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Kuman Das v. Radhika Singh

Patna High Court
May 29, 1929
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Structured Summary of the Opinion (Fazl Ali, J. and Chatterji, J.)

Factual and Procedural Background

This appeal arises from a dispute concerning a written, registered kabuliyat (lease) that stipulated an enhanced rent (Rs. 7 per bigha) if the tenant held over after the expiry of the lease. The defendants (ancestors of the present defendants) allegedly held over after the lease expired. In their written statement the defendants pleaded (paragraph 13) that the plaintiffs waived their claim for the enhanced rent in the presence of witnesses and allowed the defendants' ancestor to hold over on payment of the original (lower) jama. The lower courts found that the contract for payment of the enhanced rent had been waived, partly relying on acts and conduct (including rent receipts showing payments at the original rate for certain years). The appellants challenge that finding in this second appeal.

The appellate Court below relied on evidence of conduct (such as rent receipts and acceptance of rent at the original rate for certain years) to presuming waiver. On appeal to this Court the principal questions were whether the finding of waiver could be sustained and whether evidence of conduct or unwritten agreements could be used to vary a registered contract.

Legal Issues Presented

  1. Whether the appellants (plaintiffs) can successfully challenge the lower courts' finding that the registered contract for payment of the enhanced rent was waived by them.
  2. Whether evidence of conduct (or implied/unwritten agreements) is admissible to prove waiver or to vary the terms of a contract that has been registered according to law, in light of proviso (4) to section 92 of the Evidence Act and section 115 (estoppel) of the Evidence Act.
  3. Whether mere acceptance of reduced rent for some years (including rent receipts issued by agents) is sufficient to raise a presumption of waiver of the contractual right to a higher stipulated rent.
  4. Whether the stipulation for payment of higher rent in the kabuliyat is a penal clause and thus unenforceable, or whether it is enforceable (or alternatively, capable of being treated as reasonable compensation under section 74 of the Contract Act).

Arguments of the Parties

Appellants' Arguments (as presented in the opinion)

  • Mr. Hasan Imam, for the appellants, argued that evidence of conduct is wholly inadmissible to prove waiver of a contract that has been registered; reliance was placed on proviso (4) of section 92 of the Evidence Act which excludes proof of subsequent oral agreements to rescind or modify a registered contract.
  • He contended that the expression "oral agreement" in proviso (4) is wide enough to include all unwritten agreements, whether oral or implied from acts and conduct, and cited supporting authority (Mayandi Chetti v. Oliver and Radharaman v. Bhowani Prasad).

Defendants'/Respondents' Arguments (as reflected in the written statement and submissions)

  • In paragraph 13 of the written statement the defendants alleged an express waiver: that plaintiffs, in the presence of witnesses, waived their claim for enhancement and allowed the defendants' ancestor to hold over on payment of the original jama (i.e., an asserted subsequent agreement / waiver).
  • Paragraph 15 of the written statement asserted that plaintiffs' amlas realised rent according to the khatian entry for the years in suit but had not granted receipts (a plea of payment).
  • The respondents' counsel argued before this Court that the stipulation for payment of Rs. 7 per bigha was penal and could not be enforced; they relied upon authority (Tejendra Narain Singh v. Bakai Singh) for that contention.
  • The respondents also suggested that the lower courts had effectively found a fresh contract post-expiry that allowed holding over at the original rent.

