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Joy Daniel vs N.A.Ibrahimkutty
2024 Latest Caselaw 31805 Ker

Citation : 2024 Latest Caselaw 31805 Ker
Judgement Date : 7 November, 2024

Kerala High Court

Joy Daniel vs N.A.Ibrahimkutty on 7 November, 2024

Author: Kauser Edappagath

Bench: A.K.Jayasankaran Nambiar, Kauser Edappagath

RP No.753/2020 in
RCR No.380/2017 &
RCR No.380/2017



                             -:1:-              2024:KER:82440
            IN THE HIGH COURT OF KERALA AT ERNAKULAM

                            PRESENT

     THE HONOURABLE DR. JUSTICE A.K.JAYASANKARAN NAMBIAR

                               &

          THE HONOURABLE DR. JUSTICE KAUSER EDAPPAGATH

                               &

          THE HONOURABLE MR.JUSTICE MOHAMMED NIAS C.P.

                               &

             THE HONOURABLE MRS. JUSTICE C.S. SUDHA

                               &

           THE HONOURABLE MR. JUSTICE SYAM KUMAR V.M.

THURSDAY, THE 7TH DAY OF NOVEMBER 2024 / 16TH KARTHIKA, 1946

                       RP NO. 753 OF 2020

        AGAINST THE ORDER DATED 28/4/2020 IN RCRev. NO.380 OF
                  2017 OF HIGH COURT OF KERALA
PETITIONERS/ADDL.RESPONDENTS IN RCR:

    1      ZEENATH IBRAHIM
           AGED 58 YEARS
           W/O. LATE N.A IBRAHIMKUTTY, JNARAKKATIL HOUSE,
           BISMILLAH MANZIL, ST.MARY'S STREET,
           KURIACHIRA P O, THRISSUR - 680006.

    2      RAZIL IBRAHIM
           AGED 34 YEARS
           S/O. LATE N.A IBRAHIMKUTTY, JNARAKKATIL HOUSE,
           BISMILLAH MANZIL, ST.MARY'S STREET,
           KURIACHIRA P O, THRISSUR - 680006.
 RP No.753/2020 in
RCR No.380/2017 &
RCR No.380/2017



                            -:2:-              2024:KER:82440
    3      NIZIL IBRAHIM
           AGED 30 YEARS
           S/O. LATE N.A IBRAHIMKUTTY, JNARAKKATIL HOUSE,
           BISMILLAH MANZIL, ST.MARY'S STREET,
           KURIACHIRA P O, THRISSUR - 680006.

    4      SANAM IBRAHIM
           AGED 27 YEARS
           D/O. LATE N.A IBRAHIMKUTTY, JNARAKKATIL HOUSE,
           BISMILLAH MANZIL, ST.MARY'S STREET,
           KURIACHIRA P O, THRISSUR - 680006.

           BY ADV P.B.KRISHNAN


RESPONDENT/PETITIONER IN RCR:

           JOY DANIEL
           AGED 62 YEARS
           S/O. DANIEL, KANNAMPUZHA, THOTTATHIL LANE,
           CHIYYARAM VILLAGE, THRISSUR - 680003.

           ADV.SRI.V.K.PEERMOHAMED KHAN

     THIS REVIEW PETITION HAVING COME UP FOR ADMISSION
ON 12.09.2024, THE COURT ON 07.11.2024 DELIVERED THE
FOLLOWING:
 RP No.753/2020 in
RCR No.380/2017 &
RCR No.380/2017



                            -:3:-              2024:KER:82440
           IN THE HIGH COURT OF KERALA AT ERNAKULAM

                              PRESENT

     THE HONOURABLE DR. JUSTICE A.K.JAYASANKARAN NAMBIAR

                                 &

         THE HONOURABLE DR. JUSTICE KAUSER EDAPPAGATH

                                 &

         THE HONOURABLE MR.JUSTICE MOHAMMED NIAS C.P.

                                 &

            THE HONOURABLE MRS. JUSTICE C.S. SUDHA

                                 &

          THE HONOURABLE MR. JUSTICE SYAM KUMAR V.M.

THURSDAY, THE 7TH DAY OF NOVEMBER 2024 / 16TH KARTHIKA, 1946

                    RCREV. NO. 380 OF 2017

      AGAINST THE ORDER DATED 31.08.2015 IN IA NO.15498/2015
    IN RCP NO.105 OF 2013 OF RENT CONTROL COURT,THRISSUR
 ARISING OUT OF THE JUDGMENT DATED 07.04.2017 IN RCA NO.75
OF 2015 OF IV ADDITIONAL RENT CONTROL APPELLATE AUTHORITY,
                          THRISSUR
REVISION PETITIONER/APPELLANT/RESPONDENT:

           JOY DANIEL
           AGED 59 YEARS, S/O. DANIEL, KANNAMPUZHA,
           THOTTATHIL LANE, CHIYYARAM VILLAGE, THRISSUR.

