Magistrate, respondent No. 1. It may not
be quite correct to say that it was purely an administrative
order as has been the view of the High Court in the Special
Appeal. But the, order was made by him in
71l
a quasi- judicial manner after hearing the parties concerned
and after fully allying his mind. He being a delegate of
the District Magistrate, was competent to make order of
allotment. So was the Rent Controller. But the latter
merely issued the formal order made by the former. It was
not a cm where *a authority competent to make the order
mechanically did it on the direction or in pursuance of an
order of a different authority not competent to Pass the
order. [717G-718B; C-D]
(ii) By majority (Mathew and Untwalia, JJ.)
The appellant filed Civil Suit No. 132/1962 against the
third respondent to challenge the order of allotment made in
his favour by respondent Nos. 1 and 2. Neither of the said
two respondents was impleaded as a defendant in the suit.
But that apart, the agreement entered into between the
appellant and respondent No. 3 embodied in the compromise
petition dated 11-10-1962 Was void under section 23 of the
Contract Act as it was unlawful and against the public
policy of the Act under the Rules. So long as the Act and
the Rules continued in force, the control of letting vested
in the District Magistrate and not in the parties. By an
agreement of the kind embodied in the compromise petition
the parties could not curtail the powers of the District
Magistrate. It was unlawful and against the public policy
of the law to do so. Respondent No. 3 committed no fraud in
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ignoring the void compromise when he applied for eviction of
the appellant under section 7A of the Act and for delivery
of actual, physical possession to him. [717C-F]
Per Bhagwati, J. (dissenting)
Even it the compromise was unlawful and the consent decree
was on that account void, the very fact of the 3rd
respondent having submitted to the consent decree, declaring
the order of allotment to be invalid and recognising the
right of the appellant to occupy the shop for himself vis-a-
vis the 3rd respondent, was a highly relevant circumstance
bearing on the exercise of the discretion of the District
Magistrate, and it ought to have been disclosed to the
District Magistrate. It is a well settled proposition of
law and this proposition ,Should apply equally in the field
of administrative law, that when a party approaches a
tribunal for discretionary relief, he must not only come
with clean hands but must also show the utmost good faith
and disclose all material facts having a bearing on the
exercise of discretion of the authority which are within his
knowledge. He cannot escape this obligation on the plea
that So other side can always, if it so chooses, appear and
bring the material facts to the notice of the authority. It
is an obligation of confidence which he owes to the
authority and this obligation is imposed by law in the
larger interests of administration of justice so that
justice, whether dispensed by Civil court or by
administrative authority, remains pure and unsullied. The
nondisclosure of the fact of consent decree by the 3rd
respondent in the application made by him vitiated the order
of the Rent Control and Eviction Officer under section 7A.
[722C-723B; 724A-E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION.: Civil Appeal No. 38 of 1968.
From the Judgment and Decree dated the 3rd February, 1964 of
the Allahabad High Court in Spl. Civil Appeal No. 254 of
1963.
S. T. Desai, S. S. Bhatia, J. P. Goyal and S. M. Jain, for
the appellant.
Bishan Narain, B. P. Maheshwari and Suresh Sethi, for
respondent No. 3.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Untwalia, J. P.
N. Bhagwati, J. gave a dissenting Opinion.
712
UNTWALIA, J.-There is a building bearing no. 24/6, Tulsa
Kothi, situated at Mall in the City of Kanpur. The
appellant in this appeal filed by certificate of the
Allahabad High Court is the owner of the said building. He
lives in the upper floor of the building with his son and
other members of the family. There are two shops in the
ground floor in which tenants had been inducted. One of the
shops has been coming in possession of Raghunath Prasad
Mehrotra, respondent no. 3 and his brother Kanahyalal
Mehrotra who have been carrying on the business of Druggists
and Chemists in the said shop as partners of the firm
Pioneer Drug Stores. The other shop was in the tenancy of
Bata Shoo Company Ltd. Since the said Company had taken
another shop on rent sometime in the year 1961 it was about
to vacate the shop in the building of the appellant. He,
therefore, filed an application on 7-11-1961 before the Rent
Control and Eviction Officer (for brevity, Rent Controller)
with a copy to the District Magistrate, Kanpur under Rule 6
of the Control of Rent and Eviction Rules, 1949 framed under
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section 17 of the U.P. (Temporary) Control of Rent and
Eviction Act, 1947-hereinafter called respectively the Rules
and the Act praying for the release of the shop in his
favour on the ground that he required the accommodation for
his own use for establishing a business for his son. On
2-5-1962, respondent no. 3 made an application under section
7(2) of the Act for allotment, of the accommodation to him.
There were four more applicants under section 7(2). The
shop was actually vacated by Bata Shoe Company on 15-8-1962.
