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[Cites 11, Cited by 4]

Supreme Court of India

Shiv Kumar vs Jawahar Lal Verma & Ors on 14 September, 1988

Equivalent citations: 1988 AIR 2164, 1988 SCR SUPL. (2)1079, AIR 1988 SUPREME COURT 2164, 1988 (4) SCC 763, 1988 SCFBRC 525, (1988) 3 JT 680 (SC), (1988) 3 SCJ 600, 1988 ALL CJ 561, 1990 HRR 365, (1988) 2 ALL RENTCAS 465, (1988) 2 ALL WC 1245, (1988) 14 ALL LR 633, 1988 3 JT 680, (1988) 2 RENCJ 588, (1988) CURLJ(CCR) 570, (1988) 2 RENCR 386

Author: A.P. Sen

Bench: A.P. Sen

           PETITIONER:
SHIV KUMAR

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
JAWAHAR LAL VERMA & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT14/09/1988

BENCH:
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
BENCH:
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
SEN, A.P. (J)

CITATION:
 1988 AIR 2164		  1988 SCR  Supl. (2)1079
 1988 SCC  (4) 763	  JT 1988 (3)	680
 1988 SCALE  (2)1085


ACT:
    U.P.  Urban	 Building (Regulation of Letting,  Rent	 and
Eviction) Act, 1972. Section 39--Deposit of arrears of rent-
-Deposit  within one month from date of knowledge of  suit--
Necessity for.



HEADNOTE:
    A suit for eviction on the ground of arrears of rent was
filed  by the Appellant-landlord on 11th June,	1973,  after
the  coming  into  the	force of  the  U.P.  Urban  Building
(Regulation of Letting, Rent and Eviction Act, 1972. In	 the
plaint it was contended that the Act would not apply to	 the
demised premises which was a shop because the same had	been
constructed  only in the year 1966 and as such the shop	 was
exempted  from	the purview of the Act for a  period  of  10
years  under  section 2(3). The	 respondents  contested	 the
suit, the main ground being that the shop was covered by the
Act  and as such they were entitled to claim  the  statutory
benefit	 conferred  by	section 39 on tenants  who  were  in
arrears of the rent.
    During  the	 pendency of the suit the  respondents	made
applications  in  February  and March, 1976  to	 direct	 the
Appellant to disclose the date of construction of the  shop.
As  no	information was forthcoming  the  respondents  after
waiting for some time deposited the arrears of rent together
with the interest as required under section 39 of the Act in
April,	 1976.	The  Appellant	thereafter   furnished	 the
information  that  though the shop had been  constructed  in
1965  it  was assessed to house tax for the  first  time  in
January,  1966	and therefore the date of  construction	 for
purpose of section 2(2) would be January 1. 1966.
    The	  Trial	 Court	accepted  the  aforesaid   statement
regarding date of construction of the shop and took the view
that  the respondents had failed to deposit the	 arrears  of
rent  within one month from the date but had  deposited	 the
arrears	 only  in the month of April, 1976 and as  such	 the
respondents  were  not entitled to claim the  benefit  under
section 39.
    The	 Revision Petition preferred by the  respondents  to
the District  Court under section 25 of the Provincial Small
						  PG NO 1079
						  PG NO 1080
Causes	Courts	Act was dismissed following the	 ratio	laid
down by this Court in Om Prakash v. Digvijendrapal, [1982] 3
SCR  491.  The	Addl.  Distt.  Judge  took  the	 view	that
irrespective of the date of deposit of the arrears of  rent,
the  respondents  were entitled to claim the  benefit  under
section	 39  because  the Act itself did not  apply  to	 the
demised	 premises inasmuch as the suit for eviction was	 not
pending	 on  the date the Act came into	 force	namely	15th
July, 1972 and had been filed only on 11.7.1973.
    The respondents preferred a writ petition under Art. 226
to the High Court. A Single Judge held that the	 observation
in Om Prakash's case to the effect that in order to  attract
section	 39,  the suit must be pending on the  date  of	 the
commencement of the Act, viz., 15.7.1972 has been held to be
obiter	dicta in the later case Vineet Kumar v. Mangal	Sain
Wadhera,  [l984]  3 SCC 352, and therefore  the	 respondents
would not stand dis-entitled to seek the benefit of  section
39  of the Act. The High Court further held that  since	 the
appellant  had failed to disclose in the plaint the date  of
construction  the respondents cannot be found fault for	 not
having	deposited the arrears of rent, that the	 respondents
can  be	 attributed  to have knowledge	about  the  date  of
construction of the shop only in the month of April 1976 and
since the arrears of rent had been deposited in April, 1976,
they are entitled to claim the benefit of section 39 of	 the
Act.  The High Court accordingly allowed the writ  petition,
and  quashed  the  decree for eviction	passed	against	 the
respondents.
the appeal, this Court,
    HELD:  1. The High Court was not correct in	 taking	 the
view  that since the respondents came to know only in  April
1976  about  the date of construction of the  building,	 the
deposit	 of the arrears of rent in the month of	 April	1976
should	 be  considered	 a  valid  deposit  and	  sufficient
compliance  with  the mandatory requirement of	section	 39.
[1086F-G]
    2. Section 39 envisages only two situations viz. deposit
of the arrears of rent within one month from the date of the
commencement of the Act or within one month from the date of
knowledge of the pendency of the suit. The Section does	 not
provide	 for a tenant depositing the arrears of rent  within
one month from the date of his coming to know of the date of
construction of the building. [1086E-F]
    3. In the instant case, even though the respondents	 had
contested   the	 suit  and  taken  a  plea  in	the  written
statement  that the lease of the shop granted to them  would
						  PG NO 1081
be  governed  by the terms of the Act, they  had  failed  to
deposit	 the arrears of rent within one month from the	date
of their coming to know of the pendency of the suit. On	 the
other hand, they had waited till February and March 1976  to
call upon the appellant to furnish the date of	construction
of  the building and then of their own accord had  deposited
the  arrears  of  rent in April, 1976.	No  explanation	 was
offered by the respondents as to why they failed to  deposit
the arrears of rent within one month from the date of  their
knowledge  of  the  pendency of the suit  even	though	they
claimed	 the  benefit of Section 39 or as to  why  they	 had
waited	till February/March 1976 to call upon the  appellant
to furnish information regarding the date of construction of
the shop. [1086C-E]
    4.	It is not necessary in the instant case, to go	into
the  question whether the respondents would or would not  be
entitled  to claim the benefit of section 39 of the  Act  by
reason	of the eviction suit not being a pending  action  on
the date the Act came into force. However, it can be said in
agreement  with	 the pronouncement in Vineet  Kumar's  case,
that  the view taken in Om Prakash's case was obiter  dicta.
[1084H; 1085A-B]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURlSDlCTlON: Civil Appeal No. 2199 of 1988.

