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  1. Home/
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  3. High Court Of Sikkim/
  4. 2024/
  5. September

Mohammed Safique vs. Ahishek Rai

Decided on 30 September 2024• Citation: RFA/6/2023• High Court of Sikkim
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                     THE   HIGH   COURT     OF  SIKKIM:    GANGTOK                  
                             (Civil Appellate   Jurisdiction)                       
                  -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                  SINGLE BENCH: MR. JUSTICE BHASKAR   RAJ PRADHAN, JUDGE            
                  -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                               R.F.A.  No.   06  of 2023                            
                      Mohammed    Safique                                           
                      Aged  about 62 years                                          
                      S/o Late Abdul Wawid                                          
                      R/o  Tibet Road, Near Netuk House                             
                      P.O. & P.S. Gangtok, Sikkim                                   
                      Pin No. 737 101.                                              
                                                         .  Appellant               
                                                          …                         
                                   versus                                           
                      Abishek  Rai                                                  
                      S/o Dhurba  Rai                                               
                      R/o  Lall Market                                              
                      P.O. & P.S. Gangtok, Sikkim,                                  
                      Pin No: 737 101.                                              
                                                           . Respondent             
                                                         …                          
                 --------------------------------------------------------------------------
                      Appeal  under Order  XLI, Rules 1 and 2 read with             
                      Section  151 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908.            
                    Appearance                                                      
                      Mr.  Rahul Rathi and  Ms. Khushboo   Rathi, Advocates         
                      for the Appellant.                                            
                      Dr. Doma   T. Bhutia, Senior Advocate with Mr. Shakil         
                      Raj Karki, Advocate for the Respondent.                       
                 --------------------------------------------------------------------------
                       Date of Hearing    :    28.08.2024                           
                       Date of Judgment   :    30.09.2024                           
                 --------------------------------------------------------------------------
                              J   U   D   G    M    E   N   T                       
                 Bhaskar   Raj Pradhan,  J                                          
                 1.   The  questions involved in this regular first appeal are      
                 whether  the respondent (the plaintiff) had been able to prove     
                 that the appellant (the defendant) had defaulted in payment        

                                                                          2         
                                        R.F.A. No. 06 of 2023                       
                                    Mohammed Safique vs. Abishek Rai                
                 of rents and  whether the premises  (the suit property) was        
                 required by the plaintiff bona fide?                               
                 2.   The  learned District Judge has on examination of the         
                 evidence led by the parties concluded that the plaintiff had       
                 in fact been able to prove that the defendant had defaulted        
                 in payment  of rents and further that the plaintiff bona fide      
                 required the suit property for his personal use.                   
                 3.   The  learned counsel for the defendant submits that he        
                 had  not defaulted in payment  of rents as he continued to         
                 pay  rents                                                         
                            to the plaintiff‟s grandfather by sending money         
                 orders on the bona fide                                            
                                        belief that the plaintiff‟s grandfather     
                 was  the owner of the suit property (although admittedly the       
                 grandfather  had  not accepted  the money  orders). It was         
                 further submitted that the plaintiff suffered a trust deficit as   
                                                             unsuccessfully         
                 previously  the plaintiff‟s grandfather had                        
                 filed an eviction suit against the defendant as well.              
                 4.   The  suit property is situated in Gangtok and therefore,      
                 section 4 of the Gangtok Rent Control and Eviction Act, 1956       
                 would  govern the same. It reads as under:                         
                                  4. A Landlord may not ordinarily eject any tenant.
                                 “                                                  
                                 When  however whole or part of the premises are    
                                 required for the bonafide occupation of the landlord
                                 or his dependents or for thorough overhauling      
                                 excluding addition and alterations or when the rent
                                 in arrears amount to four month rent or more the   
                                 landlord may evict the tenant on filing a suit of  
                                 ejectment in the court of the Chief Magistrate. The
                                 tenant so evicted shall however have the first right
                                 to reoccupy the premises after over-hauling on     
                                 such enhanced rent as may be fixed by the Sikkim   
                                 Darbar before it is let out to any tenant.         
                                                                 ”                  