On 16-8-1962 intimation was given by the appellant to the
Rent Controller about the vacancy of the shop in accordance
with section 7(1). It may be stated here that the
Additional District Magistrate, respondent no. I as also
the Rent Controller, respondent no. 2 had been authorised by
the District Magistrate of Kanpur to exercise powers under
the Act. On 18-8-1962 the Rent Controller heard the matters
and fixed 27-8-1962 for orders. Due to some reason he felt
difficulty in deciding the matter of the release of shop in
favour of the appellant or its allotment to any of the five
applicants including respondent no. 3. In due course, the
District Magistrate transferred the proceedings to the
Additional District Magistrate, respondent no. 1. After
hearing all the parties concerned he made an order on 17-9-
1962 refusing to release the shop to the appellant and
directed its allotment to respondent no. 3 Thereupon a
formal order of allotment alloting the shop accommodation to
respondent no. 3 was issued by the Refit Controller,
respondent no. 2 on 18-9-1962.
It appears that the appellant had in the meantime occupied
the shop when it was vacated by Bata Shoo Company.
Respondent no. 3. therefore filed an application under
section 7A of the Act on 2-111962, which was allowed by the
Rent Controller on 15-11-1962. The order was ex-parte in
absence of the appellant as he is said to have not responded
to the notice issued and alleged to have been served on him
under section 7A(1) of the Act. The shop was got vacated
and actual possession delivered to respondent no. 3 with the
help of the police force on 16-11-1962 in accordance with
section 7A(3) of the Act.
713
Before the filing of the application by the third respondent
on 2-11-1962 under section 7A of the Act, the appellant had
filed on 22-9-1962 Suit No. 132/1962 in the Court of First
Civil Judge at Kanpur challenging the allotment order of the
Additional District Magistrate and the Rent Controller
implementing the third respondent as the sole defendant in
the suit. A decree for permanent injunction was asked for.
Interim injunction was granted. The suit ended in com-
promise on 11-10- 1962. The terms of the compromise will
have to be considered at the appropriate place in this
judgment. It may also be noted here that Kanahyalal
Mehrotra, brother of the third respondent, filed another
suit to challenge the compromise decree dated 11-10-1962
claiming that the order of allotment had been made in favour
of the partnership firm and the third respondent had no
right to nullify the said order by the compromise. The suit
was decreed and we were informed at the Bar that an appeal
from the decision of the Trial Court is pending.
The appellant filed an application for review on 17-11-1962
before the Rent Controller asking him to review his ex-parte
order dated 15-11-1962 made under section 7A of the Act
chiefly on two grounds viz. (1) that no notice was served
upon the appellant; (2) that the third respondent had
obtained the order fraudulently by suppressing the fact of
compromise entered in Suit No.132/1962. The Rent Controller
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refused to review his order and dismissed the application on
8-1-1963. The appellant on the same date i.e. on 8-1-1963
filed a petition in the Allahabad High Court under Article
226 of the Constitution to challenge the various orders of
allotment and delivery of possession made by respondents I
and 2 from time to time. The Writ Petition was’ dismissed
by a learned single Judge on 7-5-1963. Special. Appeal
No.254/1963 was dismissed by a Bench of the Allahabad High
Court on 3-2-1964. The present appeal was preferred in this
Court on grant of certificate by the High Court.
The appellant had urged five points before the High Court in
the special appeal. Mr. S. T. Desai appearing for him in
this Court pressed only 3 points for our consideration in
support of this appeal. They are : (1) The order of
allotment having not been made within 30 days of the receipt
of the intimation sent by the landlord under section 7(1)
(a) of the Act as required by Rule 3 of the Rules was ultra
vires and void; (2) Respondent no.3 had no right to apply
for possession under section 7A of the Act after having
entered into a compromise in suit No. 132/1962; (3) that the
order of allotment issued by the Rent Controller was bad as
it was. mechanically issued on the basis of the order of
the- Additional District Magistrate and without any applica-
tion of the mind by the former.
Mr. Bishan Narain, learned counsel for respondent no. 3
submitted that the period of 30 days mentioned in Rule 3 was
directory, or, in any view of the matter in the facts and
circumstances of this case the order of allotment was not
bad on that account. He further submitted that the
allotment order was in favour of the partnership firm,
respondent no. 3 had applied for the allotment as a partner
of the firm and the compromise entered into between the
appellant
714
and the said respondent was not binding on the firm.
Moreover, it was illegal, null and void. fie further argued
that there was no sub,stance in the third point urged on
behalf of the appellant in as much as the order was really
that of the Additional District Magistrate who had made it
after fully hearing the parties concerned.
The High Court in appeal has expressed the view that the
requirement of passing the order of allotment within the
period of 30 days is directory or in any view of the matter
on the facts of this case it could not be made before
disposing of the appellant’s application for release of the
accommodation under Rule 6. In the opinion of the High Court
the compromise was a fraud on the officers empowered to act
under the Statute and was of no avail to the appellant. The
order of allotment was in fact made by the Additional
District Magistrate and the formality of issuing the order
could be done either by him or by the Rent Controller, as it
was an administrative order.
