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[Cites 9, Cited by 2]

Delhi High Court

Sham Lal Kapoor vs Joginder Lal Kuthiala & Ors. on 6 July, 2017

Author: Rajiv Sahai Endlaw

Bench: Rajiv Sahai Endlaw

*       IN THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI AT NEW DELHI

%                                            Date of decision: 6th July, 2017.

+       C.R.P. 152/2008, CM No.13597/2008 (for condonation of 82 days
        delay in filing the petition) & CM No.13598/2008 (for stay)

        SHAM LAL KAPOOR                                      ..... Petitioner
                    Through:            Mr. Nitin Gupta and Mr. Vikas Singh,
                                        Advs.

                                    Versus

    JOGINDER LAL KUTHIALA & ORS.             ..... Respondents
                  Through: Mr. Bharat Deepak, Adv.
CORAM:
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE RAJIV SAHAI ENDLAW

1.      This Civil Revision Petition under Section 115 of the CPC impugns
the order dated 7th March, 2008 of the learned Additional District Judge of
dismissal of an application filed by the petitioner under Order VII Rule 11 of
the CPC for rejection of the plaint in a suit for recovery of arrears and future
mesne profits filed by the respondents.

2.      The petition was entertained and notice thereof issued.             Vide
subsequent order dated 15th October, 2009 which is stated to be continuing in
force, further proceedings in the suit from which this petition arises were
stayed.

3.      The counsels have been heard.

4.      The respondents No.1 to 3 namely Joginder Lal Kuthiala, Jitender Lal
Kuthiala and Late Smt. Harvansh Kumari Kuthiala instituted the suit from
which this petition arises against the respondents No.4&5 namely Tilak

C.R.P. 152/2008                                                    Page 1 of 12
 Kumar and Baldev Kumar and the petitioner for recovery of Rs.10,80,000/-
on account of damages/mesne profits for wrongful use and occupation of
immovable property and for recovery of future mesne profits/damages for
use and occupation of the immovable property till the date of delivery of
possession thereof, pleading (i) that Sh. Fakir Chand Wadhera father of the
respondents No.4&5 Tilak Kumar and Baldev Kumar was a tenant under the
respondents No.1 to 3 in property No.B-2, Connaught Place, New Delhi at a
monthly rent of Rs.60/-; (ii) that on demise of Sh. Fakir Chand Wadhera, the
respondents No.4&5 namely Tilak Kumar and Baldev Kumar did not take
any care of the demised premises and abandoned the same and allowed the
petitioner to occupy the same exclusively; (iii) that the petitioner since the
demise of the tenant Sh. Fakir Chand Wadhera is in unauthorised use and
occupation of the premises; (iv) that the petitioner alleges himself to be a
partner of M/s Tilak Hosiery business of the deceased tenant Sh. Fakir
Chand Wadhera; (v) that the respondents No.4&5 filed a suit for accounts
against the petitioner and in which a collusive decree was obtained; (vi) that
the respondents No.1 to 3 had filed a petition for eviction of respondents
No.4&5 namely Tilak Kumar and Baldev Kumar from the aforesaid tenancy
premises on the ground of subletting under Section 14(1)(b) of the Delhi
Rent Control Act, 1958 i.e. of respondents No.4&5 having unauthorisedly
sublet, assigned or parted with possession of the tenancy premises to the
petitioner and which was pending consideration; (vii) that the petitioner and
the respondents No.4&5 thus being in wrongful possession of the premises
are liable to pay mesne profits to the respondents No.1 to 3 therefor.

5.      The respondents No.4&5 did not contest the said suit and the
petitioner only contested the same.
C.R.P. 152/2008                                                   Page 2 of 12
 6.       The petitioner filed an application under Order VII Rule 11 of CPC for
rejection of the plaint contending that till an order of eviction from the
premises was passed, the suit for mesne profits was not maintainable.

7.       The learned Additional District Judge has vide the order impugned in
this petition dismissed the said application of the petitioner observing as
under:

         "4. So far as the plaint is concerned, the plaintiff has
         described the defendant as unauthorized occupant and has
         claimed mesne profits in the form of use and occupation
         charges. The pendency before the Addl. Rent Controller, which
         being not a civil Court otherwise can not be any ground for
         maintaining an application under Order 7 Rule 11 CPC.
         Moreover, the mesne profits is being asked for use and
         occupation charges and it can not be said that the plaintiff can
         ask for the use and occupation charges only after the decision
         by the Court of Addl. Rent Controller in as much as if the
         petition is decided say after two years from now an appeal can
         be preferred and still the same ground can be taken which will
         bar the claim of the plaintiff by limitation for mesne profits in
         case the eviction proceedings are decided in his favour. The
         Court can not be a party by rejecting the petition to debar a
         party from claiming a relief making the relief barred by
         limitation."


