Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 5
CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 1350 of 2001
PETITIONER:
NATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SEEMA MALHOTRA AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 20/02/2001
BENCH:
K.T. Thomas & R.P. Sethi.
JUDGMENT:
L...I...T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T..JJ U D G M E N T
THOMAS, J.
Leave granted.
Under a contract of insurance the insured gave a cheque
to the insurer towards the first premium amount, but the
cheque was dishonoured by the drawee bank due to
insufficiency of funds in the account of the drawer. Is the
insurer liable in such a situation to honour the contract of
insurance? There is no dispute that the insurer is liable
as against third parties because it is covered by the
statutory provisions contained in Chapter X of the Motor
vehicles Act 1988. But the insurer vehemently disputed the
liability when the claim is made by the insured himself or
his legal heirs, without any third party being involved. To
avoid confusion we may point out that the insurance company
has no dispute that the claims, if any, made by the kith and
kin of the insured for the injuries sustained by them in the
accident including the claims made by the legal
representatives of the deceased in such accident would also
be treated as third party claims).
A division bench of the High Court of Jammu and Kashmir
held, on the facts of the case, that the insurance company
is still liable because it chose to cancel the policy with
effect from the date of bouncing of the cheque, whereas the
liability was incurred prior to it.
The question can be dealt with after summarizing the
facts in this case which led to the impugned judgment of the
High Court. The insured was one Yash Paul Malhotra. He and
the appellant insurance company entered into an insurance
contract on 21st December, 1993, by insuring a Maruti car
for a sum of Rupees one lakh and fifty thousand. On the
same day, the insured gave a cheque for Rs.4492/- towards
the first instalment of the premium and the insurance
company issued a cover note as contemplated in Section 149
of the Motor Vehicles Act. But unfortunately, the last day
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 5
in the year 1993 became the last day of the insured as well
as his Maruti car because the insured died and the car was
completely damaged in an accident which occurred on
31.12.1993.
On 10.1.1994 the bank on which the cheque was drawn by
the insured sent an intimation to the insurance company that
the cheque was dishonoured as there was no funds in the
account of the insured. On 20.1.1994 the insurance company
informed the business concern of the insured as under:
Notwithstanding anything contained to the contrary, it
is hereby agreed and declared that your cheque has been
dishonoured by the bank. So we are cancelling the above
said policy with immediate effect. The company is not at
risk.
The respondents who are the widow and children of the
insured, who died in the accident, filed a claim for the
loss of the vehicle. When the claim was repudiated, the
respondents moved the State Consumer Protection Commission.
As per a judgment pronounced by the Commission the said
claim was rejected. The judicial member of the State
Commission, who delivered the judgment, has stated thus:
In so far the facts of the present case are concerned,
it is a settled law that the insurer even if it had issued a
cover note is entitled to cancel the policy if it fails to
cash the cheque for premium. The concept of contract in
essence envisages a proposal, acceptance and passing of
consideration. In the absence of any consideration there
can be no contract and that is all what is recognised by
section 64-VB of the Insurance Act. The insurer was
justified in repudiating the contract and it has done it in
time and soon after the cheque bounced. In this view of the
matter there is no need for us to go to any other point that
may arise in this case.
When the respondents (legal heirs of the insured) moved
the High Court of Jammu and Kashmir, the division bench
which heard the matter reversed the order passed by the
State Consumer Commission and held the insurance company
liable to honour the claim. The Division Bench directed the
State Commission to assess the compensation in accordance
with law and pay the same after deducting the amount of
premium (as the cheque was dishonoured). The following
reasoning was mainly adopted by the learned judge of the
division bench for holding that the insurance company is
liable on the fact situation:
While ordering the cancellation of policy in question,
respondent insurance company instead of cancelling the same
due to dishonour of cheque of the premium from the date it
was issued i.e. 21.12.1993, chose to cancel it with
immediate effect. This clearly indicates that till the
issuance of this communication respondent insurance company
itself treated the policy subsisting. Besides this, it had
not chosen to treat the same cancelled from the date of
issue. In the face of this position, this case need not
detain us any further and for this reason the argument
addressed on behalf of the insurance company based on
section 64- VB of the Insurance Act also does not hold good.
There was nothing which prevented the insurance company to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 5
have informed the appellants that the policy stood cancelled
from the date of its issuance, and as such it is not liable
for the payment of any compensation.
The direction that insurance company can now deduct the
premium amount from the compensation to be fixed is no
solace to the insurer. The essence of the insurance
business is the coverage of the risk by undertaking to
indemnify the insured against loss or damage. They agree to
pay the damages arising out of any accident by taking a
chance that no accident might happen. Motivation of the
insurance business is that the premium would turn to be the
profit of the business in case no damage occurs. Such
business of the insurance company can be carried on only
with the premium paid by the insured persons on the
insurance policy. The only profit, if at all the insurance
company makes, of the insurance business is the premium paid
when no accident or damage occurs. But to ask the insurance
company to bear the entire loss of damages of somebody else
without the company receiving a pie towards premium is
contrary to the principles of equity, though the insurance
companies are made liable to third parties on account of
statutory compulsions due to the initial agreement, entered
between the insured and the company concerned.
A three-Judge Bench in Oriental Insurance Co. Ltd. vs.
Inderjit Kaur (1998 (1) SCC 371) left this point
unconsidered. In that case also the premium was paid by
cheque which was later dishonoured and the insured was
intimated about it by the insurance company two months after
the vehicle got involved in the accident. When a claim was
made by the legal heirs of the driver who died in the
accident the insurance company resisted the claim on the
strength of Section 64-VB of the Insurance Act of 1938.
