Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 1778-79 of 2001
PETITIONER:
RATHI MENON
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 13/03/2001
BENCH:
K.T. Thomas & R.P. Sethi.
JUDGMENT:
THOMAS, J.
Leave granted.
L...I...T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T..J
Misfortunes do not come single is an old adage but even
the author of that adage would not have imagined that
multiplicity of misfortunes would visit the same person in a
series on the same night, that too within the same hour.
One may ask aghast, can the destiny be so cruel to a damsel.
Rathi Menon, a Commerce graduate of 22 years, was thrown
off from a running train during the night of a jinxed train
journey as the consequence of a sudden jerk of the train.
In the impact her spinal cord was ruptured and in a trice
she turned a paraplegic. After she fell down, the wheels of
the train ran over her right arm severing it from the
shoulder point forever. The train, not knowing what it did
to one of its lawful and innocent passengers, continued its
running leaving the paraplegic on the track itself on that
dreadful night.
It was physiologically impossible for the young lady to
move her leg from the position where she fell. Her right
leg happened to remain on the rail-track, and unless a Good
Samaritan had passed by that track during the night she had
to remain there unmoved. As none like that came the poor
female human being remained on the track bleeding and
unattended by anyone.
Alas, within half an hour another train came along the
same track which, without knowing that a badly mauled human
being was lying ahead, ran over her right leg causing a
sudden amputation of that leg also. Thus, within the span
of less than an hour, she became a one-handed and one-legged
paraplegic. All those disasters happened during the night
of 3.9.1996. While she remained on the track unattended by
any one she happened to be spotted by an engine driver who
was shunting a railway engine. He got her removed from that
scene to the district hospital, and then to a Medical
College Hospital where she had to undergo a long period of
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hospitalisation. However, she remained immovable forever.
Though she was unable to move by herself she was able to
make two petitions before the Railway Claims Tribunal on
27.6.1997, in respect of the aforesaid two accidents. The
Claims Tribunal awarded a total amount of six lakhs of
rupees with the regret that it could not award more due to
the ceiling imposed by the statutory rules. However the
Claims Tribunal directed interest to accrue on the amount at
the rate of 15% per annum from the date of default.
The Railways Department, mindless as it was, dragged the
helpless lady to the High Court of Kerala before which the
Administration filed an appeal challenging the award passed
by the Claims Tribunal only on the ground that the amount
awarded was excessive according to law of the
Administrations interpretation.
The misfortune spree which was haunting the unfortunate
lady bubbled up once again when a Division Bench of the High
Court had chosen to slash down substantially the
compensation amount awarded to her, on the premise that the
amount granted by the Claims Tribunal could not have been
awarded as the disaster had not visited her after 1.11.1997.
The Division Bench expressed the helplessness of law in
helping the hapless female in her misery of the superlative
dimension.
Though her body was disabled due to the paraplegia
afflicted consequent to the rupture of the spinal cord, and
though she became limbless in a major measure, she collected
morale to approach the apex Court to ask whether the limbs
of law could be so stretched as to give the limbless girl
solace at least in the form of pecuniary compensation. We,
therefore, heard Mr. K. Sukumaran, learned senior counsel
for the appellant and Mrs. Rekha Pandey, learned counsel
for the Railway Administration.
There is no dispute on the factual position of which the
following are some more details. Rathi menon lost her
father earlier, and her mother became a widow. She passed
her degree in commerce and secured a job in Bangalore. In
her early twenties she was in search of better career
prospects and it earned some response. She was called for
an interview at Trichur. It was that trip which turned out
the most cursed one in her life. On her way back to
Bangalore on 3.9.1996 she boarded the Island Express (bound
for Bangalore) at 8.00 p.m. from Palakkad Railway Station.
After the train started moving and when it collected
momentum her ill-luck prompted her to have a face wash for
which she moved to the wash basin situated next to the door
of the train. While washing her face the train jerked
violently at a turning and in that impact she was thrown out
of the train. What happened thereafter has been summarized
earlier and cannot be repeated over again.
As the above facts are not disputed by the Railway
Administration appellant was relieved of the burden to prove
those facts averred in her claim petition. Thus, the only
question which remained for the Claims Tribunal to decide
was regarding the amount of compensation payable to her.
