11 November 1987
Supreme Court
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STATE OF U.P.& ANOTHER Vs MALIK ZARID KHALID

Bench: RANGNATHAN,S.
Case number: Appeal Civil 2981 of 1987


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PETITIONER: STATE OF U.P.& ANOTHER

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: MALIK ZARID KHALID

DATE OF JUDGMENT11/11/1987

BENCH: RANGNATHAN, S. BENCH: RANGNATHAN, S. MISRA RANGNATH

CITATION:  1988 AIR  132            1988 SCR  (1) 948  1988 SCC  (1) 145        JT 1987 (4)   578  1987 SCALE  (2)1262

ACT:      Uttar Pradesh  Public Buildings (Regulation of Letting, Rent and  Eviction) Act,  1972:  Sections  2(1)(a)  and  21- Buildings taken on lease by Government-Possession for owners occupation-Remedy-Whether only by way of suit. After May 18, 1983-Change in  position-Effect of  amendments by Ordinances and U.P. Act No. 17 of 1985-Explained.      Statutory Construction.  When Courts  entitled to  read down the plain language of a statutory provision.

HEADNOTE: %      The appellant-State of Uttar Pradesh, took on lease the premises belonging  to the  respondent for  the  purpose  of running a  Training Centre.  The respondent-landlord  gave a notice of  termination of  the tenancy  under Section 106 of the Transfer  of Property  Act and filed a suit for recovery of possession.      The  appellant   claimed  that   the   suit   was   not maintainable and  that the  respondent’s remedy, if any, was only to seek eviction in the circumstances and in the manner outlined in  the  Uttar  Pradesh  Buildings  (Regulation  of Letting, Rent and Eviction) Act, 1972. The respondent sought to overcome  this hurdle  by contending that the premises in question was not one of the classes of ’building’ covered by the aforesaid Rent Act, and in support thereof relied on the exclusion clause incorporated in Section 2(1)(a) of the Rent Act.      The  appellant   contended,  successfully   before  the Additional District  Judge, but  unsuccessfully  before  the trial court  and  the  High  Court,  that  the  premises  in question was  not a  ‘public building’  with the  meaning of section 3(0)  read with  section 2(1)(a) of the Rent Act, as amended from July 5, 1976 and hence, the respondent’s remedy for eviction  of the  appellant was  not by way of suit in a Civil Court.      Dismissing the Appeal to this Court, 949 ^      HELD: 1. The building in question is one taken on lease by the  State Government and so it falls squarely within the

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definition of  ‘public building’ in Section 3(0) of the Act. It is,  therefore, exempt from the application of the Act by reasons of  s. 2(1)  as it  stood at  the relevant  time. It would follow,  therefore, that  the respondent’s  remedy  to recover possession  lay under  the general law and had to be enforced by  a suit  for recovery  of  possession  which  is exactly what he has done.[955B]      2. Sub-sections  (1), (1A)  and (8) of s. 21 have to be read together. Though s. 2(1)(a) excluded ‘public buildings’ which has  to interpreted  to include buildings in which the Government  is   only  a   tenant-s.21(A)  incorporates   an exception  to   this  exclusion.  "Notwithstanding  anything contained in  s. 2",  it permits an application for eviction being moved  under section 21(1)(a) of the Act by a landlord against any  tenant but in the limited circumstances set out in that  sub-section viz.  that the  landlord  has  been  in occupation of  a public  building but had to vacate it as he had ceased  to be in the employment of the Government, Local Authority or Corporation.[958C-D]      3. The  landlord of  a building in which the Government is a  tenant could  have moved an application under s. 21(1) read with  s. 21(1A). This is what is prohibited by s. 21(8) absolutely in view of clauses (ii) and (iv) of Explanation 1 to sub-section  (1) being  non-existent. S.  21(8) makes  it clear that  while a  landlord who  is compelled  to vacate a public building  occupied by  him due  to cessation  of  his employment can  proceed under  the Act  to evict  any tenant occupying his  property so  that he may use his own property for his  residential purposes,  he will not be able to do so where his  tenant is  the Government, a local authority or a public Corporation.  Thus read,  s. 21(8)  does  not  become otiose or redundant by accepting the wider interpretation of s. 3(0).[958D-F]      4(i) The interpretation placed by the Full Bench of the High Court on s. 3(0) in Punjab National Bank v. Suganchand, [1985]1 ARC 214 equates the position under the statute after the amendment of 1976 to the position both as it stood prior to the  1976 amendment  and also  as it stood after the 1983 Ordinance. Such  an approach fails to give any effect at all to the  change in  language deliberately  introduced by  the 1976 amendment.[956H; 957A]      (ii) Prior  to the  amendment, only  buildings of which the Government  was owner or landlord were excluded from the Act. But  the Legislature  clearly intended a departure from the earlier position. If the 950 intention was merely to extend the benefit to premises owned or let  out  by  public  corporation,  it  could  have  been achieved by  simply adding  a reference to such corporations in s. 2(1)(a) and (b) as they stood earlier. [957A-B]      (iii) Reading  s. 2(1)(a)  & (b)  as they  stood before amendment and  the definition  in s.  3(0) side by side, the departure in  language is  so wide  and  clear  that  it  is impossible  to  ignore  the  same  and  hold  that  the  new definition   was    just   a   re-enactment   of   the   old exemption.[957B-C]      (iv) The  amendment significantly  omitted the  crucial words present  in the  earlier  legislation  which  had  the effect of  restricting the exclusion to tenancies created by the Government, either as owner or as landlord. [957D]      (v) Though  the Ordinance  of 1977  made its  amendment retrospective from  5.7.76, these  later amendments  are all specifically given  effect to  from 18.5.1983. The effect of the decisions  rendered remained  untouched till  then.  The fact that  the 1976  amendment marked  a departure  from the

