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[Cites 12, Cited by 60]

Supreme Court of India

Om Prakash Gupta Etc vs Dig Vijendrapal Gupta Etc on 5 March, 1982

Equivalent citations: 1982 AIR 1230, 1982 SCR (3) 491, AIR 1982 SUPREME COURT 1230(2), 1982 (2) SCC 61, (1982) 1 RENTLR 355, 1982 UJ(SC) 213, (1982) 8 ALL LR 242, (1982) ALL WC 226, (1982) 2 RENCJ 93, 1982 MPRCJ 95, (1982) 2 RENCR 383, (1982) 2 SCJ 329, (1982) ALL RENTCAS 391, (1982) 3 SCR 491 (SC), 1982 ALL CJ 250

Author: R.B. Misra

Bench: R.B. Misra, A.D. Koshal, V. Balakrishna Eradi

           PETITIONER:
OM PRAKASH GUPTA ETC.

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
DIG VIJENDRAPAL GUPTA ETC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT05/03/1982

BENCH:
MISRA, R.B. (J)
BENCH:
MISRA, R.B. (J)
KOSHAL, A.D.
ERADI, V. BALAKRISHNA (J)

CITATION:
 1982 AIR 1230		  1982 SCR  (3) 491
 1982 SCC  (2)	61	  1982 SCALE  (1)153
 CITATOR INFO :
 C	    1984 SC  87	 (18,20)
	    1985 SC 817	 (8)
 D	    1985 SC 817	 (14)
 F	    1987 SC2284	 (4,11,13)
 F	    1988 SC2031	 (9)
	    1988 SC2164	 (8)
 E&D	    1990 SC 897	 (8,9,10,11,14)
 D	    1991 SC 266	 (7)
 D	    1992 SC1106	 (6,10)


ACT:
     U.P. Urban	 Buildings (Regulation	of Letting, Rent and
Eviction) Act 1972. S.2 (2) and Expln. I and s. 39.
     Applicability of  the Act-Act  not to apply to building
for a  period of  ten years  from  'date  of  completion  of
construction'.
     Date of  completion of  construction-What	is-'Date  of
first assessment'  if assessed-'Date  of occupation' when no
record of completion of construction or of assessment.
     Interpretation of	Statutes-Intention of legislature-To
be ascertained	primarily from	words used  by	legislative-
Question of interpretation arises when language ambiguous.



