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[Cites 4, Cited by 52]

Supreme Court of India

Udai Chand vs Shanker Lal & Others on 7 February, 1978

Equivalent citations: 1978 AIR 765, 1978 SCR (2) 809, AIR 1978 SUPREME COURT 765, 1978 2 SCC 209, 1979 (1) RENTLR 484, 1978 2 SCR 809, 1978 U J (SC) 171, 1978 (1) RENCJ 576, 1978 2 SCWR 170

Author: M. Hameedullah Beg

Bench: M. Hameedullah Beg, P.N. Bhagwati, D.A. Desai

           PETITIONER:
UDAI CHAND

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
SHANKER LAL & OTHERS

DATE OF JUDGMENT07/02/1978

BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH (CJ)
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH (CJ)
BHAGWATI, P.N.
DESAI, D.A.

CITATION:
 1978 AIR  765		  1978 SCR  (2) 809
 1978 SCC  (2) 209


ACT:
Special	 leave,	 revocation of under rule 6 of	Order  XLVII
read  with  rule  10 of Order XVI  of  Supreme	Court  Rules
1966--Special  leave obtained by misrepresentation of  facts
should be revoked--Constitution of India Article 136.



HEADNOTE:
The  respondents  are  the  legal  representatives  of	 one
Surajmal,  who had purchased suit shop by a registered	sale
deed   dated  17-5-1965,  from	one  Bhurdas  to  whom	 the
petitioner  had	 executed  two rent  notes,  Exhibit  8	 and
Exhibit 10, specifically mentioning the name of Bhurdas,  as
the  owner of the shop. The petitioner was notified  of	 the
said sale deed by a registered letter dated 25-6-1965  which
was  received by him on 29-6-1965.  Surajmal terminated	 the
tenancy	 of  the petitioner by a registered notice  in	July
1965, coupled with the demand for arrears of rent.  Upon the
failure to comply with the notice to quit, a suit was  filed
against	  the  petitioner  on  23-11-65.    The	  petitioner
contested the suit denying the execution of any rent note in
favour	of  Bhurdas and pleaded having taken the  shop	from
another individual, Mahant Ram Ratan Das.  In the course  of
litigation, the petitioner prayed for an issue to be  framed
on  the question whether there was legal necessity  for	 the
transfer  in favour of the plaintiff by Bhurdas,  which	 was
refused.  In revision against the said interlocutory  order,
the High Court refused to interfere taking the view that the
petitioner  was	 estopped  from	 questioning  the  title  of
Bhurdas as his landlord by reason of the principle laid down
in Section 116 of the Evidence Act.
Ultimately,  upon the decree of eviction by the trial  Court
and  affirmed by the First Appellate Court,  the  defendant-
petitioner  again challenged the view that he  was  estopped
from  questioning  the title of Bhurdas, by  way  of  second
appeal before the High Court.  The High Court dismissed	 the
appeal	 quoting  a  recital  in  Exhibit  10  wherein	 the
petitioner has admitted the ownership of the shop by Bhurdas
to whom he would pay rent.  The petitioner thereafter  filed
special leave petition and obtained ex-parte ad-interim stay
of eviction by alleging in Ground No. 7 that the rent  note,
Exhibit	 10, no where stated that Bhurdas was the  owner  of
the shop and, therefore, there was no proper appreciation of
the said Exhibit.
The  respondent filed an application for revocation  of	 the
special	 leave	petition.  Revoking the	 special  leave	 and
dismissing it the Court.
HELD  : In dealing with application for special	 leave,	 the
Court  naturally  takes statements of facts and	 grounds  of
fact  contained in the petitions at their face value and  it
would  be  unfair to betray the confidence of the  Court  by
making statements, which are untrue and misleading.  Supreme
Court  cannot permit abuse of the process of law and of	 law
courts. [812 BC]
Hari  Narain  v.  Badri	 Das, [1964] 2 SCR  203	 @  209	 and
Rajabhal  Abdul	 Rehman Munshi v. Vasudev  Dhanjibhai  Mody,
[1964] 3 SCR 481 @ 488 & 493 followed and reiterated
The King v. Williams & Ors. [1914] 1 K. B. 608, The King  v.
The  General Commissioners" for the Purposes of	 the  Income
Tax  Acts for the District of Kensington' [1917] 1 K B.	 486
and  Asiatic Engineering Co. v. Achhru Ram ; Ors.  AIR	1951
All 746 referred to.
Observation:
Supreme Court cannot mitigate possible rigours of any law by
permitting  defaulting	tenants to hold up  their  evictions
indefinitely  or for inordinately long periods on flimsy  or
unsustainable grounds. [813 B-C]
810



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Miscellaneous Petition No. 8783 of 1977.

