Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 5825 of 2006
PETITIONER:
THE ORIENTAL INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
RESPONDENT:
MEENA VARIYAL & ORS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/04/2007
BENCH:
C.K. THAKKER & P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN, J.
1. One Suresh Chandra Variyal was employed as a
Regional Manager in M/s Apace Savings and Mutual Benefits
(India) Ltd., the owner of a motor vehicle, respondent No.3
herein. Variyal was provided with a car by the employer. The
vehicle was insured with the appellant company in terms of
the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988. There was no special contract.
On 14.6.1999, the vehicle met with an accident. Suresh
Chandra Variyal, died. The widow and daughter of Suresh
Chandra Variyal, filed a claim petition under Section 166 of
the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988, before the Motor Accidents
Claims Tribunal, Nainital. Therein, they claimed
compensation to the tune of Rs.15 lakhs. According to the
claim, the deceased was driving along with his ’companion’
Mahmood Hasan after completing his work for the employer.
At about 11.30 pm the car collided with a tree due to the rash
and negligent driving of the driver. The car was being driven
by Mahmood Hasan at the time of the accident. The deceased
was an occupant of the car. The car was being used for the
business and for the benefit of the employer of the deceased at
the time of the accident. The deceased was earning Rs.
9,000/- per month. He had a bright career ahead. Mahmood
Hasan had lodged a first information report the same day
(reiterated in the counter affidavit filed in this Court) giving
wrong facts to escape from any prosecution. It was not
specified in the application as to what was the wrong fact or
what were the wrong facts mentioned in the complaint filed by
Mahmood Hasan. The claimants as dependants were entitled
to compensation as claimed.
2. The claim was filed against the employer, the owner
of the motor vehicle and against the insurance company.
Mahmood Hasan, who was allegedly driving the car and that
too negligently, at the time of the accident, was not impleaded.
No reason was given in the claim for his not being impleaded.
The owner of the car, the company that employed the
deceased, did not appear and did not file any written
statement. The insurance company filed a written statement.
It pleaded that the driver and the owner of the vehicle have
colluded and the alleged driver of the car had not been
impleaded. As a matter of fact, the deceased himself was
driving the vehicle. Hence he was not entitled to claim any
compensation since the accident occurred on account of his
own negligence. The insurance company had no liability.
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The compensation claimed was exorbitant and the claim was
liable to be dismissed.
3. In support of the claim, the wife of Variyal was
examined as P.W.1 and another person, who was allegedly
travelling in the car when it met with the accident, was
examined as P.W. 2. P.W. 1 asserted that the vehicle was
being driven at the time of the accident by Mahmood Hasan
and her husband was travelling in the car. This was sought to
be supported by P.W. 2 who claimed that he was also
travelling in the same car at the time of the accident. He gave
evidence that Variyal was employed as a Regional Manager
with the owner of the car, M/s Apace Savings and Mutual
Benefits (India) Ltd. P.W. 2 also gave evidence that sometimes
Variyal himself used to drive the vehicle but Mahmood Hasan
usually drove the car. Mahmood Hasan had lodged a First
Information Report at 4.40 p.m. on the day of the accident.
Therein, Mahmood Hasan had stated that Variyal was driving
the car at the time of the accident.
4. No independent evidence was adduced to show what
exactly was the salary that was being earned by Variyal from
his employer. The employer was a limited liability company
and in the normal course, should have been maintaining the
relevant records showing the salary paid to a Regional
Manager like Variyal. No attempt was made to get them
produced. The widow contented herself by asserting in her
oral evidence that Variyal was earning a salary of Rs. 9,000/-
per month. The Motor Accident Claims Tribunal held that the
evidence disclosed that Variyal was driving the vehicle since
what was more acceptable was the first version regarding the
accident and not the oral assertions of P.Ws. 1 and 2 in
support of the claim. It also held that Variyal was not holding
a valid driving licence when he drove the car. Purporting to
accept the interested, unsupported version of P.W. 1 that the
income of her husband was Rs. 9,000/- per month, the
Tribunal calculated the dependency at Rs. 6,000/- per month
and applying the multiplier of 10, arrived at the compensation
payable as Rs. 7,20,000/-. The Tribunal held that the
claimants were entitled to receive the amount from the owner
of the vehicle, the employer, but the insurance company was
not liable, since the vehicle was being driven by the deceased
himself who was an employee of the owner of the car and the
policy of insurance did not cover such an employee. Thus, the
claim was ordered directing the owner of the car to pay the
claimant a sum of Rs. 7,20,000/- with interest thereon.