           BY ADV SRI.V.K.PEERMOHAMED KHAN


RESPONDENT/RESPONDENT/PETITIONER:

    *1     N.A.IBRAHIMKUTTY
 RP No.753/2020 in
RCR No.380/2017 &
RCR No.380/2017



                             -:4:-             2024:KER:82440
           S/O. NJARAKKATTIL, ADIMAKUNJU HAJI, KURIACHIRA
           DESOM, CHIYYARAM VILLAGE, THRISSUR - 680 001.
           (DIED, LEGAL REPRESENTATIVES IMPLEADED)

    2      ADDL.R2. ZEENATH IBRAHIM,
           W/O. LATE N.A IBRAHIMKUTTY, AGED 56, NJARAKKATTIL
           HOUSE, BISMILLAH MANZIL, ST. MARY'S STREET,
           KURIACHIRA P O, THRISSUR-680006.

    3      ADDL.R3.RAZIL IBRAHIM,
           S/O. LATE N.A IBRAHIMKUTTY, AGED 32, NJARAKKATTIL
           HOUSE, BISMILLAH MANZIL, ST. MARY'S STREET,
           KURIACHIRA P O, THRISSUR-680006.

    4      ADDL.R4. NIZIL IBRAHIM
           S/O. LATE N.A IBRAHIMKUTTY, AGED 28, NJARAKKATTIL
           HOUSE, BISMILLAH MANZIL, ST. MARY'S STREET,
           KURIACHIRA P O, THRISSUR-680006.

    5      ADDL.R5. SANAM IBRAHIM
           D/O. LATE N.A IBRAHIMKUTTY, AGED 25, NJARAKKATTIL
           HOUSE, BISMILLAH MANZIL, ST. MARY'S STREET,
           KURIACHIRA P O, THRISSUR-680006. (ADDITIONAL R2 TO
           R5 ARE IMPLEADED AS THE LEGAL REPRESENTATIVES OF
           THE DECEASED 1ST RESPONDENT VIDE ORDER DATED
           21.02.2018 IN IA 386/18.)

           BY ADV SRI.P.B.KRISHNAN

     THIS RENT CONTROL REVISION HAVING BEEN FINALLY HEARD
ON 12.09.2024, ALONG WITH RP.753/2020, THE COURT ON
07.11.2024 PASSED THE FOLLOWING:
 RP No.753/2020 in
RCR No.380/2017 &
RCR No.380/2017



                                               -:5:-                     2024:KER:82440
                                                                                     "C.R."



                                            ORDER

Dr.Kauser Edappagath, J.

Doubting the correctness of the law declared by the three

Division Benches1 of this Court on the question of maintainability

of an application filed under Section 12 (1) of the Kerala Buildings

(Lease and Rent Control) Act, 1965 (for short, the Rent Control

Act) in an appeal preferred against the order passed under

Section 12(3), a Full Bench2 of this Court thought it appropriate to

refer the question to a Larger Bench for an authoritative

pronouncement, and that is how the above review petition has

been placed before us.

Background Facts

2. The facts of the case lie within a very narrow compass.

The landlord filed a Rent Control Petition against his tenant for

eviction under Sections 11(2)(b), 11(3) and 11(4)(v) of the Rent

Control Act before the Rent Control Court, Thrissur as RCP 1 Sulaiman Sahib v. Mohemmed Moosa, (2003 (2) KLT 1058), Mohammed Shameer v. Ashokan (2015 (1) KLT 396) and City Co-operative Hospital v. Luquman (2017 (3) KLT 1172) 2 Joy Daniel v. Ibrahimkutty {2020 (2) KLT 850 (FB)} RP No.753/2020 in RCR No.380/2017 &

-:6:- 2024:KER:82440 No.105/2013. There is no dispute between the parties regarding

their jural relationship and rate of rent. The tenant is running an

electric shop in the building under the name and style 'Sara

Electricals'. The rate of rent per month is `66,000/-. During the

pendency of the Rent Control Petition, the landlord filed IA

No.456/2013 on 20/12/2013 at the trial court under Section 12(1)

of the Rent Control Act seeking a direction to the tenant to pay

the admitted arrears of rent. According to the landlord, a sum of

`18,07,819/- was due and payable towards arrears of rent. The

tenant disputed the allegation and filed a statement contending

that he was liable to pay only `5,63,817/-. By the order dated

12/6/2015, the Rent Control Court directed the tenant to pay the

admitted arrears of rent. Though the Rent Control Court granted

sufficient time to the tenant to pay the admitted arrears of rent,

the tenant failed to remit the same. The landlord then filed IA

No.15498/2015 under Section 12(3) of the Rent Control Act

seeking an order to stop further proceedings and to direct the

tenant to hand over the possession of the building to him. By the

order dated 31/8/2015 passed in IA No.15498/2015, the Rent

Control Court recorded a finding that the tenant has failed to pay RP No.753/2020 in RCR No.380/2017 &

