BOMBAY HIGH COURT Vidyavardhak Sangh Company Vs. Ayyappa Sangirimallappa (Norman Macleod, C.J. and Coyajee, J.) 01.07.1925 JUDGMENT Norman Macleod, C.J. 1. This action was instituted by the plaintiffs to recover possession, together with mesne profits and costs, of the land in dispute from the defendants alleging that the land belonged to the father of defendant No. 3 who agreed to look after the trees, plant new trees and pay rent equal to the assessment, and that defendant No. 3 having denied their title they were entitled to take possession without giving any notice to quit. 2. The learned Trial Judge found all the allegations of the plaintiffs proved, but thought that notice to quit was necessary and on that ground he dismissed the plaintiffs' claim for possession. 3. The Appellate Judge having referred to various decisions said: From the rulings cited above it is clear that a disclaimer of the landlord's title works forfeiture. The fact that there has been a disclaimer is not disputed. I, therefore, hold that no notice to quit is necessary, in this case. 4. Accordingly the decree of the Trial Court was set aside and a decree was passed for possession. 5. In Venkaji Krishna Nadkarni v. Lakshman Devji Kandar1 the following question was referred for decision of the Full Bench. 6. Whether in this Presidency a disclaimer of the lessor's title by the annual tenant of a holding to which Section 84 of the Land Revenue Code (Bombay Act V of 1879) applies, is, if made prior to suit, a sufficient cause of action to enable the lessor to recover possession without proof of notice to quit. 7. Sir Charles Sargent in giving judgment of the Full Bench said (page 361 Page of 20 B.--[Ed.]): The object of Section 84 is to define the nature of the contract creating an annual 110 Ind. Dec.798 tenancy, which, it is to be remarked, may be for agricultural or other purposes both as regards the period during which it runs and the landlord's power of determining it. The landlord's right of forfeiture, however, arising from disclaimer of his title, although it is treated as determining the tenancy at his election, is no part of the contract of tenancy, but is a right which the law implies in all cases from the relationship of landlord and tenant. Had it been the intention of the Legislature to exclude the right of forfeiture in the case of all annual tenancies, we should have expected to find it expressly provided for. Section 111 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882, which gives the right of forfeiture, is, in common with all the provisions of Ch. V of the Act, declared to be inapplicable by Section 117 of the Act in the case of all leases for agricultural purposes, except so far as the Local Government may have otherwise declared. That Act, however did not become the law of this Presidency before January, 1893, subsequent to the institution of this suit. In Vithu v. Dhondi2 which was a case in which it was assumed that notice was required by Section 84 of the Land Revenue Code, it was not contended that the right of forfeiture had been taken away by the section. We think, therefore, that the first question should be answered in the affirmative assuming the case not to be governed by Section 117 of the Transfer of Property Act. 8. The tenancy in this case commenced before 1878, so that the provisions of the Transfer of Property Act would not apply 9. In Ochhavalal v. Gopal3 the question arose whether an annual tenancy to which the Bombay Land Revenue Code applied could be determined without a notice in writing by the landlord. It was urged before the Court that it could be so determined, because there was a repudiation of the landlord's title. As a matter of fact in that case, there was no repudiation of the landlord's title by the tenant. Apart from that, the Court considered that effect must be given to the express provisions of the Bombay Land Revenue Code. As no such notice was given the annual tenancy had not been determined. But in that case the defendant tenant did not disclaim the landlord's title, but merely contended that the plaintiffs had no right to expect payment of rent on a fixed date. Therefore the relationship of landlord and tenant still existed. 10. The facts are somewhat similar in the case of Rama Ranchhod v. Abdul Rahim4, where it was held that the setting up of a permanent tenancy by a yearly tenant is not tantamount to disclaimer of the landlord's title. Such a tenant is, therefore entitled to a notice to quit before he carl be evicted by the landlord. 11. It must be noted that in the case of Ochhavalal v. Gopal5, the Pull Bench decision in Venkaji Krishna Nadkarni v. Lakshman Devji Kandar6, was not referred to. 12. In Maharaja of Jeypore v. Rukmini Pattamahadevi7, it was said in the judgment of the Privy Council: The repudiation of a landlord's title by the tenant will in pertain circumstances work a forfeiture. This is not the ancient Indian law, but has been adopted by the Courts from the Law of England, and is now embodied in the Transfer of 28 Ind. Dec. 277 422 Bom. L.R. 1214 : 45 B 303 610 Ind. Dec. 798 39 Bom. L.R. 1332 59 Bom. L.R. 1332 750 Ind. Cas. 631 : 21 Bom. L.R. 655 : 36 M.L.J. 543 : 17 A.L.J. 552 : 29 C.L.J. 528 : (1919) M.W.N. 271 Property Act, 1882, Section 3 of which merely gives statutory form to a rule already in force. The denial which operates forfeiture must--now--be by matter of record before institution of any suit for forfeiture, and must be in clear and unmistakable terms. 13. It may also be noticed that in Rama Ranchhod v. Abdul Rahim8, Mr. Justice Fawcett said (page 1220 Page of 22 Bom. L.R.-[Ed]): In the case of an agricultural lease such as the present, Section 84 of the Land Revenue Code lays down that in the absence of any special agreement in writing to the contrary an annual tenancy shall require for its termination a notice given in writing in a certain form. Therefore, even where there has been a disclaimer of the landlord's title, such notice is necessary to determine an annual agricultural tenancy in this Presidency. 14. His Lordship referred to Vithu v. Dhondi9, and Ochhavalal v. Gopal10, 15. But in the first place, that particular question was not before the Court. Secondly, no reference was made to the Full Bench decision in Venkaji Krishna Nadkarni v. Lakshman Devji Kandar11, We think then that this case comes within the purview of the Full Bench decision, and that no notice was required to determine the tenancy, once the tenant had disclaimed the landlord s title. We, therefore, confirm the decision of the lower Appellate Court and dismiss the appeal with costs. Coyajee, J. 16. I agree. 109 Bom. L.R. 1332 1110 Ind. Dec. 798 859 Ind. Cas. 278 : 22 Bom. L.R. 1214 98 Ind. Dec. 277