Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KRISHNA BUS SERVICE LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SMT. MANGLI & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT21/01/1976
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
CITATION:
1976 AIR 700 1976 SCR (3) 178
1976 SCC (1) 793
ACT:
Negligence-Vicarious responsibility of the management
in fatal injury cases-Presumption when arises-Liability is
on both the rash and negligent driver and the management
since the driver acted "in the course of its employment".
Duty to care-Absence of explanation by the defendants
affords reasonable evidence towards contributory negligence.
Maxim-Res ipsa loquitur-Applies to fatal accident cases
on road.
Second appeal-Reappraisal of evidence on record by
Supreme Court only in exceptional cases where injustice
would result.
HEADNOTE:
One of the buses belonging to the appellant, DLB 5749,
driven by "HS" enroute to Hissar, while negotiating a turn
in village Kheri Sadh overturned, causing the death of "LWS"
and injuries to many. At the time of the fatal accident, the
bus was over-loaded with passengers and goods, driven by
"HS" at an excessive speed despite protests by the
passengers while negotiating a turn.
A suit for damages was filed by the legal heirs of
deceased "LWS" against the driver and the appellant, the
liability of the appellant arising out of the fact of its
negligence in employing such a rash and negligent driver who
was responsible for the accident acting in the course of its
employment. The appellant took the plea of "vis major",
there being rain on the fateful day and the breaking of the
tie-rod of the vehicle when it fell into a pit and making
the bus out of the control of the driver. The suit was
dismissed fixing the "quantum damni-ficatus" at Rs. 34,210/-
applying the principle of "quantum meruit" and on appeal the
Punjab and Haryana High Court held that the accident was due
to negligence attributable to the driver or both the driver
and the appellant and decreed the suit, basing on the cogent
and trustworthy evidence of P.Ws. 5, 6 and 8 to these facts
(i) overload of the bus with goods and passengers; (ii)
Witness and slippery nature of the road due to drizzling
(iii) The expert report of the mechanic to the effect that
the "tie-rod" of the vehicle was only "opened" (dismantled)
but not broken and the bad conditions of the foot-brake and
hand brakes: (iv) Factum of negotiating a turn and passing
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through the habitation of village Kheri; (v) Zig-zag
movement of the bus and the fast speed at which the bus was
driven despite protests and shouts of the passengers. (vi)
The actual) speed of the bus at 30 miles per hour at the
time ", of the accident and (vii) over turning of the bus
resulting in the death of "LWS" on the spot and injuries to
many. The High Court, drawing an adverse inference against
the appellant and the driver for non-appearance in the
witness box held that "inasmuch as buses in sound road
worthy condition and driven with ordinary care do not
normally overtime, and in this case the bus did overturn,
the principle of "res ipsa loquitur" applied." The High
Court also awarded a decree for Rs. 21,600/- with
proportionate cost as damages against the appellant and the
driver limiting the liability of Rs. 2,000/- only against
the insurance company.
On appeal by certificate the appellant contended (i)
that it was wrong to assume that over-turning of the bus was
"res ipsa loquitur"; (ii) that it was wrong to shift the
onus on the appellant to show that they were not negligent
and (iii) that in the absence of specific assignment of the
reasons by the witnesses in their evidence the sudden
breaking‘ of the tie rod was the cause of the accident and
hence a vis major".
Dismissing the appeal, the Court,
179
^
HELD: (1) ordinarily in second appeal, it is not
necessary for the court to reappraise the evidence on record
because the first appellate court is supposed to be the
final court of fact. [182E]
(2) Buses in sound road worthy condition, driven with
ordinary care, do not normally over-turn. It would be for
the driver who had special knowledge of the relevant facts
to explain why the vehicle over-turned. The maxim "res ipsa
loquitur" would be attracted in such a case. In the present
case, the defendants failed to rebut the presumption of
negligence that arose from the manifest circumstances of the
case. [184 C-D]
Shyam Sundar and others v. State of Rajasthan, A.I.R.
1974, S.C. 890, not applicable.
Barkway v. South Wales Transport Co. Ltd. [1948] 2 All.
E.R. 460, applied.
(3) Viewed in the light of the other circumstances, in
the instant case, like overloading, negotiating of a turn
near the village habitation on a slippery road a duty was
cast on the driver to go dead slow. A speed of 25 to 30
miles per hour, in these conditions and in this situation,
at the turning of the road would be imprudently excessive.