                                                                          3         
                                        R.F.A. No. 06 of 2023                       
                                    Mohammed Safique vs. Abishek Rai                
                 5. In  the plaint, the plaintiff had averred  that he  had         
                 become  the absolute owner  of the suit property which was         
                 let out to the defendant by  his grandfather; that the suit        
                 property was  transferred by his grandfather by executing a        
                 gift deed dated 17.04.2018; that the tenancy was a monthly         
                 tenancy  and it was earlier let out by his grandfather to the      
                 defendant at a monthly rent of Rs.4500/-                           
                                                         ; that the plaintiff‟s     
                 grandfather  had   communicated   the  fact of  change  of         
                 ownership  of the suit property to the defendant in writing        
                 vide letter dated 31.05.2018 which was  received by him on         
                 02.06.2018;  that he had also orally informed the defendant        
                 on  11.02.2019   about  the  change  of ownership   in the         
                 presence  of his sister-in-law, i.e., Kimu Lepcha; that the        
                 defendant  had  however, defaulted in payment  of monthly          
                 rents  from  01.05.2018  and  continues  to do  so despite         
                 intimation. It was averred that the defendant was liable to be     
                 evicted as he  had failed to pay rents for more  than four         
                 months   from the  date of intimation regarding change  of         
                 ownership  vide letter dated 31.05.2018. The  plaintiff also       
                 pleaded  that he required the suit property for his bona fide      
                 need  to settle down and have a family, as he had attained         
                 marriageable age; that he was an ad-hoc employee, employed         
                 on  a temporary basis and his job may be terminated at any         
                 time  by  the Government   of Sikkim;  that he  received a         
                 meagre  salary of Rs.18,000/- only and he was not financially      

                                                                          4         
                                        R.F.A. No. 06 of 2023                       
                                    Mohammed Safique vs. Abishek Rai                
                 sound;  that he was not in a position to purchase land and         
                 construct house for himself; and that he was embarrassed to        
                 remain   dependent  on  his father  who  was  a  Class  D          
                                                                         „ ‟        
                 employee  of the Government  working as a mechanic  in the         
                 SNT  Department,  Government  of Sikkim, as he is currently        
                 living with his parents in a joint family; that he desires to      
                 shift to the suit property to accommodate himself. He further      
                 averred that the defendant is rich; that he owns a five and a      
                 half storied commercial-cum-residential building in a prime        
                 location in Tibet Road; that he is running a hotel business        
                 from  the said building and  has also let out some  rooms          
                 therein for running beauty parlour etc. on exorbitant rents;       
                 that  he has  obtained a  license from Gangtok   Municipal         
                 Corporation to carry his hotel business. The plaintiff averred     
                 that a  legal notice had been issued on  16.05.2019 which          
                 was  replied to vide letter dated 31.05.2019 stating that the      
                 plaintiff was building a false story.                              
                 6. In the written statement, the defendant admitted that he        
                 was  a  tenant  in the suit property  since 1978  and  the         
                                        as his landlord. He admitted that the       
                 plaintiff‟s grandfather w                                          
                 suit property was let out at a monthly rent of Rs.4,500/- by       
                                            He denied  knowledge  about the         
                 the plaintiff‟s grandfather.                                       
                 execution of the gift deed; the mutation in the name of the        
                 plaintiff; and the registration thereof. He denied  having         
                 received the  letter dated 31.05.2018  from  the plaintiff‟s       

