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Puthiapurayil Kannyan Baduvan And Another v. Chennyanteakath Puthiapurayil Alikutti And Others

Puthiapurayil Kannyan Baduvan And Another
v.
Chennyanteakath Puthiapurayil Alikutti And Others

(High Court Of Judicature At Madras)

Second Appeal No. 94 Of 1917 | 26-03-1919


[This Second Appeal first came on for hearing on the 19th day of July 1918, before their Lordships Phillips and Kumaraswami Sastri, JJ.]

In this case a lease was granted to the 2nd defendant for a period of 8 years. This lease comprised 11 items of property, and the period of 8 years had expired at the time of suit. The plaintiff is a melcharthdar from the jenmi, and his melcharth refers to only one item of the 2nd defendants lands.

Two minor points have been raised in this Second Appeal; firstly, that the melcharth which was obtained by one Ussan Parikutti and assigned to the 2nd defendant is valid and secondly that notice to quit had been waived by subsequent receipt of rent. These two points were found against the 2nd defendant by the District Munsif, and were not argued before the Subordinate Judge, and we agree with the District Munsif that they must be found against the appellant for the reasons given by him. The fact that the appellant now urges, i.e. , that the properties were Devaswom properties and not ordinary tarwad properties, is a question of fact which cannot be decided without evidence, and it is very doubtful if it can affect the merits of the case.

The main point for consideration is whether the plaintiff is entitled to evict the 2nd defendant from one item of his leasehold lands without paying compensation to him for improvements in the other items. The Subordinate Judge has found that he can do so, and the reasons he gives are that the rent of each of the items is stated separately in the lease deed Exhibit X and that the term of each is to expire after 8 years, and there is no agreement for bidding the lessor to recover each item separately. As a matter of fact the rent of the plaint item is not stated separately in the lease, but its rent is lumped up with that of the only other nilam contained in the lease, the other 9 items all being parambas .

It has no doubt been held that, when there is a severance of the interest of the landlord, the owner of the severed interest can sue to recover the portion of the property which has fallen to him. Vide Korapalu v. Narayana (I.L.R. 38 Mad., 445) [LQ/MadHC/1913/146] , and Syed Ahmad v. Magnesite Syndicate, Ltd. (I.L.R., 39 Mad., 1049) [LQ/MadHC/1915/622] . But these decisions are not decisions from Malabar, and hardly seem to bear on the question of the tenants rights under the Improvements Act. In this case plaintiff is not the original landlord but a melcharthdar, a lessee under the landlord, but there seems to be no reason why if a landlord cannot eject from one item only, the assignee from the landlord should be allowed to do so. Under the Malabar Compensation for Tenants Improvements Act, a tenant is entitled to resist eviction until he has been paid compensation for his improvements, but it has been held in an unreported case, S. A. No. 2180 of 1914, that when the lease is divisible and when no hardship is caused to the tenant by ejecting him from one item of land without paying for his improvements in the other items, he can be evicted from a portion only of the leased property without compensation for improvements on other items. This judgment does not decide definitely what the tenants rights are under Sect. 5 of the Malabar Improvements Act. It appears to consider that his rights are dependent on facts, such as whether the lease can be divided up into parts and on the hardship that the tenant might suffer through the division of the property and ejectment from one portion of it. The object of Sect. 5 of the Act appears to be to give the tenant some security that he will receive the value of the improvements made upon the land, and the question that has to be decided is whether the whole of the land held on lease is the security for such payment, or whether only the items of land on which those improvements stand form the security. Sect. 5 is in very general terms and merely says that the tenant shall on ejectment be entitled to compensation for improvements, and is entitled to remain in possession until ejectment in execution of a decree or order of Court. The language of the section would seem to imply that a tenant can resist eviction from any portion of his holding until he gets compensation, and there is no section of the Act which specially authorizes eviction from a part of the holding without paying compensation. In Sect. 3, Cl. (3) Improvement is defined as any work or product of a work which adds to the value of the holding, is suitable to it and consistent with the purpose for which the holding was let, mortgaged or occupied; and again Sect. 9 relates to improvements which enhance the value and annual produce of the holding. The use of the word holding seems to imply that the whole of the land demised under the lease has to be considered when there is a question of compensation for improvements; and we see in Sect. 6, Cl. (2), that if a tenant is found to be in arrears with his rent, the Court is directed to set off such sum against the amount found due for improvements. If therefore a landlord is entitled to evict a tenant from a portion of his holding on which no improvements have been made, he might obtain a decree for ejectment and for arrears of rent, and the tenant would not be able to set off against arrears of rent the amount due for improvements, and he would thus lose the benefit of Sect. 6 (2). We think that this is a very important question which in many cases is likely to arise in Malabar, and consider it advisable to refer it to the decision of a Full Bench of this Court, more especially in view of the decision in S. A. No. 2180 of 1914, which does not seem to have held that there is any definite principle und erlying the provisions of the Act as regards the security which the tenant has for the payment of his improvements. We therefore refer for the orders of the Full Bench the following question:

When several items of property are comprised in a lease, is the landlord entitled to evict the tenant from one of those item only, without paying him compensation for the improvements on other items

[This Second Appeal came on for hearing in pursuance of the above Order of Reference, before the Full Bench as constituted above.]

[1] The Malabar compensation for Tenants Improvements Act, 1899, entitles a tenant who is sued in ejectment to compensation for improvements to the land from which it is sought to eject him, and authorizes him, notwithstanding the determination of the tenancy, to remain in possession until ejectment in execution of a decree or of an order of Court varying that decree as provided in Section 6(3). Section 6(1) provides that the decree is to direct that on payment by the plaintiff into Court of the amount found due for improvements the defendant is " to put the plaintiff into possession of the land with the improvements thereon." As under Section 5(2) the tenant after decree is to continue in possession as a tenant, Section 6(3) provides for a re-valuation of the improvements when the plaintiff seeks to execute the decree with reference to the state of things then existing, and for an order of Court varying the decree accordingly. The only improvements for which compensation is payable under these sections are improvements to the land from which it is sought to eject the tenant, and they neither impose nor recognize any obligation on the plaintiff to pay for improvements to land from which the plaintiff does not seek and is not entitled to eject the tenant. We have therefore to consider the question referred to us apart from the provisions of the Act. A lessor cannot give a tenant notice to quit a part of the holding only and then sue to eject him from such part only, as pointed out quite recently by the Privy Council in Harihar Banerji v. Ramasashi Ray (1918) 35 M.L.J. 70

7. Consequently if the suit is brought by the original lessor the answer to the question referred to us must be in the negative because such a suit does not lie at all. Other considerations, however, arise, where, as in the present case, the original lessor has parted in whole or in part with the reversion in part of the demised premises. Under the general law such an assignment effects a severance, and entitles the assignee on the expiry of the term to eject the tenant from the land covered by the assignment. There never was any question about this, but it was held in England that, while the assignee of the reversion in part was entitled to the benefit of the covenants in the lease as regards such part, the result of the severance effected by the assignment was to destroy altogether the conditions in the lease as for re-entry for non-payment of rent. Coke on Littleton 2.15a. The Law was altered as regards the case last mentioned by 22 and 23 Vict. C. 35 Section 3, and generally, as regards leases made after the passing of the Act, by Section 12 of the Conveyancing Act, 188

1. See Piggot v. Middlesex County Council (1909) 1 Ch. 134, 14

1. Section 109 of the Transfer of Property Act gets over the difficulty by providing that " the transferee shall possess all the rights of the transferor in the part transferred" words which are large enough to cover both covenants and conditions. There is no question of a condition here, as the suit was to recover possession on the expiry of the term. Under the general law the assignee of the reversion in part of the demised premises is entitled to bring such a suit, and there does not appear to be any ground for suggesting that the general law in this respect is inapplicable in Malabar. The learned judges in their Order, of Reference have referred to the provision in Section 6(2) that "the money due by the plaintiff to the defendant for rent or otherwise in respect of the tenancy" is to be set off against the amount found due for improvements. The only rent due to a plaintiff suing as assignee of the reversion in part of the demised premises would be the apportioned rent in respect of the part assigned to him. There would be therefore no difficulty in applying the provision in question to such a case. Moreover, it is a provision in favour of the landlord, and cannot be regarded as enlarging the tenant s rights. The view I have taken is in accordance as to the construction of the Act with the decision of Sadasiva Aiyar and Moore, JJ., in Second Appeal No. 2180 of 1914, and as to the question of severance with the decision of Sundara Aiyar and Sadasiva Aiyar, JJ., in Appeal Against Order No. 85 of 1911, an earlier stage of the same case. It was not suggested that there was any hardship to the tenant in that case or in this. If however it be apprehended that jenmis may be so unwise as to attempt to use the power of severance in a manner oppressive to their tenants, the proper course, it seems to me, is to move for an amendment of the Act.

