27 February 1962
Supreme Court
Download

KANJI MANJI Vs THE TRUSTEES OF THE PORT OF BOMBAY

Case number: Appeal (civil) 302 of 1961


1

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 9  

PETITIONER: KANJI MANJI

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE TRUSTEES OF THE PORT OF BOMBAY

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 27/02/1962

BENCH: HIDAYATULLAH, M. BENCH: HIDAYATULLAH, M. DAS, S.K. SHAH, J.C.

CITATION:  1963 AIR  468            1962 SCR  Supl. (3) 461  CITATOR INFO :  R          1988 SC 832  (8)  D          1988 SC1313  (11)  D          1990 SC2053  (4)

ACT: Ejectment--Suit  by  Government or local  Authority  against assignees of leased land and building--Applicability of Rent Act--Jurisdiction of City Civil Court--joint tenancy--Notice on one tenant, if sufficient--Suit if bad for non-joinder of legal representative of the deceased joint  tenant--Assignee of   tenancy  if  bound  by  the  terms  of   the   original lease--Where  enviction  of sub-tenant  not  Possible  under statute, whether a ground to defeat the rights of the  Local Authorities--Bombay  Rents.  Hotel and Lodging Houses  Rates (Control) Act, 1947 (Bom. 57 of 1947), ss. 4, 5(8), 15.

HEADNOTE: In  1924, the Trustees of Port of Bombay granted a lease  of land for ten years to a partnership firm, with the  covenant that  the lessee would, at their own expense construct  upon the  said land, certain buildings to the  specification.  of the  trustees.  It was provided inter alia that  the  lessee would  be  at liberty to remove the  buildings,  erected  by them, within three months after the expiration of the  term. It is not clear what happened actually after the  expiration of the term of ten years.  In 1942, the Trustees granted  to M/s.    D   and  0  their   respective   heirs,   executors, administrators  and  assigns, a mnthly tenancy  of  the  and together with the buildings standing thereon.  It was agreed with them that on the 462 determination of the tenancy, they would have to remove such buildings as were standing upon the demised land.  In 1947 M Is.  D and 0 assigned then rights in the lease to one R  and the  appellant K which was accepted by the trustees.   After due notice in 1956, the Trustees filed a suit for  ejectment against R ard K, in the Bombay City Civil Court.  R had died before the filing of the suit and the plaint was amended  by striking out the name of R. The appellant as defendant  took a  number of pleas; (a) notice was invalid as ’it  had  been served  only upon one of the lessees, (b) suit was  bad  for

2

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 9  

non-joinder of the heirs and the legal representatives of R, (c)  jurisdiction of City Civil Court was challenged as  the suit  was  governed by Rent Act, (d) and  lastly,  that  the contract  to  deliver vacant possession  was  impossible  of performance  and the said impossibility rendered the’  claim of the plaintiffs incompetent. Held,  that  once it is held that the tenancy  was  joint  a notice  to one of the joint tenants was sufficient, and  the suit for the same reason was good. Held,  further, that the suit as laid for vacant  possession of the site and in the City Civil Court was competent. Held,  that in view of the definition "premises" in  s.5.(8) and the events leading to the amendment of s. 4, the  amend- ment  was enacted to cut down by a definition the  operation the  words  "any premises belonging to the Government  or  a local authority" by excluding buildings which were  occupied by  sub-tenants  even though the building  belonged  to  the Government  or continued to belong to it and any  action  of the  Government  or local authority in respect of  the  land falls to be governed by usb-s. (1) and not sub-s (4.) (a) of the Rent-control Act. Held,  therefore,  if the Government or  a  local  authority wants to evict a person from the land, the provisions of the Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging Houses Rates (Control)  Act, 1947,  (lo  not come in the way.  For the same  reason,  the suit for ejectment does not have to be filed in the court of small  causes, as requirtd by a Rent Control Act but in  the City- Civil Court. If the ’original lessees took on lease not only the land but also  the  building, it is not open to  their  assignees  to claim that the ownership of the Government extended only  to the land and not to the buildings. If the appellant cannot evict his tenant so as to be able to remove  the building, in exercise of the right conferred  on him,  that  is an unfortunate circumstance, which  does  not serve   to  entitle  him  to  defeat  the  rights  of   Port Authorities. 463 Quere  :-The Port Trust Authorities, whether can  evict  the sub-tenants ? Bhatia  Co-operative  Housing society Ltd.  v.  D.C.  Patel, (1953) S.C.R. 185 and Bara Bhaywandas v. Bombay Corporation, A.I.R. 1956 Bom. 364, referred to.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL   APPELLATE  JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal  No.  302  of 1961. Appeal  by special leave from the judgment and  order  dated September 24, 1959, of the Bombay High Court in F.A. No. 731 of 1959. B. Sen and I. N. Shroff, for the appellant. M.   C.   Setalvad,   Attorney   General   of   India,    B. Parthasarthi,  J. B. Dadachanji, 0. C. Mathur  and  Ravinder Narain, for the respondents. 1962.   February,  27.   The  Judgment  of  the  Court  was. delivered by HIDAYATULLAH,  J.-This appeal arises out of a suit tried  in the  Bombay  City  Civil  Court at  Bombay:.  filed  by  the respondents,  the  Trustees of the Port of Bombay,  for  the ejectment  of  the  appellant, Kanji Manji,  and  one  Rupji Jeraji who had ’died even before the suit was filed, from  a plot  situated  at Haji Bunder  Mazgaon,  Sewri  Reclamation Estate, Bombay. and for possession of the land.  There was a

