Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2479 of 2007
PETITIONER:
Kaushlya Devi
RESPONDENT:
Shri Karan Arora & Ors
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 14/05/2007
BENCH:
Dr. ARIJIT PASAYAT & LOKESHWAR SINGH PANTA
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 2479 OF 2007
(Arising out of S.L.P. (C) No.16500 of 2005)
Dr. ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
Leave granted.
Challenge in this appeal is to the order passed by a
Division Bench of the Punjab and Haryana High Court which
dismissed the appeal filed by the husband of the appellant. In
the appeal, appellant was respondent no.4.
The background facts in a nutshell are as follows:
A claim petition was filed by the husband of the
appellant, namely, Balwant Singh in terms of Sections 166,
140 and 141 of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 (in short the
’Act’). In the claim petition, the present appellant was
impleaded as respondent no.4 while the driver of the vehicle
no. HR 41/3347 and the owner of the vehicle were impleaded
as respondents 1 and 2. The United India Insurance
Company Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as the ’insurer’) was
impleaded as respondent no.3. In the claim petition filed on
15.3.1997 which was registered on 17.3.1997, it was alleged
that the son of Balwant Singh (claimant) and the present
appellant, died as a result of the vehicular accident in which
the aforesaid car was involved. The deceased was aged about
14 years and was the only son of the appellant. The accident
took place on 5.2.1997 when Karan Arora (respondent no.1)
came to the house of the claimant and requested the deceased
to accompany him in his car. The car was being driven by the
said Karan Arora. The vehicle met with an accident. The
deceased lost his life. A claim of Rs.10,00,000/- was made.
On receipt of the notice from the Motor Accident Claims
Tribunal, Chandigarh (in short the ’Tribunal’) responses were
filed by the respondents. Respondent no.2 i.e. the owner of
the vehicle stated that the driver was a minor and the claim
petition was not maintainable against him. Though some other
points were urged they were treated not to be of consequences
by the Tribunal. The insurer took the stand that since the
death of the deceased was never intimated to the insurer and
also about the alleged accident, the petition appears to have
been a collusive petition. The claim in the claim petition was
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that the deceased was earning Rs.10,000/- per month. The
insurer took the stand that it was not liable as it was the
admitted stand that the driver did not have any driving
licence. The present appellant as respondent no.4 accepted the
claim in the claim petition and prayed that the same be
accepted and indicated that she was entitled to share in the
amount of compensation.
The Tribunal on consideration of the rival stand came to
hold that the accident took place in the manner described.
Since the driver was a minor he did not have any liability but
the owner of the vehicle was liable to pay compensation as per
the award. It was further held that the insurer has no liability
as the driver was not authorized to drive any vehicle. A sum of
rupees one lakh was awarded along with 12% interest from
the date of the claim till realization. The manner in which the
amount was to be deposited was also indicated in the award.
An appeal was preferred by the claimant Balwant Singh which
as noted above was dismissed by the High Court.
In support of the appeal, learned counsel for the
appellant submitted that the awarded amount is meagre and
considering the background from which deceased came and
his academic career the award should have been more.
Learned counsel for the owner of the vehicle on the other hand
supported the order. Similar was the stand of the insurance
company.
In Mallett v. McMonagle 1970 (AC) 166, Lord Diplock
analysed in detail the uncertainties which arise at various
stages in making a rational estimate and practical ways of
dealing with them. In Davies v. Taylor (1974) AC 207, it was
held that the Court, in looking at future uncertain events,
does not decide whether on balance one thing is more likely to
happen than another, but merely puts a value on the chances.
A possibility may be ignored if it is slight and remote. Any
method of calculation is subordinate to the necessity for
compensating the real loss. But a practical approach to the
calculation of the damages has been stated by Lord Wright in
Davies v. Powell Duffryn Associated Colleries Ltd. (1942) 1 All
ER 657, in the following words:
"The starting point is the amount of
wages which the deceased was earning, the
ascertainment of which to some extent may
depend on the regularity of his employment.
Then there is an estimate of how much was
required to be spent for his own personal and
living expenses. The balance will give a datum
or basic figure which will generally be turned
into a lump sum by taking a certain number of
years’ purchase."
In State of Haryana and Anr. v. Jasbir Kaur and Ors.
