Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 4
CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2296 of 2000
PETITIONER:
BIMAN KRISHNA BOSE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNITED INDIA INSURANCE CO.LTD. & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/08/2001
BENCH:
V.N. Khare & Shivaraj V. Patil
JUDGMENT:
V.N. KHARE, J.:
The appellant herein and his wife Smt. Alka Bose, took out a
mediclaim insurance policy from the respondent United India Insurance
Company (hereinafter referred to as insurance company) on December 14,
1990. In July 1991, Smt. Alka Bose fell ill and as per advice of the doctor
she was admitted to a hospital on August 14, 1991. She paid Rs.8,243/-
towards the charges for her treatment to the hospital. On August 30, 1991
the appellant lodged a claim for Rs.8,243/- with the insurance company
along with necessary papers. Despite repeated requests the claim was not
honored, with the result the appellant approached the District Consumer
Grievance Redressal Forum (District Forum Calcutta) but the said complaint
was rejected. On appeal before the State Commission, the order of the
District Forum was set aside and direction was issued to the respondent
insurance company to pay to the appellant a sum of Rs.8,243/-. The
insurance company thereafter went in revision before the National Consumer
Redressal Commission which allowed the revision and set aside the order of
the State Commission. Aggrieved, the appellant filed an appeal before this
Court. On May 10, 1995 this Court allowed the appeal with costs which was
quantified at Rs.20,000/-. Despite the order of this Court, the payment was
not made with the result the appellant had to take further proceedings.
While the said litigation was going on, appellants policy fell due for
renewal. Under such circumstances, the appellant on 24.1.1996, sent a letter
along with a cheque of Rs.1,796/- to the respondent insurance company
requesting for renewal of his existing mediclaim policy. On 7.3.1996, the
insurance company declined to renew the mediclaim policy as per the advice
of the competent authority of the company. Under the aforesaid
circumstances, the appellant filed a writ petition under Article 226 of the
Constitution before the Calcutta High Court challenging the order passed by
the respondent insurance company refusing to renew the mediclaim policy.
The said writ petition was allowed and the order refusing to renew the policy
was set aside and a direction was issued to the insurance company to renew
the mediclaim policy earlier taken out by the appellant. Aggrieved, the
respondent insurance company filed an appeal against the judgment of
learned Single Judge. The Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court while
agreeing with the view taken by the learned Single Judge substantially
dismissed the appeal. Yet, the High Court directed the appellant to take
fresh mediclaim policy, as the renewal of mediclaim policy cannot be
granted with retrospective effect, as the period for which renewal was
required has already expired. It is against the said part of the order the
appellant has preferred this appeal.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 4
The appellant, Biman Krishna Bose, has appeared in person. He
argued that the High Court even after setting aside the order refusing to
renew the policy, was not justified in directing the appellant to take fresh
mediclaim policy. According to the appellant, by the said order of the High
Court he has been placed at a great disadvantageous position. The appellant
referred to the exclusion clause of the policy taken out by him. Relevant
clauses 2.1 and 2.1.14 of the mediclaim policy run as under:
2.1 The Company shall not be liable to make
any payment under this policy in respect of any
expenses whatsoever incurred by any Insured
Person in connect with or in respect of: -
2.1.14 All diseases/injuries which are pre-
existing when the cover incepts for the first time.
On the strength of the exclusion clause, the appellant urged that in case the
appellant is required to take fresh mediclaim policy, all the diseases which
have surfaced during the period the policy was not renewed shall be treated
as pre-existing diseases and the same would neither be covered by the fresh
policy nor he will be paid the money which he has incurred for treatment of
the said diseases during the relevant time and, therefore, the order of the
High Court be set aside. We find substance in the argument.
Under Section 9 of the General Insurance Business (Nationalisation)
Act, 1972 (hereinafter referred to as the Act), General Insurance
Corporation of India (in short GIC) was set up as a government company for
the purpose of superintendence, control and carrying out the business of
general insurance in the country. Under Section 24 of the Act, the acquiring
companies were given the exclusive privilege to carry on general insurance
business in India. Under Section 3 (a) of the Act, an acquiring company has
been defined to mean any Indian Insurance Company in which any other
company has been merged in pursuance to the amalgamation scheme
formulated under the Act. The respondent insurance company is one of such
acquiring company. A perusal of the provisions of the Act makes it evident
that it is only the acquiring companies which have exclusive privilege of
carrying on the general insurance business in India, under the supervision
and control of General Insurance Corporation of India. Excepting the
acquiring companies no other company in private sector has a right and
privilege to carry on general insurance business in India and to that extent
the acquiring companies have a monopoly over such business. In such a
situation, acquiring companies have the trappings of the State being other
authorities under Article 12 of the Constitution of India. The acquiring
companies thus being the State under Article 12 of the Constitution are
expected to act fairly and reasonably. In the present case, what we find is
that the respondent insurance company refused to renew the insurance policy
of the appellant on the ground of his past conduct. The past conduct
attributed is that the appellant had gone in litigation for payment of his claim
lodged by him with the respondent insurance company. If an insured lodges
a claim with the company and the company does not honor the claim, the
insured is left with no alternative but to knock the doors of court of law.