Now the only question remaining is whether the High Court
was so helpless that learned Judges could not confirm the
amount awarded to her by the Claims Tribunal.
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Appellants claim for the compensation was based on
Section 124A of the Railways Act 1989 (for short the Act).
The said Section itself was introduced as per Railway
(Amendment) Act 28 of 1994. The Section provided for
awarding compensation to victims of any untoward incident
which occurs in the course of working of a railway. The
expression untoward incident was alien to Railways Act
before Parliament inserted such an expression in the statute
as per the Amendment Act 28 of 1994. Prior to it the
Railways could have granted compensation only to the victims
of accident. As the definition of accident in the Act did
not embrace instances of other types of disasters which
frequently happened during train journeys, the Parliament in
its wisdom, decided to insert a new category of disasters,
both man- made and otherwise, to be the causes of action for
claiming compensation.
It was in compliance of the aforesaid intention of the
Parliament that the category untoward incident was
included by defining its contours in section 123 of the Act.
The Sections consists of two segments. In the first segment
acts such as terrorists acts, riotous attacks, robbery and
decoity which visit the passengers in the train as well as
those who wait within the precincts of Railway Station are
included. In the second segment, which is the relevant part
for the purpose of this case, is included the accidental
falling of any passenger from a train carrying passengers.
Now we have to see Section 124A which is the provision
imposing liability on the Railway Administration to pay
compensation to the victims of untoward incidents. Its
proviso excludes from its purview persons who committed or
attempted to commit suicide, persons who inflicted injury by
self, and those who committed criminal acts or acts done in
a state of intoxication or insanity and also the cases
affected by any natural cause of disease etc. After
excluding such persons and cases, Section 124A can be read
thus:
When in the course of working a railway an untoward
incident occurs, then whether or not there has been any
wrongful act, neglect or default on the part of the railway
administration such as would entitle a passenger, who has
been injured or the dependant of a passenger who has been
killed, to maintain an action and recover damages in respect
thereof, the railway administration shall, notwithstanding
anything contained in any other law, be liable to pay
compensation to such extent as may be prescribed and to that
extent only for loss occasioned by the death of, or injury
to a passenger as a result of such untoward incident.
The liability of the Railway Administration in such a
case would be to pay compensation, but the extent of such
compensation is as may be prescribed which means
prescribed by the rules made under the Act. Section 129 of
the Act empowered the Central Government to make such rules.
The Railway Accident Compensation Rules 1990 (for short
the Rules) were made by the Central Government in exercise
of the powers conferred on it by Section 129 of the Act.
Rule 3(1) says that the amount of compensation payable in
respect of death or injuries shall be as specified in the
Schedule. The Rules as well as the Schedule were amended
with effect from 1.11.1997. After the amendment Rule 3(2)
reads thus:
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The amount of compensation payable for an
injury not specified in Part II or Part III
of the Schedule but which in the opinion of
the claims Tribunal, is such as to deprive a
person of all capacity to do work, shall be
Rupees four lakhs.
Item No.2 of Part III of the Schedule relates to
amputation below shoulder with stump less than 8 from tip
of acromion for which an amount of Rs.3.20 lakhs is shown
as the compensation.
Item 20 in Part III of the Schedule relates to
amputation below knee with stump exceeding three and a half
inch but not exceeding five inches, for which an amount of
Rupees two lakhs is shown as compensation.
Before the said amendment of the Rules and the Schedule
which came into effect on 1.11.1997 the above amounts were
respectively two lakhs (instead of rupees four lakhs) and
1.40 lakhs (instead of 3.20 lakhs) and one lakh (instead of
two lakhs). Such amounts were revised by the Central
Government in 1990. The revision of the rates was made
after 8 years and thus the new rates were incorporated by
amending the Schedule.
