First cousin can inherit tenancy, rules high court
MUMBAI, June 12 -- The Bombay High Court has upheld the tenancy rights of a woman living in a Parsi Punchayet property in Dadar, ruling that as the first cousin and legal heir of a deceased tenant, she was entitled to be recognised as a tenant even though she could not prove that she was residing with him at the time of his death.
A single-judge bench of Justice MM Sathaye dismissed a petition filed by the Parsi Punchayet Funds and Properties (Trust), which had challenged concurrent rulings of the Small Causes Court and its appellate bench in favour of Katty Mistry.
The dispute dates back to 1993, when tenant Baji B Patel died. Following his death, Mistry, who claimed to be Patel's first cousin and legal heir, sought recognition as the tenant of the premises and requested that the rent receipt be transferred to her name.
The Trust opposed her claim, arguing that she was neither residing with Patel before his death nor related to him or his family. It described Mistry as a "rank trespasser" attempting to "unlawfully usurp the suit premises".
The matter was subsequently heard by the Small Causes Court in Mumbai, which in December 1997 declared Mistry the tenant of the premises and directed the Trust to issue rent receipts in her name. The Trust challenged the decision before the appellate bench, which upheld the ruling in 1999. The Trust then moved HC in August 2000.
Before the High Court, the Trust relied on documents such as ration cards and municipal election slips to argue that Mistry was merely Patel's neighbour in the same building and not a resident of his household. It also contended that she had failed to establish any legal relationship with Patel and therefore could not be recognised as a tenant under the Bombay Rent Act.
Mistry, however, maintained that she was claiming tenancy rights both as a member of Patel's family and as his legal heir under the provisions of the Indian Succession Act applicable to Parsis. She pointed out that no other person had come forward claiming heirship and that the genealogy placed on record had already been accepted by the lower courts. While Justice Sathaye noted that Mistry had failed to prove that she was residing with Patel as a family member at the time of his death, the court observed that both the trial court and the appellate court had accepted her status as Patel's first cousin and legal heir. The HC also relied on Unit Trust Certificates that showed Patel and Mistry as joint holders years before his death, finding that the documents supported her claim as a legal heir.
Interpreting section 5(11)(c)(i) of the Bombay Rent Act, the court explained that the first part of the provision applies to family members residing with a tenant at the time of the tenant's death. However, in the absence of such a family member, the second part allows a court to recognise "any heir of the deceased tenant" as the tenant.
Noting that no other heir had come forward and that Mistry had already been recognised as the tenant, the HC found no reason to interfere....
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