Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2422-2459 of 2001
PETITIONER:
NATIONAL INSURANCE CO. LTD
RESPONDENT:
ANJANA SHYAM & ORS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 20/08/2007
BENCH:
A.K. MATHUR & P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
[with C.A. Nos. 5992-6026/2002, 4288/2006 and
C.A. No 3824/2007 @ SLP (C) No. 14167 of 2001]
P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN, J.
1. Delay condoned and leave granted in SLP(C)
No.14167 of 2001.
2. A bus bearing registration No. HP-06-1245,
owned by the Tehsil Cooperative Union and insured with
the appellant met with an accident on 4.3.1996. The
vehicle had a carrying capacity of 42 passengers, one
driver and one conductor and in terms of Section
147(1)(b)(ii) of the Motor Vehicles Act (hereinafter "the
Act") was insured for the 42 passengers. It goes without
saying that the route permit of the vehicle was for
carrying 42 passengers other than the driver and the
conductor.
3. On the day of the accident, the materials
indicate that the bus was overloaded. There were at
least 90 passengers. The bus fell off the road into a
nullah leading to the death of 26 including the one who
was driving the vehicle and injuring 63 persons. The
legal representatives of the deceased and the injured, all
approached the Motor Accident Claims Tribunal claiming
compensation and seeking its adjudging on applications
made under Section 166 of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988.
The claim was resisted by the owner, the insured and by
the insurance company. The insurance company mainly
contended that the bus was overloaded; that it was being
driven not by an authorized driver at the time of the
accident; and that the insurance company had no
liability. Alternatively, it was sought to be pleaded that
the owner having permitted the vehicle to be overloaded
had committed a fundamental breach of the contract of
insurance and therefore the insurance company could
repudiate the policy and hence was not liable for the
compensation that may be adjudged. The Tribunal had
brushed aside these objections and passed various
awards on the various claims and made the insurance
company liable for paying the amounts covered by all the
awards exceeding the 42 covered by the insurance.
Feeling aggrieved, the insurance company filed 38
appeals challenging the awards. In the appeals, an
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application was made seeking impleadment of the State
of Himachal Pradesh. This was on the basis that the
authorities under the State had failed to check the
overloading of the bus and it was due to the negligence of
the authorities of the State in not checking overloading
and adherence to the conditions of the permit by the
owner of the vehicle and the relevant provisions of the
Act that the accident had occurred and hence the State
must be found to be liable in contributory negligence and
for that purpose it was just and necessary to implead the
State as a party to the proceedings. An amendment of
the written statement of the company was also sought
for to introduce the plea that the bus carried 90
passengers at the time of the accident as against the
sitting capacity of 42 including the driver and the
conductor and in that situation the liability should be
apportioned between the insurance company, the owner
and the State and the insurance company could be
found liable only to the extent of the insurance it had
provided and it was bound to provide in terms of Section
147 of the Act and in terms of the conditions of the
permit held by the owner of the bus.
The Insurance Company also sought permission to raise
other contentions which were not normally open to it, by
invoking Section 170 of the Act. The High Court taking
the view that overloading of the bus which had a permit
to ply on the route with only 42 passengers, did not
amount to violation of the route permit or any other law
for which the State Government could be held to be
contributorily negligent and that the insurance company
was liable to pay the amounts as awarded by the
Tribunal since it could not also question the quantum of
compensation awarded. Thus, the High Court dismissed
the appeals filed by the insurance company. It also
dismissed the three appeals filed by three different
claimants seeking enhancement of compensation in their
respective cases. The insurance company has filed Civil
Appeal Nos.2422-2459 of 2001 challenging the decision
of the High Court.
4. In the accident giving rise to C.A. Nos.5992-
6026/2002, the vehicle had only the capacity to carry 42
passengers but at the time of the accident, there were 70
passengers in the bus. The stand of the insurance
company is that only 42 passengers were insured and
they cannot be compelled to meet the award beyond the
contract of insurance itself. The appeals actually
challenge only the interim awards made in respect of the
claims, even beyond the insured 42.
5. In the accident giving rise to C.A.
No.4288/2006 the vehicle was insured for 38 passengers
and two more including the driver and the conductor.
There were more than 70 passengers at the time of the
accident. The insurance company contends that its
liability is limited to the claim of 38 passengers.
