Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAJANNA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA
DATE OF JUDGMENT19/04/1995
BENCH:
VERMA, JAGDISH SARAN (J)
BENCH:
VERMA, JAGDISH SARAN (J)
MANOHAR SUJATA V. (J)
CITATION:
1995 AIR 1966 1995 SCC Supl. (2) 601
JT 1995 (3) 632 1995 SCALE (2)852
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J.S. VERMA, J.:
1. Leave granted.
2. The only question for decision is: Whether the
appellant is entitled to the ex-gratia payment of Rs.
50,000/- in accordance with the circular dated 13.6.1986 of
the Cabinet Secretariat of the Central Government providing
for grant of exgratia payment to the Special Protection
Group (SPG) Personnel? The claim is on account of the
permanent partial disablement suffered by the appellant as a
result of certain injuries sustained by him in a motor
accident on 20.6.1986 while travelling in a SPG vehicle.
The material part of the circular providing for ex-gratia
payment to be made to the SPG personnel who suffer permanent
partial disablement as a result of injuries received while
per-
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forming actual VIP security duty is as under:
"(iii) Rs. 50,000/- (Rupees Fifty thousand
only) to the SPG personnel who suffer
permanent partial disablement as a result of
injuries received While performing actual VIP
security duty."
3. The relevant facts are admitted. The appellant was a
security assistant in the Special Protection Group
attached to the Cabinet Secretariat from 17.9.1985 and
was amongst the security personnel attached to the Prime
Minister’s Office. On 20.6.1986 the appellant was required
to be on such duty at the South Block, New Delhi from 9.00
a.m. to 5.30 p.m. According to the official arrangement some
members of the SPG personnel including the appellant were
picked up by an official SPG vehicle from the staff quarters
and the vehicle was going to the South Block when it was
involved in a road accident at about 8.20 a.m. in which the
appellant sustained certain injuries resulting in his
permanent partial disablement on account of shortening of
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one leg. As a result of this disability the appellant be-
came unsuitable for performance of the security duty of
VVIPs and was shifted to a less important posting which also
reduced his special allowance from 50% to 25%.
4. The appellant claimed the ex-gratia payment of
Rs.50,000/- in accordance with the above circular dated
13.6.1986 on the ground that his permanent partial disable,-
ment was the result of injuries sustained by him while on
duty. The appellant’s claim was rejected by letter dated
23.7.1992 which reads as under: -
"No.8/SPG-PF/85(136)
Special Protection Group
(Cabinet Secretariat)
New Delhi
No. 1, Safdurjung Lane,
New Delhi 110001.
Dated 23 July 92.
M E M O R A N D U M
With reference to his representation for grant
of ex-gratia payment, Shri Rajanna, SA is
hereby informed that his case was considered
by the Government carefully but could not be
acceded to as the same was not covered for the
grant of ex-gratia payment under the rules and
has since been dropped.
Sd/-
Assistant Director (Admn.)
TO
Shri Rajanna, SA through AD (Tech), SPG"
5. The appellant then filed O.A. No.2284 of 1992 before
the Central Administrative Tribunal, Principal Bench, New
Delhi for recovery of his claim of exgratia payment of
Rs.50,000/-. The claim was contested on the ground that the
injuries resulting in the permanent partial disablement of
the appellant were not sustained by him while performing
"actual VIP security duty" as required by the circular but
in the motor accident which occurred before the appellant
had joined actual duty at 9.00 a.m. The Tribunal has
rejected the appellant’s claim accepting the defence.
Hence, this appeal by special leave.
636
6. The real question for decision is the meaning of the
expression "actual VIP security duty" in the above circular
in the context of the provision for "grant of exgratia
payment to SPG personnel". The reasoning of the tribunal
which is supported by the learned Additional Solicitor
General on behalf of the respondent is that " actual VIP
security duty" means the actual period when the person is
providing security to the VIP on commencement of the duty
hours and it does not include the journey to and from the
duty post. Is this the correct meaning of the expression
in the present context?
7. It is well known that the Special Protection Group is
the elite security force formed initially in 1985 of
specially trained personnel to provide security cover to the
Prime Minister of India; and sometime back the statute under
which it was constituted has been amended to extend the
provision of such security cover also to the former Prime
Ministers. In view of the high quality of personnel needed
to constitute the SPG, some extra benefits are given to them
for the much greater risk they take and the greater danger
to which they are exposed. The above circular providing for
grant of ex-gratia payment to the SPG personnel in the event
of sustaining injuries has the same object.
