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[Cites 9, Cited by 76]

Supreme Court of India

Krishnawati vs Hans Raj on 29 November, 1973

Equivalent citations: 1974 AIR 280, 1974 SCR (2) 524, AIR 1974 SUPREME COURT 280, 1974 (1) SCC 289, 1974 RENCR 163, 1974 2 SCR 524, 1974 CURLJ 48, 1975 (1) SCJ 87

Author: D.G. Palekar

Bench: D.G. Palekar, V.R. Krishnaiyer, Ranjit Singh Sarkaria

           PETITIONER:
KRISHNAWATI

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
HANS RAJ

DATE OF JUDGMENT29/11/1973

BENCH:
PALEKAR, D.G.
BENCH:
PALEKAR, D.G.
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH

CITATION:
 1974 AIR  280		  1974 SCR  (2) 524
 CITATOR INFO :
 RF	    1987 SC1782	 (15)
 R	    1987 SC2055	 (6)
 F	    1988 SC1362	 (6)
 R	    1989 SC1141	 (20)


ACT:
Delhi  Rent Control Act (59 of 1958) Ss. 14 and 39  (2)-Onus
of proving sub-letting--Mixed question of law and fact, what
is.



HEADNOTE:
The  appellant	took  a	 lease of  shop	 premises  from	 the
respondent.  From the time of letting, a chemist's  business
was carried on in the shop by S with the occasional help  of
the  appellant.	 S and the appellant were living as  husband
and wife to the knowledge of the respondent.  The respondent
applied under s. 14 of the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958, for
eviction of the appellant on the ground that she had  sublet
the premises toS. The Rent Controller and the  Tribunal
on  appeal  held  that	the appellant  and  S.	were  living
together  as  husband and wife, and   that  therefore  there
wasno  question	 of any subletting by  the  appellant.	In
second appeal,	holding that two substantial  questions	 of
law were involved namely, one relatingto the status of the
appellant  as  the wife of S, and the  other,  whether	sub-
lettingwas  established,  the High Court  concluded  that
there was subletting in favour oOf S.
Allowing the appeal to this Court,
HELD : (1) Under s. 39 (2) of the Act the High.-Court  could
interfere  in second appeal only if there was a	 substantial
question of law.  On the question whether the appellant	 was
legally	 married  no finding was necessary in  the  eviction
suit.	It was sufficient for the rent court to	 proceed  on
the finding that the appellant and S were living together as
husband and wife, whether they were legally married or	not.
[528C-D, E-F]
(2)The	question  whether there was subletting	is  not	 a
mixed question of law and fact.	 In a mixed question of	 law
and fact the ultimate conclusion has to be drawn by applying
principles   of	  law  to  basic  findings,   but   in	 the
determination  of a question of fact no application  of	 any
principle  of  law is required in finding either  the  basic
facts  or  in  arriving at  the	 ultimate  conclusion.	 The
question to be determined in the circumstances of this	case
was whether it was likely that the appellant had sublet	 the
premises  to S. The negative answer given by the rent  court
is  merely the factual common sense inference which did	 not
call  for the application of any principle of law.  [528F-G;
529A-B]
Meenakshi Mills, Madurai v. The Commissioner of	 Income-tax,
Madras, [1956] S.C.R. 691, followed.
(3)When eviction is sought on the ground of subletting the
onus  of  proving  subletting is on the	 landlord.   If	 the
landlord  prima-facie  shows that the occupant	was  in	 the
exclusive  possession of the premises let out  for  valuable
consideration, it would then be for the tenant to rebut	 the
evidence.   But in the present case the respondent  produced
no  evidence to show subletting in spite of the	 appellant's
denial in the written statement. [527C-D]
Associated  Hotels  of	India Ltd.  Delhi v.  S.  B.  Sardar
Ranjit Singh, [1968] 2 S.C.R. 548, followed.
(4)Under  s. 14 (4) premises could be deemed to have  been
sub-let by the tenant only when the Controller is  satisfied
that  some  person is let into possession  ostensibly  as  a
partner	  in  business	but  really  for  the  purposes	  of
subletting.  This provision has no application to the  facts
and circumstances of the present case. [526G-H]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1475 of 1970. Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order. dated the 29th May, 1970 of the High Court of Delhi in Second Appeal No. 25-D of 1966.

525

V.M. Tarkunde, M. N. Bombhra and Saroja Gopala Krishnan for the appellant.

Hardyal Hardy, S. K. Mehta, K. R. Nagaraja, A. C. Sehgal and O. P. Gupta for the respondent.

The Judgment of the Court was, delivered by PALEKAR, J.-This is an appeal by special leave from an order passed by the single Judge of the High Court of Delhi in second appeal under section 39 of the Delhi Rent Control Act, No. 59 of 1958.

