26 July 1974
Supreme Court
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MURLIDHAR AGARWAL AND ANR. Vs STATE OF U.P. AND ORS.


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PETITIONER: MURLIDHAR AGARWAL AND ANR.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF U.P. AND ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT26/07/1974

BENCH: MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN BENCH: MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN RAY, A.N. (CJ)

CITATION:  1974 AIR 1924            1975 SCR  (1) 575  1974 SCC  (2) 472  CITATOR INFO :  MV         1975 SC 865  (60)  RF         1975 SC1525  (8)  R          1983 SC1239  (12)  RF         1984 SC  74  (21)  RF         1986 SC1194  (10,12)  D          1987 SC 925  (13)  R          1987 SC2117  (23)

ACT: Constitution  of  India, 1950--Article 226--Powers  of  High Court  to interfere with revisional orders passed  by  State Government under s. 7F of U.P. Temporary Control of Rent and Eviction Act, 1947. Public Policy--U.P. (Temporary) Control of Rent and Eviction Act,  1947 s. 3(1)--Suit for eviction to be instituted  with permission of District Magistrate--Whether tenant can  waive the requirement of Section. U.   P. (Temporary) Control of Rent and Eviction Act. 1947-- Powers  of  the  High  Court  under  writ  jurisdiction   to interfere  with  the revisional order passed  by  the  State Government under section 7F of the Act.

HEADNOTE: The  Additional  District  Magistrate passed  an  order  for eviction  against tenant on an application by  the  landlord under  Section 7A of the Act.  On revision,  the  Additional Commissioner  confirmed  the order of eviction.   The  State Government  in  exercise  of  its  revisional  powers  under section   7F  set  aside  the  orders  passed  by  the   two authorities  and held that the tenant was not liable  to  be evicted from the Premises.  The State Government passed  the order  on the basis that the tenant was running a cinema  in the  premises  since the year 1952 and  that  the  District. Magistrate  when he granted the licence was  satisfied  that the tenant was in lawful occupation and that, therefore, the tenant was entitled to the benefit of proviso to section  7A (1) of the Act.  On writ petition filed, the Learned  Single Judge  of  the  High Court quashed the order  of  the  State Government.   The Division Bench of the High Court  reversed the order of the Learned Single Judge. The  landlord  instituted  a suit  against  the  tenant  for eviction  without obtaining the permission of  the  District

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Magistrate  under  section 3(1) of the  Act.   The  landlord relied  on  one  of  the clauses in  the  lease  deed  which provided  that the parties agreed that they would not  claim the  benefit of the Rent Control and Eviction Act  and  that the  provisions  of  the  said Act were  agreed  not  to  be applicable to the said lease.  The High Court held that  the suit  was not maintainable in view of Section (3)(1) of  the Act. Dismissing the appeals, HELD  : The High Court was right in holding that  section  3 was applicable and therefore, the suit was not maintainable. [585C-D] (1)  Having  regard to the definition of tenant  in  section 2(g) and the scheme of the Act a person is a ’tenant’  under section  3  even though he is  occupying  the  accommodation without an allotment order. [580G-H] Udho  Dass  v.  Prem  Prakash, (2)  (1963)  A.  L.  J.  406, approved. (2)  The  language  of  section 3(1) is  imperative  and  it prohibits the institution of the suit without the permission of  the District Magistrate.  The policy of the Act-,  seems to be that a responsible authority like District  Magistrate should  consider the claim of the landlord and needs of  the tenant before granting permission The. object of the Act was to  protect tenants from greedy and grasping landlords  and. from  their  resorting  to court  for  eviction  of  tenants without reasonable grounds.  There can be no doubt that  the provision  has  been enacted for protecting one set  of  men from  another set of men.  The one from their situation  and condition  are:  liable to be oppressed  and  imposed  upon. Though  there is considerable support in judicial dicta  for the  view  that  courts cannot create new  heads  of  public policy  there is also no lack of judicial authority for  the view  that the categories of heads of public policy are  not closed.   Public policy does not remain static in any  given community.  Public policy would be almost useless if it were to remain in fixed moulds for all times.  Our law relies  on the implied insight of the judge on such matters.  Section 3 is based on public policy.  It is intended to protect a 576 weaker  section of the community with a view  to  ultimately protecting  the  interests -of the community in  general  by creating equality of bargaining power.  The tenant could not have  waived the benefit of the provision. [581 E-F; 582  G; 584BGG-585C] Lachoo  Mal v. Radhey Shyam [1971] 3 S. C. R. 693,  Gheralal Parakh  v. Mahadeodas Maiya Das [1959] Supp. 2  S.C.R.  406, 440., referred to.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE  JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal Nos.  2370  of 1969 Appeal from the judgement and order dated the 22nd May, 1969 of the Allahabad High Court in Spl.  Appeal No. 343 of 1968.                 Civil Appeal No 583 of 1971 Appeal  from the Judgement & order dated the  28th  October, 1970 .of the Allahabad High Court in First Appeal No. 82  of 1970. S.   V.  Gupte,  J.  P.  Goyal  and  S.  M.  Jain,  for  the appellants (in both, the appeals) R.   K.  Garg,  S. C. Aggarwal, S. S. Bhatnagar  and  V.  J. Francis, for the respondent (in C. A. No. 583/71) N.   Dixit  and O. P. Rana, for the respondent Nos. 1,3  and