HEADNOTE:
     The U.P.  Urban Buildings	(Regulation of Letting, Rent
and (Eviction)	Act, 1972  provided by	sub-section  (2)  of
section 2  that except	as provided  in the Act, the Act was
not to	apply to a building during a period of 10 years from
the  date   on	which	its  construction   was	  completed.
Explanation I  to the sub-section provided that the building
shall be  deemed to have been completed on the date on which
completion thereof  is reported or otherwise recorded by the
local authorities  having jurisdiction,	 and in	 case  of  a
building subject  to assessment, the date on which the first
assessment thereof  comes into	effect, and  where the	said
dates are  different, the  earliest of the said date, and in
the absence  of any  such report,  record or assessment, the
date on which it is actually occupied for the first time.
     The appellant-tenant  was in  occupation of a shop from
the 16th June, 1967 and prior to his occupation the shop was
in occupation  of another  tenant for  about a	month and  a
half. The  first assessment of the shop took place on Ist of
April, 1968.  The respondent-landlord  filed a	suit for the
eviction of  the tenant	 on the	 ground that the Act did not
apply to the shop and the tenant was liable to eviction.
     The Trial	Judge finding  that the	 construction of the
shop was completed in the year 1967 and that 10 years having
not elapsed  since then, held that the provisions of the Act
did not apply and decreed the suit. The appellant's
492
petition under	section 25  of the  Provincial Small  Causes
Courts Act  was dismissed.  In his  revision petition to the
High Court under section 115 of the Civil Procedure Code the
appellant contended  that the  date of	occupation should be
taken to  be the  date of  completion of the construction of
the shop  and not  the date  of first  assessment. The	High
Court  overruled   the	contention   and   held	  that	 the
construction of	 the shop  would  be  deemed  to  have	been
completed on  1st of  April, 1968  the	date  of  the  first
assessment and	ten years  not having elapsed, the Act would
not be applicable to the building and dismissed the revision
petition.
     In the  appeal to this Court it was contended on behalf
of the	appellant: (1)	that by virtue of sub-section (2) of
section 2,  the Act  would be  applicable  to  the  shop  in
question and  that the	exemption created by the sub-section
did  not   embrace  buildings	constructed  prior   to	 the
commencement of	 the Act and (2) that the building should be
deemed to have been constructed on the date of occupation on
16th June, 1967 and not on the date of the first assessment.
and that  the appellant	 was  entitled	to  the	 benefit  of
section 39 of the Act.
     Dismissing the appeal,
^
     HELD: 1(i)	 The suit  was rightly decreed by the Courts
below. The  Act had  no application  and the appellant could
not be given the benefit of section 39. [498 G-H]
     (ii)  Primarily,	the   language	 employed   is	 the
determining factor  of the intention of the legislature. The
first and primary rule of construction is that the intention
of the	legislature must  be found  in the words used by the
legislature itself.  The question  of interpretation  arises
only when  the language	 is ambiguous and, therefore capable
of two interpretations. [497 F]
     (iii) The	language of  sub-section (2) of section 2 of
the Act is explict and unambiguous and is not capable of two
interpretations. [497 G]
     In the absence of any ambiguity there is no question of
taking any  external aid  for the interpretation of the sub-
section. The sub-section contemplates that the Act shall not
apply to  a building  during a	period of  10 years from the
date on	 which its  construction is  completed. It  no where
says that  the building	 should have  been constructed after
the enforcement of the Act and to interpret it in such a way
would be  to add  words to  the sub-section,  which  is	 not
permissible. [497 D-F]
     2 (i)  Explanation I makes it abundantly clear that the
date of	 occupation  would  be	taken  to  be  the  date  of
completion of  the construction only when there is no report
or record  of the  completion  of  the	construction  or  no
assessment thereof.  If there  is an  assessment, as  in the
instant case  it will  be the  date of	the first assessment
which will  be deemed  to be  the date	of completion of the
construction. The  building had	 not therefore	become	more
than ten  years's old  on the date when the revision came to
be decided  by the  High Court and consequently there was no
question of  giving the	 benefit of section 39 of the Act to
the appellant. [498 D-F]
493
     (ii) In  order to	attract section	 39 the suit must be
pending on  the date  of   the commencement of the Act which
was 15th of July, 1972. [498 F]
     In the instant case the suit was filed on 23rd of March
1974 long after the commencement of the Act. [498 F]
     (iii) In  view of sub-section (2) of section 2, the Act
is not	applicable to a building which has not a standing of
ten years. If the Act itself was not applicable, it would be
absurd to  say that  section 39 thereof would be applicable.
[498 G]
     Rattan Lal	 Shinghal v.  Smt. Murti Devi (1980)4 S.C.C.
258 and	 Ram Saroop  Rai v.  Lilavati (1980)  3 S.C.C.	452,
over-ruled.



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1314 of 1978.

Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated the 23rd March, 1978 of the Allahabad High Court in Civil Revision No. 1906 for 1976.

WITH CIVIL APPEAL No. 2436 OF 1981 Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated the 20th August, 1981 of the Allahabad High Court in Civil Writ Petition No. 6909 of 1979.

AND CIVIL APPEAL No. 1710 OF 1981 From the judgment and Decree dated the 13th March, 1981 of the Allahabad High Court in Writ Petition No. 6167 of 1979.

AND SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION (CIVIL) NO. 3573 OF 1979 494 From the judgment and order dated the 3rd January, 1979 of the Allahabad High Court in Civil Revision No. 3714 of 1978.

G.L.Sanghi, Mrs. A. Verma and D.N. Mishra for the Appellant in CA. No. 1314 of 1978.

J.P. Goyal, S.Markandeya and C.K.Ratnaparkhi for the Respondent in CA. 1314 of 1978.

A.K. Srivastava for the Appellant in CA. 1710/80. R.B. Mehrotra for Respondent in CA. 1710/80. Pramod Swarup and Mrs. S. Markandeya for the appellant in CA. 2436 of 1980.

S.N. Kacker and K.K Gupta for the Respondent in CA. 2436 of 1980.

P.R.Mridul, Praveen Jain and K.B. Rohatgi for the Petitioner in SLP (Civil) No. 3573 of 1979 R.H. Dhebar for the Respondent.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by MISRA J. The first two appeals by special leave and the third by certificate and the special leave petition raise a common question of law and, therefore, we propose to dispose of them by a common judgment.

