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1965 DIGILAW 338 (MAD)

R. Sundaram v. A. D. Peter

1965-10-01

M.NATESAN

body1965
Order.- This revision has been preferred under section 25 of the Madras Buildings (Lease and Rent Control) Act, 1960, hereinafter referred to as the Act by the landlord whose application under section 14(1)(b) of the Act, for eviction of the respondent with a view to demolish and reconstruct, has been rejected in limine by the authorities below, in the view that the provisions of section 14(1)(b) can be availed of, only when the landlord seeks possession of the entire building for the purpose of demolition and reconstruction and not when only possession of a part of the building is sought. The brief facts my be stated. The petitioner owns a building in the city with an open terrace. The ground floor is let out to a tenant who is not a party to this proceeding. On the terrace, there is a thatched shed, of which the respondent is stated to be the tenant. The landlord applied for possession of this terrace with the thatched shed under section 14(1)(b), submitting that he intended immediately demolishing the shed and putting up a pucca structure thereon. Whether it is bona fide required by him for demolition and reconstruction has not as a fact been gone into. Learned Counsel for the respondent-tenant does not admit before me that the shed belongs to the landlord. These are questions on the merits. The simple question for consideration now in this revision is whether the petition for possession of this portion of the building which is stated to have been separately let out and is in the occupation of the respondent is maintainable under section 14(1)(b) of the Act. The authorities below have taken the view that in the context of section 14(1)(b) the building must refer to the entire building and not to any part of it though separately let. Reliance is placed for this contention on the language of section 14(1)(b) which runs thus: “That the building is bona fide required by the landlord for the immediate purpose of demolishing it and such demolition is to be made for the purpose of erecting a new building on the site of the building sought to be demolished.” The reasoning is that, when reference is made to the word ‘site ‘it can only refer to a building on the ground, that is on terra firma or earth. It is reasoned that the petitioner-landlord must claim and intend, demolishing the building as a whole from the ground; otherwise, it would not come within the scope of section 14(1)(b). Confirmation for this view is sought from the language employed in section 14, sub-clause (2)(b) which runs thus: “No order directing the tenant to deliver possession of the building under this section shall be passed (a) .............. (b) on the ground specified in clause (b) of sub-section (1) unless the landlord gives an undertaking that the work of demolishing any material portion of the building shall be substantially commenced by him not later than one month and shall be completed before the expiry of three months from the date he recovers possession of the entire building or before the expiry of such further period as the Controller may, for reasons to be recorded in writing, allow.” Emphasis is laid on the language used in the above sub-clause: ‘entire building ‘. Now ‘building ‘is defined in the Act in section 2(2) unless the context otherwise requires, thus: “‘building ‘means any building or hut or part of a building or hut, let or to be let separately for residential or non-residential purposes and includes- (a) the garden, grounds and out-houses, if any, appurtenant to such building, hut or part of such building or hut and let or to be let along with such building or hut. (b) any furniture supplied by the landlord for use in such building or hut, but does not include a room in a hotel or boarding house;” . In limiting the scope of section 14(1)(b) the authorities below also appear to be of the view that the Legislature intended to encourage the construction of new houses only in the place of old buildings. It may here be pointed out that this Court has recently in more than one case emphasised that it is not always the essential requisite for the application of section 14(1)(b) that the building should be old and decrepit. Old and decrepit state of the building may, in certain cases, be the requirement for demolition. There may be other grounds also for requiring possession of the building for demolition and reconstruction. Old and decrepit state of the building may, in certain cases, be the requirement for demolition. There may be other grounds also for requiring possession of the building for demolition and reconstruction. In my view, the Courts below have overlooked that the apparent object of the Legislature in making this provision in section 14 of the new Act is to give also scope for more accommodation and fresh buildings being provided by landlords who have the requisite finance, to relieve the persistent shortage of accommodation. In this connection the provision in the Act exempting buildings constructed after the commencement of the Act from its provisions may be noticed. While seeking to economise available accommodation the Act encourages fresh building activities. It is, bearing these in view that one has to interpret the provisions of section 14(1)(b). The Act itself defines a building as part of a building let or to be let separately. Statedly in this case, the terraced portion with the thatched shed has been let separately. It would, therefore, be a building as defined in the Act. This meaning is sought to be taken away by reliance on the language of section 14(1)(b) where the requirement is that the new building must be erected on the site of the building sought to be demolis hed. The question is whether ‘site ‘should necessarily be interpreted in this provision as referring only to the earth or place at ground level, or it can mean also a place where the ‘building’ sought to be demolished stands. In the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary, of the meanings given to the word ‘site’, the following may be referred to: “The place or position occupied by some specified things; the situation or position of a place town, building, etc., the ground or area upon which a building, town-etc, has been built, or which, is set apart tor some purpose, also a plot, or number of plots, or land intended or suitable for building.' If the