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4. Civil Appeal No. 2370 of 1969 The Judgment of the Court was delivered by MATHEW J.  The appellants filed a petition under Article 226 of  the  Constitution  before the High  Court  of  Allahabad praying  that  the order passed by the State  Government  on October   20,  1967,  allowing  a  revision  filed  by   the respondent  be  quashed and possession of  the  premises  in question  be  given  to  them under s.  7-A  of  the  U.  P. (Temporary)   Control  of  Rent  and  Eviction   Act,   1947 (hereinafter ,called the Act). The  original  owner  of the premises was  one  Ram  Swaroop Gupta.  He leased the premises to M/s Pioneer Exhibitors and Distributors Limited. They used the premises for  exhibiting cinema. That lease terminated by efflux of time on June  30, 1952. Gupta, thereafter, leased the premises by a deed dated October  13,  1952 for a period of  10 years  to  Ram  Agyan Singh,  respondent No. 2. But there was no  order  allotting the  accommodation  to  him  under  S.  7(2)  of  the   Act. Respondent  No.  2  also used the  premises  for  exhibiting cinematography  films.  Disputes having arisen  between  the parties,  Gupta filed suits for recovery of rent as well  as for  ejectment  against  respondent No.  2.  The  appellants purchased the premises in question from Ram Swaroop Gupta by a sale deed dated March, 26, 1962. Thereafter they filed  an application  under  s. 7 of the Act read with  rule  6  made under  the  Act for release of the  accommodation  in  their favour.  On December 3, 1965, the Additional District Magis- trate  allowed the application and permitted the  appellants to  take possession of the premises.  That was on the  basis that  the premises were in illegal occupation of  respondent No.  2.  The  representation against  this  order  filed  by respondent No. 2 to the State                             577 Government  was rejected on January 10, 1966 on  the  ground that  there  was  no  provision  for  any  interference   by Government  with  the  order.   On  December  4,  1965,  the appellants  filed an application for eviction of  respondent No.  2  under  s. 7-A of the Act.  On  June  18,  1966,  the Additional  )District  Magistrate directed issue  of  notice under clause (2) of s. 7-A, why respondent No. 2 should  not be evicted.  Thereafter, the Additional District  Magistrate passed the order for eviction.  Respondent No. 2 went up  in revision  against the order to the Additional  Commissioner. He   confirmed   the  cider  of  the   Additional   District Magistrate.    Respondent  No.  2,  thereafter,   filed   an application for revision under s. 7-F of the Act before  the State  Government against the order.  The  State  Government allowed  that application on October 20, 1967  holding  that respondent  No.  2  was not liable to be  evicted  from  the premises.   On  January  20,  1968,  the  State   Government communicated to the parties a summary of the reasons on  the basis  of which the order had been passed.  That  in  effect said  that  the  respondent was running  a  cinema  under  a licence  in  the  premises  from  1952,  that  the  District Magistrate, when he granted the licence, was satisfied  that respondent No. 2 was in lawful occupation and that, in these circumstances, he was entitled to the benefit of the proviso to  s.  7-A(1) of the Act and was not liable to  be  evicted from the premises. It  was  to quash this order that the appellants  filed  the writ petition before the High Court. A learned Single Judge of the Court quashed the order.  Res- pondent  No.  2  filed an appeal  against  the  order.   The division  Bench  reversed the order of  the  learned  Single