The pattern of facts in all these cases is similar. We, therefore set out the facts of Civil Appeal No. 1314 of 1978 to bring out the point for consideration in these matters.

The appellant Om Prakash Gupta is a tenant of a shop on a monthly rent of Rs. 150/-.The respondent-landlord filed a suit for the eviction of the tenant on the ground that the U.P. Urban Buildings (Regulation of Letting, Rent and Eviction) Act, 1972 (Act 13 of 1972 and hereinafter referred to as 'the Act') did not apply to the shop and the tenant was liable to eviction. The Judge, Small Causes Court, Mainpuri decreed the suit on the finding inter alia that the construction of the shop in suit was completed in the year 1967 and 495 that ten years having not elapsed since then, the provisions of the Act did not apply to the case. The defendant went up in revision under section 25 of the Provincial Small Causes Courts Act against the judgment and decree of the trial Court but the same was substantially dismissed. The defendant thereupon filed a revision under section 115 of the Civil Procedure Code in the High Court which came up for hearing before a learned Single Judge who remitted the following issue to the trial court:

"On what date was the construction of the building in dispute completed within the meaning of section 2 (2) of the U.P. Urban Buildings (Regulation of Letting, Rent and Eviction) Act, 1972, and deemed to have been completed as contemplated by Explanation I (a) thereto."

The Judge Small Causes Court by his order dated 26th of November 1977 returned the following finding:

"The construction of the disputed shop will be deemed to have been completed on the date of the first assessment i.e. 1.4.68 within the meaning of section 2 (2) of the U.P. Urban Buildings Act, 1972."

The finding returned by the trial court was sought to be challenged on behalf of the tenant on the ground that the date of occupation should be taken to be the date of completion of the construction of the shop and not the date of the first assessment. In Tilak Raj v. Sardar Devendra Singh,(1) a learned Single Judge of the same High Court had the occasion to consider section 2 (2) of the Act. He held:

"It is apparent from this provision that for purposes of this Act, a building is to be deemed to be constructed, if it is subject to assessment, on the date with effect from which the first assessment is made. It is immaterial whether the building was constructed actually prior to that date or it had come into occupation prior to that date. The law recognised for the purposes of this Act, the date of assessment as the date of the completion of the building. There is thus no error in the judgment of the court below."
496

The learned Single Judge before whom the revision in the instant case came up for hearing doubted the correctness of the above decision. He, therefore, referred the case to a Division Bench.

There is no dispute that the first assessment of the shop took place on 1st of April, 1968. It is also not in dispute that the shop in question was occupied by the defendant on 16th of June, 1967, and prior to his occupation the shop was in occupation of another tenant for about a month and a half. The appellant sought the benefit of section 39 of the Act on the ground that if the date of occupation was taken to be the date of the completion of the construction of the shop, then ten years having elapsed during the pendency of the revision before the High Court, the Act would be applicable. The Division Bench, however, over-ruled the contention of the appellant and held that the construction of the shop in question would be deemed to have been completed on 1st of April 1968 and, therefore, the Act would not be applicable to the building till the date of the decision of the revision on March 23, 1968. The defendant undaunted by the failure came to this Court to challenge the judgment of the High Court.

Mr. G.L. Sanghi, senior counsel. appearing for the appellant strongly contended that on a correct interpretation of sub-section (2) of section 2, the Act would be applicable to the shop in question. It would be appropriate at this stage to extract sub-section (2) of section 2 of the Act insofar as it is material for the purposes of the case:

"Except as provided in sub-section (5) of section 12, sub-section (1-A) of section 21, sub-section (2) of section 24, sections 24A, 24B, 24C or sub-section (3) of section 29, nothing in this Act shall apply to a building during a period of ten years from the date on which its construction is completed:
Explanation I. For the purposes of this sub- section:
(a) the construction of a building shall be deemed to have been completed on the date on which the completion thereof is reported to or otherwise recorded by the local authority having jurisdiction and in the case of a building subject to assessment the date on which the first assessment thereof 497 comes into effect, and where the said dates are different, the earliest of the said dates, and in the absence of any such report, record or assessment, the date on which it is actually occupied (not including occupation merely for the purposes of supervising the construction or guarding the building under construction) for the first time :.."

