Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Special Leave Petition (civil) 9027 of 2003
PETITIONER:
National Insurance Co. Ltd.
RESPONDENT:
Swaran Singh & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/01/2004
BENCH:
CJI., V.N. Khare, D.M. Dharmadhikari & S.B. Sinha.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
W I T H
SLP (C) 10017/03, 10042, 10055, 10510, 10787,
10829-10831, 11129/2003, SLP(C) 153/04 CC No.
4917/2003, SLP(C) 154/04 CC No. 4997/2003,
SLP(C) 156/04 CC No. 5137/2003, SLP(C) 155/04
CC No.5196/2003, SLP(C) 157/04 CC
No.5360/2003, SLP(C) 159/04 CC No. 5564/2003,
SLP(C) 356/04 CC No. 5877/2003, SLP (C) No.
9335, 9356, 9554, 9560, 9811, 9812, 9815, 9867,
9900 of 2003, 9947/2003, SLP(C) 321/04 CC No.
4686/2003, SLP(C) 160/04 CC No. 4739/2003,
SLP(C) 357/04 CC No. 4747/2003, SLP (C) No.
15528/2002 & SLP (C) No. 15772/2002
By V.N.Khare, CJI & D.M.Dharmadhikari, S.B. Sinha, JJ.
Interpretation of Section 149(2)(a)(ii) vis-‘-vis the proviso appended
to sub-sections (4) and (5) of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 is involved in
this batch of special leave petitions filed by the National Insurance Company
Limited (hereinafter referred to as Insurer) assailing various awards of the
Motor Vehicle Claims Tribunal and judgments of the High Courts.
In view of the fact that these petitions involve pure questions of law, it
is not necessary to advert to the individual fact pertaining to each matter.
Suffice, however, is to point out that the vehicles insured with the
petitioners were involved in accidents resulting in filing of claim
applications by the respective legal representatives of the deceased(s) or the
injured person(s), as the case may be.
Defences raised by the Petitioner company in the claim petitions
purported to be in terms of Section 149(2)(a)(ii) of the Motor Vehicles Act,
1988 (hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’) were : (a) driving licence
produced by the driver or owner of the vehicle was a fake one; (b) driver
did not have any licence whatsoever; (c) licence, although was granted to
the concerned driver but on expiry thereof, the same had not been renewed;
(d) licence granted to the drivers being for one class or description of vehicle
but the vehicle involved in the accident was of different class or description;
and (e) the vehicle in question was driven by a person having a learner’s
licence.
Before we proceed further in the matter it is relevant to notice certain
relevant statutory provisions which are :
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"2(10) "driving licence" means the licence issued by a
competent authority under Chapter II authorising the
person specified therein to drive, otherwise than as a
learner, a motor vehicle or a motor vehicle of any
specified class or description;
3. Necessity for driving licence. -(1) No person shall
drive a motor vehicle in any public place unless he holds
an effective driving licence issued to him authorising him
to drive the vehicle; and no person shall so drive a
transport vehicle other than [a motor cab or motor cycle
hired for his own use or rented under any scheme made
under subsection (2) of section 75 unless his driving
licence specifically entitles him so to do.
(2) The conditions subject to which sub-section (1) shall
not apply to a person receiving instructions in driving a
motor vehicle shall be such as may be prescribed by the
Central Government.
4. Age limit in connection with driving of motor
vehicles. -(1) No person under the age of eighteen years
shall drive a motor vehicle in any public place:
Provided that a motor cycle with engine capacity not
exceeding 50cc may be driven in a public place by a
person after attaining the age of sixteen years.
(2) Subject to the provisions of section 18, no
person under the age of twenty years shall drive a
transport vehicle in any public place.
(3) No learner’s licence or driving licence shall be
issued to any person to drive a vehicle of the class to
which he has made an application unless he is eligible to
drive that class of vehicle under this section.
5. Responsibility of owners of motor vehicles for
contravention of sections 3 and 4. -No owner or
person in charge of a motor vehicle shall cause or permit
any person who does not satisfy the provisions of section
3 or section 4 to drive the vehicle.
6. Restrictions on the holding of driving licences. -
(1) No person shall, while he holds any driving licence
for the time being in force, hold any other driving licence
except a learner’s licence or a driving licence issued in
accordance with the provisions of section 18 or a
document authorising, in accordance with the rules made
under section 139, the person specified therein to drive a
motor vehicle.
(2) No holder of a driving licence or a learner’s
licence shall permit it to be used by any other person.
(3) Nothing in this section shall prevent a licensing
authority having the jurisdiction referred to in sub-section
(1) of section 9 from adding to the classes of vehicles
which the driving licence authorises the holder to drive.
7. Restrictions on the granting of learner’s licences
for certain vehicles. (1) No person shall be granted a
learner’s licence to drive a transport vehicle unless he has
held a driving licence to drive a light motor vehicle for at
least one year.
(2) No person under the age of eighteen years shall
be granted a learner’s licence to drive a motor cycle
without gear except with the consent in writing of the
person having the care of the person desiring the learner’s
licence."
Section 9 provides for grant of driving licence.
"9. Grant of driving licence. -(1) Any person who is
not for the time being disqualified for holding or
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obtaining a driving licence may apply to the licensing
authority having jurisdiction in the area -
(i) in which he ordinarily resides or carries on
business, or
(ii) in which the school or establishment
referred to in section 12 from where he is
receiving or has received instruction in
driving a motor vehicle is situated.
for the issue to him of a driving licence.
xxx xxx xxx xxx
(7) When any application has been duly made to the
appropriate licensing authority and the applicant has
satisfied such authority of his competence to drive, the
licensing authority shall issue the applicant a driving
licence unless the applicant is for the time being
disqualified for holding or obtaining a driving licence:
Provided that a licensing authority may issue a driving
licence to drive a motor cycle or a light motor vehicle
notwithstanding that it is not the appropriate licensing
authority, if the licensing authority is satisfied that there
is good and sufficient reason for the applicant’s inability
to apply to the appropriate licensing authority:
Provided further that the licensing authority shall not
issue a new driving licence to the applicant, if he had
previously held a driving licence, unless it is satisfied
that there is good and sufficient reason for his inability to
obtain a duplicate copy of his former licence.
(8) If the licensing authority is satisfied, after
giving the applicant an opportunity of being heard, that
he-
(a) is a habitual criminal or a habitual drunkard; or
(b) is a habitual addict to any narcotic drug or
psychotropic substance within the meaning of the
Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985
(61 of 1985); or
(c) is a person whose licence to drive any motor
vehicle has, at any time earlier, been revoked,
it may, for reasons to be recorded in writing, make an
order refusing to issue a driving licence to such person
and any person aggrieved by an order made by a
licensing authority under this sub-section may, within
thirty days of the receipt of the order, appeal to the
prescribed authority.
(9) Any driving licence for driving a motor cycle in
force immediately before the commencement of this Act
shall, after such commencement, be deemed to be
effective for driving a motor cycle with or without gear.
10. Form and contents of licences to drive. - (1) Every
learner’s licence and driving licence, except a driving
licence issued under section 18, shall be in such form and
shall contain such information as may be prescribed by
the Central Government.
(2) A learner’s licence or, as the case may be,
driving licence shall also be expressed as entitling the
holder to drive a motor vehicle of one or more of the
following classes, namely: -
(a) motor cycle without gear;
(b) motor cycle with gear;
(c) invalid carriage;
(d) light motor vehicle;
(e) transport vehicle;
(i) road-roller;
(j)motor vehicle of a specified description.
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14. Currency of licences to drive motor vehicles. - (1)
A learner’s licence issued under this Act shall, subject to
the other provisions of this Act, be effective for a period
of six months from the date of issue of the licence.
(2) A driving licence issued or renewed under this
Act shall. -
(a) in the case of a licence to drive a transport
vehicle, be effective for a period of three years:
Provided that in the case of licence to drive a transport
vehicle carrying goods of dangerous or hazardous nature
he effective for a period of one year and renewal thereof
shall be subject to the condition that the driver undergoes
one day refresher course of the prescribed syllabus; and
(b) in the case of any other licence,-
(i) if the person obtaining the licence, either originally or
on renewal thereof, has not attained the age of fifty years
on the date of issue or, as the case may he, renewal
thereof,-
(A) be effective for a period of twenty years from the date
of such issue or renewal; or
(B) until the date on which such person attains the age of
fifty years, whichever is earlier;
(ii) if the person referred to in sub-clause (i), has attained
the age of fifty years on the date of issue or as the case
may be, renewal thereof, be effective, on payment of
such fee as may be prescribed, for a period of five years
from the date of such issue or renewal:
Provided that every driving licence shall,
notwithstanding its expiry under this subsection continue
to be effective for a period of thirty days from such
expiry,
15. Renewal of driving licences. - (1) Any licensing
authority may, on application made to it, renew a driving
licence issued under the provisions of this Act with effect
from the date of its expiry:
Provided that in any case where the application for the
renewal of a licence is made more than thirty days after
the date of its expiry, the driving licence shall be renewed
with effect from the date of its renewal:
Provided further that where the application is for the
renewal of a licence to drive a transport vehicle or where
in any other case the applicant has attained the age of
forty years, the same shall be accompanied by a medical
certificate in the same form and in the same manner as is
referred to in sub-section (3) of section 8, and the
provisions of sub-section (4) of section 8 shall, so far as
may be, apply in relation to every such case as they apply
in relation to a learner’s licence.
(2) An application for the renewal of a driving
licence shall be made in such form and accompanied by
such documents as may be prescribed by the Central
Government.
(3) Where an application for the renewal of a
driving licence is made previous to, or not more than
thirty days after the date of its expiry, the fee payable for
such renewal shall be such as may be prescribed by the
Central Government in this behalf.