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Judge.   It is against this order that this appeal has  been filed  on the basis of a certificate granted  under  Article 133(1)(b) of the Constitution. The  division Bench was of the view that the learned  Single Judge was not justified in interfering with the order passed by the State Government udder s. 7-F of the Act inasmuch  as the  order of the State Government  did not suffer from  any infirmity  either on the ground that it had no  jurisdiction to pass the order or for the reason that there was an  error of law apparent on the face of the record. The material provision in s. 7-A of the Act provides               "S. 7-A.  District Magistrates’ power to  take               action  against  unauthorised   occupation-(1)               Where  in  pursuance  of  the  order  of   the               District  Magistrate under sub-section (2)  of               Section 7 the vacancy of any accommodation  is               required  to be reported and is not  reported,               or where an order requiring any  accommodation               to  be  let  or not to be let  has  been  duly               passed  under sub-section(2) of Section 7  and               the District Magistrate believes or has reason               to   believe   that   any   person   has    in               contravention of the said order, occupied  the               accommodation or any part thereof, he may call               upon the, person in occupation to show  cause,               within  a  time  to be fixed by  him,  why  he               should not be evicted therefrom;               578               Provided  that  no order  under  this  section               shall be passed if the District Magistrate  is               satisfied  that there has been undue delay  or               it is otherwise inexpedient to-do so"               The  proviso to sub-section (1) of s.  7-A  is               couched  in  wide  language.   The  dictionary               meaning of the word ’inexpedient’ is:               "Not   expedient;   disadvantageous   in   the               circumstances; unadvisable, impolitic." The circumstances that could be taken into consideration  to decide  whether it is expedient or inexpedient to  order  an eviction under the section are not mentioned in the proviso. A great deal of discretion must,therefore, be vested in  the District Magistrate and in the State    Government      when disposing  a revision from an order passed by  the  District Magistrate as several factors would enter the making of  the verdict  whether  it  is inexpedient to  pass  an  order  of ,eviction  under  the  section.  In  this  case,  the  State Government has taken into account two reasons for exercising its discretion under the proviso in favour of respondent No. 2:  (1)  that respondent No. 2 was in possession  from  1953 onwards  and was conducting a cinema in the  premises  after obtaining  a licence from the District Magistrate under  the U.   P.  Cinema  Regulation  Act;  (2)  that  the   District Magistrate  when granting the licence to conduct the  cinema must  have been satisfied that the respondent was in  lawful occupation  of  the  premises.   In  other  words,  what  in substance  the  State Government said was,  that  respondent ’No.  2  has been using the premises for  conducting  cinema from 1953 on the basis of his possession of the premises and that it would be inexpedient to evict him at this stage.  We cannot  say  that the circumstances taken into  account  are irrelevant for the exercise of the discretion. Mr. Gupte, appearing for the appellants, said that when  the Additional District Magistrate passed the order for  release on  the basis that the appellants require the premises  bona fide for their personal occupation, the State Government, in

