08 December 1981
Supreme Court
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JAIN MALLEABLES Vs BHARAT SAHAY

Bench: VARADARAJAN,A. (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 1472 of 1980


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PETITIONER: JAIN MALLEABLES

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: BHARAT SAHAY

DATE OF JUDGMENT08/12/1981

BENCH: VARADARAJAN, A. (J) BENCH: VARADARAJAN, A. (J) TULZAPURKAR, V.D. ISLAM, BAHARUL (J)

CITATION:  1982 AIR   71            1982 SCR  (2)  53  1982 SCC  (1) 149        1981 SCALE  (3)1817

ACT:      Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958, section 14A (1) read with section 25B and Government of India Notifications dated 9-9- 1975 and 14-7-1977, scope of.

HEADNOTE:      The respondent-landlord  filed a  petition for eviction of the appellant, under section 14A read with section 25B of the  Delhi   Rent  Control   Act,  1958  on  the  ground  of requirement for  personal occupation,  in view  of the  fact that he  was forced  to pay penal rent of Rs. 1,448 from his Government  accommodation   as  per   Government  of   India notification dated  9-9-1975 and the special order dated 22- 1-1976 requiring  him to vacate the Government accommodation by 31-12-1975.  After presentation  of the eviction petition and service  of notice  under section  25B of  the Act,  the appellant filed  a petition for grant of leave to defend the main petition  and raised  several objections in the written statement. One  such objection was that in view of the later circular of  the Government  dated 14-7-1977, the respondent was not required to vacate the Government accommodation and, therefore, he was not entitled to evict the appellants under the provisions of section 14A of the Delhi Rent Control Act. The said  objection having been disallowed by the Additional Rent Controller  the appellant filed Civil Revision Petition before the  Delhi High  Court, which met with the same fate. Hence the appeal against that order by special leave.      Dismissing the appeal, the Court ^      HELD: 1.  The respondent  landlord is  entitled to have recourse to  section 14A of the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 for evicting  the appellants  from the premises in question. [68 A-B]      2. The  second  notification  dated  14-7-1977  of  the Government, without  taking away  the obligation  imposed by the first  notification dated 9-9-75 on Government employees owning houses in their own names or in the name of any other member of  their families,  within the limits of their place of posting, vacate the Government accommodation within three months from  1st of  October, 1975,  has given  an option to those  employees   to  continue  to  occupy  the  Government

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accommodation subject  to the  obligation mentioned  in  the second  notification,   namely,  that   the   house   owning Government employee  will have  to pay  normal rent  for the Government accommodation  if the  income from  his own house does not exceed Rs. 1,000 per mensem half the market rent if the 54 income from  his own  house exceeds Rs. 1,000 per mensem but does not  exceed Rs. 2,000/- per mensem and full market rent if the  income from  his house is above Rs. 2,000 per mensem with effect from 1-6-1977. [64 C-E]      3. In  the present  case, (i) even apart from the first notification dated  9-9-1975 which  is general in nature and has been modified by the second notification dated 14-7-1977 there is  the special  order dated  22-1-1976 which required the respondent to vacate the Government accommodation by 31- 12-1975, failing  which he is to pay market rent with effect from 1-1-1976:  (ii) the  market rent/licence  fee which the respondent had  to pay  for the  Government accommodation on the date  of institution  of the  Eviction Petition  was Rs. 1,448 per  mensem and it had been increased to Rs. 1,543 per mensem and  further enhanced  to Rs. 2,898 per mensem by the letter dated  17/18-7-1981  of  the  Assistant  Director  of Estates addressed  to the respondent: (iii) there is nothing on  record   to  show   that  the  obligation  imposed  upon respondent  by   the  first   notification  to   vacate  the Government accommodation  within three  months from  1st  of October, 1975  and by  the special  order dated 22-1-1976 by 31st December,  1975 has been withdrawn; (iv) the respondent has  an   option  to   continue  to  occupy  the  Government accommodation subject  to certain  obligations contained  in the  two   notifications  without  vacating  the  Government accommodation within  a period  of three  months from 1st of October, 1975  and (v)  it is  not open to the appellants to compel the respondent to exercise his option and continue to occupy the  Government accommodation  in order  that he  may continue to  occupy the  premises in question as the tenant. [64 E-H, 65 A-B]      Busching Schmitz  Private Ltd.  v.  P.T.  Menghani  and Anr., [1977] 3 S.C.R. 312 referred to.      K.D. Singh  v. Shri  Hari Babu Kanwal, [1980] 1 RCR 90, overruled.      J.L. Paul v. Ranjit Singh, [1980] 2 SCR 527, approved.

