Suit for recovery of arrears of rent against a surety of the tenant

0
774
Privy Counci
Mangal Sen vs Kanchhid Mal on 20 August, 1981
Equivalent citations: 1981 AIR 1726, 1982 SCR (1) 331
Bench: Eradi, V. Balakrishna (J)
PETITIONER:
MANGAL SEN

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
KANCHHID MAL

DATE OF JUDGMENT20/08/1981

BENCH:
ERADI, V. BALAKRISHNA (J)
BENCH:
ERADI, V. BALAKRISHNA (J)
PATHAK, R.S.
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)

CITATION:
 1981 AIR 1726		  1982 SCR  (1) 331
 1980 SCC  (4) 117	  1981 SCALE  (3)1242
 CITATOR INFO :
 D	    1986 SC1753	 (9)


ACT:
     U.P. Urban	 Buildings (Regulation	of Letting, Rent and
Eviction) Act, 1972, section 20(2) (a) (4)-Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
     The respondent-landlord  filed  a	suit  under  section
20(2)(a) of the U.P. Urban Buildings (Regulation of Letting,
Rent and  Eviction) Act	 1972 against  the appellant praying
for his eviction from the suit premises. It was alleged that
the tenant  was in  arrears of	rent for  not less than four
months from  April 9,  1972, that  he had  failed to pay the
same within one month from the date of the notice to him and
that the  tenant had declined to pay arrears of rent despite
the notice.
     While denying  the allegation  of default in payment of
rent the  tenant claimed  that since he stood surety for the
landlord for  the payment of arrears of sales tax payable by
him there could not be any question of arrears of rent being
outstanding against him to the landlord.
     Although the  trial Court	found it  as a fact that the
tenant had  committed default  in payment  of rent  for more
than four  months after the notice of demand had been issued
it held that the landlord's action in inducing the tenant to
stand surety  for him  for payment  of arrears	of sales tax
constituted waiver  of the demand for rent and that for this
reason the  landlord was  not  entitled	 to  the  relief  of
ejectment.
     In revision  the District	Judge found  that the tenant
had at	no stage  of the  proceedings before the trial Court
put forward  the plea  of waiver  but that an issue had been
framed by  the trial  Court of its own accord. On merits the
District Judge	held that  no conduct  on the  part  of	 the
landlord which	amounted  to  waiver  had  been	 established
because the  tenant had	 not actually  made any	 payment  on
behalf of the landlord towards the sales tax dues.
     The High Court dismissed the tenant's revision petition
under section 115 C.P.C.
     [Since  in	  the  special	leave  petition	 the  tenant
contended that the revision petition Sled by him in the High
Court was  not	maintainable  in  law,	this  Court  granted
special leave to appeal against the judgment of the District
Court.]
332
     Dismissing the appeal,
^
     HELD: The	District Court	was right in holding That in
the absence  of any plea of waiver put forward by the tenant
the trial  Court was  not really called upon to go into that
question. Therefore, the finding of the trial Court that the
landlord's notice  had	been  effaced  by  his	(landlord's)
subsequent conduct  which amounted  to waiver was manifestly
illegal and perverse. It was the specific case of the tenant
that no	 amount whatever  had been  paid by him to the sales
tax authorities	 on behalf  of the landlord. Neither did the
landlord make any endorsement on the rent deed adjusting the
proposed payment  of sales tax against arrears of rent. [335
A-D]
     Having failed  to establish  that he  had complied with
the conditions	specified in  section 20(4)  of the  Act the
tenant is  not entitled to be relieved against his liability
for eviction  on the  ground set out in section 20(2 )(a) of
the Act. [336 H-337 A]
     The provisions of section 20(4) will get attracted only
if  the	 tenant	 had  at  the  first  hearing  of  the	suit
unconditionally paid  or tendered to the landlord the entire
amount of  rent	 and  damages  due  from  him  for  use	 and
occupation of the building together with interest thereon at
9% per	annum. There  is nothing  on record to show that the
deposit was  made on  the first	 date of hearing and that it
was made  by way  of unconditional tender for payment to the
landlord.  On	the  contrary  the  tenant  in	his  written
statement, had	stated that since he had IL stood surety for
the landlord's arrears of sales tax, there was no default by
him r  in the  payment of  rent.  In  the  face	 of  a	plea
disputing the  existence of  any arrears of rent and denying
the default  the deposit  even if  made on  the date  of the
first hearing, was not an unconditional tender of the amount
for payment  to the  landlord. Nor  is there anything on the
record to  show that  what was	deposited  was	the  correct
amount calculated  in  accordance  with	 the  provisions  of
section 20(4) of the Act. [336 D-H]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 965 of Appeal by special leave from the judgment dated the 28th November, 1979 of the Allahabad High Court in Civil Revision No.661 of 1977.