5. The claimants filed an appeal before the High Court.
The insurance company, which had been exonerated by the
Tribunal, alone resisted the appeal. The owner of the vehicle
kept away. The claimants, the appellants before the High
Court, contended that the Tribunal was in error in finding that
the insurance company was not liable and in not granting
them a decree against the insurance company. The insurance
company pointed out that the deceased was not a third party
covered by the insurance policy, was an employee of the owner
of the vehicle and was not covered by the policy. Even
otherwise, he was driving the car himself as found by the
Tribunal and since the accident was caused by his own
negligence, the insurance company was not liable.
6. The only argument attempted on behalf of the
claimants, the appellants in the High Court, was that in the
light of the decision of this Court in National Insurance Co.
Ltd. Vs. Swaran Singh & Ors. [(2004) 3 S.C.C. 297], the
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insurance company was liable to pay the amount awarded
even if there was breach of a policy condition and if there was
a dispute between the insured and the insurer, it had to be
fought elsewhere and they cannot be denied the benefit of the
insurance. The insurance company pointed out that the ratio
in Swaran Singh (supra) had no application to the case and in
the face of the finding that the deceased was himself driving
the vehicle belonging to his employer, the insurance company
had no liability. There was no special contract and since it was
only a policy in terms of the Motor Vehicles Act, the insurance
company cannot be asked to pay the amount awarded which
was even otherwise not supported by any admissible or
acceptable evidence. The High Court, stating that they had in
so many cases held, in view of the ratio in Swaran Singh
(supra), that it is not open to the insurance company to avoid
liability under the Act, simply directed the insurance company
to pay the amount as ordered by the Tribunal, leaving it to the
insurance company to take recourse to recover the amount
from the insured in accordance with the directions of this
Court in Swaran Singh (supra).
7. We must say that one would have expected the High
Court to apply its mind to the question arising, in a better
manner and to specifically answer the question that arose for
decision in the case. For instance, we may observe that it has
not reversed the finding of the Tribunal that the deceased was
himself driving the vehicle. Then, what was the position? The
position was that a Regional Manager of the Company, which
was owner of the vehicle, was himself driving the vehicle of the
Company and during the course of it, he died in an accident,
whether the accident occurred due to his negligence or
otherwise. It appears to us that mere going by some decision
or other, without appreciating the facts in a given case, in the
light of the law, if any, declared by this court, does not lead a
court or Tribunal to a correct conclusion in the normal course.
8. On behalf of the insurance company, the appellant,
it is contended that the policy was only one in terms of the
Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 and the policy did not cover the
employee of the owner, the insured, who was driving the
vehicle while attending to the business of the employer
company. The deceased was not "a third party" in terms of the
policy or in terms of the Act. The Act did not provide for
statutory coverage of such a person. This would be the
position even if the deceased was only travelling in the car in
his capacity as a Regional Manager of the owner \026 Company
and the vehicle was being driven by Mahmood Hasan as
claimed. Since the High Court has not interfered with the
finding of the Tribunal that the deceased was himself driving
the car at the time of the accident and that he did not have a
valid licence to drive a vehicle, there was absolutely no
question of the insurance company being made liable under
any principle of law. It was also submitted that without
impleading Mahmood Hasan who was allegedly driving the car,
the claim ought not to have been entertained, especially since
there was controversy as to whether the car was being driven
by Mahmood Hasan or by the deceased as sought to be
projected by the claimants. The claimants were obliged to
prove the negligence of the driver and the principles of general
law in that regard, have not been jettisoned by the Motor
Vehicles Act. On the other hand, the law expounded by this
Court earlier had been accepted by the Legislature by enacting
Section 163A of the Act. Thus, this was a case where High
Court grossly erred in directing the insurance company to pay
the compensation decreed by the Tribunal, which in itself was
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a figure unsupported by any legal evidence and in purporting
to apply the ratio of Swaran Singh (supra) to compel the
insurance company to pay the amount awarded and then to
have recourse to the insured. The learned counsel for the
claimant - respondent on the other hand submitted that the
vehicle, at the relevant time, was being driven by Mahmood
Hasan and the Tribunal was wrong in entering a finding that
the deceased himself was driving the vehicle in the light of the
evidence of P.Ws. 1 and 2. The burden was on the insurance
company, on the scheme of the Act, to show that it had no
liability and in that context to show that the deceased himself
was driving the vehicle and not Mahmood Hasan. Learned
counsel further submitted that this Court in Swaran Singh
(supra) has laid down the law and that principle applies in all
cases involving an insurance company and a policy issued by
the Company in terms of the Act and whenever there is an
award against the insured, the insurer is obliged to satisfy the
award and have recourse to the insured even if the insurance
company was really not liable under the policy. He therefore
submitted that the High Court was justified in directing the
insurance company to pay the compensation. He urged that
Chapter XI of the Act contained beneficent provisions to
protect the victims and the relevant sections should not be
construed restrictively.
