Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 6
PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SUNIL KUMAR GHOSH.
DATE OF JUDGMENT21/08/1984
BENCH:
THAKKAR, M.P. (J)
BENCH:
THAKKAR, M.P. (J)
SEN, A.P. (J)
CITATION:
1984 AIR 1737 1985 SCR (1) 555
1984 SCC (4) 246 1984 SCALE (2)376
ACT:
Indian Railways Act 1890, Section 82A-Scope of-Bogie of
passenger train shunted at railway station-Passenger
travelling in bogie falling down from train and hand crushed
by train-Railway’s liability for compensation-Extend of.
’accident-What is-Explained.
Words and Phrases: ’accident-Meaning of-Section 82A,
Indian Railways Act 1890.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent was travelling by train as a bona fide
passenger. While the bogie in which he was travelling was
being shunted at a Railway Station, the respondent fell down
from the train near the water column at the end of the
platform and his right hand was crushed by that part of the
train which was being shunted.
The District Judge did not accept the version of the
respondent that the bogie in which he was travelling
received a sudden jerk and that he fell down on that
account, and dismissed the application for compensation,
In appeal, the High Court, held that the word
’accident’ in section 82A must mean to include within its
ambit all incidents resulting in the death of or bodily
injury to any passenger during his rail journey, occuring in
the course of working of a railway, if it involves a
passenger train or apart thereof, and awarded compensation
on the premise that it was not essential to establish that
there was an ’accident to the train’ by which the passenger
was travelling.
In the Appeal to this Court, on the question of
liability of the Railway Administration under Section 82A of
the Indian Railways Act, 1890.
^
HELD: 1. The liability under Section 82A will not be
attracted in the case of a mishap or injury sustained by a
passenger on account of falling down whilst getting on or
off a running or stationary train or sustained when he slips
in a compartment or when something falls on him whilst
travelling. All such mishaps, when not connected with the
accident
556
to the train, or a part of it, would be accidents to the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 6
passenger only. And until both the mishaps take place, one
to the train, and another, a sympathetic one to the
passenger, the liability under section 82A of the Act will
not be attracted. So also, unless the loss or damage to the
property of a passenger is attributable to the accident to
the train, liability under Section 82A will not be
attracted. [562G-563A]
In the instant case, liability under Section 82A will
not be attracted, as it cannot be said that there has been
an accident to the train and the mishap has nexus with it.
[562G]
2. The philosophy of Section 82A appears to be to turn
an existing ’fault liability into a ’fault’ or no fault’
liability. And presumably in order to be ’fair’ to the
passengers who pay the ’fare’ for a safe (safe from accident
to the train) journey, the legislature, with an eye on
social welfare, has provided for compensation by a summary
proceeding and has made the liability fault-free. [561B-D]
3. That the ’accident’ envisioned by the first part of
Section 82A(1) is an accident ’to’ the ’train’ or ’a part of
the train’ is self-evident. The Section speaks of an
accident by reason of either (1) collision or (2) derailment
or (3) other accident to a train. [560G-H]
4. What is provided is compensation for death or injury
caused or loss sustained on account of accident ’to’ the
train. What is ’not’ provided is compensation for death of
the passenger ’whilst’ travelling or injury sustained by a
passenger ’whilst travelling on the train, say by reason of
his own act default or misfortune, which has no nexus with
the ’accident’ to the train.’ What the section does is to
turn a liability which was contingent on fault into an
’absolute’ liability. What however, it does not do, is to
provide a free insurance cover to the person and property of
a passenger so that compensation can be claimed for the
accidental death of or injury to the passenger and or loss
or damage to his property even when there has been no
’accident’ to the train carrying such a passenger.
[561E-G]
5. An accident is an occurrence or an event which is
unforeseen and startles one when it takes place but does not
startle one when it does not take place. It is the happening
of the unexpected, not the happening of the expected, which
is called an accident. An event or occurrence the happening
of which is ordinarily expected in the normal course by
almost every one undertaking a rail journey cannot be called
an ’accident’. But the happening of something which is not
inherent in the normal course of events and which is not
ordinarily expected to happen or occur is called a mishap or
an accident. A collision of two trains or derailment of a
train or blowing up of a train is something which no one
ordinarily expects in the course of a journey. That is why
it falls within the parameters of the definition of
accident. But a jolt to the bogie which is detached from one
train and attached to another cannot be termed as an
accident. No shunting can take place without such a jerk or
an impact at least when it is attached or annexed to a train
by a shunting engine. if a passenger
557
tumbles inside the compartment or tumbles out of the
compartment when he is getting inside the compartment or
stepping out of the compartment it cannot be said that an
accident has occurred to the train or part of the train. It
is doubtless an accident ’to the passenger’. But not to the
train.
[562B-F]
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 6
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Special Leave Petition
(Civil) No. 11525 of 1983
From the Judgment and Order dated the 10th March, 1983
of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Misc. (First) Appeal No.