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1472 of 1980.      Appeal by  Special leave  from the  judgment and  order dated the  1st February,  1980 of  the Delhi  High Court  in Civil Revision Petition No. 122 of 1980.      Madan Bhatia,  Rajiv Behl  and  Sushil  Kumar  for  the Appellant.      L.M. Singhvi,  L.R. Gupta  M.V. Goswami and L.K. Pandey for the Respondent.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      VARADARAJAN J. This appeal by special leave is directed against the  one word  order dated  1.2.1980 of  the learned Single Judge of the 55 Delhi High  Court dismissing Civil Revision Petition No. 122 of 1980  in limine.  The tenants who were respondents in the Rent Control  Eviction Petition,  filed the  Civil  Revision Petition  against   the  Rent   Controller’s   order   dated

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30.10.1979,  declining  to  permit  them  to  raise  certain grounds of  defence  while  granting  leave  to  defend  the eviction petition on certain other grounds. Special leave to appeal against  the order of the learned Single Judge of the High Court  has been  granted by  this  Court  only  on  the question whether  s. 14A of the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 is applicable  or not  to the facts and circumstances of the case "in  view of  the later  Circular of  1977". The "later Circular of  1977" mentioned in the special leave granted by this Court  on  5.8.1980  is  the  Office  Memorandum  dated 14.7.1977 of the Joint Secretary to the Government of India, Ministry of  Works  and  Housing,  Directorate  of  Estates, hereinafter referred  to as  the "second  notification". The same Joint  Secretary to the Government of India in the same Ministry had  issued the  earlier Memorandum dated 9.9.1975, hereinafter referred to as the "first notification".      The respondent-landlord filed the Petition for eviction of the appellants under s. 14A read with s. 25B of the Delhi Rent Control  Act, 1958,  hereinafter  referred  to  as  the "Act". In  the Eviction  Petition the respondent had alleged that by virtue of his being a Government servant he has been allotted residential  accommodation at  No. 83 Lodhi Estate, New Delhi  since November 1971. Under the first notification he is  required to  vacate the  Government accommodation and shift to  his own  house No.  11-B Maharani Bagh, New Delhi, which is  now in the occupation of the appellants, and if he failed to  do so  he is  to incur  the obligation  of paying rent/licence fee  of Rs  1,448 per mensem on the ground that he owns  a residential  building in  the Union  Territory of Delhi   and    still   continues    to   occupy   Government accommodation. The  appellants have not vacated the premises occupied by  them in  spite of  several assurances  given by them since  February 1976.  The respondent is paying a penal rent  of   Rs.  1,448   per  mensem   for   the   Government accommodation because  he had not vacated that accommodation provided to him by the Government as a Government servant.      After presentation of the Eviction Petition and service of notice  under s.  25B of  the Act, the appellants filed a Petition for grant of leave to defend the main Petition. One of the objections disallowed, with which we are concerned in this appeal,  is that in view of the second notification the respondent is not required to vacate the 56 Government accommodation  now available  to him  and that he is, therefore,  not entitled  to evict  the appellants under the provisions  of s.  14A of  the Act.  The Civil  Revision Petition filed  by the  appellants against  the order of the Additional Rent Controller has been dismissed by the learned Single Judge  of the  High Court  as  mentioned  above.  The appellants have,  therefore, filed  this appeal  by  special leave against that order.      We are  concerned in this appeal with s. 14A (1) of the Act, which reads thus:           "14A (1)  Where landlord  who, being  a person  in      occupation of  any residential premises allotted to him      by the  Central Government  or any  local authority  is      required, by,  or  in  pursuance  of,  any  general  or      special order  made by that Government or authority, to      vacate such  residential accommodation,  or in default,      to incur  certain obligations,  on the  ground that  he      owns, in  the Union  territory of  Delhi, a residential      accommodation either  in his own name or in the name of      his wife or dependent child, there shall accrue, on and      from  the   date  of   such  order   to  such  landlord      notwithstanding anything  contained elsewhere  in  this