[184A-B]
(4) Had the bus been properly maintained in a sound
road worthy condition and used with due care and driven with
due caution, the tie-rod should not have broken loose by the
fall of the wheel in a pit hardly six inches deep,
particularly when the upward thrust of the water in the pit
would have largely absorbed the shock of the fall. The pit
was in the kacha berm and not right in the mettled portion.
The driver could have with ordinary care and diligence
avoided it. Thus, the breaking of the tie-rod-assuming it
did break-was. at best, a neutral circumstance. [184 B-C]
(5) In the instant case the driver was admittedly an
employee of the appellant-company, and at the relevant‘ time
he was acting in the! course of his employment. The vehicle
was the property of the appellant-company under whose
management defendant 3 was working at the material time. It
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s well settled that where in an action for negligence the
thing causing fatal injury to the deceased and consequent
pecuniary loss to the plaintiff, is shown to be under the
management of the defendant or his servants and the accident
is such as in the ordinary course of events, does not
happen, if those who have the management use proper case,
that affords reasonable evidence, in the absence of
explanation by the defendants, that the accident arose from
want of care. The appellant company was, therefore, fully
liable for the negligent act of their employee and the
injury resulting therefrom. [185 D-F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 971 of
1968
From the judgment and decree dated the 10-5-1965 of the
Punjab High Court at Chandigarh in R.F.A. No.181 of 1957.
S. K. Mehta, K. R. Nagaraja and P. N. Puri for the
appellant.
V. M. Tarkunde, J. P. Agarwal and Miss Manik Tarkunde
for respondents 1-6.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SARKIRIA, J.-This appeal on certificate is directed
against a judgment of the High Court of Punjab and Haryana
awarding to the plaintiff-respondents a decree for Rs.
21,600. It arises out of these facts:
On January 21, 1955, Lala Wazir Singh deceased, a
retired Divisional Engineer (Railways) was traveling from
Delhi to Hissar by a bus belonging to the Krishna Bus
Service Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as the Company). On
the way, the vehicle went out of order.
180
Lala Wazir Singh and some other passengers were then
transferred to another bus No. DLB 5749 belonging to the
same Company. This bus was being driven by Harbans Singh,
defendant 3 (Respondent 8 herein) who was an employee of the
Company, acting under its directions and instructions. When
at about 3 p.m., this bus was negotiating a turn in village
Kheri Sadh, a few miles from Rohtak, it over turned, causing
the death of Lala Wazir Singh, at the spot and in injuries
to several other passengers.
The widow, the sons, the daughters, the grandsons and
grand daughters of the deceased instituted a suit in the
court of the Subordinate Judge, 1st Class, Rohtak for the
recovery of Rs. 50,000 as damages for the loss caused to
them on account of his death. The Company was impleaded as
defendant No. 1, the Insurance Company was joined as
defendant No. 2 and the driver of the bus as defendant 3. it
was alleged that the accident causing the death of Lala
Wazir Singh, occurred on account of the negligence of
defendants 1 and 3. The bus, it was pleaded, was not in
proper order; it was overloaded with passengers and goods,
and despite these facts, defendant 3 drove it at a very high
speed while it was negotiating a turn. The liability. of the
employer Company was sought to be fixed on the ground that
it was negligent in employing such a rash and negligent
driver and that the accident occurred when defendant 3 was
acting in the course of its employment.
In their written statement presented on July 16, 1956,
the Company admitted that the bus involved in the accident
belonged to it and at the time of the accident it was driven
by their employee, defendant 3. In regard to the allegations
of negligence, the Company replied:
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"The accident alleged by the plaintiffs was not
due to any negligent or careless driving of Harbans
Singh Driver of the vehicle owned by the defendant but
was vis major. There was rain on that day and the front
was slippery. The bus overturned and the death of the
said Wazir Chand (Singh) was in no case the result of
overturning of the Bus."