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more restricted  exclusion available  earlier and  the  fact that the  said restricted  exclusion was again restored with effect only  from 18.5.1983 militate against the correctness of adhering  to a  narrow  interpretation  even  during  the interregnum from 5.5.1976 to 18.5.1983. [957F-G]      (vi) Full  effect must  therefore be  given to  the new definition in  s. 3(0)  and to  the conscious  departure  in language in reframing the exclusion. [959D]      5. There  are situations  in which Courts are compelled to subordinate  the plain meaning of statutory language. Not unoften, Courts  do  read  down  the  plain  language  of  a provision or  give it  a restricted  meaning, where,  to  do otherwise may be clearly opposed to the object and scheme of the  Act   or  may   lead  to   an  absurd,   illogical   or unconstitutional result. [959D-E]      6. This  mode of construction is not appropriate in the context of  the present legislation for a number of reasons. In the first place, such an interpretation does not fit into the  legislative  history.  It  does  not  explain  why  the legislature should  have, while enacting the 1976 amendment, omitted certain operative words and used certain wider words instead. Secondly,  the Rent  Act is  a piece of legislation which imposes certain restrictions on a landlord and confers certain protections on a 951 tenant. Thirdly,  while it  is true  that the  result of the interpretation this  Court favours  would be  to  facilitate easy eviction  of Government,  local authorities  and public corporations,  there  is  nothing  per  se  wrong  about  it because, with  their vast  resources or  capacity to augment their resources,  these bodies would not be in as helpless a position  as   ordinary  tenants   for  whose   benefit  the legislation is primarily intended. Fourthly, the legislature has applied its mind to the situation more than once. If its intention  in   carrying  out   the   amendment   had   been misunderstood by  the High  Court or  found  ambiguous,  the legislature was expected to rectify the situation by a piece of  retrospective   or  declaratory  legislation.  The  1977 Ordinances was,  but the  later Ordinances and the 1985 Act, are not,  of this  nature. They  neither are, nor purport to be, declaratory  or retrospective  from 5.7.76. At least, if the 1985  Act had  been made  retrospective from 5.7.76, one could  have   thought  it   was  a  clarificatory  piece  of legislation. But  the Legislature  has advisedly given these enactments effect  only from  18.5.1983. This means that the amendment of  1976 was  intended  to  be  effective  between 5.7.76 and  18.5.83 and  it also means that the amendment of 1983 onwards  is not  intended to  be  read  back  for  that period. Lastly,  the interpretation  this Court favours will create no  lasting difficulties for the Government and other organisations which  are tenants only, since after 18.5.1983 they will  be in  a position  to claim  all  the  immunities available to other tenants under the Act. [959E-G; 960B-G]      Punjab National  Bank v.  Sugan Chand,  [1985]1 ARC 214 overruled.