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    Act or  in any other law for the time being in force in      any contract  (whether express  or implied),  custom or      usage to  the contrary,  a right to recover immediately      possession of any premises let out by him:           Provided that  nothing in  this section  shall  be      construed as  conferring a  right on a landlord owning,      in the  Union territory  of Delhi, two or more dwelling      houses, whether  in his  own name or in the name of his      wife or  dependent child,  to recover the possession of      more than one dwelling house and it shall be lawful for      such  landlord   to  indicate   the   dwelling   house,      possession of which he intends to recover.      ...            ...                    ...      There is no dispute that the respondent is the owner of the premises  in question,  namely, 11-B  Maharani Bagh, New Delhi, now occupied by the appellants on a rent of Rs. 2,100 per mensem  and that  he is  at  present  in  occupation  of Government accommodation  at No.  83 Lodhi Estate, New Delhi and is obliged to pay 57 penal rent/licence fee of Rs. 1,448 per mensem. The relevant portion of the first notification reads thus:           "That undersigned  is directed  to  say  that  the      question  of   allotment  of   Government   residential      accommodation to  officers owing  houses at or near the      stations of  their posting has been under consideration      of Government  for some  time past.  It  has  now  been      decided, in  supersession of all previous orders on the      subject, as follows:-      (i)  Those Government  servants, who  build  houses  in           future at  the place  of their posting, within the           limits of  any local  or  adjoining  municipality,           whether with  or without Government assistance, or           who become  owners of  houses in  future-either in           their own  names or in the names of any members of           their  families-shall   be  required   to   vacate           Government accommodation  in their occupation from           the date their own houses are fit for occupation.      (ii) Those Government  servants, who have already built           houses at  the place  of their  posting within the           limits of  any local  or  adjoining  municipality,           whether with  or without Government assistance, or           who own houses either in their own names or in the           names of  any members  of their  families-shall be           required to  vacate the  Government  accommodation           allotted to them, within three months from the 1st           of October  1975. If they do not vacate Government           accommodation after  that period,  they  would  be           charged licence fee at market rates.      (iii)Hence onward,  no Government  accommodation should           be allotted  to an  officer owning  a house at the           place of  his posting  within the  limits  of  any           local or  adjoining  municipality.  A  certificate           shall be obtained from a prospective allottee that           he has  no house  at the  station  of  his  posing           within  the  limits  of  any  local  or  adjoining           municipality-either in  his own name or in name of           any member of his family.      (iv) ...                  ...                 ... 58      (v)  ...                   ...                 ...      2.   ...                   ...                 ...      3.   The Ministry  of Home  Affairs, etc. are requested           to bring  the above  decision of Government to the           notice  of  all  their  attached  and  subordinate

