24 February 1977
Supreme Court
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SUNDER DASS Vs RAM PRAKASH

Bench: BHAGWATI,P.N.
Case number: Appeal Civil 2006 of 1968


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PETITIONER: SUNDER DASS

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: RAM PRAKASH

DATE OF JUDGMENT24/02/1977

BENCH: BHAGWATI, P.N. BENCH: BHAGWATI, P.N. FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA

CITATION:  1977 AIR 1201            1977 SCR  (3)  60  1977 SCC  (2) 662

ACT:             Delhi Rent Control Act. 1958--Sec. 3--proviso--Interpre-         tation of statutes ---Introduction of  proviso with   retro-         spective  effect--Whether decree  passed earlier  becomes  a         nullity--Legal  fiction--Whether  to be carried  to  logical         conclusion.

HEADNOTE:             The  appellant purchased in a public auction a  building         which was evacuee property.  Before the sale certificate was         made  out in favour of the appellant, the-possession of  the         building was handed over to him.  He in turn let out a  shop         in the said building to the respondent.  The appellant filed         a suit for eviction in the Civil Court against the  respond-         ent.   The  Civil  Court passed a decree  for  eviction  and         negatived  the contention of the respondent that  the  Delhi         Rent  Control Act, 1958 was applicable and,  therefore,  the         jurisdiction     of the Civil Court was barred.   The  Court         relied  on  section 3 of the Delhi Rent  Control  Act  which         provides that nothing in the Act shall apply to any premises         belonging  to  the Government. The decree for  eviction  was         confirmed by the Appellate Court and then by the High  Court         in  Second Appeal. Before     the decree could  be  executed         section 3 was amended by adding a proviso with retrospective         effect, which provided that where any premises belonging  to         Government  have been lawfully let out by any person,   then         notwithstanding  any judgment, decree or order of any  court         the  provisions of the Act would apply to the tenancy.   The         Executing Court held that it was not competent to it .to  go         into the question whether the decree was rendered d  nullity         on  the ground that the jurisdiction of the Civil Court  was         ousted by the introduction of :the proviso in section 3 with         retrospective  effect  since  the decree  had  become  final         between  the parties.  The Appellate Court upheld  the  said         decision.   The  High Court in Second  Appeal  reversed  the         decision  of the two courts below and held that  the  decree         was a nullity and could not be executed.         Dismissing the appeal this Court,             HELD  :(1)  An  executing court cannot  go  behind  the.         decree  nor can it question its legality or correctness  but         where  a decree sought to be executed is a nullity for  lack         of inherent jurisdiction in the court passing it, its  inva-

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       lidity can be set up in an execution proceeding. [64C-D]             Vide  Kiran Singh v. Chaman Paswan [1955] 1 SCR 177  and         Seth  Hiralal  Patni  v. Sri Kali Nath, [1962]  2  SCR  747,         followed.         (2)-Since  the  proviso was  introduced  with  retrospective         effect  it must be deemed to be part of section 3Since.  the         time the Delhi Rent Control Act was enacted.  [65-D]              East End Dwellings Co. Ltd. v. Finsbury Borough Council         [1952]  A.C. 132, approved.             As a result of the fiction the proviso must be deemed to         be-part of section 3 from the date of enactment of the  Act.         The  logical and  inevitable Consequence of the introduction         of the proviso. in section 3 with retrospective effect would         be to read the proviso as if it were part of the section  at         the  date when the Act was ’enacted, and the  legal  fiction         created  by the retrospective operation must be  carried  to         its  logical extent and all the consequences  and  incidents         must  be  worked  out as if the proviso forms  part  of  the         section right from the beginning.  The phrase "notwithstand-         ing  any  judgment;  decree or order of any  court"  in  the         proviso  makes it clear that the legislature intended"  that         the  finality of the judgment,decree etc., should not  stand         in  the  way  of giving full effect  to  the=  retrospective         operation of the proviso in section 3.  [66C-G]         61

