H.S. Puttashankara (Appellant) initiated eviction proceedings against Yashodamma (Respondent) for a property in Bengaluru. The eviction was based on the Karnataka Rent Act, 1999. The Respondent disputed the existence of a landlord-tenant relationship and challenged the Appellant’s title to the property. The Rent Controller found a landlord-tenant relationship and ordered the Respondent to vacate the premises within three months. However, the High Court of Karnataka, in a revision petition, overturned the Rent Controller’s order. The High Court concluded that the Appellant failed to provide positive documentary evidence of lineage and ownership through Sri Banappa, the alleged original owner, and noted the Respondent’s son’s denial of signatures on rent receipt counter-foils. Aggrieved by this, the Appellant brought the matter to the Supreme Court of India. The fundamental dispute centred on whether a landlord-tenant relationship existed between the parties.
Law Involved The primary legislation involved is the Karnataka Rent Act, 1999 (referred to as the “Rent Act”).
Section 27(2)(a)(e)(g) and (o): These sections were the basis for initiating the eviction proceeding.
Section 3(e): Defines a “landlord” as a person receiving or entitled to receive rent.
Section 43: This crucial section deals with disputes concerning the landlord-tenant relationship.
It specifies that if a party denies the landlord-tenant relationship, the Court may accept a lease document or rent receipt as prima-facie evidence and proceed with the case.
However, if the lease is oral, the relationship is denied without a receipt, or the genuineness of the documents is suspected, the Court must halt proceedings and direct the parties to a competent Civil Court for a declaration of their rights, as the Rent Controller cannot adjudicate title disputes.
Reasoning The Supreme Court determined that the Rent Controller was justified in proceeding with the eviction petition because the Appellant-landlord had discharged the initial burden of proving a prima-facie landlord-tenant relationship by producing original rent receipts dated 20.07.2015, covering the period 01.02.2013 to 31.05.2014. According to Section 43 of the Rent Act, presenting such prima-facie evidence, like rent receipts, allows the Rent Controller to continue with the hearing.
The Supreme Court found that the High Court had “misdirected itself” by conducting a fact-finding exercise within its revisional jurisdiction, reaching a conclusion contrary to the Rent Controller. The High Court’s revisional powers should not typically involve such extensive factual inquiry. The High Court was “heavily swayed” by the Respondent’s son’s denial of signatures on the rent receipts and the Appellant’s inability to prove his lineage to Sri Banappa, which led it to incorrectly conclude that no landlord-tenant relationship existed. The Supreme Court emphasized that the Rent Controller’s jurisdiction is limited and does not extend to adjudicating complex title disputes between parties. Once prima-facie evidence of the landlord-tenant relationship is established, as it was by the Appellant, the Rent Controller is empowered to proceed with the eviction.
Holding The Supreme Court allowed the appeal. It set aside the final judgment of the High Court of Karnataka dated 31.03.2021. Consequently, the order passed by the Rent Controller dated 01.09.2017, directing the Respondent to ‘quit, vacate and deliver vacant possession’ of the suit property, was restored. Any pending applications were also dismissed.
H.S. Puttashankara Vs Yashodamma
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 1087: (DoJ 09-09-2025)