(4) Where an application for the renewal of a
driving licence is made more than thirty days after the
date of its expiry the fee payable for such renewal shall
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be such amount as may be prescribed by the Central
Government:
Provided that the fee referred to in sub-section (3) may
be accepted by the licensing authority in respect of an
application for the renewal of a driving licence made
under this sub-section if it is satisfied that the applicant
was prevented by good and sufficient cause from
applying within the time specified in sub-section (3):
Provided further that if the application is made more
than five years after the driving licence has ceased to be
effective the licensing authority may refuse to renew the
driving licence unless the applicant, undergoes and
passes to its satisfaction the test of competence to drive
referred to in sub-section (3) of section 9.
(5) Where the application for renewal has been
rejected, the fee paid shall be refunded to such extent and
in such manner as may be prescribed by the Central
Government.
(6) Where the authority renewing the driving
licence is not the authority which issued the driving
licence it shall intimate the fact of Renewal to the
authority which issued the driving licence.
16. Revocation of driving licence on grounds of
disease or disability. -Notwithstanding anything
contained in the foregoing sections, any licensing
authority may at any time revoke a driving licence or
may require, as a condition of continuing to hold such
driving licence, the holder thereof to produce a medical
certificate in the same form and in the same manner as is
referred to in sub-section (3) of section 8 if the licensing
authority has reasonable grounds to believe that the
holder of the driving licence is, by virtue of any disease
or disability, unfit to drive a motor vehicle and where the
authority revoking a driving licence is not the authority
which issued the same, it shall intimate the fact of
revocation to the authority which issued that licence."
Section 19 provides for power of the licensing authority to disqualify
from holding a driving licence or revoke such licence.
Section 20 empowers the court to disqualify a person in the event a
person is convicted of an offence under the Motor Vehicles Act or of an
offence in the commission of which a motor vehicle was used.
Section 21 provides for suspension of driving licence in certain cases.
Section 23 provides for effect of disqualification order. Section 27 provides
for the power of the Central Government to make rules.
Chapter II of the Act deals with the provisions of licensing of drivers
of motor vehicles.
Section 147 of the Act provides for requirements of policies and limits
of liability. Section 149 provides for the duty of insurers to satisfy
judgments and award against persons insured in respect of third party risks.
Sub-section (1) of Section 149 postulates that in the event of a certificate of
insurance has been issued in terms of Section sub-section (3) of Section 147
a judgment or award in respect of any such liability is obtained by the
insured, the insurer notwithstanding its entitlement to avoid or cancel or may
have avoided or cancelled the policy, the insurer shall, subject to the
provisions of this section, pay to the person entitled to the benefit of the
decree any sum not exceeding the sum assured payable thereunder, as if he
were the judgment debtor, in respect of the liability, together with any
amount payable in respect of costs and any sum payable in respect of interest
on that sum by virtue of any enactment relating to interest on judgments.
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Sub-section (2) of Section 149 of the Act, however, seeks to make an
exception thereto. Sub-sections (4), (5) and (7) of Section 149 read thus :
"(4) Where a certificate of insurance has been issued
under sub-section (3) of section 147 to the person by
whom a policy has been effected, so much of the policy
as purports to restrict the insurance of the persons insured
thereby by reference to any condition other than those in
clause (b) of sub-section (2) shall, as respects such
liabilities as are required to be covered by a policy under
clause (b) of sub-section (1) of section 147, be of no
effect:
Provided that any sum paid by the insurer in or towards
the discharge of any liability of any person which is
covered by the policy by virtue only of this sub-section
shall be recoverable by the insurer from that person.
(5) If the amount which an insurer becomes liable
under this section to pay in respect of a liability incurred
by a person insured by a policy exceeds the amount for
which the insurer would apart from the provisions of this
section be liable under the policy in respect of that
liability, the insurer shall be entitled to recover the excess
from that person.
(7) No insurer to whom the notice referred to in
sub-section (2) or sub-section (3) has been given shall be
entitled to avoid his liability to any person entitled to the
benefit of any such judgment or award as is referred to in
sub-section (1) or in such judgment as is referred to in
sub-section (3) otherwise than in the manner provided for
in subsection (2) or in the corresponding law of the
reciprocating country, as the case may be."
Sections 165 of the Act provides as under :
"165. Claims Tribunals. - (1) A State Government may,
by notification in the Official Gazette, constitute one or
more Motor Accidents Claims Tribunals (hereafter in this
Chapter referred to as Claims Tribunal) for such area as
may be specified in the notification for the purpose of
adjudicating upon claims for compensation in respect of
accidents involving the death of, or bodily injury to,
persons arising out of the use of motor vehicles, or
damages to any property of a third party so arising, or
both.
Explanation.- For the removal of doubts, it is
hereby declared that the expression "claims for
compensation in respect of accidents involving the death
of or bodily injury to persons arising out of the use of
motor vehicles" includes claims for compensation under
section 140 [and section 163A].
(2) A Claims Tribunal shall consist of such number
of members as the State Government may think fit to
appoint and where it consists of two or more members,
one of them shall be appointed as the Chairman thereof.
(3) A person shall not be qualified for appointment
as a member of a Claims Tribunal unless he -
(a) is, or has been, a Judge of a High Court, or
(b) is, or has been a District Judge, or
(c) is qualified for appointment as a High Court
Judge
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[or as a District Judge].
(4) Where two or more Claims Tribunals are
constituted for any area, the State Government, may by
general or special order, regulate the distribution of
business among them."
Section 168 of the Act provides as follows :
"168. Award of the Claims Tribunal.- On receipt of an
application for compensation made under section 166,
the Claims Tribunal shall, after giving notice of the
application to the insurer and after giving the parties
(including the insurer) an opportunity of being heard,
hold an inquiry into the claim or, as the case may be,
each of the claims and, subject to the provisions of
section 162 may make an award determining the amount
of compensation which appears to it to be just and
specifying the person or persons to whom compensation
shall be paid and in making the award the Claims
Tribunal shall specify the amount which shall be paid by
the insurer or owner or driver of the vehicle involved in
the accident or by all or any of them, as the case may be;
Provided that where such application makes a
claim for compensation under section 140 in respect of
the death or permanent disablement of any person, such
claim and any other claim (whether made in such
application or otherwise) for compensation in respect of
such death or permanent disablement shall be disposed of
in accordance with the provisions of Chapter X.
(2) The Claims Tribunal shall arrange to deliver
copies of the award to the parties concerned
expeditiously and in any case within a period of fifteen
days from the date of the award.
(3) When an award is made under this section, the
person who is required to pay any amount in terms of
such award shall, within thirty days of the date of
announcing the award by the Claims Tribunal, deposit
the entire amount awarded in such manner as the Claims
Tribunal may direct."
Mr. Harish Salve and Mr. M.L. Verma, learned senior counsel
appearing on behalf of the insurer made the following submissions in
support of these petitions.
(1) The insurer in terms of sub-section (2) of Section 149 of the
Act has an absolute right to raise a defence specified, inter alia,
in sub-clause (ii) of clause (a) thereof;
(2) Such a right being clear and unequivocal having regard to the
judgment of this Court in National Insurance Company Ltd.,
Chandigarh Vs. Nicolletta Rohtagi and Others [(2002) 7 SCC
456] must be allowed to be invoked by the insurer to its full
effect. In the proceedings before the Tribunal, the insurers,
thus, were entitled to show that the vehicle involved in the
accident at the material point of time was driven by a
person who was not ’duly licensed’ or was ’disqualified to
hold a licence’.
(3) A person cannot be said to be ’duly licensed’ unless he has
been granted a permanent licence for driving a particular
vehicle in terms of the provisions of Chapter II of the Motor
Vehicles Act and, thus, a vehicle cannot be held to be driven by
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a person duly licensed therefor if : (a) he does not hold a
licence; (b) he holds a fake licence; (c) he holds a licence but
the validity thereof has expired; or (d) he does not hold a
licence for the type of vehicle which he was driving in terms of
Chapter II of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988, or (e) he holds
merely a learner’s licence. Reliance in this behalf has been
placed on New India Assurance Co. Ltd. Vs. Mandar Madhav
Tambe and Others [(1996) 2 SCC 328] and United India
Insurance Co. Ltd. vs. Gian Chand and Others [(1997) 7 SCC
558].
(4) Once the defence by the insurer is established in the
proceedings before the Tribunal, it is bound to discharge the
insurer and fix the liability only on the owner and/or the driver
of the vehicle.
(5) Once it is held that the insurer has been able to establish its
defence, the Tribunal or the Court cannot direct the insurance
companies to pay the awarded amount to the claimant and in
turn recover the same from the owner and the driver of the
vehicle.
The decisions of this Court in New India Assurance Co., Shimla vs.
Kamla and Others etc. [(2001) 4 SCC 342] and United India Insurance
Company Ltd. vs. Lehru and Others [(2003) 3 SCC 338] wherein it has been
held that the court is entitled to issue a direction upon the insurer to satisfy
the award and thereafter recover the same from the owner of the vehicle do
not lay down the correct law and should be overruled.
The learned counsel appearing on behalf of the respondents, who are
third party claimants on the other hand, submitted:
(i) that the Parliament deliberately used two different expressions
’effective licence’ in Section 3 and ’duly licensed’ in sub-section
(2) of Section 149 of the Act which are suggestive of the fact
that a driver once licensed, unless he is disqualified, would
continue to be a duly licensed person for the purpose of Chapter
XI of the Act.
(ii) Thus, once a person has been duly licensed but has not renewed
his licence, the same would not come within the purview of
Section 149 and thus would not constitute a statutory defence
available to the insurer in terms thereof. Only in the event of
lapse of five years from the date of expiry of the licence, such
statutory defence may be raised.
