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(PERCIVAL
HENRY
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DEFENDANT
(APPELLANT) |
BETWEEN |
(AND
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(ANGELITA
VIVAS |
PLAINTIFF
(RESPONDENT) |
Supreme
Court
Inferior Court Appeal No. 18 of 1982
9th December, 1982.
Moe, CJ.
Mr. Denys
Barrow, for the Appellant
Mr. Nicholas Dujon, for the Respondent
Tenancy
at will - Application for repossession of premises after
tenant refused to quit occupation of premises after service
of notice to quit - Whether magistrate had jurisdiction
to hear application - Whether jurisdiction of magistrate
ousted by section 3 of the District Courts Ordinance, Chapter
II - Effect of section 6(1) of Inferior Courts Ordinance,
Chapter 10, as read with section 53 of the Landlord and
Tenant Ordinance, Chapter 201, on the jurisdiction of the
magistrate.
J
U D G M E N T
On 28th
April, 1981 the Respondent claimed from the Appellant possession
of a house situated at 12 Cinderella Street, Orange Walk Town.
The particulars of her claim were as follows: The Plaintiff
(now Respondent) is the landlady of the Defendant (Appellant)
in respect of the house situated on the premises located at
No. 12 Cinderella Street, Orange Walk Town. On the 1st day
of September, 1980 the said Defendant sold the said house
to the said Plaintiff for a consideration of $4,000.00; on
the 2nd day of February, 1981 the Plaintiff gave the Defendant
notice in writing to quit and deliver the said house by the
15th day of February, 1981. The Defendant has failed to give
up possession of the said house to the Plaintiff and wrongfully
remains in possession thereof. On the 18th May, 1981 the magistrate
made an order that the Appellant give to the Respondent possession
of the house within twenty-one days failing which an ejectment
warrant to be issued.
The Appellant
filed three grounds of appeal from the magistrate's order,
namely:-
(1)
The Inferior Court had no jurisdiction in the matter.
(2)
The decision was unreasonable and could not be supported
having regard to the evidence.
(3)
The decision was based on a wrong principle or was such
that the Inferior Court viewing the circumstances reasonably
could not properly have so decided.
At this
hearing he combined those grounds under one head: that the
magistrate had no jurisdiction in the matter. He submitted
that there was no jurisdiction in the magistrate by virtue
of sections 3(1)(b) and 3(2) of the District Courts Ordinance,
CAP. 11. They provide as follows:-
"Section
3(1) (b): The court shall have jurisdiction to hear and
determine,
-(b) all actions for the recovery of any chattel or thing
where the value of the chattel or thing does not exceed
one hundred and fifty dollars,
and such actions may be commenced in the court and dealt
with in accordance with the provisions of this Ordinance."
"Section
3(2): The court shall not have cognizance of any action
in which any incorporeal right, or the title to any real
property, is or may be in question, or in which the validity
of any devise, bequest, or limitation under any will or
settlement is or may be disputed, or of any action for malicious
prosecution, libel, slander, seduction or breach of promise
of marriage."
The Appellant
argued first that if the Action was to obtain possession of
a chattel, the magistrate would have had jurisdiction under
and subject to the monetary limitation set by section 3(1)(b)
(supra), but if it was for recovery of a house standing
on land, the court did not have any jurisdiction because a
question of title to the land arose. He also contended that
there was no landlord and tenant relationship between the
parties and thus the provisions of the Landlord and Tenant
Ordinance, CAP 201, did not apply.
The Respondent
relied on section 53 of the Landlord and Tenant Ordinance,
CAP 201 as giving the magistrate jurisdiction whether or not
it is to be regarded as a chattel or house and land which
is sought to be recovered and thus section 3(1) (b) did not
limit the jurisdiction of the Court. He also contended that
there was no evidence on which the magistrate could have held
that a question of title arose in the matter.
Now section
6(1) of the Inferior Courts Ordinance, CAP 10 provides:
"(1)
There shall be established in each judicial district a "District
Court" which shall have and exercise civil jurisdiction
in accordance with, and subject to, the provisions of -
(a)
the District Courts (Procedure) Ordinance; and
(b)
any other Ordinance or law conferring upon the said court
jurisdiction to hear and determine any cause or matter or
authorising it to do or perform any act or function.
One such
Ordinance is the Landlord and Tenant Ordinance, CAP 201 which
in Part IV provides for application before a District Court
for recovery of possession of certain premises.