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the  exercise  of its revisional jurisdiction under  s.  7-F against the order of eviction under s. 7-A ,should not  have nullified  the effect of the order of release by  exercising its  discretion  under  the proviso to s.  7-A  against  the appellants.  He also said that the State Government did  not even refer to the order for release which would show that it made no assessment of the hardship to the landlords. The  fact  that  an  order for release  was  passed  by  the Additional  District  Magistrate  on  the  basis  that   the premises were bona fide required by the appellants for their personal occupation did not preclude him, when he was  moved by the appellants to evict respondent no. 2 from  exercising his  discretion under the proviso to s. 7-A.  For it  is  at that stage that the respondent will have the opportunity  to urge  the circumstances which make it inexpedient  to  evict him.  In other words, the only relevant question at the time when the order (1)  See  Shorter  oxford English  Dictionary,  Illustrated, VoI. 1, 3rd ed., (1964), p. 997. 579 of  release was passed was whether the  appellants  required the premises bona fide for their occupation.The controversy was   limited   at  that  stage  to   that   question.   The circumstances  which would make the passing of an  order  of evictioninexpedient under s.7-A could not have been  urged at that time by respondent No. 2. So, the inference that the State  Government was not aware of the order for release  on the  ground  that the appellants required the  promises  for their  personal occupation could not be made from  the  fact that  the State Government found that it was inexpedient  to order the eviction of the second respondent in the  exercise of its discretion under the proviso to s. 7-A when disposing of a revision. We are not satisfied that the order of the State  Government was vitiated by any error of law apparent on the face of the record.  As already stated, the considerations which weighed with  the  State Government in  rejecting  the  application, namely, the hardship to respondent No. 2 who was  conducting a  cinema  in the premises from 1953 cannot be  said  to  be irrelevant.   As the order of the State Government  did  not suffer  from  any error of law apparent on the face  of  the record,  the  learned  Single Judge  was  not  justified  in quashing the order and the Division Bench rightly set  aside the  order  of  the learned Single  Judge  and  allowed  the appeal. We  dismiss  the appeal but, in the circumstances,  make  no order as to costs.                 Civil Appeal No. 583 of 1971 In  this appeal, by certificate, we are concerned  with  the question  whether  the  suit filed  by  the  appellants  for recovery of Possession of the premises which is the  subject matter  of Civil Appeal NO. 2370 of 1969, on the basis  that the   tenancy   created   by   Ram   Swaroop   Gupta,    the predecessor-in-interest of the appellants, in favour of  Ram Agyan Singh, the respondent, had expired and, therefore, the appellants were entitled to recover possession of the  same, was  maintainable  in law in view of the fact  that  it  was instituted without obtaining the permission of the  District Magistrate under s. 3(1) of the U. P. (Temporary) Control of Rent and Eviction Act, 1947 (hereinafter called the Act). The  trial  court held that although the  respondent  was  a tenant  against  whom the suit cannot be filed  without  the previous permission as visualised by s. 3 of the Act, yet he cannot claim the benefit of s. 3 on account of clause 20  of the lease deed and decreed the suit.

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On  appeal  by the respondent, the High Court  reversed  the decree,  holding that the suit was not maintainable in  view of  s.  3, and dismissed the suit.  It is from  this  decree that this appeal has been filed. The  two  questions  which arise in  this  appeal  are:  (1) whether  the High Court was right in holding that s.  3  was applicable  and, therefore, the suit was  not  maintainable; and (2) whether clause 20 of the lease deed was a bar to the respondent  from claiming that’ the provisions of s. 3  were applicable. 580 Section 3(1) insofar as it is material, provides, "3.   Restriction  on  eviction--(1) Subject  to  any  order passed  under  sub-section (3) no suit  shall,  without  the permission of the District Magistrate, be filed in any Civil Court   against   a  tenant  for  his  eviction   from   any accommodation  except  on  one  or  more  of  the  following grounds:-" The   lease  deed  in  question  was  executed   after   the commencement of the Act and the respondent did not obtain an allotment  under S. 7(2) of the Act in his favour  from  the District Magistrate.  It was, therefore, contended on behalf of  the  appellants  that the respondent was  not  a  tenant within  the  meaning of that term in s. 3 as the  lease  was created in violation of the provision of s. 7(2). In  Udho  Dass  v.  Prem Prakash(1)  a  Full  Bench  of  the Allahabad  High  Court took the view that a  lease  made  in violation  of  the  provisions of s.  7(2)  would  be  valid between  the  parties and would create the  relationship  of landlord and tenant between them although it might not  bind the authorities concerned.  In the light of this ruling  the correctness of which we see no reason to doubt-we think that the respondent was a tenant.  The respondent had been paying the  rent to Ram Swaroop Gupta and to the  appellants  after the  sale  by him to the appellants.   "Tenant"  is  defined under s. 2(g) of the Act as follows: "2(g) ’Tenant’ means the person by whom rent is, or but  for a  contract  express or implied, would be  payable  for  any accommodation". Now, the landlord and the tenant cannot, by their agreement, bind  the District Magistrate.  In spite of the  lease,  the District  Magistrate may treat the accommodation  as  vacant and  evict therefrom the tenant who is in occupation of  the accommodation  without  an  allotment order.   This  is  his statutory obligation.  But the appellants would be  estopped from denying that the respondent is a tenant.  The Act makes a  distinction  between a tenant by virtue of  an  allotment order and a tenant otherwise than by virtue of an  allotment order.  In most of the sections of the Act the word  tenant’ alone is used.  If the word ’tenant’ in s. 3 is construed as "tenant under an allotment order", then the tenants who have been  occupying an accommodation without an allotment  order will  be deprived of several material  privileges  conferred upon  them  by  the Act.  Having regard  to  the  definition clause and the scheme of the Act, we are of opinion that the respondent  is  a  tenant  under s.  3  even  though  EC  is occupying the accommodation without an allotment order,.  It follows  that the respondent would get the protection  under S. 3 and that the appellants’ suit was, therefore, liable to be dismissed as it was found that it was instituted  without the permission of the District Magistrate. (1)  (1963) A.L.J. 406.                             581 We  now  turn  to the other question,  viz.,  whether  under clause  20 of the lease deed, the respondent  was  precluded