From the Judgment and Order dated 12.8.1985 of the Allahabad High Court in C.M.W P. No. 7343 of 1982. Yogeshwar Prasad, Ms. Rachna Gupta Ms. Asha Rani Madan and S.R. Shrivastava for the Appellant.

Prithvi Raj and Uma Dutta for the Respondents. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by NATARAJAN, J. Leave granted.

This appeal by special leave has been preferred by a landlord and is directed against the judgment and order of the Allahabad High Court in Civil Miscellaneous Writ Petition No. 7343 of 1982. The appellant succeeded in obtaining a decree for eviction against the respondents before the Trial Court and the Revisional Court but the decree was quashed by the High Court in the writ petition filed by the respondents herein and hence the present appeal by the landlord appellant.

PG NO 1082 The suit for eviction on the ground of arrears of rent was filed by the appellant on 11.6.1973 after the coming into force of the U.P. Urban Buildings (Regulation of Letting, Rent and Eviction) Act, 1972 (for short the Act). In the plaint it was averred that the Act would not apply to the lease of the demised premises viz. a shop because the shop had been constructed only in the year 1966, and as such, the shop was exempted from the purview of the Act for a period of ten years as provided for in Section 2(2) of the Act. The respondents raised various defences to the action but we are now concerned only with the tenability of one of those defences viz. that the shop was covered by the Act and as such the respondents were entitled to claim the benefit conferred by Section 39 of the Act on tenants who were in arrears of rent.

During the pendency of the suit, in the month of February 1976, the respondents made an application to the Trial Court to direct the appellant to disclose the date of construction of the shop as the plaintiff failed to disclose the date and it only contained a general averment that the shop had been constructed in the year 1966. As no information was forthcoming, the respondents filed another application on 12.3.1976 for the self same purpose. After waiting for some time, the respondents deposited the arrears of rent together with interest etc. as provided for in Section 39 of the Act in April 1976 and after they had made the deposit, the appellant furnished information to the effect that though the shop had been constructed in 1965, it was assessed to house tax for the first time on 1.1.1966 and therefore the date of construction for purposes of Section 2(2) would be the 1st of January 1966. The Trial Court accepted the statement of the appellant regarding the date of construction of the shop being 1. 1. 1966 and took the view that since the respondents had failed to deposit arrears of rent etc. within one month from that date but had deposited the arrears only in the month of April 1976, the respondents were not entitled to claim the benefit under Section 39.

