Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KULDEEP SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GANPAT LAL & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT05/12/1995
BENCH:
KULDIP SINGH, S. SAGHIR AHMAD
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
S.C. AGRAWAL, J :
Leave granted.
This appeal by the tenant arises out of a suit for
eviction filed by the respondents under the provisions of
the Rajasthan Premises (Control of Rent & Eviction) Act,
1950 (hereinafter referred to as the ’Act’). It relates to a
shop situated at Udaipur in Rajasthan. Under Section 13
(1)(a) of the Act, the tenant can be evicted from the
premises if he has neither paid nor tendered the amount of
rent due from him for six months. Sub-Section (6) of Section
13 affords pro- tection to the tenant from eviction if the
tenant deposits in court or pays to the landlord the amount
determined by the court in terms of Sub-sections (3) and (4)
of Section 13 of the Act. This protection is, however, not
available if the tenant after having obtained such benefit
in respect of the premises again makes a default in the
payment of rent of the said premises for six months. The
respondent landlords had filed a suit (Suit No.117 of 1981)
against the appellant for his eviction on the ground of
default in the payment of rent and protection under Section
13(6) of the Act was given to the appellant in those
proceedings. On December 20, 1982 the respondents filed a
second suit (Suit No.169 of 1983) which has given rise to
this appeal in the court of District Judge at Udaipur for
the eviction of the appellant on the ground that he has
defaulted for the second time in payment of rent, inasmuch
as he had not paid the rent for six months from May 1, 1982.
The said suit was contested by the appellant, who denied
that he had committed a second default in payment of rent
for six months. The case of the appellant was that he had
paid the rent for five months from May, 1982 to September,
1982 in cash to the respondents and 10 days later on October
21, 1982 when he went to them for collecting the receipt for
the said payment, they refused to give the said receipt and
returned the amount which was paid by the appellant to the
respondents by way of rent. The appellant claims that
thereupon on October 22, 1982, he submitted an application
under Section 19-A of the Act in the court of Munsiff
(South), Udaipur narrating the aforesaid facts and seeking
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permission of the court to deposit the rent for the months
of May to October, 1982 in the court and that after
obtaining the permission of the court, the appellant on
October 29, 1982 deposited the sum of Rs. 3,600/- in the
court by way of rent for the period from May, 1982 to
October, 1982 by tender No. 1711 dated October 29, 1982 and
that the notice of application submitted by the appellant
under Section 19-A of the Act had been issued to the
respondents. The said suit of the respondents was dismissed
by the Additional District Judge No.1. Udaipur by his
judgment dated July 2, 1987 on the view that the appellant
could not be held to be a defaulter in the payment of rent
since he had deposited the rent for the months of May, 1982
to October, 1982 in the court on 29th October, 1982 before
the rent for six months fell due. The respondents filed an
appeal against the said judgment of the Addl. District Judge
in the High Court of Rajasthan. The said appeal was allowed
by a learned Single Judge of the High Court by his judgment
dated January 25, 1989. The learned Judge, after considering
the evidence adduced by the appellant, has held that his
plea about payment of rent personally to the respondents had
no legs to stand. The learned Judge further held that the
deposit by the appellant in the court under Section 19-A of
the Act was not a valid valid deposit and the appellant
could not claim any benefit on the basis of the said deposit
under Section 19-A inasmuch as the appellant had not adopted
the procedure as laid down in Sub-section (3) of Section 19-
A before making the said deposit and that the appellant had
committed a second default in payment of rent for six
months. The learned Single Judge rejected the contention
urged on behalf of the appellant that the cause of action
had not arisen on November 1,1982 because the rent for the
month of October could have been paid by November 15 and
that on November 1, 1982 the rent for five months only was
due and not for six months. The learned single Judge has
held that the rent for a particular month becomes due as
soon as the month ends and under the provisions of the Act
it was made payable by a particular date, i.e. the 15th of
next following month, but it was only a facility provided to
the tenant to pay the rent by that date and it does not mean
that the rent for the month of October had not become due on
November 1,1982. The special appeal filed by the appellant
against the said judgment of the learned Single Judge was
dismissed by the Division Bench of the High Court by the
impugned judgment dated March 8, 1989. Hence, this appeal.
Shri Rajinder Sachar, the learned Senior Counsel
appearing for the appellant, has, in the first place,
invited out attention to para 6 of the plaint, wherein the
respondents have stated:
"6. That the cause of action for the
suit arose on 1.11.1982 when the rent of
six months became outstanding."