Learned judges of the Division Bench of the High Court
of Kerala, for reaching the conclusion that appellant is not
entitled to the amount indicated in the Rules as they stand
now on account of the fact that the accident happened prior
to 1.11.1997, considered among other things the effect of
Section 126 of the Act. That Section enables an applicant
to claim interim relief. Sub-section (2) of that section
empowers the Claims Tribunal to pay to the applicant who has
sustained the injury such sum as it considers reasonable
for affording such relief, so however, that the sum paid
shall not exceed the amount of compensation payable at such
rates as may be prescribed." The Division Bench thereafter
concluded thus:
The wording of sub-section (2) of Section
126 would show that the liability is saddled
as soon as the accident happens, not when
the quantum is determined. The wording of
section 124 and 124A also would clearly show
that the liability of the Railway
Administration to pay compensation arises as
soon as the accident or untoward incident,
as the case may be, happens. But the quantum
of compensation is to be as prescribed.
Prescription is under the Rules. Therefore,
it is clear that the liability to pay
compensation is to the extent prescribed
under the Rules in force at the time of the
accident or the untoward incident, as the
case may be.
It was on the above premise that the Division Bench of
the High Court slashed down the compensation amount
considerably from what the Claims Tribunal awarded. In our
perception the provision for payment of interim relief
indicated in Section 126 of the Act has no utility for
deciding as to what should be the total amount of
compensation payable to the injured or other claimant. The
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right of the injured to claim compensation as well as the
liability of the Railway Administration are both reposed in
Section 124A of the Act. The right is to maintain an action
and recover the damages. The liability is to pay
compensation to such extent as may be prescribed.
The collocation of the words as may be prescribed in
Section 124A of the Act is to be understood as to mean as
may be prescribed from time to time. The relevance of the
date of untoward incident is that the right to claim
compensation from the Railway Administration would be
acquired by the injured on that date. The statute did not
fix the amount of compensation, but left it to be determined
by the Central Government from time to time by means of
rules. This delegation to the Central Government indicates
that it was difficult for the Parliament to fix the amount
because compensation amount is a varying phenomenon and the
Government would be in a far advantageous position to
ascertain what would be the just and reasonable compensation
in respect of a myriad different kinds of injuries by taking
into account very many factors. What the legislature wanted
was that the victim of the accident must be paid
compensation and the amount must represent a reality which
means the amount should be fair and reasonable compensation.
Government have the better wherewithals to ascertain and fix
such amount. It is for the said reason that the Parliament
left it to the Government to discharge that function.
Sections 124 and 124A of the Act speak the same language
that the Railway Administration shall be liable to pay
compensation. As pointed above, it is the liability of the
Railway Administration to pay compensation to such extent
as may be prescribed. Hence the time of ordering payment
is more important to determine as to what is the extent of
the compensation which is prescribed by the rules to be
disbursed to the claimant.
In this context a reference to Section 129 of the Act
appears useful. The Central Government is empowered by the
said provision to make rules by notification to carry out
the purposes of this chapter. It is evident that one of
the purposes of this chapter is that the injured victims in
railway accidents and untoward incidents must get
compensation. Though the word compensation is not defined
in the Act or in the Rules it is the giving of an equivalent
or substitute of equivalent value. In Blacks Law
Dictionary, compensation is shown as equivalent in money
for a loss sustained; or giving back an equivalent in
either money which is but the measure of value, or in actual
value otherwise conferred; or recompense in value for some
loss, injury or service especially when it is given by
statute. It means when you pay the compensation in terms
of money it must represent, on the date of ordering such
payment, the equivalent value.
In this context we may look at Section 128(1) also. It
says that the right of any person to claim compensation
before the Claims Tribunal as indicated in Section 124 or
124A shall not affect the right of any such person to
recover compensation payable under any other law for the
time being in force. But there is an interdict that no
person shall be entitled to claim compensation for more than
once in respect of the same accident. This means that the
party has two alternatives, one is to avail himself of his
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civil remedy to claim compensation based on common law or
any other statutory provision, and the other is to apply
before the Claims Tribunal under Section 124 or 124A of the
Act. As he cannot avail himself of both the remedies he has
to choose one between the two. The provisions in Chapter
XIII of the Act are intended to provide a speedier remedy to
the victims of accident and untoward incidents. If he were
to choose the latter that does not mean that he should be
prepared to get a lesser amount. He is given the assurance
by the legislature that Central Government is saddled with
the task of prescribing fair and just compensation in the
rules from time to time. The provisions are not intended to
give a gain to the Railway Administration but they are meant
to afford just and reasonable compensation to the victims in
a speedier measure. If a person files a suit the amount of
compensation will depend upon what the court considers just
and reasonable on the date of determination. Hence when he
goes before the Claims Tribunal claiming compensation the
determination of the amount should be as on the date of such
determination.