Manoj Swarup & Miss Lalita Kohli for the Appellant. R. N. Sharma and N. N. Sharma for the Respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by BALAKRISHNA ERADI, J. This appeal by special leave is against a judgment rendered by the First Additional District Judge, Bulandshahr, allowing a Revision Petition filed before him by the respondent herein.

The respondent is the owner of a shop building in Jahangirabad town which he had let out to the appellant on a month to month tenancy basis. A suit for ejectment was filed by the respondent in the Court of Small Causes (Civil Judge), Bulandshahr, praying for eviction of the appellant from the shop under Section 2() (2) (a) of the U. P. Urban Buildings (Regulation of Letting, Rent andEviction) Act, 1972 (for short, the Act) on the ground that the tenant was in arrears of rent for not less than four months commencing from April 9, 1972 and had failed to pay the same to the landlord within one month from the date of service upon him of a notice of demand (October 19, 1972). It was alleged in the plaint that the agreed rent of the shop was Rs. 100/- per month and that the tenant had kept the rent in arrears from April 9, 1972 onwards despite notice having been served on him on October 19, 1972 demanding payment of arrears of rent and determining the tenancy.

The appellant (defendant) pleaded in defence that the rent was only Rs. 90/- per month, that he had not committed any default in payment of the same and hence the suit for ejectment was not maintainable. According to the defendant, after service of the notice of demand for payment of arrears of rent, the respondent had approached him with a request to stand surety for him for the payment of arrears of sales-tax due by him for the realisation of which the Amin had come with a warrant for the arrest of the respondent and since the appellant had acceded, to the said request and stood surety for the respondent there could be no further question of any arrears of rent being outstanding as due by him to the respondent.

The trial court held that the rent of the shop was Rs. 90/- per month, that it had been kept in arrears by the tenant from April 9, 1972 onwards and a default had been committed by the tenant in payment of arrears of rent of more than four months after the notice of demand. Notwithstanding the aforesaid finding that there had been such default committed by the tenant, the trial court took the view that the conduct of the plaintiff-respondent in inducing the defendant to stand surety for him for the payment of sales-tax arrears due by him constituted a waiver of the demand made in the notice for surrender of possession on the ground of arrears of rent made. On this reasoning, the trial court denied the plaintiff the relief of ejectment and decreed the suit only for recovery of arrears of rent.

The respondent-plaintiff carried the matter in revision before District Court, Bulandshahr. The learned District Judge found that the plea of waiver had not been put forward by the defendant either in the written statement or in any other manner at any stage before the trial court and that the issue covering the question of waiver had been framed by the trial court of its own accord. The District Judge further found on the merits that no conduct amounting to waiver on the part of the plaintiff had been established by the evidence because even according to the case of the defendant himself, excepting for standing surety for the plaintiff, he had not actually made any payment on behalf of the plaintiff towards the sales-tax dues since the plaintiff had specifically refused to make any endorsement in the Rent Deed adjusting the proposed payment of sales-tax against the arrears of rent due by the defendant. Inasmuch as the trial court had found that the default in payment of the arrears of rent for a period exceeding four months had been committed by the defendant and it had denied a relief of ejectment only on the reasoning that there had been a waiver of the demand for eviction on the part of the plaintiff, the District Judge allowed the Revision Petition and granted the plaintiff a decree for ejectment under Section 20 (2) (a) of the Act.

Thereafter, the appellant defendant took up the matter in further revision before the High Court under Section 115, Code of Civil Procedure. The High Court by its judgment dated November 28, 1979 confirmed the findings of the District Judge and dismissed the Revision Petition.

The defendant thereupon approached this Court for the grant of special leave to appeal against the said judgment of the High Court. It would appear that, at the time of the preliminary hearing of the Special Leave Petition, the appellant realised that the Revision Petition filed by him before the High Court was not maintainable in law. Hence, this position was conceded by the appellant before a Bench which heard the Special Leave Petition and a request was made by the appellant for the grant of special leave to him to appeal against the judgment of the District Court. That request was granted by order of this Court dated April 23, 1980. This Civil Appeal is thus directed against the judgment of the District Judge.

