Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 7359 2000
PETITIONER:
ORIENTAL INSURANCE CO. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CHERUVAKKARA NAFEESSU & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 14/12/2000
BENCH:
K.T.Thomas, R.P.Sethi
JUDGMENT:
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SETHI,J.
Leave granted. What is the extent of liability of an
insurance company towards the third party as per Section
95(1)(b) of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 (hereinafter called
"the Act") and what are its rights in case of payment of an
amount in excess of the limits of the liability under the
insurance policy vis-Ã -vis the insured?, are the questions
to be determined in this appeal. It has been argued on
behalf of the insurance company that under the terms of the
insurance policy in the instant case, the company was not
liable to pay more than Rs.50,000/-, being the limit of its
liability. The excess amount of the award was to be paid by
the insured for which the Tribunal was not competent to
issue directions against the appellant-company. On the
other hand counsel for the insured has submitted that as per
avoidance clause in the insurance company, the
appellant-company was liable to indemnify the whole extent
of liability towards the claim notwithstanding the limit of
liability of the insurance. In this case the claim petition
was filed by the legal heirs of C. Abdul Shukkoor, who died
in a road accident on 6.7.1988. The accident was caused by
an auto-rickshaw bearing Registration NO.KRN 1859 which was
insured with the appellant-company. The respondents claimed
Rs.2 lakhs as compensation. The appellant-company filed
their reply specifically stating therein that their
liability was limited to Rs.50,000/- under the policy of
insurance. The Claims Tribunal passed an award of
Rs.1,94,150/- and fastened the entire liability on the
appellant-company. The appeal filed against the order of
the Claims Tribunal was dismissed vide the judgment impugned
in this appeal. Admittedly, the insurance policy in this
case is of a date prior to the coming into force of the new
Motor Vehicles Act on 1.7.1989. The liability of the
insurance company to satisfy judgments against persons
insured in respect of the third party risk is covered under
Section 96 of the Act, sub-section (1) of which provides:
"96. Duty of insurers to satisfy judgments against persons
insured in respect of third party risks _ (1) If, after a
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certificate of insurance has been issued under sub-section
(4) of Section 95 in favour of the person by whom a policy
has been effected, judgment in respect of any such liability
as is required to be covered by a policy under clause (b) of
sub-section (1) of Section 95 (being a liability covered by
the terms of the policy) is obtained against any person
insured by the policy, then, notwithstanding that the
insurer may be entitled 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."
Under the insurance policy the limit of company’s
liability in respect of any one claim or series of claims
arising out of one event is Rs.50,000/- only. However, the
avoidance clause of the policy provides: "Nothing in this
policy or the endorsement hereon shall affect the right of
any person indemnified by this policy or any other person to
recover an amount under or by virtue of the provisions of
the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939, Section 96.
BUT the insured shall repay to the company all sums
paid by the company which the company would not have been
liable to pay but for the said provisions."
Section II of the policy deals with "liability of
third party" and provides that the company will indemnify
the insured against all sums including claimants costs and
expenses which insured become legally liable to pay in
respect of the death of or bodily injury to any person
caused by or arising out of the use of the motor vehicle or
damage to the property caused by such use. A conjoint
reading of all the terms of the policy of insurance executed
in this case indicate that the total extent of liability of
the insurance policy is Rs.50,000/- but the company is
liable to indemnify the insured against all sums including
claimant’s costs and expenses which insured becomes liable
to pay and nothing in the policy affects the right of any
person indemnified by the policy or any other person to
recover an amount under or by virtue of the provisions of
Section 96 of the Act. However, the insured is liable to
repay to the company all sums paid by the company which the
company would not have been liable to pay but for the
condition of liability relating to third party. Dealing
with such a situation this Court in New Asiatic Insurance
Co. Ltd.v. Pessumal Dhanamal Aswani & Ors. [AIR 1964 SC
1736] held: "The Act contemplates the possibility of the
policy of insurance undertaking liability to third parties
providing such a contract between the insurer and the
insured, that is, the person who effected the policy, as
would make the company entitled to recover the whole or part
of the amount it has paid to the third party from the
insured. The insurer thus acts as security for the third
party with respect to its realising damages for the injuries
suffered, but vis-a-vis the insured, the company does not
undertake that liability or undertake it to a limited
extent. It is in view of such a possibility that various
conditions are laid down in the policy. Such conditions,
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however, are effective only between the insured and the
company, and have to be ignored when considering the
liability of the company to the third parties. This is
mentioned prominently in the policy itself and is mentioned
under the heading ’avoidance of certain terms and rights of
recovery’, as well as in the form of "An Important Notice",
in the Schedule to the policy. The avoidance clause says
that nothing in the policy or any endorsement thereon shall
affect the right of any person indemnified by the policy or
any other person to recover an amount under or by virtue of
the provisions of the Act. It also provides that the
insured will repay to the company all sums paid by it which
the company would not have been liable to pay but for the
said provisions of the Act. The ’Important Notice’ mentions
that any payment made by the company by reason of wider
terms appearing in the certificate in order to comply with
the Act is recoverable from the insured, and refers to the
avoidance clause.
