Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PHEROZE FRAMROZE TARAPOREWALAAND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
10/12/1952
BENCH:
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BENCH:
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
CITATION:
1953 AIR 73 1953 SCR 226
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1971 SC1495 (18)
R 1973 SC1099 (3)
R 1980 SC1605 (14)
ACT:
Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging Rates Control Act, 1947, s.
28-Sub-lease by tenant in contravention of term of lease-
Suit by landlord against tenant and sub-tenant for
possession and compensation for use and occupation-
Jurisdiction of Small Causes Court -Construction of s. 28-
Impleading of sub-tenant, effect of.
HEADNOTE:
Where a lease of a flat situated within the City of Bombay
contained a term that the tenant shall not assign, sub-let
or re-let the premises, without the previous consent of the
landlord and the tenant, in contravention of this term sub-
let the flat, and the landlord instituted a suit against him
and the sub-tenant in the Court of Small Causes Bombay, for
possession and compensation for use and occupation of the
premises, and the sub-lessee contended that the Court of
Small Causes had no jurisdiction so far as he was concerned
inasmuch as the suit was not one between a landlord and a
tenant nor, one for rent within S. 28 of the Bombay Rents,
Hotel and Lodging Rates Control Act, 1947:
Hold, (i) that the suit was clearly one for possession and
the claim for compensation wag merely an incidental claim;
(ii) s. 28 of the Act conferred jurisdiction on the Court of
Small Causes not only to entertain and try any suit or
proceeding between a landlord and tenant for recovery of
rent or possession, but also "to deal with any claim or
question arising out of this Act or ’any of its provisions"’
and s. 28 was thus wide enough to cover the question raised
as between the plaintiff and the sub-lessee ;
(iii) in any event, though the sub-lessee was not a
necessary party to the suit he was a proper party, and the
joinder of such a party cannot alter the nature of the suit
and make it any the less a suit between a landlord and
tenant or take it out of s. 28.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 172 of 1952.
Appeal by special leave from the Judgment and Decree dated
January 25, 1952, of the High Court of Judicature at Bombay
(Chagla C.J.) in Revision Application No. 1119 of 1951 from
the Judgment and Decree dated August 10, 1951, of the Court
of Small Causes at Bombay in Appeal No. 355 of 1950, arising
out of Judgment and Decree dated
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December 18, 1950, of the Court of Small Causes in Suit No.
1055/7943 of 1948.
B. H. Lulla for the appellants.
C. H. Daphtary (Solicitor-General for India) (B.B.
Adhyarujina, with him) for the respondents Nos. 1, 2 and 3.
1952. December 10. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
DAS J.-This is an appeal by special leave from the
judgment and order of the High Court of Judicature at Bombay
passed on January 25, 1952, in Civil Revision, Application
No. 1119 of 1951. It arises out of a suit filed in the
Bombay Small Causes Court under section 28 of the Bombay
Rents,’ Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act, 1947, for
ejectment from and compensation at the rate of Rs. 370 per
month from November 1, 1947, for the use and occupation of
the second floor flat of Sunama House situate in Cumballa
Hill, Bombay. The plaintiffs are the trustees of the will
of Framroze D. B. Taraporewala deceased and as such the
owners of the Sunama House. The defendants are two in
number, namely, the first defendant Mrs. Dinbai K. Lala to
whom the said flat was let out by the plaintiffs on or about
September 1, 1942, at Rs. 370 per mouth and the second
defendant a limited company to whom the first defendant had
sublet the said flat as from November- 16, 1947, at the same
rent. The defendants contested the suit on a variety of
grounds, but the trial Court by its judgment dated October
18, 1950, rejected all-the pleas and passed a decree
directing both the defendants to vacate the flat by March
31, 1951, and awarding, only as against the first defendant,
Rs. 3,317-10-8 for compensation from November 1, 1947, till
July 31, 1948, and thereafter at Rs. 370 per month from
August 4, 1948, till delivery of possession besides the
costs of the suit. The defendants preferred an appeal under
section 29 of that Apt. Besides the various pleas put
forward
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before the trial Court, the defendants, before the Appellate
Bench, put forward an additional plea, watch was not pleaded
in their written statements, namely, that the Small Causes
Court had no jurisdiction to entertain the suit in so far as
it concerned the second defendant. The Appellate Bench of
the Small Causes Court dismissed the appeal with costs. The
second defendant thereafter moved the High Court in revision
under section 115 of the Code of Civil Procedure which was
also dismissed with costs. The second defendant has now
come up in appeal before us after having obtained special
leave of this Court.
