Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHRI VIDYA PRACHAR TRUST
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PANDIT BASANT RAM
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
21/03/1969
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M. (CJ)
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M. (CJ)
MITTER, G.K.
CITATION:
1969 AIR 1273 1970 SCR (1) 66
1969 SCC (1) 835
CITATOR INFO :
D 1979 SC1307 (7,8,9)
D 1980 SC 138 (4,5,6,8,9,10,12,13,14)
O 1980 SC1709 (3,4,5,14,16,17,23)
ACT:
East Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act, 1949-S. 13(2)(1)-
Eviction for non-payment of rent-Deposits in court under s.
31 Relief of in- debtedness Act, 1934-Whether equivalent to
tender of rent to landlord.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant landlord made an application under s. 13 of
the East Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act, 1949 for the
respondent’s eviction from certain premises on the ground
that the -rent ’for the premises from October 1959 to June
1961 had -not been paid. On the first day of hearing the
respondent appeared and tendered part of the rent. He
claimed that he had made two deposits in the court of the
Senior Sub-Judge under s. 31 of the East Punjab Relief of
Indebtedness Act, 1934 and that this was a valid tender of
the balance rent to the landlord. The Rent Controller
decided that the respondent was not in default and the
appellate authority as well as the High Court took the same
view.
On appeal to this Court,
HELD : The deposit under s. 31 of the Relief of Indebtedness
Act did not save the tenant from the consequences of the
default as contemplated by s. 13 of the Urban Rent
Restriction Act. [70 F]
Section 31 is intended to operate between debtors and
creditors where difficulty in making the payment, either
wholly or partly, may arise in the debtor wishes to save
himself from interest which is running. The Act is not
intended to operate between landlords and tenants; nor is
the Court of the Senior Sub-Judge a clearing house for rent.
Although the general words "any person who, owes money" may
appear to cover the case of a tenant, looking at the Act as
a whole, the phrase must be read to cover cases of debtors
and creditors between whom the-re is an agreement for
payment of interest because the deposit is intended to stop
interest from running. No interest is agreed to be paid by
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tenants, at any rate, nor ordinarily, and therefore, the
section cannot be said to cover a case between a landlord
and a tenant. [69 F-H]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION :Civil Appeal No. 499 of 1966.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
March 18, 1964 of the Punjab High Court in Civil Revision
No. 750 of 1962.
Bishan Narain and Naunit Lal, for the appellant.
N. N. Keswani, for the respondent.
Janardan Sharma and S. K. Nandy, for the intervener.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by.
Hidayatullah, C.J. This is a landlord’s appeal against an
order of the High Court of Punjab, March 18, 1964,
confirming
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the dismissal of his petition for the eviction of the
respondent from certain premises taken on rent. The
appellant had made the application under S. 13 of the East
Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act, 1949 on the allegation
that rent for the premises from October 1, 1959 to June 30,
1961 had not been paid. The rent of the premises was Rs.
32/8/- and the water connection charges were Rs. 2/8//-. On
the first date of hearing the tenant appeared and tendered
Rs. 292/8/- as rent from October 1, 1960 to June 30, 1961.
He also paid Rs. 7/- as interest and Rs. 25/- as costs.
These amounts were accepted by the landlord without
prejudice to his claim that the rent for the earlier period
had not been paid.
It appears that the tenant had made two deposits in the
Court of the Senior Sub-Judge, Ludhiana under s. 31 of the
East Punjab Relief of Indebtedness Act, 1934 on December 23,
1959 and July 18, 1960, the amount being 210/- on each
occasion. The tenant claimed that this was a valid tender
of rent to the landlord. The Rent Controller, by his order,
decided that the tenant was not in default and the Appellate
Authority and the High Court also took the same view. It
was held by the Appellate Authority, as well as by the High
Court, that the deposit under s. 31 of the Relief of
Indebtedness Act was a valid tender under s. 13 of the Urban
Rent Restriction Act. The Division Bench in the High Court
followed an earlier decision of the same Court reported in
Mam Chand v. Chhotu Ram(1). The correctness of that
decision as well as the decision under appeal are challenged
before us.
Before the hearing commenced the respondent took Objection
to the grant of the special leave stating that the appellant
was guilty of making "certain inaccurate untrue and
misleading statements in respect of certain material facts".
The charge was that before the Rent Controller there was no
issue that the deposit under s. 31 of the Relief of
Indebtedness Act was a valid tender of payment, although
this was mentioned as a fact in the petition for special
leave. It was also said that this question was given up
before the Appellate Authority although it was stated that
the point was decided by the Appellate Authority. Reliance
was placed in this connection upon two decisions of this
Court reported in Hari Narain v. Badri Das(2) and Rajabhai
Abdul Rehman Munshi v. Vasudev Dhanjibhai Mody(3). These
were cases of gross misstatement where the party applying
for special leave had deliberately chosen to make false
statements and false pleas. In the present case the same
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cannot be said of the appellant. There I was only one
issue, before the Court and it was whether the deposit
(1) 1. L. R. (1964) 1 Pb. 626. 2. [1964] 2 S. C.
R. 203.
3. [1964] 3 S. C. R. 480
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under one Act was good for the purposes of the other Act.
All that the courts had to consider was whether that deposit
saved the tenant from eviction or not. The High Court
mentioned that this was the only point before all the courts
below and we do not think that the complaint that there had
been any false averment in the petition for special leave
was sustainable. We accordingly -rejected the contention,
raised by C.M.P. No. 64 of 1969.