9. Before we proceed to consider the main aspect
arising for decision in this Appeal, we would like to make
certain general observations. It may be true that the Motor
Vehicles Act, insofar as it relates to claims for compensation
arising out of accidents, is a beneficent piece of legislation. It
may also be true that subject to the rules made in that behalf,
the Tribunal may follow a summary procedure in dealing with
a claim. That does not mean that a Tribunal approached with
a claim for compensation under the Act should ignore all basic
principles of law in determining the claim for compensation.
Ordinarily, a contract of insurance is a contract of indemnity.
When a car belonging to an owner is insured with the
insurance company and it is being driven by a driver employed
by the insured, when it meets with an accident, the primary
liability under law for payment of compensation is that of the
driver. Once the driver is liable, the owner of the vehicle
becomes vicariously liable for payment of compensation. It is
this vicarious liability of the owner that is indemnified by the
insurance company. A third party for whose benefit the
insurance is taken, is therefore entitled to show, when he
moves under Section 166 of the Motor Vehicles Act, that the
driver was negligent in driving the vehicle resulting in the
accident; that the owner was vicariously liable and that the
insurance company was bound to indemnify the owner and
consequently, satisfy the award made. Therefore, under
general principles, one would expect the driver to be
impleaded before an adjudication is claimed under Section
166 of the Act as to whether a claimant before the Tribunal is
entitled to compensation for an accident that has occurred
due to alleged negligence of the driver. Why should not a
Tribunal insist on the driver of the vehicle being impleaded
when a claim is being filed? As we have noticed, the relevant
provisions of the Act are not intended to jettison all principles
of law relating to a claim for compensation which is still based
on a tortious liability. The Tribunal ought to have, in the case
on hand, directed the claimant to implead Mahmood Hasan
who was allegedly driving the vehicle at the time of the
accident. Here, there was also controversy whether it was
Mahmood Hasan who was driving the vehicle or it was the
deceased himself. Surely, such a question could have been
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decided only in the presence of Mahmood Hasan who would
have been principally liable for any compensation that might
be decreed in case he was driving the vehicle. Secondly, the
deceased was employed in a limited company. It was
necessary for the claimants to establish what was the monthly
income and what was the dependency on the basis of which
the compensation could be adjudged as payable. Should not
any Tribunal trained in law ask the claimants to produce
evidence in support of the monthly salary or income earned by
the deceased from his employer Company? Is there anything
in the Motor Vehicles Act which stands in the way of the
Tribunal asking for the best evidence, acceptable evidence?
We think not. Here again, the position that the Motor Vehicles
Act vis-‘-vis claim for compensation arising out of an accident
is a beneficent piece of legislation, cannot lead a Tribunal
trained in law to forget all basic principles of establishing
liability and establishing the quantum of compensation
payable. The Tribunal, in this case, has chosen to merely go
by the oral evidence of the widow when without any difficulty
the claimants could have got the employer \026 company to
produce the relevant documents to show the income that was
being derived by the deceased from his employment. Of
course, in this case, the above two aspects become relevant
only if we find the insurance company liable. If we find that
only the owner of the vehicle, the employer of the deceased
was liable, there will be no occasion to further consider these
aspects since the owner has acquiesced in the award passed
by the Tribunal against it.