The only contention urged before us is that the Small Causes
Court had no jurisdiction to entertain this suit. The
relevant portions of section 28 of the Act are as follows:-
"Notwithstanding anything contained in any law and
notwithstanding that, by Reason of the amount of the claim
or for any other reason, the suit or proceeding would not,
but for this provision, be with in its jurisdiction,
(a) in Greater Bombay, the Court of Small
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Causes, Bombay,
(aa)....................................
(b).......................................
shall have jurisdiction to entertain and try any suit or
proceeding between a landlord and a tenant relating to the
recovery of rent or possession of any premises to which any
of the provisions of this Part apply, and to decide any
application made under this Act and to deal with’ any claim
or question arising out of this Act or any of its provisions
; and no other Court shall have jurisdiction to entertain
any such suit, proceeding or application or to deal with
such claim or question."
It was not disputed that the provisions of Part II of the
Act apply to the premises. The contention of the appellant
is that the suit as against it was not a suit between a
landlord and a tenant and that, in so
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far as it claimed compensation for use and occupation, it
was not a suit for recovery of rent and, therefore, section
28 had no application, and the Court of Small Causes had no
jurisdiction to-entertain this suit. In view of this plea
it is necessary to refer to the plaint in this suit. After
setting forth their title as owners of the Sunama Houses
trustees under the will of Framroze D. B. Taraporewala the
plaintiffs plead that the second floor flat was let out to
first defendant on or about September 1, 1942, at Rs. 370
per month on terms and conditions printed on the back Of the
rent bill form which were shown to and accepted by the first
defendant. In paragraph 5 of the plaint is set out one of
those terms, namely, that the tenant shall not assign,
sublet or re-let the premises without the previous written
consent of the landlords. In paragraph 7 reference is made
to the notice given by the plaintiffs to the first defendant
on October 17, 1946, to vacate the flat at the end of
November, 1946, on the ground that the same was required
reasonably and bonafide for the use of two of the
beneficiaries under the will. Then, after referring to an
unsuccessful attempt on the part of the plaintiffs to obtain
a certificate under section 9 of the Act ’ the plaintiffs
refer to a letter dated November 16, 1947, written by the
first defendant to the plaintiff8 intimating that she had
from that day sublet the flat to the second defendant. It
is stated in para,graphs 12 and 13 of the plaint that on
December 19, 1947, the second defendant sent a cheque for
Rs. 370 for rent , for the month of November, 1947, but the
plaintiffs declined to accept the same or to recognise the
second defendant as a lawful occupant as subtenant or
otherwise. It is also alleged that on January 23, 1948, the
plaintiffs gave a notice to both ,the Codefendants to vacate
the premises at the end of February 29, 1948. In paragraphs
14 and 15 the plaintiffs formulate the grounds for
ejectment, ,namely, (1) that the alleged subletting by the
first ,defendant to the second defendant was wrongful,
illegal and in breach of the terms of the tenancy and
30
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(2)that the plaintiffs required the premises reasonably and
bona fide for the use and occupation of two of the
beneficiaries. The plaintiffs prayed that both the
defendants be ordered to vacate the -premises and that both
of them be ordered to pay to the plaintiffs compensation for
the use and occupation of the premises at Rs. 370 per mouth
from November 1, 1947, till delivery of vacant possession.
