In Leela Thakur and Another vs. Himachal Shiksha Samiti Saraswati Vidya Mandir, the High Court of Himachal Pradesh upheld an eviction order, ruling that technical omissions in legal pleadings—such as the failure to specifically state that unauthorized alterations “materially impaired the value and utility” of a building—are curable if the parties proceed to trial with full knowledge of the issues. The Court established that once a tenant allows evidence of such alterations to be led without objection and fails to raise the technical plea in their initial written statement, they cannot challenge it later in a revision petition. Furthermore, the Court clarified that a successful landlord is not an “aggrieved party” required to file a separate cross-revision to support an eviction order; they may legally challenge adverse findings within the tenant’s revision petition to sustain the ultimate decision.
- Factual Background and Eviction Grounds
The respondent (landlord/Society) sought the eviction of the petitioners (tenants) from a building in Solan on three primary grounds: that the premises were unsafe and unfit for human habitation, that the building was required for bona fide rebuilding, and that the tenants had illegally converted a verandah into a room and kitchen without written consent. The Rent Controller and Appellate Authority concurrently ordered eviction based on the unsafe condition of the building and the unauthorized material alterations, though they rejected the plea for rebuilding on the grounds that residential premises could not be converted to non-residential use without specific permission.
- Technical Defects in Pleadings and Waiver of Objections
The tenants challenged the eviction primarily on the technicality that the landlord’s petition did not explicitly plead how the additions materially impaired the “value and utility” of the property. The High Court rejected this contention, observing that:
- Actual Knowledge: Both parties were fully aware of the controversy and went to trial with complete knowledge of the case they had to meet.
- Expert Evidence: The landlord produced an expert witness (PW-5) who testified that the unauthorized construction diminished the value of the land and building.
- Implied Admission: The tenants’ defense—arguing that the alterations did not impair value—amounted to an admission that the alterations had indeed been carried out.
- Failure to Object: By failing to raise the lack of specific pleadings in their written statement or objecting during the evidentiary stage, the tenants were estopped from raising the plea for the first time in a revision.
- Limited Scope of Revisional Jurisdiction
The Court emphasized that its jurisdiction under Section 24(5) of the H.P. Urban Rent Control Act is extremely narrow. It held that:
- The High Court cannot re-appreciate or re-evaluate evidence merely to take an alternative view of the facts.
- Concurrent findings of fact—such as the dilapidated condition of the building and the existence of unauthorized alterations—can only be disturbed if they are perverse or entirely unsupported by the record.
- The fact that other tenants in the same building had already vacated further supported the finding that the premises were no longer safe for habitation.
- Rights of the Successful Landlord in Revision
A significant legal point addressed was the landlord’s ability to support the eviction order by disputing adverse findings (specifically the rejection of the “rebuilding” ground) without having filed a separate revision petition. The Court ruled:
- Aggrieved Party: A party who successfully secures the ultimate relief (eviction) is not an “aggrieved party” simply because an isolated finding was ruled against them.
- Support of Order: It is “just, equitable, and legally permissible” for a successful respondent to attack adverse findings to ensure the ultimate decision is sustained.
Conclusion
Finding no perversity or error of law in the concurrent findings of the lower authorities, the High Court dismissed the revision petition, thereby affirming the eviction of the tenants.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 304
Leela Thakur And Another V. Himachal Shiksha Samiti Saraswati Vidya Mandir (D.O.J. 02.06.2026)
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