                                                                          5         
                                        R.F.A. No. 06 of 2023                       
                                    Mohammed Safique vs. Abishek Rai                
                 grandfather. He denied any knowledge  that the plaintiff was       
                 the owner  of the suit property while acknowledging that the       
                 grandfather was  in fact the owner. He stated that therefore       
                 he continued to send the rents through money orders.               
                 7. The  defendant  also denied that the suit property was          
                 bona  fide required by the plaintiff as averred in the plaint.     
                 He  denied that he owned  the five storied building in Tibet       
                 road  as alleged but stated that he had taken the property         
                 jointly with  others.  The   defendant  averred  that  the         
                 grandfather had  sought to raise the rent exorbitantly in the      
                 year 2016  and  thereafter filed an eviction suit against him      
                 which  was rejected. The defendant averred that the plaintiff      
                 had  filed the eviction suit sponsored by his grandfather on       
                 “artificial grounds”;   the  plaintiff‟s grandfather   had         
                 approached  various businessmen  to let out the suit property      
                 at a monthly rent of Rs.30,000/-.                                  
                 8. The  learned District Judge framed five issues:                 
                            (i) Whether  the suit is maintainable? (opp)            
                           “                                                        
                           (ii) Whether  there has been any default in              
                           payment  of monthly rent on the part of the              
                           Defendant/tenant?  (opp)                                 
                           (iii) Whether the suit premises are required by the      
                           Plaintiff for bona fide occupation? (opp)                
                           (iv) Whether  the P                                      
                                              laintiff’s grandfather refused to     
                           accept the monthly  rent on account of which the         
                           Defendant  was   constrained to send  it through         
                           money  order/post (opd); and                             

                                                                          6         
                                        R.F.A. No. 06 of 2023                       
                                    Mohammed Safique vs. Abishek Rai                
                           (v)  Whether  the Plaintiff is entitled to the reliefs   
                           prayed for by him? (opd)                                 
                                                  ”                                 
                 9. The   learned District Judge  held  that  the suit was          
                 maintainable; that the  plaintiff was the owner of the suit        
                 property and the defendant was  his tenant. It was also held       
                 that  the plaintiff have been able to prove  that the suit         
                 property  was  required bona  fide by the  plaintiff for his       
                 personal use. The learned District Judge also held that the        
                 suit  property  had  been   transferred by  the  plaintiff‟s       
                 grandfather  to the plaintiff through a registered gift deed       
                 dated  17.04.2018; that the plaintiff has been able to prove       
                 that  the defendant  had been  intimated  vide letter dated        
                 31.0                             father and the legal notice       
                      4.2018 by the plaintiff‟s grand                               
                 dated 16.05.2019  on behalf of the plaintiff about the change      
                 of ownership; The defendant  had sent all the money orders         
                 to the plaintiff‟s grandfather although he was aware about         
                 the  change in ownership.  The learned  District Judge was         
                 also of the view that the defendant  had  failed to pay the        
                 rents  to the  plaintiff from May  2018.  Accordingly, the         
                 learned  District Judge decreed  the suit in favour of the         
                 plaintiff.                                                         
                 10.  The  learned District Judge has  correctly opined that        
                 the  suit was maintainable  as the  defendant had  himself         
                 admitted  that he was  a tenant of the suit property in his        
                 written statement. The only issue raised by the defendant in       