The object of the Act as its Preamble indicates is to
provide for continuance of powers to control the letting and
the rent of residential and non-residential accommodation
and to prevent the eviction of tenants therefrom. Section 3
providing for restrictions on eviction as held by one of us
(Mathew, J.) delivering the judgment on behalf of this Court
in the case of Murlidhar Aggarwal Another v. State of Uttar
Pradesh and others(1) is based on Public Policy. it is
intended. to protect the weaker section of the community in
general by granting equality of bargaining power. The
protection is based on public policy. Similarly, the Scheme
of the Act as per the provisions contained in Section 7 and
7A and Rules 3 to 6 is to curtail the right and freedom of
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the landlord to a large extent in the matter of letting out
of accommodation. Section 7 provides for control on
letting; sub-section (1) of which casts a duty on the
landlord to give notice in writing of the vacancy of the
accommodation to the District Magistrate. Under subsection
(2) the District Magistrate may by general or special order
require a landlord to let or not to let to any person any
accomodation which has fallen vacant or is about to fall
vacant. The provision of sub-section (2) has to be read in
conjunction with the relevant rules. Section 7A empowers
the District Magistrate to take action against the
unauthorised occupants by directing their eviction and in
case of necessity even with force. Proviso to sub-section
(1) of Section 7A enjoins upon the District Magistrate not
to pass any order of eviction if be is satisfied that there
has been undue delay or it is otherwise inexpedient to do
so. In order to appreciate the true purport of the law
contained in Section 7 of the Act it is necessary to read
Rules 3 to 6 of the Rules in full :
3. "Allotment Order-The District Magistrate
shall make an allotment order within thirty
days of the receipt of the intimation sent by
the landlord under section 7 (1) (a) of the
Act and shall give notice thereof to the
landlord.
4. Landlord’s Right to Let-If the landlord,
receives no notice from the District
Magistrate within thirty days of the
(1) A.I.R. 1974 S.C. 1924.
715
receipt by District Magistrate of the
intimation given by landlord under section
7(1)(a), the landlord may nominate a tenant
and the District Magistrate shall allot the
accommodation to his nominee unless, for
reasons to be recorded in writing, he
forthwith allots the accommodation to other
person.
5. Liability for Rent from the date of
allotment-The allottee shall, unless he
intimates in writing to the District
Magistrate his refusal to accept the
accommodation within seven days of the receipt
of the order, be liable for rent from the date
of allotment.
6. Occupation by landlord-When the District
Magistrate is satisfied that an accommodation,
which has fallen vacant or is likely to fall
vacan is bona fide needed by the landlord for
his own personal occupation, the District
Magistrate may permit the landlord to occupy
it himself."
Recently in the case of Jiwan Singh v. Rajindra Prasad &
Anr.(1), judgment of which was delivered by Mathew, J. on
behalf of this very Bench on 18-12-1974, it was pointed out
that if the landlord failed to discharge his obligation of
giving 7 days’ notice in accordance with section 7(1)(a), he
lost his right of making a nomination under Rule 4. It is to
be noticed that on the failure of the District Magistrate to
make an allotment order within the period provided in Rule 3
the landlord gets a right to nominate a tenant. The
District Magistrate under Rule 4 has got to allot the
accommodation to the nominee of the landlord unless for the
reasons- to be recorded he allots it to somebody else.
Under certain circumstances therefore the District
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Magistrate is empowered to make an order of allotment even
after the expiry of the period of 30 days by ignoring the
nomination made by the landlord. In such a situation and in
the context of the Rules it is difficult to hold that the
period fixed for the making of an allotment order in Rule 3
is mandatory in the sense of resulting in the nullification
of the order of the District Magistrate if made after the
expiry of the period. Without resorting to the well-known
expressions of the requirement of the law being mandatory or
directory we would rest our view oil the plain reading of
the language of the Rules. The District Magistrate. as we
have said above, has got to make the order of allotment
within 30 days of the receipt of the intimation sent by the
landlord under section 7(1)(a) of the Act. He has, at the
same time, to give notice of his order of allotment to the,
landlord. If the landlord receives no notice from the
District Magistrate within 30 days, which as a matter of
construction under Rule 4 must mean shortly after the expiry
of 30 days of the receipt by the District Magistrate of the
intimation given by the landlord under section 7(1)(a), of
an order of allotment having been made within that period,
he gets a right to nominate a tenant. Ordinarily and
generally the District Magistrate shall have to allot the
accommodation to the nominee of the landlord but for special
reasons to be recorded in writing, he may depart from the
nomination made by the landlord and allot the accommodation
to some
(1) Civil Appeal No. 999 (N) of 1971.