[2] I would answer that the lessor is not entitled to eject from a part only of the holding, but that the assignee of the reversion in part of the demised premises is entitled to eject for due cause from such part on payment of the value of the improvements to that part, and that this answer applies to tenancies in Malabar.

Oldfield, J.

[3] I agree with the answer just proposed to the reference and accept the reasoning, by which it is supported, unreservedly, so far as it relates to the effect of severance on a tenancy. I agree also that its effect is undiminished, when as in the case before us, the tenant is holding over and there has been no acceptance of rent, involving that the lease has been renewed.

[4] I have however felt some hesitation regarding the application of Act I of 1900 as between the tenant and the transferee of a part of the leased property, because it has been argued that the Act is worded with reference to improvements to the holding, and compensation is payable only for improvements on the holding, that is the whole property covered by the original lease, not for those standing on or affecting the transferred portion. And no doubt in Section 3(3) an improvement is defined with reference to the value of the holding and the purpose, for which it is let; and in Sections 4, 7 and 9(i) improvements, which increase the value of the holding are referred to directly. But there are also provisions, in which the reference is not to the holding, but to the tenancy, such reference being direct in Section 6(2) and (3) and indirect in Section 6(1) where the reference to "the land" may be read as to the land referred to in the definition of "tenant" in Section 3(1). The question is then whether the use of the term " holding" was intended by the Legislature to be distinctive and to mean the property originally leased, not the portion of it, from which in consequence of a subsequent transfer the tenant would be separately ejected. The result of so regarding it will be the exclusion of claims to compensation after severance from the purview of the Act, and we have been shown no reason for thinking that this was contemplated. The Act contains no definition of the term "holding"; and in the circumstances I am of opinion that a liberal interpretation of it is legitimate and I therefore concur in the conclusion reached by the learned Chief Justice.

Sadasiva Aiyar, J.

[5] I agree with the judgment of my Lord and have nothing to add.

Coutts Trotter, J.

[6] I agree with my Lord. The Legislature might have created a substantive right in the tenant to compensation for his improvements enforced by a lien on his holding in its entirety. What in fact it has done is to make the right to compensation merely an adjunct to a suit in ejectment or for redemption. So far as I can see, the right itself does not even arise till such a suit is brought. That being so, the right must, it appears to me, be limited to the land which is the subject-matter of the suit, i.e., the lands from which it is actually sought to eject the tenant.

Seshagiri Aiyar, J.

[7] The scope of the reference was considerably limited during the second argument before a Fuller Bench. The objection which 1 had raised to the suggestion that there can be no eviction from part of the premises during the continuance of the tenancy was not attempted to be answered by Mr. Eroman Unni, on the second occasion. I feel no hesitation in saying that neither under Section 109 of the Transfer of Property Act, nor under the general Law of the land is it competent to an assignee of a part of the demised premises to eject the tenant from that portion compulsorily during the period of the tenancy. Even if Section 109 is capable of a different construction, I would hold that its operation should not be extended to agricultural tenancies in this country, because the rule of equity, justice and good conscience would be defeated rather than advanced by the extension of the doctrine of partial eviction to agricultural leases. As to the rule of English Law, I had formed an opinion at the first hearing that partial eviction before the expiry of the term of the tenancy is equally unavailing in England and I see no reason to change that view. But I do not think it necessary to discuss the point now. Therefore my answer to the question would be in the negative, if it is understood to refer to eviction before the expiry of the period of the lease.

[8] But what we have to consider is a case of a terminated tenancy which by virtue of the Malabar Compensation for Improvements Act has not wholly ceased to be operative. There can be no doubt that the act does not attempt to legislate whether there can be partial eviction or not. The Legislature has only provided for events happening on the filing of a suit for ejectment. At the same time, to my mind it seems clear, that it did not contemplate the possibility of a partial eviction. It, by the terms of Sections 5, 6, 7 and 9, seems to have assumed that the lease under which the tenant came in would continue intact. In Clause (1), the expression used is notwithstanding the determination of the tenancy." This must have reference to the one which was created on the first entry and not to the split up parts by the process of sale or assignment. Strictly speaking unless the tenant attorns or otherwise acknowledges the fractional landlord, there would be no tenancy to determine. Again in Section 6 Clause (1) the word "tenant" is used; in Clauses (2) and (3) the word "tenancy." These words are not appropriate to the relationship which comes into existence by reason of the division of the demised premises, either by conveyance or assignment. In Sections 7 and 9, as if by way of variety, the language employed is. "holding. Where can we have a "holding" between the assignee of one of the demised premises and the quondam tenant of all the premises, unless a new tenancy is created in respect of it If such a one is by act of parties brought into existence, the present question is easily answered. Otherwise 1 find it difficult to hold that on the expiry of the term of the lease, there is any " holding " belonging to the assignee of a portion or "a tenant" in respect of it. It seems to me that the Legislature in providing for compensation on eviction understood that the parties were in status quo ante and that there has been no break up of the lease interest.