(2003(7) SCC 484) it was held as under:
"7. It has to be kept in view that the Tribunal
constituted under the Act as provided in
Section 168 is required to make an award
determining the amount of compensation
which is to be in the real sense "damages"
which in turn appears to it to be "just and
reasonable". It has to be borne in mind that
compensation for loss of limbs or life can
hardly be weighed in golden scales. But at the
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same time it has to be borne in mind that the
compensation is not expected to be a windfall
for the victim. Statutory provisions clearly
indicate that the compensation must be "just"
and it cannot be a bonanza; not a source of
profit; but the same should not be a pittance.
The courts and tribunals have a duty to weigh
the various factors and quantify the amount of
compensation, which should be just. What
would be ’just" compensation is a vexed
question. There can be no golden rule
applicable to all cases for measuring the value
of human life or a limb. Measure of damages
cannot be arrived at by precise mathematical
calculations. It would depend upon the
particular facts and circumstances, and
attending peculiar or special features, if any.
Every method or mode adopted for assessing
compensation has to be considered in the
background of ’just" compensation which is
the pivotal consideration. Though by use of the
expression "which appears to it to be just" a
wide discretion is vested in the Tribunal, the
determination has to be rational, to be done by
a judicious approach and not the outcome of
whims, wild guesses and arbitrariness. The
expression ’just" denotes equitability, fairness
and reasonableness, and non-arbitrary. if it is
not so it cannot be just. (See Helen C. Rebello
v. Maharashtra SRTC (1999(1) SCC 90)
There are some aspects of human life which are capable
of monetary measurement, but the totality of human life is
like the beauty of sunrise or the splendor of the stars, beyond
the reach of monetary tape-measure. The determination of
damages for loss of human life is an extremely difficult task
and it becomes all the more baffling when the deceased is a
child and/or a non-earning person. The future of a child is
uncertain. Where the deceased was a child, he was earning
nothing but had a prospect to earn. The question of
assessment of compensation, therefore, becomes stiffer. The
figure of compensation in such cases involves a good deal of
guesswork. In cases, where parents are claimants, relevant
factor would be age of parents.
In case of the death of an infant, there may have been
no actual pecuniary benefit derived by its parents during the
child’s life-time. But this will not necessarily bar the parent’s
claim and prospective loss will find a valid claim provided
that the parents establish that they had a reasonable
expectation of pecuniary benefit if the child had lived. This
principle was laid down by the House of Lords in the famous
case of Taff Vale Rly. V. Jenkins (1913) AC 1, and Lord
Atkinson said thus:
".....all that is necessary is that a
reasonable expectation of pecuniary benefit
should be entertained by the person who sues.
It is quite true that the existence of this
expectation is an inference of fact - there must
be a basis of fact from which the inference can
reasonably be drawn; but I wish to express my
emphatic dissent from the proposition that it is
necessary that two of the facts without which
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the inference cannot be drawn are, first that
the deceased earned money in the past, and,
second, that he or she contributed to the
support of the plaintiff. These are, no doubt,
pregnant pieces of evidence, but they are only
pieces of evidence; and the necessary inference
can I think, be drawn from circumstances
other than and different from them." (See Lata
Wadhwa and Ors. v. State of Bihar and Ors.
(2001 (8) SCC 197)
This Court in Lata Wadhwa’s case (supra) while
computing compensation made distinction between deceased
children falling within the age group of 5 to 10 years and age
group of 10 to 15 years.
In cases of young children of tender age, in view of
uncertainties abound, neither their income at the time of
death nor the prospects of the future increase in their income
nor chances of advancement of their career are capable of
proper determination on estimated basis. The reason is that
at such an early age, the uncertainties in regard to their
academic pursuits, achievements in career and thereafter
advancement in life are so many that nothing can be assumed
with reasonable certainty. Therefore, neither the income of the
deceased child is capable of assessment on estimated basis
nor the financial loss suffered by the parents is capable of
mathematical computation.
These aspects were highlighted in New India Assurance
Co. Ltd. v. Satender and Ors. (AIR 2007 SC 324).
Applying the principles indicated in last named case
(supra) to the facts of the present case, and the fact that the
husband of the appellant has already died, we find no scope
for interference with the quantum awarded.
The appeal deserves dismissal which we direct.