716
other person, even to a person who was an applicant before
him before the expiry of the period of 30 days and due to
one reason ’Or the other no order of allotment could be made
in his favour within the said period. if, however, the
landlord does not make a nomination in accordance with Rule
4 he cannot challenge the order of allotment subsequently
made by the District Magistrate on the expiry of the period
of 30 days only on the ground of its having been made beyond
the time.
It is no doubt true that the liability for rent of the
allottee begins only from the date of allotment under Rule 5
and the landlord suffers if there is delay in the making of
the allotment by the District Magistrate. The landlord may
move the legal machinery for forcing the District Magistrate
to make the allotment. It may well be that in some case the
order of allotment made after undue delay will be found to
be bad. In the instant case it is not correct to say that
the order of allotment made on the 17th September, 1962-two
days after the expiry of the period of 30 days was invalid
on that account alone. The High Court is also right in its
view that no order of allotment was possible to be made in
this case before disposal of the landlord’s claim under Rule
6. There is no time limit fixed for disposal such a claim.
Of course it should be disposed of as quickly as possible,
preferably within the period of 30 days mentioned in Rule 3.
That being so even in the light of Rule 6 it is difficult to
nullify an order of allotment made by the District
Magistrate merely on the ground of having been made on the
expiry of the period of 30 days. On the facts of this case
surely the order of allotment was not invalid.
The appellant filed Civil Suit No. 132/1962 against the
third respondent to challenge the order of allotment made in
his favour by respondent nos. 1 and 2. Neither of the said
two respondents was impleaded as a defendant in the suit.
But that apart, the agreement entered into between the
appellant and respondent no. 3 embodied in the compromise
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petition dated 11-10-1962 was void under section 23 of the
Contract Act as it was unlawful and against the Public
Policy of the Act under the Rules. The four terms of the
compromise are, as under :
(a) "That it is admitted by the defendant
that at the expiry of 30 days from the date of
intimation, the shop in dispute automatically
stood released to the plaintiff and the
allotment order dated 18th September, 1962 was
not at all effective vis-a-vis the rights of
the plaintiff as a landlord to use the said
premises.
(b) That the defandant has no objection if the
plaintiff continues to utilize the
accommodations for his own business or a
business of his son whether himself or in
partnership with any person and till such time
as the plaintiff and his son utilize the
accommodation in this manner, the defendant
will not be entitled to enforce, his allotment
order against him.
717
(c) That the plaintiff has agreed that if at
any time he wants to discontinue, the business
established by him in the said shop and wants
to let out the shop to any person, he will do
so in favour of the defendant and unless he
refuses to take the lease on reasonable terms,
the plaintiff will not let out the shop to any
third party.
(d) That the shop is already in possession of
the plaintiff and the defendant will not be
entitled to take any steps till the landlord
himself desires to let out the shop to the
defendant."
By clause (a) the parties agreed to the statement of the law
which in our judgment was not sound and correct. It will be
hazardous t0 permit a landlord and a tenant to agree to such
a position of law. It was not open to respondent no. 3 to
permit the appellant to utilize the accommodation for his
own business or business of his son as was done under clause
(b). Nor was it open to the appellant to agree to let out
the shop, if in future he let it out to anybody, after
giving first preference to the third respondent as was
agreed to be done under clause (c). So long the Act and the
Rules continued in force the control of letting vested in
the District Magistrate and not in the parties. By an
agreement of the kind emobodied in the compromise petition
the parties could not curtail the powers of the District
Magistrate. It was unlawful and against the public policy
of the law to do so. The Public Policy behind the Act and
the Rules is to vest the control of letting in the District
Magistrate for the benefit of the general public or to be
more precise such members thereof who were in. need of
accommodation on rent. In our opinion, therefore, res-
pondent no. 3 committed no fraud in ignoring the void
compromise when he applied for eviction of the appellant
under section 7A of the Act and for delivery of actual,
physical possession to him. We do not accept the
alternative argument put forward by Mr. Bishen Narain as
correct in respect of the compromise. it was not bad for the
reason of having been entered into by respondent no. 3
alone. After perusing the application for allotment made by
respondent no. 3, the order of allotment made by respondent
no. 1 and tile order made by respondent no. 2 under section
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74(3) of the Act, we have come to the conclusion that the
allottee of the accommodation in question was respondent no.
3 although he may have taken it for the purpose of extending
his business of Chemists and Druggists run in partnership
with his brother.
The third submission made on behalf of the appellant has no
force and must also be rejected. The order of allotment in
this case was made by the Additional District Magistrate,
respondent no. 1. It may not be quite correct to say that it
was purely an administrative order as hag been the view of
the High Court in the Special Appeal. But the order was
made by him in a quasi-judicial manner after hearing the
parties concerned and after fully applying his mind. He,
being a delegate of the District Magistrate, was competent
to make the order of allotment. So was the Rent Controller.
But the latter
718
merely issued the formal order made by the former. It was
not a case where the authority competent to make the order
mechanically did it on the direction or in pursuance of an
order of a different authority not competent to pass the
order. In our judgment, therefore, the order of allotment
allotting the accommodation to respondent no. 3 was not bad.