8.       The counsel for the petitioner has referred to (A) Smt. Chander Kali
Bail Vs. Jagdish Singh Thakur AIR 1977 SC 2262, though in the context of
M.P. Accommodation Control Act, 1961, holding that even after termination
of his contractual tenancy, a tenant does not become an unauthorised
occupant of the accommodation but remains a tenant and that once on such

C.R.P. 152/2008                                                    Page 3 of 12
 termination his possession does not become wrongful, until and unless a
decree for eviction is passed, he cannot be held liable for mesne
profits/damages for use and occupation; and (B) Atmaram Properties Vs.
Federal Motors (2005) 1 SCC 705 holding that owing to the pari materia
provisions of the Delhi Rent Control Act, what was held in Smt. Chander
Kali Bail supra was good under the Delhi Rent Control Act also and that a
tenant becomes liable for mesne profits only with effect from the date when
the eviction order is passed against him.

9.      Per contra, the counsel for the respondents No.1 to 3 has contended (a)
that the aforesaid dicta is applicable to tenants; (b) that according to the
respondents/plaintiffs, the petitioner is not a tenant but is a rank trespasser of
the premises; (c) that in the eviction proceedings, the respondents No.4&5
namely Tilak Kumar and Baldev Kumar have in their written statement
stated that the petitioner is an unauthorised occupant; (d) that thus the suit for
recovery of mesne profits against the petitioner at least, if not against the
respondents No.4&5 namely Tilak Kumar and Baldev Kumar, is
maintainable.

10.     I may at this stage record that the eviction petition under Section
14(1)(b) of the Act filed by the respondents No.1 to 3 was dismissed by the
Court of the Additional Rent Controller (ARC) and the appeal preferred by
the respondents No.1 to 3 before the Rent Control Tribunal has also been
dismissed and which order is assailed in CM(M) No.938/2012 which is also
listed today. However, need to decide the two proceedings by a common
judgment has not been felt inasmuch as the outcome of this Revision Petition



C.R.P. 152/2008                                                     Page 4 of 12
 has to be irrespective of the outcome of the challenge to the dismissal of the
petition for eviction.

11.     I will first take up the aspect of claim in the plaint of future mesne
profits. Ordinarily, a claim in a suit is confined to that for which cause of
action has accrued to the plaintiff. A cause of action for recovery of mesne
profits/damages for use and occupation can accrue only for the period of
unauthorised occupation till the date of institution of the suit. The cause of
action for recovery of mesne profits for a period after the institution of the
suit cannot accrue on the date of institution of the suit. Thus, a suit for mesne
profits can be filed only for the past period and not for future. However the
Legislature, to obviate the difficulty of an owner/landlord of repeatedly filing
such suits till the unauthorised occupation continues, has in Order XX Rule
12 carved out an exception and permitted a suit for future mesne profits to be
filed when accompanied with the relief of recovery of possession of
immovable property.

12.     The suit from which this petition arises is not for recovery of
possession but only for recovery of arrears and of future mesne profits. I
have thus enquired from the counsel for the respondents No.1 to 3 the
maintainability of the suit insofar as for recovery of future mesne profits.

13.     No provision permitting institution of such a suit has been cited.

14.     This Court in Santosh Arora Vs. M.L. Arora 2014 SCC OnLine Del
3005 (DB) and in Cosmos Infra Engineering (I) Ltd. Vs. Tirupati Buildings
& Offices (P) Ltd. 2016 SCC OnLine Del 6378 has held that such a suit for
future mesne profits unaccompanied with a relief of possession cannot be
filed. In view of the question being no longer res integra, need to elaborate

C.R.P. 152/2008                                                     Page 5 of 12
 further is not felt. Thus, the relief in the suit, insofar as for future mesne
profits, has necessarily to be rejected.

15.     That brings me to the core question, whether a landlord can recover
mesne profits from an unauthorised sub-tenant.