The appellant points out that on the face of the plaint the
plaintiffs declined to recognise it as a lawful occupant as
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subtenant or otherwise and treated it as a mere trespasser
having no lawful claim to the demised flat and, therefore,
the suit, in so far as it was one between the plaintiffs and
the appellant (the second defendant), cannot be said to be a
suit between a landlord and a tenant and that the suit in so
far as it claimed compensation from him cannot be said to be
a suit for recovery of rent. The last part of the
contention need not detain us long, for the suit was
undoubtedly one for possession of the flat and the claim for
compensation was only incidental and ancillary to to the
claim for possession. Jurisdiction to entertain a suit for
possession will empower the Court not only to pass a decree
for possession but also to give directions for payment of
mesne profits until delivery of possession. Such direction
for payment of mesne profits is usually an integral part of
the decree for possession. The only question for
consideration, therefore, is whether the suit was one
between a landlord and a tenant.
The respondents (the plaintiffs) do not contend that the
appellant (the second defendant) is a ’tenant" as defined in
section 5 (11) of the Act. The appellant, on the other
hand, does not and, indeed, cannot ;deny that, as between
the plaintiffs and the first defendant, the suit is one
between a landlord and a tenant and as such the Small Causes
Court is, under section 28 of the Act, the only Court
competent to entertain the suit. Section 28 confers
jurisdiction on the Court of Small Causes not only to
entertain and try any suit or proceeding between a landlord
and a
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tenant relating to the recovery of rent or possession of the
premises but also "to deal with any claim or question
arising out of this Act or any of its provisions. There is
no reason to hold that’ "any claim or question" must
necessarily be one between the landlord and the tenant. In
any case, once there is a suit between a landlord and a
tenant relating to the recovery of rent or possession of the
premises the Small Causes Court acquires the jurisdiction
not only to entertain that suit but also "to deal with any
claim or question arising out of the Act or any of its pro-
visions" which may properly be raised in such a suit. The
plaintiffs in this suit claimed that the purported
subletting by the first defendant to the second defendant
was unlawful both because it was a breach of the terms of
the tenancy and also because as the statutory tenant after
the determination of the contractual tenancy the first
defendant was not entitled to create a sub-tenancy and they
questioned the validity of the second defendant’s claim to
any protection under the Act. The claim or question as to
the respective rights of the plaintiffs and the second
defendant thus raised in the plaint certaintly arises out of
the Act and the language of section 28 appears to be wide
enough to cover the same. Apart from that section, under
the ordinary law a decree for possession passed against a
tenant in a suit for ejectment is binding on a person
claiming title under or through that tenant and is
executable against such person whether or not he was or was
not a party to the suit. The non-joinder of such a person
does not render the decree any the less binding on him. It
is in this sense, therefore, that he is not a necessary party
to an ejectment suit against the tenant. It is, however,
recognised that such a person is, nevertheless, a proper
party to the suit in order that the question whether the
lease has been properly determined and the landlord
plaintiff is entitled to recover possession of the premises
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may be decided in his presence so that he may have the
opportunity to see that there is no collusion between the
landlord
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and the tenant under or through whom he claims and to seek
protection under the Act, if he is entitled to’ any. Such a
person may be joined as a party to the suit from the
beginning of the suit or at any later stage of the suit if
the Court thinks fit to do so. The joinder of such a proper
party cannot alter the character of the suit and does not
make the suit any the less a suit between the landlord and
the tenant or take it out of section 28 of the Act. To hold
otherwise will be to encourage multiplicity of suits which
will result in no end of inconvenience and confusion. In
our view the decision and the reasoning of Chagla C.J. are
substantially correct and this appeal must fail. We,
therefore, dismiss the appeal with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
Agent for the appellants: Rajinder Narain.
Agent for respondents Nos. 1, 2 & 3: B. A. Gagrat.