Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE MUNICIPAL CORPORATION OF DELHI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SMT. SUSHILA DEVI & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/05/1999
BENCH:
A.P.Misra, R.C.Lahoti
JUDGMENT:
R.C. LAHOTI,J.
On 18th August, 1964, in the evening, late Suresh
Chander and his brother Ramesh Chander were going on a
scooter from their office to their residence. The deceased
was driving the scooter and his brother was riding his
pillion. When they were passing against Sant Permanand
Blind Relief Mission Building situated at 20, Alipur Road, a
branch of the neem tree standing there suddenly broke down
and fell on the head of the deceased. His head was crushed.
He was rushed to Irvin Hospital where in spite of medical
care and attendance, he died the next day at about 10 a.m.
A piece of wood was found embedded into his brain for which
a surgery had also to be performed on the deceased.
The deceased was survived by a widow, three minor sons
and a minor daughter and his mother. All the six brought a
suit for damages claiming Rs.3 lacs. A learned Single Judge
sitting on the Original side of the High Court held the
Municipal Corporation of Delhi liable for damages in torts
and granted a decree of Rs.90,000/- by way of compensation
payable to the widow and the children of the deceased. Two
Letters Patent Appeals were preferred. The Municipal
Corporation sought for the suit being dismissed while the
claimants sought for enhancement in the amount of
compensation. The Division Bench dismissed the appeal filed
by the Corporation but at the same time partly allowed the
appeal preferred by the claimants enhancing the amount of
compensation to Rs.1,44,000/- payable with interest
calculated at the rate of 6 per cent per annum from the date
of suit, i.e., 5.8.1966 till 17.9.1970 when the amount was
deposited by the Corporation in the Court for payment to the
successful claimants. The Division Bench also allowed
interest at the rate of 3 per cent per annum on Rs.90,000/-
from the date of deposit in the Court till the date of
actual withdrawal of the amount by the claimants and
interest at the rate of 6 per cent per annum on Rs.54,000/-
from 17.9.1970 till payment. The reasons for the award of
additional interest calculated at the rate of 3 per cent per
annum on Rs.90,000/- and the legality thereof we shall deal
with separately.
Both the parties have preferred further appeals to
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this Court. However, after hearing the learned counsel for
the parties, we have found only three contentions worth
being dealt with and the same are noted and disposed of
hereinafter. The incident took place on 18.8.1964 in
consequence whereof late Suresh Chander died on 19.8.1964.
Suit for compensation was filed on 5.8.1966 after issuing a
legal notice in April, 1966. The learned counsel for the
Municipal Corporation has submitted that Municipal
Corporation is an authority governed by the Delhi Municipal
Corporation Act, 1957 (hereinafter the Act, for short) and
inasmuch as it was sought to be held liable for failure to
perform its duty to take care resulting into an accident, it
was necessary for the claimants to have served a legal
notice of two months’ duration under sub-section (1) of
Section 478 of the Act and the suit should have been
instituted within a period of six months from the date of
accrual of cause of action which having not been done, the
suit was barred by time.
Section 478 reads as under :-
"478. Notice to be given of suit - (1) No suit shall
be instituted against the Corporation or against any
municipal authority or against any municipal officer or
other municipal employee or against any person acting under
the order or direction of any municipal authority or any
municipal officer or other municipal employee, in respect of
any act done, or purporting to have been done, in pursuance
of this Act or any rule, regulation or bye-law made
thereunder until the expiration of two months after notice
in writing has been left at the municipal officer and in the
case of such officer employee or person, unless notice in
writing has also been delivered to him or left at his office
or place of residence, and unless such notice states
explicitly the cause of action, the nature of the relief
sought, the amount of compensation claimed and the name and
places of residence of the intending plaintiff, and unless
the plain contains a statement that such notice has been so
left or delivered.
(2) No suit, such as is described in sub-section (1)
shall unless it is a suit for the recovery of immovable
property or for a declaration of title thereto, be
instituted after the expiry of six months from the date on
which the cause of action arises.
(3) Nothing in sub-section (1) shall be deemed to
apply to a suit in which the only relief claimed is an
injunction of which the object would be defeated by the
giving of the notice or the postponement of the institution
of the suit."
A bare reading of Section 478 (1) shows that its
applicability is attracted to a suit filed ‘in respect of
any act done or purporting to have been done’ in pursuance
of the Act or Rules, Regulations or Bye-laws made
thereunder. The learned counsel for the Corporation
submitted that an act includes an omission as well. The
Court has found an omission on the part of the Municipal
Corporation in discharging its duty to take care and
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therefore under sub-Section (2) the limitation for filing
the suit was six months from the date of accrual of cause of
action, i.e., 18th and 19th August, 1964.