The submission of Shri Sachar is that in view of Clause (e)
of Rule 1 of Order VII of the Code of Civil Procedure, it
was incumbent upon the respondents to set out in the plaint
the facts constituting the cause of action and when it arose
and as per the said requirement the respondents, in para 6
of the plaint, have indicated that the cause of action arose
on November 1,1982. Shri Sachar has submitted that the said
statement in para 6 of the plaint is not correct and has
pointed out that under Sub-section (1) of Section 19-A of
the Act, it is provided:-
"(1) Subject to the provisions of this
section, every tenant shall pay rent
within the time fixed by contract or in
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the absence of such contract, by the
fifteenth day of the month next
following the month for which it is
payable."
According to Shri Sachar, since no time was fixed for
payment of rent by contract, the rent was payable by the
appellant by the 15th day of the month next following the
month for which it was payable and the rent for the month of
October, 1982 was therefore, payable by November 15, 1982
and that on November 1, 1982 the rent for October, 1982 was
not due and therefore, it could not be said that on November
1, 1982, when the cause of action is claimed to have arisen,
the appellant was in default of payment of rent for six
month. It is no doubt true that in view of Sub-section (1)
of Section 19-A of the Act, since there was no contract
prescribing the date for payment of rent, the appellant
could pay the rent for the month of October, 1982 till
November 15, 1982 and the cause of action for filing a suit
on the ground of default for the payment of rent for the
months of May, 1982 to October, 1982 could arise only on
November 16, 1982 and to that extent and the statement in
the plaint that the cause of action arose on November 1,
1982 is not correct. But that does not mean that the
respondents must be non-suited on this ground. The object
underlying Order VII Rule (1) (e) which requires that the
plaint shall contain the particulars about the facts
constituting the cause of action and when it arose, is to
enable the court to find out whether the plaint discloses
the cause of action because the plaint is liable to be
rejected under Order VII Rule 11 CPC if it does not disclose
the cause of action. The purpose behind the requirement that
the plaint should indicate when the cause of action arose is
to help the court in ascertaining whether the suit is not
barred by limitation. Any error on the part of the plaintiff
in indicating the date on which the cause of action arose
would be of little consequence if the cause of action had
arisen on the date on which the suit was filed and the suit
was within limitation from the said date. The error in
mentioning the date on which the cause of action had arisen
in the plaint in such a case would not disentitle the
plaintiff from seeking relief from the court in the suit. In
the instant case, the suit was filed on December 20, 1982 on
which date admittedly the rent for six months i.e. from May,
1982 to October, 1982 had fallen due. Moreover, in para 7 of
the plaint, while indicating the valuation of the suit for
the purpose of court fee, the respondents have stated that
there was outstanding rent of 7 months amounting to
Rs.4,200/- and court fee was paid on the said amount of
outstanding rent. Merely because in para 6 of the plaint,
the respondents have stated that the cause of action arose
on November 1, 1982 would not, in our opinion, disentitle
the respondents from seeking relief of eviction since as per
the plaint, on the date of the filing of the suit the rent
for seven months (May, 1982 to November, 1982) had fallen
due. The first contention urged by Shri Sachar cannot,
therefore be accepted.
The next contention urged by Shri Sachar relates to the
deposit of the sum of Rs.3,600/- by the appellant in the
court on 29th October, 1982 under Section 19-A of the Act.
For that purpose, it is necessary to take note of the
relevant provisions contained in Sub-sections (3) and (4) of
Section 19-A, which provide as under:
"(3) A tenant may, apart from personal
payment of rent to the landlord, remit
or deposit rent by any of the following
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methods-
(a) he may remit the amount of any rent
due from him by postal money order at
the ordinary address of the landlord; or
(b) he may, by notice in writing,
require the landlord to specify within
ten days from the date of receipt of the
notice by the latter, a bank and account
number into which the rent may be
deposited by the tenant to the credit of
the landlord. If the landlord specifies
a bank and account number, the tenant
shall deposit the rent in such bank and
account number and shall continue to
deposit in it any rent which may
subsequently become due in respect of
the premises:
Provided that such bank shall be
one situated in the city or town in
which the premises is situated :
Provided further that it shall be
open to the landlord to specify from
time to time by a written notice to the
tenant and subject to the proviso
aforesaid, a bank different from the one
already specified by him under this
clause;
(c) Where he has remitted the rent by
postal money order under clause (a) and
the money order is received back by him
under a postal endorsement of refusal or
unfound and where the landlord does not
specify a bank and account number under
clause (b) or where there is bona fide
doubt as to the person or persons to
whom the rent is payable, the tenant may
deposit such rent with the court within
fifteen days of the expiry of the period
of ten days referred to in clause (b)
and in the case of such bona fide doubt
as aforesaid, within fifteen days of the
time referred to in sub-section (1) and
further continue to deposit with the
court any rent which may subsequently
become due in respect of the premises.