Table of Precedents Cited

Precedent Rule or Principle Cited For Application by the Court
Mayandi Chetti v. Oliver Supports the view that "oral agreement" may include unwritten or implied agreements; cited on admissibility of acts/conduct to vary registered contracts. Recognised as authority supporting the broader interpretation of "oral agreement" but the Court considered proviso (4) of s.92 alongside s.115 and other authorities; ultimately, this case was discussed but did not decide the appeal in favour of defendants.
Radharaman v. Bhowani Prasad (Radha Raman Chowdhry v. Bhowani Prasad Bhowmik) Followed Mayandi Chetti on the admissibility point (acts/conduct as proof of unwritten agreements). Cited as supporting precedent but the Court examined its application in light of s.92 and s.115 and found the lower court's reliance on conduct inconclusive in the present facts.
Lakshman v. Gobind Dokanji Conduct may be evidence of agreement or may amount to estoppel; evidence of conduct is admissible under s.115 of the Evidence Act. Quoted to show that conduct can amount to estoppel and hence be admissible, but the Court noted it need not resolve the broader conflict because the lower court's finding was unsupported on other grounds.
Baijnath Prasad Sahu v. Raghunath Rai; Kailash Chandra Saha v. Darbari Sheikh; Manindra Chandra Nandi v. Sreemati Durga Sundari Dassya; Durga Prasad Singh v. Rajendra Narayan Bagchi; Mayandi Chetti v. Oliver; Radha Raman Chowdhry v. Bhowani Prasad Bhowmik Authority for the proposition that mere acceptance of a reduced rent by a landlord for a number of years does not necessarily deprive him of his right to claim rent at the stipulated rate. The Court relied on this body of authority to hold that the mere acceptance of reduced rent (even over several years) is insufficient to establish waiver unless the conduct is clear and conclusive.
Dhakeshwar Prasad Narain Singh v. Ishwardhari Singh Illustrates that where landlord's conduct is unequivocal (e.g., suing on reduced rent as if it were the agreed rent), waiver may be presumed. The Court cited it as an example of circumstances where waiver might be inferred, but distinguished the present facts as not equally unequivocal.
Tejendra Narain Singh v. Bakai Singh Held that a somewhat similar stipulation in a kabuliyat was penal and could not be enforced (authorities were discussed). The Court noted this decision but also observed there was a dissent and later contrary authorities; it did not adopt this view as determinative here.
Ganpat Singh v. Jasodhar Singh Held that a stipulation for payment of higher rent on holding over was not a penalty and was enforceable. Relied upon to support the view that the higher-rent stipulation in the kabuliyat is not necessarily penal and is enforceable.
Gobind Mandal v. Banarsi Prasad Held that an agreement that a hold-over tenant would pay higher rent than during the term was valid and enforceable. Used to support the proposition that the clause for enhanced rent is valid and enforceable.
Dilan Singh v. Ram Sunder Singh; Garju Mandal v. Babu Kuman Das; Human Das v. Dhuna Mandal; Ram Kant Chowdhry v. Kuman Das; Kuman Das v. Kachali Mandal; Kuman Das v. Tilakdhari Series of decisions consistently holding that a clause providing for higher rent on hold-over is not penal but an option to the lessee and therefore enforceable. The Court cited this series to show consistent appellate authority that such clauses are not penal and to justify enforcing or treating the clause as giving the plaintiff a right to compensation.
Adanky Ramchandra Row v. Indukuri Appalaraju Garu Authority emphasising restraint in courts interfering with express contractual intentions and criticizing the policy of relieving parties from their stipulations. Quoted to underline the judicial tendency to respect express contract terms and not to override parties' stipulations lightly.
Beni Madhab v. Lalmati; Manindra Chandra Nandi v. Srimati Durga Sundari Support the proposition that evidence of conduct is admissible to show that certain contractual terms were never intended to be acted upon or to establish estoppel/waiver. Referred to by Chatterji, J. to explain contexts in which conduct-based evidence may be admissible, while distinguishing the present case as not amounting to clear legal estoppel.
Baidyanath v. Raghu Nath and Kailash v. Darbaria Examples cited for the proposition that mere acceptance of reduced rent does not necessarily deprive the landlord of the right to claim the stipulated rent. Cited by Chatterji, J. to support the conclusion that acceptance of reduced rent (with ambiguous receipt entries) does not amount to waiver or estoppel here.

Court's Reasoning and Analysis

The Court proceeded by identifying the primary question: whether the lower courts' finding of waiver of the enhanced-rent clause could be sustained. Two interrelated evidentiary provisions were considered: proviso (4) to section 92 of the Evidence Act (excluding proof of subsequent oral agreements to vary registered contracts) and section 115 (estoppel) which admits evidence of words or conduct as estoppel.

