(1.) THIS is a defendant-tenant's revision. At the hearing of this revision before a learned Single Judge it was submitted on behalf of the tenant-applicant that the deposit made by him under Section 20 (4) of the Rent Control Act of 1972 was an unconditional deposit. The court below erred in law in holding to the contrary. The learned Single Judge found some inconsistency between two single Judge decisions of this Court, namely, Ram Kishan v. The District Judge, 1976 AWC 763 and Laxmi Narain Sharma v. Arjun Deo Dhawan, 1981 ARC 672 on the nature of the deposit being conditional or unconditional. He hence referred this case to a Division Bench.
(2.) THE plaintiff-opposite party sued for the ejectment of the tenant applicant. She alleged that the defendant was a tenant of a portion of the accommodation on a monthly rent of Rs. 360/-. He had not paid the rent ever since August 1, 1972. THE suit was filed on August 6, 1973 for ejectment and recovery of arrears of rent and damages.
(3.) THE defendant had, at the first hearing of the suit, deposited the amount of rent and damages etc. as provided by Section 20 (4) of the U. P. Rent Control Act of 1972. THE deposit was made at the rate of Rs. 360/-per month. THE first hearing of the suit on which the deposit was made was October 30, 1973. Few months later, on January 1, 1974 the defendant filed a written statement to contest the suit in which he took the plea that the rate of rent was not Rs. 360/- per month as claimed by the plaintiff, but Rs. 125/- per month. It does not appear that the tenant denied non-payment of rent from August 1, 1972. THE Court found that the defendant had, at the first hearing, deposited in court the entire amount due (taking the rate of Rs. 360/- per month), but the deposit was conditional because the defendant had pleaded that the agreed rent was Rs. 125/- per month only. Section 20 (4) required that the deposit of the amount due should be unconditional. Hence the tenant was not entitled to the benefit of Section 20 (4) by being relieved of his liability to ejectment. In this view, the suit for ejectment was decreed.