In the case of Brij Mohan Batta vs. Tara Chand Garg & Anr., the Delhi High Court dismissed a revision petition filed by a landlord seeking the eviction of a tenant from a commercial shop in Kirti Nagar. Justice Amit Sharma upheld the decision of the Additional Rent Controller (ARC), ruling that the landlord failed to establish a genuine bona fide requirement for the premises. Although the landlord claimed he needed the shop to settle his two “unemployed” sons in a catering business, the Court found the claim to be concocted, as evidence proved the sons were already gainfully employed running a gift and packaging business at another location.
- Nature of the Petition
The petitioner (landlord) filed this revision petition under Section 25B(8) of the Delhi Rent Control Act (DRCA) to set aside an ARC order dated July 8, 2024, which had dismissed his eviction petition against the respondents (tenants). During the pendency of the high court proceedings, the original petitioner passed away and was represented by his legal heirs.
- Landlord’s Case for Eviction
The original petitioner sought eviction from Shop No. 3/14-A, Kirti Nagar, which had been let out in 1970. He asserted a bona fide requirement under Section 14(1)(e) of the DRCA, claiming:
- He was running a catering business from an adjoining shop but was unable to manage it alone due to age.
- His two sons, Nitin and Ankush Batta, were unemployed and needed the demised premises to run their own business.
- He had no other suitable alternate accommodation available.
- Tenant’s Defense and Evidence
The respondents argued that the landlord’s requirement was forged and fabricated. They provided evidence to show:
- The sons were already successfully running a business named “Om Vaneesa Creations” (dealing in gift items and theme packaging) from the ground floor of another property in East Punjabi Bagh.
- They placed photographs on record showing a business banner for “Om Vaneesa Creations” that featured the mobile number of one of the petitioner’s sons.
- The landlord possessed other vacant shops at the East Punjabi Bagh property that could be used if necessary.
- Reasoning of the Lower Court (ARC)
The ARC dismissed the eviction petition after finding that the landlord had not come to the court with clean hands. The ARC noted that the landlord admitted the phone number on the business banner belonged to his son but failed to produce his brother (the alleged owner of that shop) as a witness to rebut the claim that his sons were running that business. The ARC concluded the need for the Kirti Nagar shop was fabricated solely to evict the tenants.
- High Court’s Findings and Analysis
- Limited Scope of Revision: The Court emphasized that its powers under Section 25B(8) of the DRCA are supervisory in nature and not as wide as an appellate court. It can only interfere if the lower court’s order suffers from a jurisdictional error or grave illegality.
- Failure to Rebut Evidence: The High Court found that once the tenants raised a triable issue regarding the sons’ existing business, the onus shifted to the landlord to displace that presumption. The landlord failed to prove that his sons intended to wind up their current business or that the East Punjabi Bagh premises were unsuitable.
- Appreciation of Evidence: The Court held that the ARC’s reliance on the photographs and the son’s visiting card—which shared the same contact details—was legally sound.
- Final Conclusion
Finding no error apparent on the face of the record or perversity in the ARC’s judgment, the High Court dismissed the revision petition and upheld the refusal to grant an eviction order
2026 DHC 5385
Brij Mohan Batta vs. Tara Chand Garg & Anr.(D.O.J. 06.07.2026)