(iii) Once a certificate of insurance is issued in terms of the
provisions of the Act, the insurer has a liability to satisfy an
award. It has been pointed that a major departure has been
made in the 1988 Act insofar as in terms of Section 96(2)(b) of
the 1939 Act all the statutory defences were available in terms
of sub-section (3) thereof provided that the policy conditions
other than those prescribed therein had no effect; whereas in the
new Act, Section 149(2)(a) prescribes that the policy is void if
it is obtained by non-disclosure of material fact. Section 149(4)
confines to only clause (b) and states that the conditions of
policy except as mentioned in clause (b) of sub-section (2) are
of no effect and, thus, after the amendment, except in cases
which are covered under clause (b) of Section 149, the
insurance companies are liable to pay to the third parties. In
other words, the right of insurer to avoid the claim of the third
party would arise only when the policy is obtained by
misrepresentation of material fact and fraud and in no other
case.
(iv) Sub-section (1) of Section 149 makes it clear that the insurer
should pay first to the third parties and recover the same if they
are absolved on any of the grounds specified in sub-section (2)
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thereof. Reliance, in this connection, has been placed on BIG
Insurance Co. Ltd. vs. Captain Itbar Singh and Others [AIR
1959 SC 1331] and New India Assurance Company Vs. Kamla
& Others [(2001) 4 SCC 342].
(v) The burden to prove the defence raised by the insurers as regard
the question as to whether there has been any breach of
violation of policy conditions of the insurance policy has been
issued or not, would be upon the insurer.
(vi) The breach on the part of the insured must be a wilful one being
of fundamental condition by the insured himself and the
burden of proof, therefore, would be on the insurer.
(vii) With a view to avoid its liabilities it is not sufficient for the
insurer to show that the person driving at the time of accident
was not duly licensed but it must further be established that
there was a breach on the part of the insured. Reliance, in this
connection, has been placed on Narcinva V. Kamath and
Another vs. Alfredo Antonio Doe Martins and Others [(1985) 2
SCC 574], Skandia Insurance Company Ltd. vs. Kokilaben
Chandevadan and Others [(1987) 2 SCC 654], Sohan Lal Passi
vs. P. Sesh Reddy and Others [(1996) 5 SCC 21] and United
India Insurance Company Ltd. vs. Lehru & Others [(2003) 3
SCC 338].
Before we deal with various contentions raised by the parties it is
desirable to look into the legislative history of the provisions for its
interpretation. The relevant provisions of the Act indisputably are beneficent
to the claimant. They are in the nature of a Social Welfare Legislation.
Chapter XI of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988, inter alia, provides for
compulsory insurance of vehicles in relation to the matters specified
therefor. The provision for compulsory insurance indisputably has been
made inter alia with a view to protect the right of a third party.
This Court in Sohan Lal Passi (supra) noted:
"10. The road accidents in India have touched a new
height. In majority of cases because of the rash and
negligent driving, innocent persons become victims of
such accidents because of which their dependants in
many cases are virtually on the streets. In this
background, the question of payment of compensation in
respect of motor accidents has assumed great importance
for public as well as for courts. Traditionally, before the
Court directed payment of tort compensation, it had to be
established by the claimants that the accident was due to
the fault of the person causing injury or damage. Now
from different judicial pronouncements, it shall appear
that even in western countries fault is being read and
assumed as someone’s negligence or carelessness. The
Indian Parliament, being conscious of the magnitude of
the plight of the victims of the accidents, have introduced
several beneficial provisions to protect the interest of the
claimants and to enable them to claim compensation
from the owner or the insurance company in connection
with the accident."
The intention of the Parliament became further evident when in the
Motor Vehicles Act, 1939, a new chapter being Chapter VIIA dealing with
insurance of motor vehicles against third party risks was introduced and the
beneficent provisions contained in the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 were
further made liberal by reason of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 and the
amendments carried out therein from time to time in aid of the third party
claims by way of grant of additional or new rights conferred on the road
accident victims.
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Under the common law a person injured by reason of another person’s
wrongdoing had no right of action against insurers who undertook to
indemnify the wrongdoer. The first invasion of this principle took place by
reason Third Parties (Rights against Insurers) Act, 1930. The British
Parliament in the light of the aforementioned Act enacted the Road Traffic
Act, 1930 which has since been replaced by Road Traffic Act, 1988.
The Third Parties (Rights Against Insurers) Act 1930 was enacted
with a view to correct injustice effecting a statutory assignment of the rights
of the assured to the injured person as prior thereto the right of a person to
be indemnified under a contract of insurance against claims made against
him by persons whom he might have injured was one personal to himself,
and there was no privity of any sort between the injured person and the
insurers. The injured person had no interest either at law or in equity in the
insurance money, either before or after it was paid by the insurers to the
assured. In a case where the assured became bankrupt and if the injured
person had not already obtained judgment and levied execution of his claim
for damages his only right was to move in the bankruptcy or the winding-up
of proceedings. The beneficial provisions of the aforementioned English
statutes were incorporated by the Parliament of India while enacting the
Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 which has also since been repealed and replaced
by the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988.
Concededly different types of insurance covers are issued containing
different nature of contract of insurance. We are, however, in this batch of
cases mainly concerned with third party right under the policy. Any
condition in the insurance policy, whereby the right of the third party is
taken away, would be void.
Indisputably such a benefit to a third party was provided under the
Statute keeping in view the fact that the conditions in the assured’s policy
may not be of no or little effect in relation to a claim by a person to whom an
assured was under a compulsorily insurable liability.
In this context, it is necessary to consider as to what is a third party
right. A third party claim arises when a victim of an accident suffers a
bodily injury or death as a result thereof or his property is damaged. An
accident is not susceptible to a very precise definition.
The popular and ordinary sense of the word was "an unlooked-for
mishap or an untoward event which is not expected or designed".
In R. Vs. Morris [(1972) 1 W.L.R. 228], the Court of Appeal defined
the word as an "unintended occurrence which has an adverse physical
result". The Supreme Court of Canada in Pickford & Black Ltd. vs.
Candian General Insurance Co. [(1976) 2 Lloyd’s Rep. 108], stated the law
thus :-
"The meaning to be attached to the word
"accident" as employed in the body of an insurance
policy was thoroughly explored by Mr. Justice Pigeon in
the reasons for judgment which he delivered on behalf of
the majority of this Court in The Canadian Indemnity Co.
v. Walkem Machinery & Equipment Ltd., (1975) D.L.R.
(3d) 1. In the course of these reasons at p. 5 he adopted
the views expressed by Mr. Justice Freedman, in a
dissenting opinion in the Court of Appeal of Manitoba in
Marshall Wells of Canada Ltd. v. Winnipeg Supply and
Fuel, R. Litz & Sons Co. v. Candian General Insurance
Co., (1964) 49 W.W.R. 644 at p. 665 where that learned
Judge said :
With respect, I am of the view that what
occurred here was an accident. One must avoid
the danger of construing that term as if it were
equivalent to "inevitable accident." That a mishap
might have been avoided by the exercise of greater
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care and diligence does not automatically take it
out of the range of accident. Expressed another
way, "negligence" and "accident" as here used are
not mutually exclusive terms. They may co-exist.
After expressing the view that even an occurrence
which is the result of a calculated risk or of a dangerous
operation may come within the meaning of the word
"accident", Mr. Justice Pigeon went on to say at p. 6 :
While it is true that the word "accident" is
sometimes used to describe unanticipated or unavoidable
occurrences, no dictionary need be cited to show that in
every day use, the word is applied as Halsbury says...to
any unlooked for mishap or occurrence...this is the proper
test..."
In Halsbury’s Laws of England, Fourth Edition Reissue, it is stated:
"An injury caused by the willful or even criminal act of
a third person, provided the assured is not a party or
privy to it, is to be regarded as accidental for the
purposes of the policy, since from the assured’s point of
view it is not expected or designed."
In Colinvaux’s Law of Insurance (6th Edition) page 304, the
following illustration is given :
"If a man walks and stumbles, thus spraining his
ankle, the injury is accidental for while he intends to
walk he does not intend to stumble. In Hamlyn v. Crown
Accidental Insurance the assured’s injury was due to
stooping forward to pick up a marble dropped by a child
as it rolled from him. He stood with his legs together,
separated his knees, leaned forward and made a grab at
the marble, and in doing so wrenched his knee. The
injury was held by the Court of Appeal to be accidental,
on the ground that the assured did not intend to get into
such a position that he might wrench his knee."
At para 17-13 of the said treatise it is stated :
"Accident includes negligence
It makes no difference that the accident was caused
by the negligence of the assured (as opposed to his
intentional act). Thus there is an accident where the
assured crosses a railway line without exercising due care
and is knocked down by an approaching train. In fact,
one of the commonest causes of accidents is negligence,
and an accident policy applies, excepted perils apart,
whether the injury is caused by the negligent act of the
assured himself or of a third party."
A right of the victim of a road accident to claim compensation is a
statutory one. He is a victim of an unforeseen situation. He would not
ordinarily have a hand in it. The negligence on the part of the victim may,
however, be contributory. He has suffered owing to wrongdoing of others.
An accident may ruin an entire family. It may take away the only earning
member. An accident may result in the loss of her only son to a mother. An
accident may take place for variety of reasons. The driver of a vehicle may
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not have a hand in it. He may not be found to be negligent in a given case.
Other factors such as unforeseen situation, negligence of the victim, bad
road or the action or inaction of any other person may lead to an accident.
A person suffering grievous bodily injury may require money for his
survival/medical treatment. Statutory compensation paid to the next of kin
of the victim of an accident may, thus, bring to a large number of families
the only ray of light at the end of the tunnel.
In other words, what would also be covered by the contract of
insurance vis-‘-vis the beneficent statutory provisions like Sub-Section (2)
of Section 149 of the said Act would be when a death or bodily injury has
been caused as a result of assured’s own voluntary act. Even an
unforeseeable result of assured’s deliberate act may come within the
purview of the accident. Even if an accident has occurred due to negligent
driving of the assured person, it may not prevent recovery under the policy
and certainly thereby a third party would not be non-suited.