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         offices,  and   ensure  that   the   decision   is           implemented  in  respect  of  different  pools  of           Government residence under their control.      4.   In  so   far  as  general  pool  accommodation  is           concerned, the Ministry of Home Affairs, etc., are           requested to  bring this  to  the  notice  of  all           Government Servants  who are  eligible for general           pool accommodation  as  well  as  those  who  have           already  been   allotted  accommodation  from  the           general pool, asking them by 15th October, 1975 to           indicate whether  they have  their own  houses  as           covered by  these orders.  In case  they  have,  a           declaration may  be  obtained  from  them  in  the           prescribed   proforma   and   forwarded   to   the           Directorate of  Estate (Coordination I Section) by           15th November, 1975. Other officers who do not own           houses should  also furnish  a declaration to that           effect.  All  officials  who  have  been  allotted           general pool  accommodation may be advised that it           is their  responsibility to inform the Directorate           of Estates,  when they  or  any  member  of  their           families become owners of houses in future, within           one month  from the  date of becoming such owners.           All   officers    eligible   for    general   pool           accommodation  may  also  be  warned  that  severe           action will  be taken  against them  in case  they           furnish any incorrect information".      In addition to this general first notification relating to Government  accommodation in the occupation of Government employees there  is a  special order  dated 22.1.1976 of the Assistant Director  of Estates,  New Delhi  calling upon the respondent to  vacate the  Government accommodation  No.  83 Lodhi Estate allotted to him since 31.12.1975, failing which he would be charged market rent with effect from 1.1.1976 at the rate fixed by Government from time to time and informing him that  a bill  at the  market rate of licence fee for the said premises will follow. 59      In the  affidavit filed  in support of the Petition for grant of  leave to  defend the  main Eviction  Petition  the appellants have  stated that  the respondent  is occupying a huge, massive and palatial bungalow in the Lodhi Estate, New Delhi built  on an  area of  about two acres and allotted to him by  the Government  and that  whereas he  is  paying  an alleged rent of Rs. 1,448 per mensem for that accommodation, he is  getting a  rent of  Rs.  2,100  per  mensem  for  his premises occupied  by  the  appellants  and  he  is  thereby gaining a  sum of  Rs. 652  per mensem.  The appellants have further stated in that affidavit that there is a clear shift in  the   policy  of   the  Government   whereby  Government accommodation is  made available to even those employees who happen to have their own houses at Delhi and that Government have modified the notification relied upon by the respondent whereby house  owing  officials  have  become  eligible  for allotment of Government accommodation at the places of their posting with effect from 1.6.1977.      The notification  said to modify the first notification is the  second notification.  The relevant  portion of  that notification reads thus:           "The undersigned  is  directed  to  say  that  the      orders contained  in this  Ministry’s office Memorandum      No. 12031  (1)/74-Pol. II,  dated 9.9.1975, as modified      from time  to time  have been  reconsidered. Government      has decided  that  the  restrictions  on  allotment  of      accommodation  to  houses  owning  officers  should  be