The respondents preferred a revision to the District Court under Section 25 of the Provincial Small Causes Courts Act. The 3rd Addl. District Judge, Meerut who heard the revision held that irrespective of the date of deposit of the arrears of rent, the respondents were not entitled to claim benefits under Section 39 because the Act itself did not apply to the demised premises inasmuch as the suit for eviction was not pending on the date the Act came into force viz. 15.7.1972 and had been filed only on 11.7.1973. In taking such a view, the Revisional Court followed the ratio laid down by this Court in Om Prakash v. Digvijendrapal, [1982] 3 SCR 491. Accordingly. the Revisional Court dismissed the revision petition.

PG NO 1083 The respondents thereafter preferred a writ petition to the High Court of Allahabad under Article 226 of the Constitution of India. A learned single judge of the High Court held that that the observation in Om Prakash case (supra) to the effect that in order to attract Section 39 the suit must be pending on the date of the commencement of the Act viz. 15.7.1972 has been held to be obiter dicta by this Court in a later case Vineet Kumar v. Mangal Sain Wadhera, [1984] 3 SCC 352 and therefore the respondents would not stand dis-entitled to seek the benefit of Section 39 of the Act merely on the ground the suit for eviction was not pending on the date the Act came into force. Proceeding further the High Court held that since the appellant had failed to disclose in the plaint the date of construction of the building and had further failed to give the particulars thereof in spite of being specifically called upon to do so by the respondents by means of two applications filed in the months of February and March 1976, the respondents cannot be found fault with for not having deposited the arrears of rent, interest etc. within a period of one month from 1.1.1976 and that the respondents can be attributed to have knowledge about the date of construction of the shop only in the month of April 1976 and since they had deposited the arrears of rent in April 1976 itself they must be held to have deposited the arrears of rent within time so as to enable them to claim benefits under Section 39 of the Act. The High Court has rendered its finding on this aspect of the matter in the following manner:

"Commencement of the Act, therefore, depends on first assessment. A tenant could avail of benefit under Section 39 only if he is aware of the first assessment. In the plaint opposite party did not disclose any date except that building was completed in 1966.
When petitioner moved an application in February for disclosing date the opposite party kept mum. Even if it is assumed that this application as claimed by opposite party is not on record the petitioner moved another application in March to which reply was filed in April and it was stated that first assessment of the building had been done on 1st January, 1966. Petitioner, therefore, could know about the date of completion in April, 1976 only. In absence of any disclosure in the plaint or by any other manner the petitioner cannot be deprived of benefit under Section 39. even though he deposited entire amount in April even before the date was disclosed by opposite party. On the finding PG NO 1084 recorded by Trial Court Act no doubt became applicable on 1st January, 1976 but for purposes of Section 39 the one month period could be calculated from the date the petitioner acquired knowledge or shall be deemed to have acquired knowledge about commencement of the Act. As petitioner came to know in April only it could not be said that he did not comply with mandatory requirements of Section 39."

In accordance with such conclusion the High Court allowed the writ petition and quashed the decree for eviction passed against the respondents. The correctness of the view taken by the High Court is the subject matter of challenge in this appeal.

Learned counsel for the appellant contended before us that even though the view taken in Om Prakash's case (supra) that the Act would apply only to those suits which were pending on the date of the commencement of the Act was declared to be obiter dicta in Vineet Kumar's case (supra), another Bench of this Court has subsequently held in Nand Kishore Marwah v. Samundri Devi, [1987] IV SCC 382 that the view taken in Om Prakash's case by a Bench of three judges was binding on them and that the correct view to be taken is that Section 39 of the Act would apply only to those suits which were pending on the date of the commencement of the Act i.e. July 15, 1972 and likewise Section 40 would apply only to those appeals which pertained to suits pending when the Act came into force and as such the Revisional Court had acted correctly in holding that the respondents cannot claim benefits under the Act and that the High Court had erred in quashing the decree for eviction passed against the respondents.

Arguing to the contrary. the learned counsel for the respondents stated that the decision in Nand Kishore Marwah's case would not affect the respondents in any manner because of two factors viz. the view taken in Om Prakash's case (supra) regarding the Act being applicable only to suits pending on the date of commencement of the Act being admittedly obiter dicta and secondly the Bench which decided Nand Kishore Marwah's case had wrongly construed the decision in Vineet Kumar's case because of the mistaken assumption that the attention of the Court was not drawn to Om Prakash's case.