6. In the civil appeal arising from SLP(C) 14167 of
2001, the claim was one arising out of the accident that
has given rise to Civil Appeal Nos.2422-2459/2001. The
appeal before the High Court was disposed of in the light
of the earlier judgment from out of which C.A. Nos.
2422-2459 have arisen.
7. Learned counsel for the insurance company
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did not pursue his argument before us that overloading
the bus was a breach of a specified condition of the
insurance in that it was a user of the insured vehicle for
a purpose not allowed by the permit under which the
vehicle is used where the vehicle is a transport vehicle.
His only contention in all these appeals was that the
insurance company having insured 42 passengers in two
of the cases and 38 passengers in another, the liability of
the insurance company cannot be enlarged and the
liability is confined only to the 42 passengers insured. It
was submitted that there is nothing in the Act which
justifies the imposing of the liability on the insurance
company in respect of persons who were not at all
covered by the insurance policy and in respect of whom
there was no obligation on the owner of the vehicle to
take coverage of insurance in terms of Section 147 of the
Act. Counsel submitted, however much we may keep in
mind that the relevant provisions of the Motor Vehicles
Act are for the benefit of third parties or passengers of a
transport vehicle injured in an accident, the same did
not contain any provision which could enlarge the
liability of the insurance company compelling it to cover
more persons than it had contracted to cover.
8. Counsel for the respondents in these appeals
submitted that the victims of an accidents are not to be
driven to chase the mirage of recovery of compensation
or damages from the owner of the vehicle and it is to
ensure that the victims are paid compensation, whatever
might be the inter se rights and obligations of the owner
of the vehicle and the insurance company, that the
relevant provisions are made. Counsel relied on Section
149 of the Act to contend that once an award is passed,
it was the duty of the insurer to satisfy the judgment and
award and viewed from that angle, the insurance
company was bound to pay the victims the entire
amount covered by the various awards.
9. Before us, there were attempts by learned
counsel for the insurance company to suggest the
adoption of a formula in cases of over-loaded vehicles
meeting with the accidents and more people than those
covered by the policy getting killed or injured. Counsel
for the respondent submitted that that was not an
acceptable formula and it was not practicable to adopt
the same. We shall consider that aspect at a later stage
if it becomes necessary.
9. Under Section 146 of the Motor Vehicles Act,
1988, no vehicle can be plied on the road without taking
out an insurance against third party risk. Section
147(1)(b)(ii) provides that in order to comply with the
requirements of Chapter XI of the Act, a policy of
insurance must be a policy which insures persons or
classes of persons, specified in the policy to the extent
specified in sub-section (2) of that Section against the
death of or bodily injury to any passenger of a public
service vehicle caused by or arising out of the use of the
vehicle in a public place. The limit in terms of Section
147(2)(a) of the Act is the amount of liability incurred.
Under Section 149(1) of the Act, the insurance company
has the obligation, subject to the provisions of that
Section, to satisfy the decree or award made by the
concerned court or Tribunal on claims by third parties.
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Section 149(2) of the Act provides that no sum shall be
payable by an insurer unless notice of the proceedings
had been given to the insurance company before the
commencement of the proceedings through the court or
the Claims Tribunal, and that it shall not be liable if
there has been a breach of a specified condition of the
policy as indicated in that sub-section. These cover use
of the vehicle for hire or reward where the vehicle is on
the date of the contract of insurance a vehicle not
covered by a permit to ply for hire or reward, or use for
organized racing and speed testing, or use for a purpose
not allowed by the permit under which the vehicle is
used where the vehicle is a transport vehicle, or use
without side-car being attached where the vehicle is a
motor cycle, or there is a breach of a condition excluding
driving by a named person or persons or by any person
who is not duly licensed, or by any person who has been
disqualified for holding or obtaining a driving licence
during the period of disqualification, or a condition
excluding liability for injury caused or contributed to by
conditions of war, civil war, riot or civil commotion, or
that the policy is void on the ground that it was obtained
by the non-disclosure of a material fact or by a
representation of fact which was false in some material
particular. Under sub-section (5), it is provided that if
the amount which an insurer becomes liable to pay
under this Section in respect of a liability incurred by a
person insured by a policy exceeds the amount for which
the insurer would, apart from the provisions of this
Section be liable under the policy in respect of that
liability, the insurer shall be entitled to recover the
excess from that person. Therefore, on the scheme of the
Act, the insurance company, if it is not able to establish
that there is a fundamental breach of a condition which
would enable it to disclaim liability, it may have to pay
the amount of compensation adjudged by a Claims
Tribunal subject of course to its rights to recover from
the insured, the owner of the vehicle such excess as it is
obliged to pay.