88 of 1979
M. S. Gujral and R. N. Poddar for the Petitioners.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
THAKKAR, J. Two mishaps, one ’to the train’ by which a
passenger is travelling, and another, a sympthetic one,
having nexus with the former, and going arm-in-arm with it,
’to the passenger’ himself, must occur in the course of the
same transaction in order to attract liability of the
Railway Administration under Section 82A of the Indian
Railways Act, 1890, rightly contends counsel for the
Railway.
The High Court, in our opinion, was in error in not
upholding this unexceptionable proposition and in awarding
compensation to a passenger on the premise that it was not
essential to establish that there was an ’accident to the
train, by which the passenger was travelling.
Counsel for the Railway was fair enough (we very highly
appreciate this gesture) to state that it was on account of
the erroneous interpretation placed by the High Court which
was likely to give rise to untenable claims in future,
rather than the relatively small amount awarded to the
passenger, that the Railway was obliged to approach this
Court by way of the present Special Leave Petition. We
declined to interfere with the operative order of the High
Court in exercise of jurisdiction under Art. 136 of the
Constitution of India having regard to the size of the award
(both sides would have expended more than the amount at
stake in litigation expenses if leave was granted) but
observed that the view taken by the High Court in regard to
the question of law involved in the matter was erroneous. We
now
558
proceed to articulate our reasons in support of the view
expressed by us.
The question of interpretation of Section 82A of the
Act has arisen in the following contextual backdrop.
The respondent was travelling by train in his capacity
as a bonafide passenger. While the bogie in which the
respondent was travelling was being shunted at a Railway
Station, the respondent accidentally fell down from the
train, near the water column at the end of the platform, and
his right hand was crushed by that part of the train which
was being shunted As to how exactly the respondent sustained
the injury, the versions of the parties differ. The District
Judge did not accept the version of the respondent that the
bogie in which he was travelling received a sudden jerk and
he fell down on that account. The Railway Administration on
the other hand contended that the respondent sustained the
injury in the manner described in the relevant
contemporaneous record (Assistant Station Master’s Diary)
namely:
"the injury was sustained by the appellant in
going to the rear end of the train and possibly
boarding one of the bogies which was being detached
during the shunting operation and in this process he
appears to have been hit by the water column when these
bogies (a part of the train) were being moved during
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 6
the shunting operation."
Now Section 82A of the Act in so far as material reads
thus:-
"82A Liability of Railway Administration in respect of
accidents to trains carrying passengers-
(1) When in the course of working a railway accident
occurs, being either a collision between trains of
which one is a train carrying passengers or the
derailment of or other accident to a train or any
part of a train carrying passengers then, whether
or not there has been any wrongful act, neglect or
default on the part of the railway administration
559
such as would entitle a person who has been
injured or has suffered loss to maintain an action
and recover damages in respect thereof, the
railway administration shall, notwithstanding any
other provision of law to the contrary, be liable
to pay compensation to the extent set out in sub-
section (2) and to that extent only for loss
occasioned by the death of a passenger dying as a
result of such accident, and for personal injury
and loss, destruction or deterioration of animals
or goods by the passenger and accompanying the
passenger in his compartment or on the train,
sustained as a result of such accident.
(2) This liability of a railway administration under
this Section shall in no case exceed fifty
thousand rupees in respect of any one person."
(Emphasis added).
In interpreting Section 82A the High Court speaks
thus:-
"The word accident therefore according to its
ordinary meaning, which must be given to it and
construed in the context in which it is used in Section
82A must mean to include within its ambit all incidents
resulting in the death of or bodily injury to any
passenger during his rail journey, occurring in the
course of working a railway, if it involves a passenger
train or a part thereof. Any incident treated as
railway accident involving a passenger train by the
public at large and the railway staff should be treated
to be such an accident, falling within the ambit of
Section 82A. Any mishap or misfortune in the working of
a railway involving a passenger train or a part thereof
resulting in the death of or personal injury to a
passenger travelling therein, during his rail journey
is an accident within the ambit of Section 82A. This
will, of course exclude any incident voluntarily and
consciously invited by the passenger, i.e. suicide by
jumping in front of the moving train."
In our opinion the High Court has shut its eyes to the
560
significance of the essential precondition engrafted in
Section 82A in regard to the ’accident, to the train’. Why
we say so will become evident presently.
A ’body scan’ of the aforesaid provision (Section 82A)
reveals that:-
(1) The machinery of the Section is set in motion only
provided there is an ’accident’.
(2) The accident must be ’to’ the train’ or ’part of
the train’ carrying passengers.
(3) The accident to the train carrying passengers may
be due to:
(a) Collision of two trains one of which is the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 6
train carrying passengers; or
(b) derailment of such train; or
(c) other accident ’to’ such a train.
(4) In case any passenger travelling by such train
dies, or sustains any injury to his person or
property, as a result of or on account of such
accident to the train or a part of the train
carrying passengers, compensation to the extent
provided in the Section will become payable.