Nor had the order made by the Rent Controller under section
7A of the Act any infirmity.
in the result the appeal fails and is dismissed. No orders
as to cost.
BHAGWATI, J. I have had the, advantage of reading the
judgment of brother Untwalia, J. He has discussed the three
contentions urged by Mr. S. T. Desai on behalf of the
appellant and rejected them. Whilst agreeing with the view
taken by him, in regard to the first and the third
contentions, I find myself unable to subscribe to the view
taken by him in regard to the second contention. I shall
immediately proceed to give my reasons why I take a
different view as regards the second contention, but before
I do so, I would like to add a few words in reference to the
first contention.
The Act with which we are concerned in this appeal is the
United Provinces (Temporary) Control of Rent and Eviction
Act, 1947. The object of this Act, as may be gathered from
its preamble, is to provide for continuance of powers to
control the letting and the rent of residential and non-
residential accommodation and to prevent the eviction of
tenants from such accommodation. Section 7, which is the
material section, enacts various provisions relating to
control on letting. It consists of four sub-sections, but
of them only two are material. Sub-s. 1(a) requires the
landlord to give notice of vacancy to the District
Magistrate within seven days after the accommodation becomes
vacant by his ceasing to, occupy it or by the tenant
vacating it or otherwise ceasing to occupy it or by
termination of tenancy or by release from requisition or in
any other manner whatsoever. A similar obligation is laid
on the tenant vacating the accommodation under sub-s. 1(b).
Sub-s. (2) then proceeds to say that the District Magistrate
may, by general or special order require a landlord to let
or not to let to any person any accommodation which is or
has fallen vacant or is about to fall vacant. It may be
noted that the power conferred on the District Magistrate
under sub-section (2) is absolute in terms. The vacant
accommodation is placed completely under the control of the
District Magistrate and he may require the landlord to let
the accommodation to any person nominated by him or he may
even make a negative order that the landlord shall not let
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the accommodation to a particular person. Moreover, this
power may be exercised by the District Magistrate at any
time. There is no provision in the statute requiring the
District Magistrate to exercise this power within a
particular time limit. The question is whether there is
anything in the Rules which imposes any such limitation on
the District Magistrate ? Rule 3 provides that the District
719
Magistrate shall make an allotment order within thirty days
of the receipt of the intimation sent by the landlord under
s. 7(1)(a) and .shall give notice thereof to the landlord.
This Rule obviously contemplates that the District
Magistrate must make an order requiring the landlord to let
the accommodation to a specified person within thirty days
of the receipt of the intimation of vacancy from the land-
lord. But does it also carry with it by necessary
implication a negative prohibition that if the District
Magistrate does not make such an order within the stipulated
time, he shall be precluded from making such order
thereafter. We do not think so. The only consequence ,of
the District Magistrate not making an order of allotment
within the period of thirty days is that set out in Rule 4.
It confers. a right on the landlord to nominate a tenant and
where the landlord makes such a nomination, the District
Magistrate is bound to allot the accommodation to such
nominee "unless for reasons to be recorded in writing he
forthwith allots the accommodation to other persons". It is
significant to note that Rule 4 does not provide that if the
District Magistrate, fails. to make an order of allotment
within the period of thirty days, the landlord may occupy
the accommodation himself The only right which enures to the
landlord in such a case is to nominate a tenant. This he
may do or may not do depending on his volition. But he does
not get a right to occupy the accommodation for himself.
Moreover, even where the landlord nominates a tenant, the
District Magistrate may, for reasons to be recorded in
writing, disregard such nomination and allot the
accommodation to another person notwithstanding the
expiration of the period of thirty days. It would,
therefore, be seen that the time limit of thirty days is not
intended to operate as a fetter on the right of the District
Magistrate to make an order of allotment in the sense that
he cannot thereafter make such an order. The only reason
why the period of thirty days is provided is that thereafter
the landlord gets a right to nominate a tenant, though even
this right can be displaced by the District Magistrate in a
proper case. But if for some reason, the landlord does not
exercise this right and nominate a tenant, the power of the
District Magistrate to make an order of allotment conferred
under s. 7(1)(a) is not affected. There is nothing in the
Rules which says that the landlord shall be entitled to
occupy the accommodation himself or that the District
Magistrate shall be precluded from making an order ,of
allotment after the expiration of the period of thirty days.