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from  contending,  that the suit was not  maintainable  even though  it  was  instituted without the  permission  of  the District Magistrate.  Clause 20 of the deed provides:               "That  this agreement of lease has  been  made               between the parties with the knowledge of  the               existing  Rent Control and Eviction Act.   The               parties  do hereby agree and declare  that  no               party will ever claim the benefit of the  said               Acts and that the provisions of the said  Acts               have  been  agreed  by mutual  consent  to  be               inapplicable to this deed." The  question  for consideration is whether this  clause  is illegal.   Clause  20 contains two  provisions.   The  first provision  is that the parties will never claim the  benefit of the Act.  The second provision is that the provisions  of the  Act will be inapplicable to the lease deed.   The  High Court  has  taken the view that clause 20  is  illegal,  and therefore, the respondent was not precluded from  contending that- the suit was not maintainable. The  Act was passed inter- alia to prevent the eviction  of’ tenants from their accommodations.  The language of s. 3 (1) is  imperative and it prohibits the institution of the  suit without  the permission, If any landlord institutes  a  suit for  eviction  of the tenant without the permission  of  the District Magistrate, he commits an offence and is punishable Linder  s.  15 of the Act.  The object of s. 3  is  to  give protection to a tenant from eviction from an  accommodation. The  policy  of  the  Act seems to  be  that  a  responsible authority  like the District Magistrate should consider  the claim  of  the landlord and the needs of the  tenant  before granting   permission.   There  was  alarming  scarcity   of accommodation.   The object of legislature in  enacting  the law  was  to  protect  tenants  from  greedy  and   grasping landlords, and from their resorting to court for eviction of tenants without reasonable grounds. Under  s. 23 of the Indian Contract Act, 1872, an  agreement is void if it defeats any provision of law: "S.  23.   The consideration or object of  an  agreement  is lawful, unless-- it is forbidden by law; or is of such a nature, that, if permitted, it would defeat the provisions  of  any law, or is fraudulent;  or  involves  or implies injury to the person or property of another; or  the Court regards it Lis immoral, or opposed to public policy. In  each of these cases, the consideration or object  of  an agreement is said to be unlawful.  Every agreement of  which the object or consideration is unlawful is void." Mr.  Gupte,  appearing for the appellants, referred  to  the decision of this Court in Lachoo ’Mal v. Radhey Shyam(1) and said that (1) [1971] 3 S.C.R.693. M185 Sup.  CI/75 582 it  was open Lo the respondent to waive the benefit  of  the provision  of  s.  3 as it was enacted for  the  benefit  of tenants and that no question of public policy is involved. In that case this Court was considering the question whether it  was  open  to  a landlord to  waive  the  benefit  of  a provision  enacted  for the benefit of landlords  under  the Rent  Control Act.  This Court said that if a  provision  is enacted  for  the benefit of a person or class  of  persons, there   was  nothing  which  precludes  him  or  them   from contracting to waive the benefit, provided that no  question of public policy was involved. "If the object of a statute is not one of general policy, or

