Section 8 (2) provides that, for the purposes of the Act, 'lessee ,, includes a person who remains in possession of premises after the termination of his lease of the premises, and 'lessor' has a corres- ponding meaning. Assuming, then, that the tenancy which was vested in the Public Trustee came to an end upon the expiry of the notice to quit, the claimant and the Public Trustee are lessor and lessee respectively, by virtue of S. 8 (2), if it is correct to say that the Public Trustee remains in possession of the subject premises. Mrs. Denahy, of course, was in possession of the premises in her lifetime, having possession of portion of them personally and of the rest by her tenants, the defendants. When she died, her tenancy, and therefore her reversion upon the tenancies of the defendants, became vested in the Public Trustee. It follows that thereafter their possession of their respective portions was the possession of the Public Trustee. When the tenancy vested in the Public Trustee came to an end, the possession which first Mrs. Denahy, and then the Public Trustee, had had by their tenants was not re- stored to the claimant, and nothing occurred to change its character. The defendants did not claim to have any title to possession other- wise than by virtue of their sub-tenancies, and the Public Trustee, naturally enough, did not concern himself to eject them and thus bring to an end the possession retained by them as his sub-tenants. In my opinion the Public Trustee "remains in possession" of the premises occupied by the defendants, and accordingly the claimant and he are, by virtue of S. 8 (2), lessor and lessee within the meaning of S. 62 (1).
It is necessary then to consider whether the present action of ejectment answers the description of proceedings to recover posses- sion of the premises from the lessee or for the ejectment of the lessee therefrom. It certainly is proceedings to recover possession of the premises. The lessee is not named as a defendant, but the effect of a judgment for the claimant will be to deprive the lessee of the possession which at present he has, and to give vacant possession to the claimant. It will take possession from the defendants, but no less certainly it will take possession from the lessee. The words of the section seem to me to be exactly satisfied.
It is important to remember that the Act is not one which protects only a personal occupation. It protects lessees against the termination of their leases whether they have sub-let or not and when their tenancies have been determined it protects them against deprivation of possession whether they are in possession personally or not. Likewise it protects sub-lessees: whether joined as defendants or not, they are entitled to be heard (s. 82 (4) ),