Merely because the appellant had approached the Consumer Forum and this
Court for redressal of his grievance, can such an act be attributed as bad
record as to dis-entitle the appellant to get his policy renewed. The answer
is no. Where an insurance company under the provisions of the Act having
assumed monopoly in the business of general insurance in the country and
thus acquired the trappings of the State being other authorities under
Article 12 of the Constitution, it requires to satisfy the requirement of
reasonableness and fairness while dealing with the customers. Even, in an
area of contractual relations, the State and its instrumentalities are enjoined
with the obligations to act with fairness and in doing so, can take into
consideration only the relevant materials. They must not take any irrelevant
and extraneous consideration while arriving to a decision. Arbitrariness
should not appear in their actions or decisions. In the present case, what we
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 4
find is that arbitrariness is writ large in the actions of the respondent
company when it refused to renew the mediclaim policy of the insured on
the ground of his past conduct i.e. having gone into litigation for payment of
his claim against the respondent company. We are, therefore, in agreement
with the view taken by the High Court that the order of the respondent
company refusing to renew the mediclaim policy of the appellant was unfair
and arbitrary.
Coming to the next question whether the appellants policy was
required to be renewed with effect from the date when it fell due for
renewal. The view taken by the High Court is that an insurance policy
cannot be renewed for the period which has already expired. It is not
disputed that original mediclaim policy taken out by the appellant provided
for its renewal. It is also not disputed that the appellant applied for renewal
of the insurance policy well in time and sent a cheque towards its premium.
The respondent company has not challenged the order of the High Court
setting aside the order refusing to renew the mediclaim policy of the insured.
Under such facts and circumstances of the case, whether the appellant can be
directed to take a fresh mediclaim policy on the premise that no renewal of
the policy can be ordered for the expired period.
A renewal of an insurance policy means repetition of the original
policy. When renewed, the policy is extended and the renewed policy in the
identical terms from a different date of its expiration comes into force. In
common parlance, by renewal, the old policy is revived and it is sort of a
substitution of obligations under the old policy unless such policy provides
otherwise. It may be that on renewal, a new contract comes into being, but
the said contract is on the same terms and conditions as that of the original
policy. Where an insurance company which has exclusive privilege to carry
on insurance business has refused to renew the mediclaim policy of an
insured on extraneous and irrelevant consideration, any disease which an
insured had contacted during the period when the policy was not renewed,
such decease cannot be covered under a fresh insurance policy in view of the
exclusion clause. The exclusion clause provides that the pre-existing
diseases would not be covered under the fresh insurance policy. If we take
the view that the mediclaim policy cannot be renewed with retrospective
effect, it would give handle to the insurance company to refuse the renewal
of the policy on extraneous consideration thereby deprive the claim of
insured for treatment of diseases which have appeared during the relevant
time and further deprive the insured for all time to come to cover those
diseases under an insurance policy by virtue of the exclusion clause. This
being the disastrous effect of wrongful refusal of renewal of the insurance
policy, the mischief and harm done to the insured must be remedied. We
are, therefore, of the view that once it is found that the act of an insurance
company was arbitrary in refusing to renew the policy, the policy is required
to be renewed with effect from the date when it fell due for its renewal.
Learned counsel appearing for the insurance company argued that
since the appellant has not deposited the premium for subsequent years, the
policy cannot be renewed with retrospective effect. It is not disputed that
the appellant sent a cheque for Rs.1,796/- towards premium but the same
was returned to the appellant. Thereafter, the parties had been litigating and
respondent insurance company stopped having any correspondence with the
appellant. Therefore, there arose no occasion for the appellant to deposit the
premium. We accordingly reject the argument of the learned counsel for the
respondent.
For the aforesaid reasons, we are of the view that the High Court
committed error in directing the appellant to take fresh medicalim policy
even after setting aside the order of refusal to renew the mediclaim policy by
the insurance company. The order passed by the High Court to that extent is
not sustainable in law. We, therefore, set aside the order of the High Court
to the extent it directed the appellant to take a fresh mediclaim policy. We,
further direct that if the appellant applies for renewal of his mediclaim
policy for the expired period and pays the premium, the respondent company
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 4
shall renew the said mediclaim policy forthwith.
The appeal is allowed with costs, which we quantify at Rs. 5,000/-.
J.
(V.N. Khare)
J.
(Shivaraj V. Patil)
New Delhi,
August 2, 2001.