10. Chapter XI of the Act bears a heading, "Insurance of
Motor Vehicles against third party risks". The definition of
"third party" is an inclusive one since Section 145(g) only
indicates that "third party" includes the Government. It is
Section 146 that makes it obligatory for an insurance to be
taken out before a motor vehicle could be used on the road.
The heading of that Section itself is "Necessity for insurance
against third party risk". No doubt, the marginal heading may
not be conclusive. It is Section 147 that sets out the
requirement of policies and limits of liability. It is provided
therein that in order to comply with the requirements of
Chapter XI of the Act, a policy of insurance must be a policy
which is issued by an authorised insurer; or which insures the
person or classes of persons specified in the policy to the
extent specified in sub-section (2) against any liability which
may be incurred by the owner in respect of the death of or
bodily injury or damage to any property of a third party
caused by or arising out of the use of the vehicle in a public
place. With effect from 14.11.1994, injury to the owner of
goods or his authorised representative carried in the vehicle
was also added. The policy had to cover death of or bodily
injury to any passenger of a public service vehicle caused by
or arising out of the use of the vehicle in a public place. Then,
as per the proviso, the policy shall not be required to cover
liability in respect of the death, arising out of and in the
course of his employment, of the employee of a person insured
by the policy or in respect of bodily injury sustained by such
an employee arising out of and in the course of his
employment, other than a liability arising under the
Workmen’s Compensation Act, 1923 in respect of the death of,
or bodily injury to, an employee engaged in driving the vehicle,
or who is a conductor, if it is a public service vehicle or an
employee being carried in a goods vehicle or to cover any
contractual liability. Sub-section (2) only sets down the limits
of the policy. As we understand Section 147 (1) of the Act, an
insurance policy thereunder need not cover the liability in
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respect of death or injury arising out of and in the course of
the employment of an employee of the person insured by the
policy, unless it be a liability arising under the Workmen’s
Compensation Act, 1923 in respect of a driver, also the
conductor, in the case of a public service vehicle, and the one
carried in the vehicle as owner of the goods or his
representative, if it is a goods vehicle. It is provided that the
policy also shall not be required to cover any contractual
liability. Uninfluenced by authorities, we find no difficulty in
understanding this provision as one providing that the policy
must insure an owner against any liability to a third party
caused by or arising out of the use of the vehicle in a public
place, and against death or bodily injury to any passenger of a
public service vehicle caused by or arising out of the use of
vehicle in a public place. The proviso clarifies that the policy
shall not be required to cover an employee of the insured in
respect of bodily injury or death arising out of and in the
course of his employment. Then, an exception is provided to
the last forgoing to the effect that the policy must cover a
liability arising under the Workmen’s Compensation Act, 1923
in respect of the death or bodily injury to an employee who is
engaged in driving the vehicle or who serves as a conductor in
a public service vehicle or an employee who travels in the
vehicle of the employer carrying goods if it is a goods carriage.
Section 149(1), which casts an obligation on an insurer to
satisfy an award, also speaks only of award in respect of such
liability as is required to be covered by a policy under clause
(h) of sub-section (1) of Section 147, (being a liability covered
by the terms of the policy). This provision cannot therefore be
used to enlarge the liability if it does not exist in terms of
Section 147 of the Act.
11. The object of the insistence on insurance under
Chapter XI of the Act thus seems to be to compulsorily cover
the liability relating to their person or properties of third
parties and in respect of employees of the insured employer,
the liability that may arise under the Workmen’s
Compensation Act, 1923 in respect of the driver, the
conductor and the one carried in a goods vehicle carrying
goods. On this plain understanding of Section 147, we find it
difficulty to hold that the insurance company, in the case on
hand, was liable to indemnify the owner, the employer
Company, the insured, in respect of the death of one of its
employees, who according to the claim, was not the driver. Be
it noted that the liability is not one arising under the
Workmen’s Compensation Act, 1923 and it is doubtful, on the
case put forward by the claimant, whether the deceased could
be understood as a workman coming within the Workmen’s
Compensation Act, 1923. Therefore, on a plain reading of
Section 147 of the Act, it appears to be clear that the
insurance company is not liable to indemnify the insured in
the case on hand.