However, we may notice that in C.M. Jaya’s case (supra), a
Constitution Bench of this Court held that the liability of the insurer will
have to be determined having regard to the question as to whether any extra
premium is paid or not. It was observed :
"...The said decision cannot be read as laying down that
even though the liability of the Insurance Company is
limited to the statutory requirement, an unlimited or
higher liability can be imposed on it. The liability could
be statutory or contractual. A statutory liability cannot
be more than what is required under the statute itself.
However, there is nothing in Section 95 of the Act
prohibiting the parties from contracting to create
unlimited or higher liability to cover wider risk. In such
an event, the insurer is bound by the terms of the contract
as specified in the policy in regard to unlimited or higher
liability as the case may be. In the absence of such a
term or clause in the policy, pursuant to the contract of
insurance, a limited statutory liability cannot be
expanded to make it unlimited or higher. If it is so done,
it amounts to rewriting the statute or the contract of
insurance which is not permissible."
For the aforementioned reasons, the provisions contained in Chapter
XI of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 must be construed in that light.
Sub-section (1) of Section 149, casts a liability upon the insurer to pay
to the person entitled to the benefit of the decree as if he were the judgment
debtor. Although the said liability is subject to the provision of this section,
it prefaces with a non-obstante clause that the insurer may be entitled to
avoid or cancel or may have avoided or cancelled the policy. Furthermore,
the statute raises a legal fiction to the effect that for the said purpose the
insurer would be deemed to be judgment debtor in respect of the liability of
the insurer.
In Halsbury’s Laws of England, Fourth Edition Reissue, Volume 25,
it is stated:
"743. Benefits conferred on third parties by the Road
Traffic Act, 1930. It was against the background of the
Third Parties (Rights against Insurers) Act 1930 that the
Road Traffic Act 1930 (now replaced by the Road Traffic
Act 1988), was passed. It was realised that, unless some
alterations were made in the rights to which the third
party was by the first-named Act subrogated, those rights
would frequently be of little, if any, value. Accordingly,
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it was provided that certain conditions in the assured’s
policy were to be of no effect in relation to a claim by a
person to whom an assured was under a compulsorily
insurable liability. The conditions to that extent avoided
are any conditions providing (1) that no liability is to
arise, or (2) that any liability which has arisen is to cease,
in the event of some specified thing being done, or
omitted to be done, after the occurrence of the event
giving rise to the claim. If, therefore, any admission of
liability is made after an accident contrary to a condition
in the policy, or if, contrary to a condition in the policy,
proper notice of the accident is not given to the insurers,
the injured third party is not affected so far as his claim is
concerned."
This Court in Nicolletta Rohtagi (supra) which has since been
followed in Sadhana Lodh Vs. National Insurance Company Ltd. and Anr.
reported in [(2003) 1 SCR 567] in no uncertain terms held that the defence
available to an insurance company would be a limited one.
The question as to whether an insurer can avoid its liability in the
event it raises a defence as envisaged in Sub-section (2) of Section 149 of
the Act corresponding to sub-section (2) of Section 96 of the Motor Vehicles
Act, 1939 had been the subject matter of decisions in a large number of
cases.
It is beyond any doubt or dispute that under Section 149(2) of the Act
an insurer, to whom notice of the bringing of any proceeding for
compensation has been given, can defend the action on any of the grounds
mentioned therein.
However, Clause (a) opens with the words "that there has been a
breach of a specified condition of the policy", implying that the insurer’s
defence of the action would depend upon the terms of the policy. The said
sub-clause contains three conditions of disjunctive character, namely, the
insurer can get away from the liability when (a) a named person drives the
vehicle; (b) it was being driven by a person who did not have a duly granted
licence; and (c) driver is a person disqualified for holding or obtaining a
driving licence.
We may also take note of the fact that whereas in Section 3 the words
used are ’effective licence’, it has been differently worded in Section 149(2)
i.e. ’ duly licensed’. If a person does not hold an effective licence as on the
date of the accident, he may be liable for prosecution in terms of Section 141
of the Act but Section 149 pertains to insurance as regard third party risks.
A provision of a statute which is penal in nature vis-‘-vis a provision
which is beneficent to a third party must be interpreted differently. It is also
well known that the provisions contained in different expressions are
ordinarily construed differently.
The words ’effective licence’ used in Section 3, therefore, in our
opinion cannot be imported for sub-section (2) of Section 149 of the Motor
Vehicles Act. We must also notice that the words ’duly licensed’ used in
sub-section (2) of Section 149 are used in past tense.
Thus, a person whose licence is ordinarily renewed in terms of the
Motor Vechiles Act and the rules framed thereunder despite the fact that
during the interregnum period, namely, when the accident took place and
the date of expiry of the licence, he did not have a valid licence, he could
during the prescribed period apply for renewal thereof and could obtain the
same automatically without undergoing any further test or without having
been declared unqualified therefor. Proviso appended to Section 14 in
unequivocal term states that the licence remains valid for a period of thirty
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days from the day of its expiry.
Section 15 of the Act does not empower the authorities to reject an
application for renewal only on the ground that there is a break in validity or
tenure of the driving licence has lapsed as in the meantime the provisions for
disqualification of the driver contained in Sections 19, 20, 21, 22, 23 and 24
will not be attracted, would indisputably confer a right upon the person to
get his driving licence renewed. In that view of the matter he cannot be said
to be delicensed and the same shall remain valid for a period of thirty days
after its expiry.
If a person has been given a licence for a particular type of vehicle as
specified therein, he cannot be said to have no licence for driving another
type of vehicle which is of the same category but of different type. As for
example when a person is granted a licence for driving a light motor vehicle
he can drive either a car or a jeep and it is not necessary that he must have
driving licence both for car and jeep separately.
Furthermore, the insurance company with a view to avoid its
liabilities is not only required to show that the conditions laid down under
Section 149(2)(a) or (b) are satisfied but is further required to establish that
there has been a breach on the part of the insured. By reason of the
provisions contained in the 1988 Act, a more extensive remedy has been
conferred upon those who have obtained judgment against the user of a
vehicle and after a certificate of insurance is delivered in terms of Section
147(3) a third party has obtained a judgment against any person insured by
the policy in respect of a liability required to be covered by Section 145, the
same must be satisfied by the insurer, notwithstanding that the insurer may
be entitled to avoid or to cancel the policy or may in fact have done so.
The same obligation applies in respect of a judgment against a person not
insured by the policy in respect of such a liability, but who would have been
covered if the policy had covered the liability of all persons, except that in
respect of liability for death or bodily injury.
Such a breach on the part of the insurer must be established by the
insurer to show that not only the insured used or caused or permitted to be
used the vehicle in breach of the Act but also that the damage he suffered
flowed from the breach.
Under the Motor Vehicles Act, holding of a valid driving licence is
one of the conditions of contract of insurance. Driving of a vehicle without
a valid licence is an offence. However, the question herein is whether a
third party involved in an accident is entitled to the amount of compensation
granted by the Motor Accidents Claims Tribunal although the driver of the
vehicle at the relevant time might not have a valid driving licence but would
be entitled to recover the same from the owner or driver thereof.
It is trite that where the insurers relying upon the provisions of
violation of law by the assured takes an exception to pay the assured or a
third party, they must prove a wilful violation of the law by the assured. In
some cases violation of criminal law, particularly, violation of the provisions
of the Motor Vehicles Act may result in absolving the insurers but, the same
may not necessarily hold good in the case of a third party. In any event, the
exception applies only to acts done intentionally or "so recklessly as to
denote that the assured did not care what the consequences of his act might
be".
In Narvinva’ case (supra), a Division Bench of this Court observed :
"...The insurance company complains of breach of a term
of contract which would permit it to disown its liability
under the contract of insurance. If a breach of term of
contract permits a party to the contract to not to perform
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the contract, the burden is squarely on that party which
complains of breach to prove that the breach has been
committed by the other party to the contract. The test in
such a situation would be who would fail if no evidence
is led..."
In Skandia’s case (supra), this Court held :
"Section 96(2)(b)(ii) extents immunity to the insurance
company if a breach is committed of the condition
excluding driving by a named person or persons or by
any person who is not duly licensed, or by any person
who has been disqualified from holding or obtaining
driving licence during the period of disqualification. The
expression "breach" is of great significance. The
dictionary meaning of "breach" is "infringement or
violation of a promise or obligation" (See Collins English
Dictionary). It is, therefore, abundantly clear that the
insurer will have to establish that the insured is guilty of
an infringement or violation of the promise that a person
who is duly licensed will have to be in charge of the
vehicle. The very concept of infringement or violation of
the promise that the expression "breach" carries within
itself induces an inference that the violation or
infringement or violation. If the insured is not at all at
fault and has not done anything he should not have done
or is not amiss in any respect, how can it be
conscientously posited that he has committed a breach ?
It is only when the insured himself places the vehicle in
charge of a person who dies not hold a driving licence,
that it can be said that he is "guilty" of the breach of the
promise that the vehicle will be driven by a licensed
driver. It must be established by the insurance company
that the breach was on the part of the insured and that it
was the insured who was guilty of violating the promise
or infringement of the contract. Unless the insured is at
fault and is guilty of a breach, the insurer cannot escape
from the obligation to indemnify the insured and
successfully contented that he is exonerated having
regard to the fact that the promisor (the insured)
committed a breach of his promise. Not when some
mishap occurs by some mischance. When the insured has
done everything within his power inasmuch as he has
engaged a licensed driver and has placed the vehicle in
charge of a licensed driver, with the express or implied
mandate to drive it himself, it cannot be said that the
insured is guilty of any breach."
In B.V. Nagaraju vs. M/s Oriental Insurance Co. Ltd. [AIR 1996 SC
2054], Punchhi, J. speaking for the Division Bench followed Skandia
(supra) and read down the exclusionary term of the insurance policy to
serve the main purpose thereof, holding :
"The National Commission went for the strict
construction of the exclusion clause. The reasoning that
the extra passengers being carried in the goods vehicle
could not have contributed, in any manner, to the
occurring of the accident, was barely noticed and rejected
sans any plausible account; even when the claim
confining the damage to the vehicle only was limited in
nature. We, thus, are of the view in accord with the
Skandia’s case (AIR 1987 SC 1184), the aforesaid
exclusion term of the insurance policy must be read down
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so as to serve the main purpose of the policy that is
indemnify the damage caused to the vehicle, which we
hereby do."
