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Wednesday, October 31, 2012

whether removing tin sheets and making cement slab amounts to permanent construction or not – the lower court correctly held that it amounts to permanent constructions , where as High court negatived the same, where as the Apex court set aside the High court order and confirm the Lower court order



                                                                  REPORTABLE
                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
                        CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
                       CIVIL APPEAL NO.  7710  OF 2012
                 (Arising out of S.L.P. (C) No.4629 of 2008)

Purushottam Das Bangur & Ors.   …Appellants
      Versus
Dayanand Gupta                  …Respondent

                               J U D G M E N T
1.      Leave granted.
2.      This appeal arises out of a judgment and order passed  by  the  High
Court of Calcutta whereby Civil First Appeal No.290 of  1986  filed  by  the
respondent-tenant has been allowed, the judgment and decree  passed  by  the
trial Court set aside and the suit for  eviction  filed  by  the  plaintiff-
appellant against the defendant-respondent dismissed.
3.      A residential premise comprising two rooms with  a  gallery  situate
at the first floor bearing no.95-A, Chittaranjan Avenue, Calcutta and  owned
by Gauri Devi Trust of which the appellants are trustees was let out to  the
respondent-tenant on a monthly rental of Rs.225/-.  One  of  the  conditions
that governed the jural  relationship  between  the  parties  was  that  the
tenant shall not make any  additions  or  alterations  in  the  premises  in
question without obtaining the prior permission of the landlord in  writing.
Certain differences appear to have arisen between the  parties  with  regard
to the mode of payment of rent as also with regard to repairs, sanitary  and
hygiene  conditions  in  the  tenanted  property  which  led  the  landlord-
appellant to terminate the tenancy  of  respondent  in  terms  of  a  notice
served upon the latter under Section 106 of the  Transfer  of  Property  Act
read with Section 13 (6) of West Bengal Premises Tenancy Act,  1956.   Since
the respondent-tenant did not oblige,  the  plaintiff-appellant   instituted
Ejectment Suit No.391 of 1976 in the City Civil  Court  at  Calcutta  asking
for eviction of the former inter alia on the ground that respondent-  tenant
had illegally and unauthorisedly removed the corrugated  tin-sheet  roof  of
the kitchen and the  store  room  without  the  consent  of  the  appellant-
landlord and replaced  the  same  by  a  cement  concrete  slab  apart  from
building a permanent brick and mortar passage which did not  exist  earlier.
These additions and alterations were, according to the  plaintiff-appellant,
without the consent and permission of the Trust and,  hence,  violative  not
only of the provisions of clauses (m), (o) and (p) of  Section  108  of  the
Transfer of Property Act, 1882 but also the  conditions  stipulated  in  the
lease agreement executed between the parties.  Eviction  of  the  respondent
was also sought on the ground that the respondent  and  his  family  members
were using the  passage  constructed  by  them  for  creating  nuisance  and
peeping into the bedroom of Shri Bharat Kumar Jethi, another  tenant  living
on the second floor of the premises.
4.      The defendant-respondent contested the suit primarily on the  ground
that his tenancy had not been terminated in terms of  the  notice  allegedly
issued by the landlord and that there was no violation of the provisions  of
clauses (m), (o) and (p) of Section 108 of the Transfer of Property Act.   A
Court  Commissioner  deputed  by  the  trial  Court  carried  out  a   local
inspection of the suit premises on  12th  July,  1978  in  presence  of  the
parties.  The  Commissioner  formulated  five  different  points  for  local
inspection and answered the same in the report submitted to the Court.   One
of the aspects on which the  Commissioner  made  a  report  related  to  the
existence of a passage leading to the concrete roof of the kitchen  and  the
store space.  The Commissioner appears to have found that  the  kitchen  and
store space had a concrete cemented  plastered  roof  with  a  small  window
inside the kitchen.
5.      Long after the Commissioner’s report  was  submitted  to  the  trial
Court, the tenant filed an additional written statement in which he for  the
first time took the stand that although he was inducted into  the  premises,
comprising two rooms and two small rooms with  corrugated  tin-sheet  for  a
roof, the latter required replacement  on  account  of  the  tin-sheet  roof
getting worn out.  It was further submitted that it  was  only  on  repeated
demands of the defendant-tenant that the  landlord  had  replaced  the  said
corrugated tin-sheet by putting a cement concrete slab over the kitchen  and
store room. He further alleged that he  had  not  made  any  alterations  or
additions or committed any act contrary to  clauses  (m),  (o)  and  (p)  of
Section 108 of the Transfer of Property Act.
6.      On the pleadings of the parties, the trial Court raised as  many  as
eight issues in the suit and allowed parties to adduce  their  evidence.  In
support of his case  the  plaintiff  examined  four  witnesses  while  three
witnesses were examined by the defendant-tenant. A careful appraisal of  the
evidence so  adduced  led  the  trial  Court  to  the  conclusion  that  the
plaintiff had made out a case for the grant of a  decree  for  ejectment  of
the respondent-tenant.  The  trial  Court  in  the  process  held  that  the
removal of the tin-sheet roof over  the  kitchen  and  store  room  and  its
replacement with a concrete slab was carried out  by  the  respondent-tenant
and not by the plaintiff-trust.  In coming to that conclusion,  one  of  the
circumstances which  the  trial  Court  mentioned  was  the  fact  that  the
defendant had not made any whisper in the first written statement  filed  by
him about the construction of the concrete roof having  been  undertaken  by
the landlord.  The story that the landlord had replaced the tin  roof  by  a
concrete slab was propounded  belatedly  and  for  the  first  time  in  the
supplementary written statement. The trial Court observed:
         “Lastly, it must not be lost sight of that when the defendant first
         filed the written statement there was no whisper from the  side  of
         the defendant that the construction was made by  the  landlord  for
         the convenience of the tenants.  This story was first propounded by
         the convenience of the tenants.  This story was first propounded by
         the defendant by filing an additional  written  statement  in  1983
         i.e. about seven years after the institution  of  the  suit.   This
         belated plea of the defendant should be taken  with  the  grain  of
         salt.”