16.     Supreme Court in Smt. Chander Kali Bail supra has noticed the
definition of tenant in the M.P. Accommodation Control Act and found
therein the sub-tenant to be also included. The same is the position under the
Delhi Rent Control Act in Section 2(l) defining tenant and which expression
has been held to include a sub-tenant.

17.     The provisions of the Delhi Rent Control Act permit eviction of a
tenant or even an unauthorised sub-tenant only in accordance with the
procedure prescribed therein and bar the jurisdiction of the Civil Court.
Thus, even if the tenancy premises are in the exclusive occupation of an
unauthorised sub-tenant, it is not open to the landlord to institute a suit in the
Civil Court for recovery of possession of the premises from the unauthorised
sub-tenant and the landlord is required to institute a petition for eviction
under Section 14(1)(b) of the Act.

18.     I have in Chitra Garg Vs. Seema Bansal 2009 (112) DRJ 545
(FAO(OS) NO.567/2009 preferred whereagainst was dismissed on 23 rd
December,         2009   and   SLP(C)      No.021203-021204/2010        preferred
whereagainst was dismissed on 9th August, 2010) held that an
owner/landlord cannot be held entitled to approach the Civil Court on the
plea of tenancy premises being in occupation of a sub-tenant and there thus
being no need to approach the Rent Controller. It was reasoned that the
same can become a tool in the hands of unscrupulous litigants to obtain

C.R.P. 152/2008                                                     Page 6 of 12
 decrees for possession without impleading the tenants as parties and in
pursuance thereto dispossessing tenants from the premises.

19.     The respondents No.1 to 3/plaintiffs, in paras 2 to 13 of the plaint have
stated as under:
           "2. That one Shri Fakir Chand Wadhera, father of Defendants No.1 and 2 was a
           tenant in respect of a big showroom situated at B-2, Connaught Place, New
           Delhi, measuring 15.3" X 27" 4 ½‟ at a monthly rent of Rs.60/-, besides other
           charges. The said showroom is situated in the most prestigious commercial
           place of Delhi where the offices of multinational companies, foreign banks,
           airlines etc. are located. He was carrying on the business under the name and
           style of M/s Tilak Hosiery, as a sole proprietor in the said premises. Shri Fakir
           Chand Wadhera died on 30.12.1983 and Defendant No.1 and 2 are his sons who
           are residing in America and are permanently settled over there. It is respectfully
           submitted that even during the life time of Shri Fakir Chand Wadhera, his sons
           i.e. Defendants No.1 and 2 never used or occupied the said premises nor carried
           on any business from that place. It is submitted that the tenancy of Shri Fakir
           Chand Wadhera was duly terminated during his life time by a valid legal notice
           dated 04.01.1974. However since this was a commercial tenancy Defendants
           No.1 and 2 being the sons of Shri Fakir Chand Wadhera became joint tenants
           being the only legal heirs left by Fakir Chand Wadhera.

           3.     That on the demise of Shri Fakir Chand Wadhera Defendants No.1 and 2
           did not take any care of the demised premises and rather abandoned the same.
           Since the premises under the tenancy of their late father were of no use to them,
           except greed of getting premium over it. It is submitted that Section 192 of the
           Indian Succession Act specifically provides for the preventive measures for
           safeguard of the property by the heirs of a deceased person. The Defendants
           No.1 and 2 did not take any action under the law and allowed the Defendant
           No.3 to occupy the property exclusively for ulterior purposes or for some
           forbidden deal.




C.R.P. 152/2008                                                                    Page 7 of 12
            4.     Thus after the death of Shri Fakir Chand Wadhera the Defendant No.3 Shri
           Sham Lal Kapoor illegally occupied the premises and is carrying on his business
           in connivance with other Defendants. It is submitted that Defendant No.1 and 2
           are not likely to return to india since they are settled in America for a very long
           time and they have no interest whatsoever in India.

           5.     It is submitted that immediately after the death of Shri Fakir Chand
           Wadhera father of the Defendants No.1 and 2, the Defendant No.3 occupied the
           demised premises and the Defendant No.1 and 2 allowed him to occupy the
           premises without any hitch. The Defendants No.1 and 2 did not take any action
           against the Defendant No.3 under the law to restrain him from doing so as stated
           in para No.3 hereinabove. The Defendants colluded with each other in order to
           strike a better deal of premium from the Plaintiffs.