Rule 4 in fact indicates to the contrary. And so also does
Rule 6. That rule provides that if the landlord wants the
accommodation bona fide for his own personal occupation, he
must obtain permission of the District Magistrate to, occupy
it himself. This provision also suggests that the landlord
does not become entitled to occupy the accommodation himself
on the expiration of the period of thirty days, but he can
do so only if the necessary permission is granted by the
District Magistrate. If is, therefore, clear, on a
conspectus of the provisions contained in s. 7, sub-ss. (1)
and (2) Rules 3, 4 and 6, that even if an order of allotment
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is not made by the District Magistrate within the period of
thirty days, the landlord does not become entitled to occupy
the accommodation himself in defeasance of the power of the
District Magistrate to make an order of allotment and the
Dist-
720
rict Magistrate can, notwithstanding the expiration of the
period of thirty days, make an order of allotment under s.
7(1)(a). The validity of the order of allotment made by the
District Magistrate in favour of the third respondent could
not, therefore, be assailed on the ground that it was made
after the expiration of thirty days from the receipt of
intimation of vacancy from the appellant.
I would now turn to examine the, third contention on which I
find myself in disagreement with my learned brother
Untwalia, J. The facts which bear on this contention are
fully set out in the judgment of my learned brother
Untwalia, J. and I need not reiterate them. It would be
enough for my purpose to, state that Civil Suit No. 132 of
1962 was filed by the appellant against the 3rd respondent
in the Court of the First Civil Judge, Kanpur challenging
the validity of the order of allotment made by the District
Magistrate in favour of the 3rd respondent. Immediately on
filing the suit, the appellant obtained an injunction
restraining the 3rd respondent from taking any steps to
enforce the order of allotment or to interfere with the
possession of the appellant in respect of the shop. The
result was that the 3rd respondent was prevented from
obtaining possession of the shop from the appellant and he
could not even move the District Magistrate for evicting the
appellant and handing over possession of the shop to him.
The 3rd respondent, therefore, within a few days after the
suit was-filed and the injunction was obtained, entered into
a compromise with the appellant for settlement of the suit
and the terms of this compromise were as follows :
(a) That it is admitted by the defendant that
at the expiry of 30 days from the date of
intimation, the shop in dispute automatically
stood released to the plaintiff and the
allotment order dated 18th September, 1962 was
not at all effective vis-a-vis the rights of
the plaintiff as a landlord to use the said
premises.
(b) That the defendant has no objection if the
plaintiff continues to utilize the
accommodations for his own business or a
business of his son whether himself or in
partnership with any person and till such time
as the plaintiff and his son utilize the
accommodation in this manner, the defendant
will not be entitled to enforce his allotment
order against him.
(c) That the plaintiff has agreed that if at
any time he wants to discontinue the business
established by him in the said shop and wants
to let out the shop to any person, he will do
so in favour of the defendant and unless he
refuses to take the lease on reasonable terms,
the, plaintiff will not let out the shop to
any third party.
(d) That the shop is already in possession of
the plaintiff and the defendant will not be
entitled to take any steps till the landlord
himself desires to let out the shop to the
defendant"
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721
The learned Civil Judge, presumably on the view that the
compromise between the parties was lawful, passed a decree
in terms of the compromise on 11th October, 1962
under’Order-XXIII’ rule 3 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
One consequence of this consent decree was that the
injunction against the 3rd respondent came to an end. The
3rd respondent, thus freed from the inhibitory mandate of
the injunction, immediately proceeded to make an application
to the Rent Control and Eviction Officer on 2nd November,
1962 under s. 7A fur an order directing the appellant to
vacate the shop on the ground that he was in occupation of,
it in contravention of the order of allotment made in favour
of the 3rd respondent. The application was in effect and
substance one for enforcement of the order of allotment
under s. 7A. Now, under the consent decree the order of
allotment was declared void and ineffective and the right of
the appellant to use the shop for his personal occupation
was recognized vis-a-vis the 3rd respondent, but the 3rd
respondent did not disclose this fact in the application,
nor did he make any reference in it to the consent decree.
There was a dispute between the parties in regard to the
service of the notice of the application on the appellant,
but it was found by the Rent Control and Eviction Officer,
as also by the High Court in the writ petition, out of
,which the present appeal has arisen, that the appellant
refused to accept the notice of the application and hence we
must proceed on the, basis that the notice of the
application was duly served on the appellant. The appellant
did not appear at the hearing of the application and
proceeding ex parte, the Rent Control and Eviction Officer
passed an order dated 15th November, 1962 directing that the
appellant be evicted from the shop and the 3rd respondent be
put in possession of the same. Though this order was not
contemplated to be executed before 18th November, 1962, the
appellant was. forcibly evicted from, the shop in pursuance
of the order on 16th November, 1962 and possession of the
shop was immediately on the same day handed over to the 3rd
respondent. The appellant applied for a review of the order
to the Rent Control and Eviction Officer but the application
for review was rejected on 8th January, 1963. This led to
the filing of the writ petition out of which the present
appeal has arisen before us.