Having regard to the facts of the case we do not think it necessary for us to go into the question whether the respondents would or would not be entitled to claim the PG NO 1085 benefit of Section 39 of the Act by reason of the suit for eviction not being a pending action on the date the Act came into force. We may, however, say that we find ourselves in agreement with the pronouncement in Vineet Kumar's case that the view taken in Om Prakash's case was obiter dicta because as observed in the judgment, "it was not at all necessary in that case to deal with the question whether the appellant would be entitled to the benefit of Section 39 as the building had not become ten years old on the date when the revision petition was heard." Be that as it may, even accept-ing the respondent's case that the Act would govern the suit, we find that the respondents cannot claim benefit under Section 39 because of their belated deposit of the arrears of rent and interest. It has to be noted that the suit for eviction was filed as early as on 11.6.73. By then the Act had come into force and the beneficial provision under Section 39 was fully known to the respondents. If they had wanted to avail of the benefits conferred by Section 39 and deposit the arrears of rent together with interest, costs etc. the respondents should have deposited the amount within one month from the date of their knowledge of the filing of the suit. Section 39 reads as under:

"39. Pending suits for eviction relating to buildings brought under regulation for the first time: In any suit for eviction of a tenant from any building to which the old Act did not apply, pending on the date of commencement of this Act, where the tenant within one month from such date of commencement or from the date of his knowledge of the pendency of the suit, whichever be later, deposits in the Court before which the suit is pending, the entire amount of rent and damages for use and occupation (such damages for use and occupation being calculated at the same rate as rent) together with interest thereon at the rate of nine percent per annum and the landlord's full costs of the suit, no decree for eviction shall be passed except on any of the grounds mentioned in the proviso to sub-section (1) or in clause (b) to (g) of sub-section (2) of Section 20, and the parties shall be entitled to make necessary amendment in their pleadings and to adduce additional evidence where necessary. Provided that a tenant the rent payable by whom does not exceed twenty five rupees per month need not deposit any interest as aforesaid."

(Emphasis supplied) From the terms of Section 39 it may be seen that if any tenant wants to avail of the benefit conferred by the PG NO 1086 Section he should deposit in the Court before which the suit is pending the entire amount of rent and damages for use or occupation together with interest at nine per cent per annum etc. within one month from such date of commencement (of the Act) or from the date of his knowledge of the pendency of the suit, whichever be later. Obviously, the first prescription would not apply because the Act had come into force long before the suit was filed and as such there was no question of the respondents depositing the rent arrears "within one month from the date of the commencement of the Act." However, the second prescription would squarely apply viz. the deposit being made "within one month from the date of knowledge of the pendency of the suit." Booking at the facts we find that even though the respondents had contested the suit and taken a plea in the written statement that the lease of the shop granted to them would be governed by the terms of the Act, they had failed to deposit the arrears of rent within one month from the date of their coming to know of the pendency of the suit. On the other hand, they had waited till February and March 1976 to call upon the appellant to furnish the date of construction of the building and then of their own accord had deposited the arrears of rent in April 1976. No explanation was offered by the respondents as to why they failed to deposit the arrears of rent within one month from the date of their knowledge of the pendency of the suit even though they claimed the benefit of Section 39 or as to why they had waited till February/March 1976 to call upon the appellant to furnish information regarding the date of construction of the shop. The Section does not provide for a tenant depositing the arrears of rent within one month from the date of his coming to know the date of construction of the building. The Section envisages only two situations viz. deposit of the arrears of rent within one month from the date of the commencement of the Act or within one month from the date of knowledge of the pendency of the suit. The High Court was therefore not correct in taking the view that since the respondents came to know only in April 1976 about the date of construction of the building then deposit of the arrears of rent in the month of April 1976 should be considered as a valid deposit made under section 39 and that the deposit complied with the mandatory requirements of Section 39. In this view of the matter we are of the opinion that the order of the High Court should be set aside and the decree for eviction possed by the Trial Court and confirmed by the Revisional Court should be restored. Accordingly, the appeal will stand allowed and the order of the High Court is set aside and the decree of eviction passed in favour of the appellant by the Lower Courts will stand restored. However, PG NO 1087 in order to enable the respondents to find alternate accommodation to shift their shop, we direct that in execution of the decree, the respondents will not be dispossessed till 31-12-1988 subject to the condition the respondents file an undertaking before this Court in the usual terms within a period of four weeks from today failing which the appellant will be at liberty to recover possession of the leased premises even before 31.12.1988. In the facts and circumstances of the case, there will no order as to costs.

N.V.K.					 Appeal allowed.