7.      The trial Court accordingly held that it  was  the  defendant-tenant
who had made a permanent structural change in the premises in  violation  of
the conditions stipulated in the  lease  agreement  and  in  breach  of  the
provisions of Section 108 of the Transfer of Property Act.  The trial  Court
further held that the tenant had not, while doing so, obtained  the  written
consent of the landlord.  The trial Court also found that the  legal  notice
for determining the tenancy of the respondent-tenant had  been  served  upon
him and accordingly decreed the suit.
8.      Aggrieved by the judgment and decree passed against him, the tenant-
respondent herein appealed to the High Court of Calcutta  which  appeal  has
been allowed by the Division Bench of that  Court  in  terms  of  the  Order
impugned before us. While the High Court has not disturbed  the  finding  of
fact recorded by the trial Court that the replacement of the tin-sheet by  a
concrete slab was undertaken by the respondent-tenant, it has  reversed  the
view taken by the trial Court on the ground that  any  such  replacement  of
the roof did not tantamount to violation of clauses  (m),  (o)  and  (p)  of
Section 108 of the Transfer of Property Act. The High Court held that  since
the replacement of the tin-sheet  roof  by  cement  concrete  slab  did  not
result in addition of the accommodation available to the tenant, the act  of
replacement  was  not  tantamount  to  the  construction  of   a   permanent
structure.  The  replacement  instead  constituted  an  improvement  of  the
premises in question, observed the High Court.  In support  the  High  Court
placed reliance upon the decisions of this  Court  in  Om  Prakash  v.  Amar
Singh  AIR 1987 SC 617 and Waryam Singh v. Baldev Singh (2003) 1 SCC 59 .
9.      The High Court also relied upon an earlier decision  of  that  Court
in Ratanlal Bansilal & Ors. v. Kishorilal Goenka & Ors.  AIR  1993  Cal  144
and held that unless a case of waste or damage is proved, there  can  be  no
violation of clauses (m), (o), (p) of the  Transfer  of  Property  Act.  The
High Court held that proof of waste and damage because of  the  construction
of a cement  concrete  roof  over  the  kitchen  and  store  space  and  the
construction of a brick-built passage for reaching the  roof  of  that  area
was completely absent in the instant case.  The High Court, on  that  basis,
set aside the judgment of the trial Court and dismissed the  suit  filed  by
the appellant.
10.     Section 13 of the West Bengal  Premises  Tenancy  Act  1956,  starts
with a non-obstante clause and forbids passing of an  order  or  decree  for
possession of any premises by any  Court  in  favour  of  the  landlord  and
against the tenant except on one or more of the grounds stipulated  therein.