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2981 of 1987.      From the  Judgment and  Order dated  23.1.1985  of  the Allahabad High Court in Civil Revision No. 155 of 1984.      Anil  Dev   Singh  and  Mrs.  Shobha  Dikshit  for  the Appellants.

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    Anil Kumar Gupta for the Respondent.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      RANGANATHAN,J. Special leave granted.      This is  an appeal to this Court from the judgment of a Single Judge of the Allahabad High Court in a civil revision petition filed by 952 the appellant  (C.R.P. 155  of  1984).  The  result  of  the judgment  was   to  restore  a  decree  passed  against  the appellant  by  the  trial  court  in  a  suit  for  eviction instituted by  the respondent  in 1980.  The main  ground on which the  appellant had resisted the suit was that the suit was barred  by the  provisions of  the Uttar  Pradesh Public Buildings (Regulation  of Letting,  Rent and  Eviction) Act, 1972 (which  we shall  hereinafter briefly  refer to as ’the Rent Act’).  It is the correctness of this ground of defence that it in issue in this appeal.      The appellant,  the State  of Uttar  Pradesh,  took  on lease a  premises at  Barabanki belonging  to the respondent for the  purpose of  running a  Laprosy Training Centre. The respondent was  thus the  landlord, and  the  appellant  the tenant, in  respect of the premises within the meaning of s. 3(a) of the Rent Act. This Act has been enacted "to provide, in the  interests of  the general public, for the regulation of letting  and rent  of, and  the eviction of tenants from, certain classes  of buildings  situated in  urban areas, and for matters connected therewith." Section 20 of the Act bars the institution  of a  suit for  the eviction  of a  tenant, notwithstanding the  termination of  his tenancy,  except on the grounds specified in sub-section (2) of that section but none of  these grounds were pleaded by the respondent. S. 21 of the  Act enables  a prescribed  authority  to  order  the eviction of  a tenant  in two situations, subject to certain conditions and  limitations. These situations are: (a) where the landlord  requires the  premises for his own use and (b) where, the  building being  in a  dilapidated condition,  he desires to  demolish the same and put up a new construction. These situations  also do  not prevail  here. The  Landlord, however, gave  a notice  of termination  of tenancy under s. 106 of  the Transfer  of Property  Act and  filed a suit for recovery of  possession. The appellant claimed that the suit was not  maintainable and  that the  respondent’s remedy, if any, was  only to  seek eviction in the circumstances and in the manner outlined in the Act.      The  respondent  sought  to  overcome  this  hurdle  by contending that  the premises in question are not one of the classes of  buildings covered by the Rent Act. In support of this  contention,   he  relied  upon  an  exclustion  clause incorporated in  s. 2(1)(a) of the Act. Since the whole case turns on  a proper  interpretation of  this clause and since the clause  has undergone  changes from  time to time, it is necessary to  refer to  these in some detail to facilitate a proper appreciation of the stands of the parties.      (a) In  the Rent Act, as originally enacted and brought into force 953 on 15.7.1972, this sub-section ran thus:           "Nothing in this Act shall apply to-           (a) any  building belonging  to, or vested in, the           Government of any State or any local authority; or           (b) any  tenancy created  by grant  from the State           Government or  the Government  of India in respect           of a  building taken  on lease or requisitioned by           such Government."      (b) U.P.  Act  No.  28  of  1976  amended  S.  2(1)  to