3

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 9  

claim for Rs. 10,871-14-0 being the arrears of water charges and  property taxes, with which we are not  concerned.   The suit  was  decreed by the Bombay City Civil  Court  and  the appellant  was ordered to, vacate the suit premises  add  to deliver  vacant  possession thereof.  An  appeal  was  filed against  the  decree  in the High  Court  of  Judicature  at Bombay,  but  it was dismissed summarily  on  September  24, 1959.   The  High Court also refused an  application  for  a certificate,  but the appellant applied for  special  leave, and having obtained it, filed the present appeal. In 1924, the Trustees of the Port of Bombay granted a  lease of the said land to five persons, who 464 were  trading  in partnership under the name  and  style  of Mancherji Vadilal and Company.  This lease was for a term of 10   Commencing from December 14, 1923.  For the  first  six months,  the conventional rent of pepper corn, if  demanded, was payable, and thereafter for the remainder of the term, a monthly rent of Re. 633-5-4 was payable on the first day  of every month.  The lessees were also to pay all rates, taxes, assessments,  etc.   One of the covenants of the  lease  was that the lessees would, at their own expense and during  the first  six months period, construct upon the said  piece  of land  buildings  for  us  as  bullock  stables  and  offices according  to  the specification given to them by  the  said Trustees and to be approved by them.  It was provided, inter alia,  that upon the expiration of the term, if the  lessees had observed and performed all the covenants, they would  be at  liberty, at their own expense, to remove  the  buildings erected  by  them  upon the demises on  condition  that  the removal  would  be completed within three months  after  the expiration of the term.  During this period of three months, the lessees were to pay the monthly rent and also to pay all rates  and  taxes  etc. and if they  failed  to  remove  the buildings  within the period of three Calendar  months  from the expiration of the term and within like period to fill up all  excavations and to level up and restore the  land,  the right  to remove the buildings would stand  determined,  and the  buildings  would belong to the Trustees, who  would  be entitled to remove them and to clear, level and restore  the land and recover the costs from the lessees. It is not clear from the record as to what happened actually after  the expiry of the term.  But on August 11, 1942,  the Trustees of the Port of Bombay granted to Moreshwar  Narayan Dhotre and Dinshaw Rustomji Ogre, carrying on business under the name and style of Messrs.  Dinshaw and Company and their respective heirs, executors  465 administrators  and assigns, a monthly tenancy of  the  land together  with  the buildings standing thereon and  all  the rights,   easements  and  appurtenances  belonging  to   the premises  on payment of monthly rent of Rs. 300/ , clear  of all  deductions on the first day of each Calender month  and payment of all rates, taxes etc.  The lessees covenanted not to  add  to, or alter the said  buildings  and  conveniences etc., without previous consent, in writing, of the  Trustees and  to  maintain the property in good repair at  their  own cost.  They further agreed :               "to peacefully leave and, yield up the demised               premises  together with all buildings  thereon               as  prepared  and kept at  the  expiration  or               sooner  determination  of the  tenancy  hereby               created  or  in  the  event  of  the   Tenants               becoming  entitled  to  remove  the  buildings               standing on the demised land at the expiration

