The Delhi High Court dismissed a revision petition challenging the judgment of the learned Additional Rent Controller (ARC), which had dismissed an eviction petition filed under Section 14(1)(e) of the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958. The High Court upheld the ARC’s finding that the petitioners failed to establish their ownership of the subject property and, consequently, failed to prove a landlord-tenant relationship, rendering the eviction petition meritless.
- Background and Ownership Claim: The petitioners sought the eviction of the respondents from the subject property, claiming ownership through a chain of documents (GPA, Agreement to Sell, and Will) executed in 1993 by one Mr. G.R. Siddiqui in favor of the petitioners’ predecessor-in-interest, Dr. Alamgir Alvi.
- Court’s Findings on Ownership:
- The Court noted that Mr. G.R. Siddiqui, the petitioners’ source of title, never established valid ownership. Previous judicial findings (specifically an order dated 24.05.2013) held that Mr. Siddiqui was, at best, a trespasser on government land and could not transfer a title he did not possess (nemo dat quod non habet).
- The petitioners’ reliance on prior ex-parte eviction orders regarding other portions of the property was rejected, as those orders did not adjudicate the issue of ownership and did not constitute res-judicata.
- The High Court emphasized that in proceedings under the Delhi Rent Control Act, a landlord must produce documents prima facie demonstrating ownership or a better title than the tenant, which the petitioners failed to do.
- Landlord-Tenant Relationship:
- The petitioners failed to provide any documentary evidence, such as rent agreements or receipts, to substantiate the existence of a landlord-tenant relationship.
- The Court highlighted material contradictions in the petitioners’ case: they claimed an oral tenancy was created post-1993, yet PW-1 testified that the tenancy devolved in 1989—four years before the property was allegedly purchased.
- Conversely, the respondents produced various documents (including income tax assessments and utility bills) establishing their continuous possession of the property since 1975, predating the petitioners’ alleged purchase.
- Conclusion: Exercising its revisional jurisdiction, the High Court held that the ARC’s judgment did not suffer from any illegality, material irregularity, or jurisdictional error. As the petitioners failed to establish the foundational elements of ownership and a landlord-tenant relationship, the Court found no grounds to interfere with the dismissal of the eviction petition.
2026 DHC 5673
Nazima Alvi & Ors. v. Shri Mahendar Pal Sachdeva & Ors. (D.O.J. 16.07.2026)