A contract of insurance also falls within the realm of contract. Thus,
like any other contract, the intention of the parties must be gathered from the
expressions used therein.
Ivamy in his treatise ’Fire and Motor Insurance’ (2nd Edition) at page
272-273 narrated an interesting case concerning Employment of "under age"
driver in Sweeney vs. Kennedy [(1948), 82, L.I.L. Rep. 294 at 297] as under :
"In Sweeney vs. Kennedy the proposer in answer
to a question stating "Are any of your drivers under
twenty-one years of age or with less than twelve months’
experience" replied "No". One of the lorries covered by
the policy was involved in an accident whilst it was being
unloaded, and a third pqrty was fatally injured. At the
time of the accident it was being driven by the insured’s
son, who had twelve months’ driving experience but was
under twenty-one. When a claim for an indemnity was
made against the insurance company, payment was
refused on the ground that the employment of a driver
under twenty-one years of age amounted to such an
alteration in the character of the risk as would avoid the
policy.
Kingsmill Moore, J., giving judgment in the Eire
Divisional Court, rejected this argument and held that the
company was liable. He said that whether a change of
risk was so great as to avoid an insurance must always be
a question of degree and a question of the opinion of the
Court on the circumstances of the case. He could see a
vast difference between the risks involved in insuring a
merchantman and a privateer; a smaller but still very
substantial difference between the risk involved in
insuring an explosive and non-explosive demolition; and
a very exiguous difference between the risks of insuring
when a driver was under or over twenty-one.
He then observed :
"The law provides that licences to drive
motor vehicles may be given to persons of
specified ages, the ages varying with the class of
the vehicle; and when a person is driving a vehicle
of the category which by his age he is entitled to
drive, there is, I think, some presumption that, as
far as age reflects on competency, he is competent
to drive it. Certainly this would be an honest and
reasonable view for an insured person to take in a
case where he had not been expressly limited by
the terms of the policy to the employment of
drivers over 21. Certain categories of vehicles
may not, by law, be driven by persons under 21,
and as the framework of the proposal form was apt
to cover an application for insurance of such
vehicle, he might reasonably consider that Q.9 was
designed to all attention to this fact. If insurers
take a different view as to the proposer age of
drivers from the view of the law, it is open to them
- indeed, I would say incumbent upon them - to
make this clear by the insertion of specific
provisions in the policy and not attempt to secure
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their ends by a side wind. I hold that there was no
such alteration in the subject-matter of the
insurance as would or could avoid the policy."
In the event the terms and conditions of policy are obscure it is
permissible for the purpose of construction of the deed to look to the
surrounding circumstances as also the conduct of the parties.
In Oriental Insurance Co. Ltd. vs. Sony Cheriyan [(1999) 6 SCC
451], it has been held :
"The insurance policy between the insurer and the
insured represents a contract between the parties. Since
the insurer undertakes to compensate the loss suffered by
the insured on account of risks covered by the insurance
policy, the terms of the agreement have to be strictly
construed to determine the extent of liability of the
insurer. The insured cannot claim anything more than
what is covered by the insurance policy. That being so,
the insured has also to act strictly in accordance with the
statutory limitations or terms of the policy expressly set
out therein."
Yet in Oriental Insurance Co. Ltd. vs. Samayanallur Primary
Agricultural Co-op. Bank [AIR 2000 SC 10], this Court laid down the law
in the following terms :
"The State Commission appreciated the real controversy
between the parties and decided the dispute on
interpretation of the insurance policies and the proposal
produced before the District Forum. There was no
necessity of referring to the dictionaries for
understanding the meaning of the word ’safe’ which the
parties in the instant case are proved to have understood
while submitting the proposal and accepting the
insurance policy. The cashier’s box could not be equated
with the safe within the meaning of the insurance policy.
The alleged burglary and the removal of the cash box
containing the jewellery and cash was not covered by the
insurance policy between the parties. The insurance
policy has to be construed having reference only to the
stipulations contained in it and no artificial far fetched
meaning could be given to the words appearing in it."
The courts also readily apply the doctrine of waiver in favour of the
insured and against the insurer.
The insurer’s liability arises both from contract as well as statute. It
will, therefore, may not be proper to apply the rules for interpretation of a
contract for interpreting a statute.
The correctness of the decision rendered in Skandia’s case (supra) was
questioned and the matter was referred to a three-Judge Bench to which we
shall advert to a little later.
Gian Chand’s case (supra) relied on behalf of the petitioner is of not
much assistance. Therein this Court was dealing with peculiar fact situation
obtaining therein. In that case the insured admittedly did not have any
driving licence and in that situation, the insurance company was held to be
not liable. The Bench noticed the purported conflict between the two sets of
decisions but did not refer the matter to a larger Bench. It merely
distinguished the cases on their own facts stating :
"Under the circumstances, when the insured had
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handed over the vehicle for being driven by an
unlicensed driver, the Insurance Company would get
exonerated from its liability to meet the claims of the
third party who might have suffered on account of
vehicular accident caused by such unlicensed driver. In
view of the aforesaid two sets of decisions of this Court,
which deal with different fact situations, it cannot be said
that the decisions rendered by this Court in Skandia
Insurance Co. Ltd. v. Kokiolaben Chandravadan and the
decision of the Bench of three learned Judges in Sohan
Lal in any way conflict with the decisions rendered by
this Court in the cases of New India Assurance Co. Ltd.
vs. Mandar Madhav Tambe and Kashiram Yadav v.
Oriental Fire & General Insurance Co."
There may be a case where an accident takes place without there
being fault on the part of the driver. In such an event, the question as to
whether a driver was holding a valid licence or not would become
redundant. (See Jitendra Kumar vs. Oriental Insurance Co. Ltd. & Anr. -
J.T. 2003 (5) SC 538].
Skandia (supra), on the other hand, has been approved by a three-
Judge Bench, when the correctness thereof was referred to a larger Bench in
Sohan Lal Passi’s case (supra), wherein a three-Judge Bench of this Court
noticed the ratio propounded in Skandia’s case (supra) and observed :
"...In other words, once there has been a contravention of
the condition prescribed in sub-section (2)(b)(ii) of
Section 96, the person insured shall not be entitled to the
benefit of sub-section (1) of Section 96. According to us,
Section 96(2)(b)(ii) should not be interpreted in a
technical manner. Sub-section (2) of Section 96 only
enables the insurance company to defend itself in respect
of the liability to pay compensation on any of the
grounds mentioned in sub-section (2) including that there
has been a contravention of the condition excluding the
vehicle being driven by any person who is not duly
licensed. This bar on the face of it operates on the person
insured. If the person who has got the vehicle insured has
allowed the vehicle to be driven by a person who is not
duly licensed then only that clause shall be attracted. In a
case where the person who has got insured the vehicle
with the insurance company, has appointed a duly
licensed driver and if the accident takes place when the
vehicle is being driven by a person not duly licensed on
the basis of the authority of the driver duly authorised to
drive the vehicle whether the insurance company in that
event shall be absolved from its liability ? The expression
’breach’ occurring in Section 96(2)(b) means
infringement or violation of a promise or obligation. As
such the insurance company will have to establish that
the insured was guilty of an infringement or violation of
a promise. The insurer has also to satisfy the Tribunal or
the Court that such violation or infringement on the part
of the insured was wilful. If the insured has taken all
precautions by appointing a duly licensed driver to drive
the vehicle in question and it has not been established
that it was the insured who allowed the vehicle to be
driven by a person not duly licensed, then the insurance
company cannot repudiate its statutory liability under
sub-section (1) of Section 96..."
A bare perusal of the provisions of Section 149 of the Act leads to
only one conclusion that usual rule is that once the assured proved that the
accident is covered by the compulsory insurance clause, it is for the insurer
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to prove that it comes within an exception.
In MacGillivray on Insurance Law it is stated:
"25-82 Burden of Proof: Difficulties may arise in
connection with the burden of proving that the facts of
any particular case fall within this exception. The usual
rule is that once the assured has proved that the case
comes within the general risk, it is for the insurers to
prove that it comes within an exception. It has therefore
been suggested in some American decisions that, where
the insurers prove only that the assured exposed himself
to danger and there is no evidence to show why he did so,
they cannot succeed, because they have not proved that
his behaviour was voluntary or that the danger was
unnecessary. Since an extremely heavy burden is
imposed on the insurers if they have to prove the state of
mind of the assured, it has been suggested in Canadian
decisions that the court should presume that the assured
acted voluntarily and that, where he does an apparently
dangerous and foolish act, such danger was unnecessary,
until the contrary is shown. In practical terms, therefore,
the onus does in fact lie on the claimant to explain the
conduct of the assured where there is not apparent reason
for exposing himself to an obvious danger."
In Rukmani and Others vs. New India Assurance Co. Ltd. and Others
[1999 ACJ 171], this Court while upholding the defences available to the
insurer to the effect that vehicle in question was not being driven by a person
holding a licence, held that the burden of the insurer would not be
discharged when the evidence which was brought on record was that the
Inspector of Police in his examination in chief merely stated, "My enquiry
revealed that the respondent No.1 did not produce the licence to drive the
abovesaid scooter. The respondent No.1 even after my demand did not
submit the licence since he was not having it."