4

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 9  

             or sooner determination of the tenancy  hereby               created pursuant to the proviso in that behalf               hereafter  contained  to peaceably  leave  and               yield up the demised land cleared and  leveled               to  the  satisfaction in all respects  of  the               Trustees." The  provisos, inter alia, include the  following  covenants binding the lessees :               "(2)  Either  party  to  these  presents   may               terminate the tenancy hereby created by giving               to  the  other of them one,  calendar  month’s               notice in writing to expire on the 1st day  of               any calendar month.               (4)   The  Tenants  may during the  period  of               notice for determination of tenancy hereby  in               accordance  with proviso No. 2  herein  before               contained  remove such buildings as have  been               standing  upon the demised land provided  that               the  Tenants shall have paid all  rent  hereby               reserved up to the determination               466               of  this tenancy and shall have performed  and               observed all the covenants on the part of  the               Tenants and the conditions herein contained or               referred to." On  February 28, 1947, Moreshwar Narayan Dhotre and  Dinshaw Rustomji  Ogra assigned their rights in the lease  to  Rupji Jeraj  and  Kanji  Manji  who,  according  to  the  deed  of assignment  (Ex.D) paid Rs. 22,250/- to the  assignors,  and this  assignment  appears  to  have  been  accepted  by  the lessors.   On January 25, 1956, the Trustees of the port  of Bombay  sent  a  notice  to  Rupji  Jeraj  and  Kanji  Manji requiring  them to vacate the premises and  deliver.  vacant and  peaceful possession of the land on February  29,  1956. This  notice was not complied with, and the suit  was  filed for their ejectment, as stated already.  In the plaint,  the first relief claimed was that "the defendant be ordered  and decreed to forthwith deliver vacant and peaceful  possession of   the   demised  premises  situate  at   Mazagaon   Sewri Reclamation Estate and more particularly described in Ex.  A hereto." Exhibit A mentioned the following:               "All  that piece or parcel of land situate  at               Haji   Bunder,  Mazagaon   Sewri   Reclamation               Estate,  Bombay, admeasuring 5066  619  square               yards or thereabouts bearing Cadastral  Survey               No. 272/145 of Parel-Sewree Division.’ The  suit, as stated was filed against both Rupji Jeraj  and Kanji  Manji, but later, the plaint was amended by  striking out the name of Rupji Jeraj, who had died much earlier. The appellant, as defendant, raised a number of pleas.   His main  contention was that the notice dated January 25,  1956 was invalid, inasmuch as it had been served only upon one of the  lessees (Kanji Manji) and not upon the heirs and  legal representatives of Rupji Jeraj.  He also contended 467 that the suit was bad for non-joinder of the heirs and legal representatives of Rupji Jeraj, who were necessary  parties. He raised a plea #of jurisdiction alleging that the suit had to  be filed in the Court of Small Causes, Bombay,  inasmuch as  it was governed by the Bombay Rents, Hotel  and  Lodging Houses  Rates (Control) Act, 1947.  He further  claimed  the protection of a. 4, sub-a. 4 (a) of this Act which, he said, applied  to him and not subs. (1) of the same  section.   He contended that, in view of the prohibition contained in  the Act  the could not evict his sub-tenants and that  the  con-