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if  the  thing  which  is being done  will  benefit  only  a particular  person or class of persons, then the  conditions prescribed  by  the  statute are  not  considered  as  being indispensable.  This rule is expressed by the maxim of  law, quilibet  potest  renuntiare juri pro se introducto.   As  a general  rule,  the  conditions imposed  by  statutes  which authorise   legal   proceedings   are   treated   as   being indispensable  to giving the court jurisdiction.  But if  it appears  that the statutory conditions were inserted by  the legislature  simply  for  the security  or  benefit  of  the parties  to  the  action  themselves,  and  that  no  public interests   are  involved,  such  conditions  will  not   be considered as indispensable, and either party may waive them without affecting the jurisdiction of the court .... "(1) Maxwell states the rule of law as follows:               "Another   maxim  which  sanctions  the   non-               observance  of a statutory provision  is  that               culibet   licet   renuntiare   juri   pro   se               introducto.  Everyone has a right to waive and               to  agree to waive the advantage of a  law  or               rule   made   solely  for  the   benefit   and               protection  of the individual in  his  private               capacity, which may be dispensed with  without               infringing any public right or public  policy.               Where   in   an  Act  there  is   no   express               prohibition against contracting out of it,  it               is  necessary to consider whether the  Act  is               one  which  is intended to deal  with  private               rights  only or whether it is an Act which  is               intended, as a matter of public policy, o have               a more extensive operation...... (2). So,  the question is, whether s. 3 was enacted only for  the benefit  of  tenants  or whether there is  a  public  policy underlying  It  which precludes a tenant  from  waiving  its benefit.  There can be no doubt that the provision has  been enacted  for protecting one set of men from another  set  of men,  the one from their situation and condition are  liable to  be oppressed and imposed upon.  Necessitous men are  not free men. In  the  Nineteenth-Century the doctrines of  laissex  faire capitalism  were  accepted as part of the natural  order  of things  and the doctrine was reinforced by the idea  of  the early utilitarians that to achieve social justice, it  would suffice to produce formal equality before the (1)  See Craies on Statute Law, 7th ad,. pp. 269-270. (2)  See "Interpretation of Statutes", 11th ed., (1962), pp. 375-376. 583 law.   These  views  were reflected  in  contemporary  legal thought by the idea that freedom of contract was the supreme article  of  public policy, a notion which  ignored  utterly those   cases  where  there  was  no  genuine  equality   of bargaining  power as for example between master and  servant or between landlord and tenant.(1) There  can be no doubt about the policy of the law,  namely, the  protection  of  a weaker class in  the  community  from harassment of frivolous suits.  But the question is there  a public  policy  behind  it which  precludes  a  tenant  from waiving it? The  expression ’public policy’ has air  entirely  different meaning  from  ’policy  of  the  law’  and  one  much   more extensiVe(2).  Nevertheless, the term ’public policy is used by  the House of Lords itself apparently as synonymous  with the  policy  of  the law or the policy  of  a  statute  [see Hollinishead  v.  Hazleton(3).  Yet it is  clearly  so  used

