LAWS(DLH)-2013-8-331

CHAMELI Vs. KUNDAN LAL

Decided On August 30, 2013
CHAMELI Appellant
V/S
KUNDAN LAL Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) By way of the present petition under Article 227 of the Constitution of India, the petitioner has assailed order dated 11th July 2013 passed by the Additional Rent Control Tribunal, West, Delhi in an appeal filed by the respondent/tenant seeking to set aside judgment dated 21st July 2012 in a petition filed by the respondent under section 44 of the Delhi Rent Control Act (hereinafter referred to as "the Act") against the petitioner/landlady. The litigation between the parties is that the petitioner had filed an eviction petition under section 14(1)(a) of the Act against the respondent and the respondent had filed a petition under section 44 of the Act against the petitioner. In the petition under section 44 of the Act, the respondent had sought for directions to the petitioner to raise the ground level of the tenanted premises to the level of the road or to allow the tenant to raise the ground level of the tenanted premises and to remove the partition as shown in the site plan. It was stated in that petition by the respondent that at the time of letting out the tenanted premises, the ground level of the tenanted premises was equal to the road and that in the period of 30 years, the road had been constructed from time to time due to which the ground level of the tenanted premises had reached down by about three and a half feet from the road level, because of which, in rainy season, the rain water gathered in the premises, as a consequence of which, the respondent faced hardship and inconvenience and suffered losses in his business. However, it was contended in the petition by the petitioner that through the petition, the respondent was in fact seeking to change the original shape, structure and size of the tenanted premises.

(2.) The said petition was however dismissed on the ground that notice under Section 44(2) of the Act was not issued to the petitioner and furthermore, the testimonies of the witnesses revealed that the tenanted property was in the same condition as it was let out and was being used by the respondent in the same manner as it was being used when it was let out. By this order, the learned trial court had dismissed an application of the respondent seeking permission to get certain photographs of the tenanted premises through a photographer and a direction to the petitioner not to obstruct them in taking photographs.

(3.) The respondent filed an appeal against the same stating that he had not been given the opportunity to pursue his application. The learned Appellate Court observed that the respondent had stated that he is an illiterate person and he did not know whether he had served any legal notice on the petitioner, the same was not sufficient for dismissal of the petition as the said legal notice is a part of judicial record and the AD/card in relation thereto was on the record. Even otherwise the service of the notice was not denied by the petitioner in her written statement, thus deemed to have been accepted.