12. The argument that the proviso does not keep out
employees from coverage though the claims under the
Workmen’s Compensation Act are specified, cannot be
accepted on the plain language of the proviso. The proviso
enacts an exemption and carves out an exception to that
exemption. The suggested interpretation would result in
ignoring the effect of the language employed by the proviso,
exempting the owner from covering his employees under
insurance except in cases where the liability in respect of them
is, one arising under the Workmen’s Compensation Act.
Obviously, as determined by that Tribunal.
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13. We shall now examine the decision in Swaran
Singh (supra) on which practically the whole of the arguments
on behalf of the claimants was rested. On examining the
facts, it is found that, that was a case which related to a claim
by a third party. In claims by a third party, there cannot be
much doubt that once the liability of the owner is found, the
insurance company is liable to indemnify the owner, subject of
course, to any defence that may be available to it under
Section 149(2) of the Act. In a case where the liability is
satisfied by the insurance company in the first instance, it
may have recourse to the owner in respect of a claim available
in that behalf. Swaran Singh (supra) was a case where the
insurance company raised a defence that the owner had
permitted the vehicle to be driven by a driver who really had
no licence and the driving licence produced by him was a fake
one. Their Lordships discussed the position and held
ultimately that a defence under Section 149(2)(a)(ii) of the Act
was available to an insurer when a claim is filed either under
Section 163A or under Section 166 of the Act. The breach of
a policy condition has to be proved to have been committed by
the insured for avoiding liability by the insurer. Mere absence
of or production of fake or invalid driving licence or
disqualification of the driver for driving at the relevant time,
are not in themselves defences available to the insurer against
either the insured or the third party. The insurance company
to avoid liability, must not only establish the available defence
raised in the concerned proceeding but must also establish
breach on the part of the owner of the vehicle for which the
burden of proof would rest with the insurance company.
Whether such a burden had been discharged, would depend
upon the facts and circumstances of each case. Even when the
insurer, is able to prove breach on the part of the insured
concerning a policy condition, the insurer would not be
allowed to avoid its liability towards the insured unless the
said breach of condition is so fundamental as to be found to
have contributed to the cause of the accident. The question
whether the owner has taken reasonable care to find out
whether the driving licence produced by the driver was fake or
not, will have to be determined in each case. If the vehicle at
the time of the accident was driven by a person having a
learner’s licence, the insurance company would be liable to
satisfy the award. The amount that may be awarded to the
insurance company against the insurer in an appropriate case
could be recovered even by way of the enforcement of the very
award. The insurance company had to satisfy the claim of the
insured in cases where a defence under Section 149(2) has
been established by the Company in terms of a fake licence or
the learner’s licence. Their Lordships distinguished Malla
Prakasarao Vs. Malla Janaki & Ors. [(2004) 3 S.C.C. 343]
wherein it was held that the insurance company had no
liability to pay any compensation where an accident resulted
by a vehicle being driven by a driver without a driving licence.
In other words, a distinction between a case of no licence and
a case of licence which turned out to be fake or deficient was
drawn and the liability was held to stand on different footings.
14. It is difficult to apply the ratio of this decision to a
case not involving a third party. The whole protection provided
by Chapter XI of the Act is against third party risk. Therefore,
in a case where a person is not a third party within the
meaning of the Act, the insurance company cannot be made
automatically liable merely by resorting to the Swaran Singh
(supra) ratio. This appears to be the position. This position
was expounded recently by this Court in National Insurance
Co. Ltd. Vs. Laxmi Narain Dhut [2007 (4) SCALE 36]. This
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Court after referring to Swaran Singh (supra) and discussing
the law summed up the position thus:
"In view of the above analysis the following
situations emerge:
1. The decision in Swaran Singh’s case
(supra) has no application to cases
other than third party risks.
2. Where originally the licence was a
fake one, renewal cannot cure the
inherent fatality.
3. In case of third party risks the
insurer has to indemnify the
amount and if so advised, to recover
the same from the insured.
