Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
VENKATESH THIMMAIAH GURJALKAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
S.S. HAWALDAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/10/1997
BENCH:
A. S. ANAND, S. RAJENDRA BABU
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
O R D E R
This Civil Appeal is directed against the judgment and
order or the High Court of Karnataka dated 26.10.1983 in
Civil Revision Petition No. 1091/81. The facts and
circumstances in which the appeal arises need a brief notice
at this stage.
The suit premises is a shop, which was let out by the
father of the respondent - landlord, to one Thimmaiah,
father of the appellant in or about 1940 for running a hair
cutting saloon at a monthly rent of Rs. 40/-. There was a
family partition and the suit premises fell to the share of
the respondent - landlord, who thereafter became the owner
and the landlord of the demised premises. According to the
pleadings of the parties, in 1972, the original tenant
Thimmaiah fell ill and stopped paying rent of the premises
from January 1974 onwards. A notice was issued by the
respondent - landlord to Thimmaiah terminating his tenancy
and asking him to hand over the vacant possession of the
suit premises. That notice was issued to him on 10.1.1974.
Despite the notice having been received by Thimmaiah, he did
not vacate the premises and hand over the possession to the
landlord - respondent. Thimmaiah died on 12.7.1974. The
appellant carried on the hair cutting business in the
demises premises and sent rent of the premises to the
respondent - landlord, who, however, refused to receive the
same on the plea that the appellant was not his tenant and
was in unlawful possession of the premises. A notice was
issued by the landlord to the appellant on 29.7.1974 calling
upon him to hand over the vacant possession of the demised
shop. Since, the notice did not evoke any response, the
landlord - respondent filed a petition under Section 21 read
with Section 51(2) of the Karnataka Rent Control Act, 1961
for eviction of the appellant in the court of Principal
Munsiff, Bijapur. The petition was resisted by the
appellant. It was asserted that the appellant had been
carrying on the hair cutting business along with his father
and that the shop which had been taken on lease by his
father was taken by him in his capacity as a Manager of the
joint Hindu Family of which the appellant was also a member.
On that basis, he claimed that he had inherited the tenancy
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rights in the premises and that those rights did not come to
an end on the death of Thimmaiah.
The Principal Munsiff, after recording the evidence
came to the conclusion that the premises had not been taken
by Thimmaiah as a Manager of the Hindu Joint Family and also
that the appellant had not inherited the tenancy rights of
Thimmaiah, who death. accordingly, on 18.11.1976, the
petition for eviction was granted. The order of the
Principal Munsiff was challenged by the appellant in
revision before the learned District Judge, Bijapur. By a
detailed order, the learned District Judge held that the
appellant was not a tenant within the meaning of Section
3(r) of the Mysore Rent Control Act, 1961 (hereinafter
referred to as the Act). The learned District Judge further
held that the respondent - landlord had not established any
of the grounds under Section 21 (1) of the Act and,
therefore, the petition for eviction was not maintainable.
The revision petition was, accordingly, allowed and the
order of eviction passed by the learned Principal Munisff
was set aside. The respondent - landlord preferred a
revision petition in the High Court against the order of the
District Judge. The High Court allowed the revision
petition, set aside the order of the District Judge and
restored that of the Principal Munsiff.
We have heard Ms. K. Saradi Devi, learned counsel for
the appellant. Learned counsel submits that since all the
three courts have concurrently found that the appellant was
not a tenant within the meaning of Section 3(r) of the Act,
the courts ought to have held that the petition for eviction
under Section 21 of the Act was not competent to recover
possession from the appellant and should have dismissed the
eviction petition filed by the respondent - landlord.
From a perusal of the orders of all the three courts,
we find that it has been concurrently found by them that the
premises and not been taken on lease by Thimmaiah as a
Manager of Hindu Joint Family. It has also been found that
the appellant had not inherited the tenancy, since the
premises in question were non-residential premises and,
therefore, tenancy was not heritable. This finding of the
courts below is fortified by a judgment of the division
bench of the Karnataka High Court in K. Abdul Subhan Vs.
A.K. Satyanarayana Setty reported in (1984 (2) Karnataka Law
Journal, 72) wherein after an analysis of various provisions
of the Act, it has been authoritatively laid down that there
is no provision in the Act for transmission of tenancy in
regard to non-residential premises under the Act. In that
view of the matter, learned counsel for the appellant is
right to contend that since the appellant was not a tenant
and had not inherited the tenancy, a petition under Section
21 of the Act for his eviction was not maintainable. If the
respondent wanted to recover possession of the premises from
the appellant, he had to take recourse to filing a suit for
possession and not by filing an eviction petition. The
learned District Judge while hearing the revision was,
therefore, perfectly right in coming to the conclusion that
the respondent - landlord was not entitled to file the
application for eviction, more particularly because the
landlord had not mentioned any of the grounds contained in
Section 21(1) of the Act in the petition seeking eviction
either. The High Court, therefore, fell in error in
upsetting the well considered judgment and order of the
learned District Judge dated 4.3.1977. This appeal
consequently succeeds and is allowed. The order of the High
Court dated 26.10.1983 is set aside and that of the District
Judge dated 4.3.1977 restored. Since, the respondent is not
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present, there shall be no order as to costs.