11. Section 149 of the Act speaks of the judgment
or award in respect of the liability as is required to be
covered by a policy under clause (b) of sub-section (1) of
Section 147 of the Act having to be satisfied. Section
147(1)(b) compels insuring the person or classes of
persons specified in the policy to the extent specified in
sub-section (ii) of that Section. The case on hand will
come under sub-clause (ii) of clause (b) of Section 147 (1)
of the Act which obliges the owner to take out insurance
compulsorily against the death of or bodily injury to any
passenger of a public service vehicle caused by or arising
out of the use of the vehicle in a public place.
12. Section 58 of the Act makes special provisions
in regard to transport vehicles. Sub-Section (2) provides
that a registering authority, when registering a transport
vehicle, shall enter in the record of registration and in
the certificate of registration various particulars. Clause
(d) provides that if the vehicle is used or adapted to be
used for carriage of passengers, the number of
passengers for whom accommodation is provided. Thus
the registration of the vehicle, which alone makes it
usable on the road, records the number of passengers to
be carried and the certificate of registration also contains
that entry. So, an insurance company insuring the
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passengers carried in a vehicle in terms of Section
147(1)(b)(ii) of the Act, can only insure such number of
passengers as are shown in the certificate of registration.
The position is reinforced by Section 72 of the Act, which
deals with grant of stage carriage permits. Sub-Section
(2) provides that when a permit is decided to be granted
for a stage carriage, the Regional Transport Authority
can attach to the permit one or more of the conditions
specified therein. Clause (vii) is the condition regarding
the maximum number of passengers that may be carried
in a stage carriage. Overloading also invites a
consequence which can be termed penal. Section 86 of
the Act provides for cancellation of a permit if any
condition contained in the permit is breached.
Therefore, the apparent wide words of Section
147(1)(b)(ii) of the Act have to be construed harmoniously
with the other provisions of the Act, namely, Sections 58
and 72 of the Act. As early as in 1846, Dr. Lushington
in Queen V. Eduljee Byramjee [(1846) 3 MIA 468]
posited that to ascertain the true meaning of a clause in
a statute the court must look at the whole statute, at
what precedes and at what succeeds and not merely at
the clause itself. This Court has accepted this approach
in innumerable cases. Thus, the expression ’any
passenger’ must be understood as passenger authorized
to be carried in the vehicle and ’use of the vehicle’ as
permitted use of the vehicle. Affording of insurance for
more number of passengers than permitted, would be
illegal since in that case the manifest intention would be
the overloading of the vehicle, something not
contemplated by law. Thus, it is not possible to accept a
contention that the insurance can be taken to cover
more passengers than permitted by the certificate of
registration and the permit as a stage carriage and that
it will cover all the passengers overloaded. Of course, in
these cases, there is no dispute that the insurance cover
took in only the permitted number of passengers.
13. In this situation, the insurance taken out for
the number of permitted passengers can alone determine
the liability of the insurance company in respect of those
passengers. In terms of Section 149 of the Act, the duty
of the insurer is only to satisfy judgments and awards
against persons insured in respect of the third party
risk. Obviously, this is to the extent the third party risk
is coverable and is covered. Section 149 of the Act
speaks of judgment or award being obtained against any
person insured by the policy and the liability of the
insurer to pay to the person entitled to the benefit of the
decree any sum not exceeding the sum assured payable
thereunder subject to any claim the insurer may have
against the owner of the vehicle. Section 149 could not
be understood as compelling an insurance company to
make payment of amounts covered by decrees not only
in respect of the number of persons covered by the policy
itself but even in respect of those who are not covered by
the policy and who have been loaded into the vehicle
against the terms of the permit and against the terms of
the condition of registration of the vehicle and in terms
of violation of a statute.