4. The concept of purposive
interpretation has no application to
cases relatable to Section 149 of the
Act.
The High Courts/Commissions shall now
consider the mater afresh in the light of the
position in law as delineated above."
We are in respectful agreement with the above view.
15. In New India Assurance Co. Ltd. Vs. Asha Rani
and others [(2003) 2 S.C.C 223) this Court had occasion to
consider the scope of the expression "any person" occurring in
Section 147 of the Act. This Court held:
"that the meaning of the words "any person"
must also be attributed having regard to the
context in which they have been used i.e. " a
third party". Keeping in view the provisions of
the 1988 Act we are of the opinion that as the
provisions thereof did not enjoin any statutory
liability on the owner of a vehicle to get his
vehicle insured for any passenger travelling in
a goods vehicle, the insurers would not be
liable therefor."
In other words, this Court clearly held that the apparently
wide words "any person" are qualified by the setting in which
they occur and that "any person" is to be understood as a
third party.
16. In United India Insurance Co. Ltd., Shimla Vs.
Tilak Singh & Ors. [(2006) 4 S.C.C. 404 ], this Court made a
survey of the prior decisions and discountenanced an attempt
to confine the ratio of Asha Rani (supra). This Court stated
that although the observations in Asha Rani were in
connection with carrying passengers in a goods vehicle, the
same would apply with equal force also to gratuitous
passengers in any other vehicle. This Court also noticed that
the decision to the contrary in New India Assurance Co. Vs.
Satpal Singh [(2000) 1 S.C.C. 237] was specifically overruled
in Asha Rani’s case (supra). In other words, it was re-
emphasised that a policy in terms of Section 147 of the Act is
not intended to cover persons other than third parties.
17. The Court of Appeal in Cooper vs. Motor Insurers’
Bureau (1985 (1) Queen’s Bench Division 575) considered the
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interpretation of Section 143 and 145 of the Road Traffic Act,
1972 corresponding to Section 146 and Section 147 of the Act.
The Court of Appeal held:
"that Section 143(1) of the Act of the 1972
imposed an obligation on the owner to insure
against the risk of injury or death to third
parties resulting from the use by him or any
other person of his vehicle on the road; that
"third party risks" in section 143(1) did not
include risks to the driver of the vehicle at the
relevant time so that "any person" in section
145(3)(a) was therefore restricted to persons
other than the driver of the vehicle and its
owner; and that, accordingly, since the liability
of the owner to the plaintiff was not one that
was required to be covered by a policy of
insurance by the Act of 1972, the Motor
Insurers’ Bureau were not liable under the
terms of the agreement to compensate the
plaintiff in the sum of the unsatisfied
judgment."
18. In Halsbury’s Laws of England, Fourth Edition, in
paragraph 761, the position as regards ’employees’ is stated as
follows:
"A policy is not required to cover liability in
respect of the death of or bodily injury
sustained by a person in the employment of a
person insured by the policy where the death
or injury arises out of and in the course of that
employment. This exclusion is framed in the
language of the Workmen’s Compensation Acts
and is presumably intended to reflect the well-
established distinction in the insurance world
between public liability risks and employers’
liability risks. The distinctions which are
involved are very finely drawn."
19. In New India Assurance Co. Ltd. Vs. Rula & Ors.
[(2000) 3 S.C.C. 195], this Court postulated that the contract
of insurance in respect of motor vehicles has to be construed
in the light of Sections 146(1),147(5) and 149(1) of the Motor
Vehicles Act, 1988. The manifest object of Section 146(1),
which contains a prohibition on the use of motor vehicles
without an insurance policy having been taken in accordance
with Chapter XI of the Act is to ensure that the third party,
who suffers injuries due to the use of the motor vehicle, may
be able to get damages from the owner of the vehicle and
recoverability of the damages may not depend on the financial
condition or solvency of the driver of the vehicle who had
caused the injuries. Thus, any contract of insurance under
Chapter XI of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 contemplates a
third party who is not a signatory or a party to the contract of
insurance but is, nevertheless, protected by such contract.
That this was the object was reiterated in New India
Assurance Co. Shimla Vs. Kamla & Ors. [(2001) 4 S.C.C.