-:7:- 2024:KER:82440 the admitted arrears of rent (`5,63,817/-) and consequently

directed the tenant to hand over the petition-scheduled building

to the landlord within a period of one month. By a separate order,

on the same date, the Rent Control Court disposed of the Rent

Control Petition.

3. Assailing the aforesaid order in IA No.15498/2015, the

tenant filed RCA No.75/2015 before the Rent Control Appellate

Authority, Thrissur (for short, the Appellate Authority). Pending

adjudication of the appeal, the landlord filed IA No.5136/2016 on

16/11/2016 invoking Section 12(1) of the Rent Control Act

seeking an order directing the tenant to deposit the then

admitted arrears of rent. By the order dated 9/3/2017, the

Appellate Authority passed an order under Section 12(2) in IA

No.5136/2016 and directed the tenant to pay the admitted

arrears of rent of `10,88,000/- within four weeks or to show

cause. The Appellate Authority passed an order on 7/4/2017

under Section 12(3) directing the tenant to put the landlord in

possession of the building as the direction in IA No.5136/2016

was not complied with.

4. The tenant preferred RCR No.380/2017 challenging the RP No.753/2020 in RCR No.380/2017 &

-:8:- 2024:KER:82440 order dated 7/4/2017 in RCA No.75/2015. In the revision petition,

the tenant essentially took up a contention that the application

filed by the landlord, i.e., IA No. 5136/2016 was not maintainable

and it was not open to the landlord to invoke Section 12(1) of the

Rent Control Act in an appeal filed by the tenant against an order

passed by the Rent Control Court in exercise of its power under

Section 12(3) of the Rent Control Act. In support of the said

contention, the tenant heavily relied on the two decisions of the

Division Benches of this Court in Sulaiman Sahib v. Mohammed

Moosa3 and Mohammed Shameer v. Ashokan4 wherein it was held

that the landlord is not entitled to file an application under

Section 12(1) of the Act in an appeal filed by the tenant against

an order dismissing his application to set aside the ex parte order

of eviction filed under Section 23(1)(h) of the Rent Control Act r/w

Rule 13(3) of the Kerala Buildings (Lease and Rent Control) Rules,

1979 (for short, the Rent Control Rules). The Division Bench

found that the above said dictum laid in Sulaiman Sahib and

Mohammed Shameer requires reconsideration by a Larger Bench.

Accordingly, the Division Bench, by the order dated 20/3/2018,

3(2003 (2) KLT 1058) 4(2015 (1) KLT 396) RP No.753/2020 in RCR No.380/2017 &

-:9:- 2024:KER:82440 referred the Revision Petition to the Full Bench. After the Division

Bench passed the said order of reference, another Division Bench

of this Court in City Co-operative Hospital v. Luquman5 held that

an application under Section 12(1) of the Rent Control Act cannot

be filed in an appeal pending against an order passed under

Section 12(3) of the Act. By order dated 28/4/2020, the Full Bench

in Joy Daniel answered the reference in favour of the tenant

upholding the law laid in City Co-operative Hospital, Sulaiman

Sahib and Mohammed Shameer. It was declared that the Rent

Control Act does not cast an obligation on the tenant to pay the

admitted arrears of rent while pursuing an appeal filed by him

against an order passed by the Rent Control Court under Section

12(3) of the Rent Control Act. The landlord then filed Review

Petition No.753/2020 seeking review of the order dated

28/4/2020 of the Full Bench. On 26/5/2022, the Full Bench

referred the Review Petition to a Larger Bench doubting the

correctness of the decisions in City Co-operative Hospital,

Sulaiman Sahib and Mohammed Shameer.




Points for Determination
5(2017 (3) KLT 1172)
 RP No.753/2020 in
RCR No.380/2017 &




                                  -:10:-                  2024:KER:82440

5. The issue referred to us concerns the interpretation of

the provisions of Section 12 of the Rent Control Act that casts an

obligation on the tenant to pay the arrears of the rent to the

extent admitted by him to contest any proceedings for eviction,

whether it be before the Rent Control Court or the Appellate

Authority. In particular, we are called upon to give an

authoritative pronouncement on the question - whether an

application under Section 12(1) of the Rent Control Act is

maintainable in an appeal filed under Section 18 against an order

passed under Section 12(3)? Incidentally, we will also be

addressing the issue regarding the maintainability of an

application under Section 12(1) in an appeal arising from other

types of orders passed during the course of eviction proceedings

under Section 11.