Fazl Ali, J. analysed the pleadings and the evidence as follows:

  • The defendants' written statement (paragraph 13) pleaded an express waiver in the presence of witnesses and that plaintiffs allowed hold-over on payment of the old jama. That express allegation was not proved at trial.
  • The lower appellate Court relied largely on acts and conduct — notably that rents for 1312 to 1314 Fasli were paid at the original rate and that rent continued in subsequent years. The Court accepted the finding as to 1312–1314 only because rent receipts provided some evidence for that period; however, findings about subsequent years conflicted with the defendants' pleaded case and could not be supported by the record.
  • The appellate Court was criticised for going behind the defendants' pleadings and making out a case materially inconsistent with the written statement.
  • The Court emphasised that acceptance of reduced rent for a number of years, by itself, is insufficient to create a presumption of waiver: authorities were cited to that effect. By contrast, unequivocal conduct (for example, bringing suits based on the reduced rent) may properly support waiver, but such cases are distinguishable.
  • Because waiver is a mixed question of law and fact, a second appeal may impeach legal conclusions derived from findings of fact. Here the Court found the lower appellate Court's conclusion of waiver rested on inconclusive circumstances and therefore had to be set aside.

As to relief, the Court noted equitable and pragmatic considerations: the plaintiffs, through their counsel, offered to accept Rs. 5 per bigha instead of Rs. 7 and to take a decree for Rs. 5 for the years in suit and abandon the remainder of their claim. The Court accepted this representation and proposed to set aside the lower courts' judgment and pass a modified decree in favour of plaintiffs at Rs. 5 per bigha for the years in suit.

On the question whether the Rs. 7 clause was penal, the Court reviewed conflicting authorities. While one decision (Tejendra Narain Singh v. Bakai Singh) treated a similar clause as penal, later and concordant authorities held such stipulations were not penal because they gave the lessee an option and did not operate as a punitive device. The Court observed that even if the clause were regarded as penal within section 74 of the Contract Act, section 74 itself entitles the plaintiff to reasonable compensation not exceeding the stipulated amount, and Rs. 5 per bigha could reasonably be regarded as such compensation.

Chatterji, J., concurring, reiterated these points and emphasised:

  • Evidence of conduct cannot be used to vary or rescind terms of a registered contract as if it were a subsequent oral agreement excluded under section 92; if parol evidence is excluded, implied proof from acts and conduct is similarly excluded where it seeks to prove a subsequent oral agreement.
  • Nonetheless, evidence of conduct remains admissible to show that a contractual term was never intended to be acted upon or to prove estoppel; but the present facts (e.g., rent receipts with the jama column left blank and lack of subsequent rent realization) did not amount to a legal estoppel or clear waiver.
  • Consequently, the lower courts' inference of waiver could not be maintained; the decree was therefore varied in line with the principal judgment.

Holding and Implications

Holding:

The appeal is allowed. The judgments and decrees of the lower Courts that had presumed a waiver of the registered contract for payment of enhanced rent are set aside, and this Court directs a modified decree in favour of the plaintiffs at the rate of Rs. 5 per bigha for the years in suit.

Immediate consequences and other orders:

  • The modified decree awards rent at Rs. 5 per bigha for the years in suit (the plaintiffs having expressed willingness to accept that rate and to abandon the remainder of their claim).
  • The appellants (plaintiffs) are entitled to proportionate cess and damages and to costs in proportion to their success against the respondents in all Courts.

Broader implications: The Court applied existing principles without purporting to lay down any novel rule. It reaffirmed (i) the narrow construction of waiver and the requirement of clear, unequivocal conduct to establish it, (ii) the distinction between exclusion of parol evidence to vary registered documents (s.92 proviso (4)) and admissibility of conduct as estoppel under s.115, and (iii) the view adopted in later authorities that stipulations for higher rent on hold-over are, in general, enforceable rather than penal. The decision modifies the factual outcome between the parties but does not announce a new legal principle beyond the authorities discussed.

Show all summary ...

Fazl Ali, J.:— (After stating the facts set out above proceeded as follows):

Now, the main question which arises in this appeal is as to whether the appellants can successfully assail the finding of the Courts below that the contract for the payment of the enhanced rent must be presumed to have been waived by them. The contention of the appellants is that evidence of conduct is wholly inadmissible to prove waiver of a contract, which has been registered according to law and reliance is placed upon proviso (4) of section 92 of the Evidence Act which runs as follows—

“The existence of any distinct subsequent oral agreement to rescind or modify any such contract, grant or disposition of property, may be proved, except in cases in which such contract, grant or disposition of property is by law required to be in writing, or has been registered according to the law in force for the time being as to the registration of documents”.

