eng
competition

Text Practice Mode

High Court ki Taiyari

created Feb 2nd 2023, 12:16 by 1998Raunak


0


Rating

422 words
17 completed
00:00
A Division Bench of this Court in Raghunandan Saran Ashok Saran held that Sections 4,6 & 9 of the Delhi Rent Act relating to standard rent had not taken into account the huge difference between the cost of living in the past and the present time and did not pass the test of reasonableness and had become obsolete and archaic and accordingly struck down the same. However the only effect of the said judgment is that a tenant could not apply to have the standard rent thereof determined and thus could not avoid paying agreed rent, as he was able to before this judgment. Undoubtedly the Division Bench, while so striking down the said provisions, did observe that the said provisions dealing with the standard rent did not take into account the rise in the consumer price index and the huge costs required for maintaining the tenanted premises and there was no justification for not updating the frozen rents but all this was in the context of striking down Sections 4,6&9 only. Thus the said judgment cannot be said to be a judgment on the proposition that landlords are entitled to have the rent increased as per the consumer price index or rate of inflation.  In Pearey Lal, doubts as to the correctness of the view wherein have led to this reference, the premises were let out in the year 1956 at a rent of `400/- p.m. and the rent had remained the same. In the year 2008 the landlord filed a suit in the Court of Civil Judge for recovery of possession of the premises from the tenant and for mesne profits. The said suit was valued for the relief of possession for purposes of court fee and jurisdiction at `4800/- i.e. on the basis of annual rent. The tenant applied under Order 7 Rule 11 CPC contending the suit to be barred by Section 50 of the Delhi Rent Act. The landlord in reply contended that the premises were outside the purview of the Delhi Rent Act since the tenant had sublet the premises and the rent paid by the subtenant for the premises, though to the tenant, was in excess of `3500/- p.m. The Civil Judge dismissed the application under Order 7 Rule 11 CPC holding that the question whether the premises were outside the purview of the Delhi Rent Act or not was subject matter of evidence. In challenge to the said order by the tenant before this Court, the said finding of the Civil Judge was affirmed.

saving score / loading statistics ...