Thus the contract between the insured and the company
may not provide for all the liabilities which the company
has to undertake vis-Ã -vis the third parties, in view of the
provisions of the Act. We are of the opinion that once the
company had undertaken liability to third parties incurred
by the persons specified in the policy, the third parties’
right to recover any amount under or by virtue of the
provisions of the Act is not affected by any condition in
the policy. Considering this aspect of the terms of the
policy, it is reasonable to conclude that proviso (a) of
para 3 of Section II is a mere condition affecting the
rights of the insured who effected the policy and the
persons to whom the cover of the policy was extended by the
company, and does not come in the way of third parties’
claim against the company on account of its claim against a
person specified in para 3 as one to whom cover of the
policy was extended."
Relying upon the aforesaid judgment and referring to
the avoidance clause, a three-Judge Bench of this Court in
Amrit Lal Sood and another v. Smt.Kaushalaya Devi Thapar &
Ors. [AIR 1998 SC 1433] held: "In the policy in the
present case also, there is a clause under the heading:
"AVOIDANCE OF CERTAIN TERMS AND RIGHTS OF RECOVERY -
which reads thus: Nothing in this policy or any endorsement
hereon shall affect the right of any person indemnified by
this policy or any other person to recover an amount under
or by virtue of the provisions of the Motor Vehicles Act,
1939, Section 96. But the Insured shall pay to the company
all sums paid by the company which the company would not
have been liable to pay but for the said provisions."
The above clause does not enable the insurance company
to resist or avoid the claim made by the claimant. The
clause will arise for consideration only in a dispute
between the insurer and the insured. The question whether
under the said clause the insurer can claim repayment from
the insured is left open. The circumstances that the owner
of the vehicle did not file an appeal against the judgment
of single Judge of the High Court under the Letters Patent
may also be relevant in the event of a claim by the
insurance company against the insured for repayment of the
amount. We are not concerned with that question here."
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The reliance of the learned counsel for the appellant
on T.Shantharam v. State of Karnataka & Ors.[1995 (2) SCC
539 and National Insurance Co. Ltd., New Delhi v. Jugal
Kishore & Ors. [1988 (1) SCC 626] is of no help to him
inasmuch as in those cases the effect of judgment in Amrit
Lal Sood’s case has not been considered. In T.Shantharam’s
case the court was dealing with the effect of a
comprehensive policy vis-a-vis the liability of the insurer
in respect of third party risk on the basis of the estimated
value of the vehicle and found that the limit of liability
with regard to third party risk does not become unlimited or
higher than the statutory liability only on account of
entering into a comprehensive policy. It was pointed out
that the comprehensive policy only entitles the owner to
claim reimbursement of the entire amount of loss or damage
suffered upto the estimated value of the vehicle which did
not mean the limit of liability with regard to third party
risk becoming unlimited or higher than the statutory
liability. In the case of National Insurance Co. Ltd. v.
Jugal Kishore & Ors. (supra) this Court observed that the
liability under the policy could not exceed the statutory
liability under Section 95 of the Act only on the ground
that the insured had undertaken Comprehensive insurance of
the vehicle. The payment of higher premium on that score,
however, did not mean that the limit of liability with
regard to third party risk became unlimited or higher than
the statutory liability fixed under sub-section (2) of
Section 95 of the Act. In the facts and circumstances of
this case we find that despite holding the liability under
the policy limited to the extent of Rs.50,000/-, the Claims
Tribunal and the High Court were not unjustified in
directing the appellant-company to pay the whole of the
awarded amount to the claimants on the basis of the
contractual obligations contained in clauses relating to the
liability of the third parties and avoidance clause.
However, the Claims Tribunal and the High Court were not
justified in rejecting the right of the appellant- company
to recover from the insured the excess amount paid in
execution and discharge of the award of the Tribunal. The
appeal is accordingly allowed holding that the appellant-
company is liable to pay the entire award amount to the
claimants. Upon making such payment the appellant can
recover the excess amount from the insured by executing this
award against the insured to the extent of such excess as
per Section 174 of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988. No costs.