While finding that the death of Lala Wazir Singh had
occurred on account of injuries sustained by him in the
accident in question, the trial court held that the accident
took place "on account of the r breaking of the tie-rod of
the vehicle due to which the bus went out of the control of
the driver". The tie-rod, according to the trial court,
broke because the front left wheel of the vehicle while it
was negotiating a turn, fell into a pit. The court further
held that the. vehicle was not overloaded and its speed at
the time of the accident was not more than 20 or 25 miles
per hour, and as such, was not excessive. On these premises,
the trial court concluded that the is plaintiffs had failed
to prove that the accident involving fatal injuries to the
deceased, was due to rash or negligent driving by defendant
No.r 3. It further held that in case Issues 1 and 2, were
decided in favour of the plaintiffs, the maximum damages
awardable to them would be Rs. 34,210, i.e., the amount of
pension which the deceased would have earned, had he been
alive for 9 years and 2 months after the accident.
181
On these findings, the trial court dismissed the suit
leaving the parties to bear their own costs.
Aggrieved, the plaintiffs preferred an appeal to the
High Court. The Division Bench who heard the appeal, has
after appraising the evidence on record, reversed the
findings of the trial court and held that "the accident was
due to negligence attributable to defendant 3 or both
defendants 1 and 3".
This finding of negligence recorded by the High Court
is based on facts appearing in the evidence of PWs. 5, 6
and 8 who were c found by it to be entirely trustworthy.
These facts are: (i) The bus was overloaded with goods and
passengers. There were 60 or .62 passengers including 10 or
12 children, in it (vide PWs 5 and 6). (ii) It was
drizzling; the road was wet and slippery (vide P.s.. S and
6); (iii) The tie-rod of the bus was not found broken but
only "opened" (dismantled) when it was examined by the
expert motor mechanic, PW 8, on the day following the
accident. The hand brake and the foot-brakes were also found
in a bad condition; (IV) At the time of the accident the bus
was negotiating a turn and passing through the habitation of
village Cherry; (v) Immediately before the accident the bus
was making a zigzag movement and was being driven at fast
speed despite the protests and shouts of the passengers
asking the driver to slow down; (vi) the speed of the bus at
the material time, according to PW 6, was about 30 miles per
hour; (vii) The bus overturned as a result of which Lala
Warier Suing died at the spot and other passengers,
including PW S, received serious injuries.
The High Court further reinforced its finding with an
adverse inference against the defendants drawn from the fact
that the driver (defendant 3) who knew best the relevant
facts, did not appear in the witness-stand to explain the
circumstances in which the accident occurred. In this
connection it observed:
"Buses do not, in such circumstances, normally and
in the ordinary course, turn turtle. The transaction
thus speaks for itself: in other words res ipsa
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loquitur and in the absence of explanation by defendant
No. 3 and his employer, defendant No. 1 the established
facts and circa stances accompanying the fatal injury
caused to the deceased clearly raise a presumption or
at least permit an inference of negligence on the part
of defendant No. 3 The Court below was thus clearly
wrong in negativing negligence on the part of defendant
No. 3.
I would accordingly reverse the conclusion of the
court below on this point and hold that the accident
was due to the negligence of defendant No. 3 and was
not inevitable which could not be obviated by ordinary
care, caution and skill on his part."
On the above facts and the premises, the High Court
concluded that the accident was due to the negligence of the
driver and was "not inevitable which could not be obviated
by ordinary care, caution u skill on his part". In the
result, it awarded a decree for Rh. 21,600
182
as damages against defendants 1 and 3 proportionate costs,
limiting the liability of the Insurance Company, defendant
No. 2 to Rs. 2,000 only, plus proportionate costs.
Hence this appeal.
It is an undisputed fact that Lala Wazir Singh died in
the bus accident on 21.1.1955. It is further common ground
that the bus while negotiating a turn, had overturned
causing fatal injuries to the deceased, and that at the
relevant time it was being driven by Harbans Singh
defendant, an employee of the appellant Company. It is also
admitted that the bus belonged to the appellant-company. The
only issue in controversy is, whether the accident involving
the death of L. Wazir Singh, was caused due to the
negligence of defendant 1 or both defendants 1 and 3. .
Mr. Mehta, appearing for the appellant contends that
the High Court while conceding that the plaintiffs’
witnesses were not able to assign the reason for the
accident, wrongly spelled out negligence on the part of the
driver from the bald circumstance that the bus had
overturned. It is submitted that the High Court committed an
error of law inasmuch as it assumed that the overturning of
the bus was res ipsa loquitur and had shifted the burden on
the defendants to show that the accident and the consequent
death of L. Wazir Singh was not due to their negligence. It
is submitted that res ipsa loquitur is merely a Latin phrase
and does not convey any legal principle. Reliance has been
placed on this Court’s decision in Shyam Sunder and ors. v.