                                                                          7         
                                        R.F.A. No. 06 of 2023                       
                                    Mohammed Safique vs. Abishek Rai                
                 the written statement as well as in the present appeal is his      
                 lack of knowledge that the plaintiff had been gifted the suit      
                 property by his grandfather and therefore he had become the        
                 owner  thereof. The registered Gift Deed dated 14.03.2018          
                 (exhibit-2) and   the   application  for  mutation   dated         
                 18.04.2018  (exhibit-3) have been proved by the plaintiff who      
                 was  the donee. The defendant could not extract anything to        
                 doubt  the registered Gift Deed during the cross-examination       
                 of the plaintiff. The plaintiff also proved that his grandfather   
                 had   issued  letter dated 31.05.2018   (exhibit-4) to the         
                 defendant which  was received by him. The plaintiff exhibited      
                 the dispatch receipt (exhibit-6) dated 31.05.2018 addressed        
                 to the defendant as well as the delivery slip (exhibit-5) issued   
                 by  the post master  of Gangtok  GPU  which  evidences the         
                 receipt of the letter dated 31.05.2018 by the defendant on         
                 02.06.2018.  The  letter dated 31.05.2018 clearly informed         
                 the defendant that the plaintiff s grandfather had transferred     
                                               ‟                                    
                 the suit property to the plaintiff. Dhan Maya Rai (PW-2) and       
                 Kimu   Lepcha   (PW-3)  -  the  plaintiff s witnesses, have        
                                                        ‟                           
                                                    as well.                        
                 corroborated the plaintiff‟s evidence                              
                 11.  Admittedly, the defendant did not ever offer the rent to      
                 the plaintiff. The defendant, as per the written statement,        
                 took  the stand  that  the plaintiff‟s grandfather was the         
                 landlord  and   as he   had  stopped  receiving rents  the         
                 defendant  had been  sending monthly  rents through postal         

                                                                          8         
                                        R.F.A. No. 06 of 2023                       
                                    Mohammed Safique vs. Abishek Rai                
                 orders  in his  postal address. The  postal money   orders         
                 (exhibit-D3 to D56) exhibited by the defendant reflects that       
                 they were all sent to the plaintiffs grandfather and not to the    
                 plaintiff. This has been averred  by the defendant  in his         
                 written statement as well. The plaintiff proved that he had        
                 sent  a  legal notice dated 16.05.2019   to the  defendant         
                 (exhibit-11) in which he had once  again reiterated the fact       
                 that the plaintiff was now the owner  of the suit property.        
                 Admittedly, this legal notice was responded to by the counsel      
                 for the defendant vide his reply dated 31.05.2019 (exhibit-        
                 12). The reply dated 31.05.2019 also took the same position        
                 as the defendant had taken before, i.e., that the plaintiff was    
                 not the owner of the suit property but it was his grandfather      
                 who  was  the landlord. The  plaintiff had averred that the        
                 defendant was  in arrears of rent from 01.05.2018. The letter      
                 dated   31.05.2018  (exhibit-                                      
                                             4)  issued  by  the  plaintiff‟s       
                 grandfather  to the  defendant  was  received  by him   on         
                 02.06.2018.  The suit was filed on 12.08.2019. Even  if one        
                 were  to  take  the  date of  receipt of the  letter dated         
                 31.05.2018,  i.e., 02.06.2018, as the date from which  the         
                 defendant  was in arrears of rent, the defendant would still       
                 be  clearly in arrears of rent of four months. This would          
                                                                 tion under         
                 permit  the plaintiff to seek the defendant‟s evic                 
                 section 4 of the Gangtok Rent Control and Eviction Act, 1956.      
                 When   the original landlord, i.e., the plaintiff‟s grandfather,   

                                                                          9         
                                        R.F.A. No. 06 of 2023                       
                                    Mohammed Safique vs. Abishek Rai                
                 had  himself informed in writing to the defendant that the         
                 plaintiff was now   the  owner  of the  suit property, the         
                 defendant who  was only a tenant ought to have accepted the        
                 position.                                                          
                 12.                                                                
                      The plaintiff‟s plea that he requires the suit property for   
                 his personal use  has been proved  through his evidence as         
                 well as the deposition of Dhan Maya  Rai (P.W.2) and Kimu          
                 Lepcha  (P.W.3). Dhan  Maya  Rai (P.W.2) deposed  that the         
                 plaintiff is her younger son; that the  plaintiff wanted to        
                 marry  and  settle down; that the plaintiff was working in a       
                 temporary  job on a meagre salary; that they were presently        
                 living in a joint family consisting of 8(eight) members; that      
                 her husband   was on the verge of retirement and a Class-IV        
                 employee  who  had taken  huge loan for the construction of        
                 the house.  Kimu  Lepcha  (P.W.3)                      -in-        
                                                   – the plaintiff‟s sister         
                 law, also confirmed that they were staying as a joint family       
                 consisting of 8 members  and that the plaintiff, her brother-      
                 in-law had expressed  his desire to settle in life and shift to    
                 the suit property. These facts would be known to Dhan Maya         
                 Rai (P.W.2) and Kimu  Lepcha  (P.W.3). The defendant could         
                 not demolish  the evidence led by the plaintiff and his two        
                 witnesses.  The  office order dated 25.04.2018   (exhibit-7)       
                 proves  that the  plaintiff had been appointed  as  Junior         
                 Engineer  on ad hoc basis in the project division on a pay of      
                 Rs.18,000/-  (Rupees eighteen thousand) only.                      
                                                              The plaintiff‟s       