Rival Submissions

6. We have heard the learned Senior Counsel

Sri.P.B.Krishnan on behalf of the landlord and the learned

Counsel Sri. V.K.Peermohamed Khan on behalf of the tenant. We

have also perused the records.

 RP No.753/2020 in
RCR No.380/2017 &




                                   -:11:-                 2024:KER:82440

7. The submissions of the learned Senior Counsel for the

landlord, briefly stated, are as follows:

(i) An order passed in exercise of the power under Section

12(3) of the Rent Control Act is essentially an order

passed on an application under Section 11, and such an

order falls within the purview of the expression 'any

order' in Section 12. Any other interpretation has the

effect of offering room to the tenant to evade payment of

even the admitted arrears of rent and procrastinate the

proceedings thereby depriving the landlord of the

machinery provided by the integrated scheme of the Act

to redress the default made by the tenant to pay even

the admitted arrears of rent during the prosecution of an

application filed under Section 11.

(ii) The Rent Control Authorities have a statutory obligation

to ensure that the tenant is not able to contest the

eviction petition or the appeal without depositing or

paying the admitted arrears of rent. Therefore, the view

that the application under Section 12 is not maintainable

in an appeal instituted against an order passed by the RP No.753/2020 in RCR No.380/2017 &

-:12:- 2024:KER:82440 Rent Control Court under Section 12(3) is not justifiable

and legally sustainable.

(iii) It would be unreasonable to limit the applicability of

Section 12 only to appeals from final orders of eviction

passed under Section 11 of the Rent Control Act.

(iv) The challenge which is being pursued by a tenant against

an order under Section 12(3) is equal to a challenge

against an order of eviction passed under Section 11 and

therefore even in the absence of any specific mention in

Section 12, the tenant can be permitted to challenge the

order by preferring an appeal before the Appellate

Authority only on its compliance with respect to payment

of the arrears of the admitted rent as contemplated

under Section 12. Reliance was placed on Sahadevan v.

Kesavan Nair 6.

(v) The law declared in City Co-operative Hospital, Sulaiman

Sahib and Mohammed Shameer that Section 12 of the

Rent Control Act will be attracted only in an appeal from

the final order of eviction under Section 11 and not in an

appeal arising from other types of orders is not good law 6 (1973 KLT 37) RP No.753/2020 in RCR No.380/2017 &

-:13:- 2024:KER:82440 and liable to be overruled.

(vi) The dictum laid down by the Full Bench in Joy Daniel that

the Rent Control Act does not cast an obligation on the

tenant to pay the admitted arrears of rent while pursuing

an appeal filed by him against an order passed by the

Rent Control Court under Section 12(3) cannot be

sustained.

8. Per contra the submissions of the learned counsel for

the tenant, briefly stated, are as follows:

(i) Section 12(1) of the Rent Control Act does not impel the

tenant to pay the admitted arrears of rent while pursuing

an appeal filed by him against an order passed under

Section 12(3) of the Act.

(ii) The wordings in Section 12(1) of the Rent Control Act

refers only to an application for eviction filed under

Section 11 of the Act, and therefore Section 12(1) does

not apply to an appeal arising from any other order

passed by the Rent Control Court, including an order

passed under Section 12(3).


  (iii)       City Co-operative Hospital, Sulaiman Sahib, Mohammed
 RP No.753/2020 in
RCR No.380/2017 &




                                 -:14:-                 2024:KER:82440

Shameer and Joy Daniel have been correctly decided and

do not require any reconsideration.

Analysis and Findings

9. The lease of immovable property is ordinarily

governed by the Transfer of Property Act. Such a lease comes to

an end by any of the modes prescribed by the Transfer of

Property Act, and the landlord gets the right of re-entry. This right

of reversion is restricted and fettered by the provisions of Rent

Control Legislation enacted in various States in India. One such

Rent Control Legislation enacted in Kerala - the Rent Control Act-

restricts the unfettered right enjoyed by the landlord under the

Transfer of Property Act to evict his tenant. Though the Rent

Control Act is mainly meant to protect the tenant from arbitrary

and whimsical eviction, it at the same time, ensures the

landlord's right to get his building back on certain specified

grounds. Sub-sections (2), (3), (4), (7) and (8) of Section 11 of the

Rent Control Act enable the landlord to file an application for

eviction on the ground mentioned therein. The tenant's right to

contest such an application or to prefer the appeal against an RP No.753/2020 in RCR No.380/2017 &

-:15:- 2024:KER:82440 order passed in such an application is circumscribed by his vital

obligation to pay the rent as mandated in Section 12.