5

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 9  

tract that he must deliver vacant possession was  impossible of  performance,  and the said  impossibility  rendered  the claim of the plaintiffs incompetent. All  those pleas were found against the appellant.   It  was held  that the tenancy was a joint tenancy that a notice  to one  of  the  joint tenants was  sufficient,  and  that  the suit,also   was  not  bad  for  non-joinder  of  the   legal representatives of Rupji Jeraj.  The trial Judger held  that the present agreement was enforceable, inasmuch as this case was governed by sub-s. the(1) and not sub- s. 4 (a) of s.  4 of the Act.  For same reason, the trial Judge also held that the suit was properly laid in the Bombay City Civil Court at Bombay,  The same contentions were raised before us, and  we shall deal with them in the same order. The  argument about notice need not detain us long.  By  the deed of assignment dated February 28, 1947, the tenants took the  premises  as  joint tenants.  The  exact  words  of-the assignment  were that........ the Assignors do and  each  of them  both  hereby assign and assure with the  Assignees  as Joint  Tenants......... The deed of assignment was  approved and  accepted  by the Trustees of the Port  of  Bombay,  and Rupji  Jeraj  and the appellant must be  regarded  as  joint tenants.  The trial Judge 468 therefore, rightly held them to be so.  Once it is held that the tenancy was joint, a notice to one of the joint  tenants was  sufficient, and the suit for the same reason  was  also good.   Mr. B. Sen, in arguing the ’case of  the  appellant, did  not  seek to urge the opposite.  In  our  opinion,  the notice  and the frame of the suit were,  therefore,  proper, and this argument has no merit. The  real  controversy  in  this  case  centers  round   the applicability of the Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging  Houses Rates  (Control) Act, 1947 (shortly called the Rent  Control Act  in  the judgment) to the present suit., and  from  that also  arises the question of the jurisdiction of the  Bombay City  Civil  Court.  The latter argument  about  the  juris- diction of the Court can only arise, if the Rent Control Act applies to the present facts.  We shall, therefore, consider these two points together. It  must  not be overlooked that the suit was  for  eviction from  the  land only Under the Rent Control  Act,  the  word "premises " is defined by s.5 (8) inter alia, as follows:               "Premises" means-               (&)  any land-not being used for  agricultural               purposes.   The Act, prior to its amendment in 1953 by the Bombay  Act IV of 1953, provided by s.4(1) as follows:               "This  Act  shall not apply  to  any  premises               belonging   to  the  Government  or  a   local               authority  or apply as against the  Government               to  any  tenancy or  other  like  relationship               created  by  a grant from  the  Government  in               respect   of  premises  taken  on   lease   or               requisitioned by the Government; but it  shall               ,apply  in  respect  of premises  let  to  the               Government or a local authority........ This sub-section was considered by the Bombay 469 High Court in a case, which was brought up in appeal to this Court  by  special  leave.  The judgment of  this  Court  is reported  in Bhatia Co-operative Housing Society Ltd. v.  D. C.  Patel (1).  In that case, building sites were  auctioned in 1908 by the City’ Improvement Trust, Bombay.  One of  the conditions of the sale was that the bidder should  construct

6

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 9  

a building, on the site, of a certain value and according to a plan approved by the City Improvement Trust.  One  Sitaram Laxman  was  the  highest  bidder,  and  he  constructed   a building.  as  agreed.  He was then granted a lease  of  the land together with the building for 999 years.  Subsequently in   1925,  the  Bombay  Municipality  succeeded  the   City Improvement  Trust,  and  the  Bhatia  Co-operative  Housing Society  Ltd.  acquired the lessee’s interest.  A  suit  was filed by the Co-operative Society against its own tenants in the  Bombay  City Civil Court.  The plea was that  the  suit ought  to have been filed in the Court of Small  Causes,  as required by the Rent Control Act.  The plaintiff relied upon sub-s.  (1)  of s. 4 to show that the Act did not  apply  to such a suit.  This contention of the plaintiff was  accepted by the Trial Judge, who decreed the claim.  The Bombay  High Court,  however, on appeal, held that sub-s.(1) of s. 4  did not apply, and that as between the Co-operative Society  and its  sub-tenants, the suit was governed by the Rent  Control Act and ought, to go before the Court of Small Causes.   The High  Court, therefore ordered that the plaint  be  returned for presentation to the proper Court. This  Court,  on  appeal  by  special  leave,  reversed  the decision of the ’High Court, and restored that of the  Trial Judge.   This Court pointed out that sub-s. (1) of s. 4  had three parts viz.               "(1)  this  Act shall not  apply  to  premises               belonging   to  the  Government  or  a   local               authority;               (1)   [1953] S. C. R. 185,               470               (2)   this Act shall not apply as against  the               Government  to  any  tenancy  or  other   like               relationship   created  by  grant   from   the               Government  in  respect of premises  taken  or               lease or requisitioned by the Government; and               (3)   this Act shall apply in respect of  pre-               mises let out to the Government or a local               authority." This  court  further held that the first part  of  the  sub- section  mentioned as part No.(1) above had no reference  to any  tenancy  or other like relationship as  in  the  latter part,  and was general in character.  In framing it in  that way,  the intention was obviously different, and it  was  to exempt  premises of a particular type from the operation  of the  Act  altogether,  and the  exemption  attached  to  the premises.   Reasons were given by this Court why it  thought that  this exemption was general and the immunity  absolute. Into  these  reasons  we are not now  required  to  go.   As between the Bombay Municipality and the lessee, it was  held that  the land and the buildings belonged to the  former  as owners  and  not  to the  lessee.   This  Court,  therefore, observed at p. 196:               "The  truth  is  that  the  lessor  after  the               building  was erected became the owner  of  it               and  all the time thereafter the demised  pre-               mises which include the building have belonged               to  him subject to the right of  enjoyment  of               the lessee in terms of the lease." The  Act was thus held not to apply to such suits,  and  the order of the High Court was reversed. At  first,  an Ordinance and later, an Act  were  passed  to nullify  the effect of this ruling by the addition  of  sub- s.4(a). That sub-section now reads as follows ;.               "(4)(a).    The    expression "premises