As regards the merits of the case s. 1 3 (2) (1) of the East
Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act reads as follows
"13. Eviction of tenants.
(1) A tenant in possession of a building or
rented land shall not be evicted therefrom in
execution of a decree passed before or after
the commencement of this Act or otherwise and
whether before or after the termination of the
tenancy, except in accordance with the
provisions of this section, or in pursuance of
an order made under-section 13 of the Punjab
Urban Rent Restriction Act, 1947, as
subsequently amen
(2) A landlord who seeks to evict his tenant
shall apply to the Controller for a direction
in that behalf. If the Controller, after
giving the tenant a reasonable opportunity of
showing cause against the applicant, is
satisfied-
(i) that the tenant has not paid or tendered
the rent due by him in respect of the building
or rented land within fifteen days after the
expiry of the time fixed in the agreement of
tenancy with his landlord or in the absence of
any such agreement, by the last day of the
month next following that for which the rent
is payable :
Provided that if the tenant on the first
hearing of the application for ejectment after
due service pays or tenders the arrears of
rent and interest at six per cent per annum on
such arrears together with the cost of
application assessed by the Controller, the
tenant shall be deemed to have duly paid or
tendered the rent within the time aforesaid."
The Act does not lay down any other procedure under which
-money can be deposited with any Government Authority. Such
provisions are to be found in other Rent Control Acts but
are missing in this Act. Eviction, therefore, takes place
on the ground of non-payment or tender of rent due within
time fixed by the
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tenancy and 15 days thereafter. There is only one saving
for the tenant and that is when he tenders the full rent in
Court before the Rent Controller together with interest and
costs. In the present case, the tenant did tender rent but
only for a portion of the period and he relied on his
deposit under the Relief of Indebtedness Act as due
discharge of his liability for the earlier period. It may
be stated that the deposit before the Senior SubJudge was
made not only of arrears of rent but prospectively for some
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future period for which the rent was then not due. The
question is whether such payment is a valid payment or
tender to the landlord.
Section 31 of the Relief of Indebtedness Act reads as
follows :-
"31. Deposit in court.
(1) Any person who owes money may at any
time deposit in court a sum of money in full
or part payment to his creditor.
(2) The court on receipt of such deposit
shall give notice thereof to the creditor and
shall, on his application, pay the sum to him.
(3) From the date of such deposit interest
shall cease to run on the sum so deposited."
This Act was passed to govern the relation between the
debtors and creditors. The scheme of the Act bears upon
this relationship because it provides for insolvency
procedure, usurious loans, damdupat, redemption of
mortgages, deposit in court, and sets up Debt Conciliation
Boards, suitably amending the civil law wherever necessary.
Incidentally, it provides for deposit in court with a view
to giving a chance to debtors to save interest on the
outstanding dues either wholly or partially. The section,
therefore, is intended to operate between debtors and
creditors where difficulty in making the payment, either
wholly or partly, may arise and the debtor wishes to save
himself from interest which is running. The Act is not
intended to operate between landlords and tenants; nor is
the Court of the Senior Sub-Judge created into a clearing
house for rent. Although the general words "any person who
owes money" may appear to cover the case of a tenant, we
have to look at the Act as a whole and see what kind of a
person is intended thereby. The phrase must be read to
cover cases of debtors and creditors between whom there is
an agreement for payment of interest because the deposit is
intended to stop interest from running. No interest is
agreed to be paid by tenants, at any rate, nor ordinarily,
and, therefore, the, section
70
cannot be said to cover a case between a landlord and a
tenant. There is no provision in the Urban Rent Restriction
Act for making a deposit except one, and that is on the
first day of the hearing of the case. It could not have
been intended that all tenants who may be disinclined to pay
rent to their landlords should be enabled to deposit it in
the Court of a Senior Sub-Judge making the Senior Sub-Judge,
a kind of a Rent Collector for all landlords. The provision
for stoppage of interest is a pointer that the interest in
the first instance must have been due. In our judgment, S.
31 has been misunderstood in the High Court. A second
pointer is that the amount may be deposited in part which
cannot possibly be a valid tender in case of rent. It may
be pointed out that the decision of the Division Bench runs
counter to two other decisions of single Judges of the same
High Court who have taken the same view which we are taking
here. The decisions are noticed by the Division Bench but
have not been accepted. The decisions of the learned single
Judges are to be preferred. The Division Bench has taken a
very extended view of the deposit under the Relief of
Indebtedness Act.
Further the deposit of money in the present case was not
only of the rent due but also of future rent. Under s. 19
read with s. 6 of the Urban Rent Restriction Act a
landlord is liable to be sent to jail if he recovers advance
rent beyond one month. It is impossible to think that the
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landlords would be required to go to the Court of the Senior
Sub-Judge with a view to finding out whether their tenants
have deposited rent due to them or not. No doubt there is a
provision for sending a notice, but we do not think that
that notice is intended to cover such cases. On the whole,
therefore, we are of opinion that the deposit under s. 31 of
the Relief of Indebtedness Act did not save the tenant from
the consequences of the default as contemplated by s. 13 of
the Urban Rent Restriction Act. We accordingly allow the
appeal and, setting aside the judgment of the High Court,
order the eviction of the tenant from the premises rented
out by him. He shall have three months’ time in which to
vacate the premises. The costs throughout must also be
borne by the respondent.
R.K.P.S. Appeal allowed.
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