Allahabad High Court
Kamal Raj Patpatiya vs Smt. Har Bai Sahu And Another on 19 November, 2010
Author: Shashi Kant Gupta
Bench: Shashi Kant Gupta
HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT ALLAHABAD ?AFR Court No. - 7 Case :- WRIT - A No. - 65695 of 2010 Petitioner :- Kamal Raj Patpatiya Respondent :- Smt. Har Bai Sahu And Another Petitioner Counsel :- Vishnu Gupta Respondent Counsel :- K. K. Tiwari Hon'ble Shashi Kant Gupta,J.
The present petition is directed against the order dated 4.10.2001 passed by the prescribed authority/J.S.C.C. Jhansi in P. A. Case No. 62 of 2007 (Smt. Har Bai Sahu Vs. Parvesh Chandra Patpatiya ) whereby it has rejected the application filed by the present petitioner for his impleadment in release proceedings under Section 21 (1) (a) of the U. P. Act No. 13 of 1972 (hereinafter referred to as 'the Act').
Indisputably Sri Sikandar Lal Patpatiya, the father of the petitioner was the tenant of the disputed shop. He died on 15.2.2004 leaving behind, inter alia, the petitioner as well as the opposite party No. 2 (sons) as his legal heirs. The release application which was registered as P. A. No. 62 of 2007 was filed by the land lady namely Smt. Har Bai Sahu (respondent No. 1) against the Opposite Party No. 2 (one of the son of the original tenant late Sri Sikandar Lal Patpatiya).
The Opposite Party No. 2 is contesting the release application. After almost three years an impleadment application was filed by the present petitioner. It was pleaded therein that he, being one of the heirs of the deceased Sri Sikandar Lal Patpatiya, is entilted to be impleaded under Order 1 Rule 10 of the C.P.C. The said application was contested by the Opposite Party No. 1, the land lady on the ground that it is malafide and has been filed just to delay the proceedings. It was also pleaded that the release application is being contested by Sri Pravesh Chandra Patpatiya who alone is doing the business in the disputed shop.
The prescribed authority by the impugned order has rejected the impleadment application. Learned counsel for the applicant relying upon the following decisions Textile Association India Bombay Unit Vs. Balmohan Gopal Kurup 1990 AIR (SC) 2053 and Gauri Shankar Gupta Vs. Anita Mishra and another (2004 (1) ARC 200) has submitted that after the death of the original tenant namely late Sri Sikandar Lal Patpatiya, the tenancy was inherited by him along with his brother as joint tenant, as such, he is necessary and proper party. It has further been submitted that the tenancy cannot be brought to an end by proceeding only against one of the legal heirs without impleading the petitioner as party in the application filed under Section 21 (1) (a) of the Act.
Per contra, learned counsel for the land lady, Opposite Party No. 1 has submitted that the application filed by the petitioner is malafide and has been filed after almost three years just to delay the entire proceedings. It has further been submitted that when the Opposite Party No. 2 was delaying the disposal of the application, the Writ Petition No. 49474 of 2010 was filed by the landlady in the High Court and this Court directed the land lady to move application before the authority concerned for expeditious disposal of the case in view of decision in Manju Devi case ( 2007 (3) A.R.C.-128). It has further been submitted that the petitioner is neither occupying the premises nor paying any rent nor doing any business from the premises in dispute and the filing of the impleadment application was in aid of the delaying proceedings. It is further submitted that the Respondent No. 2 is exclusively carrying on the business from the disputed shop.
Learned counsel for the respondent No. 1 has referred the following authorities in support of his submissions; Smt. Sona Devi Vs. Ghanshyam Dass and others ARC 1994 (2) 207, Krshna Kityal (Smt.) Vs. Kamlesh Gupta (Smt.) and another 2008 (2) ARC 603 and H. C. Pandey Vs. G. C. Paul 1989 (2) ARC 26 (SC).
Heard the learned counsel for the petitioner, Sri K. K. Pandey, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the Opposite Party No. 1 and perused the record.
A bare perusal of the impleadment application filed by the petitioner goes to show that no averment has been made by him that either he is paying any rent or he is carrying on any business from the disputed shop or he is occupying the said shop in any capacity. It has also come on record that he is running a separate hotel business. The Opposite Party No. 2 has also not made any averment in his written statement filed in reply to the application under Section 21 (1) (a) of the Act that the petitioner is carrying on any business from the disputed shop. He has clearly stated in his written statement that the business is being carried out by him (Respondent No. 2) from the disputed shop. Besides this, the petitioner has not been able to place any material to demonstrate before this Court that in fact he is carrying on any business from the said shop.
The Supreme Court in the case of Harish Tandon Vs. Additional District Magistrate and others 1995 (1) ARC 220 (SC) has held that on the death of tenant, his heirs, succeed the tenancy rights as joint tenants, they represent the estate of the deceased as heirs. It is a single tenancy which devolves on the heirs and there is no division of the premises or of the rent payable therefor, and the heirs succeed to the tenancy as joint tenants.
The facts of the Textile Association India Bombay Unit Vs. Balmohan Gopal Kurup and Gauri Shankar Gupta Vs. Anita Mishra and another (supra) are quite distinguishable. In the case of Textile Association India Bombay Unit, the legal heirs of the original tenant after his death were residing in the disputed premises and the ex-party decree for eviction was passed against the widow and one son of the original tenant without impleading the other son as party in that suit. In this background, the apex court held that ex-party decree obtained against the widow and one of the sons was not binding upon other son who was not impleaded by the land lord, and therefore, the ex-party decree was set aside, and the land lord was directed to implead the other son of the original tenant as party in the suit. In the said case, admittedly, son of the deceased tenant who had filed impleadment application, was residing in the premises in dispute and had legitimate interest in the said premises. However, in the present case, the petitioner is neither occupying the shop nor carrying on the business from the said premises.
In the case of Gauri Shankar Gupta Vs. Anita Mishra and another (supra) it was not disputed that the third party who had applied for the impleadment was carrying on the business from the disputed shop and hence, he had a legitimate interest in the shop, however, in the present case as has already been observed hereinabove that the petitioner is neither carrying on any business nor occupying the disputed shop.
Besides, in the present case even though an application under Section 21 (1) (a) of the Act was filed in the year 2007, the impleadment application has been filed by the petitioner almost after a lapse of three years and if the petitioner did have an genuine interest in the disputed shop, he would have definitely filed the impleadment application immediately after the filing of the release application in the year 2007 and could not have remained silent for almost three years, moreover, the petitioner has not assigned any reason for not filing impleadment application soon after the filing of the release application. It is also notable that it was only after this Court in Writ Petition No. 4974 of 2010 had directed the land lady to file application before the authority concerned for expeditious disposal of the case in view of decision in Manju Devi case (supra), the present impleadment application was filed by the petitioner. It is also noteworthy that the petitioner is neither carrying on any business nor occupying the said shop, therefore, he will not be prejudiced at all if the decree of eviction is passed against the contesting respondent.
In this view of the matter, I find no illegality, in the impugned order rejecting the impleadment application filed by the petitioner. Besides, the said impleadment application was filed at a belated stage and it is not a fit case to interfere with the impugned order under Article 226 of the Constitution of India.
In the result, the writ petition lacks merit and is dismissed summarily.
Order Date :- 19.11.2010 vinay