[9] It is no answer to this difficulty to say that under the ordinary law, a tenant that was, can be evicted from each and every portion of the leased property. If that can be done, except in cases of holding over, it would be by regarding him as a trespasser who had no right to remain on the soil after the efflux of time limited by his lease, I am prepared to concede that the Act we are construing, does not in terms prohibit partial eviction. But that is only the negative side of the enactment. Has it not by implication asked the Courts to pass a decree in ejectment preparatory to the award of compensation on the basis of an exiting tenancy That is my reading of the Act, and I therefore regret I am unable to agree with the conclusion to which the learned Chief Justice and my learned brothers have come.

[10] I have been reading a great deal about the genesis of the Act. The report of the Malabar Land Tenures Committee shows that the present law is a compromise between the creation of occupancy rights in the soil in favour of all tenants in the same way that the Estates Land Act has done and the endeavour to purchase the landlord out altogether. I do not propose to quote any extracts from the Report; but I cannot help remarking that, it is a sad commentary on their labours that the Law which they recommended should have been so inaptly worded as to enable the landlord to evict the tenant piece-meal. The danger which threatens the tenant is not an imaginary one. 1 suggested some cases in the course of the hearing. A tenant erecting a house in a portion of the paramba or digging a tank in one of the demised premises to irrigate the lands demised are instances in which partial eviction would place the tenant very badly at the mercy of the landlord. When we remember the practice of granting Melcharths which prevails in Malabar, it would occur at once that a karnavan can by threatening to evict the tenant from a portion of the holding exact unconscionable terms prior to renewal. In the case of ordinary owners of property such a procedure would not be frequently adopted. But the Malabar jenmi of to day is in a transition stage. Education and notions of independence have destroyed his benevolent despotism. He is a watched man and he therefore does not hesitate to make the most of his opportunities. Melcharths and the demand of a heavy renewal fee for which he is seldom held accountable to the flock under him are his resorts to enrich his wife and children. There may be still a few old fashioned jenmis who wish well by the tarwad and its property, but their numbers are diminishing. The tie of natural kinship rebels against the enforcible claims of the corporate body; and the result is that, in the majority of cases, the Karnavan is trying to exact as much as possible from the tenants. Our decision would place a new weapon in his hands and the lot of the tenant would become more difficult than ever.

[11] I hope I may be excused this incursion into the domain of social tie between the tarwad and its members because I. am anxious to catch the eye of the Legislature as to the necessity of so amending the law as to make the lot of the Malabar tenant more tolerable than it would be under our decision. I feel compelled to differ from the majority of the Court and to hold that until the payment of compensation in respect of the holding as a whole, there can be no partial eviction.

Advocates List

For the Appellants E. Ramaswami Aiyar, Advocate. For the Respondents T. Erotnan Unni, Advocate.

For Petitioner
  • Shekhar Naphade
  • Mahesh Agrawal
  • Tarun Dua
For Respondent
  • S. Vani
  • B. Sunita Rao
  • Sushil Kumar Pathak

Bench List

HON'BLE CHIEF JUSTICE MR. JOHN WALLIS

HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE OLDFIELD

HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE SADASIVA AIYAR

HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE COUTTS TROTTER

HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE SESHAGIRI AIYAR

Eq Citation

(1919) 37 MLJ 47

(1919) ILR 42 MAD 603

1919 MWN 401

51 IND. CAS. 286

LQ/MadHC/1919/102

HeadNote

Malabar Compensation for Tenants' Improvements Act (1 of 1900) — Eviction of tenant from a holding — Landlord entitled to evict the tenant from one of those items/holding only, without paying him compensation for the improvements on other items — [Explanation: The question referred to the full bench was as