(5) Such compensation will be payable regardless of
whether or not the accident to the train carrying
passengers is due to negligence or fault on the
part of the railway administration.
That the ’accident’ envisioned by the first part of
Section 82A (i) is an accident ’to’ the ’train’ or ’a part
of the train’ is self-evident. The Section speaks of an
accident by reason of either (1) collision or (2) derailment
or (3) other accident to a train. There is therefore no room
for any ambiguity on that score.
561
So also it cannot be gainsaid that the accident,
adverted to therein cannot refer to an accident to a
passenger ’whilst’ on a passenger train even if the said
train is not at all involved in any accident. Common sense
and reason buttress this proposition, for, the philosophy of
Section 82A appears to be to turn an existing ’fault’
liability into a ’fault or no fault’ liability. Why? Because
a carrier who transports passengers as a part of his
business, when he charges fare, impliedly guarantees to
carry him with safety in so far as such safety is within his
power. It is within his power to transport the passenger
without an accident to the train, for such an accident is
not something which is ordinarily or in the normal course of
events inherent in the running of a train. And presumably in
order to be ’fair’ to the passengers who pay the ’fare’ for
a safe (safe from accident to the train) journey, the
legislature, with an eye on social welfare, has provided for
compensation by a summary proceeding and has made the
liability fault-free.
But to ensure safe travel is not to "insure" the
passenger against accident to himself ’whilst’ travelling.
The distinction deserves to be spot-lighted. What ’is’
provided is compensation for death or injury caused or loss
sustained on account of accident ’to’ the train. What is
’not’ provided is compensation for death of the passenger
’whilst’ travelling or injury sustained by a passenger
’whilst’ travelling on the train, say, by reason of his own
act, default, or misfortune, which has no nexus with the
’accident to the train’. In other words what the Section
does is to turn a liability which was ’contingent on fault’
into an ’absolute’ liability. What, however, it does not do,
is to provide a free ’insurance cover’ to the person and
property of a passenger so that compensation can be claimed
for the accidental death of or injury to the passenger
and/or loss or damage to his property even when there has
been no ’accident’ to the train carrying such a passenger.
What is the position when a passenger falls down from
the train while the bogie, in which he is travelling, is
being shunted? Say, when he is standing in the door frame or
his trying
562
to get in or get out of the train, on account of the jolt to
the bogie at the time of impact with the rest of the train?
Is it an accident ’to the train’ so as to attract the
liability under Section 82A? The answer substantially
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 6
depends on the answer to the question: what is an
’accident’? An accident is an occurrence or an event which
is unforeseen and startles one when it takes place but does
not startle one when it does not take place. It is the
happening of the unexpected, not the happening of the
expected, which is called an accident. In other words an
event or occurrence the happening of which is ordinarily
expected in the normal course by almost every one
undertaking a rail journey cannot be called an ’accident’.
But the happening of something which is not inherent in the
normal course of events, and which is not ordinarily
expected to happen or occur, is called a mishap or an
accident. Now a collision of two trains or derailment of a
train or blowing up of a train is something which no one
ordinarily expects in the course of a journey. That is why
it falls within the parameters of the definition of
accident. But a jolt to the bogie which is detached from one
train and attached to another cannot be termed as an
accident. No shunting can take place without such a jerk or
an impact atleast when it is attached or annexed to a train
by a shunting engine. If a passenger tumbles inside the
compartment or tumbles out of the compartment when he is
getting inside the compartment, or stepping out of the
compartment, it cannot be said that an accident has occurred
to the train or a part of the train. It is doubtless an
accident ’to the passenger’. But not to the train. Otherwise
it will have to be held that every time a bogie is detached
in the course of shunting operation and attached or annexed
to a train in the course of the said operation the train
meets with an accident. And if such an event or occurrence
is to be ordinarily expected as a part of every day life, it
cannot be termed as an accident-accident to the train (or a
part of it).
In the case of a mishap to the passenger in such
circumstances it cannot be said that there has been an
accident to the train and the mishap has nexus with it. The
liability under Section 82A will not therefore be attracted
in such cases. Or in the case of a mishap to a passenger in
similar circumstances, such as an injury sustained on
account of falling down whilst getting on or off a running
or stationary train or sustained when he slips in a
compartment or when something falls on him whilst
travelling. All such
563
mishaps, when not connected with the accident to the train,
or a part of it, would be accidents to the passenger only.
And until both the mishaps take place, one to the train, and
another, a sympathetic, one to the passenger, the liability
under Section 82A of the Act will not be attracted. So also,
unless the loss or damage to the property of a passenger is
attributable to the accident to the train, liability under
Section 82A will not be attracted.
In our opinion, Section 82A of the Indian Railways Act,
1890 is not capable of the rather strained interpretation
placed by the High Court and the true position of law is as
unfolded in the discussion made heretobefore. That is the
reason why we have been constrained to observe that the
decision of the High Court is not correct, whilst disposing
of the petition for special leave
N.V.K.
564