IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT CALCUTTA
SANJIB BANERJEE, SABYASACHI BHATTACHARYYA, JJ.
Sri Balaram Jana – Appellant
Vs.
Sri Madan Mohan Jana & Ors. – Respondents
SAT 402 of 2017 with CAN 9902 of 2017
Decided on : 10-01-2018
Section 106 - Transfer of Property Act - Notice under Section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882 issued by multiple plaintiffs in a tenancy dispute - Court distinguishes the present case from a previous judgment where joint owners could not claim to be parties to the contract of tenancy to seek eviction of the tenant due to exclusion from the contract. In the present case, the original owner transferred demarcated portions of the property to different plaintiffs, and the mere presence of one plaintiff in the suit or in the notice did not vitiate the action or notice.
Fact of the Case:
The appellant contested the eviction decree on the grounds that the notice under Section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882 was issued by persons who had no contractual or other relationship with the appellant-defendant.
Finding of the Court:
The Court found that the mere presence of one plaintiff in the suit or in the notice did not vitiate the action or notice, distinguishing the present case from a previous judgment where joint owners could not claim to be parties to the contract of tenancy to seek eviction of the tenant due to exclusion from the contract.
Issues: The main issue was whether the notice under Section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882 issued by multiple plaintiffs in a tenancy dispute was valid, considering the transfer of demarcated portions of the property to different plaintiffs by the original owner.
Ratio Decidendi: The court held that the mere presence of one plaintiff in the suit or in the notice did not vitiate the action or notice, and the dispute was distinguished from a previous judgment where joint owners could not claim to be parties to the contract of tenancy to seek eviction of the tenant due to exclusion from the contract.
Final Decision: The appeals were dismissed, and there was no order as to costs.
1. The only point sought to be urged against the appellate order affirming the trial court’s decree for eviction is that the notice under Section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882 was issued by a person who had no contractual or other relationship with the appellant-defendant.
2. It is not in dispute that one Girish Chandra Jana had let out the southern portion of his property to the appellant herein. During the subsistence of the tenancy, the said Jana transferred the entirety of his interest in the property by two several documents; one pertaining to the northern portion of the premises in favour of the plaintiff no.1; and, the other in respect of the southern portion in favour of the plaintiff nos.2 to 4.
3. The notice under Section 106 of the said Act was issued by all the plaintiffs. It is the contention of the appellant that since original owner Jana did not sell his undivided interest in the property to the plaintiffs but transferred a demarcated portion thereof to the first plaintiff and the balance to the other plaintiffs, all the plaintiffs could not have joined in issuing the notice to the appellant or as plaintiffs in the suit.
4. In support of such contention, a Division Bench judgment reported at AIR 1968 Cal 532 (Parekh Brothers v. Kartick Chandra Saha) has been placed. It is evident from the report that three brothers instituted a suit against a tenant who had been inducted only by brother Kartick. The two other brothers were not parties to the contract and the tenant was also not aware of such other brothers’ rights in respect of the property. It was in such context that the Division Bench held, inter alia, as follows at paragraph 15 of the report:
“15. … It is clear that the evidence on which the learned trial Judge relies does not support the plaintiffs case at all. Let us assume for the sake of argument that the premises in question belonged to the three plaintiffs and Kartick Chandra Saha had no right to let out the premises in his own name alone. Even so, the three plaintiffs cannot say that they are the landlords of the defendant. Tenancy is a matter of contract. If the other plaintiffs were nowhere in the picture when the tenancy agreement was made and if the defendant did not know about the existence of the other two brothers or at least did intend or contemplate entering into an agreement of tenancy with them, it is impossible to argue that there was, in fact, an agreement of tenancy between the defendant and all the three plaintiffs. The two other plaintiffs must seek for relief against Kartick. They can move against the defendant but in that case they must ask for a different kind of relief and they cannot found their claim for relief on an alleged contractual relationship between themselves and the defendant when, in fact, no such relationship existed. In these circumstances, one cannot escape the conclusion that the plaintiffs were not at all the landlords of the defendant. …”
5. The position in this case is quite far removed from what obtained in Parekh Brothers. It is not in dispute that the tenancy in this case was granted in favour of the appellant herein by the said Jana. It is also not in dispute that original owner Jana subsequently transferred the two parts of the property to the plaintiff no.1 and the plaintiff nos.2 to 4 by demarcating the areas transferred. Though it was not necessary for the plaintiff no.1 to be a party to the notice under Section 106 of the Act of 1882 or for such person to be impleaded as a plaintiff in the eviction suit, his mere presence in the suit or the appearance of his name as one of the addressers in the notice cannot be said to have either vitiated the action or the notice. In Parekh Brothers, the contract of tenancy was entered into by one of the joint owners to the exclusion of the others. As such, the other two joint owners could not have claimed to be parties to the contract of tenancy to seek the eviction of the tenant. The dispute was at t
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