10. Section 12 of the Rent Control Act reads as under:

"12. Payment of deposit of rent during the pendency of proceedings for eviction: (1) No tenant against whom an application for eviction has been made by a landlord under Section 11, shall be entitled to contest the application before the Rent Control Court under that section, or to prefer an appeal under Section 18 against any order made by the Rent Control Court on the application unless he has paid or pays to the landlord, or deposits with the Rent Control Court or the appellate authority, as the case may be, all arrears of rent admitted by the tenant to be due in respect of the building up to the date of payment or deposit, and continues to pay or to deposit any rent which may subsequently become due in respect of the building, until the termination of the proceedings before the Rent Control Court or the appellate authority, as the case may be.

(2) The deposit under sub-section (1) shall be made within such time as the Court may fix and in such manner as may be prescribed and shall be accompanied by the fee prescribed for the service of notice referred to in sub-

section (4):

Provided that the time fixed by the Court for the deposit of the arrears of rent shall not be less than four weeks from the date of the order and the time fixed for the deposit of rent which subsequently accrues due shall not be less than two weeks from the date on which the rent becomes due. (3) If any tenant fails to pay or to deposit the rent as RP No.753/2020 in RCR No.380/2017 &

-:16:- 2024:KER:82440 aforesaid, the Rent Control Court or the appellate authority, as the case may be, shall, unless the tenant shows sufficient cause to the contrary, stop all further proceedings and make an order directing the tenant to put landlord in possession of the building.

(4) When any deposit is made under sub-section (1), the Rent Control Court or the appellate authority, as the case may be, shall cause notice of the deposit to be served on the landlord in the prescribed manner and the amount deposited may, subject to such conditions as may be prescribed, be withdrawn by the landlord on application made by him to the Rent Control Court or the appellate authority in that behalf."

11. The opening sentence in the above provision, ' No

tenant against whom an application for eviction has been made

by a landlord under Section 11' , makes it clear that the special

restriction for contesting can only apply in cases where the

original proceeding is for eviction of the tenant under Section 11.

The restriction cannot apply to an application filed by the landlord

under sub-section (5) of Section 11 seeking renovation of the

building. The application under sub-section (5) of Section 11 is

not for eviction but only for a direction to the tenant to permit the

landlord to enter into the tenanted premises and carry out the

renovation without parting with possession. Similarly, provisions RP No.753/2020 in RCR No.380/2017 &

-:17:- 2024:KER:82440 under Section 12 cannot be put in service where the application

is for fixation of fair rent under Section 5.

12. Sub-section (1) of Section 12 obliges a tenant who

wants to contest any proceedings for eviction, whether it be

before the Rent Control Court or the Appellate Authority, to pay

all arrears of rent admitted by him. It is also his obligation to pay

rent which falls due subsequent to the commencement of the

proceedings. The deposit contemplated under sub-section (1) is

not the amount determined after adjudication but is the amount

admitted by the tenant. Section 12 proceedings can be invoked

against the tenant, only when the arrears of rent is admitted.

Sub-section (2) deals with the time and manner in which the

deposit contemplated by sub-section (1) is to be made. Sub-

section (3) deals with the consequence of non-deposit as

contemplated in Section 12(2). If the tenant fails to pay or

deposit the admitted rent without any reasonable cause, as

provided under sub-sections (1) and (2), the landlord acquires the

right under Section 12(3) to get an eviction. Sub-section (4)

deals with the manner in which the amount deposited should be

dealt with and paid to the landlord. Once the petition came to a RP No.753/2020 in RCR No.380/2017 &

-:18:- 2024:KER:82440 close and an order for eviction was passed, there was no further

occasion or right for the tenant to contest the petition for eviction

or appeal as the case may be on depositing the arrears of rent.

13. Section 12 which is part and parcel of proceedings on

an application for eviction under Section 11, consists of two

limbs. The first limb has application for contesting an application

under Section 11. It refers to the tenant's right to contest the

application for eviction under Section 11, for which he must pay

or deposit the admitted arrears. The second limb has application

while preferring an appeal under Section 18. It refers to the

tenant's right to prefer an appeal for which also he must pay or

deposit the admitted arrears. However, the Supreme Court 7 while

interpreting a pari materia provision under the Tripura Rent

Control Act, held that the expression 'prefer an appeal' must be

interpreted to mean 'proceed with the appeal' without paying the

admitted arrears of rent. Recently the Kerala High Court 8 also

took the same view and held that paying or depositing of all

arrears of rent admitted by the tenant is not a condition

precedent for presenting an appeal under Section 18. The

7 Manik Lal Majumdar and Others v Gouranga Chandra Dey and Others (AIR 2005 SC 1090) 8 Suvarna v. Ibrahimkutty (2022 (1) KLT 818) RP No.753/2020 in RCR No.380/2017 &

-:19:- 2024:KER:82440 pendency of an original petition of eviction under Section 11 is a

condition precedent to attract the first limb, and the pendency of

an appeal under Section 18 against an order made by the Rent

Control Court on the application for eviction is a condition

precedent to attract the second limb. We are concerned with the

second limb inasmuch as the primary question that falls for

consideration before us relates to the maintainability of an

application filed under Section 12(1) in an appeal filed against an

order passed under Section 12(3).