                                                                          10        
                                        R.F.A. No. 06 of 2023                       
                                    Mohammed Safique vs. Abishek Rai                
                 plea of bona fide requirement for his personal use does seem       
                 genuine  and  reasonable and  not just devised to evict the        
                 defendant.                                                         
                 13.  Both  the issues of failure to pay rent and bona  fide        
                 requirement  have been  dealt with by this Court in                
                                                                     Karma          
                                                        on identical facts as       
                 Pintso Bhutia vs. Naresh Subba & Others1                           
                 correctly pointed out by the learned Senior Counsel for the        
                 plaintiff and therefore, the law laid down therein would be        
                 applicable. In the said case, it was noticed that the tenants      
                 inspite of being informed by their previous landlord that the      
                 property  had  been  sold  to the  plaintiff they failed to        
                 acknowledge  the fact and continued to send the rents to the       
                 previous landlord. This Court held that till the receipt of the    
                 letter informing the tenants about the change in ownership,        
                 the  tenants  failure to pay  rents may   be  excused  but         
                             ‟                                                      
                 thereafter their failure would definitely be default. In the       
                 said case, it was also held that the need projected by the         
                 plaintiff for the  bonafide  occupation  of  the  tenanted         
                 premises  was   genuine, a  reasonable  one  and  not just         
                 devised to evict the tenants.                                      
                                             Therefore, the tenants‟ eviction       
                 was  justified.                                                    
                 14.  The evidence led by the plaintiff clearly establishes that    
                 the defendant  had failed to pay rents since May 2018  and         
                 that amounted  to arrears of rents of more than four months.       
                 1                                                                  
                  2022:SHC:210                                                      

                                                                          11        
                                        R.F.A. No. 06 of 2023                       
                                    Mohammed Safique vs. Abishek Rai                
                 Section 4 also permits the Court to evict the tenant on the        
                 ground   of bona  fide occupation  of the landlord  or his         
                 dependent.  The plaintiff has been able to establish that he       
                 requires the suit property for his bona fide occupation as the     
                 landlord.  There  is no  compelling  evidence  led by  the         
                 defendant  to deter the learned District Judge not to exercise     
                 the discretion in favour of the plaintiff.                         
                 15.  This Court  is of the view that the impugned judgment         
                 is  a reasoned  one  and  calls for no  interference. It is        
                 accordingly upheld.                                                
                 16.  The  defendant shall vacate the suit property within a        
                 period of three months from  the date of this judgment. The        
                 arrears of rent deposited  by the defendant  in this Court         
                 pursuant  to the Order dated 08.12.2023 shall be paid to the       
                 plaintiff by the Registry. The defendant shall pay the rent        
                 from  the date of this judgment till the vacation of the suit      
                 property, i.e., three months as directed above to the plaintiff    
                 directly.                                                          
                 17.  The appeal is dismissed.                                      
                 18.  Parties shall bear their respective costs.                    
                                          (Bhaskar  Raj Pradhan)                    
                                                  Judge                             
           Approved for reporting: yes.                                             
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