11.     Among other grounds stipulated in Section  13  of  the  Act  is  the
ground that the landlord can sue  for  eviction  of  the  tenant  where  the
tenant or any person residing in the premises let to  the  tenant  has  done
any act contrary to the provisions of clauses (m), (o)  or  (p)  of  Section
108 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882. Section 13 (1) (b) reads thus:
         “13. Protection of  tenant  against  eviction.—(1)  Notwithstanding
         anything to the contrary in any other law, no order or  decree  for
         the recovery of possession of any premises shall  be  made  by  any
         court in favour of the landlord against a tenant except on  one  or
         more of the following grounds, namely:
         (a)    *       *       *
         (b) where the tenant or any person residing in the premises let  to
         the tenant has done any act contrary to the  provisions  of  clause
         (m), clause (o) or clause (p) of Section 108  of  the  Transfer  of
         Property Act, 1882 (4 of 1882);”




12.     Clauses (m), (o) and (p) of Section 108 of the Transfer of  Property
Act referred to in clause 1 (b) of Section 13 (supra) may also be  extracted
at this stage :
          “108. Rights and liabilities of lessor and lessee.—In the  absence
         of a contract or local usage to the contrary, the  lessor  and  the
         lessee of immovable property, as against one another, respectively,
         possess the rights and are subject to the liabilities mentioned  in
         the rules next following, or such of them as are applicable to  the
         property leased:
         *      *       *
         (m) the lessee is bound to keep, and  on  the  termination  of  the
         lease to restore, the property in as good condition as  it  was  at
         the time when he was put in possession, subject only to the changes
         caused by reasonable wear and tear or irresistible  force,  and  to
         allow the lessor and his agents, at all reasonable times during the
         term, to enter upon the property and inspect the condition  thereof
         and give or leave notice of any defect in such condition; and, when
         such defect has been caused by any act or default on  the  part  of
         the lessee, his servants or agents, he is bound  to  make  it  good
         within three months after such notice has been given or left;


         *      *       *
         (o) the lessee may use the property and its products (if any) as  a
         person of ordinary prudence would use them if they  were  his  own;
         but he must not use, or permit another to use, the property  for  a
         purpose other than that for which it was leased, or  fell  or  sell
         timber, pull down or damage buildings belonging to the  lessor,  or
         work mines or quarries not open  when  the  lease  was  granted  or
         commit any other act which is destructive or permanently  injurious
         thereto;


         (p) he must  not,  without  the  lessor's  consent,  erect  on  the
         property  any  permanent   structure,   except   for   agricultural
         purposes;”