After hearing counsel on both sides, we are satisfied that the District Court was perfectly right in its view that there had not been any conduct on the part of the plaintiff which would constitute a waiver by him of the demand for surrender of possession made as per the notice dated October 9, 1972 which was served on the tenant on October 19, 1972. As rightly observed by the District Court, the defendant had not put forward any plea of waiver in the written statement filed by him before the trial court and the absence of any specific pleading in that behalf, the trial court was not really called upon to go into the question of waiver. Further, it being the specific case put forward by the defendant himself that no amount whatever had been paid by the appellant-defendant to the sales-tax authorities on behalf of the plaintiff and that the respondent-plaintiff was not agreeable to make any endorsement on the Rent Deed adjusting the proposed payment of sales-tax against the arrears of rent, we fail to see how it can be said that there had been any waiver by the plaintiff-respondent of the demand for surrender of possession already made by him as per the notice dated October 9, 1972. The finding rendered b)! the trial court that the effect of the notice had been effaced by the subsequent conduct on the part of the landlord which amounted to a waiver was manifestly illegal and perverse and it was rightly set aside by the District Judge.

Before us, an additional point was sought to be raised by the appellant which had not been put forward by him either before the trial court or before the District Judge at the revisional stage. It was urged that on the date of first hearing of the suit the defendant had deposited into the trial court an amount of Rs. 1,980/- and hence he is entitled to the benefit of sub-section (4) of Section 20 of the Act which empowers the Court to pass an order relieving the tenant against his liability for eviction on the ground mentioned in clause (a) of sub-section (2) of the said Section. It is necessary in this context to reproduce clause

(a) of sub-section (2) and sub-section (4) of Section 20 of the Act. They are in the following terms:

“20 (2)……………………………………

(a) that the tenant is in arrears of rent for not less than four months, and has failed to pay the same to the landlord within one month from the date of service upon him of a notice of demand.

(4) In any suit for eviction on the ground mentioned in clause (a) of sub-section (2), if at the first hearing of the suit, the tenant unconditionally pays or tenders to the landlord the entire amount of rent and damages for use and occupation of the building due from him (such damages for use and occupation being calculated at the same rate as rent) together with interest thereon at the rate of nine per cent per annum and the landlord’s costs of the suit in respect thereof, after deducting therefrom any amount already deposited by the tenant under sub- section (I) of Section 30, the court may, in lieu of passing a decree for eviction on that ground, pass an order relieving the tenant against his liability for eviction on that ground:

Provided that nothing in this sub-section shall apply in relation to a tenant who or any member of whose family has built or has otherwise acquired in a vacant state, or has got vacated after acquisition, any residential building in the same city, municipality, notified area or town area.”

The provisions of sub-section (4) will get attracted only if the tenant has, at the first hearing of the suit, unconditionally paid or tendered to the landlord the entire amount of rent and damages for use and occupation of the building due from him together with interest thereon at the rate of nine per cent per annum and the landlord’s costs of the suit in respect thereof, after deducting therefrom any amount already deposited by him under sub-section (I) of Section 30. There is absolutely no material available on the record to show that the alleged deposit of Rs. 1,980/- was made by the tenant on the first date of hearing itself and, what is more important, that the said deposit was made by way of an unconditional tender for payment to the landlord. The deposit in question is said to have been made by the appellant on January 25, 1974. It was only subsequent thereto that the appellant filed his written statement in the suit. It is noteworthy that one of the principal contentions raised by the appellant-defendant in the written statement was that since he had stood surety for the landlord for arrears of sales-tax, there was no default by him in the payment of rent. In the face of the said plea taken in the written statement, disputing the existence of any arrears of rent and denying that there had been a default, it is clear that the deposit, even it was made on the date of the first hearing, was not an unconditional tender of the amount for payment to the landlord. Further, there is also nothing on record to show that what was deposited was the correct amount calculated in accordance with the provisions of Section 20(4). In these circumstances, we hold that the appellant has failed to establish that he has complied with the conditions specified in sub-section (4) of Section 20 and hence he is not entitled to be relieved against his liability for eviction on the ground set out in clause (a) of sub-section (2) of the said Section.

This appeal is, therefore, devoid of merits and is accordingly dismissed. We direct the parties to bear their respective costs.

Appeal dismissed

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