Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 5
PETITIONER:
CONCORD OF INDIA INSURANCE CO LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NIRMALA DEVI AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT16/04/1979
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION:
1979 AIR 1666 1979 SCR (3) 694
1979 SCC (4) 365
CITATOR INFO :
R 1988 SC 898 (7)
RF 1992 SC1261 (8)
ACT:
Negligence of Counsel which misleads a litigant into
delayed pursuit of his remedy-Propriety and reasonableness
of companies and other persons relying upon legal opinion in
the matter of computation of limitation-Limitation Act, 1963
(Act XXXVI) Section 5.
Need for no fault tortious liability by State-Legal
rights, literacy in the case of automobile, accidents and
the processual modalities which secure redressal of
grievances, explained.
HEADNOTE:
A doctor and his brother riding a motor cycle were hit
by a jeep driver and both were killed in November 1971, but
the Motor Accident claims Tribunal delivered judgment on 5-
9-1976 five years later awarding sums of Rs. 80,000/- and
Rs. 73,500/- to the two sets of claimants.
The appeal in this case had to be filed on or before
19-1-77 but was actually filed 30 days later with an
application for condonation under S. 5 of the Limitation Act
on the ground of Counsel’s mistake in the calculation of the
period of limitation. The High Court dismissed the appeal
and the application.
Dismissing the special leave petitions, the Court
^
HELD: A company relies on its Legal Adviser and the
Manager’s expertise is in company management and not in law.
There is no particular reason why when a company or other
person retains a lawyer to advise it or him on legal affairs
reliance should not be placed on such counsel. Of course, if
there is gross delay too patent even for layman or if there
is in comprehensible indifference the shield of legal
opinion may still be vulnerable. If legal Adviser’s opinions
are to be subjected by company managers to further legal
scrutiny of their own, an impossible situation may arise.
Indeed Government, a large litigant in this country, may
find itself in difficulty. [697E-F, 698 F-G]
This does not automatically secure a visa for the
petitioner into this Court under Art. 136. There must be
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 5
manifest injustice or gross misappreciation or perversity in
factual findings. [698H]
State of Kerala v. Krishna Kurup Madhava Kurup, A.I.R
1971 Kerala 211; approved.
State of West Bengal v. Howrah Municipal Corporation,
AIR 1972 SC 749; referred to.
Observations
1. The jurisprudence of compensation for motor
accidents must develop in the direction of no-fault
liability and the determination of the quantum must be
liberal, not niggardly since the law values life and limb in
a free
695
country in generous scales. Social justice, the command of
the Constitution is being violated by the State itself by
neglecting road repairs, ignoring deadly over-loads and
contesting liability after nationalising the bulk of bus
transport and the whole of general insurance business.
[696C-D]
2. Medieval roads with treacherous dangers and total
disrepair, explosive increase of heavy vehicles often
terribly overloaded and without cautionary signals, reckless
drivers crazy with speed and tipsy with spirituous potions,
non-enforcement of traffic regulations designed for safety
but offering opportunities for systematised corruption and
little else and, as a cumulative effect, mounting highway
accidents, demand a new dimension to the law of torts
through no fault liability and processual celerity and
simplicity in compensation claims cases. [696B-C]
3. If only no-fault liability, automatic reporting by
the police who investigate the accident in a statutory
proforma signed by the claimants and forwarded to the
tribunal as in Tamil Nadu and decentralised empowerment of
such tribunals in every district coupled with informal
procedures and liberation from court-fees and the
sophisticated rules of evidence and burden of proof were
introduced-easy and inexpensive, if the State has the will
to help the poor who mostly die in such accidents-law’s
delays in this compassionate jurisdiction can be banished.
Social justice in action is the measure of the State’s
constitutional sensitivity. [696F-G]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Special Leave Petition
(Civil) Nos. 5228 and 5286 of 1977.
From the Judgment and order dated 8-8-1977 of the
Punjab and Haryana High Court in F.A.O. No. 81 and 82 of
1977.
P. P. Malhotra and R. N. Dikshit for the Petitioner.
S. K. Gambhir for the Respondent.
The order of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J. An explosive escalation of automobile
accidents, accounting for more deaths than the most deadly
diseases, has become a lethal phenomenon on Indian Roads
everywhere. The jural impact of this tragic development on
our legislatures, courts and law enforcing agencies is
insufficient, with the result that the poor, who are, by and
large, the casualty in most of these cases, suffer losses of
life or limb and are deprived of expeditious legal remedies
in the shape of reasonably quantified compensation promptly
paid-and this, even after compulsory motor insurance and
nationalisation of insurance business. The facts of this
special leave petitions, which we dismiss by this order,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 5
raise two serious issues which constrain us to make a
speaking order. The first deals with legal
696
rights, literacy in the case of automobile accidents and the
processual modalities which secure redressal of grievances.
The second relates to the consequences of negligence of
counsel which misleads a litigant into delayed pursuit of
his remedy.