13.     The appellant has in the case at hand pressed  into  service  clause
(p) of Section 108 (supra) inasmuch as,  according  to  the  appellant,  the
respondent-tenant had without his consent erected on the demised property  a
permanent structure which rendered him liable to eviction under  Section  13
(1) (b) extracted above. The question, however, is whether  the  alterations
which the respondent-tenant is found  by  the  Courts  below  to  have  made
tantamount to erection of a “permanent  structure”  within  the  meaning  of
clause (p) of Section 108 of the Act  (supra).   The  expression  “permanent
structure” has not been  defined  either  under  the  West  Bengal  Premises
Tenancy Act, 1956 or in the Transfer of Property Act, 1882.  The  expression
has all the same fallen for interpretation by the Courts in the  country  on
several occasions. We may briefly refer to some of those  pronouncements  at
this stage.
14.     In Venkatlal G. Pittie & Anr. v. Bright Bros. Pvt.  Ltd.  (1987)   3
SCC 558, the landlord alleged  that  the  tenant  had  without  his  consent
raised a permanent structure in the demised premises.  The  trial  Court  as
also the first appellate Court had taken  the  view  that  the  construction
raised by the tenant was permanent in  nature.   The  High  Court,  however,
reversed the said finding aggrieved whereof the landlord  came  up  to  this
Court in appeal. This Court referred to several  decisions  on  the  subject
including a decision of the High Court  of  Calcutta  in  Suraya  Properties
Private Ltd. v. Bimalendu Nath Sarkar AIR 1965 Cal  408  to  hold  that  one
shall have to look at the nature of the structure, the purpose for which  it
was intended to be used and take a whole perspective as to  how  it  affects
the enjoyment and durability of the building etc. to come  to  a  conclusion
whether or not the same was a permanent structure. This Court  approved  the
view taken in Suraya Properties Private Ltd. v. Bimalendu  Nath  Sarkar  AIR
1965 Cal 408 and Surya Properties Private Ltd.  &  Ors.  v.  Bimalendu  Nath
Sarkar & Ors. AIR 1964  Cal  1,  while  referring  to  the  following  tests
formulated by Malvankar J.  in  an  unreported  decision  in  Special  Civil
Application No.121 of 1968:
         “(1) intention of the party who put  up  the  structure;  (2)  this
         intention  was  to  be  gathered  from  the  mode  and  degree   of
         annexation; (3) if the structure cannot be  removed  without  doing
         irreparable damage to the  demised  premises  then  that  would  be
         certainly one of the circumstances to be considered while  deciding
         the question of intention. Likewise, dimensions  of  the  structure
         and (4) its removability had to be taken  into  consideration.  But
         these were not the sole tests. (5)  The  purpose  of  erecting  the
         structure is  another  relevant  factor.  (6)  The  nature  of  the
         materials used for the structure and (7) lastly the  durability  of
         the structure”.