On or about September 10, 1959 the respondent landlord let out the premises in suit to the appellant on a rent of Rs. 125/- per month. The premises consisted of a shop. On 1-9- 1962 the respondent applied under section 14 of the above Act to the Rent Controller, Delhi for evicting the appellant on the ground that she had sub-let the entire premises to one Sohan Singh who, according to the respondent, was running a business under the name of Royal Dispensing Chemists and Druggists in the shop. It was further alleged that the appellant was charging a fabulous amount as rent from her sub-tenant Sohan Singh. The appellant in her written statement admitted the tenancy but denied sub- letting. She alleged that Sohan Singh was her husband and from the time of the lease the business of a Chemist was being run there in the premises by her husband and she also occasionally helped him in the running of the business. The Rent Controller was of the view that the appellant was the legally Wedded wife of Sohan Singh. In any event he held, Sohan Singh and the appellant were living together as husband and wife and, therefore, there was no question of any sub--letting by the appellant of the premises. That finding was confirmed in appeal by the Rent Control Tribunal, Delhi. Aggrieved by the decision, the respondent went in second appeal to the High Court under section 39(1) of the Act. It was contended before the court by the respondent that two substantial questions of law and fact were involved in the appeal-one relating to the status of the appellant as wife and the other whether on the facts found the ground of sub-letting had been established. The learned single Judge agreed that the appeal involved substantial questions of law as submitted, and came to the conclusion that there was sub-setting in favour of Sohan Singh. Accordingly, he gave an order for evicting the appellant. So this appeal by special leave. It is contended on behalf of the appellant that the learned single Judge has interfered with a pure finding of fact. Under section 39(2) of the Act the High Court could interfere in second appeal only if there was a substantial question of law. In the present case, he submitted, there was no question of law, much less substantial question of law and, therefore, the High Court was in error in interfering with the concurrent finding of the Rent Control authorities, There is great force in this contention. The High Court has dealt with the case as if this is a matrimonial proceeding-in which the status of the appellant as the wife of Sohan M8--602 SUP CI/74 526 Singh was under direct challenge. The simple question which had to be determined in the case was whether having regard to the fact that the appellant and Sohan Singh were living as husband and wife, it was open to draw, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, the factual inference that the wife had sub-let the premises to her husband. Sub-letting like letting, is a particular type of demise of immovable property and is distinct from permissive user like that of a licensee. If two persons live together in a house as husband and wife and one of them who owns the house allows the other to carry on business in a part of it,it will be in the absence of any other evidence, a rash inference to draw that the owner has let out that part of the premises. And that is what the learned single Judge has done in the present case. He was of the view that even if it is assumed that the appellant was the wife of Sohan Singh, she, who was entitled to possession of the shop premises as a tenant, must be presumed to have sub-let the same to Sohan Singh to carry on his business, In support of this conclusion he relied on clause (b) of the proviso to sub-section (1) of section 14 of the Act read with sub-section 4 of that section. The provisions are as follows :

14(1) Provided that the Controller may, on an application made to him in the prescribed manner, make an order for the rec overy of possession of the premises on one or more of the following grounds only, namely
(a)..........................
(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;"
Sub-section (4) of section 14 is as follows : "(4) For the purposes of clause (b) of the proviso to sub-section (1),any premises which have been let for being used for the purposes of business or profession shall be deemed to have been sub-let by the tenant, if the Controller is satisfied that the tenant without obtaining the consent in writing of the landlord has, after the 16th day of August, 1958, allowed any person or occupy the whole or any part of the premises ostensibly on the ground that such person is a partner of the tenant in the business or profession but really for the purpose of sub-letting such premises to that person.

Under sub-section (4) referred to above the premises could be deemed to have been sub-let by the tenant only when the Controller is satisfied that some person is let into possession ostensibly as a partner in business but really for the purposes of sub-letting. These provisions evidently have no application to the facts of the present case. It is not the case of anybody that the appellant was the owner of the business carried on in the premises and she had let in Sohan Singh into possession ostensibly as a partner in their business. The learned Judge was, 527 therefore, in error in relying on the provisions of the Act for presuming that the appellant must have sub-let the premises.