It is contended by Mr. Hasan Imam who appears for the appellant that the expression “oral agreement” as used in this proviso is wide enough to include all unwritten agreements whether they are oral or they are implied from acts and conduct of the parties. There is no doubt that this view is fully supported by the decision in the case of Mayandi Chetti v. Oliver which was followed in Radharaman v. Bhowani Prasad. It must, however, be remembered that proviso (4) refers to the existence of a distinct subsequent agreement to rescind or modify a contract registered according to law, and it is a point to be considered whether this proviso can override the provision of section 115 of the Evidence Act Which deals with estoppels whether they be by words or by conduct or otherwise. The law of waiver is really a branch of the law of estoppel and, as Melville, J., pointed out in Lakshman v. Gobind Dokanji, “It is a mistake to reject evidence of the conduct of parties to a written contract on the ground that it is only an indication of an unexpressed unwritten contract between them. The conduct is no doubt evidence of the agreement out of which it arises but it may be very much more in many cages it may amount to estoppel. In such a case it is clear that evidence of conduct would be strictly admissible under section 115 of the Evidence Act and, even when conduct falls short of legal estoppel, there is nothing in the Evidence Act which prevents it from being proved or, when proved, from being taken into consideration”.

It is, however, unnecessary in the present case to go further into this aspect of the question because in our opinion the finding of the lower appellate Court that the contract for the payment of the enhanced rent must be presumed to have been waived in the present case cannot be supported on other grounds. It will appear that in paragraph 13 of the written statement the defendant set up a definite case to the following effect—

“After the expiry of the term of the kabnliyat the plaintiffs having waived their claim for enhancement in the presence of witnesses allowed these defendants' ancestor to hold over in accordance with the terms of the settlement, i.e, on payment of Rs. 25-4-0 as jama for the 12-annas share and Rs. 8-7-0 for the 4-annas share.”

Thus the case of the defendants in the written statement was that the contract had been expressly, waived in the presence of witnesses. This the defendants evidently failed to prove, and the lower appellate Court consequently based its decision as to waiver mainly upon the acts and conduct of the parties. It was found by the lower appellate Court that the defendants paid rent at the original rate from 1312 to 1314 and also for subsequent years. Now, the finding of the lower appellate Court that the defendants paid rent for the years 1312 to 1314 at the original rate cannot be assailed because it is based upon some evidence, namely, the rent receipts granted for the period. The finding, however, so far as it relates to the subsequent years cannot be supported because it has been arrived at in spite of the case put forward by the defendants in their written statement in paragraph 13. The defendants have stated clearly in this paragraph that the plaintiffs realised rent at the original rate till the 7th Baisakh, 1314 Fasli. It is true that in paragraph 15 the defendants say that the

“plaintiffs' amlas have realised the rent according to the khatian entry for the years in suit but they have not granted any receipts.”

This statement, however, merely amounts to a plea of payment which has been rejected by both the Courts below. We do not think, therefore, that it was permissible for the lower appellate Court to go behind the pleading of the defendants and make out a case which is materially inconsistent with the written statement.

The question then is whether the mere fact that the patwari of the plaintiffs accepted rent at the original rate from the defendants for the years 1312 to 1314 Fasli (that is to say, for the three years immediately after the expiry of the term of the lease) is sufficient to raise the presumption that the contract for enhanced rent had been waived by the plaintiffs. It may be observed that there is nothing in the judgment of the lower appellate ‘Court to show that the rents were accepted by the patwari to the knowledge of the plaintiffs. It has also been found that the rent receipts themselves do not show what was the total jama payable for the land in suit, the column for that entry having been left blank. Assuming, however, that the finding of the lower appellate Court as to the acceptance of rent by the plaintiffs from 1312 to 1314 and even in subsequent years cannot be assailed, there is ample authority for the proposition that mere acceptance of a reduced rent by the landlord for a number of years does not deprive him of his right to claim rent at the stipulated rate [See Baijnath Prasad Sahu v. Raghunath Rai; Kailash Chandra Saha v. Darbari Sheikh; Manindra Chandra Nandi v. Sreemati Durga Sundari Dassya; Durga Prasad Singh v. Rajendra Narayan Bagchi; Mayandi Chetti v. Oliver and Radha Raman Chowdhry v. Bhowani Prasad Bhowmik.