shed can be deemed to be a building under the Act, the terrace would certainly be the place or position occupied by the shed, and will be covered by the word site used in the section. At any rate, it is an area upon which the building stands. The conception of buildings has changed in the past few decades. At any rate, it is an area upon which the building stands. The conception of buildings has changed in the past few decades. We have now premises built in flats one over the other, where the flats are not merely enjoyed separately, but acquired, conveyed and owned separately. As the Earl of Halsbury, Lord Chancellor, observes in Grant v. Langston1: "A hundred years ago there was not much difficulty in saying what was a ‘house ‘but builders and architects have so altered the construction of houses, and the habits of people have so altered in relation to them, that the word ‘house ‘has acquired an artificial meaning, and the word is no longer the expression of a simple idea; but to ascertain its meaning one must understand the subject matter with respect to which it is used in order to arrive at the sense in which it is employed in a statute. What is the sense in which the Legislature can be deemed to have used the word ‘site’ in section 14(1)(b) of the Act? In my view there can be little difficulty in holding that the building now sought to be demolished certainly does stand on a site, namely, the terrace over the ground floor of the premises in question. Reference in this connection may also be made to Rowland Burrows, “ Words and Phrases judicially defined” wherein giving the possible meanings of the word ‘site, ‘the learned editor relies upon Re Feeney, Inglis v. Birmingham Corporation2, where for the meaning to be attached to the word ‘site ‘in a will whereby the testator bequeathed a sum of money to the Birmingham Corporation to be applied towards the cost of erecting an art gallery on a ‘site ‘to be provided by the Corporation it is stated thus: “The executors..........contend that what the testator contemplated was a separate building erected and directly resting on a plot of land to be provided by the Corporation, and they insist that the word site means the ground upon which the building has been or is to be erected, and cannot be read as applicable to an artificial base upon which the new erection is to be superimposed. The Corporation, on the other hand, argues that, although the word ‘site’ may as a general rule be held to refer to an area on the ground level, it is not confined to that level and does under some circumstance signify the superficial space on which the building stands, even though that space be at a higher level than the ground level..........The question, therefore, is whether the word ‘site ‘so necessarily imports an area or plot of land as to preclude its being judicially applied to a superficial area which includes no land or ground as popularly understood. I have looked again at all the dictionary quotations to which my attention has been called, and having given the best consideration I can to What was urged on both sides, I have come to the conclusion that I ought not to attach to the word the restricted meaning for which the executors contend.” To accept the arguments on behalf of the respondent and to affirm the view of the Courts below would, in my view, practically nullify the beneficial provisions of the section. One can envisage a case where a landlord having a plan to build three storeys has to stop construction after finishing the groundfloor by reason of shortage of building materials. For the time being he might have let one tenant in the ground floor and put up a temporary shed on the terrace above and lodged another tenant there. If he wants to restart construction and complete the construction according to plan when building materials became available, then, according to the view of the lower Courts, he will have to evict the tenant in the ground floor also and pull down the entire construction. Otherwise, on this interpretation he cannot secure possession for demolition and reconstruction, however, bona fide he may be in his requirement. But all that is actually needed by him in that case is to get possession of the shed and put up two or three flats. In my view, it would be in keeping with the policy of the Legislature as may be read in sections 14(1)(b) and 30 of the Act, to interpret section 14(1)(b) as entitling the landlord in such a case to secure possession of the terraced portion for purposes of demolition and reconstruction. In my view, it would be in keeping with the policy of the Legislature as may be read in sections 14(1)(b) and 30 of the Act, to interpret section 14(1)(b) as entitling the landlord in such a case to secure possession of the terraced portion for purposes of demolition and reconstruction. He will be demolishing the superstructure or shed that might have been put up on the terrace and he would be constructing thereon. No doubt the building ‘site ‘would be not on the ground. As observed in the extract made above, the word ‘site ‘can have an extended as well as a restricted meaning. ‘Site ‘here would be the place where the shed stands. Such an interpretation takes a sensible view of the provision. Of course, on principle it will make little difference if instead of the shed there is a brick and mortar structure. The Courts below have, therefore, in my view, erroneously rejected the application in limine. The matter has not been gone into on the merits. It will have to be decided whether the petitioner bona fide requires the building (portion separately let to the respondent) for the purpose of immediate demolition and reconstruction. I shall therefore say nothing on the merits of the case. When the case was taken up, it was submitted by the respondent’s Counsel that, according to his instructions, the landlord had parted with the premises by sale to a third party and that he might not in the circumstances be entitled to maintain the petition. The case has. been pending for three years in this Court. Learned Counsel for the petitioner has no instructions in the matter. I, therefore, do not consider the effect, if any, the alleged sale may have on the maintainability of the petition. The order of the tribunals below are set aside and the matter remitted to the first authority for disposal on the merits. There will be no order as to costs. R.M. ----- Revision allowed; Matter remitted to the first authority.