The asinine consequence of accepting the interpretation
placed by the Division Bench of the High Court can be
demonstrated through an illustration. If a person sustained
injury as described in Rules 3(2) of the Rules, in an
accident in a train on 31.10.1997, and another person
sustains the same kind of injury in another accident in a
train the next day i.e. 1.11.1997, when both persons made
separate applications before the same Claims Tribunal for
compensation, the Tribunal can award Rs.2 lakhs only in the
first case and Rs. 4 lakhs in the second case. What a
woeful discrimination, if not a glaringly unfair
differentiation. See the interval between the two accidents
of identical features. It was only a few hours, but the
difference in the compensation amount is enormously high.
Any court should avert an interpretation which would lead to
such a manifestly absurd fall out, unless the court is
compelled otherwise by any mandatory provision.
Why the Central Government decided to make such a vast
variation in the amount of compensation while exercising the
powers conferred by Section 129 of the Act. It cannot be
conceived that the Government wanted to make a
discrimination between those victims who suffered the
accident prior to 1.11.1997 and those who suffered the
identical injury in a similar accident on or after that
date. The raison detre for making such variation is easily
discernible. The Central Government wanted to update the
compensation amount. Rupee value is not an unchanging unit
in the monitory system. Students of economic history know
that currency value remained static before the Second World
War. But the post World War II witnessed the new phenomenon
of vast fluctuations in money value of currency notes in
circulation in each nation. When the U.S. Dollar has
registered a steep upward rise, currencies in many other
countries made downward slip. What was the value of one
Hundred rupees twenty years ago is vastly different from
what it is today. This substantial change has caused its
impact on the cost of living also.
The Central Government while changing the figure in the
compensation amount after an interval of a decade was only
influenced by the desire to update the money value of the
compensation. In other words, what you were to pay ten
years ago to one person cannot be the same if it is paid
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today in the same figure of currency notes. It is for the
purpose of meeting the reality that Central Government
changed the figures.
The unjust consequence resulting from the interpretation
which the Division Bench placed can be demonstrated in
another plane also. If a person who sustained injury in a
railway accident or in an untoward incident was disabled
from making an application immediately and he makes the
application a few years hence, is he to get the compensation
in terms of the money value which prevailed on the date of
the accident? Suppose a Tribunal wrongly dismissed a claim
after a few years of filing the application and the claimant
approaches the High Court in appeal. As it happens quite
often now, some High Courts could take up such an appeal
only after the lapse of many years and if the appeal is
decided in favour of the claimant after so many years, what
a pity if the amount awarded is only in terms of the figure
indicated on the date of the accident.
From all these, we are of the definite opinion that the
Claims Tribunal must consider what the rules prescribed at
the time of making the order for payment of the
compensation.
Learned Judges of the Division Bench in the High Court
referred to the decisions of this Court in Pratap Narain
Singh Deo vs. Srinivas Sabata and anr. {1976 (1) SCC 289},
P.A. Narayanan vs. Union of India and ors. {1998 (3) SCC
67} and Maghar Singh vs. Jashwant Singh {1998 (9) SCC 134},
in order to gain support for the conclusion arrived at in
the impugned judgment. Among them P.A. Narayanan vs.
Union of India arose from a writ petition filed for
compensation in respect of the death of claimants wife in a
railway accident which happened on 3.1.1981. The High Court
dismissed the writ petition against the claimant and
approached this Court by special leave. A plea was made
that compensation could be granted in accordance with the
rates prescribed by the rules under Railways Act, 1989. The
counsel for the Railway Administration disputed the said
contention on the ground that the said Act cannot have any
retrospective operation. A two-Judge Bench of this Court
(Dr. A.S. Anand, as His Lordship then was, and S.