The contention has to be rejected forthwith. The
bundle of facts constituting the cause of action which has
accrued to the claimants are -the ownership and possession
of the tree vesting in the Corporation, its maintenance by
the Corporation, fall of the branch of the tree over the
deceased and the death consequent to the injury sustained.
The causa proxima, i.e., the immediate cause of action is
the fall of the branch of the tree over the head of the
deceased. The fall of the branch of the tree cannot be
attributed to any act done or purporting to have been done
in pursuance of the Act etc. by the Municipal Corporation
or any officer or employee thereof. The liability has
arisen and has been sought to be enforced by the claimants
under the law of torts. The finding recorded in the suit
and in the Letters Patent Appeal is one of negligence on the
part of the Municipal Corporation. To such an action
Section 478 does not apply at all. The suit filed within a
period of two years from the date of accrual of cause of
action was governed by Article 82 of the Limitation Act,
1963 and was well within limitation. The plaintiffs’ action
was founded in tort. The plaintiffs have not rested their
case on any statutory duty on the part of the Corporation
and failure or negligence in performing such duty.
One of the findings recorded in the suit and upheld in
the Letters Patent Appeal by the Division Bench is that the
tree in question was a dead tree. It had no bark, foliage
or buts. On behalf of the plaintiffs, a Botany Professor
was examined as an expert witness who testified that a tree
which had no bark was dried up and dying. From the
testimony of the Garden Superintendent examined on behalf of
the Corporation also it was found that the tree was dead,
dried and dangerous. The Deputy Commissioner, Horticulture
examined on behalf of the Corporation admitted that the tree
looked like a partly worn out tree. The Division Bench has
upheld the finding recorded by the learned Trial Judge that
the Horticulture Department of the Corporation should have
carried out periodical inspections of the trees and should
have taken safety precaution to see that the road was safe
for its users and such adjoining trees as were dried and
dead and/or had projecting branches which could prove to be
dangerous to the passers-by were removed. This having not
been done, the Municipal Corporation has been negligent in
discharging such duty as is owed to the road users by the
adjoining property owners, especially the Municipal
Corporation. The finding has been arrived at on
appreciation of evidence by the learned Trial Judge as also
by the Division Bench and we find ourselves in entire
agreement with the said finding.
The law is stated in Winfield and Jolowicz on Tort
(13th, 1989 ed., p.415) in these words :
"If damage is done owing to the collapse of the
projection on the highway or by some other mischief
traceable to it, the occupier of the premises on which it
stood is liable if he knew of the defect or ought, on
investigation, to have known of it. At any rate this is the
rule with respect to a thing that is naturally on the
premises e.g. a tree."
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In Clerk and Lindsell on Torts (16th, 1989 ed., at
pages 546-547 para 10.122) the law on trees is summarised as
follows :
"The fall of trees, branches and other forms of
natural growth is governed by the rules of negligence. When
trees on land adjoining a public highway fall upon it, the
owner is liable if he knew or ought to have known that the
falling tree was dangerous. He is not bound to call in an
expert to examine the trees, but he is bound to keep a look
out and to take notice of such signs as would indicate to a
prudent landowner that there was a danger of a tree
falling..........the land-owner was held liable when the
tree which fell had been dying for some years before and had
become a danger which should have been apparent to an
ordinary landowner."
In Charlesworth & Percy on Negligence (8th, 1990 ed.,
at page 668) the law is stated in these terms : .lm20
"........when a tree, which had been dying for some
years and should have been known to be dangerous by an
ordinary landowner, fell and caused damage, the owner was
held liable. (Brown V. Harrison (1947) W.N.191).
In Hale vs. Hants 1947 (2) All England Reports 628,
which is a case of branches of a tree having struck the
windows of an omnibus and a piece of glass having struck the
plaintiff in the eye, it was held that in the absence of any
reason to suspect danger from an overhanging tree or some
similar obstruction a driver who is driving close to the
kerb when his vehicle is struck by the branch of the tree is
not making an unreasonable use of the highway. It was
further held that the county council should have known that
trees grow and throw out their branches and therefore it was
their obligation to see that the tree in its natural growth
was curbed in such a way as not to hinder the reasonable use
of the highway .