7

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 9  

             471               belonging  to  the Government or a  local  au-               thority"  in sub-section (1)  shall,  notwith-               standing  anything contained in the said  sub-               section or in any judgment. decree or order of               a Court, not include a building erected on any               land held by any person from the Government or               a local authority under an agreement, lease or               other  grant,  although having regard  to  the               provisions  of such agreement, lease or  grant               the building so erected may belong or continue               to  belong  to  the Government  or  the  local               authority, a,-, the case may be; and               (b)   notwithstanding  anything  contained  in               section  15,  such person shall be en  led  to               ,tit  create  a  tenancy in  respect  of  such               building or a part thereof." The amendment achieved two different things.  It enabled the lessee  of the particular kind of building described in  el. (a) to create sub-tenancies in spite of the ban against sub- tenancies  contained  in s.15). It also  excluded  from  the operation of sub-s.(1) the buildings specified in cl. (a) of the  subsection.   The  amendment  said  nothing  about  the relationship  of the Government or the local. authority,  on the  one hand, and the lessee, on the other, in  respect  of the  land.  The word "premises" in subs.(2) could  mean  the land  or  the buildings or both.  Sub-section  (4)(a)  dealt only  with  the buildings, and did not deal with  the  land, because  it  used  the word "buildings"  and  not  the  more general word "premises".  The import of sub-s.(4)(a) of  s.4 was  thus limited to buildings, and did not extend to  land. The    sub-section,    however,   was    drafted    somewhat inartistically,  and the obscurity of the language  presents some  difficulty.  The Trial Judge following a  decision  of the  Bombay High Court reported in Ram Bhagwandas v.  Bombay Corporation(1). In that case, one Khudabaksh Irani had A.I.R, 1956.  Bow. 364. 472 taken  lease  of  certain plots some  30  years  back.,  and constructed  some structures upon the open plot, and  rented them  out  as tenements.  In 1947, Irani sold  them  to  one Tyaballi.   In 1951, the Municipal Corporation filed a  suit to  eject Tyaballi from the plots, and by a consent  decree, Tyaballi agreed to deliver up vacant and peaceful possession of  the plots clear of all structures.  Tyaballi  failed  to remove the structures, and the Municipal Corporation  sought to  execute the decree.  The tenants thereupon filed a  suit under  0.  21,  103  of the  Civil  Procedure  Code  against Municipal  Corporation, but the suit was dismissed.  In  the appeal  which was filed in the High Court, it  was  conceded that  the Municipal Corporation was the owners of the  plots in question, but protection was claimed on the basis of sub- s.(4)(a)  of s.4 of the Rent Control Act.  Chagla, C. J.  in dealing  with the history of the amending Act,  pointed  out that  the  legislature was seeking to protect by  that  sub- section  tenants  who  occupied  buildings  put  upon   land belonging to a local authority, if the buildings occupied by them  were  constructed under an agreement under  which  the lessee  was under an obligation to construct buildings.   He pointed  out  that the protection of sub-s.(4)  (a)  was  to buildings  and  not to land, and that the phrase  "under  an agreement, lease or other grant" modified not only "held  by any  person  from Government or local  authority"  but  also "erected  on any land’.  He, therefore, held that the  words "erected  on  any  land  held by any  person  from  a  local