14. The very same question came up for consideration

before the Division Bench in City Co-operative Hospital. It was

held that neither is it permissible nor recognizable under law to

have recourse under Section 12 in an appeal pending against an

order passed under Section 12(3) of the Act. The Division Bench

relied upon the decisions of the two earlier Division Benches in

Sulaiman Sahib and Mohammed Shameer. In both those decisions,

it was held that the landlord is not entitled to file an application

under Section 12(1) of the Act in an appeal which arises from

Rule 13(3) of the Rent Control Rules. In fact, the question whether

in an appeal filed by the tenant from an order passed under RP No.753/2020 in RCR No.380/2017 &

-:20:- 2024:KER:82440 Section 12(3) of the Act, an application under Section 12(1) of the

Act is maintainable or not, did not directly arise for consideration

in those decisions, since in both cases challenge in the appeal

was against order passed dismissing an application filed by the

tenant to set aside the ex parte order passed against him.

15. The Full Bench of this Court in Joy Daniel answering the

reference approved the law declared in Sulaiman Sahib,

Mohammed Shameer and City Co-operative Hospital and held

that the Rent Control Act does not cast an obligation on the

tenant to pay the admitted arrears of rent while pursuing an

appeal filed by him against an order passed by the Rent Control

Court under Section 12(3). The Full Bench has arrived at the

aforesaid proposition on the reasoning that the obligation cast

under Section 12(1) is exclusively confined to an application for

eviction filed under Section 11 and in an appeal filed challenging

an order passed on such an application, but it cannot be

extended in the case of an appeal instituted against an order

passed by the Rent Control Court under Section 12(3). We are

unable to subscribe to the dictum laid down by the Division

Benches in Co-operative Hospital, Sulaiman Sahib, Mohammed RP No.753/2020 in RCR No.380/2017 &

-:21:- 2024:KER:82440 Shameer and endorsed by the Full Bench in Joy Daniel for the

following reasons.

16. While arriving at the finding that the appeal in which

the Appellate Authority may exercise the power to direct deposit

of admitted rent could only be with respect to an appeal arising

from a final order of eviction under Section 11 and not otherwise,

the Division Bench in City Co-operative Hospital and Mohammed

Shameer interpreted the term "on the application" found in

Section 12(1) as one refers only to an application made and

mentioned in the first limb of Section 12(1), i.e., an application

under Section 11 of the Rent Control Act. We are of the view that

such an interpretation would run contrary to the integrated

scheme of Sections 11 and 12 of the Rent Control Act. The

expression in sub-section 12(1) that "No tenant against whom an

application for eviction has been made by a landlord under

Section 11, shall be entitled to contest the application before the

Rent Control Court under that section, or to prefer an appeal

under Section 18 against any order made by the Rent Control

Court on the application unless he has paid or pays to the

landlord, or deposits with the Rent Control Court or the appellate RP No.753/2020 in RCR No.380/2017 &

-:22:- 2024:KER:82440 authority, as the case may be, all arrears of rent admitted by the

tenant ...." clearly suggests that the tenant is not entitled to

contest the application for eviction and to even prefer an appeal

against any order made on the Section 11 application without

paying the admitted arrears of rent. The Division Bench in Co-

operative Hospital and Mohammed Shameer did not advert or

consider the purport of the word "any order" preceding the word

"on the application" while interpreting the latter word as above. It

is an accepted principle of interpretation of statutes that a

provision in a statute must be read as a whole, and no word of a

provision in a statute could be construed in isolation. It is also

well settled that the Court should examine every word of a

provision in a statute in its context. The interpretation is best

which makes the textual interpretation contextual9. The twin

object of the Rent Control Act is to protect the tenant from

arbitrary and whimsical eviction and, at the same time, ensure

the right of the landlord to recover possession of the tenanted

premises on certain contingencies. Thus, it is a social legislation

beneficial to both landlord and tenant. The legislature considered

9 Reserve Bank of India v Peerless General Finance and Investment Co.Ltd ., (AIR 1987 SC 1023) RP No.753/2020 in RCR No.380/2017 &

-:23:- 2024:KER:82440 the payment of rent as the primary duty of the tenant and that is

why Section 12 has been incorporated. Section 12 conceives a

scheme to protect the rights of the landlord to receive the rent,

which is the consideration for the contract of lease, and to

compel the tenant to discharge his fundamental obligation to pay

rent to contest proceedings initiated by the landlord for eviction.