JUDGMENT:              CIVIL  APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal  No.  2006         of 1968.              (From  the Judgment and Decree dated 26-11-1961 of  the         Punjab High Court Circuit Bench at Delhi in Execution Second         Appeal No. 158-D of 1964).         Bishan Narain and D.N. Mishra, for the appellant.         V.S. Desai, B.P. Singh and A.K. Srivastava, for the respond-         ent.         The JUdgment of .the Court was delivered by             BHAGWATI, J.--This appeal by certificate raises a  short         but interesting question of law relating to the  interpreta-         tion  and  effect of the proviso to section 3 of  the  Delhi         Rent Control Act, 1958.  The dispute in this appeal  relates         to a shop situate on the ground floor of a building  bearing         Municipal  No.  624-36 (Old) 530-35 (New) situate  in  Sadar         Bazar,  Delhi.  The building was an evacuee property and  it         was acquired by the Central Government under section 12  ,of         the  Displaced  Persons  (Compensation  and  Rehabilitation)         Act,    1954 and formed part of the compensation  pool.   It         was  sold  by  public auction and the  appellant  being  the         highest bidder was accepted  as the auction purchaser by the         managing  officer  on  5th  September, 1955.   It  does  not         appear  from  the record as to when the appellant  paid  the         full  purchase price to the managing officer but  presumably         he  did  so before 23rd September, 1955 when  the  sale  was         confirmed  in his favour by the managing officer.  The  sale         certificate was not issued in favour of the appellant for  a         considerable time and we are told that even until now it has         not  been issued, but possession of the building was  handed         over  to.  the appellant on 30th August, 1956 and  a  letter         dated  3rd  September, 1956 was addressed  by  the  managing         officer  to  the  respondent intimating to  him  that  since         possession   of  the building had been handed  over  to  the         appellant,  the respondent should pay rent to the  appellant         and  otherwise deal directly with him with effect from  30th         August. 1956.  This letter was addressed to the  respondent,

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       because at that time the respondent was in possession of one         other shop in the same building as a tenant and pursuant  to         this letter, he attorned tenancy in respect of that shop  to         the appellant. On 1st September, 1956, the appellant let out         the  shop in dispute thereinafter referred to as  the  prem-         ises) to the respondent and the latter continued in  posses-         sion  of the premises as a monthly tenant. However, on  10th         August, 1959 the appellant gave a notice to quit terminating         the  tenancy of the respondent and calling upon him to  hand         over vacant possession of the premises by  the mid-night  of         31st  August, 1959.  The respondent declined to comply  with         the requisition contained in the notice and hence the appel-         lant  filed  a suit in the Court of the  Senior  Subordinate         Judge, Delhi on 15th September, 1959 for recovery of posses-         sion  of the premises from the respondent. There was also  a         claim  made in the suit for  recovery of  arrears   of  rent         but  this claim is no longer material and we need not  dwell         on it. The respondent resisted the claim for eviction  inter         alia  on the ground that the certificate of sale not  having         been issued in favour of the         62         appellant, he was not the owner of the premises and hence he         was  not  legally competent to let out the premises  to  the         respondent nor was he entitled to recover possession of  the         premises, from the respondent.  The respondent also disputed         the jurisdiction of the court on the ground that the.  Delhi         Rent  Control  Act, 1958 which  had come into force  on  9th         February,  1959  was applicable to the  tenancy      of  the         premises and by reason of section 50 of that Act, the  civil         court had no jurisdiction to entertain the suit.  The  Trial         Court  took the view, on a reading of the decision  of  this         Court  in  M/s Bombay Salt and Chemical Industries  v.  L.J.         Johnson,  (1)  that since the certificate of  sale  was  not         issued  in  favour of the appellant, he had not  become  the         owner  of the premises and the premises continued to  belong         to the Government and by reason of section 3 which  provided         that  "Nothing in this Act shall apply to any  premises  be-         longing  to   the Government", the Delhi Rent  Control  Act,         1958  was  not applicable to the tenancy in respect  of  the         premises and the civil court  had jurisdiction to  entertain         the  suit.  The Trial Court’ also. held that since the  full         purchase  price had been paid by the appellant  and  posses-         sion  of the premises had been handed over by  the  managing         officer to the appellant on 30th August, 1956, the appellant         was  legally  competent to let out the premises to  the  re-         spondent  and  the premises having been lawfully let out  by         the  appellant to the respondent, there was relationship  of         landlord  and   tenant  between  the parties and  since  the         ’tenancy  was validly terminated by the appellant by  giving         notice to. quit in accordance with the provisions of section         106  of  the  Transfer of Property Act,  the  appellant  was         entitled   to  recover possession of the premises  from  the         respondent.  A decree for eviction was accordingly passed by         the Trial Court in favour of the appellant.  The  respondent         preferred  an  appeal but the appeal was dismissed’  by  the         Additional  District Judge, Delhi on substantially the  same         view as that taken by the Trial Court.  This was followed by         a  second appeal to the High Court but that appeal also  met         with the same fate and the decree for eviction became  final         between the parties.             Now,  before the decree for eviction could be  executed,         an amendment was made in section 3 of the Delhi Rent Control         Act,  1958  which is very material.   We  shall  immediately         refer  to, this amendment, but before we do so, it would  be         convenient  to  advert too, few relevant  provisions,of  the