The precise contention on behalf of the appellant is that the exemption created by this sub-section does not embrace buildings constructed prior to the enforcement of the Act. In support of his contention, Mr. Sanghi, relied upon Rattan Lal Shinghal v. Smt. Murti Devi.(1) The same contention was raised by him in that case also and a Division Bench of this Court accepted the contention and held that Act 13 of 1972 was prospective and applied only to buildings brought into being de novo after the Act came into force. In that case there is no discussion except this bald observation. This Court in a subsequent case Ram Saroop Rai v. Lilavati(2) held to the contrary. It is on this account that the present appeals were referred to a larger Bench. There is no ambiguity in the language of sub-section (2) of section 2 and in the absence of any ambiguity there is no question of taking any external aid for the interpretation of the sub-section. In plain words the sub-section contemplates that the Act shall not apply to a building during a period of ten years from the date on which its construction is completed. It nowhere says that the building should have been constructed after the enforcement of the Act and to interpret it in the way the learned counsel for the appellant seeks to interpret it, we would be adding words to the sub-section, which is not permissible. Primarily the language employed is the determining factor of the intention of the legislature. The first and primary rule of construction is that the intention of the legislature must be found in the words used by the legislature itself. The question of interpretation arises only when the language is ambiguous and, therefore, capable of two interpretations. In the present case the language of sub-section (2) of section 2 of the Act is explicit and unambiguous and it is not capable of two interpretations.

498

As a second limb to the first argument, it is contended that the building will be deemed to have been constructed on the date of occupation on 16th of June, 1967 and not on the date of the first assessment, and that if this be so, the appellant would be entitled to the benefit of section 39 of the Act on the date when the revision came to be decided by the High Court on 23rd of March, 1978. In order to appreciate this argument it will be expedient to refer to Explanation I to sub-section (2) of section 2 which has already been extracted. Explanation I provides that the building shall be deemed to have been completed on the date on which completion thereof is reported to or otherwise recorded by the local authorities having jurisdiction, and in case of a building subject to assessment the date on which the first assessment thereof comes into effect and where the said dates are different, the earliest of the said dates, and in the absence of any such report, record or assessment, the date on which it is actually occupied for the first time. A perusal of Explanation I makes it abundantly clear that the date of occupation would be taken to be the date of completion of the construction only when there is no report or record of the completion of the construction or no assessment, thereof. If there is an assessment, as in the present case it is, it will be the date of the first assessment which will be deemed to be the date of completion of the construction and in that view of the matter the building had not become more than ten years' old on the date when the revision came to be decided by the High Court, and therefore there was no question of giving the benefit of section 39 of the Act to the appellant.

Further, in order to attract section 39 the suit must be pending on the date of commencement of the Act which is 15th of July, 1972 but the suit giving rise to the present appeal was filed on 23rd of March, 1974 long after the commencement of the Act. There is yet another reason why section 39 will have no application to the present case. In view of sub-section (2) of section 2 of the Act the Act is not applicable to a building which has not a standing of ten years and if the Act itself was not applicable, it would be absurd to say that section 39 thereof would be applicable. Considered from any angle the Act has no application to the present case and the appellant could not be given the benefit of section 39. The suit has, therefore, been rightly decreed by the courts below.

We find no force in either of the contentions raised by Mr. Sanghi. The counsel for the appellants in the other appeals and 499 the petitioner in the special leave petition, adopted the arguments of Mr. Sanghi.

For the foregoing discussion the appeals and the special leave petition are dismissed. There shall, however, be no order as to costs.

We, however, direct that the order of eviction in each case shall not be executed before 30th of June, 1982 on condition that each of the appellants in the appeals and the petitioner in the special leave petition files an undertaking in this Court within four weeks from today to the following effect:

1. that he will hand over vacant and peaceful possession of the suit premises to the landlord-respondent on or before 30th of June, 1982;
2. that he will pay to the respondent arrears of rent, if any, within a month from today;
3. that he will pay to the respondent future compensation for use and occupation of the suit premises for each calendar month by the 10th of the succeeding month; and
4. that he will not induct any other person in the suit premises as a sub-tenant or licensee or in any other capacity whatsoever.

We further direct that in default of compliance with any one or more of the conditions of the undertaking or if the undertaking is not filed within the stipulated time, the decree of eviction shall become executable forthwith.

N.V.K.					   Appeal dismissed.
500