It is a provision intended for the benefit of the landlord. While

interpreting a beneficial provision in a statute, the court must

always interpret the words in the provision in such a manner that

the relief contemplated by the provision is secured and not

denied to the class intended to be benefited. Thus, the use of the

expression "any order.....on the application" without denoting a

particular order warrants an interpretation in furtherance of the

said legislative intention. The said expression requires a liberal

interpretation in its widest amplitude in the landlord's favour.

Interpreting so, the expression "any order made by the Rent

Control Court on the application" found in Section 12(1) must be

understood to encompass all orders which may be passed during

the course of prosecution of an application for eviction under

Section 11.

 RP No.753/2020 in
RCR No.380/2017 &




                                 -:24:-                2024:KER:82440

17. Though the issue involved in Sulaiman Sahib and

Mohammed Shameer was as to the maintainability of an

application under Section 12(1) in an appeal filed by the tenant

against an order dismissing his application to set aside the ex

parte order of eviction, the ultimate finding therein was that

Section 12 would be attracted only in an appeal from a final order

of eviction under Section 11 and not in appeals arising from other

types of orders passed during the course of the proceedings

under Section 11 before the Rent Control Court. There is nothing

to indicate in Section 12(1) to restrict the applicability of the said

provision to the final order of eviction passed under Section 11

alone. The embargo cast on the tenant to contest the

application/appeal postulated by Section 12(1) applies to any

order passed in the course of pursuing an application under

Section 11. If the proposition laid down by the Division Bench and

Full Bench that the obligation cast under Section 12(1) is

exclusively confined to an order of eviction passed under Section

11 is accepted, it may provide room to a tenant who persistently

defaulted in paying even the admitted arrears of rent to continue

to evade payment and prolong the adjudication of Section 11 RP No.753/2020 in RCR No.380/2017 &

-:25:- 2024:KER:82440 application besides nullifying the paramount objective of

incorporating Section 12 for effective and meaningful prosecution

of proceedings for eviction under Section 11. Therefore, an order

passed in the exercise of the power under Section 12(3) of the

Rent Control Act or Rule 13(3) of the Rent Control Rules would fall

within the purview of the expression "any order" in Section 12(1).

18. The scheme of the Rent Control Act reflects that the

order under Section 12(3) is a final order of eviction passed

during the course of eviction proceedings under Section 11. On

passing an order under Section 12(3), the proceedings for

eviction under Section 11 or appeal under Section 18, as the case

may be, come to an end and stand closed. Thus, an order passed

under Section 12(3) has all the characteristics, trappings and

effect of a final order of eviction passed under Section 11. In

Sahadevan, in the context of the applicability of Section 14 of the

Rent Control Act (prior to its amendment in 1966 by Act 7 of

1966) to an order passed under Section 12(3), the Division Bench

of this Court observed that on a proper consideration of the

provisions contained in Sections 11 and 12(3), it has to be said

that an order passed under Section 12(3) is really an order RP No.753/2020 in RCR No.380/2017 &

-:26:- 2024:KER:82440 passed under Section 11.

19. While finding that the order to stop further

proceedings in the Rent Control Petition or Rent Control Appeal

cannot be treated or equated to an order rendered in consonance

with Section 11 of the Act, the Division Bench in City Co-operative

Hospital observed that when an order is passed under Section

12(3), it would be an order passed by the Rent Control Court or

the Rent Control Appellate Authority, as the case may be,

terminating the proceedings initiated by way of Rent Control

Petition or the Rent Control Appeal, but that does not mean it is

an order of eviction under Section 11 of the Rent Control Act

itself. We cannot subscribe to the said view. The words used in

Section 12(3) are "stop all further proceedings and make an

order directing the tenant to put the landlord in possession of the

building". The very same words "order directing the tenant to put

the landlord in possession of the building " have been used in sub-

sections (2), (3), (4), (7), and (8) of Section 11 as well. Thus, an

order passed under Section 12(3) is actually and effectively a

final order of eviction. In fact, it is more effective than an order of

eviction passed under Section 11 because the effect of an order RP No.753/2020 in RCR No.380/2017 &