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substitute new  clauses in  place of  the above clauses. The amended sub-section,  insofar-as is relevant for our present purposes, reads thus:           "Nothing in this Act shall apply to-           (a)  any public building; or           (b)  any building  belonging to  or  vested  in  a                recognised educational institution, the whole                of the  income from which is utilised for the                purposes of such institution;           (c)x           x              x               x           (d)x           x              x               x           (e)x           x              x               x           (f)x           x              x               x A definition of ’public building’ was inserted in s. 3 which reads:           "(o) ’public   building’    means   any   building                belonging   to   or   taken   on   lease   or                requisitioned by  or on behalf of the Central                Government or  a State  Government (including                the  Government   of  any  other  State)  and                includes any  building belonging  to or taken                on  lease  by  or  on  behalf  of  any  local                authority or any public sector corporation". These amendments were made effective from 5.7.1976. 954      (c) It appears that the above provisions were sought to be amended  by U.P. Ordinance No. 11 of 1977 (promulgated on 27.4.1977)  with   retrospective  effect  from  5.7.1976  by substituting the  following as  clause (a) of s. 2(1) of the Rent Act:           "2(1)(a) any building of which the Government or a           local authority  or a public sector Corporation is           the landlord." S. 3(0) was left unamended. However, the above Ordinance was allowed to  lapse. Thus the amendment had become inoperative by the time the suit in the present case was instituted.           (d) The next amendment of the Rent Act was by U.P. Ordinance No.  28 of  1983 promulgated  on  18.5.1983.  This revived the  amendment made  by the 1977 Ordinance which had been allowed  to lapse.  This time  this amendment  was  not allowed to lapse on the expiry of the ordinance but was kept alive by  five-successive Ordinances:  No. 43  of 1983 dated 12.10.83, No.  6 of  1984 dated 24.3.84, No. 8 of 1984 dated 7.5.84, No.  20 of 1984 dated 22.10.84, and finally no. 9 of 1985 dated 26.4.85. All these amendments were made effective from 18.5.1983  in so  far as  the provision presently under consideration is  concerned. The  last of  these, it  may be noted, was  promulgated subsequent  to the  judgment of  the High Court presently under appeal.      (e) Finally, the U.P. Legislature enacted Act No. 17 of 1985 on  20.8.85 "regularising"  the spate of legislation by ordinances. By  ss. 1  and 2 of this Act, the amendment made to s.  2(1)(a) by  the 1977  Ordinance and kept alive by the Ordinance  of   1983  and   1984  was  made  effective  from 18.5.1983.      In   this   legislative   background,   the   appellant contended, successfully before the Additional District Judge but unsuccessfully  before the  trial court  and High Court, that the  premises in  question was  not a ’public building’ within the  meaning of  s. 3(o)  read with s. 2(1)(a) of the Rent  Act,   as  amended   from  5.7.76   and,  hence,   the respondent’s remedy for eviction of the appellant was not by way  of   suit  in  a  civil  court.  What  is  the  correct interpretation of  this clause?  This is the question before us.

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    We  have  set  out  above  the  definition  of  ’public building’ in  s. 3(o) after the 1976 amendment. The language of  this   definition  is  very  wide.  It  takes  in  three categories of  buildings: (i)  buildings belonging  to (that is, owned by) the Central or State Government; (ii) 955 buildings (not  belonging to  the Government)  but taken  on lease or  requisitioned by  it or  on its  behalf and  (iii) buildings belonging  to or taken on lease by or on behalf of any local authority or any public sector corporation. In the present case, the building in question is one taken on lease by the  State Government and so it falls squarely within the definition of  ’public building’.  It is,  therefore, exempt from the  application of  the Act by reason of s. 2(1) as it stood at the relevant time. It would follow, therefore, that the respondent’s  remedy to recover possession lay under the general law and had to be enforced by a suit for recovery of possession which  is exactly  what he has done. Prima facie, therefore, the  trial Judge and the High Court were right in decreeing his suit.      It is,  however, contended  on behalf  of the appellant that s.  3(o) should  not be  given such a wide meaning. The argument runs  thus: The intention of the Legislature was to exclude from  the purview  of the Rent Act only buildings in respect of  which the Government was either the owner or the landlord. This is clear from the previous history as well as the subsequent  legislations. U.P.  Act No. 3 of 1947 (which preceded the  1972 Act)  was amended  by Ordinance  No. 5 of 1949 with  effect from  26.9.49 to  exclude from its purview "any premises  belonging to  the Central or State Government and 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". The language s. 2(1)(a) of the Rent Act, as it stood before its amendment in 1976, left  no doubt  in any one’s mind that the legislature intended  only   to  exclude   buildings  belonging  to  the Government or  any local  authority and those taken on lease or requisitioned  by Government  and rented  out  by  it  to others. The  only object of the 1976 amendment was to extend the above  exclusion also  in buildings  owned or let out by local authorities  and public  sector corporations. This was sought to  be done by providing that the Act would not apply to ’public  buildings’ and  inserting a  definition of  that expression in  s.  3(o).  That  definition  was,  no  doubt, phrased somewhat broadly. But, having regard to the previous history  as   well  as   the  language   of  the  subsequent legislation already referred to above, there can be no doubt that the legislature never intended to exclude the operation of the  Rent Act  vis-a-vis premises of which the Government (and, hereinafter,  this expression  will  take  in  also  a reference to  local authorities and public corporations) was neither the owner nor the landlord but merely a tenant.      Support of  the above  restricted construction  is also sought from 956 the phraseology  of s.  21(8) of  the Rent  Act. As has been mentioned earlier.  s. 21 empowers the prescribed authority, on an  application from a landlord, to evict a tenant on two grounds:           (a) need  of the  premises by  him  for  his  self occupation; and           (b) need  to demolish the building and reconstruct it. Sub-section (8) enacts a restriction in respect of the first of these grounds. It reads:

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         "(8) Nothing in  clause  (a)  of  sub-section  (a)                shall apply  to a  building let  out  to  the                State Government  or to  a local authority or                to  a  public  sector  corporation  or  to  a                recognised educational institution unless the                Prescribed Authority  is satisfied  that  the                landlord is  a person  to whom clause (ii) or                clause (iv) of the Explanation to sub-section                (1) is applicable." It is submitted that this sub section places it beyond doubt that the  Act does  apply also to buildings in which a State Government, local  authority, public  sector Corporation  or recognised educational  institution is a tenant and proceeds to restrict  the scope  of an application under s. 21 of the Act in such cases. It is pointed out that, if the definition in s. 3(o) is given a wide meaning so as to exclude from the application of  the Act even buildings in which these bodies are mere  tenants, the  result would  be to  render s. 21(8) redundant and otiose. Such a construction of the statute, it is submitted, should not be favoured.      The above  line of  argument found  favour with  a Full Bench of  the Allabahad  High Court  dealing with a batch of petitions filed  by a  number of  public sector corporations resisting suits for eviction instituted against them: Punjab National Bank  v. Suganchand, [1985] 1 A.R.C. 214. This Full Bench decision  was rendered  on 29.11.84 but was apparently not available  to the  learned Judge who decided the present case on  23.1.85. Learned  counsel for  the appellant  urges that we  should approve  of  the  Full  Bench  decision  and reverse the judgment under appeal.      We are unable to accept the appellant’s contention. The interpretation placed by the Full Bench of the High Court on s. 3(o)  equates the  position under  the statute  after the amendment of  1976 to the position both as it stood prior to the 1976 amendment and also as it 957 stood after  the 1983  Ordinance. Such  an approach fails to give  any   effect  at   all  to   the  change  in  language deliberately introduced  by the  1976 amendment.  No  doubt, prior  to   the  amendment,  only  buildings  of  which  the Government was owner or landlord were excluded from the Act. But the  Legislature clearly  intended a  departure from the earlier position.  If the intention was merely to extend the benefit to premises owned or let out by public corporations, it could  have been achieved by simply adding a reference to such corporations  in s.  2(1)(a)  and  (b)  as  they  stood earlier. Reading  s. 2(1)(a)  & (b)  as  they  stood  before amendment and  the definition  in s.  3(o) side by side, the departure in  language is  so wide  and  clear  that  it  is impossible  to  ignore  the  same  and  hold  that  the  new definition was  just a reenactment of the old exemption. The exclusion was  earlier restricted  to buildings owned by the Government and  buildings taken on lease or requisitioned by Government and granted by it by creating a tenancy in favour of some one. The amendment significantly omitted the crucial words present  in the  earlier  legislation  which  had  the effect of  restricting the exclusion to tenancies created by the Government,  either as owner or as landlord. Full effect must be  given to  the new  definition in s. 3(o) and to the conscious departure in language in reframing the exclusion.      The subsequent  legislation also  reinforces  the  same conclusion. The  1976 amendment  had come  up  for  judicial interpretation and certain decisions referred to in the Full Bench decision  as well  as  the  judgment  presently  under appeal had  given the  above literal  interpretation  to  s.