It is true that where the conduct of the landlord is less equivocal, as for example, when he sues, the tenant on the basis of the reduced rent as if that 1 was the rent payable for the land, it may be presumed that the landlord has waived his right to recover a higher rent [see Dhakeshwar Prasad Narain Singh v. Ishwardhari Singh]. But the principle of waiver must be strictly construed, and should not be extended to cases where the circumstances are not clear and conclusive.

Now, the question of waiver being a mixed question of law and fact, a second appeal will always lie to impeach legal conclusions from findings of fact. In this particular case we are of opinion that the finding of the lower appellate Court that the contract as to the payment of rent at the rate of Rs. 7 per bigha had been waived, is based upon wholly inconclusive circumstances, and must be set aside and, as the decree of the lower appellate Court is based on this finding, it must also be set aside.

The question, however, arises as to the terms of the decree to be passed by this Court. It was represented to us, and we felt that there was some force in the representation, that the defendants might find it somewhat hard to pay rent at the rate of Rs. 7 per bigha. The learned Advocate for the appellants, however, has taken a remarkably fair attitude in this case and states on behalf of the plaintiffs that the latter will accept rent at the rate of Rs. 5 instead of Rs. 7 from the defendants and allow them to cultivate the land on these terms. He is also willing to take a decree at the rate of Rs. 5 per bigha for the years in suit and to abandon the rest of the claim made in this suit. In these circumstances the order that we propose to pass is that we will set aside the judgment and the decree of the Courts below and pass a modified decree in favour of the plaintiffs at the rate of Rs. 5 per Bigha for the years in suit.

It may be mentioned that the learned Counsel for the respondents attempted to argue before us that the stipulation for the payment of rent at the rate of Rs. 7 made in the kabuliyat was penal and could not be enforced. It is true thana somewhat similar provision in a kabuliyat executed by a tenant in favour of his landlord was held to be penal in the case of Tejendra Narain Singh v. Bakai Singh but Rampini, J., who was one of the members of the Bench before which that case came up for decision, gave a dissenting judgment in the case and in a later case, the facts of which were very similar to the facts of the present case [Ganpat Singh v. Jasodhar Singh], it was definitely held that a stipulation for the payment of higher rent “was not a penalty incurred by reason of the non-execution of the fresh kabuliyats”. This last case was followed in Gobind Mandal v. Banarsi Prasad where it was held that an agreement by the defendant that, if he held over upon the expiry of the term of the lease, he would pay rent at a higher rate than he did during the term was valid and enforceable: This is also the view that has been consistently held in a series of decisions of this Court [see Dilan Singh v. Ram Sunder Singh, decided by Jwala Prasad, J.; Garju Mandal v. Babu Kuman Das, decided by the same Judge; Human Das v. Dhuna Mandal, decided by Adami, J.; Ram Kant Chowdhry v. Kuman Das, decided by Adami and Bucknill, JJ.; Kuman Das v. Kachali Mandal, decided by Wort, J., and Kuman Das v. Tilakdhari, decided by Sir Dawson Miller, C.J and Mullick, J.]. It was clearly pointed out in these cases that the clause for the payment of the enhanced rent is not penal, because apparently it was not introduced into the lease to compel the performance of an act stipulated in the contract but was merely an option given to the lessee which he may accept or reject as he chooses; and, as was pointed out by Jwala Prasad, J., a stipulation to pay a higher rent for what is in effect giving to the defendant the valuable right of occupancy in the land is neither penal nor an unreasonable one. Besides, as was pointed out by Frere and Holloway, JJ., in Adanky Ramchandra Row v. Indukuri Appalaraju Garu, “the tendency of the Courts of equity as well as the Courts of law at the present day is to interfere as little as possible with the express intention of the contracting parties”, the same learned Judges further observing “we have sufficiently indicated but opinion as to the policy of relieving parties from the effects of their own stipulation. That policy has been condemned by nearly every eminent Judge who has had occasion to consider the subject, and arose at a period in which the views of the Legislature were very different to what they now are”.