Section
53 of the Ordinance, CAP 201 provides:
"(1)
Whenever the term or interest of any tenant of a tenement
held by him at will or for a term, either without being
liable to the payment of rent, or ----, has expired or has
been determined by a legal notice to quit, or otherwise,
if the tenant -----refuses or neglects to deliver up possession
of them, the following provisions shall apply:
(a)
The former landlord or his agent may file against the former
tenant or occupier in the district court an application
for recovery of possession of the land formerly held under
the tenancy, which application shall be treated as if it
were a plaint filed in the said court."
"Tenement"
is defined as any land or building in possession of a tenant
under tenancy.
Section
3(1)(b) of CAP 11 did not preclude the magistrate from exercising
jurisdiction in this matter. The next question to be answered
is whether the Appellant was a tenant of the Respondent. The
magistrate found that the Appellant sold the house to the
Respondent and asked for and was allowed eight days within
which to leave the house. The Appellant was therefore permitted
occupation of the house without payment of rent and in such
circumstances, a tenancy at will is implied. See Buck v
Howarth [1947] 1 A.E.R. 342.
The remaining
question is whether a question of title arose on the evidence.
It is brief and I quote it. "Plaintiff sworn statement
states:-
"I
live in Corozal Town. I know Defendant. In September, 1980
I had deal with Defendant. I bought a house from Defendant.
House is at Cinderella Town, Orange Walk. I paid $4,000.00
for the house. Defendant asked me for 8 days to leave the
house. Defendant has not delivered me the keys of the house.
. On 2.2.81 I sent Notice to Defendant to quit house. This
is the notice marked Exhibit A.V. 1. Defendant has not yet
delivered house to me. I subsequently took action for Defendant
to deliver house to me".
Cross-examined
by Counsel Mr. Staine:- I need house as I have relatives in
Orange Walk Town. I want my relatives to live in the house.
I paid Defendant $4,000.00 for the house. I got receipt. There
is no other document except the receipt. Transaction took
place at Mr. Alpuche J.P. Both of us signed document but Mr.
Alpuche kept it. Mr. Alpuche signed also. I don't remember
what the document contained. I went to Lands Office to request
transfer of lot in my name. I went alone. I was to get a piece
of land to move the house.
Re-examined
by Counsel Mr. Dujon: - I am lessee of land now. I know this
document. This is paper whereby Minister gave land to me.
I am paying rent for land where house is located. (attached)."
Mr. Staine
for Appellant then submitted inter alia that this contention
that title of land comes into dispute would be simply that
the Defendant does not intend to relinquish any title on the
lot. Having heard Counsel for the Respondent the magistrate
ruled as follows:- Action before it is in respect of possession
of house which Defendant still holds by keeping keys from
new owner, and the issue is in respect of application for
an ejection warrant and nothing else.
There
was nothing on the evidence which raised a bona fide
question of title to land. The jurisdiction of a magistrate
is not ousted by mere pretence of title and mere assertion
of right does not do so where the evidence before the magistrate
makes it clear that the claim is wholly groundless and the
magistrate was correct in ruling as he did. He adjourned for
a week and at the next date of hearing heard evidence from
the Appellant in which he said, inter alia, "I
sold Plaintiff (Respondent) a house at Cinderella Town No.
12. I sold the lone house. I bought land from Jones. It concerns
Government. I bought rights to the land. I did not sell rights
to Plaintiff. Plaintiff should move the house. -----House
is made of lumber. One could dismantle house from outside.
------No one tried to move house. ----I don't know if Jones
has lease (to the land). I never agreed for lease to go to
Plaintiff ---- I did not deliver keys to the Plaintiff as
Plaintiff did not come with carpenter." Even then there
was no evidence showing that he was raising a bona fide
question of title to the land. If he was raising the question
that the Respondent was not entitled to the land or entitled
to remain on it, then his refusal to deliver keys so that
the house may be removed would be inconsistent with that position
and did not affect the question whether she was entitled to
get possession of her house. Further, he admitted that the
land on which the house stood was the Government's. That the
Respondent had a lease of the land from Government. A document
indicating such a lease was already in evidence. In effect,
the Appellant's evidence reinforced the magistrate's view
as already expressed. The order of the magistrate that the
Appellant give up possession of the house to the Respondent
was the correct one.
In considering
what order this Court should make, I have taken into account
that the Appellant having held over from 15th February, 1981
has been in use and occupation of Respondent's house wrongfully
for 21 months. I have considered section 53(1) (e) of CAP
201 which allows a magistrate on an order for recovery of
possession also to suspend date of possession subject to such
condition as he thinks fit and section 139(1) (c) of CAP 5
which empowers this Court to make any order for disposal of
the cause which justice requires.
The appeal
is dismissed. The Appellant to give up possession within 7
days or ejectment warrant to issue. To pay Respondent $150
for use and occupation of house and costs of appeal.
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