The principal question which arises for consideration on
these facts is as to whether the order passed by the Rent
Control and Eviction Officer under s. 7A was vitiated by
reason of non-disclosure of the fact of consent decree by
the 3rd respondent in the application made by him. It would
be convenient at this stage to refer to the relevant
provisions of s. 7A under which the application was made by
the 3rd respondent. Section 7A was introduced in the Act at
a later point of time in order to arm the District
Magistrate, with the power to enforce the order of allotment
made by him. Sub-s. (1) of that section provided inter alia
that "where an order requiring any accommodation to be let
or not to be let has been duly passed under sub-section (2)
of section 7 and the District Magistrate believes or has
reason to believe, that any person has, in contravention of
the said order, occupied the said accommodation or any part
thereof, he may call upon the person in occupation to show
cause, within
722
a time to be fixed by him, why he should not be evicted
therefrom." There is a proviso to this subsection which is
very material and it says that "no order under this section
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shall be passed if the District Magistrate is satisfied that
there has been undue delay or it is otherwise inexpedient to
do so." Therefore, it is not in every case where a person is
in occupation of accommodation in contravention of an order
of allotment that the District Magistrate is required to
make an order evicting such person and putting the allottee
in possession of the accommodation. The District Magistrate
has a discretion ill the matter and if he finds that there
has been undue delay on the part of the allottee or that on
the facts and circumstances it is inexpedient to make such
an order, he may decline to do so. It must, therefore,
follow a fortiorari that all the facts and circumstances
bearing on the exercise of his discretion should be before
the District Magistrate in order to enable him to exercise
his discretion in a just and proper manner. Now, in the
present case, there can be no doubt that the fact of consent
decree having been obtained by the parties in the suit was a
very material fact which could have considerable bearing on
the question whether it was inexpedient to make an order
under s. 7A. The 3rd respondent having himself agreed with
the appellant and obtained consent decree in the suit, that
the order of allotment in his favour was void and
ineffective and the appellant could occupy the shop for
himself, there can be no doubt that this piece of conduct,
unless satisfactorily explained, was bound to have its
impact on the exercise of discretion by the District
Magistrate. The District Magistrate would certainly ask
himself : "why should I exercise my discretion in favour of
a person who has himself conceded in the consent decree
obtained from the Civil Court that the order of allotment in
his favour is invalid and he has no objection to landlord
occupying the accommodation ?" Such conduct on the part of
the 3rd respondent could be inspired only by one of two
reasons. It may be that the 3rd respondent submitted to the
consent decree because the wanted to get rid of the
injunction issued against him by the Civil Court. So long
as the injunction stood, he could not obtain possession even
by moving the District Magistrate under s. 7A. He,
therefore, resorted to this device for the purpose of
getting the injunction out of his way, so that thereafter he
could make an application to the District Magistrate under
s. 7A suppressing the fact of the consent decree and take a
chance of obtaining an order of eviction under that section.
Or, it is possible that at some point of time subsequent to
the passing of the consent decree, the 3rd respondent was
advised that the consent decree was void and inoperative and
it did not preclude him from making an application to the
District Magistrate and obtaining an order of eviction under
s. 7A. In either case, he ought to have disclosed the fact
of the consent decree in the application made by him under
s. 7A. If he thought that the consent decree was valid, then
obviously non-disclosure of it by him in the application
made to the District Magistrate was fraudulent, for it is
difficult to see how he could have possibly persuaded
himself to believe that, notwithstanding the consent decree,
he could make such an application. The inference in that
case would be irresistible that he submitted to the consent
decree for
723
the purpose of getting rid of the injunction, so that he
could thereafter obtain an order of eviction from the
District Magistrate by keeping back the fact of the consent
decree from him. But even if I take a charitable view of
the conduct of the 3rd respondent and assume that after the
passing of the consent decree, he was advised that the,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 17
consent decree was null and void, I cannot exonerate him
from blameworthiness in not disclosing the fact of the
consent decree in the application made by him to the
District Magistrate.
I do not think that it is open to a party against whom a
decree has been passed by a court of law, whether by consent
or in invitum, to arrogate to himself the right of adjudging
that the decree, is a nullity and to disregard or to disobey
it on that hypothesis. It is true that a consent decree is
based on an agreement between the parties and, as pointed
out in Wentworth v. Bullen,(1) "the contract of the parties,
is not the less a contract,, and subject to the incidents of
a contract, because there is superadded the command of the
Judge." it would, therefore, seem to be in-controvertible
that a consent decree can be avoided or declared void on the
same grounds as, a contract. if ’the compromise on which the
consent decree is based is induced by fraud, mistake, undue
influence or any other ground which would avoid a contract,
the consent decree would be liable to be set aside but that
would have to be done by the aggrieved party by filing a
suit. So long as the consent decree is not set aside in
such suit, it would be binding on the parties as such as a
decree in invitum and it would not be open to either party
to disregard or disobey it. Similarly, if the compromise is
unlawful, Order XXIII, rule 3 prohibits the court from
passing a decree in accordance with it and even if such
decree is passed because neither party raises an objection,
it would be void. But the question is : can a party to a
litigation be permitted to decide for himself that the
consent decree is void and on that view ignore it altogether
as if it did not exist? I do not think so. Whether the
compromise is unlawful so as to render the consent decree
void must be left to the determination of the appropriate
authority before whom the question may arise and it cannot
be allowed to be determined by a party himself according to
his personal judgment. Such a question may raise difficult
and complex issues. It is not always easy to determine
whether an’ agreement is unlawful as being opposed to public
policy or contrary to law. The decision of such issues
requires a certain amount of legal training and skill and
objectivity of approach and these are matters "hardly fit
for final determination by the self-interest of a party".