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       Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958.  This Act came into force with         effect  from  9th  February, 1959 and it   was  intended  to         provide  inter  alia  for control of  rents  and  evictions.         Section 14, sub-section (1) granted protection to the tenant         against eviction by providing that notwithstanding  anything         contained  in any other law or contract, no order or  decree         for recovery of possession of any premises shall be made  by         any court or Controller in favour of the landlord against  a         tenant,  but  the  proviso. to this  sub-section  laid  down         certain grounds on which the Controller could, on an  appli-         cation  made to him in the prescribed manner, make an  order         for  recovery  of  possession of the  premises.   Since  the         jurisdiction to make         (1) A.I.R. 1958 S.C. 289.         63         an  order for recovery of possession of premises o.n one  or         more  of the specified grounds was given to  the  Controller         under  section  14, subsection (1), section  50  ousted  the         jurisdiction  of the civil court by declaring that, save  as         otherwise  expressly  provided in the Act,  no  civil  court         shall  entertain  any  suit or proceeding in so  far  as  it         relates inter alia to eviction of any tenant from any  prem-         ises  to which the Act applies or to any other matter  which         the  Controller is empowered by or under the Act to  decide.         If, therefore, the premises in  the present case were  prem-         ises to which the Act applied, the civil court would have no         jurisdiction  to entertain the suit filed by  the  appellant         for recovery of possession of the premises from the respond-         ent.  But section 3, as it stood prior to its amendment,  by         Act 4 of 1963, provided that nothing in the Act shall  apply         to any premises belonging to the Government.  The view taken         by  the Trial Court and affirmed by the Additional  District         Judge  and the High Court was that since the certificate  of         sale was not issued in favour of the appellant, the premises         continued ’to belong to the Government and on this view, the         Act  clearly did not apply tO the premises and neither  sec-         tion  14, sub-section (1) nor section 50  being  applicable,         the civil court continued to have jurisdiction to  entertain         the  suit.  This was the reason why the decree for  eviction         was passed by the Trial Court against the respondent and  it         was  affirmed by the Additional District Judge and the  High         Court.   But by the time the decree for eviction came to  be         executed,  the following proviso was added in section  3  by         Act  4 -of 1963 with retrospective effect:                             "Provided  that where any  premises  be-                       longing to Government have been or are lawful-                       ly let by any person by virtue of an agreement                       with  the Government or otherwise, then,  not-                       withstanding any judgment, decree or order  of                       any  court or other authority, the  provisions                       of this Act  shall apply to such tenancy."             The  effect of the addition of the proviso  with  retro-         spective effect was as if the proviso had always been  there         right  from the time when the Act was  enacted.   Therefore,         when an application was flied by the appellant for execution         of  the decree for eviction against  the respondent on  31st         August,  1963,  an  objection was raised on  behalf  of  the         respondent that by reason of the retrospective  introduction         of  the  proviso in section 3, the decree for  eviction  was         rendered null and void as a decree passed by a court without         jurisdiction  and hence it was not  executable  against  the         respondent.  This objection  was negatived by the  executing         court  on the ground that that was not an  .objection  which         could  be entertained in execution and the  executing  court         must  proceed to execute the decree which had  become  final

