(1.) THE present appeal is directed against the order of the Rent Control Tribunal, dated 12th February, 1962. On 29th June, 1960, one Mohd Ilyas Khan sold the property in dispute to the Respondents and on 24th August, 1962, the Respondents presented an application to the Rent Controller, Delhi, for ejectment of the Appellant on the ground that he had sublet and parted with possession of a part of the premises to one Gopal Dass and a part to Unique Electric and others. By order, dated 3rd June, 1961, the Rent Controller allowed the application for ejectment and held that there was no subletting or parting with possession so far as Gopal Dass was concerned but a part of the premises had been sublet to Anant Singh. The Appellant filed an appeal, before the Rent Control Tribunal who, by his order, dated 12th February, 1962, dismissed the same.
(2.) MR . Naubat Ram Suri, appearing for the Appellant, has urged only one point in support of his appeal. He says that the Respondents sold the premises in question by a sale deed, dated 27th December, 1961, to one Mohinder Kaur and ceased to have any interest in the property. They were consequently not entitled to a decree for ejectment. Mr. Suri's argument is that an Appellate Court can take notice of the subsequent events and in view of the sale deed, he asks me to hold that the Respondents, who lost all interest in the property, are no longer entitled to an order for ejectment of the Appellant. He further submits that the relationship between the landlord and! the tenant is a personal relation and the moment landlord is changed, the right which may have accrued to the earlier landlord ceases to be of any avail to the assignee from the said landlord. He strongly relies on two decisions of this Court, namely, Abid Hussain v. Roshan Dass, I.L.R. (1961) P&H 226 :, 1960 P.L.R. 836, and Prithi Singh v. Jiva Ram, 1961 P.L.R. 352. In Abid Hussain's case certain rent was due to the landlord when he sold the property and the right to recover those arrears was also sold to the purchaser. The tenant deposited only the arrears of rent due to the purchaser -landlord. Shamsher Bahadur, J., held that the tenant under the Delhi and Aimer Rent Control Act, 1952, was only required to deposit the arrears of rent for the period in respect of which arrears are payable on the first hearing relates to the landlord who has brought a suit for ejectment and it is only the rent due to him that is required to be deposited. The decision in Abid Hussain's case is, in my view, of no assistance to the Appellant. It is well established that arrears of rent which have been assigned are not rent as after assignment they assume a different legal character. In Prithi Singh's case, a landlord obtained a decree for ejectment of his two tenants who occupied the ground floor and the first floor of the building respectively. The occupier of the ground floor vacated the premises occupied by him and the same was occupied by the landlord. The tenant in the first floor went up in appeal and urged that the landlord did not bona fide require both the floors and the accommodation in his possession was quite sufficient for his use. The argument was accepted and the landlord's suit for ejectment dismissed.