8

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 9  

authority"  were  descriptive of the building  and  did  not emphasise  the point of time when the building was  erected. By that phrase, what was emphasised was ",that the nature of the building must be such as to satisfy the test that it was erected on land hold by a person from a local authority  and the test must be applied at the time when the protection  is sought." 473 In  this case, it is contended, as it was contended  in  the Bombay  High Court, that so long as a building  was  erected under an agreement with Government or a local authority, the benefit  of  sub-a. (4)(a) of s. 4 would  be  available,  no matter how many hands the property might have changed.  this argument  was considered by the learned Chief  Justice,  and was rejected. In  our opinion, though the section is far from  clear,  the meaning  given  by  the learned Chief Justice  is  the  only possible  meaning, regard being had to the circumstances  in which   this   sub-section  came  to  be   enacted.    Those circumstances  were : In a case in which the holder  of  the land  from a local authority was seeking to evict  his  sub- tenants,  it  was  held by the Bombay High  Court  that  the matter  was  governed by the Rent Control Act.   This  Court held that sub-s.(1) applied and the suit was not governed by the Rent Control Act.  The amendment was enacted to cut down by  a  definition the operation of the words  "any  premises belonging  to  the  Government or  a  local  authority",  by excluding only buildings which were occupied by  sub-tenants even  though  the buildings belonged to  the  Government  or continued to belong to it.  Clause (b) of sub-s.(4) excluded also s. 15, which prohibited subjecting by a tenant.   That, however, was limited to the case of buildings only, and  did not  apply  to  the case of land.  In  this  situation,  any action  by the Government or the local authority in  respect of land falls to be governed by sub-s.(1) and not  sub-s.(4) (a),  and  sub-s.(1)  puts the case  in  relation  to  land, entirely out of the Rent Control Act.  The net result, there fore,  is that if Government or a local authority  wants  to evict  a  person from the land, the provisions of  the  Rent Control  Act do not come in the way.  For the  same  reason, the  suit  for ejectment does not have to be  filed  in  the Court, of Small Causes, as required by the Rent Control  Act but in the City Civil Court. as has been done in this case. 474 There is one more reason in this case for reaching the  same conclusion,  because at the time of the lease in  1942,  the lessees,  from  whom the appellant claims  assignment,  were given  a  lease not only of the land but of  the  buildings. ’The  whole tenor of the agreement shows that the  title  of the lessees wag precarious.  It was a monthly tenancy liable to  be  terminated  with  a notice  under  the  Transfer  of Property  Act, and there was only a grace that the  lessees, when  evicted,  might remove buildings within one  month  of their  eviction.  This precarious interest was  obtained  by the assignee by an assignment, and the same thing applies to them.   If the original lessees took on lease not  only  the land  but  also  the  buildings, it is  not  open  to  their assignees  to  claim that the ownership  of  the  Government extended  only to the land and not to the buildings  By  the admissions in the deed of lease and the. various clauses, it is quite clear that these buildings cannot now be  described as  buildings  constructed  under  an  agreement  with   the Government, but rather as buildings belonging to  Government which were leased out with the land but in respect of  which by  a  concession, the lessees were entitled to  remove  the

9

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 9  

buildings  within one month after eviction, In our  opinion, the  suit as laid for vacant possession of the site  and  in the City Civil Court was competent. It  was contended that the contract was incapable  of  being performed,  because at least between the  present  appellant and  his sub-tenants the provisions of the Rent Control  Act would  apply, and he would not be able to evict them in  his turn.  It was, therefore, argued that this impossible on the part of the appellant to fulfill his, obligations to deliver vacant  possession rendered that portion of the  lease  deed unenforceable  and  void.   It is to  be  noticed  that  the appellant does not claim that by reason of the impossibility the whole of the lease 475 deed  becomes  void, because if he did so, the suit  of  the Port Trust authorities would be perfectly justified  without any  more  He only seeks to show that  portion of  the  deed dealing  with  delivery  of  vacant  possession  has  become impossible of performance.  Such a situation had also arisen in  the case of the Bombay High Court in Ram  Bhagwandas  v. Bombay  Corporation (1), and the assignee of the lessee  was unable  ’to deliver vacant possession.  Whether or  not  the Port Trust authorities would be able hereafter to evict  the sub-tenants  of the appellant is a matter, on which we  need not express any opinion.  If the appellant cannot evict  his subtenants  so  as to be able to remove  the  buildings,  in exercise  of  the  right  conferred  on  him,  that  is   an unfortunate circumstance , which does nor, serve to  entitle him to defeat the rights of the Port Trust authorities.  The are only claiming vacant possession of the sited, and  under the  agreement,  if  the  appellant  does  not  remove   the buildings  within one month, then they would be entitled  to take  possession  of the land with the  buildings,  whatever might be the rights of the sub-tenants, and as to which,  as we have pointed out already, we say nothing. In our opinion, the appeal must fail, and is dismissed ; but in  the circumstances of the case, we do not make any  order about costs. Appeal dismissed. (1) A.I R 1996 Bom. 364 476