By a catena of decisions, the law is well settled that
if there is a tree standing on the defendant’s land which is
dried or dead and for that reason may fall and the defect is
one which is either known or should have been known to the
defendant, then the defendant is liable for any injury
caused by the fall of the tree (see Brown Vs. Harrison
(1947) 63 Law Times Reports 484; Quinn Vs. Scott (1965) 1
W.L.R. 1004, Mackie Vs. Dumbartonshire County Council,
(1927) W.N. 247. The duty of the owner/occupier of the
premises by the side of the road whereon persons lawfully
pass by, extends to guarding against what may happen just by
the side of the premises on account of anything dangerous on
the premises. The premises must be maintained in a safe
state of repair. The owner/occupier cannot escape the
liability for injury caused by any dangerous thing existing
on the premises by pleading that he had employed a competent
person to keep the premises in safe repairs. In Municipal
Corporation of Delhi Vs. Subhagwanti and Ors. AIR 1966 SC
1750 a clock tower which was 80 years old collapsed in
Chandni Chowk Delhi causing the death of a number of
persons. Their Lordships held that the owner could not be
permitted to take a defence that he neither knew nor ought
to have known the danger. "The owner is legally responsible
irrespective of whether the damage is caused by a patent or
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a latent defect," - said their Lordships. In our opinion
the same principle is applicable to the owner of a tree
standing by the side of a road. If the tree is dangerous in
the sense that on account of any disease or being dead the
tree or its branch is likely to fall and thereby injure any
passer-by then such tree or branch must be removed so as to
avert the danger to life. It is pertinent to note that it
is not the defence of the Municipal Corporation that vis
major or an act of God such as storm, tempest, lightning or
extraordinary heavy rain had occurred causing the fall of
the branch of the tree and hence the Corporation was not
liable.
In our opinion the High Court was right in holding the
Municipal Corporation negligent in performing its duty under
the common law and therefore liable in damages to the
plaintiffs for the injury caused to the deceased by fall of
the branch of the tree and the consequences flowing
therefrom.
The deceased was aged 30. He was employed in a family
business wherefrom he was drawing a salary of Rs.650 per
month. The learned Trial Judge deducted an amount of Rs.150
per month for expenses incurred on the self and assessed the
dependency at Rs.500 per month. The Division Bench found
that apart from salary the deceased was also getting
commission on sales. The net income of the deceased was
arrived at Rs.1,000/- per month wherefrom Rs.200 were
deducted as expenses on the self. The dependency was
assessed at Rs.800 per month. The learned Trial Judge as
well as the Division Bench have adopted a multiplier of 15.
Thus, the Division Bench has assessed the quantum of
compensation at Rs.1,44,000/- in supersession of Rs.90,000/-
assessed by the learned Trial Judge. Though, the learned
counsel for the Municipal Corporation has assailed the
assessment to be on higher side and the learned counsel for
the claimants has submitted that keeping in view the better
future prospects of the deceased in the family business,
coupled with the youth of the deceased, the monthly income
should have been taken at Rs.1826/- but we are of the
opinion that the figure of compensation arrived at by the
Division Bench is a very reasonable figure and calls for no
interference. The multiplier has also been correctly
adopted. In the leading case of Susamma Thomas (1994) 2 SCC
176 this Court adopted a multiplier of 12 when the deceased
was aged 39. We do not find any fault with the figure of
compensation having been arrived at Rs.1,44,000/-. The same
is upheld.
The last point of controversy centres around the award
of interest. The suit having been decreed by the learned
Trial Judge, the Division Bench directed the decretal amount
to be deposited by the Municipal Corporation in the Court
which was done on 17.9.1970. The amount so deposited was
available to be withdrawn by the claimants subject to
furnishing security to the satisfaction of the executing
court. The claimants could not furnish the security and
hence could not withdraw the amount. The Division Bench in
the backdrop of such facts directed the amount to be
deposited in fixed deposit so as to earn interest. However,
the Registry omitted to comply with the order and therefore
the amount continued to remain in deposit with the Court.
The Division Bench observed that liability for default on
the part of the Registry in carrying out the order of the
Court could not be fastened on the judgment-debtor Municipal
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Corporation. Still the Division Bench has directed 3 per
cent per annum additional interest to be paid by the
Municipal Corporation to the claimants and thereby made an
effort at adjusting the equities. It cannot be lost sight
of that partly the delay in release of the amount to the
claimants is attributable to their failure to furnish the
security as directed by the Division Bench. The claimants
have been allowed interest on the decretal amount from the
date of the decree though the amount of compensation was
quantified only from the date of the passing of the decree.
In such circumstances, the direction of the Division Bench
in the matter of award of interest is also not liable to be
interfered with on consideration of totality of the
circumstances.
For the foregoing reasons both the appeals are held
liable to be dismissed. Civil Appeal No.687/86 filed by the
Municipal Corporation of Delhi is dismissed
with costs payable by the appellant-Municipal
Corporation to the respondent-claimants. Civil Appeal
No.4242/86 filed by the claimants is dismissed without any
order as to costs.