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1977 DIGILAW 152 (KAR)

SARASWATHIBAI v. MALATI

1977-07-14

K.J.SHETTY

body1977
( 1 ) THE sole question that arises for consideration in this Second Appeal relates to the right of the appellant u/s. 39 of the Insurance Act, 1938. ( 2 ) THE facts which are necessary for the determination of the question are: One Madhukar Kulkarni had taken a Policy of Assurance for Rs. 2,000 with the Life Insurance Corporation of India. He was a teacher and the premiums were paid out of his salary income. He had nominated his mother as a nominee under S. 39. The Policy was taken on 14th Dec, 1959, and assured died on 31st Oct, 1966, leaving behind his wife (the plaintiff) a,nd the mother (the defendant ). In the normal course, each would have got one-half of the assured amount. But, the mother being the nominee, claimed the entire amount on the sole ground that the nomination confers, on her an absolute right to the exclusion of the wife. So, the wife filed a suit for declaration and also for recovery of half the amount due under the Policy of her husband. ( 3 ) ON the consideration of the evidence, both the Courts treated the sum due under the Policy as a separate asset of the deceased as the premiums were paid out of his salary and not from the joint family fund. The Courts have further held that S. 39 confers on the nominee a bare right to collect the Policy money on the death of the assured and to give a good discharge to the Insurance Coy and the nominee does not become the owner of the money payable under the Policy. The correctness of this view is assailed in this Second Appeal, preferred by the defendant. ( 4 ) FOR immediate reference, the relevant portion of S. 39 is set out below:" 39. The correctness of this view is assailed in this Second Appeal, preferred by the defendant. ( 4 ) FOR immediate reference, the relevant portion of S. 39 is set out below:" 39. (1) The holder of a policy of life insurance on his own life, may, when effecting the policy or at any time before the policy matures for payment, nominate the person or persons to whom the money secured by the policy shall be paid in the event of his death: provided that, where any nominee is a minor, it shall be lawful for the policy-holder to appoint in the prescribed manner any person to receive the money secured by the policy in the event of his death during the minority of the nominee (6) Where the nominee or, if there are more nominees than one, a nominee or nominees survive the person whose life is insured, the amount secured by the policy shall be payable to such survivor or survivors. "by reading sub-secs (1) and (6) of Sec. 39, it is clear that the sum secured by the policy shall be payable in the event of the death of the assured to the surviving nominee. Upon such payment, the liability of the Insurance Coy gets discharged. The payment, however, has no relevance to the title or ownership of that money. This has been the uniform view taken by several High Courts. In Ramballav Dhandhania v. Gangadhar Nathmall, AIR. 1956 Cal. 275. P. B. Mukharji, J, observed :"all that sub-sec (6) of S. 39, Insurance Act does is to confer on the nominee the right to receive the insurance money as between such nominee and the Insurance Coy, but it does not provide for the title or ownership of that money in general. "the above view has been followed by a Bench of the Madas High court in D. Mohanavelu Mudaliar v. Indian Insurance and Banking corpn. Ltd. , AIR. 1957 Mad. "the above view has been followed by a Bench of the Madas High court in D. Mohanavelu Mudaliar v. Indian Insurance and Banking corpn. Ltd. , AIR. 1957 Mad. 115, Govinda Menon, J, as he then was, while summarising the law on the question, observed at page 118 thus :"the result of the above discussion seems to me to be this: If the construction placed upon the declaration is that a trust has been created under the provisions of the Married Women's Property Act, the beneficary would take the assured amount free of all the liabilities of the insured and if it is construed as a mere nomination, the nominee would have no more right than to receive the amount subject to all the liabilities as if the disposition was by means of a testamentary instrument. "a similar view has been taken in a Full Bench decision of the Kerala high Court in Sarojini Amma. v. Neelakanta Pillai, AIR. 1961 Kerala 126. My attention was, however, invited to a later decision of the Madras high Court in Kuruppa Gounder v. Palaniammal, AIR. 1963 Mad. 245, which according to the Counsel for the appellant, has taken a contrary view. ( 5 ) I do not think that ithe said decision could be of any assistance to the case on hand. In that case, the previous decision of the same Court in D. Mohanavelu's case (2), has not been referred to. Even s. 39 of the Insurance Act was not noticed. The decision appears to have proceeded on the special facts of that case and not on the scope of subsection (6) of Section 39. ( 6 ) IN my view, there is no scope for taking any contrary view. The plain meaning of sub-sec (6) of Sec. 39 is that the nominee has no other right except a bare right to collect the policy money without affecting the title of other claimants, if any. ( 7 ) IN the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed. ( 8 ) SINCE the parties are closely related, there shall be no order as to costs in this Court. --- *** --- .