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without intent to repudiate or disregard the distinction  so clearly  drawn in Egerton v. Brownlow.  It seems clear  that the  conception  of  public policy is  not  only  now  quite distinct  from  that of the policy of law but  has  in  fact always  been  so  except in some  exceptional  instances  of confusion  which  have  had no  Substantial  effect  on  the general course of authority(4). The  Courts  have  often repeated  Mr.  Justice  Burrrough’s metaphor  about public policy being an unruly  horse.   Some judges appear to have thought it more like a tiger and  have refused to mount it at all, perhaps because they feared  the fate  of  the young lady of Riga.  Others have  regarded  it like  Balaam’s ass which would carry its rider nowhere.  But none, at any rate at the present day, has looked upon it  as a Pegasus that might soar beyond the momentary needs of  the community.  There is nothing remarkable in this because  the topic itself is so elusive(5). "Public Policy" has been defined by Winfield as "a principle of  judicial  legislation or interpretation founded  on  the current  needs of the community"(5).  Now, this  would  show that  the interests of the whole public must be  taken  into account;  but  it leads in practice to the paradox  that  in many cases what seems to be in contemplation is the interest of  one section only of the public, and a small  section  at that.   The  explanation of the paradex is that  The  courts must certainly weigh the interests of the whole community as well as the interests of a considerable section of it,  such as  tenants, for instances as a class as in this  case.   If the decision is in their favour, it means no more than  that there  is nothing in their conduct which is  prejudicial  to the  nation  as a whole.- Nor is the benefit  of  the  whole community always a mere tacit consideration.  The courts may have to strike. a (1)  See Dennts Lloyd, "Public Policy" (1953), pp. 136-137. (2)  See Eserton v. Brownlow, 4 H.L.C. p. 105. (3)  [1916] 1 A.C. 428. (4)  see W.S.M. Knight, "Public Policy in English Law",  38, Law Quarterly Rev., 207, at pp. 217-218. (5)see Percy H. Winfield, "Public Policy in English Common Law". Harvard Law Rev. 76. 584 balance  in  express terms between community  interests  and rectorial  interests.   So, here we are concerned  with  the general  freedom  of contract which  everyone  possesses  as against the principle that this freedom shall not be used to subject a class, to the harassment of suits without valid or reasonable grounds.  Though there is considerable support in judicial  dicta for the view that courts cannot  create  new heads of public policy,(1) there is also no lack of judicial authority  for  the  view that the categories  of  heads  of public policy are not closed and that there remains a  broad field  within  which courts can apply a variable  notion  of policy  as  a  principle of judicial  legislation  or  inter predation founded on the current needs of the community (2). Public policy does not remain static in any given community. It  may vary from generation to generation and even  in  the same  generation.  Public policy would be almost useless  if it were to remain in fixed moulds for all time. If  it  is  variable, if it depends on the  welfare  of  the community at any given time, how are the courts to ascertain it  ? The judges are more to be trusted as  interpreters  of the law than as expounders of public policy.  However, there is  no alternative under our system but to vest  this  power with  judges.   The difficulty of  discovering  what  public policy is at any given moment certainly does not absolve the

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judges from the duty of doing so.  In conducting an enquiry, as  already stated, judges are not bide-bound by  precedent. The  judges  must  look  beyond the  narrow  field  of  past precedents,  though  this stilleaves open the  question,  ’a which direction.  They must cast their gaze.  The judges are to base their decision on the opinions of men of the  world, as distinguished from opinions based on legal learning.   In other  words,  the  judges  will have  to  look  beycnd  the jurisprudence  and that in so doing, they must  consult  not their  own personal standards or predilections but those  of the  dominant  opinion at a given moment, or what  has  been termed  customary  morality.   The  judgemust  consider  the social  consequences of the rules propounded, especially  in the  light  of  the factual evidence  available  as  to  its probable results.  of course, it is not to be expected  that men of the world are to be subpoenaed as expert witnesses in the  trial  of  every action raising a  question  of  public policy.   It  is not open to the judges to make  a  sort  of referendum or hear evidence or conduct an inquiry as to  the prevailing moral concept.  Such an extended extra,  judicial enquiry is wholly outside the tradition of courts where  the tendency   is   to  ’trust  the  judge  to  be   a   typical representative of his day and generation’.  Our law  relies, on the implied insight of the judge on such matters. It is the  judges  themselves,  assisted  by  the  bar,  who  here representthe highest common factor of public sentiment  and intelligence(3). No doubt, there is no assurance that judges (1)See  Gherulal Parakh v. Mahadeodas Maiya & ors.  [1959] Supp. [2, SCR. 406,440.] (2)  See Dennis Lloyd, "Public Policy" (1953), pp. 112-113. (3)  see Percy H. Winfield, "Public Policy in English Common Law",  42  Harward  Law  Rev. 76  and  also,  Dennis  Lloyd, "Public- Policy" (1953), pp. 124-125. 585 will interpret the mortes of their day more wisely and truly than other men. But this is beside the point.        The point is rather that this powermust be lodged  somewhere and under our Constitution and laws, ’It has been lodged  in the  judges  and if they have to fulfil  their  function  as judges, it could hardly be lodged elsewhere(1). We  think that s. 3 is based on public policy.  As we  said, it is intended to protect a weaker section of the  community with  a  view to ultimately protecting the interest  of  the community  in  general by creating  equality  of  bargaining power.   Although the ection is primarily intended  for  the protection  of  tenants only, that protection  is  based  on public  policy.   The respondent could not have  waived  the benefit of the provision. The   language  of  the  section  as  already   stated,   is prohibitive  in  character.   It  precludes  a  court   from entertaining the suit.  We think the High Court was right in its conclusion. We dismiss the appeal with costs. P. H.         Appeal dismissed. 586