Subletting tenant can be thrown out: SC

Written By DNA Web Team | Updated:

A tenant can be thrown out of a premises if he sublets it to someone, including distant relatives, the Supreme Court (SC) has ruled.

NEW DELHI: A tenant can be thrown out of a premises if he sublets it to someone, including distant relatives, the Supreme Court (SC) has ruled, rejecting the plea of Delhi resident Vaishakhi Ram, who contended that his sub-tenants were his family members and as such, subletting the premises was legally valid.

Interpreting section 14 (1)(b) of the Delhi Rent Control Act 1958, the apex court said a tenant can be evicted if he had “sublet, assigned or otherwise parted with the possession of the whole or any part of the premises without obtaining the consent in writing of the landlord”.

Referring to Ram’s claim that the sub-tenants were his family members, the bench said the mere fact that a relative has chosen to reside with the tenant for the sake of convenience will not make him a member of the family of the tenant in the context of the rent control legislation.

“Apart from parents, spouse, brothers, sisters, sons and daughters, if any other relative claims to be a member of the tenant’s family, some more evidence is necessary to prove that they have always resided together as members of one family over a period of time,” the court said.