Medieval roads with treacherous dangers and total
disrepair, explosive increase of heavy vehicles often
terribly overloaded and without cautionary signals, reckless
drivers crazy with speed and tipsy with spirituous potions,
non-enforcement of traffic regulations designed for safety
but offering opportunities for systematised corruption and
little else and, as a cumulative effect, mounting highway
accidents demand a new dimension to the law of torts through
no fault liability and processual celerity and simplicity in
compensation claims cases. Social justice, the command of
the Constitution is being violated by the State itself by
neglecting road repairs, ignoring deadly overloads and
contesting liability after nationalising the bulk of bus
transport and the whole of general insurance business. The
jurisprudence of compensation for motor accidents must
develop in the direction of no-fault liability and the
determination of the quantum must be liberal, not niggardly
since the law values life and limb in a free country in
generous scales. In the present case, a doctor and his
brother riding a motor cycle were hit, by a jeep driver and
both were killed. The fatal event occurred in November 1971
but the Motor Accident Claims Tribunal delivered judgment
five years later awarding sums of Rs. 80,000/- and Rs.
73,500/- to the two sets of claimants.
The delay of five years in such cases is a terrible
commentary on the judicial process. If only no-fault
liability, automatic reporting by the police who investigate
the accident in a statutory proforma signed by the claimants
and forward to the tribunal as in Tamil Nadu and
decentralised empowerment of such tribunals in every
district coupled with informal procedures and liberation
from court-fees and the sophisticated rules of evidence and
burden of proof were introduced-easy and inexpensive if the
State has the will to help the poor who mostly die in such
accidents-law’s delays in this compassionate jurisdiction
can be banished. Social justice in action is the measure of
the State’s constitutional sensitivity. Anyway, we have made
these observation hopefully to help focus the attention of
the Union and the States.
The nationalised insurance company appealed to the High
Court against the award. We have no doubt that the finding
on both the
697
culpability and the quantum as rendered by the trial court
are correct. But the High Court dismissed the appeal on the
ground of delay, dismissing the application of the
petitioner for condonation under S. 5 of the Limitation Act.
The Accident Claims Tribunal pronounced its award on
September, 15, 1976, after making the necessary computations
and deductions. The appeal had to be filed on or before
January 19, 1977 but was actually filed 30 days later.
Counsel for the petitioner is stated to have made the
mistake in the calculation of the period of limitation. He
had intimated the parties accordingly with the result that
the petitioner was misled into instituting appeal late. The
High Court took the view that the lawyer’s ignorance about
the law was no ground for condonation of delay. Reliance was
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 5
placed on some decisions of the Punjab High Court and there
was reference also to a ruling of the Supreme Court in AIR
1972 SC 749(1). The conclusion was couched in these words:
"The Assistant Divisional Manager of the Company
appellant is not an illiterate or so ignorant person
who could not calculate the period of limitation. Such
like appeals are filed by such companies daily. The
facts of this case clearly show, as observed earlier,
that the mistake is not bonafide and the appellant has
failed to show sufficient cause to condone the delay."
We are not able to agree with this reasoning. A company
relies on its Legal Adviser and the Manager’s expertise is
in company management and not in law. There is no particular
reason why when a company or other person retains a lawyer
to advise it or him on legal affairs reliance should not be
placed on such counsel. Of course, if there is gross delay
too patent even for layman or if there is incomprehensible
indifference the shield of legal opinion may still be
vulnerable. The correct legal position has been explained
with reference to the Supreme Court decision in a judgment
of one of us in AIR 1971 Ker. 211:
"The law is settled that mistake of counsel may in
certain circumstances be taken into account in
condoning delay although there is no general
proposition that mistake of counsel by itself is always
a sufficient ground. It is always a question whether
the mistake was bonafide or was merely a device to
cover an ulterior purpose such as laches
698
on the part of the litigant or an attempt to save
limitation in an underhand way. The High Court
unfortunately never considered the matter from this
angle. If it had, it would have seen quite clearly that
there was no attempt to avoid the Limitation Act but
rather to follow it albeit on a wrong reading of the
situation."
"The High Court took the view that Mr. Raizada
being an Advocate of 34 years’ standing could not
possibly make the mistake in view of the clear
provisions on the subject of appeals existing under
Section 39(1) of the Punjab Courts Act and therefore,
his advice to file the appeal before the District Court
would not come to the rescue of the appellant under
Section 5 of the Limitation Act. The Supreme Court
upset this approach."
"I am of the view that legal advice given by the
members of the legal profession may sometimes be wrong
even as pronouncement on questions of law by courts are
some times wrong. An amount of latitude is expected in
such cases for, to err is human and lay men, as
litigants are, may legitimately lean on expert counsel
in legal as in other departments, without probing the
professional competence of the advice. The court must
of course, see whether in such cases there is any taint
of mala fides or element of recklessness or ruse. If
neither is present, legal advice honestly sought and
actually given, must be treated as sufficient cause
when an application under Section 5 of the Limitation
Act is being considered. The State has not acted
improperly in relying on its legal advisers."
We have clarified the legal position regarding the
propriety and reasonableness of companies and other persons
relying upon legal opinion in the matter of computation of
limitation since it is a problem which may arise frequently.
If Legal Adviser’s opinions are to be subjected by company
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 5
managers to further legal scrutiny of their own, an
impossible situation may arise. Indeed Government, a large
litigant in this country, may find itself in difficulty.
That is the reason why we have chosen to explain at this
length the application of S. 5 vis-a-vis counsel’s mistake.
This does not automatically secure a visa for the
petitioner into this Court under Article 136. There must be
manifest injustice or gross misappreciation or perversity in
factual findings. We have
699
examined the merits of the matter to the extent available on
the record and have heard counsel for the petitioner. He has
hardly convinced us that the merits of the case call for any
intervention at all. In this view we are constrained to
dismiss the Special Leave Petitions now that we have
expressed ourselves or both the points dealt with above.
S.R. Petitions dismissed.
700