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3(o). If  they had  run  counter  to  the  rule  legislative intent, one  would have  expected  the  repeated  Ordinances since 1983  and the  ultimate Amendment  Act of 1985 to have placed  the   position  beyond   doubt  by  a  retrospective amendment. Though  the Ordinance  of 1977 made its amendment retrospective from  5.7.76, these  later amendments  are all specifically given  effect to  from 18.5.1983. The effect of the decisions  rendered remained  untouched till  then.  The fact that the the 1976 amendment marked a departure from the more restricted  exclusion available  earlier and  the  fact that the  said restriction exclusion was again restored with effect only  from 18.5.1983 militate against the correctness of adhering  to this  narrow interpretation  even during the interregnum from 5.5.1976 to 18.5.1983.      It  may   now   be   considered   whether   the   above interpretation renders s. 21(8) redundant. As pointed out by the Full  Bench of the High Court, not much thought has gone into the  framing of  this subsection  which has  failed  to notice that clauses (ii) and (iv) of the 958 Explanation to  sub-section (1) which are referred to in it, had been omitted by an earlier clause of the same section of the same  Act. The  Ordinance of  1977 sought to remedy this position  by  deleting  the  words  "unless  the  Prescribed Authority is  satisfied .... is applicable" used in the sub- section but  this Ordinance  was allowed  to lapse  and  the subsequent Ordinances  and Amendment  Act paid no heed to s. 21(8). Nevertheless, despite this clumsy drafting, one would certainly  hesitate   to  give   an  interpretation  to  the definition clause  in s.  3(0) which  may have the effect of rendering this  sub-section otiose.  But luckily that is not the position.  As pointed out by counsel for the respondent, sub-sections (1),  (1A) and  (8) of  s. 21  have to  be read together. Though  s. 2(1)(a) excludes public buildings-which we have  interpreted  to  include  buildings  in  which  the Government  is  only  a  tenant-s.  21(1A)  incorporates  an exception  to  this  exclusion.  "Nothwithstanding  anything contained in  s. 2",  it permits an application for eviction being moved  under section 21(1)(a) of the Act by a landlord against any  tenant but  in the limited circumstance set out in that  sub-section viz.  that the  landlord  has  been  in occupation of  a public  building but had to vacate it as he had ceased  to be in the employment of the Government, local authority or  Corporation. In other words, the landlord of a building in  which the  Government is  a tenant  could  have moved an  application under s. 21(1)(a) read with s. 21(1A). This is what is prohibited by s. 21(8) absolutely in view of clauses (ii)  and (iv)  of Explanation  1 to sub-section (1) being non-existent.  S. 21(8)  makes it  clear that  while a landlord who  is  compelled  to  vacate  a  public  building occupied by  him due  to cessation  of  his  employment  can proceed under  the Act  to evict  any tenant  occupying  his property so  that he  may  use  his  own  property  for  his residential purposes, he will not be able to do so where his tenant is  the Government,  a local  authority or  a  public Corporation. Thus  read,s. 21(8)  does not  become otiose or redundant by  accepting the wider interpretation of s. 3(o). This objection of the appellant is not, therefore, tenable.      The Full  Bench of  the High  Court has referred to one general aspect  which appears to have considerably influence it in  preferring a  narrower interpretation  of s. 3(o). It referred  to  the  increasing  difficulties  faced  even  by Government  and  other  public  bodies  in  securing  proper accommodation    for     their    functioning     and    the nearimpossibility, even  for them,  of securing  alternative