State of Rajasthan(1). Mr. Mehta further maintains that the
trial court had correctly held on the basis of evidence on
record, that the accident occurred due to the sudden
breaking of the tie-rod and not due to any negligence on the
part of the driver. To us, none of these contentions appears
to be well founded.
ordinarily, in Second Appeal it is not necessary for
this Court to reappraise the evidence on record because the
first appellate court is supposed to be the final court of
fact. Nevertheless, on the insistence of the Counsel for the
appellant, we have examined the evidence on the record. We
have no hesitation in holding, in agreement with the High
Court, that the evidence rendered by PWs 5, 6 and 8 was
reliable and cogent enough to establish facts which, in
their totality, unerringly point to the conclusion that the
accident was due to the negligence of the driver, defendant
No. 3.
Kali Ram, PW 5, was one of the passengers in the ill-
fated bus. He, also, received injuries in the accident. For
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treatment of his injuries he remained in hospital for twenty
days. He was therefore supposed to have personal knowledge
and experience of the circumstances in which the accident
occurred. He testified that the bus was overloaded, and the
driver unheeding the protests and shouts of the passengers
to go slow, was driving it at a fast speed. He further
stated now near village Kheri, the vehicle after making zig-
zag movements overturned causing the death of one passenger
at the spot and injuries to the witness and other
passengers.
(1) AIR 1974 SC 890.
183
Subedar Ram Kishan, PW 6, is a retired Army officer and
knows motor-driving. His house is just near the place of
the accident. According to his estimate, the speed of the
bus, while it was negotiating the turn, just before the
accident, was 30 miles per hour and it was moving in a zig-
zag manner, being not in the control of the driver. In
cross-examination, the witness accepted a suggestion put by
the defence, and stated that in his presence, the driver had
told the police that the accident had occurred due to the
breaking of the tie-rod. The witness further conceded that
there was pit by the side of the road, but repelled the
suggestion that the tie-rod could be broken by a sudden jerk
at the turning.
Raghbir Singh PW 8 was a motor mechanic. He examined
the bus at the site on the 22nd January. According to him,
the tie-rod had not broken down, but had been opened",
implying that it had been subsequently tampered with. The
witness found that the handbrake and foot-brakes of the
vehicle were in a bad condition. He did not find the pipe of
the hydraulic foot-brake in a broken condition.
For its finding that the accident had taken place on
account of the breaking of the tie-rod of the vehicle, the
trial court sought support from the evidence of PW 5 and DW
6. It is manifest that correctly read, the evidence of PW 6
does not justify that conclusion. The mere fact that
sometime after the accident during police investigation, the
driver came out with the story that the accident occurred
due to the breaking of the tie-rod, was no ground to
believe, without demur. that such breaking was the cause of
the accident. The evidence of the expert, DW 6, was dogmatic
and worthless. His opinion was not based on an examination
of the vehicle and was rightly rejected by the High Court.
On the other hand, the testimony of PW 8 who had examined
the vehicle one day after the accident, was quite
convincing, and it could reasonably lead to the conclusion
that the tie-rod of the vehicle had been tampered with an
untied sometime after the accident.
The defendants led oral evidence to prove that near the
place of the accident, there was a pit in the road, and when
the bus was negotiating a turn, its front wheel fell in that
pit, and as a result of this fall, the tie-rod end of the
steering wheel broke loose and the bus went out of control.
In the first place, DWs 2 and 3, who were examined to
substantiate this story, did not say that the wheel of the
bus had fallen in that pit. Secondly, the story of this pit
and the breaking of the tie- rod, was not even faintly
adumbrated in the written statement. It was subsequently
developed as an after-thought.
Even if it is assumed for the sake of argument that one
wheel of the bus had fallen into the pit, and the resultant
shock broke the tie-rod causing the vehicle to go out of
control, then also that would not, when viewed in the light
of the other circumstances of the case, negative the
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inference of negligence on the part of defendants 1 and 3.
The pit was according to Gordhan, DW 2, hardly four feet in
1 3-L390SCI/76
184
length and 6 inches deep. It was not in the mettled part of
the road but in the kacha berm. The bus was negotiating a
turn. There, the road runs through the habitation of a
village. lt was drizzling and the road was wet and slippery.