Rajendra Babu, J) acceded to the said plea and granted a sum
of Rs.2 lakhs as compensation, which is the sum prescribed
in the Rules then in force, despite the fact that the Act
itself came into force only in 1990. The said decision,
instead of supporting the view taken by the Division Bench
of the High Court, is more in support of the approach we
have made above.
In the other two decisions referred to by the Division
Bench the claims made under the Workmens Compensation Act,
1923 (W.C. Act, for short) were the subject matter. In
Pratap Narain Singh Deo (supra) the claimant workman
sustained injuries and one of his arms was amputated in the
course of his employment on 6.7.1968, the Commissioner under
the Act passed an order on 6.5.1969 directing the employer
to pay compensation together with penalty and interest for
delayed payment. The employer challenged the said order
before the High Court contending that penalty and interest
could not be awarded as his liability to pay had arisen only
when the Commissioner passed the order and not earlier. The
High Court repelled such a contention. Against this the
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employer approached this Court by special leave. A four-
Judge Bench of this Court held thus: The employer
therefore became liable to pay the compensation as soon as
the aforesaid personal injury was caused to the workman by
the accident which admittedly arose out of and in the course
of the employment. It is therefore futile to contend that
the compensation did not fall due until after the
Commissioners order dated May 6, 1969 under Section 19. On
the aforesaid order this Court further held that the
Commissioner under the Act was fully justified in making the
order for payment of interest and penalty. In Maghar Singh
vs. Jashwant Singh (supra) the claim made under the W.C.
Act was dealt with and the findings or the observations
therein have no bearing on the question involved in this
appeal.
The scheme of the provision under the W.C. Act is
materially different from the scheme indicated in Chapter
XIII of the Railways Act. In the former, compensation
payable is fixed in the Act itself through the schedule
incorporated thereto. Section 4 of the W.C. Act shows that
such compensation is to be linked with the monthly wages of
the workman concerned. It also provides that the liability
to pay compensation on the employer would arise not when the
Commissioner passes the order but on the date of sustaining
the injury itself. A provision is made in Section 4A of
W.C. Act that where any employer is in default of paying
the compensation due within one month the Commissioner shall
direct the employer to pay not only interest but in
appropriate cases a penalty ranging up to 50% of the amount
payable. The said scheme cannot be equated with the scheme
in Chapter XIII of the Railways Act, as the principles
involved have differences.
Shri K. Sukumaran, learned senior counsel relied on the
decision of another Division Bench of the Kerala High Court
in Oriental Insurance Company Ltd. vs. Asokan {1997 (1)
Kerala Law Times 608} in which a decision of this Court is
quoted. That decision of this Court is dated 6.11.1996,
rendered by a two-Judge Bench (Kuldip Singh and Saghir
Ahmad, JJ) of this Court (C.A. Nos.16904-09 of 1996).
Later we came across that the said decision is reported in
New India Assurance Co. Ltd. vs. V.K. Neelakandan and
ors. {1999 (8) SCC 256). The said decision was also under
the W.C. Act. This is what the two-Judge Bench said:
We are finally determining the rights of
the workmen today. The Act is a special
legislation for the benefit of the labour.
Keeping in view the scheme of the Act we are
of the view that the only interpretation
which can be given to the amendment is that
if any benefit is conferred on the workmen
and the said benefit is available on the
date when the case is finally adjudicated,
the said benefit should be extended to the
workmen.
A three-Judge Bench of this Court in Kerala State
Elelctricity Board and anr. vs. Valsala K. and anr.
{1999 (8) SCC 254} has referred to the aforesaid decision
and held that it was wrongly decided in view of the
four-Judge Bench decision of this Court in Pratap Narain
Singh Deo (supra). Nonetheless, in appropriate cases the
principle of taking advantage of the beneficial legislation,
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subsequently enacted, is not dissented from by the larger
Bench.
In the result, we allow these appeals and set aside the
impugned judgment of the High Court. We direct the Railway
Administration to pay the amount awarded by the Claims
Tribunal to the appellant (if not already paid) within three
months from today together with interest at the rate of 12%
per annum from 27.6.1997 (the date of the order passed by
the Claims Tribunal).