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1 - 9 of 9 (0.21 seconds)Section 14A in The Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 [Entire Act]
Section 14B in The Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 [Entire Act]
Section 14C in The Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 [Entire Act]
Section 14D in The Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 [Entire Act]
Section 25B in The Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 [Entire Act]
Santosh Kumar vs Bhai Mool Singh on 5 February, 1958
5. What should be the approach when leave to defend
is sought? There appears to be a mistaken belief that
unless the tenant at that stage makes out such a strong case
as would non-suit the landlord, leave to defend cannot be
granted. This approach is wholly improper. When leave to
defend is sought, the tenant must make out such a prima
facie case raising such pleas that a triable issue would
emerge and that in our opinion should be sufficient to grant
leave. The test is the test of a triable issue and not the
final success in the action (see Santosh Kumar v. Bhai Mool
Singh). At the stage of granting the leave parties rely in
support of their rival contentions on affidavits and
assertions and counter-assertions on affidavits may not
afford such incontrovertible evidence to lead to an
affirmative conclusion one way or the other. Conceding that
when possession is sought on the ground of personal
requirement, an absolute need is not to be satisfied but a
mere desire equally is not sufficient. It has to be
something more than a mere desire. And being an enabling
provision, the burden is on the landlord to establish his
case affirmatively. If as it appears in this case, the
landlord is staying at Pathankot, that a house is purchased,
may be in the name of his sons and daughters, but there may
not be an apparent need to return to Delhi in his old age, a
triable issue would come into existence and that was
sufficient in our opinion to grant leave to defend in this
case.
The Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958
Precision Steel And Engineering Works ... vs Prem Deva Niranjan Deva Tayal on 7 October, 1982
This decision is also referred to, reiterating the
same view, in a latter decision of this Court in the case of
Precision Steel & Engineering Works vs. Prem Deva Niranjan
Deva Tayal .
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