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    modified with effect from 1.6.1977, making house owning      officers  eligible   for  Government  accommodation  as      communicated in  this Ministry’s  Office Memorandum  of      even number dated the 29th June, 1977. It has also been      decided that allotment of such accommodation to a house      owning official  will be  on normal  rent if the income      from his  own house  does not  exceed Rs. 1,000 p.m. or      half the  market rent  if the  income exceeds Rs. 1,000      p.m. but  does not  exceed Rs.  2,000 p.m.  and on full      market rent  if the income is above Rs. 2,000 p.m. Rent      will be  recovered on  the same  basis w.e.f.  1.6.1977      also from those house owing officials who are retaining      Government accommodation  on payment  of market  rents.      These decisions will apply equally whether the house is      owned by  the officer  or his/her  wife/husband  or  by      his/her dependent children. 60      2.   ...                    ...                 ...      3.   Allotment  of   accommodation  to   house   owning           officers  who   have  already  vacated  Government           accommodation.           Such officers  will be considered for allotment of      accommodation in  their turn  on  the  basis  of  their      priority date  under the allotment rules. No preference      should be  shown to  them in the matter of allotment in      consideration of  the fact  that they  were earlier  in      occupation of  Government accommodation and had vacated      it in  compliance with  the earlier orders to which the      officers are  normally entitled  without restriction of      any locality  or without  any reference to the types of      accommodation  which   the  officers   were   occupying      previously. As usual, officers eligible for types V and      above should  also be  considered for  allotment in the      types next  below on  the basis  of their  priority for      such types.  After accepting  initial  allotment,  they      will be  eligible for  change in  the normal  manner in      accordance with the allotment rules.      4.   ...                    ...                 ...      5.   ...                    ...                 ...      6.   In  so  for  as  the  general  pool  is  concerned           officers  who   have  already  vacated  Government           accommodation may  submit fresh  applications  for           allotment  of   accommodation  in  the  prescribed           application form,  indicating the  details of  the           houses owned by them or their spouses or dependent           children,  alongwith   documentary  proof  of  the           income they derive from the houses they own. House           owing officers,  who are  continuing in Government           accommodation,  should   also   furnish   suitable           documentary proof  of the  income  they  get  from           their private  houses, to  enable the  Director of           Estates to  fix the  licence fee  recoverable from           them w.e.f. 1.6.1977".      Mr. Madan  Bhatia, learned  counsel for the appellants, submitted  that  while  under  the  first  notification  the respondent   was   required   to   vacate   the   Government accommodation within three 61 months from 1.10.1975 on pain of being liable to pay licence fee at  the market  rate if  he failed to vacate within that time,  Government  employees  like  respondent  have  become eligible  for  Government  accommodation  under  the  second notification and  are, therefore,  not obliged to vacate the Government  accommodation   and  that   the  respondent  is, therefore, not  entitled to  seek eviction of the appellants

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from his premises under s. 14A of the Act though he may file a Petition for eviction under s. 14 (1) (e) of the Act which is a  general provision applicable to all landlords who seek to evict  their tenants  on the ground that they require the premises for  their own  bonafide occupation. Section 14 (1) (e) reads thus:           "14.(1) Notwithstanding  anything to  the contrary      contained in  any other  law or  contract, no  order or      decree for  the recovery  of possession of any premises      shall be  made by  any Court or Controller in favour of      the landlord against a tenant:           Provided  that   the   Controller   may,   on   an      application made  to him in the prescribed manner, make      an order for the recovery of possession of the premises      on one or more of the following grounds only, namely :-      (a)  ...  ...  ...  ...      (b)  ...  ...  ...  ...      (c)  ...  ...  ...  ...      (d)  ...  ...  ...  ...      (e)  that the premises let for residential purposes are           required bona  fide by the landlord for occupation           as a  residence for  himself or  for any member of           his family  dependent on  him, if  he is the owner           thereof, or  for any  person for whose benefit the           premises are  held and  that the  landlord or such           person   has    no   other   reasonably   suitable           residential accommodation:           Explanation-For  the   purposes  of  this  clause,      "premises let  for residential  purposes"  include  any      premises which  having been  let for use as a residence      are, without the con- 62      sent of  the landlord, used incidentally for commercial      or other purposes;      ...      ...            ...                ..."      In support of the contention that in view of the second notification the respondent is not entitled to have recourse to the  provisions of  s. 14A  of the  Act, Mr. Madan Bhatia relied upon  the decision  of this Court in Busching Schmitz Private Ltd.  v. P.T.  Menghani and Anr. where the Court has observed at page 323 thus:           "Supposing the landlord, after exploiting the easy      process of  s. 14A,  relets the  premises for  a higher      rent; the  social goal boomerangs because the tenant is      ejected and  the landlord  does not occupy, as he would      have been  bound to  do, if  he had sought eviction for      bona fide  occupation under  s. 14  (1) (e). Section 19      obligates the  landlord  in  this  behalf.  In  literal      terms, that section does not apply to eviction obtained      under s. 14A. But the scheme of that section definitely      contemplates   a   specific   representation   by   the      petitioner-landlord to  the Controller  that because he      has been  ordered to  vacate the  premises where  he is      residing therefore,  he requires  immediate  possession      for his  occupation.........Once we grasp this cardinal      point, the  officer’s application for eviction under s.      14A can  be entertained  only on  his averment that he,      having been  asked to  vacate, must get into possession      of his  own.......... The  cause of  action is not only      the government  order to  vacate, but his consequential      urgency to recover his own building."      Mr. Madan Bhatia relied also on the decision of learned single Judge  of the  Delhi High Court in K.D. Singh v. Shri Hari Babu Kanwal, where the learned Judge has observed thus:           "At the  time when this application was brought in