The proposition of law is no longer res integra that the person who
alleges breach must prove the same. The insurance company is, thus,
required to establish the said breach by cogent evidence. In the event, the
insurance company fails to prove that there has been breach of conditions of
policy on the part of the insured, the insurance company cannot be absolved
of its liability. (See Sohan Lal Passi (supra)
Apart from the above, we do not intend to lay down anything further
i.e. degree of proof which would satisfy the aforementioned requirement
inasmuch as the same would indisputably depend upon the facts and
circumstances of each case. It will also depend upon the terms of contract of
insurance . Each case may pose different problem which must be resolved
having to a large number of factors governing the case including conduct of
parties as regard duty to inform, correct disclosure, suppression, fraud on the
insurer etc. It will also depend upon the fact as to who is the owner of the
vehicle and the circumstances in which the vehicle was being driven by a
person having no valid and effective licence. No hard and fast rule can
therefor be laid down. If in a given case there exists sufficient material to
draw an adverse inference against either the insurer or the insured, the
Tribunal may do so. The parties alleging breach must be held to have
succeeded in establishing the breach of conditions of contract of insurance
on the part of the insurer by discharging its burden of proof. The Tribunal,
there cannot be any doubt, must arrive at a finding on the basis of the
materials available on records.
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In the aforementioned backdrop, the provisions of sub-sections (4)
and (5) of Section 149 of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 may be considered
as the liability of the Insurer to satisfy the decree at the first instance.
A beneficent statute, as is well known, must receive a liberal
interpretation [See Bangalore Water Supply & Sewerage Board etc. vs. A.
Rajappa and Others etc. [(1978) 2 SCC 213], Steel Authority of India Ltd.
and Others vs. National Union Waterfront Workers and Others [(2001) 7
SCC 1], ITI Ltd. vs. Siemens Public Communications Network Ltd. [(2002)
5 SCC 510], Amrit Bhikaji Kale and Others vs. Kashinath Janardhan Trade
and Another [(1983) 3 SCC 437] and Kunal Singh vs. Union of India and
Another [(2003) 4 SCC 524].
The liability of the insurer is a statutory one. The liability of the
insurer to satisfy the decree passed in favour of a third party is also statutory.
In Halsbury’s Laws of England, Fourth Edition Reissue, Volume 25,
it is stated:
"749. Judgments required to be satisfied. The first
condition of the obligation of the insurers to pay on a
judgment is that there is a judgment.
The Second condition is that the judgment must be
in respect of a liability which is required to be covered by
compulsory insurance. In other words, the only person
who can maintain a right of action direct against the
insurers is a person falling within the class of third
parties whose bodily injury or death or damage to whose
property is required to be covered by a motor policy.
The third condition is that the liability is, in fact,
covered by the terms of the policy, or would be covered
but for the fact that the insurer is entitled to avoid or
cancel, or has avoided or cancelled, the policy. For this
purpose, conditions declared to be invalid as against a
third party are ignored, but if, even after ignoring all such
conditions, the relevant use of the vehicle puts it outside
the scope of the policy, the insurers are left immune. The
most important clause in this connection is the
’description of use’ clause. The assured is criminally
liable if he uses his car for purposes outside the scope of
his insurance and, in addition to his criminal liability, he
has to bear unaided the cost of compensating third parties
injured by his use if he is negligent. Subject to the
statutory provision rendering certain conditions invalid
against third parties, the insurers are not obliged to carry
a wider scope of liability that they have agreed by their
policy to carry.
The fourth condition is that the judgment must be
against a person insured by the policy. This language
covers a permitted driver as well as the person by whom
the policy has been effected."
As has been held in Sohan Lal Passi (supra), the insurance company
cannot shake off its liability to pay the compensation only by saying that at
the relevant point of time the vehicle was driven by a person having no
licence.
Thus, where a liability has been established by a judgment, it is not
permissible to look beyond the determination in order to establish the basis
of the liability.
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In United Insurance Co. Ltd. Vs. Jaimy and others [1998 ACJ 1318],
it is stated:
"Section 149(2) relates to the liability of the
insurer and speaks of a situation in regard to which no
sum shall be payable by an insurer to whom notice of
bringing of any such proceeding is given, could defend
the action stated in the said statutory provision. The
contention in the context would be found in section
149(2)(a) in the event of a breach of a specified condition
of the policy enabling the insurer to avoid liability in
regard thereto. In the process in regard to the right of the
insurer to recover the amount from the insured, it would
have to be seen by referring to section 149(4)
successfully recovered from the insured.
Section 149(4) says that where a certificate of
insurance is issued, so much of the said policy as
purports to restrict the insurance of the persons insured
thereby by referring to any of the conditions mentioned
and it is precisely enacted in regard thereto and that the
liability covered by section 2(b) as are required to be
covered by the policy would not be available. The
position is made further clear by the provisions enacting
that any sum paid by the insurer in or towards the
discharge of any liability of any person who is covered
by the policy by virtue of this sub-section shall be
recoverable by the insurer from that person.
In other words, section 149(4) considers the right
of the insurance company in regard to re-imbursement of
the amount paid by them only in the context of a situation
other than the one contemplated under Section 149(2)(b).
It would mean that except under the situation provided by
section 149(2)(b), the insurer would not be in a position
to avoid the liability because he has got rights against the
owner under the above provision.
The learned counsel strenuously submitted that this
would not be the correct understanding and interpretation
of the statutory provisions of section 149 of the 1988 Act.
The learned counsel submitted that to read the statutory
provision to understand that the insurance company could
only claim from the owner in situations governed by
section 149(2)(b) and to have no right under the said
provision with regard to other situations under section
149(2)(a) would not be the proper reading of the statutory
provision. The learned counsel submitted that in fact the
provision would have to be meaningfully understood. It
is not possible to consider the submission of the learned
counsel in the light of the plain language of the statutory
provision. It is necessary to emphasise that under the
new Act the burden of the insurance company has been
made heavier in the context of controlling the need of
taking up contentions to legally avoid the liabilities of the
insurance company."
The social need of the victim being compensated as enacted by the
Parliament was the subject matter of consideration before a three-Judge
Bench of this Court as early as in 1959 in British India General Insurance
Co. Ltd. vs. Captain Itbar Singh and Others [(1960) 1 SCR 168], wherein
Sarkar, J speaking for the Bench observed :
"Again, we find the contention wholly
unacceptable. The Statute has no doubt created a liability
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in the insurer to the injured person but the statute has also
expressly confined the right to avoid that liability to
certain grounds specified in it. It is not for us to add to
those grounds and therefore to the statute for reasons of
hardship. We are furthermore not convinced that the
statute causes any hardship. First, the insurer has the
right, provided he has reserved it by the policy, to defend
the action in the name of the assured and if he does so, all
defences open to the assured can then be urged by him
and there is no other defence that he claims to be entitled
to urge. He can thus avoid all hardship if any, by
providing for a right to defend the action in the name of
the assured and this he has full liberty to do. Secondly, if
he has been made to pay something which on the contract
of the policy he was not bound to pay, he can under the
proviso to sub-s.(3) and under sub-s.(4) recover it from
the assured. It was said that the assured might be a man
of straw and the insurer might not be able to recover
anything from him. But the answer to that is that it is the
insurer’s bad luck. In such circumstances the injured
person also would not have been able to recover the
damages suffered by him from the assured, the person
causing the injuries...
Similar view has been taken in Skandia’s case (supra), Sohan Lal
Passi’s case (supra), Kashiram Yadav and Another vs. Oriental Fire and
General Insurance Co. Ltd. and Others [(1989) 4 SCC 128] and several
others.
In Kamla’s case (supra), a Division Bench of this Court summed up
the legal position :
"The position can be summed up thus :
The insurer and the insured are bound by the conditions
enumerated in the policy and the insurer is not liable to
the insured if there is violation of any policy condition.
But the insurer who is made statutorily liable to pay
compensation to third parties on account of the certificate
of insurance issued shall be entitled to recover from the
insured the amount paid to the third parties, if there was
any breach of policy conditions on account of the vehicle
being driven without a valid driving licence. Learned
counsel for the insured contended that it is enough if he
establishes that he made all due enquiries and believed
bona fide that the driver employed by him had a valid
driving licence, in which case there was no breach of the
policy condition. As we have not decided on that
contention it is open to the insured to raise it before the
Claims Tribunal. In the present case, if the Insurance
Company succeeds in establishing that there was breach
of the policy condition, the Claims Tribunal shall direct
the insured to pay that amount to the insurer. In default
the insurer shall be allowed to recover that amount
(which the insurer is directed to pay to the claimant third
parties) from the insured person."
The submissions made on behalf of the petitioner may now be
noticed. According to the learned counsel, sub-section (4) of Section 149
deals with the situation where the insurer in the policy purports to restrict the
insurance of the persons insured thereby by reference to any condition other
than those in clause (b) of sub-section (2) of Section 149 and in that view of
the matter no liability is covered for driving of a vehicle without licence or
fake licence. The submission ignores the plain and unequivocal expression
used in sub-section (2) of Section 149 as well as the proviso appended
thereto. With a view to construe a statute the scheme of the Act has to be
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taken into consideration. For the said purpose the entire Act has to be read
as a whole and then chapter by chapter, section by section and word by
word. [See Reserve Bank of India etc. vs. Peerless General Finance and
Investment Co. Ltd. and others [(1987) 1 SCC 424 Para 33].
Proviso appended to sub-section (4) of Section 149 is referable only to
sub-section (2) of Section 149 of the Act. It is an independent provision and
must be read in the context of Section 96(4) of the Motor Vehicles Act,
1939. Furthermore, it is one thing to say that the insurer will be entitled to
avoid its liability owing to breach of terms of a contract of insurance but it
is another thing to say that the vehicle is not insured at all. If the submission
of the learned counsel for the petitioner is accepted, the same would render
the proviso to sub-section (4) as well as sub-section (5) of Section 149 of the
Act otiose, nor any effective meaning can be attributed to the liability clause
of the insurance company contained in sub-section (1). The decision in
Kamla’s case (supra) has to be read in the aforementioned context.
