Landlord's Legal Heirs Can Amend Eviction Suit To Add Bona Fide Need : Supreme Court

Yash Mittal

26 April 2026 10:59 AM IST

  • Landlords Legal Heirs Can Amend Eviction Suit To Add Bona Fide Need :  Supreme Court
    Listen to this Article

    The Supreme Court has observed that where a landlord, who filed an eviction suit on the ground of bona fide requirement for himself and his family, passes away, his legal heirs may amend the pleadings to incorporate additional grounds of bona fide need, provided such amendments do not conflict with or alter the original basis of the suit.

    A bench of Justice J.K. Maheshwari and Justice Atul S. Chandurkar heard an appeal filed by the legal heirs of the landlord (wife and children), who were aggrieved by the Bombay High Court's decision to deny them an opportunity to amend the plaint to include their additional bona fide needs in congruence with the bonafide mentioned originally by the landlord.

    In an original suit for eviction, the landlord sought eviction of the Respondent-tenant on the ground of bona fide need for himself and family members. The trial court dismissed the suit after noting that the landlord failed to put forth the business idea to be executed on the suit premises if vacated.

    During an appeal against the trial court's decision, the landlord passed away, prompting the Appellant to be brought on record, who sought leave to amend the suit to include additional bona fide grounds to strengthen their ground for eviction. The Appellant said that they were in bona fide need of the suit premises for opening an Advocate Chamber for his mother, as well as to build a clinic for himself to start a medical practice.

    The Appellate Court allowed the plea seeking amendment to the plaint, noting that the Appellants made no adverse plea.

    Aggrieved by the Appellate Court's decision, the Respondent-tenant invoked the Writ Jurisdiction of the High Court under Article 227 of the Constitution, contending that allowing the amendment as sought by the legal heirs would, therefore, amount to introducing a totally new case that was inconsistent with what was pleaded by the original landlord. The tenant argued that with the death of the original landlord, his need had eclipsed, which cannot be claimed by his legal heirs by incorporating new bona fide needs.

    The High Court's decision to interfere with the Appellate Court's decision prompted the landlord's legal heir to appeal to the Supreme Court.

    The issue before the Court was whether the amendment of the plaint sought by the legal heirs of the landlord be refused on the ground that after the death of the landlord, the claim for eviction of the tenant on the ground of bona fide need no longer survives.

    Setting aside the High Court's judgment, the judgment authored by Justice Chandurkar answered the issue in the negative and held that an amendment to an eviction suit sought by the landlord's legal heirs cannot be refused after his death, where subsequent developments giving rise to additional grounds of bona fide need have a material bearing on the parties' entitlement to relief.

    “No doubt, the principle that the rights of the parties have to be adjudicated keeping in mind the rights existing at the commencement of the lis. Where however subsequent events having a material bearing on the entitlement of the parties to relief occur, the Court is not precluded from taking cognizance of the same and moulding the relief in accordance with law.”, the Court observed, pointing that since the eviction suit was founded on the bona fide requirement of the landlord and his family, a fact not rebutted by the tenant, the appellant's additional grounds of bona fide need cannot be disregarded merely because they were not part of the original pleadings and were introduced later in light of subsequent developments. (See Pasupuleti Venkateswarlu Vs. The Motor & General Traders, 1975 INSC 75)

    In terms of the aforesaid, the appeal was allowed, and the order passed by the Appellate Court to allow the appellant's plea to amend the suit was restored.

    Cause Title: VINAY RAGHUNATH DESHMUKH VERSUS NATWARLAL SHAMJI GADA AND ANOTHER

    Click here to download judgment

    Appearance:

    For Petitioner(s) :Mr. Aniruddha Joshi, Sr. Adv. Mr. Shashibhushan P. Adgaonkar, AOR Mr. Sharian Mukherji, Adv. Mr. Anoop Raj, Adv. Mr. Chirag Zanwar, Adv. Mr. Shailendra Mishra, Adv.

    For Respondent(s) :Mr. Ravindra Kumar Raizada, Sr. Adv. Mr. Jikesh Shah, Adv. Mr. Dipen Furia, Adv. Mr. Arjun D Singh, Adv. Ms. Leena Jayesh Shah, AOR Mr. J. Prasad, Adv.

    Next Story