(Application for additional grounds etc.) In the matter of :-

Special Leave Petition (Civil) No. 2478 of 1977 From the Judgment and Order dated 3-5-1977 of the Rajasthan High Court in S.B. Civil 2nd Appeal No. 403 of 1975. Badridas Sharma and S. R. Srivastava for the Petitioner. Dr. L. M. Singhvi, S. M. Jain, Dalveer Bhandari and S. K. Jain for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by BEG, C.J. The plaintiff landlord had purchased a shop by a sale deed dated 17th May, 1965, and then terminated the tenancy of the defendant-petitioner by a registered notice in July, 1965, coupled with a demand for arrears of rent. Upon the failure of defendant to comply with the notice to quit a suit was filed against the defendant-petitioner on 23rd November, 1965. During the pendency of that suit the Rajasthan Premises (Control of Rent & Eviction) Act, 1950, was made applicable by a notification dated 30th March, 1967, to Rajgarh town where, the shop is situated. The defendant petitioner had denied having executed any rent note in favour of Bhurdas, the predecessor-in-interest of the plaintiff landlord who had also notified the defendant petitioner of the sale in favour of the plaintiff by a registered notice dated 25th June, 1965, received by the defendant petitioner on 29th June, 1965. The defendant petitioner pleaded having taken the shop from another individual. Mahant Ram Ratan Das.
In the course of litigation, the defendant-petitioner had asked for an issue to be framed on the, question whether there was legal necessity for the transfer in favour of the plaintiff. In other words, he had questioned, at that stage, the legality of transfer in favour of the plaintiff on the ground of. want of title in the plaintiff's predecessor-in-interest and also on the ground that the sale deed was invalid. The High Court had, however, on a revision application preferred by the defendant-petitioner rejected the demand of the tenant for framing of an issue on the question whether there was legal necessity for the transaction. The ground for this rejection was that, as the defendant petitioner had obtained possession under a tenancy from Bhurdas, the predecessor-in-interest of the present landlord, Surajmal, the defendant petitioner Udai Chand, was estopped from questioning the title of his landlord by reason of the principle laid down in Section 116 of the Evidence Act.
Ultimately, upon the decree for eviction, the defendant- petitioner had again challenged the view that he Was estopped from questioning the title of Bhurdas. On this question the learned judge who heard the second appeal in the High Court observed 811 "I would like to mention here that the learned- Counsel for the appellant did not challenge the correctness of the finding that the rent notes Ex. 8 and Ex. 10 were executed by the defendant in favour of Bhurdas. The learned Counsel for the appellant also did not challenge the genuineness of the sale deed dated May 17, 1965 executed by Bhurdas in favour of Surajmal".
The High Court then quoted the recitals of Ex. 10 showing that the defendant had admitted that the shop was owned by Bhurdas to whom he would pay rent. The defendant- petitioner's second appeal was, therefore, dismissed by the High Court.
The defendant-petitioner then filed a special leave petition in this Court under Article 136. Ground No. 7 of the grounds of special leave petition was :
"That the Hon'ble Court should have appreciated that the rent note Ext. 10 nowhere states that Bhoordas was the owner of the house and hence the inference of the Hon'ble Judge that the petitioner had admitted that Bhoordas was the owner of the shop, is not correct and hence the judgment under appeal deserves to be set aside".

On 17th May, 1977, the learned Vacation Judge granted special leave to appeal to this Court and also an ex-parte order staying dispossession pending disposal of a notice of motion.