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accommodation at  comparative and  non-exorbitant rates once they are  compelled to  vacate their existing tenancies. The Court posed  to itself  the question whether the Legislature can be  said to  have intended  to  exclude  them  from  the benefits of the Act and throw them open to eviction by suits 959 following a  mere termination  of tenancy by notice u/s. 106 of the  Transfer of  Property Act,  at  the  mere  whim  and caprice of  their landlords.  This, the  Court thought,  was unlikely particularly  when, prior  to the  Amendment Act of 1976, as  well as  subsequent to  1983, they could have been evicted only  on one or other of the grounds available under S. 20  or S. 21 of the Act and more so because the Amendment manifests an  intention to  extend  to  public  corporations benefits previously  available only to a Government and to a local authority.  The object of the exclusion in s. 2(1)(a), it is said, was to remove, in respect of buildings where the government or  local authority  was the landlord either as a owner or  principal lessee  or requisitioning  authority the shackles imposed on other landlords but not to deprive these bodies, when  they  are  mere  tenants,  of  the  protection available to other tenants under Act. Having regard to these considerations, the Full Bench of the High Court has invoked a line  of decisions of this Court and others which advocate that, in  certain situations,  importance should be attached to the  "thrust of  the statute"  rather than to the literal meaning of  the words  used to justify their refusal to give the words of s. 3(o) full effect.      It is  true that  there are  situations in which Courts are compelled  to subordinate the plain meaning of statutory language.  Not  unoften,  Courts  do  read  down  the  plain language of  a provision  or give  it a  restricted meaning, where, to do otherwise may be clearly opposed the object and scheme of  the Act  or may  lead to  an absurd, illogical or unconstitutional result.  But we  think that  this  mode  of construction is  not  appropriate  in  the  context  of  the present legislation  for a  number of  reasons. In the first place,  such   an  interpretation  does  not  fit  into  the legislative history  we have  traced earlier.  It  does  not explain why  the legislature should have, while enacting the 1976 amendment,  omitted certain  operative words  and  used certain wider words instead. As we have pointed out earlier, if the  idea had only been to add to the exclusion buildings owned or  let out by public sector corporations, that result could have  been achieved by a minor amendment to s. 2(1)(a) as it  stood earlier. A conscious and glaring departure from the previous  language must  be given  its due significance. Secondly, the  Rent Act  is a  piece  of  legislation  which imposes certain  restrictions  on  a  landlord  and  confers certain protections  on a  tenant. It  could well  have been intention of  the legislature  that  the  Government,  local bodies and  public sector  corporations should  be free  not only from  the restrictions  they may incur as landlords but also that  they need  not have the protection given to other ordinary tenants. To say that the legislature considered the Government qua landlord to be in a class of its own and 960 hence entitled  to immunity from the restrictions of the Act but that,  qua tenant,  it should  be on the same footing as other tenants  will be  an interpretation  which  smacks  of discrimination.  The   legislature  could   have   certainly intended to  say that  the Government,  whether landlord  or tenant, should be outside the Act. Thirdly, while it is true that the  result of the interpretation we favour would be to facilitate easy  eviction of  Government, local  authorities

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and public corporations, there is nothing per se wrong about it because,  with their  vast resources  or capacity augment their resources,  these bodies would not be in as helpless a position  as   ordinary  tenants   for  whose   benefit  the legislation is  primarily intended.  On the  other hand, the ultimate result  of the  interpretation accepted by the Full Bench will  be to practically deny a landlord, who has given his premises on rent to these bodies, any remedy to get back possession of  his premises.  The  contingencies  for  which eviction is provided for in s. 20 are hardly likely to arise in the  case of  such tenants;  S. 21(1)(a)  is taken out by s.21(8); and,  virtually, the  only ground on which eviction can be  sought by a landlord of such a building against such a tenant,  on the  interpretation urged  by the  petitioner, would be  the one  contained in s. 21(1)(b). It is debatable whether the  legislature  could  have  contemplated  such  a situation either.  Fourthly, in  this case,  the legislature has applied  its  mind  to  the  situation  more  than  once subsequently. If its intention in carrying out the amendment had been misunderstood by the High Court or found ambiguous, the legislature  was expected  to rectify the situation by a piece of  retrospective or declaratory legislation. The 1977 Ordinance was,  but the  later Ordinances  and the 1985 Act, are not,  of this  nature. They  neither are, nor purport to be, declaratory  or retrospective  from 5.7.76. At least, if the 1985  Act had  been made  retrospective from 5.7.76, one could  have   thought  it   was  a  clarificatory  piece  of legislation. But  the Legislature  has advisedly given these enactments effect  only from  18.5.1983. This means that the amendment of  1976 was  intended  to  be  effective  between 5.7.75 and  18.5.83 and  it also means that the amendment of 1983 onwards  is not  intended to  be  read  back  for  that period. Lastly, in any event, the interpretation given by us will create  no lasting  difficulties for the Government and other organisations  which are  tenants  only,  since  after 18.5.1983 they  will be  in a  position  to  claim  all  the immunities available to other tenants under the Act.      For  the  reasons  discussed  above,  we  overrule  the decision of  the Full  Bench of  the Allahabad High Court in Punjab National  Bank v. Sugan Chand, [1985] 1 A.R.C. 214 on this point.  In the  result, this  appeal is  dismissed. We, however, make no order regarding costs.      N.V.K. Appeal dismissed. 961