8. The circular Annex. ’N’ dated 24.1.1990 modifies the
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earlier circular dated 13.6.1986 and enhances the rates and
enlarges the extent of application thereof to the SPG
personnel. It shows that provision is made for payment for
in juries sustained not only while perform in " actual VIP
security duty" but also while performing duty "other than
actual security duty". Thus ex-gratia payment according to
the scheme is made even to those SPG personnel who sustain
injuries while performing duty "other than actual VIP
security duty". This is the concept of ex-gratia payment to
SPG personnel under the circular. An explanatory note in
that circular is as under: -
"For the purpose of ex-gratia payment, the
duty other them actual VIP duty would include
training also."
This note indicates that even when a person belonging to the
SPG is on training, he would be treated to be on duty "other
than actual VIP security duty", and for injuries sustained
by him during that period he would be covered by the
circular and entitled to payment thereunder, though at a
lesser rate. If this be the concept of the ex-gratia
payment under the circular, it is difficult to appreciate
how a person posted for actual VIP security duty and on his
way for that purpose in an official SPG vehicle along with
other SPG personnel can be denied the benefit of that
circular. The intrinsic evidence in the circular is that it
has to be construed liberally in favour of the SPG personnel
to promote the object of the scheme for grant of exgratia
payment to SPG personnel. Acceptance of the defence taken
would frustrate the very object of the scheme in the circu-
lar.
9. The admitted facts clearly show the appellant sustained
injuries resulting in his permanent partial disablement in a
motor accident when he was travelling from the staff
quarters to the South Block for duty in the official SPG
vehicle provided for that purpose. This road journey was
not in his private vehicle or a public transport in which
any member of the public could travel but in an official SPG
vehicle meant for carrying the SPG person-
637
nel on duty. On these facts, it cannot be doubted that
there would be notional extension of the actual duty to
include the journey of this kind in the official SPG vehicle
between the staff quarters and South Block. The principle
under the Workmen’s Compensation Act for determining whether
an accident arose out of and in the course of the employment
of the workman should be equally applicable to the circular
since both have the same object. It is, therefore, useful
to refer to some decisions of this Court on the point under
the Workmen’s Compensation Act.
10. In Saurashtra Salt Manufacturing Co. v. Bai Valu Raja &
Ors., AIR 1958 C 881, the general rule was indicated thus :-
" As a rule, the employment of a workman does not commence
until he has reached the place of employment
and does not continue when he has left the
place of employment, the journey to and from
the place of employment being excluded. It is
now well-settled, however, that this is
subject to the theory of notional extension of
the employer’s premises so as to include an
area which the workman passes and repasses in
going to and in leaving the actual place of
work. ’Mere may be some reasonable extension
in both time and place and a workman may be
regarded as in the course of his employment
even though he had not reached or had left his
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employer’s premises. The facts and
circumstances of each case will have to be
examined very carefully in order to determine
whether the accident arose out of and in the
course of the employment of a workman, keeping
in view at all times this theory of notional
extension."
".....It is well settled that when a workman
is on is on a public road or a public place
or on a public transport he is there as
anyother member of the public and is not there
in the course of ins employment unless the
very nature of his employment makes it
necessary for him to be there. A workman is
not in the course of his employment from the
moment he leaves his home and is on his way to
his work. He certainly is in the course of
his employment if he reaches the place of work
or a point or an area which comes within the
theory of national extension, outside of which
the employer is not liable to pay compensation
for any accident happening to him............"
(Para 8)
(emphasis supplied)
In the facts of that case the employer was held not liable
only because the accident occurred when the workman was
travelling in a boat not provided by the employer but a
public transport in which any other member of the public
could travel and it was not incumbent on the workman to
adopt that mode of travel. Applying the test in the present
case, it is clear that since the appellant was travelling in
the official SPG vehicle in which he was required to travel
from the staff quarters to the South Block, that vehicle not
being available to anyone other than the SPG personnel, the
appellant was at a place or a point or an area which came
within the theory of notional extension of the official
premises for performance of "actual VIP security duty". In
other words, that official SPG vehicle was a notional
extension of the official premises and, therefore, the
appellant was deemed to be on actual VIP security duty,
while travelling in it from the staff quarters to the South
Block in these circumstances.