342], wherein it was stated that the raison d’etre for the
legislature making it prohibitory for motor vehicles being used
in public places without covering third-party risks by a policy
of insurance is to protect the members of the community who
become sufferers on account of accidents arising from the use
of motor vehicles. The object of Chapter XI has thus always
been recognised as one intended to protect third parties as
understood in the context of the Act unless of course there is a
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special contract in respect of protection to others.
20. We are thus satisfied that based on the ratio in
Swaran Singh (supra), the insurance company cannot be
made liable in the case on hand to pay the compensation first
and to recover it from the insured, the owner of the vehicle.
The deceased being an employee not covered by the
Workmen’s Compensation Act, of the insured, the owner of the
vehicle, has not to be covered compulsorily under the Act and
only by entering into of a special contract by the insured with
the insurer could such a person be brought under coverage.
There is no case that there is any special contract in that
behalf in this case.
21. It was argued by learned counsel for the appellant
that since on the finding that the deceased was himself driving
the vehicle at the time of the accident, the accident arose due
to the negligence of the deceased himself and hence the
insurer is not liable for the compensation. Even if the case of
the claimant that the car was driven by Mahmood Hasan was
true, then also, the claimant had to establish the negligence of
the driver before the insured could be asked to indemnify the
insured. The decision in Minu B. Mehta & Anr. Vs.
Balkrishna Ramchandra Nayan & Anr. [(1977) 2 S.C.R. 886],
of a three Judge Bench of this Court was relied on in support.
22. In that decision, this Court considered the question
whether in a claim for compensation under the Motor Vehicles
Act, 1939, proof of negligence was essential to support a claim
for compensation. On the facts in that case, their Lordships
found that the appeal was liable to be dismissed subject to
certain directions issued therein. But their Lordships, in the
light of the fact that the High Court had discussed the law on
the question and it was of some importance, felt that it was
necessary to state the position in law. Noticing that the
liability of the owner of the car to compensate the victim in a
car accident due to negligent driving of his servant is based on
the law of tort, the court discussed the scheme of the Act of
1939 and the law on the question. Regarding the view of the
High Court that it was not necessary to prove negligence, the
court held:
"The reasoning of the two learned judges is
unacceptable as it is opposed to basic
principles of the owner’s liability for negligence
of his servant and is based on a complete
misreading of the provisions of Chapter VIII of
the Act. The High Court’s zeal for what it
considered to be protection of public good has
misled it into adopting a course which is
nothing short of legislation."
Their Lordships also noticed that proof of negligence remained
the lynch pin to recover compensation. Their Lordships
concluded by saying,
"We conclude by stating that the view of the
learned Judges of the High Court has no
support in law and hold that proof of
negligence is necessary before the owner or the
insurance company could be held to be liable
for the payment of compensation in a motor
accident claim case."
23. Learned counsel for the respondent contended that
there was no obligation on the claimant to prove negligence on
the part of the driver. Learned counsel relied on Gujarat
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State Road Transport Corporation, Ahmedabad vs.
Ramanbhai Prabhatbhai and another (1987 (3) SCC 234) in
support. In that decision, this Court clarified that the
observations in Minu B. Mehta’s case (supra) are in the
nature of obiter dicta. But, this Court only proceeded to
notice that departures had been made from the law of strict
liability and the Fatal Accidents Act by introduction of Chapter
VIIA of the 1939 Act and the introduction of Section 92A
providing for compensation and the expansion of the provision
as to who could make a claim, noticing that the application
under Section 110A of the Act had to be made on behalf of or
for the benefit of all the legal representatives of the deceased.
This Court has not stated that on a claim based on negligence
there is no obligation to establish negligence. This Court was
dealing with no-fault liability and the departure made from the
Fatal Accidents Act and the theory of strict liability in the
scheme of the Act of 1939 as amended. This Court did not
have the occasion to construe a provision like Section 163A of
the Act of 1988 providing for compensation without proof of
negligence in contradistinction to Section 166 of the Act. We
may notice that Minu B. Mehta’s case was decided by three
learned Judges and the Gujarat State Road Transport
Corporation case was decided only by two learned Judges.