Sub-section (5) of Section 149 which imposes a liability on the insurer
must also be given its full effect. The insurance company may not be liable
to satisfy the decree and, therefore, its liability may be zero but it does mean
that it did not have initial liability at all. Thus, if the insurance company is
made liable to pay any amount, it can recover the entire amount paid to the
third party on behalf of the assured. If this interpretation is not given to the
beneficent provisions of the Act having regard to its purport and object, we
fail to see a situation where beneficent provisions can be given effect to.
Sub-section (7) of Section 149 of the Act, to which pointed attention of the
Court has been drawn by the learned counsel for the petitioner, which is in
negative language may now be noticed. The said provision must be read
with sub-section (1) thereof. The right to avoid liability in terms of sub-
section (2) of Section 149 is restricted as has been discussed hereinbefore.
It is one thing to say that the insurance companies are entitled to raise a
defence but it is another thing to say that despite the fact that its defence has
been accepted having regard to the facts and circumstances of the case, the
Tribunal has power to direct them to satisfy the decree at the first instance
and then direct recovery of the same from the owner. These two matters
stand apart and require contextual reading.
WHEN ADMITTEDLY NO LICENCE WAS OBTAINED BY A DRIVER:
We have analysed the relevant provisions of the said Act in terms
whereof a motor vehicle must be driven by a person having a driving
licence. The owner of a motor vehicle in terms of Section 5 of the Act has a
responsibility to see that no vehicle is driven except by a person who does
not satisfy the provisions of Section 3 or 4 of the Act. In a case, therefore,
where the driver of the vehicle admittedly did not hold any licence and the
same was allowed consciously to be driven by the owner of the vehicle by
such person, the insurer is entitled to succeed in its defence and avoid
liability. The matter, however, may be different where a disputed question
of fact arises as to whether the driver had a valid licence or where the owner
of the vehicle committed a breach of the terms of the contract of insurance
as also the provisions of the Act by consciously allowing any person to drive
a vehicle who did not have a valid driving licence. In a given case, the
driver of the vehicle may not have any hand at all, e.g. a case where an
accident takes place owing to a mechanical fault or vis-major. [See Jitendra
Kumar (supra)]
In V. Mepherson vs. Shiv Charan Singh [1998 ACJ 601 (Del.)] the
owner of the vehicle was held not to be guilty of violating the condition of
policy by willfully permitting his son to drive the car who had no driving
licence at the time of accident. In that case, it was held that the owner and
insurer both were jointly and severally liable.
In New India Assurance Co. Ltd. vs. Jagtar Singh and Others [1998
ACJ 1074], Hon’ble M. Srinivasan, CJ, as His Lordship then was, dealing
with the case where a duly licensed driver was driving a vehicle but there
was a dispute as to who was driving the vehicle. In that case the court
referred to the judgment in Kashiram Yadav vs. Oriental Fire & General
Insurance Co. Ltd. [1989 ACJ 1078 (SC)] and expressed its agreement with
the views taken therein.
In National Insurance Co. Ltd. vs. Ishroo Devi and Others [1999 ACJ
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615] where there was no evidence that the society which employed the
driver was having knowledge that the driver was not holding a valid licence,
it was held the insurance company is liable. The court relied upon the
decisions of this Court in Kashiram Yadav’s case (supra), Skandia’s case
(supra) and Sohan Lal Passi’s case (supra).
WHEN THE PERSON HAS BEEN GRANTED LICENCE FOR ONE
TYPE OF VEHICLE BUT AT THE RELVANT TIME HE WAS DRIVING
ANOTHER TYPE OF VECHILE :
Section 10 of the Act provides for forms and contents of licences to
drive. The licence has to be granted in the prescribed form. Thus, a licence
to drive a light motor vehicle would entitle the holder there to drive the
vehicle falling within that class or description.
Section 3 of the Act casts an obligation on a driver to hold an effective
driving licence for the type of vehicle which he intends to drive. Section 10
of the Act enables Central Government to prescribe forms of driving
licences for various categories of vehicles mentioned in sub-section (2) of
said section. The various types of vehicles described for which a driver may
obtain a licence for one or more of them are (a) Motorcycle without gear, (b)
motorcycle with gear, (c) invalid carriage, (d) light motor vehicle, (e)
transport vehicle, (f) road roller and (g) motor vehicle of other specified
description. The definition clause in Section 2 of the Act defines various
categories of vehicles which are covered in broad types mentioned in sub-
sectionh (2) of Section 10. They are ‘goods carriage’, ‘heavy-goods vehicle’,
‘heavy passenger motor-vehicle’, ‘invalid carriage’, ‘light motor-vehicle’,
‘maxi-cab’,‘medium goods vehicle’, ‘medium passenger motor-vehicle’,
‘motor-cab’, ‘motorcycle’, ‘omnibus’, ‘private service vehicle’, ‘semi-trailer’,
‘tourist vehicle’, ‘tractor’, ‘trailer’, and ‘transport vehicle’. In claims for
compensation for accidents, various kinds of breaches with regard to the
conditions of driving licences arise for consideration before the Tribunal. A
person possessing a driving licence for ‘motorcycle without gear’, for which
he has no licence. Cases may also arise where a holder of driving licence for
‘light motor vehicle’ is found to be driving a ‘maxi-cab’, ‘motor-cab’ or
‘omnibus’ for which he has no licence. In each case on evidence led before
the tribunal, a decision has to be taken whether the fact of the driver
possessing licence for one type of vehicle but found driving another type of
vehicle, was the main or contributory cause of accident. If on facts, it is
found that accident was caused solely because of some other unforeseen or
intervening causes like mechanical failures and similar other causes having
no nexus with driver not possessing requisite type of licence, the insurer will
not be allowed to avoid its liability merely for technical breach of conditions
concerning driving licence.
We have construed and determined the scope of sub-clause (ii) of sub-
section(2) of section 149 of the Act. Minor breaches of licence conditions,
such as want of medical fitness certificate, requirement about age of the
driver and the like not found to have been the direct cause of the accident,
would be treated as minor breaches of inconsequential deviation in the
matter of use of vehicles. Such minor and inconsequential deviations with
regard to licensing conditions would not constitute sufficient ground to deny
the benefit of coverage of insurance to the third parties.
On all pleas of breach of licensing conditions taken by the insurer, it
would be open to the tribunal to adjudicate the claim and decide inter se
liability of insurer and insured; although where such adjudication is likely to
entail undue delay in decision of the claim of the victim, the tribunal in its
discretion may relegate the insurer to seek its remedy of reimbursement from
the insured in the civil court.
WHERE THE DRIVER’S LICENCE IS FOUND TO BE FAKE :
It may be true as has been contended on behalf of the petitioner that a
fake or forged licence is as good as no licence but the question herein, as
noticed hereinbefore, is whether the insurer must prove that the owner was
guilty of the wilful breach of the conditions of the insurance policy or the
contract of insurance. In Lehru’s case (supra), the matter has been
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considered at some details. We are in general agreement with the approach
of the Bench but we intend to point out that the observations made therein
must be understood to have been made in the light of the requirements of
law in terms whereof the insurer is to establish wilful breach on the part of
the insured and not for the purpose of its disentitlement from raising any
defence or the owners be absolved from any liability whatsoever. We would
be dealing in some details with this aspect of the matter a little later.
LEARNER’S LICENCE :
Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 provides for grant of learner’s licence.
[See Section 4(3), Section 7(2), Section 10(3) and Section 14]. A learner’s
licence is, thus, also a licence within the meaning of the provisions of the
said Act. It cannot, therefore, be said that a vehicle when being driven by a
learner subject to the conditions mentioned in the licence, he would not be a
person who is not duly licensed resulting in conferring a right on the insurer
to avoid the claim of the third party. It cannot be said that a person holding
a learner’s licence is not entitled to drive the vehicle. Even if there exists a
condition in the contract of insurance that the vehicle cannot be driven by a
person holding a learner’s licence, the same would run counter to the
provisions of Section 149(2) of the said Act.
The provisions contained in the said Act provide also for grant of
driving licence which is otherwise a learner’s licence. Section 3(2) and 6 of
the Act provides for the restriction in the matter of grant of driving licence,
Section 7 deals with such restrictions on granting of learner’s licence.
Section 8 and 9 provide for the manner and conditions for grant of driving
licence. Section 15 provides for renewal of driving licence. Learner’s
licences are granted under the rules framed by the Central Government or
the State Governments in exercise of their rule making power. Conditions
are attached to the learner’s licences granted in terms of the statute. A
person holding learner’s licence would, thus, also come within the purview
of "duly licensed" as such a licence is also granted in terms of the provisions
of the Act and the rules framed thereunder. It is now a well-settled principle
of law that rules validly framed become part of the statute. Such rules are,
therefore, required to be read as a part of main enactment. It is also well-
settled principle of law that for the interpretation of statute an attempt must
be made to give effect to all provisions under the rule. No provision should
be considered as surplusage.
Mandar Madhav Tambe’s case (supra), whereupon the learned
counsel placed reliance, has no application to the fact of the matter. There
existed an exclusion clause in the insurance policy wherein it was made
clear that the Insurance Company, in the event of an accident, would be
liable only if the vehicle was being driven by a person holding a valid
driving licence or a permanent driving licence "other than a learner’s
licence". The question as to whether such a clause would be valid or not did
not arise for consideration before the Bench in the said case. The said
decision was rendered in the peculiar fact situation obtaining therein.
Therein it was stated that "a driving licence" as defined in the Act is
different from a learner’s licence issued under Rule 16 of the Motor
Vehicles Rules, 1939 having regard to the factual matrix involved therein.
The question which arises for consideration in these petitions did not
arise there. Neither the same were argued at the Bar nor the binding
precedents were considered. Mandar Madhav Tambe’s case (supra),
therefore, has no application to the facts of these cases nor create any
binding precedent. The view we have taken is in tune with the judgments
rendered by different High Courts consistently. [See for example New India
Assurance Co. Ltd. Vs. Latha Jayaraj and others [1991 ACJ 298].