Repelling the contention of the insurance company, the
three-Judge Bench held thus:
We have, therefore, this position. Despite the bar
created by Section 64- VB of the Insurance Act, the
appellant, an authorised insurer, issued a policy of
insurance to cover the bus without receiving the premium
therefor. By reason of the provisions of Sections 147(5)
and 149(1) of the Motor Vehicles Act, the appellant became
liable to indemnify third parties in respect of the
liability which that policy covered and to satisfy awards of
compensation in respect thereof notwithstanding its
entitlement (upon which we do not express any opinion) to
avoid or cancel the policy for the reason that the cheque
issued in payment of the premium thereon had not been
honoured.
Thus, the three-Judge Bench refrained from expressing
any opinion on the question of insurers entitlement to
avoid or cancel the policy as against the insured when the
cheque issued for payment of the premium was dishonoured.
Subsequently the same question was mooted before a
two-Judge Bench of this Court in New India Assurance Co.
Ltd. vs. Rula and ors. {2000 (3) SCC 195} but the
question of insurers right to repudiate the claim as
against the insurer in a similar situation did not arise
therein and hence the Bench parried the question.
Thus the question has now to be considered as the same
is the crux of the issue involved in this case. As pointed
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 5
out earlier the insurance is a contract whereby one
undertakes to indemnify another against loss, damage or
liability arising from an unknown or contingent event and is
applicable only to some contingency or act to occur in
future. We have to consider how far the legislature has
controlled the insurance business. Section 2(9) of the
Insurance Act defines insurer, inter alia, as any body
corporate carrying on the business of insurance which is a
body corporate incorporated under any law for the time being
in force in India. Section 2(d) of the Act says that every
insurer shall be subject to all the provisions of this Act
in relation to any class of insurance business so long as
his liabilities in India in respect of business of that
class remain unsatisfied or not otherwise provided for.
It is in the aforesaid context that we have to consider
the impact of Section 64-VB of the Insurance Act. As
sub-sections (1) and (2) of the said section alone are
material for the purpose we extract them herein:
(1) No insurer shall assume any risk in India in
respect of any insurance business on which premium is not
ordinarily payable outside India unless and until the
premium payable is received by him or is guaranteed to be
paid by such person in such manner and within such time as
may be prescribed or unless and until deposit of such amount
as may be prescribed, is made in advance in the prescribed
manner.
(2) For the purposes of this section, in the case of
risks for which premium can be ascertained in advance, the
risk may be assumed not earlier than the date on which the
premium has been paid in cash or by cheque to the insurer.
Sub-section (1) is not applicable to cases in which
premium is ordinarily payable outside India. In other
words, the insurer has no liability to the insured unless
and until the premium payable is received by the insurer.
As the premium can be paid in cash or by cheque, what is the
position when the cheque issued to the insurer is
dishonoured by the drawee bank?
Sections 51, 52 and 54 of the Indian Contract Act can
profitably be referred to for the purpose of deciding the
point. They are subsumed under the sub- title Performance
of reciprocal promises in the said Act. Section 51 deals
with a contract concerning reciprocal promises to be
simultaneously performed and in such a contract the promisee
is absolved from performing his promise unless the promisor
is ready or willing to perform his part of the promise.
Section 52 says that where the order in which reciprocal
promises are to be performed has not been expressly provided
in the contract such promise shall be performed in that
order which the nature of the transaction warrants it.
Illustration (b) given to Section 52 highlights the utility
of the provision. That illustration is as follows: A and B
contract that A shall make over his stock-in-trade to B at a
fixed price, and B promise to give security for the payment
of the money. As promise need not be performed until the
security is given, for the nature of transaction requires
that A should have security before he delivers up his stock.
Section 54 of the Contract Act is to be read in that
background. It is extracted below:
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 5
When a contract consists of reciprocal promises, such
that one of them cannot be performed, or that its
performance cannot be claimed till the other has been
performed, and the promisor of the promise last mentioned
fails to perform it, such promisor cannot claim the
performance of the reciprocal promise, and must make
compensation to the other party to the contract for any loss
which such other party may sustain by the non-performance of
the contract.
In a contract of insurance when an insurer gives a
cheque towards payment of premium or part of the premium,
such a contract consists of reciprocal promise. The drawer
of the cheque promises the insurer that the cheque, on
presentation, would yield the amount in cash. It cannot be
forgotten that a cheque is a Bill of Exchange drawn on a
specified banker. A Bill of Exchange is an instrument in
writing containing an unconditional order directing a
certain person to pay a certain sum of money to a certain
person. It involves a promise that such money would be
paid.
Thus, when the insured fails to pay the premium
promised, or when the cheque issued by him towards the
premium is returned dishonoured by the bank concerned the
insurer need not perform his part of the promise. The
corollary is that the insured cannot claim performance from
the insurer in such a situation.
Under Section 25 of the Contract Act an agreement made
without consideration is void. Section 65 of the Contract
Act says that when a contract becomes void any person who
has received any advantage under such contract is bound to
restore it to the person from whom he received it. So, even
if the insurer has disbursed the amount covered by the
policy to the insured before the cheque was returned
dishonoured, insurer is entitled to get the money back.
However, if the insured makes up the premium even after
the cheque was dishonoured but before the date of accident
it would be a different case as payment of consideration can
be treated as paid in the order in which the nature of
transaction required it. As such an event did not happen in
this case the insurance company is legally justified in
refusing to pay the amount claimed by the respondents.
In the light of the above legal position we uphold the
contention of the appellant insurance company. We,
therefore, allow this appeal and set aside the impugned
judgment of the Division Bench of the High Court. The order
passed by the State Consumer Commission will stand restored.
J
( K.T. Thomas )
J
New Delhi; ( R.P. Sethi )
February 20, 2001.