An obiter dictum of this Court may be binding only on the
High Courts in the absence of a direct pronouncement on that
question elsewhere by this Court. But as far as this Court is
concerned, though not binding, it does have clear persuasive
authority. On a careful understanding of the decision in
Gujarat State Road Transport Corporation (supra) we
cannot understand it as having held that in all claims under
the Act proof of negligence as the basis of a claim is jettisoned
by the scheme of the Act. In the context of Sections 166 and
163A of the Act of 1988, we are persuaded to think that the so
called obiter observations in Minu B. Mehta’s case (supra)
govern a claim under Section 166 of the Act and they are
inapplicable only when a claim is made under Section 163A of
the Act. Obviously, it is for the claimant to choose under
which provision he should approach the Tribunal and if he
chooses to approach the Tribunal under Section 166 of the
Act, we cannot see why the principle stated in Minu B.
Mehta’s case should not apply to him. We are, therefore, not
in a position to accept the argument of learned counsel for the
respondents that the observations in Minu B. Mehta’s case
deserve to be ignored.
24. We think that the law laid down in Minu B. Mehta
& Anr. Vs. Balkrishna Ramchandra Nayan & Anr. (supra)
was accepted by the legislature while enacting the Motor
Vehicles Act, 1988 by introducing Section 163A of the Act
providing for payment of compensation notwithstanding
anything contained in the Act or in any other law for the time
being in force that the owner of a motor vehicle or the
authorised insurer shall be liable to pay in the case of death or
permanent disablement due to accident arising out of the use
of the motor vehicle, compensation, as indicated in the Second
Schedule, to the legal heirs or the victim, as the case may be,
and in a claim made under sub-section (1) of Section 163A of
the Act, the claimant shall not be required to plead or
establish that the death or permanent disablement in respect
of which the claim has been made was due to any wrongful act
or neglect or default of the owner of the vehicle concerned.
Therefore, the victim of an accident or his dependants have an
option either to proceed under Section 166 of the Act or under
Section 163A of the Act. Once they approach the Tribunal
under Section 166 of the Act, they have necessarily to take
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upon themselves the burden of establishing the negligence of
the driver or owner of the vehicle concerned. But if they
proceed under Section 163A of the Act, the compensation will
be awarded in terms of the Schedule without calling upon the
victim or his dependants to establish any negligence or default
on the part of the owner of the vehicle or the driver of the
vehicle.
25. In Pushpabai Purshottam Udeshi & Ors. Vs. M/s
Ranjit Ginning & Pressing Co. (P) Ltd. & Anr. [(1977) 3
S.C.R. 372], two of the learned judges who constituted the
Bench in Minu B. Mehta (supra) held that when a car is
driven by the owner’s employee on owner’s business, the
normal rule was that it was for the claimant for compensation
to prove negligence. When the Manager of the owner while
driving the car on the business of the owner took in a
passenger, it would be taken that he had the authority to do
so, considering his position unless otherwise shown. If due to
his negligent driving an accident occurred and the passenger
died, the owner would be liable for compensation. The court
noticed that the modern trend was to make the master liable
for acts of his servant which may not fall within the expression
"in the course of his employment" as formerly understood.
With respect, we think that the extensions to the principle of
liability has been rightly indicated in this decision.
26. On the facts of this case, there is no finding that
Mahmood Hasan, another employee of the owner was driving
the vehicle. Even if he was, there is no finding of his
negligence. The victim was the Regional Manger of the
Company that owned the car. He was using the car given to
him by the Company for use. Whether he is treated as the
owner of the vehicle or as an employee, he is not covered by
the insurance policy taken in terms of the Act --- without any
special contract --- since there is no award under the
Workmen’s Compensation Act that is required to be satisfied
by the insurer. In these circumstances, we hold that the
appellant \026 Insurance Company is not liable to indemnify the
insured and is also not obliged to satisfy the award of the
Tribunal/Court and then have recourse to the insured, the
owner of the vehicle. The High Court was in error in modifying
the award of the Tribunal in that regard.
27. We therefore allow the appeal and reversing the
decision of the High Court, restore the award of the Tribunal
exonerating the appellant from liability. We make no order as
to costs.