15.     In Surya Properties Private Ltd. & Ors. v. Bimalendu Nath  Sarkar  &
Ors. AIR 1964 Cal 1 a Special Bench  of  the  High  Court  of  Calcutta  was
examining the meaning of the expression “permanent structure”  appearing  in
Clause (p) of Section 108 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882.  The  Court
held that whether a particular structure is a permanent structure or not  is
a question that depends on the facts of each case  and  on  the  nature  and
extent of the particular structure as also the  intention  and  purpose  for
which the structure was erected. No hard and fast rule, declared the  Court,
could be laid down for determining what would be a permanent  structure  for
the purposes of Section 108 (p) of the Transfer of Property Act.   When  the
very same case came up for final adjudication on merits  before  a  Division
Bench of the High Court of Calcutta, the High Court in its order dated  20th
March, 1964 reported in Suraya Properties Private  Ltd.  v.  Bimalendu  Nath
Sarkar AIR 1965 Cal 408 held that the expression “permanent  structure”  did
not mean ‘everlasting’. The word “permanent” had been  used  to  distinguish
it from “temporary” and that while a lessee has the power to raise any  type
of temporary structure, he has no power to raise a permanent structure.  The
Court held that on a true  construction  of  Section  108  (p)  Transfer  of
Property Act the words “permanent structure” could  only  mean  a  structure
that lasts till the end  of  the  term  of  the  lease  and  does  not  mean
“everlasting” nor does it mean a structure which would last 100 years or  50
years.  The Court observed:
         “In  all  these  cases  condition  (p)  will  operate.  The  phrase
         “permanent structure” does not mean “ever lasting”.  But  the  word
         “permanent” has been used to distinguish  it  from  “temporary”.  A
         lessee has the power to raise any type of temporary structure,  but
         he  has  no  power  to  raise  a  permanent  structure.  The   word
         “permanent” is also a relative term, because the  absolute  meaning
         of the word “permanent” is “ever lasting”.  But  we  cannot  accept
         the meaning if  the  word  “permanent”  is  a  relative  term,  the
         question is, - relative of what?  The answer immediately is  –  for
         purposes of Section 108(p) relative  to  the  term  of  the  issue.
         Therefore, the word “permanent” means “which lasts till the end  of
         the term of the lease” and does not mean “ever lasting” nor does it
         mean “which would last 100 years or 50 years”. The term, as  stated
         above, is a relative one and the relation here is to the period  of
         the lease.  There may be a lease from month to month or  from  year
         to year and we do not know when the lease is  going  to  terminate.
         But the meaning of the words “permanent structure”  would  be  that
         the lessee intended that he  would  enjoy  the  structure  that  he
         raises as long as he be continuing in possession. That  period  may
         be definite, that period may be indefinite.  But that period is the
         period of the  lease  and  the  person,  namely,  the  lessee,  who
         constructs the structure, should have an intention  to  use  it  as
         long as he remains a lessee.”


16.     Applying the above to the case before it, the High Court  held  that
the tenant in that case had constructed a kitchen which he intended  to  use
till the time he remained in occupation.  The  Court  found  that  the  case
before it was not one where the tenant had constructed the structure  for  a
special purpose like a marriage in the family. Any structure which was  used
for any such limited period or definite event, function  or  occasion,  even
if made of bricks and mortar would not amount  to  building  or  erecting  a
permanent structure.  The Court observed:
         “A person raises a struct (sic) for the purpose of  a  marriage  in
         the family. There he intends to use it only during the occasion and
         has no intention to use it thereafter and  intends  to  remove  the
         structure thereafter. We cannot say that it would  be  a  permanent
         structure even  if  it  is  made  of  brick  and  mortar.   In  the
         circumstances, of this case, the lessee has said that he wanted  to
         use it as a kitchen.  He never says that the kitchen  was  required
         for a particular purpose temporarily.  Therefore, we get  from  the
         evidence of  the  tenant  that  the  tenant  intended  to  use  the
         structure as a kitchen during the continuance of the lease, because
         the tenant requires a kitchen  as  long  as  the  tenant  uses  the
         premises and as he wants, to use it as a kitchen,  he  sufficiently
         express his intention to use it as a kitchen during the term of his
         tenancy which in this case is not definite. Therefore, for purposes
         of Section108(p) of the Transfer of Property  Act,  we  would  hold
         that the kitchen raised must be considered to be  for  a  permanent
         purpose.”