                  But later on after some time it appears that the Defendants fell out amongst
           themselves and the Defendants No.1 and 2 on the one hand and the Defendant
           No.3 on the other tried to throw out each other from the premises, in order to
           devovour the demised premises. The Defendants No.1 and 2 filed a suit for
           permanent injunction and rendition of accounts against Defendant No.3 in the
           Hon‟ble High Court of Delhi being Suit No.1239 of 1985 on or around 15th June,
           1985. On the other hand Defendant No.3 filed a petition under Section 276 of
           the Indian Succession Act for grant of probate of the Will and Codicil dated
           21.02.1983 and 11.11.1983 respectively.        It is submitted that so far as the
           question of parting of possession of the premises, unlawfully, was concerned
           that was immediately completed on the demise of Shri Fakir Chand Wadhera. It
           is not out of place to mention here that even if there is no positive act of the
           Defendants No.1 and 2 in parting with possession in favour of the Defendant
           No.3, such a transfer falls within the ambit of Section 14(1)(b) of the Delhi Rent
           Control Act, which provides for unlawful subletting, assigning or parting with
           possession of the property without the consent of the landlords.

           6.     That Defendants No.1 and 2 allowed the Defendant No.3 to occupy the
           premises without the consent of the Plaintiffs, who are the owners and landlords
           of the said premises, and are liable to be evicted therefrom besides other
           remedies of the landlords / plaintiffs. It is submitted that the Plaintiffs have

C.R.P. 152/2008                                                                     Page 8 of 12
            already filed a petition No.492 of 1986 in the Court of Rent Controller, Delhi for
           eviction of the Defendants from the demised premises under Section 14(1)(b) of
           the Delhi Rent Control Act which is being unnecessarily prolonged by the
           Defendants and the Defendants have not adduced any evidence as yet.

           7.     That the Defendant No.3 alleges himself to be a partner of M/s Tilak
           Hosiery. It is submitted that the premises had been let out to Fakir Chand
           Wadhera as stated in para No.2 of the plaint. Without prejudice to this plea it is
           submitted that even if Defendant No.3 who illegally alleges himself to be a
           partner in the business of Late Fakir Chand Wadhera, cannot have any right of
           tenancy in the demised premises nor Late Fakir Chand Wadhera was entitled
           under law to pass or the tenancy rights to the Defendant No.3 under the will /
           codicil as alleged by Defendant No.3 in the written statement filed to the
           eviction petition.

           8.     That Shri Fakir Chand Wadhera was inducted as a tenant prior to the
           purchase of the demised premises by the Plaintiffs from the Custodian in the
           public auction and the actual date of letting of the property by the previous
           owners to late Shri Fakir Chand Wadhera is not within the knowledge of the
           plaintiffs. Suffice is to say that Shri Fakir Chand Wadhera had been inducted as
           a tenant before the partition of the country and the Plaintiffs became the owners
           thereof, after the purchase of the demised premises Shri Fakir Chand Wadhera
           paid the rent to the Plaintiffs and thus attorned to the Plaintiffs.

           9.     That the Defendant No.3 claims himself to be a partner of M/s Tilak
           Hosiery vide Partnership Deed since 1972. It is submitted that the Defendnt
           No.3 had filed a petition for probate / letter of administration in the Hon‟ble
           High Court of Delhi being Probate Case No.32/1984 under Section 276 of the
           Indian Succession Act. It is also submitted that the Defendant No.3 claimed the
           right in the said shop under the Will dated 21.02.1983 and Codicil dated
           11.11.1983 alleged to be executed by Fakir Chand Wadhera.

           10. That the above petition of the Defendant No.3 was dismissed by the
           Hon‟ble High Court of Delhi vide orders dated 07.07.1998.




C.R.P. 152/2008                                                                    Page 9 of 12
            11. That the Hon‟ble High Court of Delhi held that the Will and Codicil
           propounded by the Defendant No.3 are fabricated documents and also did not
           accept the Partnership Deed as set up by the Defendant No.3 in that suit and
           passed a decree against the Defendant No.3.