-:27:- 2024:KER:82440 of eviction passed under Section 12(3) cannot be undone or

obliterated at all unlike an order passed under sub-section (2)(b),

3 or (4)(iv) of Section 11. An order of eviction passed under

Section 11(2)(b) can be set aside under Section 11(2)(c) on

payment of entire arrears of rent with interest and cost within

one month or an extended period. An order of eviction passed

under Section 11(3) is subject to Section 11(12) which says that a

landlord who has obtained possession of a building pursuant to

an order under Section 11(3) does not occupy it without

reasonable cause within one month of the date of obtaining

possession, or having so occupied it, vacates it without

reasonable cause within six months of such date, the tenant is

entitled to get restoration of possession. A tenant who is evicted

under Section 11(4)(iv) shall have the first option to have a

reconstructed building allotted to him with liability to its fair rent

under the proviso. When an order is passed under Section 12(3)

in an application for eviction filed under sub-sections (2), (3) or

(4)(iv) of Section 11, the provisions of sub-sections (2)(c), (12) or

Proviso to sub-section 4(iv) as indicated above will not apply.

Having all the characteristics of a final order of eviction, a RP No.753/2020 in RCR No.380/2017 &

-:28:- 2024:KER:82440 challenge against such an order under Section 12 (3) needs to be

construed as a challenge against an order of eviction under

Section 11. Hence, the obligation under Section 12(1) is equally

applicable with respect to an appeal filed under Section 12(3).

20. In the light of the above findings, we hold that the law

declared in Sulaiman Sahib and Mohammed Shameer that Section

12 of the Rent Control Act will be attracted only in an appeal from

the final order of eviction under Section 11 and not in an appeal

arising from other types of orders and in City Co-operative

Hospital that it is not permissible to invoke Section 12(1) of the

Rent Control Act in an appeal preferred against an order passed

under Section 12(3) is not good law and liable to be overruled.

Conclusions

21. In conclusion, we answer the reference as follows:

(i). An order passed in exercise of the power under Section

12(3) of the Rent Control Act is essentially an order passed on an

application under Section 11, and, as such, falls within the

purview of the expression "any order" in Section 12.

(ii). An order passed under Section 12(3) of the Rent Control RP No.753/2020 in RCR No.380/2017 &

-:29:- 2024:KER:82440 Act during the course of eviction proceedings under Section 11

has all the characteristics, trappings and effect of a final order

passed under Section 11.

(iii). An application under Section 12(1) of the Rent Control

Act is maintainable in an appeal filed under Section 18 against an

order passed under Section 12(3).

(iv). An application under Section 12(1) of the Rent Control

Act is maintainable not only in appeal from a final order of

eviction under Section 11 but also in appeals arising from other

types of orders passed during the course of proceedings under

Section 11 before the Rent Control Court.

(v). The judgments in City Co-operative Hospital, Sulaiman

Sahib and Mohammed Shameer do not lay down the correct law

and are hereby overruled.

Relief

22. In view of the declaration of law that an application

under Section 12(1) of the Rent Control Act is perfectly

maintainable in an appeal filed against an order passed under

Section 12(3), the judgment of the Full Bench in Joy Daniel is RP No.753/2020 in RCR No.380/2017 &

-:30:- 2024:KER:82440 reversed.

23. Having answered the reference as above, in normal

course, we would have remitted the case to the Division Bench

for disposal. But we feel that such a course is not necessary since

there is hardly anything more to be considered on the merits of

the case.

24. It is quite open for this court to decide the merit as

well instead of sending the case back to the appropriate Bench

for further consideration after answering the reference by virtue

of the specific power conferred under Section 7 of the Kerala High

Court Act, 1958.

25. There is no dispute regarding the quantum of admitted

rent. The Appellate Authority gave four weeks' time to the tenant

to deposit the arrears of rent as contemplated under the proviso

to sub-section (2) of Section 12. The tenant failed to pay the rent

or show sufficient cause to the contrary. The sufficient cause

must be some reasonable circumstances which prevented the

tenant from making the deposit in time. In the counter statement

to IA No.5136/2016, the tenant had set up a case that he had

incurred huge expenses towards carrying out repair works of the RP No.753/2020 in RCR No.380/2017 &

-:31:- 2024:KER:82440 building and the same has to be adjusted towards the admitted

arrears. Any claim for set-off cannot be treated as a sufficient

cause for making the deposit in time.

We, therefore, see no reason to interfere with the order of

the Appellate Authority. We, accordingly, dismiss the Rent

Control Revision (RCR No.380/2017) and direct the tenant to give

vacant possession of the building to the landlord within two

months from today.

Sd/-

DR.A.K.JAYASANKARAN NAMBIAR, JUDGE

Sd/-

DR. KAUSER EDAPPAGATH, JUDGE

Sd/-

MOHAMMED NIAS C.P., JUDGE

Sd/-

C.S.SUDHA, JUDGE

Sd/-

SYAM KUMAR V.M., JUDGE

Rp

 
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