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    February 1977, the Circular of 9.9.1975 held the field.      Unfortunately, for  the landlord  this position  under-      went  change  when  the  Central  Government  issued  a      revised Circular  dated 14.7.1977  by which  the orders      contained in 63      the earlier circular dated 9.9.1975 were modified after      reconsideration ............  A vital  change thus took      place by  the Circular of 14.7.1977, namely, that there      is no direction to a person who owns a house and who is      in occupation of a residential premises allotted to him      by the  Central Government  to vacate  such residential      accommodation..................  Once   therefore,  the      revised Circular  of 14.7.1977 has come, the very basis      on which  the Eviction  Application under s.14 A of Act      was brought  has ceased  to exist  and cannot avail him      ......... It must be realised that s.14A was brought in      only for  a limited  purpose to  enable the  Government      servants in getting immediate possession of their house      when they  had been  directed to  vacate the Government      accommodation. The  special  legislation  was  made  to      serve special  purpose in  pursuance of the Circular of      9.9.1975. Once  that purpose  has been modified and the      Government has  revised its  decision and  there is  no      direction to  vacate such residential accommodation, it      is impermissible  in law  to allow a Government servant      to invoke s.14A and frustrate the beneficial Act of the      Rent Control  legislation like  the Delhi  Rent Control      Act". We do not agree with this view of the learned Judge.      It is  seen from  paragraph  3  of  the  Order  of  the Additional Rent  Controller, which  was sought to be revised by the  High Court,  that the respondent is paying a rent of Rs. 1,448 per mensem for the Government accommodation No. 83 Lodhi Estate, New Delhi. In the reply affidavit filed in the Special Leave  Petition the respondent has stated that he is liable to  pay Rs.  1,543  per  mensem  for  the  Government accommodation as  penal rent  on account  of his  failure to vacate the same. The respondent has produced in this Court a communication addressed  to him by the Assistant Director of Estates, New  Delhi saying  that without  prejudice  to  any other action which may be taken in respect of the Government accommodation which  has been allotted to him, his liability will continue  to increase to Rs. 2,898 per mensem and three times that  rate on  the expiry  of 15 days from the date of service of  orders of  eviction under  the  Public  Premises (Eviction  of  Unauthorised  Occupants)  Act  1971  till  he vacates and  restores the  premises to  the  Central  Public Works Department. These facts and the liability of the 64 respondent to  pay  full  market  rent  for  the  Government accommodation with  effect  from  1.6.1977  and  the  second notification in  the light  of  his  getting  rental  income exceeding Rs.  2,000 per  mensem from  his own premises show that the  respondent has to incur certain obligations on his failure to  vacate Government  accommodation on  the  ground that he  owns in  the Union territory of Delhi a residential accommodation either  in his  own name or in the name of his wife or  dependent child.  We do  not find  anything in  the second notification  taking away  the obligation  which  has been imposed  on the respondent by the first notification to vacate the Government accommodation within three months from the 1st  of October  1975. We  are of  the opinion  that the second notification,  without (taking  away  the  obligation imposed by  the first  notification on  Government employees

