Tenant Can Never Become Property Owner, Despite Prolonged Stay
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Tenant Can Never Become Property Owner, Despite Prolonged Stay
Can a tenant, after decades of accepting landlord’s title and paying rent, later dispute such landlord’s ownership over the property? The Supreme Court (“the Court”) addressed this recurring question in landlord-tenant disputes in a recent matter of Jyoti Sharma v Vishnu Goyal1. The Court firmly held in the negative and noted that a tenant who has entered the premises under the landlord’s permission and has continuously paid rent cannot subsequently challenge the landlord’s title, especially where a probated Will supports the claim. Background The tenancy in question began in 1953, when the tenants’ (“Defendants”) father took a small shop on rent from Ramji Das, the father-in-law of the current owner (“Plaintiff”). Rent was regularly paid to Ramji Das and later to his son, the Plaintiff’s husband. Ramji Das had then executed a Will in the year 1999 bequeathing the shop to his daughter-in-law, i.e., the Plaintiff soon after which he passed away. The Plaintiff sought eviction of the Defendants on the following grounds: (i) default in payment of rent since January 2000; and (ii) bona fide need to expand the family’s sweets and savouries business. The Defendants disputed the very title of Ramji Das and assailed the Will as a fraudulent one. The Defendants, however admitted that the rent deed was executed by Ramji Das and he was receiving rent from the tenants through his son, the Plaintiff’s husband. The trial court, however, dismissed the suit, primarily because the Plaintiff was unable to prove ownership or attornment. This view was further confirmed by the first appellate court and then by the High Court. All three courts doubted the Will and accepted the Defendants’ argument that Ramji Das never had title over the premises. The Plaintiff tried to produce a probate order from the year 2018 before the High Court to validate the Will, but the High Court rejected the application made under Order XLI Rule 27 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Questions of Law Whether the Plaintiff proved ownership and the landlord-tenant relationship, especially when the lower courts doubted the validity of the Will?
Decision of the Court The Supreme Court overturned the concurrent findings of the three courts and held that all three courts had ignored material evidence and reached conclusions that were speculative and unsustainable. The concurrent findings were perverse and therefore required interference and held:
Therefore, the Court ordered the recovery of rent from January 2000 and eviction on the grounds of default and bona fide need. Considering the long tenancy, the Court granted six months’ time for the tenants to vacate, upon filing of an undertaking and clearing arrears within a month. Comments and Conclusion This Apex Court’s judgment establishes two key principles:
The judgment brings much clarity and relief to the owners seeking eviction over protracted litigation and reinforces the right of the landlord to seek eviction in case of genuine need, especially when it comes to old tenancies and testamentary transfers. Endnotes: [1] 2025 SCC OnLine SC 1956
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