I have dealt with this question at some length here because the learned Counsel for the respondents laid considerable stress upon it, although in our opinion it would have been sufficient to say that the point having been abandoned by the respondents in the Courts below, as is sufficiently clear from the judgment of the lower appellate Court, it could not be agitated again in this Court. The question as to whether a certain provision is penal or not is a mixed question of law and fact and as a rule it will not be permitted to be raised in second appeal if it is clear that it was abandoned in a subordinate Court which was competent to investigate questions of fact as well as of law. In any case the conclusion which we have arrived at is that, even if the provision for the payment of Rs. 7 per bigha could by any chance be construed to be a penal provision within the terms of section 74 of the Contract Act, the plaintiff is according to that section itself entitled to a reasonable compensation not exceeding the amount named in the kabuliyat as the amount payable in the event of the breach of the contract; and in our opinion Rs. 5 per bigha which the plaintiffs are now willing to take as rent for the land cannot in any circumstances be considered to be either too high or unreasonable even if we treat it as a compensation to be awarded under section 74 of the Contract Act.

The learned Counsel for the respondents also contended that what the Courts below had virtually found was that there was a fresh contract between the parties after the expiry of the lease whereby the defendants' ancestors were allowed to hold over on payment of the original rent. Now, in the first place, as far as I can see, there is no definite finding to this effect in the judgment of the lower appellate Court which is the final Court of fact; and in the second place, paragraph 10 of the written statement is almost fatal to this argument, because it is distinctly stated there that

“no fresh settlement was made after the expiry of the term of the kabuliyat.”

It is true that in paragraph 13 the defendants set up a wholly different case and say that the plaintiffs waived their claim for an enhanced rent in the presence of witnesses and allowed the defendants' ancestor to hold over on payment of the old jama: but here the defendants' case comes directly within the mischief of proviso (4) of section 92 of the Evidence Act and, in any event, neither of the Courts below seems to have accepted the case of a subsequent oral agreement between the parties which was attempted to be set up in this paragraph of the written statement.

The result is that the contentions of the respondents fail and the appeal is decreed in the terms mentioned above. The appellants will be entitled to proportionate, cess and damages as also costs in proportion to their success from the respondents in all the Courts.

Chatterji, J.:— I agree. The case of the defendants as made out in paragraph 13 of the written, statement seems to be that there was a fresh agreement, after the expiry of the term of the kabuliyat, that the defendants would hold over on payment of the initial jama of Rs. 33 and odd. The original lease having been by a registered document reduced into writing, no subsequent oral agreement to vary the terms thereof is admissible in evidence under section 92 of the Evidence Act. The kabuliyat provides that if the tenant holds on after the expiration of his lease he will have to pay rent at Rs. 7 a bigha as mentioned therein. The oral evidence to vary this part of the contract is undoubtedly excluded by the Evidence Act. But the question is whether any evidence of conduct is admissible in the present case. The case on the point, as stated in paragraph 13 of the written statement, is that the plaintiff realized rent at the initial amount of Rs. 33 and odd from the expiration of the term of the lease till the 7th Bysack 1314 Fasli, that is from 1312-1314. The acts and conduct of the parties, so far as they are proof of a contemporaneous oral agreement varying the terms of the registered contract, or proof of a subsequent parol agreement, cannot be legally admissible in evidence. When evidence of an oral agreement is excluded it necessarily follows that proof to be implied from the acts and conduct of the parties must be similarly excluded. [See Radharaman v. Bhowani and Mayandi Chetti v. Oliver] But evidence of conduct is admissible to show that as between the landlord and the tenant the term in the kabuliyat for the payment of a, particular rate of rent, on the expiration of the term of the lease if the tenant would hold on, was never intended to be acted upon or enforced. [See Beni Madhab v. Lalmati and Manindra Chandra Nandi v. Srimati Durga Sundari]. Evidence of conduct is also admissible to prove an estoppel or waiver [Lakshman v. Gobind]. Now in the present case it appears that the plaintiff's gomashta accepted rent at the lower rate for two or three years and granted receipts for the same but without specifying the amount of jama in the appropriate column in the printed rent receipts. All that the receipts would show is that the plaintiff's gomashta realized rent which works at the lower rate. This cannot by any stretch be taken as amounting to a legal estoppel or waiver of the plaintiff's rights. The facts that the amount of rental was not mentioned in the printed receipts and no rent has since been realized, contra-indicate the theory that this particular term in the kabuliyat was not intended to be acted upon. Then, the landlord is not deprived of his right to claim rent at the rate stipulated in the kabuliyat by a mere acceptance of rent at the reduced rate [see Baidyanath v. Raghu Nath and Kailash v. Darbaria]. I do not think I can profitably add anything else to the elaborate judgment of my learned brother.

Decree varied.