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owning houses in their own names or in the name of any other member of  their families,  within the limits of their place of posting,  to vacate  the Government  accommodation within three months  from the  first of  October 1975, has given an option  to   those  employees  to  continue  to  occupy  the Government accommodation subject to the obligation mentioned in the  second notification,  namely, that  the house owning Government employee  will have  to pay  normal rent  for the Government accommodation  if the  income from  his own house does not exceed Rs. 1,000 per mensem of half the market rent if the  income from  his own  house exceeds  Rs.  1,000  per mensem but  does not  exceed Rs.  2,000 per  mensem and full market rent  if the income from his house is above Rs. 2,000 per mensem  with effect  from 1.6.1977.  In the present case the market  rent/licence fee which the respondent had to pay for the Government accommodation occupied by him on the date of institution of Eviction Petition was Rs. 1,448 per mensem and it  had been increased to Rs. 1,543 per mensem as stated in the  counter-affidavit filed  by the  respondent  in  the Special Leave  Petition and  it has been further enhanced to Rs. 2,898 per mensem by the letter dated 17/18-7-1981 of the Assistant Director  of Estates  addressed to  the respondent and referred  to above. The respondent has thus an option to continue to  occupy the  Government accommodation subject to the  said   obligation  without   vacating  the   Government accommodation within  a period  of three months from the Ist of October,  1975. We are of the opinion that it is not open to the  appellants to  compel the respondent to exercise his option and  continue to  occupy the Government accommodation in order  that they  may continue  to occupy the premises in question  as   the  tenants.   Even  apart  from  the  first notification  which  is  general  in  nature  and  has  been modified by the 65 second notification as mentioned above, there is the special order dated  22.1.1976  which  required  the  respondent  to vacate the  Government accommodation  by 31.12.1975, failing which he  is to pay market rent with effect from 1.1.1976 as mentioned above.  In these  circumstances it is not possible for us  to accept  the argument of Mr. Madan Bhatia that the respondent is not entitled to have recourse to s. 14A of the Act for seeking eviction of the appellants from the premises in question, having regard to first and second notifications and the  special order  dated 22.1.1976.  Dr. L.M.  Singhvi, learned counsel  for the respondent invited our attention to the decision  of another  learned Single  Judge of the Delhi High Court  in J.L.  Paul v.  Ranjit Singh  (supra) where we find the following observations:           "The last  objection of the petitioner is that the      notifications  granting   a  right  to  the  Government      employee to  seek eviction under Section 14A of the Act      have been withdrawn, that this defence raises a triable      issue and,  therefore, the  Controller  ought  to  have      granted  leave  to  contest  so  that  he  may  produce      evidence on  record in  support of  this  part  of  his      defence. The  right to  claim  eviction  accrues  to  a      landlord under  s. 14A  of the  Act and  not under  any      notification issued  by the  Government. The Government      notification,  general  or  special,  only  requires  a      landlord   Government    allottee   to    vacate    the      accommodation as  he owns  his house or pay penal rent.      The respondent  submits that  the general  notification      dated September  9, 1975  and the  special order  dated      December  26,  1975  have  never  been  withdrawn.  His      contention is  that there has been a notification about