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       between the parties.  The respondent preferred an appeal but         the  first appellate court took the view that, on the  facts         of the case, the proviso to section 3 was not attracted  and         hence  the decree for eviction .could not be said to be  one         passed by a court without jurisdiction and on this view,  it         upheld  the  order of the executing court and  rejected  the         appeal.   This led to the filing of a further appeal and  in         this appeal the High Court held ’that since the  certificate         of  sale  was  hot issued in favour of  the  appellant,  the         building continued to belong         64           to  the Government but the appellant having paid the  full         purchase price of the building and the sale of the  building         in favour of the appellant having been confirmed and posses-         sion  having  been handed over to him in  pursuance  of  the         sale,  the  appellant was legally competent to let  out  the         premises to the respondent and the letting of the the  prem-         ises  by the appellant in favour of the respondent  on   1st         September,  1956 was lawful and hence the condition for  the         applicability of the proviso to section 3 was satisfied, and         since  the proviso was introduced in section 3  with  retro-         spective effect, it must be held that the Act was applicable         to the premises at the date of  the institution of the  suit         and  consequently  the civil court had  no  jurisdiction  to         entertain the suit and in that view, the decree for eviction         was  a  nullity.   The High Court  accordingly  allowed  the         appeal and held that the decree for eviction being null  and         void  could not  be executed against the  respondent.   This         view  taken by the. High Court is challenged in the  present         appeal preferred by  special leave obtained from this Court.             Now,  the  law is well settled that an  executing  court         cannot  go behind the decree nor can it question its legali-         ty or correctness. But there is one exception to this gener-         al  rule  and  that is that where the decree  sought  to  be         executed  is a nullity for lack of inherent jurisdiction  in         the  court  passing it, its invalidity can be set up  in  an         execution  proceeding.   Where  there is  lack  of  inherent         jurisdiction,  it goes to the root of the competence of  the         court  to  try the case and a decree which is a  nullity  is         void  and can be declared to be void by any court  in  which         it  is presented.   Its nullity can be set up whenever   and         whenever it is sought to be enforced or relied upon and even         at the stage of execution or even in collateral proceedings.         The  executing court can, therefore, entertain an  objection         that  the decree is a nullity and can refuse to execute  the         decree.   By doing so, the executing court would  not  incur         the   reproach   that  it  is  going  behind   the   decree,         because  the   the decree being null and void,  there  would         really  be   no decree at all.  Vide Kiran Singh  v.  Chaman         Paswan(1) and  Seth Hiralal Patni v. Sri Kali-Nath.(2)    It         is, therefore, obvious that  in     the present case, it was         competent  to  the executing court to  examine  whether  the         decree  for  eviction was a nullity on the ground  that  the         civil  court had no inherent jurisdiction to  entertain  the         suit  in which the decree for eviction was passed.   If  the         decree for eviction was a nullity, the executing court could         declare it to be such and decline to execute it against  the         respondent.             The  position which obtained when the suit for  eviction         was  instituted by the appellant against the respondent  was         that section 3, as it stood prior to.its amendment by Act  4         of 1963, was in force and that excluded the applicability of         the  Delhi Rent Control Act. 1958  to premises belonging  to         the  Government.   The premises in the  present  case,  were         vested  in the Government under section 12 of the  Displaced

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       Persons  (Compensation & Rehabilitation) Act, 1954 and  they         were sold by public auction to the appellant and though full         purchase price         (1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 117. (2) [1962] 2 S.C.R. 747.         65         was paid by the appellant and the sale was confirmed in  his         favor  and possession was also handed over to him, the  cer-         tificate  of  sale was, for some  inexplicable  reason,  not         issued  in his favour. The Trial Court, therefore, took  the         view, and this view was affirmed by  the Additional District         Judge as well as the High Court, that the appellant did  not         become  the  owner  of the premises and  they  continued  to         belong  to the Government and for this reason, it  was  held         that  the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 did not apply to  the         premises  and the civil court had jurisdiction to  entertain         the  suit  for eviction.   The Trial Court also  found,  and         this  finding too was accepted by  the  Additional  District         Judge as well as the High Court, that though the certificate         of  sale  was not issued in his favour,  the  appellant  was         competent  to  let out the premises and the letting  of  the         premises  by him in favour of the respondent on 1st  Septem-         ber, 1956 was lawful  and since the tenancy of the  respond-         ent  was  validly  terminated by  the  appellant  by  giving         notice  to quit, the appellant was  entitled  to   a  decree         for  eviction against the respondent.  But, as  pointed  out         above,  section 3 was amended with retrospective  effect  by         the introduction of the proviso and the question is  whether         the  introduction of the proviso with  retrospective  effect         had the effect of rendering the decree for eviction null and         void.             Since  the  proviso was  introduced  with  retrospective         effect, it must be deemed to be part of section 3 since  the         time that the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 was enacted.   It         was  pointed out by Lord Asquith of Bishopstone in East  End         Dwellings  Co.  Ltd.  v. Finsbury Borough  Council(1)  in  a         passage which has become classical by reason of its felicity         of  language that "if you are bidden to treat  an  imaginary         state of affairs as real, you must surely, unless prohibited         from  doing  so, also imagine as real the  consequences  and         incidents  which, if  the putative state of affairs  had  in         fact  existed, must inevitably have flowed from or  accompa-         nied it.  One of those in this case is emancipation from the         1939 level of rents.  The statute Says that you must imagine         a certain state of affairs; it does not say that having done         so, you must cause or permit your imagination to boggle when         it  comes  to the inevitable corollaries of that  state  of.         affairs".   The proviso must, therefore, for all legal  pur-         poses,  be deemed to have been included in section     3  as         from  the date of enactment of the Delhi Rent. Control  Act,         1958.  If that be the true position, then obviously it  must         be held that  the provisions of the Delhi Rent Control  Act,         1958  were applicable to the tenancy of the respondent,  for         the  premises though belonging to the Government, were  law-         fully  let  out by the appellant to the respondent  and  the         condition of the proviso was satisfied.  That was the  posi-         tion which, by reason of the legal fiction brought about  by         the retrospective introduction of the proviso in section, 3,         must be held to have prevailed at the date. of the  institu-         tion  of the suit and the provisions of the Delhi Rent  Con-         trol  Act, 1958 being applicable, it must be concluded  that         the  civil court had no inherent jurisdiction  to  entertain         the suit (vide section 50) and the decree for eviction was a         nullity. Prima facie, it may appear somewhat strange that  a         decree  for  eviction which was good and valid when  it  was         made should be treated as null and void by