The speed of the bus at the relevant time, according to PW
6, was 30 miles per hour, and according to DWs 2, 4 and 5,
it was 25 miles per hour. The bus was overloaded. In these
peculiar circumstances, a duty was cast on the drier lo go
dead slow. A speed of 25 to 30 miles per hour, in these
conditions and in this situation, at the turning of the
road, would be imprudently excessive. Had the bus been
properly maintained in a sound road worthy condition, and
used with due care and driven with due caution, the tie-rod
should not have broken loose by the fall of the wheel in a
pit hardly six inches deep, particularly when the upward
thrust of the water in the pit would have largely absorbed
the shock of the fall. The pit was in the kacha berm and not
right in the mettled portion. The driver could have with
ordinary care and diligence avoided it. Thus, the breaking
of the tie-rod-assuming it did break was at best, a neutral
circumstance.
As rightly pointed out by the High Court, buses in
sound road worthy condition, driven with ordinary care, do
not normally over turn. It would be for the driver who had
special knowledge of relevant facts to explain why the
vehicle overturned. The maximum res ipsa loquitur would be
attracted to such a case. Defendants 1 and 3 had failed to
rebut the presumption of negligence that arose from the
manifest circumstances of the case. ,
In Barkway v. South Wales Transport Co. Ltd.(’’) a
motor omnibus loaded with passengers was passing through a
village when the off side front tyre burst; the omnibus went
over to the off-side of the road, mounted the pavement,
crashed into some railings, and fell down an embankment,
killing four of the passengers, including the plaintiff’s
husband. On these facts, Asquith L.J. summarised the
position as to the onus of proof thus:
"If the defendants’ omnibus leave the road and
falls down an embankment, and this without more is
proved, then res ipsa loquitur, there is a presumption
that the event is caused by negligence on the part of
the defendants, and the plaintiff succeeds unless the
defendants can rebut this pre sumption,
(ii) It is no rebuttal for the defendants to show,
again without more, that the immediate cause of this
omnibus leaving the road is a tyre-burst, since a tyre-
burst per se is a neutral even consistent, and equally
consistent, with negligence or due diligence on the
part of the defendants. When a balance has been tilted
one way, you cannot redress it by adding an equal
weight to each scale. The depressed scale will remain
down. This is the effect of the decision in Laurie v.
Raglan Building Co. Ltd., where not a tyre-burst but a
skid was involved.
(1) [1948] 2 All E.R. 460.
185
(iii) To displace the presumption, the defendants
must go further and prove (or it must emerge from the
evidence as a whole) either (a) that the burst itself
was due to a specific cause which does not connote
negligence on their part but points to its absence as
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more probable, or (b) if they can point to no such
specific cause, that they used all reason able care in
and about the management of their tyres."
The above observations apply with greater force to the
facts of the present case.
Shyam Sunder’s case (supra), cited by Mr. Mehta does
not advance his case. There, the radiator of the vehicle was
getting heated frequently and the driver was pouring water
therein after every 6 or 7 miles of journey. It took the
vehicle 9 hours to cover a distance of 70 miles and
thereafter it suddenly caught fire. On these facts this
Court, speaking through Mathew J., held that there was some
defect in the mechanism and the driver was negligent in
putting the vehicle on the road. Since the driver could not
explain the cause of the accident which was within his
exclusive knowledge and it was not possible for the
plaintiff to give any evidence as to the cause of the
accident, the maxim res ipsa loquitur was attracted to the
case.
Coming back to the instant case, it may be observed
that the driver was admittedly an employee of the appellant-
Company, and at the relevant time he was acting in the
course of his employment. The vehicle was the property of
the appellant-Company, under whose management defendant 3
was working at the material time. It is well settled that
where in an action for negligence the thing causing fatal
injury to the deceased and consequent pecuniary loss to the
plaintiff, is shown to be under the management of the
defendant or his servants and the accident is such as in the
ordinary course of events does not happen, if those who have
the management use proper care, that affords reasonable
evidence, in the absence of explanation by the defendants,
that the accident arose from want of care.
The appellant-Company was therefore fully liable for
the negligent act of its employee and the injury resulting
therefrom.
No other point has been argued before us.
In the light of all that has been said above, the
appeal fails and is hereby dismissed with costs.
S.R.Appeal dismissed.
186