           12. That the Defendants No.1 and 2 had also filed a suit against the Defendant
           No.3 in the Hon‟ble High Court of Delhi being suit No.1239/1985 on
           15.06.1985 which was decreed 07.07.1998.             It is submitted that those
           proceedings have been filed in the High court in collusion with each other in
           order to defeat the right of the Plaintiffs of possession of the property. It is not
           out of place to mention here that the R.F.A./F.A.O. filed by the Defendants
           against the orders of the Hon‟ble High Court shall take at least twenty years to
           be decided and in the meanwhile the Plaintiffs shall continue to be entangled in
           the legal battle.

           13. The fact remain that after the death of Shri Fakir Chand Wadhera who had
           been carrying the business under the name and style of M/s Tilak Hosiery as a
           sole proprietor, the Defendant No.3 occupied the premises with the consent of
           the Defendants No.1 and 2. It is also submitted that even if a tenant is deprived
           of the possession of the premises involuntarily he is said to have been sub let,
           assigned or otherwise parted with the possession of the premises. It is submitted
           that the Defendants No.1 and 2 did not take any preventive action against the
           Defendant No.3 to occupying the property since they were in connivance with
           him as also submitted in para No.3 hereinabove.

                                                                             (emphasis added)

20.     It would thus be seen that it is not as if it is the case of respondents
No.1 to 3/plaintiffs that the respondents No.4&5/tenants abandoned the
tenancy premises and the petitioner, of his own volition and without any
assistance from respondents No.4&5/tenants has occupied the tenancy
premises and in which case it could have been possibly urged that the ground
of eviction under Section 14(1)(b) of the Act as under:


C.R.P. 152/2008                                                                      Page 10 of 12
         "(b) that the tenant has, on or after the 9th day of June, 1952,
        sub-let, assigned or otherwise parted with the possession of the
        whole or any part of the premises without obtaining the consent
        in writing of the landlord."


        is not made out because the respondents No.4&5/tenants are not
responsible for the unauthorised occupation of the petitioner. However the
respondents No.1 to 3/plaintiffs in the plaint have expressly pleaded that the
respondents No.4&5/tenants have allowed the petitioner to occupy the
tenancy premises. In the face of such averments in the plaint, a ground of
eviction under Section 14(1)(b) supra is made out and which respondents
No.1 to 3/plaintiffs have expressly pleaded having invoked. Once that is so,
Section 50(1) of the Act as under:

        "50. Jurisdiction of civil courts barred in respect of certain
        matters.--(1) Save as otherwise expressly provided in this Act, no civil
        court shall entertain any suit or proceeding in so far as it relates to
        the fixation of standard rent in relation to any premises to which this
        Act applies or to eviction of any tenant therefrom or to any other
        matter which the Controller is empowered by or under this Act to
        decide, and no injunction in respect of any action taken or to be taken
        by the Controller under this Act shall be granted by any civil court or
        other authority."


        will kick in and the jurisdiction of Civil Court, before which suit from
which this petition arises has been filed, to grant the relief of eviction of
respondents No.4&5/tenants and/or the petitioner inducted by them, would
be barred. It cannot be lost sight of that eviction of a sub-tenant or assignee


C.R.P. 152/2008                                                    Page 11 of 12
 of tenant or of person to whom tenant has parted with possession amounts to
eviction of tenant also from the premises.

21.     If it were to be held that though a landlord cannot recover possession
from an unauthorised sub-tenant till satisfies the Controller in this regard but
can recover mesne profits by instituting a suit in the Civil Court, the same
would amount to penalising the so called unauthorised sub-tenant/tenant,
even prior to the Controller has found him/them liable for eviction.

22.     In the present case, there are concurrent findings of the Controller and
of the Tribunal of no ground of eviction under Section 14(1)(b) of the Act
having been made out on account of the petitioner being in unauthorised
possession/occupation of the premises. Though the same are subject matter
of challenge but the petitioner cannot be held liable for mesne profits till the
order of the Tribunal is set aside and in which case also the liability of the
petitioner even as an unauthorised sub-tenant or rank trespasser for mesne
profits shall be with effect from the order of eviction only.

23.     The impugned order dismissing the application under Order VII Rule
11 of CPC cannot thus be sustained and is set aside.

24.     Resultantly, this petition is allowed. The application of the petitioner
under Order VII Rule 11 of CPC is allowed and the plaint in the suit from
which this present appeal arises is rejected. However, no costs.




                                               RAJIV SAHAI ENDLAW, J.

JULY 06, 2017 „gsr/bs‟ C.R.P. 152/2008 Page 12 of 12