The case of the respondent in his application under section 14 of of the Act was that the appellant had sub-let the whole premises to Sohan Singh who was running the business under the name of Royal Dispensing Chemists and Druggists and that the entire premises have been sub-let by the appellant and the appellant had completely parted with possession without the written consent of the respondent. It was also alleged that the appellant was charging fabulous amount of rent from the sub-tenant Sohan Singh. Sub-letting was,' therefore, the principal ground on which eviction was sought. When eviction is sought on that ground it is now settled law that the onus to prove sub-letting is on the landlord. If the landlord prima-facie shows that the occupant who was in exclusive possession of the premises let out for valuable consideration, it would then be for the tenant to rebut the evidence. See:Associated Hotels of India Ltd., Delhi V. S.B. Sardar Ranjit Singh(1).In the present case the respondent produced no evidence to show such sub-letting in spite of the appellant's denial in the written statement of any sub-letting. It was averred by her therein that Sohan Singh was her husband and that right from the taking of the shop premises on rent Sohan Singh was carrying on business of a Chemist therein and appellant also helped him occasionally as his wife. The averment that she was the wife of Sohan Singh provided the necessary ammunition for a formidable battle in which the respondent took upon himself to show that she was not the legally married wife of Sohan Singh. He called Sohan Singh's first wife as his first witness in this case but all that the lady was able to say was that she had no knowledge if the appellant was married to Sohan Singh but she knew that he lived with the appellant since about six years before her deposition, recorded in 1963. The respondent himself in his testimony admitted that he had never himself made any enquiry as to whether Sohan Singh and the appellant are husband and wife or not. Nor could he deny that they were living together. His reasons for saying that Sohan Singh was a sub-tenant were in his own words ; "As Sohan Singh is the tenant, I can, therefore, say that the capital invested in the shop might be that of Sohan Singh. Neither any talks regarding sub-letting took place in my presence, nor the rent was paid in my presence," In undertaking to prove that the appellant was not Sohan Singh's wife the respondent completely lost sight of his own weak position. The appel- lant had passed a rent note in the respondent's favour and it was the case of the appellant that in that rent note the respondent had in his own handwriting written' that the appellant was the wife of Sohan Singh. The appellant summoned him to produce his rent note but the respondent did not produce it. So in his cross examination he was shown a typed copy of it and this he accepted as a true copy. The true copy disclosed that the appellant was accepted as the wife of Sohan Singh. Besides, when the appellant and Sohan Singh gave evidence of the ,fact that they were living as husband and wife and looking after the (1) [1968] 2 S.C.R. 548.

528

business in the shop there was hardly any cross examination on the point. The respondent relied principally on some previous self-serving statements made by Sohan Singh in other proceedings which could not be used as substantive evidence in the present case. The evidence was clear namely, that to the knowledge of the respondent, the appel- lant and Sohan Singh were living as husband and wife and from the day the rent note was passed by the appellant in 1959 a Chemist's shop was opened in the premises which was run principally by Sohan Singh but occasionally by the appellant also. The question is whether that evidence gives rise to the factual inference that the appellant had sublet the premises to Sohan Singh. The first two courts held that it did not. This was a concurrent finding of fact and it seems to us that the learned counsel for the appellant is right in contending that the High Court in second appeal should not have interfered with that finding especially when section 39(2) of the Act provides that no appeal shall it to the High Court unless 'the appeal involved some substantial question of law.

The learned single Judge thought that two substantial questions of law were involved-one relating to the status of the appellant as the alleged wife of Sohan Singh and the second whether on the facts found, sub-letting was established. Both these questions involved, according to the learned Judge, substantial questions of mixed fact and law.

As to the first question whether the appellant was legally married, that was a question on which no finding was necessary in an eviction suit. It was sufficient for the Rent Court to proceed on the finding that the appellant and Sohan Singh were living as husband and wife, whether they were legally married or not. This was specifically pointed out by the Additional Rent Controller in his judgment. As regards the second question, one does not see how it is a mixed question of law and fact. In the 'determination of a question of fact no application of any principle of law is required in finding either the basic facts or arriving at the ultimate conclusion; in a mixed question of law and fact the ultimate conclusion has to be drawn by applying principles of law to basic findings. See : Meenakshi Mills, Madurai v. The Commissioner of Income-Tax, Madras (1).The basic facts in the present case were (1) the appellant and Sohan Singh were living as husband and wife to the knowledge of the respondent; (2) the appellant took the lease of the shop premises from the respondent in 1959; (3) from the time of the letting a Chemist's business was carried in the shop by Sohan Singh with the occasional help of the appellant. The question to be determined was whether in the above circumstances it was likely that the appellant had (1) [1956] S.C.R. 691.

529

sub-let the premises to Sohan Singh. The negative answer given to it by the Rent Courts is merely the factual common sense inference which did not call for the application of any principle of law. In out view, no question of law-much less, a substantial question of law-was involved in the second appeal and the learned Judge was in error in disturbing the concurrent findings of fact of the rent control authorities.

The appeal is, therefore, allowed, the order passed by the High Court is set aside and that of the Rent Control Authorities is restored with costs throughout. V.P.S. Appeal allowed.

530