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       "(1) [1952] A..C. 132.         66         virtue-of  the retrospective introduction of the proviso  in         section 3. But such a result is necessarily involved in  the         legal fiction created by the retrospective operation of  the         proviso.  If, as a result of the said fiction, we must  read         the proviso as forming part of section 3 as from the date of         enactment of the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958,  the  conclu-         sion  is  inescapable that the civil court had  no  inherent         jurisdiction  to entertain the suit and the Trial  Court  as         well  as  the Additional District Judge and the  High  Court         were in error in exercising jurisdiction in relation to  the         suit when their Jurisdiction was clearly excluded by section         50.              The appellant, however, urged that the introduction  of         the proviso in section 3 should not be given greater  retro-         spective  operation than necessary and it should not  be  so         construed  as to affect decrees for eviction which  had  al-         ready become final between the parties. Now, it is true, and         that is a settled principle of construction, that the  court         ought  not  to give a larger retrospective  operation  to  a         statutory  provision than what can plainly be seen  to  have         been meant by the  legislature.  This rule of interpretation         is hallowed by time  and sanctified by decisions, though  we         are  not at all sure whether it should have validity in  the         context of changed social norms and  values. But even so, we         do not see how the retrospective introduction of the proviso         in  section 3 can be construed so as to leave  unimpaired  a         decree for eviction already passed, when the question arises         in  execution  whether  it is a nullity.   The  logical  and         inevitable consequence of the introduction of the proviso in         section  3  with retrospective effect would be to  read  the         proviso a.s if it were part or the section at the date  when         the  Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 was enacted and the  legal         fiction  created  by  the retrospective  operation  must  be         carried  to its logical extent and all the consequences  and         incidents  must be worked out as if the proviso formed  part         of the section right from the beginning.  This would clearly         render the decree for eviction a nullity and since in execu-         tion proceeding, an objection as to nullity of a decree  can         always be raised and the executing court can examine whether         the  decree iS a nullity, the principle of finality  of  the         decree  cannot  be  invoked by the appellant  to  avoid  the         consequences   and incidents flowing from the  retrospective         introduction  of  the  proviso in section 3.   Moreover  the         words  notwithstanding any Judgment, decree or order of  any         court  or or other authority in the proviso make   it  clear         and  leave no doubt that the legislature intended that   the         finality of "judgment, decree or order of any court or other         authority" should not stand in the way of giving full effect         to the retrospective introduction of the proviso in  section         3   and  applying the provisions of the Delhi  Rent  Control         Act, 1958 in cases falling m the proviso.             We  are therefore, of the view that the High  Court  was         right in taking the view that by reason of the  introduction         of  the proviso in section 3 with retrospective  effect  the         decree  for eviction was a nullity and the  executing  court         was  justified  in declining to execute it against  the  re-         spondent.         67             We accordingly dismiss the appeal with costs  throughout         but order and direct the respondent to pay to the  appellant         all  the arrears  of rent in respect of the  premises  which         remain to be paid by him  to the appellant in the  following         installments: Rs. 2,000/- on or before 30th April, 1977; and

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       out  of the balance a further sum of Rs. 2,000 within  three         months  thereafter  and   the balance,  if  any,   by   31st         October,  1977.  The respondent through his  counsel  under-         takes  to make payment of the arrears in the  manner  afore-         said.         P.H.P.                                                Appeal         dismissed.         68