CONFLICT OF DECISIONS :
Contention of Mr. Salve that there exists a conflict in the decisions of
this Court in Nicolletta Rohtagi (supra) on the one hand and Kamla (supra)
and Lehru (supra) on the other cannot be accepted. We do not find in the
said decisions any such conflict.
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Nicolletta Rohtagi (supra) was a case where a question arose as to
whether an appeal by the insurer on the ground de’hors those contained in
Section 149(2) would be maintainable. It was held not to be. There cannot
be any doubt or dispute that defences enumerated in Section 149(2) would
be available to the insurance companies, but that does not and cannot mean
that despite such defences having not been established, they would not be
liable to fulfil their statutory obligation under sub-section (1) of Section 149
of the Act.
So far as the purported conflict in the judgments of Kamla (supra) and
Lehru (supra) is concerned, we may wish to point out that the defence to the
effect that the licence held by the person driving the vehicle was a fake one,
would be available to the insurance companies, but whether despite the
same, the plea of default on the part of the owner has been established or
not would be a question which will have to be determined in each case.
The court, however, in Lehru (supra) must not read that an owner of a
vehicle can under no circumstances has any duty to make any enquiry in this
respect. The same, however, would again be a question which would arise
for consideration in each individual case.
The submission of Mr. Salve that in Lehru’s case (supra), this Court
has, for all intent and purport, taken away the right of insurer to raise a
defence that the licence is fake does not appear to be correct. Such defence
can certainly be raised but it will be for the insurer to prove that the insured
did not take adequate care and caution to verify the genuineness or otherwise
of the licence held by the driver.
Our attention has also been drawn on an unreported order of this
Court in Malla Prakasarao vs. Malla Janaki & Ors. (Civil Appeal No. 163 of
1996 disposed of on 6th August, 2002) which reads as under :
"It is not disputed that the driving licence of the driver of
the vehicle had expired on 20th November, 1982 and the
driver did not apply for renewal within 30 days of the
expiry of the said licence, as required under Section 11 of
the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939. It is also not disputed that
the driver of the vehicle did not have driving licence
when the accident took place. According to the terms of
contract, the Insurance Company has no liability to pay
any compensation where an accident takes places by a
vehicle driven by a driver without driving licence. In that
view of the matter, we do not find any merit in the
appeal.
The appeal fails and is, accordingly dismissed.
There shall be no order as to costs".
In that case, the Court presumably as in the case of Mandar Madhav
Tambe’s case (supra), was concerned with the terms and conditions of the
contract of insurance. Before the Court, no occasion arose to consider the
general terms and condition of the contract of insurance vis-‘-vis liability of
insurance under the Motor Vehicles Act.
CONCLUSION:
It is, therefore, evident from the discussions made hereinbefore that
the liability of the insurance company to satisfy the decree at the first
instance and to recover the awarded amount from the owner or driver thereof
has been holding the field for a long time.
Apart from the reasons stated hereinbefore the doctrine of stare
decisis persuades us not to deviate from the said principle.
It is well-settled rule of law and should not ordinarily be deviated
from. (See The Bengal Immunity Company Limited Vs. the State of Bihar
and Others [1955] 2 SCR 603 at 630-632, Keshav Mills Co. Ltd. Vs.
Commissioner of Income-Tax, Bombay North [1965] 2 SCR 908 at 921-
922, Union of India & Anr. Vs. Raghubir Singh (Dead) By LRs. etc. [1989]
3 SCR 316 at 323, 327, 334, M/s. Gannon Dunkerley and Co. and Others
Vs. State of Rajasthan and Others (1993) 1 SCC 364, Belgaum Gardeners
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Cooperative Production Supply and Sale Society Ltd. Vs. State of
Karanataka 1993 Supp (1) SCC 96, Hanumantappa Krishnappa Mantur and
Others Vs. State of Karnataka [1992 Supp (2) SCC 213].
We may, however, hasten to add that the Tribunal and the court must,
however, exercise their jurisdiction to issue such a direction upon
consideration of the facts and circumstances of each case and in the event
such a direction has been issued despite arriving at a finding of fact to the
effect that the insurer has been able to establish that the insured has
committed a breach of contract of insurance as envisaged under sub-clause
(ii) of clause (a) of sub-section (2) of Section 149 of the Act, the insurance
company shall be entitled to realise the awarded amount from the owner or
driver of the vehicle, as the case may be, in execution of the same award
having regard to the provisions of Sections 165 and 168 of the Act .
However, in the event, having regard to the limited scope of inquiry in the
proceedings before the Tribunal it had not been able to do so, the insurance
company may initiate a separate action therefor against the owner or the
driver of the vehicle or both, as the case may be. Those exceptional cases
may arise when the evidence becomes available to or comes to the notice of
the insurer at a subsequent stage or for one reason or the other, the insurer
was not given opportunity to defend at all. Such a course of action may also
be resorted when a fraud or collusion between the victim and the owner of
the vehicle is detected or comes to the knowledge of the insurer at a later
stage.
Although, as noticed hereinbefore, there are certain special leave
petitions wherein the persons having the vehicles at the time when the
accidents took place did not hold any licence at all, in the facts and
circumstances of the case, we do not intend to set aside the said awards.
Such awards may also be satisfied by the petitioners herein subject to their
right to recover the same from the owners of the vehicles in the manner laid
down therein. But this order may not be considered as a precedent.
Although in most of the case, we have not issued notices in view of
the fact that the question of law has to be determined; we have heard
counsel for the parties at length at this stage.
SUMMARY OF FINDINGS :
The summary of our findings to the various issues as raised in these
petitions are as follows:
(i) Chapter XI of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 providing compulsory
insurance of vehicles against third party risks is a social welfare
legislation to extend relief by compensation to victims of accidents
caused by use of motor vehicles. The provisions of compulsory
insurance coverage of all vehicles are with this paramount object
and the provisions of the Act have to be so interpreted as to
effectuate the said object.
(ii) Insurer is entitled to raise a defence in a claim petition filed under
Section 163 A or Section 166 of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988
inter alia in terms of Section 149(2)(a)(ii) of the said Act.
(iii) The breach of policy condition e.g., disqualification of driver or
invalid driving licence of the driver, as contained in sub-section
(2)(a)(ii) of section 149, have to be proved to have been committed
by the insured for avoiding liability by the insurer. Mere absence,
fake or invalid driving licence or disqualification of the driver for
driving at the relevant time, are not in themselves defences
available to the insurer against either the insured or the third
parties. To avoid its liability towards insured, the insurer has to
prove that the insured was guilty of negligence and failed to
exercise reasonable care in the matter of fulfilling the condition of
the policy regarding use of vehicles by duly licensed driver or one
who was not disqualified to drive at the relevant time.
(iv) The insurance companies are, however, with a view to avoid their
liability must not only establish the available defence(s) raised in
the said proceedings but must also establish ’breach’ on the part of
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the owner of the vehicle; the burden of proof wherefor would be on
them.
(v) The court cannot lay down any criteria as to how said burden
would be discharged, inasmuch as the same would depend upon
the facts and circumstance of each case.
(vi) Even where the insurer is able to prove breach on the part of the
insured concerning the policy condition regarding holding of a
valid licence by the driver or his qualification to drive during the
relevant period, the insurer would not be allowed to avoid its
liability towards insured unless the said breach or breaches on the
condition of driving licence is/ are so fundamental as are found to
have contributed to the cause of the accident. The Tribunals in
interpreting the policy conditions would apply "the rule of main
purpose" and the concept of "fundamental breach" to allow
defences available to the insured under section 149(2) of the Act.
(vii) The question as to whether the owner has taken reasonable care to
find out as to whether the driving licence produced by the driver,
(a fake one or otherwise), does not fulfil the requirements of law or
not will have to be determined in each case.
(viii) If a vehicle at the time of accident was driven by a person having a
learner’s licence, the insurance companies would be liable to
satisfy the decree.
(ix) The claims tribunal constituted under Section 165 read with
Section 168 is empowered to adjudicate all claims in respect of the
accidents involving death or of bodily injury or damage to property
of third party arising in use of motor vehicle. The said power of
the tribunal is not restricted to decide the claims inter se between
claimant or claimants on one side and insured, insurer and driver
on the other. In the course of adjudicating the claim for
compensation and to decide the availability of defence or defences
to the insurer, the Tribunal has necessarily the power and
jurisdiction to decide disputes inter se between insurer and the
insured. The decision rendered on the claims and disputes inter se
between the insurer and insured in the course of adjudication of
claim for compensation by the claimants and the award made
thereon is enforceable and executable in the same manner as
provided in Section 174 of the Act for enforcement and execution
of the award in favour of the claimants.
(x) Where on adjudication of the claim under the Act the tribunal
arrives at a conclusion that the insurer has satisfactorily proved its
defence in accordance with the provisions of section 149(2) read
with sub-section (7), as interpreted by this Court above, the
Tribunal can direct that the insurer is liable to be reimbursed by the
insured for the compensation and other amounts which it has been
compelled to pay to the third party under the award of the tribunal.
Such determination of claim by the Tribunal will be enforceable
and the money found due to the insurer from the insured will be
recoverable on a certificate issued by the tribunal to the Collector
in the same manner under Section 174 of the Act as arrears of land
revenue. The certificate will be issued for the recovery as arrears
of land revenue only if, as required by sub-section (3) of Section
168 of the Act the insured fails to deposit the amount awarded in
favour of the insurer within thirty days from the date of
announcement of the award by the tribunal.
(xi) The provisions contained in sub-section (4) with proviso
thereunder and sub-section (5) which are intended to cover
specified contingencies mentioned therein to enable the insurer to
recover amount paid under the contract of insurance on behalf of
the insured can be taken recourse of by the Tribunal and be
extended to claims and defences of insurer against insured by
relegating them to the remedy before regular court in cases where
on given facts and circumstances adjudication of their claims inter
se might delay the adjudication of the claims of the victims.
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For the reasons aforementioned, these petitions are dismissed but
without any order as to costs.