(4) For the purpose of clause (a) of
sub-section (1) of section 13, a tenant
shall be deemed to have paid or tendered
the amount of any rent due from him, if
he has paid, remitted or deposited the
amount of rent by any of the methods
specified in sub-section (3)."
Under Sub-section (3), apart from personal payment of rent
to the landlord, three other modes have been prescribed,
namely, (i) remittance by postal money order at the ordinary
address of the landlord, (ii) deposit in the bank account of
the landlord and (iii) deposit in court in cases where the
money order has been received back under the postal
endorsement of refusal or unfound or where the landlord does
not specify the bank account number or where there is a bona
fide doubt that the person or persons to whom the rent is
payable. Under Sub-section (4), a legal fiction is created
and the tenant is deemed to have paid or tendered the amount
of rent due from him and is not to be treated in default of
payment of rent if he has paid, remitted or deposited the
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amount of rent by any of the three methods specified in Sub-
section (3).
The High Court has held that in view of the language of
Clause (c) of Sub-section (3) of Section 19-A, a deposit in
the court can be made only if the conditions laid down in
clause (c) are fulfilled and if the said conditions are not
fulfilled, the deposit would not be treated as a valid
deposit under Clause (c) of Sub-section (3) of Section 19-A
and would not entitle the tenant to avail the benefit of
Sub-section (4) of Section 19-A. It has been held that in
the instant case, it is not the case of the appellant that
he had remitted the amount of rent due from him by postal
money order and the same had been received back by him under
the postal endorsement of refusal or unfound, nor is it the
case of the appellant that he had asked the respondents to
indicate the bank account number in which the rent may be
deposited by the appellant to the credit of the respondents
and the respondents had failed to specify the bank and
account number and that it is also not the case of the
appellant that there was a bona fide doubt as to the person
or persons to whom the rent was payable.
Shri Sachar does not dispute that the conditions
prescribed in clause (c) of Sub-Section (3) of Section 19-A
for the purpose of making the deposit in court are not
fulfilled in the present case. The submission of Shri
Sachar, however, is that since the appellant had deposited
in court the rent for the months of May, 1982 to October,
1982 on 29th October, 1982, before the said rent for six
months fell due, he cannot be held to be a defaulter in
payment of rent for six months and a decree for eviction
under Section 13 (1) (a) could not be passed. Shri Sachar
has, in this connection, placed reliance on the decisions of
this Court in Duli Chand vs. Maman Chand 1980(1) S.C.C. 246
and Sheo Narain vs. Sher Singh 1980 (1) S.C.R.836.
We have carefully perused the said judgments. Both
these judgments relate to the proviso to Section 13(2)(i) of
the East Punjab Urban Rent Restriction Act, 1949 which
affords protection against eviction of the tenant if on the
first hearing on the application for ejectment after due
service he 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. In both
these cases, the tenant had deposited the amount of rent in
the Court in which the ejectment proceedings were pending
prior to the first hearing of the application and on the
first hearing the landlord was made aware of the deposit.
This Court has held that even though there was no provision
in the Act for deposit of the rent in Court the said deposit
could be treated as compliance of the requirements of the
proviso to Section 13 (2)(i) of the East Punjab Urban Rent
Restriction Act, 1949 and the tenant was entitled to avail
the benefit of the said proviso.
In the present case, the appellant is seeking to avail
the benefit of the legal fiction under Section 19-A(4) of
the Act. It is settled law that a legal fiction is to be
limited to the purpose for which it is created and should
not be extended beyond that legitimate field. [See : The
Bengal Immunity Company Limited v. The State of Bihar &
Ors., 1955 (2) SCR 603 at p. 646]. The appellant can avail
the benefit of Section 19-A(4) if the deposit of Rs.3,600/-
made by him in the Court of Munsiff (South), Udaipur, on
October 29, 1982, by way of rent for the months of May, 1982
to October, 1982, can be treated as a payment under Section
19-A (3)(C) so as to enable the appellant to say that he was
not in default in payment of rent. Under Section 19-A(3)(c)
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the tenant can deposit the rent in the Court only if the
conditions laid down in the said provision are satisfied. It
is the admitted case of the appellant that these conditions
are not satisfied in the present case. The deposit which was
made by the respondent in Court on October 29, 1982 cannot,
therefore, be regarded as a deposit made in accordance with
clause (c) of Sub-section (3) of Section 19-A and the
appellant cannot avail the protection of Sub-section (4) of
Section 19-A and he must be held to have committed default
in payment of rent for the months of May, 1982 to October,
1982. This means that the decree for eviction has been
rightly passed against the appellant on account of default
in payment of rent for the period of six months.
For the reasons aforementioned, the appeal fails and it
is accordingly dismissed. But in the circumstances. there is
no order as to costs.