Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act, 1947, Section 15A – Evidence Act, 1872, Section 91 and 92 – Transfer of Property Act, 1882, Section 108 – Interpretation of document – Oral evidence – Held that the plain interpretation of the agreement dated 16.08.1967 discloses that the parties to the agreement were contemplating dealing with a business and have entered into an agreement for conducting the business and that the agreement is one for conducting the business of the first defendant – Oral evidence excluded from consideration as none of the exceptions stipulated in Section 92 of the Act, 1872 is attracted – The plaintiff adduced oral and documentary evidence either to dilute the obligation/standing of the plaintiff in the agreement dated 16.08.1967, or to claim the status of a deemed tenant – Document relied on by plaintiff is the registration certificate under the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1959 – The plaintiff, as conductor of the business, has assumed the responsibility for the incidences of running the business – This includes payment of sales tax as well – Held that a photocopy of the registration certificate exhibited before this Court will not change the status of the plaintiff from the conductor of the business to a sub-tenant and, by operation of law, a deemed tenant – Similarly, the receipts evidencing payment of royalty would militate against the status of deemed tenancy claimed by the plaintiff – Sections 91 and 92 are substantive provisions under the Act, 1872 – Unless and until the case falls under one or the other exceptions enabling receipt of oral evidence on a written document, the court is precluded from entertaining oral evidence.
(Para 22)
(B) Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act, 1947, Section 15A –Transfer of Property Act, 1882, Section 108 – Agreement for conducting business – Tenancy rights – The law recognises both ownership and possession of an owner of a property – A lease recognises the outcome of a rightful separation of ownership and possession between lessor and lessee – Section 108 of the Act, 1882 deals with the rights of the lessor and lessee – Under the said section, one of the conditions is that the lessor is bound by lessee’s request to put lessee in possession of the property – Admittedly, defendant no. 1 is in possession of the property from defendant no. 2 – Whereas the Agreement of Conducting business does not deal with the possession so enjoyed by defendant no. 1 in favour of the plaintiff – The absence of such a crucial clause in the agreement dated 16.08.1967 is a vital circumstance in construing the subject matter of the said agreement – This is an added circumstance to hold that what has been entrusted is to run the business in the plaint schedule but not occupying the plaint schedule under leave and licence – Terms of the agreement dated 16.08.1967 are clear that the entrustment to the plaintiff is the ownership of the hotel business of the first defendant and not the tenancy right of the first defendant in favour of the plaintiff – Held that the view taken by the first appellate court and the Impugned Order of the High Court upheld – Civil Appeal fails and is accordingly dismissed with costs quantified at Rs. 1,00,000/- payable to defendant no. 1.
(Para 23 to 24)
Annaya Kocha Shetty (Dead) Through Lrs V. Laxmibai Narayan Satose Since Deceased Through Lrs & Others
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 466: (DoJ 08-04-2025)