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    the rate of rent/licence fee to be paid by a Government      employee, if  he is  also owner of his own house at the      place of  his posting  and  does  not  vacate  allotted      premises. In  short his  contention is  that  right  of      eviction  is   available  to  a  landlord  allottee  of      Government accommodation  if he  fulfils the conditions      mentioned in  s. 14A of the Act. According to him there      is modification that if the income of the landlord from      his own  house does  not exceed Rs. 1,000 per month, he      is liable to pay only the normal rent of the Government      allotted accommodation,  but if his income from his own      house exceeds  Rs. 1,000  and does not exceed Rs. 2,000      he is  liable to  pay half the market rent and in cases      where his income from his own house is above 66      Rs. 2,000  per month,  he is  liable to pay full market      rent. The  respondent contends  that s.  14A of the Act      conferring  upon   a  landlord/Government  allottee  (a      right) to  get his own vacated has never been repealed.      The learned counsel for the respondent further contends      that  mere   assertion  of   the  petitioner  that  the      notifications have been withdrawn is vague and does not      give him  any right  to leave  to contest  and lead any      evidence.......If any  notification has  been withdrawn      or cancelled,  such an  order must  be in  writing. The      petitioner/tenant in  his application does not disclose      any   notification    under   which    the   Government      notification requiring  a landlord/Government  employee      to vacate has been withdrawn.      ...       ...       ...       ...           Thus the  notification  dated  September  9,  1975      stands modified  to the  extent as to what rate of rent      would  be   payable  by   the   respondent   Government      allottee/landlord owning  his own  house if  he retains      the allotted  premises, that  is, if he fails to vacate      the  Government   accommodation  in  pursuance  of  the      general order  dated September  9, 1975 and the special      order dated  December  26,  1975.  The  income  of  the      respondent from  his own  house, that is, suit property      No. 164  Greater Kailash-1,  New Delhi is Rs. 1,950 per      month. He  is  getting  Rs.  850  per  month  from  the      petitioner occupying  first floor  and  Rs.  1,100  per      month from  ’Escorts’ occupying  the ground  floor.  In      accordance with  the notification  dated July 14, 1977,      the respondent/landlord  is thus liable to pay half the      market rent from June 1, 1977 if he does not vacate the      Government allotted  accommodation. In  fact after  the      issue  of   notification  dated   July  14,   1977  the      respondent has  been directed  to pay  half the  market      rent by  means of  an order  dated September  20,  1977      issued by  the Directorate  of Estates,  Government  of      India with  effect from  June 1,  1977. In short, it is      certain that  there is  the general  notification dated      September 9,  1975 and the special order dated December      26, 1975  requiring the  respondent/landlord to  vacate      the Government allotted residential accommodation or in      default to  pay half the market rent. In other words he      is to  incur certain  obligations, The  liability is on      account of the fact that he owns 67      the house  in suit in the Union Territory of Delhi, his      place of posting.      ...       ...       ...       ...           On December  12, 1979  Directorate of  Estates was      required  to   state  whether  the  notification  dated

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    September 9,  1975 stands  withdrawn or  it was  simply      modified. The  Directorate of  Estates  in  his  letter      dated December  14, 1979  informed that  the Memorandum      dated September  9, 1975 was not withdrawn but was only      modified by the Memorandum dated July 14, 1977.      ...       ...       ...       ...           So if  the two  notifications dated  September  9,      1975 and  July 14,  1977 are  read together, it appears      that  there   is  no   cancellation  of   the   earlier      notification and  that it is only a notification of the      rate of  rent payable  by an  allottee owning  his  own      house. Under  this notification  dated July 14, 1977 it      is further  provided that with effect from June 1, 1977      rent of  allotted premises  shall be recovered from the      house owning  officials retaining  the premises  at the      rates mentioned  therein. The respondent is, therefore,      liable to  pay the  rent accordingly and thus liable to      incur obligation in default of vacating the premises.      ...       ...       ...       ...           The respondent satisfies the requirement of s. 14A      of the  Act. There  is  no  defence  available  to  the      petitioner against  the eviction  application under  s.      14A of the Act".      ...        ...       ...      ...      In the  present case also there is nothing on record to show that  the obligation  imposed upon  respondent  by  the first notification  to vacate  the Government  accommodation within three  months from the Ist of October 1975 and by the special  order  dated  22.1.1976  by  31.12.1975,  has  been withdrawn. The respondent can continue to 68 occupy the  Government accommodation only subject to certain obligations. We,  therefore, hold  that  the  respondent  is entitled to  have recourse to s. 14A of the Act for evicting the appellants  from the  premises in  question. Accordingly the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs. S.R.                                       Appeal dismissed. 69