14. It is true that the provisions in Chapter XI of
the Act are intended for the benefit of third parties with a
view to ensure that they receive the fruits of the awards
obtained by them straightaway with an element of
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certainty and not to make them wait for a prolonged
recovery proceeding as against the owner of the vehicle.
But from that, it would not be possible to take the next
step and find that the insurance company is bound to
cover liabilities not covered by the contract of insurance
itself. The Act only imposes an obligation to take out
insurance to cover third party risks and in the case of
stage carriages, the passengers to be carried in the
vehicle and the passengers to be carried in the vehicle
can be understood only as passengers authorized or
permitted to be carried in the vehicle.
15. In spite of the relevant provisions of the
statute, insurance still remains a contract between the
owner and the insurer and the parties are governed by
the terms of their contract. The statute has made
insurance obligatory in public interest and by way of
social security and it has also provided that the insurer
would be obliged to fulfil his obligations as imposed by
the contract and as overseen by the statute
notwithstanding any claim he may have against the
other contracting party, the owner, and meet the claims
of third parties subject to the exceptions provided in
Section 149(2) of the Act. But that does not mean that
an insurer is bound to pay amounts outside the contract
of insurance itself or in respect of persons not covered by
the contract at all. In other words, the insured is
covered only to the extent of the passengers permitted to
be insured or directed to be insured by the statute and
actually covered by the contract. The High Court has
considered only the aspect whether by overloading the
vehicle, the owner had put the vehicle to a use not
allowed by the permit under which the vehicle is used.
This aspect is different from the aspect of determining
the extent of the liability of the insurance company in
respect of the passengers of a stage carriage insured in
terms of Section 147(1)(b)(ii) of the Act. We are of the
view that the insurance company can be made liable
only in respect of the number of passengers for whom
insurance can be taken under the Act and for whom
insurance has been taken as a fact and not in respect of
the other passengers involved in the accident in a case of
overloading.
16. Then arises the question, how to determine the
compensation payable or how to quantify the
compensation since there is no means of ascertaining
who out of the overloaded passengers constitute the
passengers covered by the insurance policy as permitted
to be carried by the permit itself. As this Court has
indicated, the purpose of the Act is to bring benefit to the
third parties who are either injured or dead in an
accident. It serves a social purpose. Keeping that in
mind, we think that the practical and proper course
would be to hold that the insurance company, in such a
case, would be bound to cover the higher of the various
awards and will be compelled to deposit the higher of the
amounts of compensation awarded to the extent of the
number of passengers covered by the insurance policy.
Illustratively, we may put it like this. In the case on
hand, 42 passengers were the permitted passengers and
they are the ones who have been insured by the
insurance company. 90 persons have either died or got
injured in the accident. Awards have been passed for
varied sums. The Tribunal should take into account, the
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higher of the 42 awards made, add them up and direct
the insurance company to deposit that lump sum. Thus,
the liability of the insurance company would be to pay
the compensation awarded to 42 out of the 90
passengers. It is to ensure that the maximum benefit is
derived by the insurance taken for the passengers of the
vehicle, that we hold that the 42 awards to be satisfied
by the insurance company would be the 42 awards in
the descending order starting from the highest of the
awards. In other words, the higher of the 42 awards will
be taken into account and it would be the sum total of
those higher 42 awards that would be the amount that
the insurance company would be liable to deposit. It will
be for the Tribunal thereafter to direct distribution of the
money so deposited by the insurance company
proportionately to all the claimants, here all the 90, and
leave all the claimants to recover the balance from the
owner of the vehicle. In such cases, it will be necessary
for the Tribunal, even at the initial stage, to make
appropriate orders to ensure that the amount could be
recovered from the owner by ordering attachment or by
passing other restrictive orders against the owner so as
to ensure the satisfaction in full of the awards that may
be passed ultimately.
17. In these cases, we find that this Court has not
issued notices to the claimants. We are therefore not in
a position to vary the decision of the High Court as
regards the claimants. But, we have clarified the law on
the question and we grant the insurance company a
decree to recover the excess amount that it has
deposited, from the owner, who has been issued notice
and who has contested these appeals. Obviously, the
principle indicated by us here will have to be applied by
the Tribunal in the case from which the appeal against
the interim award has been filed by the insurance
company.
18. Thus, the appeals are allowed to the extent
indicated above. There will be no order as to costs.