(1.) This is a landlord's second appeal. his application for eviction of the tenant having been dismissed by the Rent Control Tribunal reversing the finding of the Rent Controller, who was of the opinion that he had made out a case of personal bona fide requirement by him of the accommodation with the tenant.
(2.) A second appeal lies only on a substantial question of law according to Sub -section (2) of Sec. 39 of the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958. The learned Counsel for the tenant urges that the finding of the Rent Control Tribunal whether the requirement of the premises for personal occupation claimed by the landlord is bona fide or not, is a finding of fact which cannot be interfered with in this second appeal. Normally this is so. The learned Counsel for the landlord points out first that the Rent Control Tribunal has erred in basing its finding that on the first -floor of the house in which practically half of the ground -floor is with the tenant, there are three rooms in front of the room in the occupation of the landlord which are also with him, but it is the statement of the tenant himself that those three rooms, marked by red pencil as A.B.C in the plan A. 1, are in fact with the family of Jagmindar Lal, a son of the landlord, who is employed in Bombay. The learned Counsel presses that this is a mistake of fact made by the Rent Control Tribunal, and justified interference in this second appeal. His second ground is that the landlord has a third son named Prem Chand, who at the time the matter was before the Rent Control Tribunal, was under training in the Agra Agricultural College as a Research Scholar, having been sent there by the Indian Council of Agricultural Research, and he was there only for training and was not permanently employed there. An affidavit to this effect had been filed by the landlord, but the learned Counsel says that the negative in the application was not read because the word has come partly under a seal, which is true. The affidavit of the landlord shows that his third son Prem Chand, was not permanently employed in the Agra Agricultural College, but was there only temporarily as a Research Scholar. These two mistakes of fact, the learned Counsel urges, are sufficient to justify interference with the order of the Rent Control Tribunal.
(3.) The house has two storey and on top of the second storey there are three Bursitis with a latrine and open roof. That part of the house is obviously used as sleeping accommodation mostly during summer. So that what has to be considered is the accommodation on the ground -floor and on the first -floor. On the ground -floor, there is portion marked red which is with the tenant, there is portion marked green which is with another son, named Tarlok Chand, of the landlord, and there is a room, marked yellow with letter 'C, with dimension of 13' Ã - 7', which is in the possession of the landlord. On the first floor, as already stated, portion marked by red pencil A -B -C and also with a blue lining is in the possession of the family of Jagminder Lal, son of the landlord. The remaining portion is in the possession of the landlord which consists of a store, 7' Ã - 51/4', a room, 12' Ã - 7 ¼, a bath and a kitchen. In front of the store and the bath there are verandahs, and in front of the rooms, there is another room, through the middle of these three a blue line in drawn, which is a line of division and on either side of the line is shown a passage. This accommodation the Rent Control Tribunal has found sufficient for the landlord and his wife. Two of his sons, namely, Jagmindar Lal and Tarlok Chand, are independent earning members and their families are living in separate portions of this very house. Those are not found dependants of the landlord. The question then only remains with regard to the third son, Prem Chand, He has come back from Agra and it is admitted at this stage by both the parties that he in these days employed at Ghaziabad. The landlord says that he was married some five or six months back and is at present drawing a salary of Rs. 1,000 per mensem. In C.L. Davar v/s. Amar Nath Kapur , I.L.R. (1962) 2 P&H 484 :, 1962 P.L.R. 521, it has been decided by my Lord, the Chief Justice, that the term 'dependent' must be construed as meaning somebody not wholly dependent or self -supporting and in a position to set up a separate residence. The third son Prem Chand of the landlord, who, otherwise in different circumstances, may have been his dependent, cannot in the circumstances be said to be his dependent, though he has recently been married, because he is self -supporting and in a position to set up a separate residence. No doubt, according to the admission of the parties at this stage, he is residing with his Gather, but that still does not make him dependent as that expression is used in the Act. So that he and his family are also to be dropped from consideration.