638
11. In Mackinnon Mackenzie & Co. Pvt. Ltd. v. Ibrahim
Mahommed Issak, 1970 (1) SCR 869, the test for this pur-
pose was indicated as under :-
"To come within the Act the injury by accident
must arise both out of and in the course of
employment. The words "in the course of the
employment" mean "in the course of the work
which the workman is employed to do and which
is incidental to it." The words "arising out
of employment" are understood to mean that
"during the, course of the employment, injury
has resulted from some risk incidental to the
duties of the service, which unless engaged in
die duty owing to the master, it is reasonable
to believe the workman would not otherwise
have suffered." In other words there must be
a causal relationship between the accident and
the employment. The expression "arising out
of employment" is again not confined to the
more nature of the employment. The expression
applies to employment as such to its nature,
its conditions, its obligations and its
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incidents. If by reason of any of these
factors the workman is brought within the
scene of special danger the injury would be
one which arises out of employment". To put
it differently if the accident had occurred on
account of a risk which is an incident of the
employment, the claim for compensation must
succeed. unless of course the workman has
exposed himself to an added peril by his own
imprudent act............".
(Pages 872-873)
(emphasis supplied)
This indicates that there must be a causal relationship
between the accident and the employment- or the accident
must be related to a risk which is an incident to the
employment. The House of Lords in Lancashire and Yorkshire
Railway Co. v. Highley, [1917] A.C. 352, relied on in the
above decision, indicated the test as under:
"’There is, however, in my opinion, one test
which is always at any rate applicable,
because it arises upon the very words of the
statute, and it is generally of some real
assistance. It is this : Was it part of the
injured person’s employment to hazard, to
suffer, or to do that which caused his injury?
If )*a, the accident arose out of his
employment.............."
(emphasis supplied)
12. In Halsbury’s Laws of England, Volume 33, Fourth
Edition, the summary is stated thus:
"490. ACCIDENT TRAVELLING TO AND FROM WORK.
The course of employment normally begins when
the employee reaches his place of work. To
extend it to the journey to and from work it
must be shown that, in travelling by the
particular method and route and at the
particular time, the employee was fulfilling
an express or implied term of his contract of
service. One way of doing this is to
establish that the home is the employee’s base
from which it is his duty to work and that he
was travelling by direct route from his home
to a place where he was required to work, but
that is only one way of showing this; the real
question at issue is whether on the particular
journey he was travelling in the performance
of a duty, or whether the journey was
incidental to the performance of that duty and
not merely preparatory to the performance of
it. If the place where the accident occurs is
a private road or on the employer’s property,
the accident is in the course of the em-
ployment because he is then at the scene
639
of the accident by reason only of his em-
ployment and he has reached the sphere of his
employment. The test is whether the employee
was exposed to the particular risk by reason
of his employment or whether he took the same
risks as those incurred by any member of the
public using the highway."
(Pages 369-370)
"496. ACCIDENTS TRAVELLING T0 OR FROM WORK IN
EMPLOYER’ S TRANSPORT.
An accident happening while an employed earner
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is, with the express or implied permission of
his employer, travelling as a passenger to or
from his place of work In any vehicle which is
being operated by or on behalf of his
employer, or which is provided by some other
person in pursuance of arrangements made with
his employer, must be deemed to arise out of
and in the course of his employment, even
though the employed earner is not obliged to
travel by that vehicle, if it would have been
deemed so to have arisen if he had been under
an obligation to travel by it provided that
the vehicle is not operated in the ordinary
course of a public transport service."
(Page 374)
(emphasis supplied)
13.There can be no doubt that there was a causal
relationship between the accident in which the appellant
sustained the injuries and his employment in the SPG for
actual VEP security duty; and it was an incident of his
employment to travel from the staff quarters to the South
Block in the SPG vehicle according to the official ar-
rangement. In our opinion, the meaning of the expression
"actual VIP security duty" in the above circular must be the
same as that of the words "in the course of the employment"
in the Workmen’s Compensation Act; and, therefore, the test
for determining the liability for payment under the circular
should also be the same. In our view, the tribunal was in
error in making an unduly strict and narrow construction of
the expression used in the circular.
14.We are constrained to observe that the concerned
authorities must adopt a humane approach and construe the
circular liberally to advance its object instead of taking
such a rigid and pedantic stand. Unless properly
implemented, the scheme in the circular would be frustrated
resulting in failure to achieve the avowed purpose.
15.Consequently, the appeal is allowed with Rs. 10,000/- as
costs.
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