The respondent's application for revocation of special leave to appeal is now before us. The respondents have filed a true copy of the rent deed Ex. 10. A perusal of it shows that there was a specific mention of Bhurdas as the owner of the shop in dispute which, the defendant petitioner had taken on rent. Hence, there could be no getting away from the fact that the defendant petitioner had made a clearly false and misleading assertion in his special leave petition. We fail to see what point other than the applicability of Section 116 of the Evidence Act could possibly arise in the case. The whole case was concluded by findings of fact. Nevertheless, the special leave petition was granted in this Court. We think that the only reason why such leave could have been granted was that it was misrepresented to the Court that the rent note in favour of Bhurdas did not contain an admission of the ownership of Bhurdas. This was certainly a misstatement of a material fact which was of decisive importance in the case. In fact, it was a serious misrepresentation on the only point which could possibly arise in the case.

We have heard learned counsel for both sides. Learned Counsel for the, defendant petitioner is unable to give any explanation for the false assertion in ground No. VII of his special leave petition except that the learned Counsel had himself misunderstood the 'document, because of other facts, in the case. We are unable to accept this flimsy explanation as a sufficient justification for the false assertion.

812

Reference was made by the learned Counsel for the respondents to The King v. Williams & Ors.(1), and The King v. The General Commissioners for the Purposes of the Income Tax Acts for the District of Kensington (2) which are cases of misleading assertions by petitioners made in affidavits to support grounds for writ petitions. He also cited Asiatic Engineering Co. v. A chru Ram & Ors. (3), on principles governing refusal of relief on writ petitions due to misrepresentation or suppression of material facts. More relevant is : Hari Narain v. Badri Day(4),where Gajendragadkar, J., speaking for this Court said (at p.

209):

"In dealing with applications for special leave, the Court naturally takes statements of fact and grounds of fact contained in th e petitions at their face value and it would be unfair to betray the confidence of the Court by making statements which are untrue and misleading,'.
In that case, this Court revoked the grant of special leave despite the fact that Mr. Setalvad, who had argued the special leave petition at the time of its grant, had stated that, so far as he recollected, the special leave was not granted on the ground on which misrepresentation by his client had taken place.
The last mentioned case was cited with approval in Rajabhai Abdul Rehman Munshi v. Vasudev Dhanjibhai Mody(5), where Sarkar and Shah.JJ. pointed out (at p. 488) :
"Exercise of the jurisdiction of the Court under Art. 136 of the Constitution is discretionary, it is exercised sparingly and in exceptional cases, when a substantial question of law fans to be determined or where it appears to the Court that interference by this Court is necessary to remedy serious injustice. A party who approaches this Court invoking the exercise of this overriding discretion of the Court must come with clean hands. If there appears on his part any attempt to overreach or mislead the Court by false or untrue statements or by withholding true information which would have a bearing on the question of exercise of the discretion, 'the Court would be justified in refusing to exercise the discretion( or if the discretion has been exercised in revoking the leave to appeal granted even at the time of hearing of the appeal".

And, Hidayatullah J., said (at p. 493-494) there "The powers exercisable by this Court under Art. 136 of the Constitution are not in the nature of a general appeal. They enable this Court to interfere in cases where an irreparable (1) [1914] 1 K.B. 608.

(2) [1917] 1 K.B. 486.

(3) A.I.R. 1951 All 746 (4) [1964] 2 S.C.R.203 at 209.

(5) [1964] 3 S.C.R. 481 at 488 and 493.

813

injury has been caused by reason of a miscarriage of justice due to a gross neglect of law or procedure or otherwise and there is no other adequate remedy. The article is hardly meant to afford relief in a case of this type where a party is in default of ren t because he withdrew a deposit lying in court but who cannot, on the record of the case, be shown to have withdrawn the amount. If the petition had mentioned that the decision of the appeal court had proceeded on the ground that the amount was taken out, it is difficult to imagine that this Court would have given special leave to decide a question of discretion".

We are constrained to observe that the tendency to file appeals in hopeless cases only to gain time and ward off eviction has assumed alarming proportions. We cannot mitigate possible rigours of any law by permitting defaulting tenants to hold up their evictions indefinitely or for inordinately long periods on flimsy or unsustainable grounds. We cannot permit abuses of the process of law and of law Courts.

Accordingly, we allow this application for revocation of special leave. We hereby revoke the special leave granted and reject the special leave petition. We also vacate the stay granted. The application for urging additional grounds is rejected. The plaintiff-respondent will get special costs.

S.R. Petition allowed.

814