They must be left to the judgment of the appropriate
authority "and not the personal judgment of one of the
parties". That is both a postulate and a requirement of the
democratic form of government. It was pointed out by
Frankfurter, J., in United States v. United Mine Workers of
America(2) :"No one, no matter how exalted his public office
or how righteous his private motive, can be judge in his own
case." Otherwise society will be ruled not by law but by
brute Dower. "If one man can be allowed to determine for
himself what is law, every man can. That means first chaos,
(1) (1829) 9 B & C 1840 N.
(2) 330 U.S. 258; 91 Law. Ed. 884.
724
then tyranny." Legal process is an essential part of the
democratic process. Therefore, to my mind, there can be no
doubt that if the, 3rd respondent was of the view that the
compromise was unlawful ,and the consent decree was on that
account void, he should have taken appropriate proceedings
in the civil court and got the consent ,decree declared void
before making an application to the District Magistrate
under s. 7A, or at the least, disclosed the fact of the
consent decree to the District Magistrate in his application
under S. 7A and pointed out to the District Magistrate that
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 17
the consent decree was void on the ground that the
compromise was against public policy or contrary to the Act
and did not, therefore, preclude the third respondent from
making an application for enforcement of the order of
allotment nor did it stand in the way of the District
Magistrate in making an order of eviction in favour of the
3rd respondent. The District Magistrate could not be asked
to enforce the order of allotment in favour of the 3rd
respondent unless the consent decree, holding the order of
allotment to be invalid, was first found to be void,
because, if it was valid, it would be binding on the 3rd
respondent and he could not, in that event, seek the order
of eviction in his favour. This was, therefore, a material
fact which ought to have been disclosed by the 3rd
respondent in the application made by him under s. 7A. But
on ’this ground alone I would not be inclined to quash and
set aside the order made by the Rent Control and Eviction
Officer as delegate of the District Magistrate under S. 7A
because, as pointed out by my learned brother Untwalia, J.,
in his judgment, and there I agree with him, that the
consent decree was void by reason of the compromise being
against the public policy of the law and hence there would
be no point in interfering with the order of the Rent
Control and Eviction Officer on this ground.
There is, however, one other aspect of this question which
requires consideration. It cannot be seriously disputed,
and I have already referred to the aspect a little earlier,
that the District Magistrate had a discretion under s. 7A
not to enforce an order of allotment, if he thought that, on
the facts and circumstances of the case, it was inexpedient
to do so. Even if the compromise was unlawful and the con-
sent decree was on that account void, the very fact of the
3rd respondent having submitted to the consent decree,
declaring the order of allotment to be, invalid and
recognising the right of the appellant to occupy the shop
for himself vis-a-vis the 3rd respondent, was a highly
relevant circumstance bearing on the exercise of the
discretion of the District Magistrate, and it ought to have
been disclosed to the District Magistrate. It is a well
settled proposition of law and this proposition should apply
equally in the field of administrative law, that when a
party approaches a tribunal for discretionary relief, he
must not only come with clean hands but must also show the
utmost good faith disclose all material facts having a
hearing on the exercise of discretion of the authority which
are within his knowledge. He cannot escape this obligation
on the plea that the other side can always, if it so
chooses, appear and bring the material facts to the notice
of the
725
authority. It is an Obligation of confidence which, he owes
to the authority and this Obligation is imposed by law in
the larger interests of administration of Justice so that
justice, whether dispensed by civil court or by
administrative authority remains pure and unsullied. I am,
therefore, of the opinion that"the non-disclosure of the
fact of consent decree by the 3rd respondent in the
application made by him vitiated the order of the Rent
Control and Eviction Officer under s. 7A
I would, therefore, allow the appeal and quash and set aside
the order made by the Rent Control and Eviction Officer as
delegate of the District Magistrate under S. 7A and direct
the 3rd respondent to hand over possession of the shop to
the appellant. It would be open to the District Magistrate
to take such action under S. 7, sub-S. (2) as he thinks fit
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including making of an order of allotment in favour of any
person he thinks proper, The District Magistrate may even,
if he so thinks fit, make a fresh order of allotment in
favour of the 3rd respondent. Each party will bear and pay
his own costs of this litigation.
ORDER
In view of the majority judgment the Appeal is dismissed
with no, order as to costs.
V. M. K.
726