17.     To sum up, no hard and fast rule can be prescribed  for  determining
what is permanent or what is  not.  The  use  of  the  word  ‘permanent’  in
Section 108  (p)  of  the  Transfer  of  Property  Act,  1882  is  meant  to
distinguish the structure from what  is  temporary.   The  term  ‘permanent’
does not mean that the structure must last forever.  A structure that  lasts
till the end of the tenancy can be treated as a  permanent  structure.   The
intention  of  the  party  putting  up  the  structure  is  important,   for
determining whether it is permanent or temporary.  The nature and extent  of
the structure is similarly an important circumstance  for  deciding  whether
the structure is permanent or temporary within the meaning  of  Section  108
(p) of the Act.  Removability of the structure without  causing  any  damage
to the building is yet another test that can be applied while  deciding  the
nature of the structure.  So also the durability of the  structure  and  the
material used for erection of the same will help  in  deciding  whether  the
structure is permanent or temporary.   Lastly  the  purpose  for  which  the
structure is intended is also an important factor that cannot be ignored.
18.     Applying the above tests to the instant case the structure  was  not
a temporary structure by any means.   The  kitchen  and  the  storage  space
forming part of the demised premises was meant to be used till  the  tenancy
in favour of the respondent-occupant subsisted.  Removal  of  the  roof  and
replacement thereof by a concrete slab was also meant to continue  till  the
tenancy subsisted. The intention of the tenant while replacing the tin  roof
with concrete slab, obviously was not to make a  temporary  arrangement  but
to provide a permanent solution for the alleged failure of the  landlord  to
repair the roof. The construction  of  the  passage  was  also  a  permanent
provision made by the tenant  which  too  was  intended  to  last  till  the
subsistence of the lease. The concrete slab was a permanent feature  of  the
demised premises and could not be easily  removed  without  doing  extensive
damage to the remaining structure.  Such being the position, the  alteration
made by the tenant fell within the  mischief  of  Section  108  (p)  of  the
Transfer of Property Act  and,  therefore,  constituted  a  ground  for  his
eviction in terms of Section 13(1)(b) of the West  Bengal  Premises  Tenancy
Act, 1956.
19.     We may at this stage refer to the decision of this  Court  in  Ranju
alias Gautam Ghosh v. Rekha Ghosh and Ors.  (2007)  14  SCC  81  where  this
Court found that cutting of a collapsible gate by  5/6”  and  replacing  the
same without the consent and permission of the landlord  was  tantamount  to
violation of Section 108 (p) of the  Transfer  of  Property  Act  read  with
Section 13 (1)(b) of West Bengal Premises Tenancy Act,  1956.   It  is  thus
immaterial whether the structure has resulted in creating additional  usable
space for the tenant who carries out  such  alteration  and  additions.   If
addition of usable space was ever intended to be  an  essential  requirement
under Section 108 (p) of the Act, the Parliament could have easily  provided
so. Nothing of this sort has been done even in Section 13  (1)  (b)  of  the
State Act   which clearly shows that addition of space is not the  test  for
determining whether the structure is permanent or temporary.
20.     Reliance  upon  the  decisions  of  this  Court  in  Brijendra  Nath
Bhargava and Anr. v. Harsh Wardhan and Ors. (1988) 1 SCC 454, Om Prakash  v.
Amar Singh and Ors. (1987) 1 SCC 458, Waryam Singh v. Baldev Singh (2003)  1
SCC 59 and G. Reghunathan v. K.V. Varghese (2005) 7 SCC 317 do  not  in  our
opinion advance the case of the respondent.  In  Brijendra  Nath  Bhargava’s
case (supra) this Court was dealing with a case  arising  out  of  Rajasthan
Premises (Control of Rent and Eviction) Act, 1950. Section  13  (1)  (c)  of
the said Act required the landlord to prove that  the  tenant  had,  without
his permission, made or permitted to be made any construction which  had  in
the opinion of the Court, materially altered the premises or was  likely  to
diminish the value thereof.  Section 13 (1)(c)  of  the  Rajasthan  Premises
(Control of Rent and Eviction)  Act,  1950   is  to  the  following  effect:

         “13(1) (c) that the  tenant  has  without  the  permission  of  the
         landlord made or permitted to be made any such construction as,  in
         the opinion of the court, has materially altered the premises or is
         likely to diminish the value thereof”


21.     The above provision is materially different from  the  provision  of
Section 13(1)(b) of the West Bengal Premises Tenancy Act 1956 applicable  in
the present case which does not require the landlord  to  prove  that  there
was any material alteration in the premises  or  that  such  alteration  was
likely to diminish  the  value  thereof.  The  decision  in  Brijendra  Nath
Bhargava’s case (supra), is therefore, distinguishable and  would  not  have
any application to the case at hand.
22.     In Om Prakash’s case (supra) this Court  was  dealing  with  a  case
under Section 14 (c) of the U.P. Cantonment Rent  Control  Act,  1952  which
reads as under:

           “14.  Restrictions  on  eviction.—No  suit  shall,  without   the
         permission of the District Magistrate, be filed in any civil  court
         against a tenant for his eviction from any accommodation except  on
         one or more of the following grounds, namely:
         (c) that the tenant has, without the permission  of  the  landlord,
         made or permitted to be  made  any  such  construction  as  in  the
         opinion of the court has materially altered the accommodation or is
         likely substantially to diminish its value.”




23.     A perusal of the above would show the language employed  therein  is
materially different from the provision of  Section  13(1)(b)  of  the  West
Bengal Premises Tenancy Act 1956 with which we are concerned in the  present
case. In the case at hand the landlord is not required  to  prove  that  the
construction have been materially altered  or  is  likely  to  diminish  its
value as was the position in Om Prakash’s case (supra).
24.     In Waryam Singh v. Baldev Singh (2003)  1  SCC  59  this  Court  was
dealing with a case under Section  13(2)(iii)  of  East  Punjab  Urban  Rent
Restriction Act, 1949 which was to the following effect:

         “13. Eviction of tenants.—(1)  *       *       *
         (2) A landlord who seeks to evict his tenant  shall  apply  to  the
         Controller for a direction in that behalf. If the Controller, after
         giving the tenant a reasonable opportunity of showing cause against
         the applicant, is satisfied—
         *      *       *
         (iii) that the tenant has committed such  acts  as  are  likely  to
         impair materially the value or utility of the  building  or  rented
         land,
         *      *       *”




25.     It is evident from the above that this provision was different  from
the language employed in  Section  13(1)(b)  of  the  West  Bengal  Premises
Tenancy Act 1956. The ratio of that case also, therefore, does not lend  any
support to the respondent.  Same is true even in regard to the  decision  in
G. Reghunathan’s case (supra) where this Court was dealing with an  eviction
petition under Section 11(4)(ii) of the Kerala  Buildings  (Lease  and  Rent
Control) Act, 1965 which was to the following effect:

          “11. (4) A landlord may apply to the Rent  Control  Court  for  an
         order directing the tenant to put the landlord in possession of the
         building—
         (i)    *       *       *
         (ii) if the tenant uses the building in such a manner as to destroy
         or reduce its value or utility materially and permanently;”




26.      The  above  provision  is  also  materially  different   from   the
provisions with which we are concerned in the present  case.  The  ratio  of
that case does not, therefore, have any application to the question  whether
the structure raised by the respondent was a permanent structure within  the
meaning of Section 108 (p) of the Transfer of Property Act.   In Om  Pal  v.
Anand Swarup (dead) by Lrs. (1988) 4 SCC 545 also  this  Court  was  dealing
with a case under the East Punjab Urban Rent  Restriction  Act,  1949  which
makes material impairment of the property  an  important  consideration  for
purposes of determining whether the tenant has  incurred  the  liability  on
the premises leased to him.
27.     In the result, therefore, we allow this appeal, set aside the  order
passed by the High Court and restore that of the  trial  Court.   Respondent
is, however, given one year’s time to vacate the premises in his  occupation
subject to his filing an undertaking on usual terms within four  weeks  from
today. The grant of time to vacate the premises is further  subject  to  the
condition that the respondent shall either pay directly  to  the  appellants
or deposit in the trial Court compensation of the premises @ Rs.1500/-  p.m.
from 1st October, 2012 till the date of vacation. The deposit shall be  made
by the 15th of every succeeding calendar  month  failing  which  the  decree
shall become executable by the Court.
                                                  ……………………………………….……….…..…J.
                                                               (T.S. Thakur)




                                                   ……………………..…………………..…..…J.
                                                          (Gyan Sudha Misra)
New Delhi
October 31, 2012